Sunday, October 31, 2004
OVERDUE THOUGHTS: On the topic of George Carlin's book not being offered in WalMart retail outlets, and the mini-uproar which followed: If you're the type of person who goes to a WalMart expecting to find anything by Carlin, you've probably never been to a WalMart.
On the Sox winning the series: Good on ya, Boston. You've been an inspiration to perennial underdogs everywhere. I just hope it won't take me 86 years to start raking in the winnings again.
Oh yeah, there's this bit, too...
JUST FINISHED: Gulliver's Travels, by Johnathan Swift. This one's going to be short, because it'd be presumptuous to think you need a plot summary, at least for the first two books (Lilliput and Brobdingnag). If the kid's lit versions are all you've ever read, though, the full version is worth your while, since otherwise you'd likely miss Gulliver's way of putting out a Lilliputian fire, and some of the nastier bits of the ironic and satirical arts (hint: the mercy of the King of Lilliput is a scary thing). Swift seems to be the type that wants people to redeem themselves, to aspire to their utmost and highest, and nowhere is this clearer than in Gulliver's nothing-spared, nothing-sugarcoated dialogue with his Houyhnhnm host about the state of Europe at the start of the 18th century. It's a brisk read in mostly accessible language, and since the core of human nature hasn't really changed in 300 years, still aims its daggers straight and true.
If you don't spring for a hard-copy version of Gulliver, I lean towards Lee Jaffe's web version, with copious background notes and a glossary. If you do, keep in mind that the selection from the book that Jaffe lists last (the letter from Captain Gulliver) was actually a preface added after the first edition, which definitely gives a different spin to everything that follows and made it a slightly different reading experience to subsequent generations. I know most of you have heard of "A Modest Proposal", but I'd also recommend looking up the story behind the Isaac Bickerstaff predictions, giving us yet another reason why you never want to cross swords with a satirist (I'm looking at you, Bill O'Reilly).
Friday, October 22, 2004
Wednesday, October 20, 2004
WALDOEVIL: | Fox probably told the Yanks to throw 3 because they would lose millions in ad revenue |
FireThunder: | How many Red Sox fans will jump into the sea like lemmings? |
jtts: | I'm just glad to know that God hates the Yankees |
jtts: | either that or he likes watching Red Soxs fans suffer |
FireThunder: | If the Red Sox win tomorrow, there's gonna be a riot. |
FireThunder: | I just can't decide in which city... |
Doom: | GO BOSTON |
Doom: | BURN |
Doom: | BURN BABY BURN |
Monday, October 18, 2004
Saturday, October 16, 2004
I accidentally found out that Fox News ran a clip of Jon's appearance on Fox and Friends, and hilariously enough, it looked like their copy was taped on a worn-out videocassette with a consumer-grade VCR that badly needed its heads cleaned. One more reason I get the bulk of my news from my Yahoo start page.
Now don't get me wrong, I have as much of an eye for the jiggly bits as the next hetero guy, but come ON, what the hell do you people expect to find on Blogger? Coming to a site looking for porn and finding a guy talking about books and TV has to be an instant erection killer.
So for those who were dopey enough to come here anyway looking for barely-legal girly flesh, I cordially invite you to bite me. Then again, maybe I better take that back...don't want butt-biting fetishists to get the wrong idea.
And speaking of awkward transitions...
JUST FINISHED: The Haunted Bookshop by Christopher Morley. The follow-up to Parnassus On Wheels finds Roger Mifflin, travelling bookseller, holding down a storefront in post-WW1 Brooklyn, holding forth on his favorite topic (his passion for reading) to anyone who will listen. Apparently a few people actually agree with him, as a friend sends his daughter to do a bit of apprenticeship to "get some of the 'finishing school' nonsense out of her head". While she gets accustomed to the way things are done in her new trade, a book of Oliver Cromwell's speeches keeps popping in and out of its assigned place on the shelf, and after somebody almost pitches ad man Aubrey Gilbert off the Brooklyn Bridge in a burlap sack for being too nosy, he starts to suspect something sinister going on at the bookshop.
I do have to give you fair warning on a few points, especially if you go into this book without reading Parnassus first (which isn't completely necessary). Morley has the good grace to apologize up front the romantic subplot running away with the book at certain points when his original goal was to give us more Mifflin. If you can't get into the literary lifestyle, you might take issue with the chapters dedicated to the importance of books, complete with reading lists, then-current publishing trends, and the philosophies of various book sellers. However, if you're the type who gets into kicking around musty covers in secondhand stores, these may be the most interesting parts. Morely has a wonderfully descriptive style, which gives you a real sense of the place and the times. As was mentioned above, he throws in a decent dollop of adventure and (naturally) some digs at the ad game.
Once again, you can pick up the e-text at Gutenberg, but Barnes and Noble's in-store imprint was kind enough to put into print a new illustrated hardcover edition which is well worth your time.
Thursday, October 14, 2004
Sunday, October 10, 2004
Saturday, October 09, 2004
Parnassus on Wheels, originally published in 1917, is a cheerful enough book, concerning Andrew and Helen McGill, a brother and sister who ditch the city and take up the farming life. Everything's copacetic until the day they inherit a relative's library, which promptly sends everything to Hell. Pretty soon Andrew is not only reading as he plows the fields, but starts writing books, eventually neglecting his "practical" work to crank out bestselling homespun homilies. Sort of Green Acres in reverse.
Into this ventures Roger Mifflin, a balding red-haired man who shows up one day intending to sell his horse-drawn mobile bookshop, the Travelling Parnassus, to Andrew. Helen, hellbent on snatching a temptation to desert the farm (again) out from under her brother's nose and having her own open-road adventure in the bargain, buys the Parnassus from Mifflin, who tags along to help Helen learn her new vocation.
Actually, it's more of a spiritual calling than a job, since Mifflin's attitude towards bookselling is a bit different than what we've become used to in the mallrat chain bookstores. He drives his rolling store around the countryside, selling his wares with the verve of a medicine show hawker, his goal to marry people to the book that suits them best. He sells books for what he feels they're worth, rather than cover price, and won't give a person a book if he doesn't feel they're "ready". The main goal is to instill a love of reading, and in that respect, business is booming.
Parnassus was a very brisk read (I managed to reach the end in just a few hours); there's adventure, a bit of romance, and even some stuff about books. Mifflin is a fascinating character, and my understanding is that The Haunted Bookshop, a sequel which allows him even more of a chance to hold forth on literature, is even better.
Wednesday, October 06, 2004
SonnyChiba: Here's a cliche you'll hear too much of
SonnyChiba: "Maybe he'll get some respect in heaven."
Ska: My first one was "He gets no respect from mortality"
Ska: My second Dangerfield thought was "HEY EVERYBODY! WE'RE ALL GONNA GET LAID! (THEN DIE!)"
Alternate ideas for epitaphs, as always, are welcome.
Monday, October 04, 2004
I had a wonderful imaginary scenario cooked up for this one, which I was going to cram down everybody's throat, but dangit if somebody else didn't actually write the guy to ask what gives:
Hi M. Thanks for the email. I haven't been contacted by the owner,So when he started seeing all those hits come in, Mr. Found Life thought to himself, "This is a good thing and a bad thing." Makes sense. Of course, since nothing truly disappears from the Internet as long as somebody's interested, there's a mirror of the last frontpage out there. Other than that, those who have an itch for recontextualized pictures will have to go to Cliff or that Lileks guy.
but I believe that he knows. The site's exposure got out of hand. I
hope to get the card back to the owner as soon as possible. I'll try
to put up a post when something happens.
Sunday, October 03, 2004
Could it be that the push away from processed food and the cutting down of sugars will undo the country's taste for overly seasoned junk food? The trend has been towards stronger and bolder, and now thanks largely to the dead doctor the food companies have been forced to head in another direction. Some might say that underseasoned junk food is still junk food, but as I keep saying, you pays your money and you takes your chances.
Saturday, October 02, 2004
- A melting Sermon being preached in a Country Church, all fell weeping but one Man, who being asked why he did not weep with the rest? O! said he, I belong to another Parish.
- A Gentlewoman growing big with Child, who had two Gallants, one of them with a wooden Leg, the Question was put, which of the two should father the Child. He who had the wooden Leg offer'd to decide it thus. If the Child, said he, comes into the World with a wooden Leg, I will father it, if not, it must be yours.
- A Gentleman happening to turn up against an House to make Water, did not see two young Ladies looking out of a Window close by him, 'till he heard them giggling, then looking towards them, he asked, what made them so merry? O! Lord, Sir, said one of them, a very little Thing will make us laugh.
- A Countryman passing along the Strand saw a Coach overturn'd, and asking what the Matter was? He was told, that three or four Members of Parliament were overturned in that Coach; Oh, says he, there let them lie, my Father always advis'd me not to meddle with State Affairs.
- A Gentleman said of a young Wench, who constantly ply'd about the Temple, that is she had as much Law in her Head, as she had had in her Tail, she would be one of the ablest Counsel in England.
AND ONE OTHER THING: Please welcome the Trackback link to my arsenal of things you're not likely to take advantage of. Haloscan kept piling it on until I had to give 'em my money, so there ya go...
I republished the entire blog so all the articles could be tracked back, and I hope that's the last time I have to do that for awhile. I live for my little sidebar comments, and it's always sad to see them go.
(Edit @ 10:30am: The upside is that all those cheerful comments from the beginning finally came back. W00T!)