Archive for the ‘mStuff’ Category
Aisha Tyler – Lit…pretty funny
Watched Aisha Tyler’s “Lit”. Â It was pretty funny and I liked that it was in SF. Â I actually really like her.
Happy New Years!

I am very excited about 2010, and no I don’t say that every year. Â Wishing everyone a fabulous New Years and a very very Prosperous Year!
Authors I like….
|  I was recommending some books the other day and it make me realize that I need to get back into my reading more. I actually only really “read” when I travel because I’ve become a little addicted to Audible.com and “listen” to books a lot more than I actually read them.
In 1966, 29-year-old Margot Harrington heads off to Florence, intent on doing her bit to protect its precious books from the great floods–and equally intent on adventure. Serendipity, in the shape of the man she’ll fall in love with, leads her to an abbey run by the most knowing of abbesses and work on its library begins. One day a nun comes upon a shockingly pornographic volume, bound with a prayer book. It turns out to be Aretino‘s lost erotic sonnets, accompanied by some rather anatomical engravings. Since the pope had ordered all copies of the Sixteen Pleasures burned, it could be worth a fortune and keep the convent autonomous. The abbess asks Margot to take care of the book and check into its worth: “We have to be cunning as serpents and innocent as doves,” she warns.Soon our heroine finds her identity increasingly “tangled up” with the volume and with Dottor Postiglione, a man with an instinct for happiness–but also one for self-preservation. Margot enjoys the secrecy and the craft (the chapters in which she rebinds the folios are among the book’s finest). Much of the book’s pleasure stems from Robert Hellenga’s easy knowledge, which extends to Italian complexities. Where else would you learn that, in cases of impotence, legal depositions are insufficient: “Modern couples often take the precaution of sending postcards to each other from the time of their engagement, leaving the message space blank so that it can be filled in later if the couple wishes to establish grounds for an annulment.” Luckily, however, there are also shops that sell old postcards, “along with the appropriate writing instruments and inks.” Though The Sixteen Pleasures is initially in the tradition of American innocent goes abroad to encounter European experience, Hellenga’s depth (and lightness) of characterization and description lift it high above its genre. And what better book than one about loving and loving books?
The first of William Gibson’s usually futuristic novels to be set in the present, Pattern Recognition is a masterful snapshot of modern consumer culture and hipster esoterica. Set in London, Tokyo, and Moscow, Pattern Recognition takes the reader on a tour of a global village inhabited by power-hungry marketeers, industrial saboteurs, high-end hackers, Russian mob bosses, Internet fan-boys, techno archeologists, washed-out spies, cultural documentarians, and our heroine Cayce Pollard–a soothsaying “cool hunter” with an allergy to brand names.Pollard is among a cult-like group of Internet obsessives that strives to find meaning and patterns within a mysterious collection of video moments, merely called “the footage,” let loose onto the Internet by an unknown source. Her hobby and work collide when a megalomaniac client hires her to track down whoever is behind the footage. Cayce’s quest will take her in and out of harm’s way in a high-stakes game that ultimately coincides with her desire to reconcile her father’s disappearance during the September 11 attacks in New York. Although he forgoes his usual future-think tactics, this is very much a William Gibson novel, more so for fans who realize that Gibson’s brilliance lies not in constructing new futures but in using astute observations of present-day cultural flotsam to create those futures. With Pattern Recognition, Gibson skips the extrapolation and focuses his acumen on our confusing contemporary world, using the precocious Pollard to personify and humanize the uncertain anxiety, optimistic hope, and downright fear many feel when looking to the future. The novel is filled with Gibson’s lyric descriptions and astute observations of modern life, making it worth the read for both cool hunters and their prey. |
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Blog DRAFTS….ugh
I find things…think about things….finish client projects, blah blah blah. I do a quick post and save it as DRAFT with the thought that I will go back and compliment with my words but my DRAFTs grow and my posts don’t.
Makes me look at those little bottles of energy boost drinks on the counter top when you check out in a new light…maybe I should try one, twist the cap, just go down the line and finish off my DRAFTs one by one.
Note to self….PUBLISH this…don’t save as DRAFT.
Lazy Blogging
I’ve recently moved all my hosting sites to a brand spanking new Dedicated Server (yippy!) and meanwhile back at the ranch I hadn’t really been very good with my blog and needed to do some housekeeping including updating and searching for plugins that offered features I was interested in, setting up my permalinks, etc.
I’m now in the process of figuring out my “Pings” and “Trackbacks” and updating tags, categories (topics), and eek…adding Exerpts to all my entries.
I had so many draft posts that I would do a quick “Press This” with the intention of going back and finishing the entry. Kinda like what I’m doing now.
The Sixteen Pleasures by Robert Hellenga
Pattern Recognition by William Wibson

