Tuesday, May 31, 2005

by popular demand (and a desire to not do work) i will now do the book survey.

1. Total number of books owned?
based on a count of the books on the shelf directly next to me, a knowledge that there are at least twice as many in the garage and a few more in the basement, probably ~200.

2. The last book I bought?
"Electric Sound" by joel chadabe (text for class). the last book i bought for pleasure... i don't remember, i've been using the library a lot recently.

3. The last book I read?
Currently reading "Tales of Pirx the Pilot" by Stanislaw Lem. Picked this up off the shelf in the library because i had never read any Lem, despite having never heard of this book. It's taking me a long time because i've been leaving it home to force myself to read the aforementioned "Electric Sound" on the train. Before that, I read "The Final Solution" by Michael Chabon. The last really good book I read was probably "Satan in Goray" by Isaac Bashevis Singer.

4. 5 books that mean a lot to me?
- Everyone seems to be starting with their favorite book, and mine is "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency" by Douglas Adams
- "Childhood's End" by Arthur C. Clarke, besides being all around wonderful, has the most brilliant plot twist of all time. and you will never, ever even see it coming, even though I told you it was there.
- The words "mean a lot to me" simply beg for the inclusion of a childhood book, and I would like to put "A Carp in the Bathtub" which amazon helpfully tells me is by Barbara Cohen. This book is really about Jewish life in lower class brooklyn in the early part of the 20th century, but the plot centers around a young brother and sister trying to save the carp living in their bathtub for a week before their mother makes gefilte fish for passover.
- "Civilization and Its Discontents" by Sigmund Freud is great because it's the book where Freud basically goes "listen, i know i wrote all sorts of stuff about sex and id and ego and consciousness and dreams, but that's all just ephemera in the grand scheme of things. in the end you can either create or destroy: time to choose sides."
- When "The Complete Calvin & Hobbes" comes out and i can count it as one book, it will be the fifth. in the meantime, a completely random handful of others that i've liked but wouldn't necessarily say "mean a lot to me" (the first few that come to mind): "pattern recognition" by william gibson; "ender's game" by orson scott card (fun new game! is this book an apologist parable for hitler?); "american psycho" by bret easton ellis; "a tale of two cities," which i think i like mostly because i read it with my dad and was the first book i ever read where i knew that there was more than was showing on the surface; doh i can't believe i didn't put 1984 here.
- also not really a book: many, many short stories by ray bradbury are superlatively wonderful but my absolute favorite is "The Toynbee Convector," which can be found in a collection by the same name. also really good overall is the first bradbury short story collection, the october country.

5. Tag 5 people and have them fill this out on their ljs:
my friends are either cooler than i am and did this first, or are cooler than i am and would never do this.

movie survey to come later after i get some work done.

Like the first robin of

Like the first robin of spring, it's the first "ithaca is gorges" shirt of summer.

Sunday, May 29, 2005

i forgot to give this a title the first go round

so my discovery that blogger now provides free "moblogging" (god i hate that word) has convinced me to give the blog deal another go. this is because from time to time i send leslie or some other lucky duck a timely witticism in the form of an email or text message. one time i actually said to her "sending stupid text messages to you is my blog." but you know, obviously i am depriving the rest of the world of my greatness that way. but my problem was that i rarely remember funny, clever things long enough for them to survive until i return home. and i almost never think of anything worth typing up while here (which is why i should really get out more. ok, it's one of many reasons). so, the addition of moblogging (gah! there it is again! make it stop!) made this more attractive to me. some of you (well, all of you probably. i can pretty much guess exactly who will read this) may remember the blog i had in college. this will hopefully be very different. i do have a copy of that blog, maybe i will make it available.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

i want a new drug

and it's called a blog