geekchick: (reading)
[personal profile] geekchick
How to make sure you end up sneaking a power nap in your office at some point during the day: get four hours of sleep the night before, wake up to a dark, cool, and rainy day, and then put on the new Current 93 CD. That last is of course a fabulous way to ensure really f'ed up dreams as well. Heh.

Before I forget again, the recent reading:

  1. Book of Longing, Leonard Cohen. A new collection of poetry, some of which appears as lyrics on "Ten New Songs", "Dear Heather" and "Blue Alert", and original illustrations. A nice addition to my recent Cohen addiction.

    I love this quote from an interview in The NewsHour's poetry series:
    LEONARD COHEN: You know, you scribble away for one reason or another. You're touched by something that you read. You want to number yourself among these illustrious spirits for one advantage or another, some social, some spiritual.

    It's just ambition that tricks you into the enterprise, and then you discover whether you have any actual aptitude for it or not. I always thought of myself as a competent, minor poet. I know who I'm up against.

    JEFFREY BROWN: You know who you're up against?

    LEONARD COHEN: Yes, you're up against Dante, and Shakespeare, Isaiah, King David, Homer, you know. So I've always thought that I, you know, do my job OK.


  2. Kushiel's Avatar, Jacqueline Carey. The conclusion to this trilogy, in which Phèdre takes on not just one but two impossible-seeming tasks: first she must rescue Melisande's son, Imriel, who's been kidnapped and sold into slavery to a sadistic king who intends to use the boy as a sacrifice to his dark god, then she must learn the Name of God  and use it to free her old friend Hyacinthe, bound as the Master of the Straits. A satisfying ending to the series while leaving enough open to allow for future books in the same setting. Like, say, Kushiel's Scion, the first book in a new trilogy (which I just snagged from the library and am now reading).

  3. Notes from a Small Island, Bill Bryson. After living in England for 20 years, Bryson decided to take a seven-week farewell tour around Great Britain before returning to the US and treats us to a fond and irreverent look at his adopted home.

  4. A Feast for Crows, George R.R. Martin. Half a book, and it feels it. Damn, now I'm caught up and have to wait for the next one along with everyone else.

  5. All Dressed in White: The Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding, Carol Wallace. An examination of the last 150 years of wedding traditions and how the over-the-top "princess for a day" white wedding came to be the norm.

who you're up against

Date: 2006-08-10 05:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lowflyingsquab.livejournal.com
A great quote, and as I read it, he was playing on my ipod, so it worked out perfectly!

Date: 2006-08-10 05:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quasigeostrophy.livejournal.com
# Half a book, and it feels it. Damn, now I'm caught up and have to wait for the next one along with everyone else.</>

Um, no. You're now ahead of me. :-)

Date: 2006-08-11 01:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quasigeostrophy.livejournal.com
:-) I may listen to AFFC in the car via audiobook sometime while I'm commuting to Purdue, while awaiting the other half.

Date: 2006-08-10 05:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brian1789.livejournal.com
I enjoyed the Elizabeth Bear for my birthday :). Have actually read something on your list (#37, and am waiting for [personal profile] dawnd to finish reading her birthday present in order to borrow it...)

Date: 2006-08-11 01:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com
I listened to "Notes from a Small Island" on audio some years ago and really enjoyed it as well :)

I'm also pleased to hear that your library system carries the "Kushiel" series. Ours doesn't, I suspect for the obvious reasons, but I should put in a recommendation anyway.

Date: 2006-08-11 05:29 pm (UTC)
winterbadger: (books)
From: [personal profile] winterbadger
I think a lot of public library systems would be a bit uncomfortable about shelving fiction that has such a high content of fairly graphic bondage, sadism, and masochism. Not that some other books don't or that I find anything wrote with tasteful BDSM myself. It's just that library boards are usualyl answerable to voters, many of whom would rather the limited library funds go to something else. And they can't really be argued to be great literature either; Ms. Carey writes entertaining books, but William Faulkner she ain't.

Date: 2006-08-12 01:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nminusone.livejournal.com
I have to admit I'm a little surprised that your part of MD doesn't have them and our part of VA does. We are in "the liberal part" of VA, but still. So much for the accuracy of my prejudices ;)

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