Birthday! Books!
Apr. 22nd, 2008 09:45 amToday I am 34!
I share a birthday with Robert Oppenheimer, Lenin, Nabokov, and Chris Makepeace of Mazes and Monsters.
Generally speaking, my 30s have been much more interesting and engaging than my 20s. I am healthier, by and large happier, and seem to have settled into a career that did not actually exist when I entered university.
I have many of you to thank for that current happiness – new friends and old, and most especially
velvetpage who continues to surprise and thrill me after nearly nine years of marriage and fourteen years of being a couple. I have two intelligent and adorable daughters, a reasonably sound house, and an interesting job. There are many blessings to count, and count them I do!
I have no specific plans for today, beyond sushi with
commanderteddog and maybe watching a movie this evening with
velvetpage. This suits me fine – I had cake on the weekend, and got presents from my older sister and my parents, as well as some gift cards, etc., from Erin’s grandparents and aunt and uncle.
***
Since last updating my reading list, I’ve finished:
• Post Captain, by Patrick O’Brian (1972)
• The Mauritius Command, by Patrick O’Brian (1977)
• The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, by Haruki Murakami (1997)
Post Captain was quite good, but the Mauritius Command was a trifle disappointing, though still solid. I’m not going to seek out any additional books by O’Brian unless I received specific recommendations, as I think I’ve read the best ones. I may have simply overdosed on Napoleonic-era sailing stories.
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle was my 17th book of the year thus far, and probably the most memorable. The story reminded me a bit of the anime film Paprika, at least in its quality of blurring lines between reality and internal fantasy. It also sparked me to do a lot of reading about Manchukuo and Mongolia. Wind-Up Bird had a sort of extraordinary cadence to it that drew me in and pulled me along for all 600+ pages, without ever losing my interest. I highly recommend it.
I also finished listening to my fifth audiobook, The Princess and the Goblin, written in 1872 by George Macdonald. Macdonald was a very influential fantasy writer, and served as fictional angelic guide for C.S. Lewis in The Great Divorce. This book was quite readable (listenable?) and the reader on Librivox has a clear voice with a cute accent. I am wondering if The Princess and the Goblin was the work which established the rule that all goblins in British fantasy novels should talk and act like boorish Cockneys.
I share a birthday with Robert Oppenheimer, Lenin, Nabokov, and Chris Makepeace of Mazes and Monsters.
Generally speaking, my 30s have been much more interesting and engaging than my 20s. I am healthier, by and large happier, and seem to have settled into a career that did not actually exist when I entered university.
I have many of you to thank for that current happiness – new friends and old, and most especially
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I have no specific plans for today, beyond sushi with
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***
Since last updating my reading list, I’ve finished:
• Post Captain, by Patrick O’Brian (1972)
• The Mauritius Command, by Patrick O’Brian (1977)
• The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, by Haruki Murakami (1997)
Post Captain was quite good, but the Mauritius Command was a trifle disappointing, though still solid. I’m not going to seek out any additional books by O’Brian unless I received specific recommendations, as I think I’ve read the best ones. I may have simply overdosed on Napoleonic-era sailing stories.
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle was my 17th book of the year thus far, and probably the most memorable. The story reminded me a bit of the anime film Paprika, at least in its quality of blurring lines between reality and internal fantasy. It also sparked me to do a lot of reading about Manchukuo and Mongolia. Wind-Up Bird had a sort of extraordinary cadence to it that drew me in and pulled me along for all 600+ pages, without ever losing my interest. I highly recommend it.
I also finished listening to my fifth audiobook, The Princess and the Goblin, written in 1872 by George Macdonald. Macdonald was a very influential fantasy writer, and served as fictional angelic guide for C.S. Lewis in The Great Divorce. This book was quite readable (listenable?) and the reader on Librivox has a clear voice with a cute accent. I am wondering if The Princess and the Goblin was the work which established the rule that all goblins in British fantasy novels should talk and act like boorish Cockneys.