5/31/2026

My May books

This is an overview of the books I have finished in a month (not necessarily started in the same month) and those I have read to Gundel (marked with ðŸ˜¸).
I will be adding a short explanation why I chose a book or how I found it and possibly if it's a re-read candidate, but I'm usually not going to add real reviews or ratings (Gundel also refuses to give ratings). Should you want a little more information on a book you're interested in, though, just let me know.


"Die Jungens von Burg Schreckenstein" by Oliver Hassencamp, first published in 1959


What a surprise for the pupils of an overcrowded boy school when they are told that they are going to move to a boarding school - in a castle!
After having explored "Burg Schreckenstein" (translated in the book as Horror Rock Castle (as a name for their jazz band)), the boys start calling themselves Knights and decide to follow a knightly code.

When I was a child, we - my guess is my brothers - had the first three volumes of this series which Hassencamp wrote between 1959 and 1988 (when he died in a car accident). The series has 27 volumes and has still been popular in Germany in the 2000s, possibly still now. The other day I noticed I had only inherited volume 2 and 3, therefore I bought volume 1 now and re-read it.

"The Gift of Not Belonging: How Outsiders Thrive in a World of Joiners" by Rami Kaminski, first published in 2025


In this book, psychiatrist Dr. Kaminski introduces a new personality type, no introvert, no extrovert, but the otrovert - "one who faces a different direction" according to his definition.

If my copy weren't missing the jacket, you could see a group of green chameleons on a branch and above them a blue one - the otrovert who can mingle with a group better than an introvert, but still stands outside of it as a kind of observer.
My problem with the book is that while some passages seem to describe me, I found others extremely generalizing, sometimes repetitive, sometimes contradictive in the description of what defines "
the" otrovert - which I totally am according to the test in the book which I can believe or not just like a personality test in a magazine in a doctor's waiting room as we get no clue what exactly it's based on.
There are anecdotes about patients, but nothing concrete, studies or references, that would make me feel as if this could be more than someone telling me about having a kind of superpower by being different from people who live a more community-based life which the author (who is of course an otrovert) seems to frown upon. This is only one example: "Tuned in to their rich, multilayered inner worlds, they gain access to a fantastically complex universe of thought, memory, and imagination that the communal person cannot access." Come on now, seriously?
So yeah, to me this seemed just like a new drawer to store people in (tempting superpower included), but I don't believe in such drawers. I got the book used and wonder if the previous owner felt the same about it as I did.

"The Silent Bullet" by Arthur B. Reeve, first published in 1910
(Craig Kennedy, Scientific Detective 1)


Craig Kennedy is a professor at Columbia University and he's convinced there should be a professorship in criminal science.
With the help of his journalist friend Walter James - yes, they are flatmates -, he uses his scientific expertise to help out the police and private clients.

I have the "leaping fish" to thank for discovering the "American Sherlock Holmes" (there wasn't much in German, it seems) as someone commented on the video that Coke Ennyday may be a Sherlock Holmes spoof, but that the name is definitely inspired by Professor Kennedy.
Initially the stories were published in "The Cosmopolitan".
This book has 12 stories in which Kennedy uses hidden microphones, lie detectors, a defibrillator, magnets, and more ("Murdoch Mysteries" anyone?).
I still prefer Sherlock Holmes, but it was a fun read, and as Reeve wrote loads more my vintage crime folder has grown again.

"Last Ditch" by Ngaio Marsh, first published in 1977
(Roderick Alleyn 29)



Alleyn's son Ricky is on one of the Channel Islands in order to write a book.
The peace is disturbed, however, when a young woman is found dead after a riding accident. Or wasn't it an accident?


This is still part of my vintage crime project for which I keep getting books by Marsh and Allingham.

"The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus" by Emma Knight, first published in 2025


A coming-of-age book about two friends, Pen and Alice from Canada who study in Edinburgh.

The book was mentioned on a blog and I have to admit that the words octopus (spoiler, it's a metaphor) and Edinburgh made me read it. It was okay, but not substantial enough to be sticking with me for long.

"Photo Finish" by Ngaio Marsh, first published in 1980
(Roderick Alleyn 31)



When his wife Troy is invited to a millionaire's luxury residence on an island in a New Zealand lake to paint the portrait of famous opera singer Isabella Sommita, Alleyn is invited along to look into the affair of a paparazzo following her.
After the performance of an opera written by Sommita's lover, part of the group is stuck on the island due to a heavy storm. Then the singer is found in her room ... murdered ...

This is still part of my vintage crime project and I have now read all 33 Roderick Alleyn books.

"An American Comedy" by Harold Lloyd (in collaboration with Wesley W. Stout), first published in 1928 (this edition was reproduced with minor corrections plus an interview from 1966)


This is the autobiography of Harold Lloyd at the height of his career. Kind of. I found it to be a mix of some life stories without getting too much in details unless they were light enough and stories of how his film career developed and how he developed films. That was actually quite interesting (if a bit dated which is no surprise), but I know there have been things left out (in regards to his accident with a bomb, for example), so I will read a "real" biography when possible.
What I liked was that someone really worked with this copy. There are loads of asterisks, marked paragraphs, and a few marginal notes. To me, it looks like someone tried to research how to do comedy.


I'm having fun with making my way through film-related biographies.

"The Ex Hex" by Erin Sterling, first published in 2021
(Graves Glen 1)



After breaking up with Rhys, the witch Vivienne puts a curse on him. It's not supposed to be serious, but when Rhys comes back to Vivienne's hometown after nine years to charge the town's ley lines, the magic goes crazy because of the curse and both the town and Rhys are in danger.

I found the book on OverDrive by accident and liked the idea of magic going crazy. Unfortunately it was mostly about the love story, but not in a way that captured me. I won't be reading the other books in the series.


"Bury Your Secrets" by Kerry Watts, first published in 2024
(DI Fraser Brodie 1)



A man well liked in the community is murdered in a gruesome way. The next day another body is found. A third man disappears.
DI Brodie and the isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides have to deal with a serial killer - again. Brodie is reminded of the murders his own twin brother has committed decades ago.

The book was recommended on a blog and sounded like one of the police thrillers I like to watch on TV sometimes.
It was a quick read, but "the secret" was mentioned so often that it got boring, and honestly, after not even half of the book I was quite sure I knew who the killer was (I was right). I would probably give the second book in the series a try to see if that improves, but my library doesn't have it, anyway.


"Celia's House" by D. E. Stevenson, first published in 1943 ðŸ˜¸


The book spans about 40 years of Dunnian House, a Scottish country estate. There have always lived Dunnes in the house, and the book starts with the unmarried Celia in 1905 and then tells the story of her nephew and his family who move in after Celia's death.

I hadn't known DES before I came across a review of a different book of hers on Liz's blog "Adventures in reading, running, and working from home". I think I marked both books to remind myself that DES wrote a lot, but randomly chose this one first. 
It was gentle, charming, and just what I needed at the moment. Afterwards I found that Liz has a short review of it on her blog, too. It will definitely not be the last book by this author for me.

"A Handful of Time" by Helen Foley, first published in 1961


Frances is asked by the police to travel to Cornwall to identify the body of her friend Fanny who has drowned in a sailing accident.
On the way, she remembers the story of her friendship after meeting as undergraduates in Cambridge in the 30s, of living together and making it through the war - Fanny is Austrian, but has been living in England since she went to school -, of friends and lovers.


I found this book mentioned on "The Neglected Books Page" and thought it sounded interesting - which it was, but eventually it started dragging.


"The Mysterious Mr. Badman : A Yorkshire Bibliomystery" by William Fryer Harvey, first published in 1934


When blanket manufacturer Athelstan Digby offers to mind the bookshop of his hosts while they are out of the house, he doesn't expect three men to ask for the same ominous book within a few hours.
Little does he know about the secret connected with this book, but after a body is found, there's no stopping him from investigating.

This is one of my random finds, a vintage crime with quite a bit of fun mixed in.


"The Cat Who Came in From the Cold" by Deric Longden, first published in 1991 ðŸ˜¸


A tiny kitten on a bucket in the neighbor's garden during the rain ... writers Deric and Aileen can't help falling in love.
This is the story of Thermal and his adventures in a Huddersfield neighborhood.

I had an urgent need for a familiar feel good book and this one which started my cat book collection decades ago is always a good choice!

"Robert My Father" by Sheridan Morley, first published in 1993


The biography of British actor Robert Morley written by his eldest son who was a drama and film critic and a writer.

I knew Morley from old movies of course, but I hadn't known about his long career in theater both as actor and playwright. As someone who knows next to nothing about theater, it was sometimes hard for me to wade through lists of unfamiliar names, but the stories made up for it.


"Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths" by Natalie Haynes, first published in 2022


In ten chapters, Haynes features women from classical literature and mythology, for example Pandora, Medea, Medusa, and tells the stories shining a light on them instead on the male point of view.

I had a look at the non-fiction books on OverDrive and picked this one because it sounded interesting. Good choice, I really enjoyed it!



DNF:

"The Frozen River" by Ariel Lawhon, first published in 2025


Midwife Martha Ballard is called to examine the body of a man found in the ice of the frozen river. He's one of two men having been accused of rape and Martha finds he was hanged before he got thrown into the river. Not everyone wants this murder to be solved, but Martha is determined.

I gave up at about a third. I wanted to like Martha for being strong and fighting for justice, but I didn't and even worse, the book started dragging for me.
It's inspired by real life events and the real Martha sounds very fascinating. I'd rather read the biography about her instead of this book.

5/29/2026

Weekend Traffic Jam - Week 158

Welcome to the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot!
My posts for the link up will go live on Thursdays at 9:30 p.m. EDT or, if you live in the future like I do, on Fridays at 3:30 a.m. CE(S)T.


Isn't it amazing how simple pictures like these can take you back in time (my sister also took them in the old neighborhood, well, old for me)?
This used to be part of my way home from my best friend. I could have taken a shorter one, but there was no "zebra stripe" (aka crosswalk) on the busy road there, so I always took a little detour to be on the safe side.
Today I watched a video about how some people read (leave out prologue and epilogue, only read the dialogue ... how weird), and the creator mentioned reading in the street.
That's what I used to do, have my nose in a book on the way home or make up stories for myself which were usually based on favorite books.
I can never see this part of the street without remembering a neighbor kindly warning me not to read while walking and watch my step instead. Yup, that's what I have to do nowadays, but back then I didn't li
sten ðŸ˜‰
 


Are you ready for the weekend?

As part of the reboot, we will be featuring a different blog every week.
How about stopping by and saying hello? Let them know we sent you.


This week our spotlight is on bushel and a pickle.


Linda from bushel and a pickle says: "
Welcome! I’m Linda and I’m so glad you stopped by.
I live a rich and full life in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in a very, very old farmhouse. Bushel & a pickle (named for my daughter’s childhood saying) is my story of life experiences, family, travels and faith."



Marsha from Marsha in the Middle started blogging in 2021 as an exercise in increasing her neuroplasticity. Oh, who are we kidding? Marsha started blogging because she loves clothes, and she loves to talk or, in this case, write!

Melynda from Scratch Made Food! & DIY Homemade Household - The name says it all, we homestead in East Texas, with three generations sharing this land. I cook and bake from scratch, between gardening and running after the chickens, and knitting!

Lisa from Boondock Ramblings shares about the fiction she writes and reads, her faith, homeschooling, photography and more.

Cat from
 Cat's Wire has what she calls a jumping spider brain. She has many interests and will blog about whatever catches her attention - crafts, books, old movies, collectibles or random things.

Rena from Fine Whatever Blog writes about style, midlife, and the "fine whatever" moments that make life both meaningful and fun. Since 2015, she's been celebrating creativity, confidence, and finding joy in the everyday.


Here are some of my picks from last week's link up.


Judee really makes me want to try frozen limonana, it sounds so good!

I think it's great that Mireille is trying to have a solo picnic each week.

Joanne's post about Bryce Canyon gave me a flashback, such beautiful pictures.

Have you ever heard about croissant s'mores? Laura has tried them.

Nancy shows us a modern take on countryside chic.


Let's link up!

Guidelines:
This link party is for blog posts only. All other links will be deleted.
Please link only blog posts you created yourself. Please link directly to the URL of your blog post and not the main address of your blog.
Please do not link to videos, sales ads, or social media links such as YouTube videos/shorts, Instagram or Facebook reels, TikTok videos, or any other social media based content.
Please do visit other blogs and give the gift of a comment. 

Notice:
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We welcome unlimited, family friendly content. This can include opinion pieces, recipes, travel recaps, fashion ideas, crafts, thrifting, lifestyle, book reviews or discussions, photography, art, and so much more!
Thank you for linking up with us! 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

5/28/2026

Silent films - Mary, Queen of Tots (Our Gang Comedy)

Do you remember "Our Gang" or maybe they are more familiar to you as "The Little Rascals"?
I think it's about time we had a look at one of the films from this popular series!
Today I got "Mary, Queen of Tots" from 1925 for you.

Public domain via Wikipedia

"Little Mary of the Big House - - Father and mother are always too busy to remember that they love her - -"
Mary is lonely in the big house. Her governess is very strict and doesn't even allow her dolls. Her only friend is the gardener.


After finding Mary in the bathroom with a very wet dog, the governess tells her to stay in her room. Mary kicks a few things with a lot of verve and then sits on her bed crying.


Not to worry, though. Her gardener friend is approached by a lady who makes dolls together with her husband, and he buys four and sneaks into Mary's room to give them to her.
Mary reads to her new friends, but gets tired and falls asleep on the floor. The dolls and two plush animals, a dog and a donkey, come to life and explore the room.


When the governess comes in to check on Mary before going out, she finds the dolls and throws them right into the bin (which is an absolute shame as the dolls look really amazing, also she could have put Mary on her bed ... we don't like her).


Mary wakes up and runs outside to look for her dolls, but she just finds four boys who look like them!


She hugs them which confuses them highly, asks them why they ran away, and takes them back to the big house showing them around. "- - And this is the dining room." I love the reply. "That interests me - Let's eat! - -" (That could have been me.)
While Mary goes to the kitchen for food, the boys - Joe, Jackie, Mickey, and Little Farina - explore the house. They use the tea trolley as a scooter, Farina struggles with a chapeau claque - an opera hat that keeps folding and unfolding by itself -, they all take turns falling down on what Mickey is sure to be a magic rug (in fact just a rug on a very slippery floor), and they get nervous about a very loud wireless shouting HEY at them.
When the governess returns, she's shocked to see the boys who so much look like the dolls she has thrown away. Mickey tells her they have been invited to dinner, but she goes off to fetch the police.
Meanwhile, the gardener has found the dolls in the bin and Mickey explains that they model for the dollmaker couple. He also warns them that the governess will bring back the police.


The boys quickly hide in the kitchen, so the policeman only finds the dolls. He asks Mary if the governess is crazy. She tells him she doesn't know for sure, "mebbe", and he takes the governess away.


In another short it says "Mary - - She causes all the fights in the neighborhood - And there's lots of them - -"
Mary Kornman was the leading female character in the "Our Gang Comedies" from 1922 to 1926. Although this short is from 1925, I know I read somewhere that it might be the story how Mary came to join the gang, if only I knew where!

"Our Gang" was created by Hal Roach who also worked with Laurel and Hardy and with Harold Lloyd.
Roach said that he saw a few kids fighting about the best stick in a yard and thought that although they would have forgotten about those sticks in a few hours, they were so important to them now, just because that's the way kids are. This gave him the idea of a kids and pets series.
While of course dated in some regards, "Our Gang" is simply about kids from a working class neighborhood (which can lead to fights with wealthier kids) - playing, being themselves, full of fantasy, ideas, and enthusiasm, but also innovative in avoiding chores or schoolwork.

Between 1922 and 1944, there were 88 silent shorts, 132 sound shorts, and one feature length film.
Obviously, there were different children involved over such a long time.

We watched "The Little Rascals" on TV when I was a kid, but I don't remember anything (but the dog). I watched a few of the films and chose this one because it's just cute, especially the scene when the dolls come to life and explore Mary's room.
I wouldn't be surprised if they wouldn't pop up on the blog every, now and then ...


Sources and further info:

1. The Our Gang Story: A History of "The Little Rascals". On the YouTube channel of Legend Films
2. Our Gang/The Little Rascals (Partially Lost 1920s Silent Short and Foreign Prints). On: Lost Media Archive

5/26/2026

Heat

I don't function in the heat and I complained and whined more than once about it here on the blog. I always start early, too. If temperatures in my place go higher than 20 °C/ 68 °F, I'm beginning to fall apart, can't help it.
Luckily, I don't live in a really hot region!

A sunset sky from 2011.
That's how heat feels to me.

As my brain is in a puddle on the floor somewhere at the moment, I haven't been able to finish any of the blog posts I started.
So I'll be taking the easy way out instead today and share some "hot" items with you that I made over the years.


Now excuse me while I'm going to look if I can find and mop up my brain anywhere. Do you think it'll come together again if I put it in the freezer?

5/23/2026

Random Saturday - Nachtkrabb

Do you know the "Nachtkrabb"? No? I'm not surprised.
Although the Nachtkrabb has always been familiar to me, there's really only one story I remember from my own family. My little brother was probably around five years old at the time (we're talking late 70s). He was sitting at the kitchen table, ready to eat an egg, when one of my other brothers came in and told him that if he cracked the egg, a Nachtkrabb would come flying out. Little brother freaked out and actually stopped eating eggs for a short while (but got over it quite quickly).
What I don't remember is if he had been told about the Nachtkrabb before and if that was what shocked him so much or if it was just the idea of anything at all flying (!) out of that egg.

You must know, the Nachtkrabb is a mysterious and dark creature, a bugbear in the folklore of southern Germany and Austria.
Other names for him (I have only seen someone call it her once) are Nachtkrapp or Nachtrabe which translates to "Night raven". I'll stick with the "bb" spelling for this post.

I love ravens and they were the inspiration for this
bead embroidered necklace, not the Nachtkrabb,
but I have been thinking about a Nachtkrabb
version for a while ... if only I had a good idea!

As it often happens in folklore, the tales can differ more or less from region to region.
I don't even remember if we only knew the name or if we were actually got told a story. If we were, it would probably have been the one that prevails here - of the huge black birdlike creature flying through the night looking for children who haven't gone to bed - and it would have had to come from my father's side because my mother wasn't Swabian.
In short, it's one of those stories made up to get children to do or
not to do certain things, in this case staying out after dark. In some regions children who don't obey get caught in a big sack and carried away. What happens to them isn't said, but they don't make it home which leaves the outcome open, but doesn't bode well. Other regions are more explicit, there the Nachtkrabb takes the children back to his nest where he devours them.

Other countries have their own versions of the night ravens, by the way.
The raven and other corvids have always been part of folk tales, in good or bad ways.
Just think of Hugin and Munin, the ravens of the god Odin, sent out by him to bring him news of the world.
In some cultures, ravens were used in oracles to predict the outcome of battles or help to make important decisions.
Some Native American tribes see the raven both as a creator and a trickster.
The positive image changed in Christianity. Corvids fed off carrion, animals but also humans after battles or excecutions which didn't help their reputation. They were seen as messengers of death, disaster, and plague, and also as familiars of witches.

Contemporary art depicting two ravens,
such as Hugin and Munin, by Kim Diaz Holm
(the young Mr. Holm)
CC BY 4.0
 

So with that negative image in mind, the idea of a huge kidnapping variety could easily frighten you as a kid.
But why did I describe the Nachtkrabb as a birdlike creature and not as a ravenlike one?
There are not just different tales about what he does, but also different theories about his origin.

One of those is that it doesn't have anything to do with ravens at all, but with the Northern Bald Ibis, a bird that used to be widespread, for example across parts of Central Europe such as Southern Germany or Austria. Hunting the ibis for food, the beautiful feathers or taxidermy, and the destruction of its habitat brought it to the brink of complete extinction.
There is a population in Morocco and smaller ones elsewhere thanks to reintroductions, but the species is still endangered.
The Wilhelma, a big Botanical-Zoological Garden not far from here, has always had a big aviary with them in front of which you often heard people commenting how ugly they were. I think they're fabulous.
Anyhow, their looks may have inspired spooky stories.

Picture by Len Worthington, CC BY-SA 2.0
via Wikimedia Commons

So who knows what's the truth.
Today people (hopefully!) try to avoid scary stories like that in the raising of children even if it's supposed to be for their own sake, but nevertheless the Nachtkrabb hasn't been forgotten completely.
He still has a place in some local carnival celebrations, for example, where some of the masks remind of ravens, others of the bald ibis, but also stories, songs, or amusement parks!
You won't be understanding the lyrics of this song as it's in a German dialect (not mine), but I like the video.



To be honest, back then I thought the idea of a tiny Nachtkrabb flying out of an egg was rather cute than scary, but I couldn't tell you what image exactly I have in my head (which is the reason why I haven't managed to make my own version yet).
You know me, though. I can't tell you a story with animals without bringing a cat into it.
This is a painting by my friend Heather - the one from the HeatherCats - which I had to own. I could see my Ponder spreading his wings and flying into the night like that. I love this little painting so much.
On the other hand, I also think it would be a good inspiration for a Nachtkrabb piece ... I'm not going to give up on the idea yet.


Are there any regional bugbear stories where you are?

5/21/2026

Silent movies - The Freshman

Two weeks ago we had a college football hero, last week Harold Lloyd, how about Harold Lloyd at college today?
Here's "The Freshman" from 1925.

Public domain via Wikipedia

Today we have a proper plot. As Lloyd says in his autobiography, films like the "Lonesome Luke" ones are gag type comedies, films like "The Freshman" are character comedies which start more slowly and develop.

Harold Lamb is a young man excited for college. He copies a greeting - a little jig and a handshake -, the outfit, and the nickname "Speedy" from his favorite college movie, he has saved some money, he has high expectations about becoming a "college hero" like his movie idol.


On the train he meets Peggy, he gets interested in her crossword puzzle and they get along splendidly.


Once arrived in town, Harold falls right into the hands of the College Cad (no names, it's practically a tpye) for whom he's the perfect victim due to his desire to be popular in connection with his incredible naiveté.


The Cad shows him the "car assigned to him" which is in fact the dean's car and lures him on the stage where the dean is supposed to hold the opening speech by making him save a kitten from a height (if that wasn't enough already to hate the Cad, just wait, there's more to come), then tells him he has to make a speech during which Harold is laughed at by the whole assembly.

Harold holds the rescued kitten, but puts it under his sweater when he needs both
hands free. Mama Kitty urgently wants her baby back.
You understand that I was legally bound (by Gundel) to include these pictures
(and it was hard to keep it down just to these two, the kitten is adorable).

The Cad and his friends - male and female - cheer for Harold who thinks he's on the best way to be popular and invites the group for ice cream, but the Cad keeps inviting more people on the way to the ice cream parlor.
Look who follows them, too!

Again, legally bound.

After spending a good deal of his savings like that, Harold has to downgrade in regards to his living quarters.
There he meets Peggy again who happens to be the landlady's daughter. Harold's shirt has been ripped up when the kitten climbed up it under his sweater and Peggy sews the button on for him. You see him secretly cutting off more buttons.


To up his game, Harold tries out for the football team, but the coach isn't impressed. When their only tackle dummy is damaged, however, they use Harold as a live dummy and even the coach is impressed by his unbroken spirit at the end of the day. To "reward" him, they make him water boy and let him think he's one of the substitutes.

Harold thinks his leg has broken apart, but it's the dummy's leg.

Do you remember Pete from "Our Gang"?
This is his dad, Pal the Wonder Dog, at
six months old. He actually had a three
quarter ring around his eye while
Pete's ring was makeup.
(Gundel wasn't sure you needed to know
that. Always those dogs.)

Harold hosts the "Fall Frolic" dance.
He gets a new suit for the occasion, but his tailor has dizzy spells and therefore can't make it in time, so the suit is only held together by basting stitches and finally falls apart.
From the phone booth he has hidden in, Harold sees how the Cad tries to force himself on Peggy and teaches him a lesson.


The Cad retaliates by telling him that he has never been popular and that it all has just been a big joke.
Harold is devastated, but Peggy comforts him and tells him to stop trying to be someone he isn't and make them like him for what he really is.
Harold sees his chance at the big football game still thinking he's in the team because Peggy who knows the truth didn't have the heart to tell him. When the coach runs out of substitutes because of injuries, he has to send in Harold to avoid the game being forfeited.
Of course, Harold manages a touchdown in the last minute - and with just one shoe on, too!


Sweeter to him than being celebrated by everyone, however, is this note that Peggy slips him while he's being carried into the locker room ...


Let me get something out of the way first.
I hate bullying of all sorts and I really felt for Harold. You are supposed to do that of course, but also still to be able to laugh. Therefore, the scene of him as a live tackle dummy is cut rather short and a scene at the ice cream parlor was actually cut completely according to Lloyd's autobiography because it made the test audience feel too sorry for Harold to be funny.

If you read my post about "Brown of Harvard", you may wonder why I even watched another college movie (by the way, it's said that "The Freshman" kicked off a college movie vogue).
The difference is that I knew bits of "The Freshman" from the olden days when I was still an innocent, fresh-faced kid. Seriously though, I did know parts from the old compilation films. This was Lloyd's financially most successful silent movie and I knew it would be hilarious.
Tom Brown annoys me, but I route for Harold even though they both end up in a big football game, a sport I know even less about than others.
Also Harold's football game is fun because he's still Harold. He's not athletic, he's struggling, and it's a miracle that he suceeds. Tom's isn't because he is a sportsman and we know that he just needs to shed off the old wisecracker's shell, get serious and do it. You know what I mean.
Something that I thought was funny, though - Lea Stans from "Silent-ology" also pointed it out - was that there was absolutely no mention of studying. Even Tom held a stack of books once even if not for long 
😂
Then again one of the intertitles said: "Tate University - a large football stadium with a college attached." I wonder if that was the reason why the Germans literally called the movie "The sports student".

Most of all, however, Harold is relatable. He is the ordinary guy who wants to be popular, who wants to be liked, who wants to show what he can do. Probably we all have been there one way or the other, haven't we (I mean, isn't blogging and hoping for reactions a rather good example 
😉)?
We can relate to his reaction when the Cad tells him the truth, the shock, trying to laugh it off like it's nothing, then the breakdown. And it's so sweet to see Peggy comforting him and building him up again. The chemistry between Harold and Peggy (Jobyna Ralston) is great.


Yes, and then it is just nice to see the ordinary guy succeed even if it's not very realistic and we know it. It's something we maybe hope for sometimes in our own lives.
"Wait a moment, though," I hear you say. "What was it you said about sports heros?"
The difference for me is that in the end you don't find Harold letting himself be celebrated in a crowd or a parade. You find him alone in the shower - which he turns on by accident without even noticing - with what's important to him. Peggy's note.
 

I love this movie and think it's really funny and sweet.


Sources and further reading:

1. Stephen Winer: The Freshman: Speedy Saves the Day! A Harold Lamb Adventure! On: The Criterion Collection. Essays, March 25, 2014
2. Lea Stans: Thoughts On: "The Freshman". On: Silent-ology, May 23, 2016
3. Harold Lloyd (in collaboration with Wesley W. Stout): An American Comedy, New York, NY, Dover Publ., republication of the 1928 edition