Politics. I just love trump. Thats my boy. Im honored to have the heroic crew and passengers of southwest flight 1380. We salute you and every member of this crew. Thank you very much. [applause] brian what city is that . Steve brian, you look at it every morning. Brian i believe its new york city. Steve it is new york city. We are live. It is a wednesday. It is may the 2nd. Thank you very much for joining us. I have got to confess Something Weird happened at our house last night. I think it started about 1 30. You know when you just hear a chirp about every three or four minutes. Ainsley a bird in your house . Steve smoke alarm or Carbon Monoxide detect ter it needed a battery. Brian at least it wasnt a leak. Steve i didnt know. I couldnt find any more batteries that fit it. Its like is there Carbon Monoxide. Ains is it one of those rectangular . Steve it was a double a. You are thinking of a 9volt. I took batteries out of the tv remote. Ainsley reminder to change the battery in your
Four crime novels that could do with a dose of steroids
Boldly kickstarting two new imprints, Westland has simultaneously launched four crime novels by three debutants Gautam S. Mengle and Gabriel Khan are mentored by veteran crime reporter S. Hussain Zaidi, and Jigs Ashar by pulp-master Ravi Subramanian. The outcome may turn out to be a market success since these paperbacks are eminently suitable for newcomers to the genre they are nicely cosy, asexual bordering on neutered, and largely non-violent, save for the sporadic creepy moment.
To the latter category belong the horrific hangovers as portrayed by Mengle in
Intersections, which features API Mhatre, a policeman driven to drink by inner demons. He wakes up “sprawled out on the floor somewhere between the bathroom and the living room, with no memory of how he had ended up there. The fact that he was facing away from the bathroom indicated that he had been on his way back after relieving himself, and the absence of any b