Kablammo!
Land of all lives, suppress all rebels! Don't Move!
Christmas come early
December 15, 2005Just as my stocks of Sisu ran dry and I began to despair of ever again tasting my favorite Finnish salmiakki, and just as I had given up all hope of ever finding mp3s of CMX’s new album Pedot, I got a package in the mail that made it all better.
Thanks to the three of you.
Song of the Moment: «Uusi ihmiskunta» — CMX
A Story
December 14, 2005The short-lived clear-soda craze of 1993 was one of the happiest times of his life, for he had relished switching inattentive friends’ gins-and-tonic for rum and Coke and fondly remembered the resulting spit-takes.
15 Things
December 12, 2005This particular blog-meme is rather less obnoxious than most, since it’s completely free-form. Without further ado, I present 15 things about me and books.
- The last book I was assigned to read for class that I actually bothered to read was The Great Gatsby for Mr Sullivan’s American Literature class in the 11th grade. I had intended to just skim the first few chapters so I’d be able to fake my way through the in-class discussions we’d have, but I found myself completely transfixed and unable to put the book down until I finished it.
- My approach to books is similar to park ranger advice for wilderness areas—I take only words, and I try to avoid leaving even fingerprints. I don’t like creased spines, dog-eared pages, or wrinkly spots from a sweaty palmprint; and I absolutely cannot stand people who underline passages or, God forbid, lick their grubby fingers every time they turn the page.
Oddly enough, though, I don’t mind if a book gets a bit mangled or bent from being crammed into an overstuffed backpack or a jacket pocket that doesn’t quite fit, nor do I mind buying used books that exhibit every kind of normal wear and tear.
- I used to be a voracious reader, but I stopped around the time I went to college. Or, equivalently, I stopped around the time I switched to contact lenses.
- For some reason I decided to read the unabridged version of Stephen King’s The Stand a few months ago. The most lasting impression I was left with was that the book was very very long. That, and I didn’t like the supernatural mumbo-jumbo stuff near the end very much. I liked it better when it was just the stories of people trying to deal with an awful situation.
- I have started many more books than I have finished. I’m not counting those books whose first pages I’ve read in a bookstore or a library, just the ones I’ve bought or borrowed with every intention of reading the whole way through. Off the top of my head, some books I’m theoretically in the middle of include:
- The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Salman Rushdie.
- Something Happened, Joseph Heller.
- Võõras (L’Étranger), Albert Camus.
- Popmuusika a la Vittula, Mikael Niemi.
- Necessary Illusions, Noam Chomsky.
- Notes from Underground, Fyodor Dostoevsky.
- Rehepapp, Andres Kivirähk.
- Ma armastasin sakslast, A. H. Tammsaare.
- On a related topic, while there are a number of books whose opening lines I remember (or remember the gist of), I can only think of one ending line that has really stuck with me:
The extra three were for leap years.
It’s from Solzhenitsyn‘s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.
- I’ve read more books in Piers Anthony’s Xanth series than I care to admit.
- I’ve read Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series from beginning to end three times now.
- The most worthless book I’ve read is probably either Hederick the Theocrat or a Harlequin romance novel whose title may have been The Daddy Dilemma.
- I wish more books were printed on bible paper.
- My favorite book of all time is probably Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach. I must have read it 100 times in elementary school.
- Three more bits of very important formative reading:
- Zoobooks.
- D’Aulaire’s Book of Greek Myths.
- Anything and everything to do with dinosaurs.
- My least favorite book of all time is the textbook for a feedback control systems course I took. Not only did I loathe the class and despise the professor, I hated every aspect of the physical book itself. It was poorly written and organized, and the index was short and useless to the point of being downright insulting. There were few examples in the text, and many of the examples that were provided had typographical or mathematical errors in them. The book was not available used and cost significantly more than our other engineering texts, which were expensive enough to begin with. Its dimensions were such that, if left to its own devices for even an instant, it would flip to a different page or just close on you altogether. I could go on.
- It blows my mind to think of what tasks like typesetting, pagination, indexing, revising, and picture printing entailed before computers.
- The last book I read was Richard Dawkins’s The Selfish Gene, which I recommend wholeheartedly for much more than just the genesis of the meme-meme. The case studies of peculiar organisms are invariably fascinating, and Dawkins talks shit about the Pope at one point, more or less.
2k5, preliminary
December 9, 2005In no particular order, here are some of my favorite tracks from this year.
- «Special»—Mew.
This is a fine example of Mew’s penchant for interesting and atypical rhythmic constructions. The song doesn’t quite go where you might expect it to, which makes it well worth a listen, particularly in its context on the album. And the Glass Handed Kites flows together so smoothly it’s hard to single out a particular song as noteworthy. - «Godspell»—The Cardigans.
The once-rampant popularity of “Lovefool” belies the fact that the Cardigans have been one of the most consistently good bands over the past 10 years. Nina Persson has a wonderful set of pipes and she’s not afraid to use them, as this song indicates. The way the sound keeps flirting with a nice hard-rock feeling doesn’t hurt either. - «Dear Sons and Daughters of Hungry Ghosts»—Wolf Parade
Please forgive Wolf Parade all the hype, and the band name, and the name of the song, and the fact that the first half of their album is entirely unremarkable, and the super-lo-fi sound. Just listen to this song. It’s not going to change your life, but it just may brighten your day.
More is coming, but comment if you have suggestions.
Our American Government
December 7, 2005The other day I ran across a GPO publication, specifically a pamphlet printed in 1955 under the authority of the 84th Congress, after the ratification of Wright Patman‘s House Concurrent Resolution 85. It’s called “Our American Government”. Here’s a picture.
As you can see, the cover of the pamphlet clearly states “…our American government interestingly and accurately portrayed” (emphasis mine).
I have the pamphlet for the same reason I am the proud owner of a monstrously ugly (and surprisingly well-fitting) plaid suit with matching vest: my aunt is in the process of clearing out some of the copious amounts of junk that have accumulated over the years in the house where my grandmother lived. Some of said junk is decidedly more choice than the rest, and I’m not above rescuing it from the recycle bin though God knows I certainly have enough useless junk of my own accumulated already.
(Incidentally, the pamphlet was, back in its day, part of the materials that my grandparents used to study for their citizenship exam. But I digress.)
Anyway, as a point of comparison, here is the full text of the 2000 edition of “Our American Government”, printing authorized by the 106th Congress. What do you see on the front page? For one thing, you don’t see any snazzy eagle designs, but that’s just because this text-only version has GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE to it. For another thing, though, you don’t see any mentions about being interesting. Or accurate, for that matter.
Both 2000 and 1955 have the same general format, basically acting as a FAQ for the Federal government. Each gives the reader a good sense for the workings of the three branches and the two cameras and whatnot, and both editions mention the elaborate system of bells installed in the Capitol and throughout the several House office buildings.
The 2000 edition even soundly thrashes the 1955 in its inclusion of full texts of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution (including all Amendments) as appendices, but it has some failings of its own — for one thing, the number of questions answered is down from 300 to 178! Some of this can be explained by the merging of some sets of related questions into a single answer, but that can’t hide the fact that 2000 just has less information than 1955 did. The inclusion of the Constitution is all well and good and commendable, but it’s reprinted here and there and everywhere — I’ve literally never been unable to find the text of the Constitution when I needed it. It seems to have been included here at the expense of some very important (and interesting) information.
Information like this:
- Is Abraham Lincoln the only President to have been born in a log cabin?
No. Presidents Jefferson, Jackson, Fillmore, Buchanan, Garfield, and Arthur were all born in log cabins.
Song of the Moment: «My Friend Dario» — Vitalic
Burning down the horse
December 6, 2005You know, there was a time when CD liner notes would include messages like this:
VISIT THE CARDIGANS HOMEPAGE:
http://lindstedt.mech.kth.se/~moch/cardigans/cardi.htlm [sic]
How times have changed — indeed, how times changed by the time they released their next album, when they were the proud owners of their very own domain.
yeah
November 17, 2005Not that this is news, but it’s still tremendously upsetting. And it’s official!
Q And the poverty problem?
PRESIDENT BUSH: And the poverty problem — listen, this nation is committed to dealing with poverty. First, let me make it very clear, poor people aren’t necessarily killers. Just because you happen to be not rich doesn’t mean you’re willing to kill. And so it’s important to understand — people are susceptible to the requirement by these extremists, but I refuse to put a — put killers into a demographic category based upon income. After all, a lot of the top al Qaeda people were comfortable middle-class citizens. And so one of the things you’ve got to do is to make sure we distinguish between hate and poverty.
Emphasis added.
“Sony, Rootkits and Digital Rights Management Gone Too Far”
November 2, 2005The DRM stuff in Civ4 isn’t fun either, but that doesn’t stop it from being the best Civ game since the original.
Well, here’s a poke at you
October 21, 2005Quite.
- Why in God’s name does such a thing exist? And why can’t I turn away?
- Let me tell you, it feels terrible to take a brand-new $100 DVD burner and immediately start hacking bits of plastic off of it before you can even test whether it works. Can you say “goodbye warranty”? At least it seems to function properly, damn laptops and their nonstandard faceplate/opening/crevice designs.
- The last 3 or 4 times I’ve been to Wal-Mart, I’ve purchased a $6 wristwatch while there. I think I have some kind of disease. But I also have a lot of wristwatches.
Song of the Moment: «Radio/Video» — System of a Down
Something glowing from inside
October 20, 2005Indeed.
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