Although that might actually be a widget. Whatever, it looked stupid. Tips for tomorrow? Don't stare directly into the sun. Don't take any wooden nickels.
There. Forewarned is forearmed. You may thank my father for these pearls of wisdom.
Doesn't Hez look adorable? She likes the EXACT CENTER of the couch, thankyouverymuch.
One of the problems with starting and abandoning posts then sporadically posting them is trying to figure out what the Hades I had in mind when I was writing what looks like utter gibberish now. (It might still but there was an effort to make it reasonably cohesive.)
It may have something to do with coming to grips with my recent one-of-those birthdays. But probably not.
Brigitte aka Wrapped Around My Finger had a birthday (the 2nd) AND she's getting an orange kitty boy. And she's stalling on celebrating said birthday until this weekend. Good plan.
Bookish links! First up is Aarti'sBooklust, mostly because she's been hosting a Rosie Riveter weekly column on her blog and I contributed to it some time back - so naturally now is when I link it.
- In her own words (as mine were insufficient - you'd think I read enough to turn a decent phrase occasionally) - Rosie's Riveters is a weekly posting written by Booklust readers about riveting females in literature. Many readers have strong reactions to the women in the books they read- either very positive or very negative. These are the characters we find riveting, for good reasons or bad ones, and they form the population of Rosie's Riveters. Through this weekly post, we can discuss females we love to hate, or love to love. And maybe, just maybe- we can determine why we react so strongly to them.
- she still looking for contributors, hint, hint. She writes some thoughtful reviews and is at least as annoyed with some heroines as I am. and has a way with words.
Puttermeister is trying out some interesting lists for books, check them out.
July Books:
Argh. Too hard. (Getting book cover pictures) 1)1633(L) UF 2004 688p by David Weber and Eric Fint. I enjoyed it, they got out of Thuringia and into France and England finally meeting up with Richelieu, Oliver Cromwell and Spinoza but really, the Ring of Fire short stories should be read before as it sets up 1633. (Bitter about this! bitter! Ridiculously bitter, really but there you are.)
2) The Thirty Years War by Samuel Gardner 1916 (L) Great overview, dated language but it read aloud so evocatively. I should have been an itinerant small town preacher, I'd've loved the sound of my own voice.
Dana Stabenow's Kate Shugak in 3)Killing Grounds pb M 1998, 4) Hunter's Moon pb M 1999, 6) Midnight come Again pb M 2000, 7) Singing of the Dead L M 2001, A *0 Fine and Bitter Snow L M 2002, 9) A Grave Denied pb M 2003, 13) A Taint in the Blood pb M 2004. I've stalled at A Deeper Sleep L M 2007 but Kate and Mutt continue to run across murder most foul and their love lives remain convoluted. Actually what I think I like most about this series (other than taking place in the imaginary Park in Alaska which I just find fascinating. Imagine living in a home where you had to stock up for the winter and probably wouldn't see another soul for a month or two? I can't decide if I'm envious or not) is the love between Kate and Mutt.
10) Breathing Out by Peggy Lipton (L) (B) I so wanted to hang out with Pete and Linc and Julie when I was a kid. My dad was a cop, and a cop in Oakland during the 60's and the counterculture was not exactly promoted in my house growing up. Peggy Lipton had what I think of as a typical I'm Not Really Beautiful life, which is to say, I was totally dismissive of her and her suffering until it finally reached me that she didn't have it all that easy and everyone has to fight to be free. (Hey. That might make a cool Tom Petty song).
5 The Solitude of Prime Numbersby Pablo Giordano. I had mixed feelings about this book. Mattia and Alice's parents were completely clueless for two completely different reasons. That poor Alice feels she has to throw herself over a cliff - or at the very least, when she's laying broken at the bottom, she's relieved she doesn't have to compete skiing anymore - made me want to shake her father until his teeth rattled.
Mattia I felt less sorry for but even so, being so inextricably tied to his fraternal mentally challenged twin Michaela frustrated him that while I couldn't believe he left her in the park (with instructions not to move) I couldn't quite fully despise him for it. It was a sad story but beautifully written.
11) The Sword Edged Blonde by Alex Bledsoe 2005 (SF) (L) It's billed as Sam Spade in Sci Fi and it was, kind of.
12) The Age of Reason Begins by Will and Ariel Durant (1961) (L) Overview of the Reformation era. They have such a chatty style of teaching history, no wonder their books are still some of the best to turn to for historical perspective.
August Reads:
1) Moral Relativism by Steven Lukes 2008 (L). Oh man. I started this is July and it just took me forever to read it. Party because I was questioning what I consider moral standards and how flexible I am in relation to others violating said standards, be it in person, in the past or from a different culture and partly because so many of the moral standards that seemed to be in flux were in regards to women and the treatment thereof. That gobsmacked me. There's a question of culture and morality when it comes to women? And not, say, race? religion? politics? Yeah, exactly. It turns out I'm somewhat inflexible and don't have much problem judging.
2) Ring of Fire by Eric Flint and edited by Eric Flint & a huge group of great guest writers featuring side characters in the main series. Mercedes Lackey had my favorite short story, To Dye Forfeaturing Tom Stone, Grantville's resident hippie.
3) Thirty Years War by Geoffrey Parker 1997 (L) Really, a delightful breezy overview of the military skirmishes in the 30 Years War and those most involved. Just because it took me two months to read 182 pages is completely beside the point.
Look what Angie (Purling Oaks) sent me! Cow pies! Oh, and some Artyarns fiber, sugar scrub, scented soap and what she claims is "catnip". From her cats no less. Suuuuuure.
Opal (aka The Akamai Knitter) (she's having a Labor Day sale btw) sent me some Indian Corn BFL fiber and some truly gorgeous orange earrings (the money shot up the page wherein I also discover that the zoom on the iPhone isn't really a zoom but a clip but considering it's a stationary camera lens......
and what she claims is packing fiber but is soooo pretty (it's really not a bright electric blue though. I took an outdoor picture because the colors are generally better and also display my poor pathetic single eggplant. That you can't see.
Hey. I know Squish (aka Purling Dervish) sent me earrings and I think fiber and no pictures? I am remiss.
Altho - you all know I don't actually know how to spin yet, right? I have a spindle, I'm signed up for a class (in a lighthouse! Well, at the lighthouse grounds) but I have not yet spun anything but Fickleknitter's yarn she had (the devious enabler) at Stitches West.
Nothing else was finished (and no modeled shot of Undulating Waves yet either) but OTOH, no new projects were cast on. That statement may only be good until I get home. WANT WANT WANT
This is Melchior (until I'm told her actual name). She loves us and Hez. Hez does not love her. I hope, someday, to get a halfway decent picture of her without Hez chasing her off.
Random! :) Lots of pretties pictured - including Hez. "Delightfully breezy overview" of the 30 Year War? I worry.
Posted by: Chris | September 03, 2009 at 07:14 PM
Love that photo of Hez. The lighting is... ethereal.
Posted by: kmkat | September 03, 2009 at 08:54 PM
The fiber is gorgeous!
Posted by: Elspeth | September 03, 2009 at 11:11 PM
Ooooh... Hez the centerfold!
So gorgeous and she knows it.
(I've heard spinning is addictive~ it can eat up your knitting time ;o)
Posted by: CarolyninAlaska | September 03, 2009 at 11:45 PM
Fun, reading this blog post in the morning before my first cup of tea! Hmm, sounds like I'm addicted to the internet.
Posted by: Monika | September 04, 2009 at 03:51 AM
You have fiber! Growing in your garden! What's with that!?!? (speaking of, I may have gone off the deep end this week and asked Texas to make me a flower bed for growing cotton)
I'm having a hard time finding a book that will keep my interest since I ate the potato chip that is Sookie Stackhouse.
Posted by: Stacey | September 04, 2009 at 03:56 AM
I read Peggy Lipton's book a while back. Like you, if I couldn't actually be Julie, hanging out with her would have been fine.
Posted by: Kim | September 04, 2009 at 04:27 AM
Hez occupies all of the good spots.
Love that you've managed to grow fibre in your garden, and only 1 eggplant.
Posted by: Gale | September 04, 2009 at 04:31 AM
Good advice, pretty earrings, gorgeous fiber. Have fun at spinning class, let me know how it goes!
Posted by: Michelle | September 04, 2009 at 06:40 AM
Ooh, look at that lovely fiber! And you get to take a spindling class? Hooray for spinning! :)
Posted by: Jocelyn | September 04, 2009 at 08:49 AM
LOVE that photo of Hez...
Wow you read a lot!
(((hugs)))
Posted by: knitnana | September 04, 2009 at 10:27 AM
Seriously, how fast do you read??? I love your posts when you summarize 20 books at once. At this point I'm most intrigued by The Solitude of Prime Numbers. Hmmmm.
BTW--I've managed to stay away from spinning so far because repeat after me..I do not need another hobby. With that said, I want to know how your class goes.
Posted by: Rachel | September 04, 2009 at 01:39 PM
Hez is so pretty. Melchior is a cat, right? :-) I had a birthday on the 3rd, and I have an orange kitty boy already! But I did eat a lot of really good cake, and I'm slowly coming out of my buttercream coma.
Posted by: Julia | September 04, 2009 at 02:30 PM
Don't let your dad near the "catnip"! Just saying' ..... once a cop, always a cop!
Posted by: deb | September 04, 2009 at 03:01 PM
Loves the kitty!
Posted by: Cookie | September 04, 2009 at 04:32 PM
"a delightful breezy overview of the military skirmishes in the 30 Years War " made me laugh out loud. It brought to mind one of my favorite history professors I hadn't thought of in years. Medieval England was his speciality, however, but the turn of phrase would have pleased him greatly.
Posted by: mary Lou | September 04, 2009 at 07:41 PM
Hey--thanks for the shout out, as the kids say (or I think they do.)
Great recs on more Reformation reads. Why, oh, why is that period so very fascinating? And while it may be strange to say so, I've been wanting to know more about the Thirty Years' War (that rhymed), so I'm glad to have that rec to put in the queue, too.
I concur with Mary Lou: "a delightful breezy overview of the miliary skirmishes in the 30 Years War" is a fabulous throw-away line. Bravo!
Posted by: puttermeister | September 05, 2009 at 10:49 AM
It's almost like Hez thinks she owns the place. Pretty gifties and fiber! I'm tempted to the spinning every time I see a spinning wheel or some really gorgeous roving. I'm looking forward to seeing what you spin up!
Posted by: Sonya | September 07, 2009 at 04:24 AM
Carrie- Peggy Lipton- talk about a blast from the past! I remember Mod Squad.
Hez is the color of the couch too!
Posted by: Lorraine | September 08, 2009 at 07:16 AM
Melchior looks remarkably like a chair. Or maybe I just need to look harder. ;)
Hez and couch match!! Coolness!
I try not to look at the sun but in truth I'm going to go blind, eventually, because sunset photography is a killer.
Posted by: Bookfool, aka Nancy | September 08, 2009 at 07:47 PM
middle of the couch = center of attention.
cosmo likes to sit RIGHT NEXT TO ME. tucks his head so it's pressed against my leg and likes throw his back leg up on my thigh. the ultimate "you will not move while in the presence of my cuteness" stance.
you read "REAL" books. I don't like those. They feel too much like learning.
Posted by: Cyn | September 08, 2009 at 10:39 PM
Eeee, the celebration really starts on Friday when Chris arrives! Then orange-kitty boy arrives with his little suitcase on Saturday!
Speaking of orange, how much do I love that Indian Corn?! WOW. Lucky you! And as for Miss Hez sleeping right smack in the middle of the couch - how could it be any other way?? Sort of like Atticus' penchant for the middle of the floor.
Posted by: Brigitte | September 09, 2009 at 05:21 AM
OH I just want to snuggle Hez, he looks adorable.
Posted by: Rebekah | September 10, 2009 at 08:37 AM
You have been raking in the loot lately!
Posted by: Miss T | September 10, 2009 at 03:52 PM
What a gorgeous floofer, that Hez! The yarn is gorgeous, too...
Posted by: Ex Libris | September 15, 2009 at 05:04 PM
i adore that picture of hez! adore it!
thanks for pimping me. i always appreciate a good pimp. ;-)
Posted by: opal | September 17, 2009 at 12:44 PM
Hez is so cute :)
You will love spinning- looking forward to hearing how you get on.
Posted by: mrspao | September 20, 2009 at 03:20 AM