- What is the strangest thing you’ve ever eaten?
"Chinese casserole" via the mother of my former spouse. No food should be that pale, or bland. - If you could bring one character to life from your favorite book, who would it be?
Everett Chance, from The Brothers K (by David James Duncan), or Jonathan Bovaro, from The Girl She Used to Be (by David Cristofano). - What dead person would you least want to be haunted by?
anyone of whom I'm not fond in life, I suppose. Let's start with whomever created the Geico caveman advertising campaign. - If you had to be trapped in a book for a month, which book would you choose? (you can also pick what character you would want to be as well)
It's tempting to say The Rich Part of Life, and though I adore that book, there's too much there that's heartbreaking, too, to live it. It's an obvious choice: The Brothers K, to be Kincaid. - If you had to be trapped in a TV show for a month, which show would you choose? (you can also pick what character you would want to be as well)
the only recurring series I'm watching right now is The Big Bang Theory, and it's just not that kind of show for me. I would love to go back to be Jill on ReGenesis. Not only was it a good part, smart and feminine, brainy and physical, and real, but also playing off of the most drop-dead sexy actor ever, Peter Outerbridge. Loved the show, loved the characters, loved the guy.
2.29.2012
to read a book for the first time is to make an acquaintance with a new friend; to read it for a second time is to meet an old one
2.28.2012
the word "good" has many meanings
(I can understand using some little-known words for this, but this is...odd.)
February 27: sycophant
We're in the midst of the 'anniversary' portion of our year, when things get a little clogged in my memory and it sometimes takes a bit for me to remember to live in the present and not the past. The 22nd is memorable as the day I did something wonderfully out of character, which paid dividends for years to come. The 24th is, four years ago, when I got my first two tattoos. The 25th is, good and bad, when the brave act of the 22nd unfolded in a big way. Also nearing my half-birthday, and the birthday of the guy whose wife accused me (wrongly, as it happens, and in a barely-keeping-it-together fashion) of having an affair with him a couple of years ago. (No, I haven't seen him since then.) (Nor had I seen him for ~15 years before that, for what that's worth.)
That day is also Johnnie's birthday.
And next week comes Nick's birthday (the 6th) and my former spouse's (the 7th). No, I don't have all this noted somewhere--it just lives in my head, and pops up when I see these dates at work (stupid street dates [The Cat knows what I'm talking about] and meetings) or make plans in advance with friends. I would love to be able to shut off whatever piece of my brain makes it possible to remember this sort of thing. If anyone can help me do that, I'd be thrilled.
February 28: eristic
[the title quotation is by G.K. Chesterton, and reads in its entirety: "The word 'good' has many meanings. For example, if a man were to shoot his grandmother at a range of five hundred yards, I should call him a good shot, but not necessarily a good man."]
2.26.2012
no one understands that you have given everything. You must give more.
February 26: jacquerie
A relatively quiet weekend, overall, even given the burst of travel yesterday and the hours spent making changes to the blog template. I watched a DVD--The One, with Jet Li, which wasn't his best work but turned out to be more entertaining than originally feared--and finished a couple of books (Alan Shapiro's Night of the Republic: Poems; The Side of the Angels by Christina Bartolomeo; and Goodnight, Nobody by Jennifer Weiner), cleaned the kitchen and took a few naps. Two necessary tasks that I did not accomplish: picking up allergy medicine (I'm totally out again. How does this keep happening? Glargh!) and vacuuming the whole place. Looks like this will be a busy week for after-work tasks.
[the title quotation is by Antonio Porchia, trans. by W.S. Merwin]
2.25.2012
all changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy
If you're reading this post through a feed of some sort, do me a favor and click through to the blog itself. I've made some template changes for the first time in a couple of years, and I'm curious for reactions from the faithful (and the unfaithful, and those just stopping by).
February 24: Rubicon
Next, we ate an extremely leisurely lunch at the Irish place. Our waiter (who could have been in a boy band or possibly modeling for J.Crew after his shift--he was more beautiful than the most beautiful woman I've seen in the past year, by 10%) was arrogant but skilled, and delivered our drinks and food effectively and without undue spillage. The more-brisk-than-expected (thanks to the probably 25° windchill) walk to Crate and Barrel did us no harm; the bar had been over-warm, and a little sobering up prior to the temptations of C&B is not a bad thing. Despite some surprisingly pushy customer service personnel, we enjoyed our time there very much as well. This was the (ostensible) object of our trip:
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| The Atwood frame and headboard |
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| The Elevate bookcase |
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| The Elevate low bookcase |
Instead, I bought a couple of things for my collections, and off we went, heading across town in the opposite direction. The 'burbia is...awkward, I guess, to drive, since where we wanted to go turned out to be in quite disparate areas. If we started at the compass point S, and Am Sci & Surplus is N, the Irish place and Crate & Barrel are sort of E, and World Market, our last destination, is, essentially, W. Sort of. It was a lot of driving, and a lot of traffic. Neither of which either of us is used to. So that was a trial. But we survived. Anyway....
Am Sci & Surplus is for geeks, nerds, dorks, and scientists. Crate and Barrel is for yuppies and hipsters. World Market, on the other hand, is for all of them and the rest of us. Weird, wonderful, bizarre, a little scary, deadly when you're hungry or bored or desperately need a gift, there's literally something for everyone. M. bought some olives the size of my thumb and a jar of pesto, and I spent ~$50 on....
| The spoils. |
Several packages of scone mix (surprise! they're not from scratch); lemon cookies; a set of napkins, since mine have seen better days - and, oddly, all of mine are blue; a couple of sets of chopsticks (which, locally, are used for swizzle sticks), and two chopstick rests (black origami swan and a blue fan, which is actually an incense holder but who's going to know?). Also pictured are the shot glass and saki cup that I got from C&B
February 25: diapause
(Oh, God, I'm snorting with laughter as I type....)
[the title quotation is by Anatole France, and reads in its entirety: "All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another."]
2.23.2012
weekends don't count unless you spend them doing something completely pointless
(Some of these are just too easy.)
Sleepy. It's winter again, however temporarily. Half day tomorrow, followed by a massage and new hair. Time to start thinking of what to wear to my brother's wedding, and how to wear my hair (i.e. whether to grow it out), and what the hell to do about a date. I'm pretty much constrained to someone from the Midwest, because no one with any sense would travel to the home state in late July. If it's not 100 degrees, I'll be amazed.
Weekend plans, too. Heading to the suburbs with the Mumbler to look at beds (frames) at Crate and Barrel, wander American Science & Surplus, check out furniture at World Market, have lunch (and then some) at the Irish place, and whatever else suits our mood[s]. I was going to drive, since I've spent much more time in the area than he has and it was my idea in the first place, but considering the weather, we're more likely to want his Jeep than my slippery compact car.
And so, to bed.
[the title quotation is by Bill Watterson]
2.22.2012
your broccoli will tell you how to eat it
Idealistic. Warm. Caring. Creative. Imaginative. Original. Artistic. Perceptive. Supportive. Empathetic. Cooperative. Compassionate. Responsive. Sensitive. Gentle. Tenderhearted. Devoted. Loyal. Virtuous. Self-critical. Perfectionistic. Self-sacrificing. Deep. Multifaceted. Daydreamer. Persistent. Determined. Hardworking. Improvising. Initiator of new projects and possibilities. Agent of change. Drawn to possibilities: "what could be" rather than "what is." Values oriented with a high level of personal integrity. Focus is on understanding the self, personal growth, and contributing to society in a meaningful way. Under the surface appearances: complex and driven to seek perfection and improvement, in the self, in relationships, in self-expression.
If the career does not express idealism and drive for improvement, then boredom and restlessness sets in.
Dislike conflict, dealing with trivialities, and engaging in meaningless social chatter. Thrive on acknowledgement and recognition so long as not attention-centered. Need a private work-space, autonomy, and a minimum of bureaucratic rules.
That is what it means to be an INFP (Introversion, iNtuition, Feeling, Perception), one of the sixteen personality types on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI). (The other options are Extroversion, Sensing, Thinking, and Judgment.) Roughly 4-5% of the United States population is estimated to be INFP, which is often called the "healer" personality type.
Each time that I've taken the test - and there have been several, whether for work or as a test subject while living in the Mitten - I've been an INFP, and I've always scored Strong or Very Strong in each category. It is unlikely that I will ever score dramatically differently; I will probably always be INFP.
Among the career options that are suggested to be a good fit for INFPs:
- artist
- "attorney devoted to righting wrongs" (as compared to the ordinary attorneys, who cause them?)
- clergy in low-dogma faiths
- coach (personal growth/effectiveness)
- consultant (education, human resources)
- counselor (relationship, spiritual, career)
- editor
- entrepreneur
- healer (alternative disciplines)
- librarian
- physician (psychiatrist, family, holistic)
- psychologist
- researcher
- social scientist
- social worker (excuse me while I laugh myself sick...)
- songwriter/musician
- teacher
- therapist
- writer, poet, or journalist
2.21.2012
hells anticipated but foregone
All bodies have their yearnings for true evil,
A pall of darkness blotting out the heart,
Nor can remorse cancel luckless events
That rotted our engagements with Heaven’s truth;
These are now history. Therefore once more
We swear perpetual love at love’s own altar
And reassign our bodies, in good faith,
To faith in their reanimated souls.
But on our death beds shall our flaming passions
Revert in memory to their infantile
Delight of mocking the stark laws of love?
Rather let death concede a warning record
Of hells anticipated but foregone.
2.20.2012
loneliness...is and always has been the central and inevitable experience of every man
2.19.2012
the trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt
[This one was completely new to me.]
Postsecret blew my mind today.
Since the site has gained (by leaps and bounds) in popularity, the "secrets" have seemed, more and more, to be mere showing off/attention seeking/artwork rather than what the whole project seemed to be trying to be, from the beginning. Lately, I've felt like it's less and less relevant to me - which is not such a bad thing, really, given the content of the average revelation. Today, however, it went a little wonky. Two of the "secrets" really, really pissed me off.
"I go out of my way to park annoyingly close to people who park poorly in hopes that they will have a hard time getting out... Oops! My bad for parking in the lines. :-/"
In other words:
- parked as best they could, compensating for others who were also parked poorly?
- was in a legitimate hurry, perhaps because of illness/injury/work requirements?
- was simply having a bad day?
"I keep a list of people I'd mace, given the opportunity."
Those photographed are, clockwise from top, Ben Roethlisberger, George Huguely, and Chris Brown. What do these three men have in common?
- Chris Brown: "In 2009, he pleaded guilty to felony assault of singer and then-girlfriend Rihanna. He was sentenced to five years probation and six months of community service." (See his Wikipedia page for more.)
- George Huguely: A University of Virginia Lacrosse player charged with murdering his former girlfriend, after having abused her while they were in a relationship. (See the Wikipedia page about her murder and The Huffington Post article about the ongoing trial for more.)
- Ben Roethlisberger: Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback. From the Wikipedia page about him-- "Off the field, Roethlisberger has been involved in high-profile incidents, including a nearly fatal motorcycle accident in 2006 and sexual assault allegations in Lake Tahoe in 2008 and in Milledgeville, Georgia, in 2010. Neither allegation resulted in charges being filed; however, the latter act resulted in Roethlisberger being suspended for six games (reduced to four) under the NFL's personal conduct policy for the start of the 2010 season."
- Pleaded guilty, was sentenced, and is serving sentence.
- Was formally charged and is at trial right now.
- Accused.
Does anyone still understand this? I-N-N-O-C-E-N-T until proven guilty.
Stupid bitch. May you and the charmer in postcard #1 be locked in an endless cycle of Macing and car-scratching throughout eternity. Y'all deserve each other.
2.18.2012
time is the school in which we learn / time is the fire in which we burn
February 18: frowsy
Today's activities included concluding the reading of a couple of books (Bibliophilia by Michael Griffith and Noble Destiny by Katie Macalister); paying bills; catching up on blog posts here and elsewhere; cleaning the kitchen (why oh why is that a neverending task?!); watching a movie (A River Runs Through It, which I haven't seen in years but, wow, loved it again just like before, and now I am SO much more homesick than I had been); and thinking about but not doing about twenty other things that desperately need doing before the weekend is over. I can't figure out if I'm disorganized, plagued by a time warp, or maybe just like everybody else.
[the title quotation is by Delmore Schwartz, from "Calmly We Walk Through This April's Day"]
perhaps I should have tried to keep the empty space open by keeping quiet. But I only have words, and without them I would not be able to hear...
January 17: fifth column
February 17: maieutic
The ongoing interview series with bgm of Sledding with Rosebud, volume II
- The Time Machine has been revved up, but there has been a slight malfunction - you get to go back in time, but this time, you get to BE somebody. So, in the wide wonderful world of all history, who do you want to be?
The first time I read these questions, I loved this alternate take on the alternate-history entry. Now that I'm writing it, though, it seems much less fun. I think that (thanks to "maieutic", above - and I believe that the question-giver will know about whom I was writing there), in thinking about history from the point of view of 'a real historian' (rather than a regular person), it has become impossible for me to consider injecting myself into it without "poisoning the timeline." If I admire someone and the way that they lived their life, how can I think that I would do it even so well? (And if I did not admire them, why would I want to live that life at all?) I think it probably answers the question just as much (or it answers a different question even better) to say that I cannot answer this question in the way it was intended.
So, the best that I can do is to say that, putting aside issues of personality and practicality (e.g. cleanliness standards of the day), I would love to spend a day or two in the inner circle of the following people, to be someone that each of them talked to about what really mattered:
- Frank Murphy (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from 1940-1949, he wrote a dissenting opinion in Korematsu v. United States)
- Gene Sarazen (an athlete and a gentleman)
- my paternal grandfather, who died about 5 years before I was born
- Jim Henson (it is literally impossible to imagine my childhood without Sesame Street and The Muppets!)
- Adrienne Shelly (an actor/filmmaker whose work means a lot to me)
- Ah, a novel idea. Do you have any ideas rattling around in your expansive intellect about writing a novel? If you did, how would you approach it? Would you take notes on people you already know to flesh out characters? Would you choose to write an historical novel? Which direction might you take?
I do have some ideas for longer fiction. There are handwritten notes, some vague (handwritten) outlines, some short treatments on each of my home computers and on various portable media. I would not take notes on people that I already know, necessarily - more like, through conversations with people that I know well, I will gain insight into characters that already exist in my head, in sort of not-yet-set form. Historical? No, I don't think so. Maybe it sounds strange, but that's not the way that I think. (It won't be set in the future, either.) - Oh, the places you'll go... name three places you would like to visit before you shuffle off this mortal coil.
Ireland - nothing more specific than that, since I'd like to go with someone who's been before and knows what's to see; Spain (everything); and Canada - I understand the bowling is terrific. - You have sweet feet - this is self-evident. Is there a regimen you maintain to keep your feet awesome? What things do you do to pamper or dress up your peds?
There's nothing too outlandish, I don't think? I started with good genes, of course. Hmm. Without getting into anything too technical, proprietary or unseemly...
- regular washing (with lengthy soaking) in warmer rather than cooler water
- scrubbing to remove dead skin - this is not something to do "only during warm weather"; regular upkeep is necessary or it gets completely out of control
- tending to nail length and relative smoothness
- lotion regularly. As in, more than once per day. I use a "foot-specific" cream at night, but usually either hand-lotion or even face cream in the morning. More expensive but it lasts a lot longer.
- change polish regularly. During spring/summer/fall, that's every three days. Winter, it drags out to five- to seven.
- I considered using the word succulent in the previous question, but it sounded so... wrong. So, is there anything you find succulent, whether it be food, or a book, or a person, or a physical characteristic of someone?
Succulent food: a perfectly-cooked steak, dripping with juice and redolent of garlic
Succulent reading: when the phone rings and you jump because you didn't even realize you were - the book has you so into it that you cease to be separate from what you're reading. Example: anything by Jennifer Crusie.
Succulent person/physical characteristic of a person: hmmm. How to answer this without getting myself in heaps and loads of trouble...? I suppose it would be someone whose particular combination of physical and psychological attributes seem like a potential match to the awkward, 'oddly-shaped, interlocking and tessellating' edges that make up my individual puzzle piece. Maybe the great (if stupidly obscure) Danish author Jens Christian Grøndahl said it best, in (his fantastic novel) Silence in October:“What was it about her that made her such a watershed? ... Was it our mutual love of Mark Rothko and Morris Louis, her way of intuiting what I was going to say about them and about everything else we discussed because each of us had thought and felt the same thing? Was it the remarkable, finely tuned, undisturbed, and noiseless wavelength where we had found each other so easily, because for years we had transmitted on the same frequency without knowing it?”
2.16.2012
disease is somatic; the suffering from it, psychic
February 16: inkling
Under the weather and a little grumpy. Needing a weekend. Needing 3 days' worth of sleep.
[the title quotation is by Martin H. Fischer]
2.15.2012
no man drowns if he perseveres in praying to God, and can swim
February 15: cloying
- At what age (if at all) did you learn to swim?
I was first in water over my head before I started school, but I first took "lessons" as part of physical education classes in junior high (seventh grade). - Some educators have proposed that swimming lessons be mandatory for children. Do you think this is a good idea?
absolutely. Anyone who lives near water - any water - should learn at least the basics for saving him/herself from drowning his (potential) rescuer in the event of an accident or worse. Bridge collapses happen. Floods happen. Stupidity happens. Leaving it up to someone else to save me, when I can potentially at least try to save myself? That's not going to happen. - How often do you hang out with friends at a swimming pool?
when my friends have swimming pools, I'm there. I love the water. I'm still not a great swimmer - I never will be - but I love to get wet, love to be around it. More under natural circumstances than pools, but I'll take what I can get. - Have you ever been thrown into a pool with your clothes on?
I don't think so? I wouldn't like it. Not because I'm concerned about my clothes so much, but just because that sort of behavior is juvenile and dangerous. - How often do you visit a beach?
see above - whenever possible! - When were you last in a boat?
it's been a while; fewer of my friends have boats than have [access to] pools.
[from The Cat, who got it here; the title quotation is a Russian proverb]
2.14.2012
I don't wish to be everything to everyone, but I would like to be something to someone.
February 14: dally
Rough day. I think I'm getting a cold, and this holiday stinks.
[the title quotation is by Javan]
2.13.2012
though love be a day and life be nothing, it shall not stop kissing
February 13: chirography
Winter weather is back, if only for a day or so. It was quite cold this weekend and has been snowing all day. The drive home was fine, though, more wet than anything. Tomorrow is forecast to be fairly decent, and before it snows again we've got another high in the mid-40s. This is a strange, strange season.
My parents have been through a rough couple of weeks. Two of their neighbors passed away. Each was elderly, and both died of natural causes, but it was still a shock. It is a neighborhood that lends itself more toward older people, though, because of its rather secluded location and total lack of outdoor play areas, etc. Still, it's not something one would expect.
Don't leave the important stuff to another day, just in case there is no other day.
[the title quotation is by E.E. Cummings]
2.12.2012
sometimes you have to get to know someone really well to realize you're really strangers
February 12: pedantic
| The vaunted wrestling shoes, products of Earth-scouring. Finally! |
2.11.2012
people say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading
I've always been a reader. For as far back as I can remember, any spare moment (and probably the majority of those 'unspare' moments, too, when I should've been doing something else...) was spent reading, searching for something to read, rereading, talking about reading, writing, writing about reading, or thinking about reading or writing. Words and stories are an integral part of who I am. Maybe they are the most integral part of me, in fact. Maybe the rest of me wouldn't exist at all, now that I think about it, if I weren't tied together with thoughts and memories and feelings about what I've read, want to read, and want to write woven around and through.
Paper, I thought, was necessary for this process. Tangibility. The weight of the book in my hand. The texture of the pages, the edge at my fingertips as I finish the page and maintain the thought while I turn it, breathless (always holding my breath while I turn the page - doesn't everyone?), rushing as I start the next. The scent. The oppressiveness and expense of hardcover, with the benefit of staying open so much more nicely in the process. The cheapness of mass market paperbacks (16-19 cm tall - the back-pocket size you can buy at the drugstore), with the drawback of flimsiness and a tendency to look worn before they've been read through once - but also that much easier to block open with an elbow or something on the desk while I'm eating, without fearing too much for the binding. My personal preference: trade paperback (generally: softcover, the width of a hardcover but shorter [19-23 cm], bound more flexibly than mass market). In the middle, price-wise, between hardback and mass. Built for rereading. They can take a lot of use and still look as good as the day they rolled off the press.
Where does the e-reader (by which I mean a book on an electronic device of any kind, be it reading on a desk- or laptop computer, netbook or notepad, smartphone, or dedicated e-reader) fit into all this? Well...
When I'm asked for my opinion about something I haven't read and have zero interest in reading - and, in fact, think is a complete waste of brain cells - my response is often an equivocal, "Anything that gets people reading is a good thing." That is the gist of the answer I've given when asked about e-readers for the past couple of years. Why? Well...
They're basically single-use, and I'm not an enthusiastic fan of single-use technology. I have several sets of miniature tartlet pans, bread pans, Bundt cake pans, and muffin tins. I have a machine that can only be used to make a Swedish dessert called Krumkake. I have the much-maligned popover pan (which can, naturally, only be used for popovers). In the kitchen, it sometimes makes sense...but, yeah, lots of times it doesn't, and if there were a way to make decent popovers in a muffin pan, I wouldn't have both. That's why I'm so sensitive to the concept of having a machine that will do one thing, and one thing only: contain a book that I'm reading. (Yes, I see the irony: each book that I have contains itself and none other, and I'm not complaining about that. We'll argue the need to acquire another day.) So unless I was going to buy a new laptop, a netbook or notepad, or a smartphone, I was highly unlikely to acquire an e-reader for myself.
Therefore, it seemed ridiculous to either learn more about, or get attached to the idea of one day having, something that I couldn't afford. So I let myself spurn the entire concept and have basically tried to remain above the fray, letting my friends (some of whom cannot help but be embroiled in it, because of the jobs they do) muck about in it.
This is all way it was such a genuine surprise when, for Christmas, someone who knows me very, very well (yes, in this, even better than I know myself) sent me a Kindle and a bunch of books for it, too. From the moment I'd torn the paper from the box, it was obvious that I'd been fooling myself for a long time: I was beyond thrilled. Books, anyway, are such an awesome present, and that many at once - W00T! But beyond that: he knew. He knew that I really wanted it, that I was too stubborn to say so, that I was too stubborn and stupid to get it for myself. And so, here it is.
And what do I think of it?
I like it a lot. I've finished the first book that I started that first night, and have moved on to another in the same series - they're fantasy novels, so they take longer for me than the typical books that I roar through without maybe thinking about so closely. There are some aspects about reading with/from/by (? whatever) the Kindle that are particularly nice. Some would apply to any e-reader, I'm sure, while some are probably only appropriate to my experience with this particular model. For instance...
It stays "open" to a page without actually being held, regardless of where I am in the book. For someone who tends to read while doing other things (e.g. eating, drinking, writing, watching TV, talking, changing toenail polish, etc.) this is absolutely amazingly terrific. Of course, I'm also super leery of anything happening to it, so I try not to be anywhere near it with food, drink, heavy or ungainly objects (e.g. TV remotes), or caustic substances, rendering nearly everything I've just mentioned moot.
And I can read it comfortably from a relatively long distance. According to my eye doctor, I "have the eyes of a 28-year-old." By this, I've come to understand, he means that by my current chronological age, most people who use computers as much as I do have already started to experience certain symptoms of illness, injury, and irreversible damage, both to their vision and to the physical makeup of their eyes themselves. I, for some wonderful reason, have remained relatively free of such problems. It is probably a combination of some incidental factors (my insistence on wearing sunglasses practically all the time when I'm outside, any season, in the slightest light; the ratio of white-to-iris in my eyes; the amount of white exposed when my eyes are open normally, which is (if you know me, this is no surprise) abnormally high; the shape of my eyes and the shape of my irises; the distance that I choose to sit from computer monitors at home and at work; and, perhaps most important, the degree of light that I use at home (since what's there at work cannot be controlled by humans). I'd been concerned that I would need to hold an e-reader closer to my eyes, because some phones and laptop screens are difficult to discern at certain distances, but the Kindle is very comfortable and easy to read, just where I want it. When I'm propped up on the couch (with my back to one arm and my legs stretched out) with a pillow in my lap, it's the perfect height and distance on that pillow, a mug of tea on the coffee table next to me, blanket around my legs so my feet don't freeze.
It's light. Super light. Ridiculously light. I think my phone is heavier. (Probably not, but there are certainly times when it's seemed that way.) The Kindle is comfortable to hold, intuitively designed so that page-turning and menu-following are simple and seamless, and there is an absolute minimum of on-screen activity while reading, so I'm not distracted (or worse) by anything blinking or seemingly out of place.
I only skimmed the extremely thorough online (i.e. on-device) user's manual - I was far too eager to get started! - so I'm still learning to take advantage of some of the more intricate features, but I know how buy and load books, and how to bookmark, highlight and make notes, which seemed key.
Reading excessively illustrated books (or books which rely on maps or illustrations, such as the Song of Ice and Fire series!) seems like it would be complicated, to say the least, on any e-reader, mine included. When I read the books, I used Post-It notes to flag the pages that had maps or were the start of the Appendix which listed the Major Houses and their alliances. While bookmarks and notes could be created to 'flag' these pages on the Kindle, I can't imagine that someone with my level of facility in using the notes could flip back and forth with the ease that I did in the books. There are just too many references, too often, to make it seem feasible.
Another example of this drawback would be a book with a necessary genealogical table, such as Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez' One Hundred Years of Solitude. It's a terrific book (one of the best I've ever read), but without that table to lay out the generations of Buendias, it would make no sense at all - and to go back and forth to the two-page table, scrolling both up-and-down and side-to-side, would be onerous.
Will I give up my paper books and only read electronically? No, I will not. But will I enjoy the books that I've been given, and get more when I've read these? Definitely! What a great way to save a tree, save some space when traveling, save my back when carrying luggage, save my eyes and my hands, and most of all, to continue to do what I love maybe more than anything else: to read.
[the title quotation is by Logan Pearsall Smith, from Trivia, 1917]
know, first, who you are; and then adorn yourself accordingly
January 10: ulterior
February 10: scour
Tomorrow: the e-reader review.
[the title quotation is by Epictetus]
2.09.2012
there is always a way to be honest without being brutal
[Wow, the irony is thick!]
February 9: ebullient
2.08.2012
God gives the nuts, but he does not crack them.
February 8: zeitgeist
[the title quotation is by - naturally - Franz Kafka himself]
2.07.2012
the chains that bind us most closely are the ones we have broken
February 7: funambulism
[the title quotation is Antonio Porchia, from Voces, trans. from the Spanish by W.S. Merwin]
2.06.2012
even the best needles are not sharp at both ends
January 6: omnium-gatherum
- Are you through with all of the stress associated with the Holidays and the New Year?
I think so? And [bleep]ing V-Day is next week. Hoo-ray. - What is the stupidest thing about New Year's resolutions?
how bent out of shape people get about them. Look, to me it's just the natural reaction to the newness of the year, the winter, the end of the hustle & bustle of the holidays. Clearing the decks of the old stuff that's not working, and resetting the routine with something new that just might work. I don't think that they're "necessary" or even a great idea for most people, most of the time. But are they a "bad" thing? Probably not. Getting out of a rut cannot be a bad thing. - We hear that Michael Vick has been given the use of a car in return for promoting a car dealership. Would you ever buy a car from that dealership?
YES. I WOULD.
I believe in innocent until proven guilty. And I believe in allowing those who've served their time to be DONE when they're DONE. If you're 'cleared' to be back on the streets, part of the general population, then you're back to sea level: back to innocent. Until PROVEN. Guilty. So ENOUGH already. The guy did what he did; he was caught. He was charged. He was convicted. He served his sentence. And he's done. That's ENOUGH!
If we have to point fingers, let's get a mirror. Let's blame the culture of parents who shove their kids into "traveling leagues" in elementary school so they'll be up for scholarships and have a better chance to make the pros. Um, you know this when they're eight? Get over yourself, Stefano Capriati. Let's also blame the fans--those of us who promote the mentality that whatever they do is OK, that we'll buy their jerseys and watch their games and read their feeds anyway, regardless of what they say or do. Let's blame the press, who take a little bit of interest, blow it wildly out of proportion, and ferret their way into athletes' personal lives so far that they have no real safe space to be themselves; the entirety of their universe is (seemingly) for public viewing.
What would Vince Lombardi say about the Leap? - Do you think that eating too many carrots turns the skin orange?
er, yes? I do believe in science' carotenosis is real. - Have you ever witnessed someone stealing from a store?
nope - not that I know of? - What is the worst thing you can say to a bus driver?
I would guess that just screaming would be the worst thing, while they're driving. This is an odd question. - What grosses you out about feet?
absolutely nothing. As everyone knows, my feet are practically perfect in every way. Well, that's my feet. In other people: showing them off, when they're not cared for. I don't mean that a $50 pedicure is necessary before one dares to step outside in sandals. I do mean that trimming one's toenails and filing off the grody dead skin is necessary before drawing attention to one's feet by wearing flashy flip-flops with iridescent beads. - The highlight of your perfect day would be what?
The right communication from the right party, tendering the right offer. It would cause no end of problems for other people (some of whom I care about a lot) but it's still as close to perfect as I can imagine.
2.05.2012
to learn something new, take the path that you took yesterday
February 5: jeunesse dorée, meaning "young people of wealth and fashion".
[the title quotation is by John Burroughs]
2.04.2012
and see, no longer blinded by our eyes
February 5: arduous, meaning "hard to accomplish or achieve", "marked by great labor or effort", or "steep".
| Gift, Counterpoint: Jeremiah Weed Sweet-Tea (sweet-tea flavored vodka, 70 proof), and "Junk Drunk" shot glass actually purchased from Antique Archeology (American Pickers). |
[the title quotation is by Rupert Brooke - one of the most underrated and lovely English poets of all time]
2.03.2012
trying to define yourself is like trying to bite your own teeth
February 3: pundit, meaning ""a learned person: teacher", or "an authority or critic".
| Point/counterpoint: a striking, mysterious, sophisticated mirrored box from D - and two tiny glass cattle (Angus the Bull & Darlene the Dairy Cow) from the Cat-Beasts. |
[the title quotation is by Alan Watts]
2.02.2012
be loyal to what you love, be true to the earth, fight your enemies with passion and laughter
February 2: vade mecum, meaning "a book for ready reference; manual" or "something regularly carried about by a person."
[the title quotation is by Edward Abbey]
2.01.2012
it takes a long time to grow an old friend
Last week was Christmas, part two. I had four separate holiday-ish events that had either been delayed or just late-scheduled. It was a little strange, but not really. Not for me.
One of the big hits is my new Word-of-the-Day calendar from The Cat & The Beast. Because I'm a full month behind on such things, I'll try to make up by doubling the words that I cover for this month (plus an odd few for the start of the next).
At some point there will be photographs of all (or nearly all) of my loot - highlighting the uniquely and delightfully point/counterpoint nature of this year's gift-receiving - but for now I leave you with a picture of the fantastic bouquet that the Cat-Beasts brought to me on Saturday. Isn't it a beauty?
[the title quotation is by John Leonard]





