Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Late September, 2021: Hold The Phone

 What I'm scratching my head about:

I recently overheard The Spawn tell someone that he was 6 months ahead on his blog posts. What the hell?! Here I am, always running behind on my posts like someone with a broken-off heel chasing the last bus. And he has SIX MONTHS of bloggy freshness and goodness in the can??? That's half a year!!!

So yeah, I know eavesdropping is a bad habit, but The Spawn knows my flaws as well as anyone, so I asked him:

Me: [skipping the niceties] How the hell did you get six months ahead with your blog?

Spawn: [startled] What? I'm not six months ahead.

Me: [feeling uncomfortable, wondering if I'm going to have to give up eavesdropping because my hearing has gone bad] Oh, I thought you said --

Spawn: I'm two months ahead.

Me: Oh! Two! Again, how the hell...?!

What I read:

September is nearly finished, and it looks like it's going to be just three books completed this month: 

The Andy Warhol Diaries - Andy Warhol, Pat Hackett, ed.

Who Was Frida Kahlo? - Sarah Fabiny

The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver

Two of the books (The Lacuna and The Andy Warhol Diaries) were pretty chunky, to explain my low book count for this month. I also blame my newfound ardent fangirling of The Office and some new involved reading projects. If I'm being absolutely forthcoming, I should also cite my time on the phone as a reason. However, I did hit my dinger on Goodreads! I pledged to read 60 books in 2021, and The Lacuna put me at 62. 

What I'm reading:

Warhol - Blake Gopnik. I'm starting to worry because I haven't picked this biography up in almost a week. Every page is so very dense with information. Andy is still in art school in Pittsburgh! I can't go on/I'll go on.

American Cheese - Joe Berkowitz. Enjoying it immensely, but slow going. This is because some tasty information will strike my fancy and I'll stop reading and start down as many rabbit holes (Hello, Phone!) as there are holes in aged Swiss. My latest detour was to Erika Kubick's mouthwatering blog Cheese Sex Death It was there that I discovered her nationwide list of places to buy cheese, and guess what??? There is a place practically in my backyard, a mere 20 miles away in Sweet Springs. It's called, appropriately enough, The Cheese Store. Time to go a-fromage-ing. Lastly, here is a list of cheeses I've eaten this week: Sharp Cheddar, Baby Swiss, and Blue Cheese. 

The Office: The Untold Story of the Greatest Sitcom of the 2000s - Andy Greene. I absolutely love how this book about my new favorite show is put together. There's a short introduction at the beginning of each chapter, then it goes into interviews with writers, directors, and actors reminiscing about the show. It starts right from the very beginning, the utterly true beginning with Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant going back to when the UK Office was merely a glimmer of a brainchild. The documentary style of presentation is perfect since the show is a "mockumentary". Do I still have to put that in quotes, or is it a part of the language by now?

What I DNFed:

An audiobook, and I really don't want to admit to it, because it's by a distinguished literary presence who recently died. I've read several of the author's other books and admired them, but this one didn't click for me at all. To make matters worse, the author was the narrator and their voice was raspy. Sentences would fade towards the end. I didn't even make it to the end of the first CD. It's back in the library now.

What I'd like to read:

Cheese Sex Death - Erika Kubick. Hope there's loads of pictures.

Nightbitch: A Novel - Rachel Yoder. I can't resist a title like that.

Blind Man's Bluff - James Tate Hill. Memoir.

Cack-Handed - Gina Yashere. Memoir. 

What I need:

Another audiobook!

Sunday, June 08, 2014

7 Sunday Reading Ruminations

1. I'll read whatever I want, and that includes Children's Literature and Young Adult books.  No embarrassment here.  It's true that I could hide behind my job (...just looking these over in case one of my students asks me to recommend something good with a manageable English level, heh heh...) but that's not necessary.  You see, I worked this all out back in 1993 after I read Ramona Forever and my spouse suggested that it was not eligible for my reading journal because it was a children's book.  I chewed on that for a couple of days, then entered it, defiantly pressing down with my pen.

2. Speaking of Children's Literature, I don't remember the nonfiction of my childhood --except for biographies-- being as captivating as the juvenile nonfiction I see these days. A fine example is a 2001 book I just finished reading. It's called Black Potatoes: The Story of the Great Irish Famine, 1845-1850.  The book is beautifully researched, and the author, Susan Campbell Bartoletti, writes intelligently and not down to her intended audience.  Black Potatoes weighs in at 192 pages and there's not a word wasted nor did I feel skimped on information. 

3. I love and am so grateful for The Busan English Library, but one drawback is that graphic novels can't be checked out.  Initially, I chafed at this, but now I've turned it around and used it to carve out quality time at my library.  I grab a graphic novel, grab a table by a window in the Orange section (Adults) and sit down and read the whole thing.  This interlude has proved to be so pleasant that I wouldn't take a graphic novel home even if they suddenly reversed their policy.

4. Speaking of orange, I finally got on board and started watching Season 1 of Orange Is The New Black. Everyone was right.  It is good.  Piper Kerman's book is still fairly fresh in my mind, but I have plans to reread it and compare it with Brother One Cell by Cullen Thomas, a prison memoir about a young teacher who got busted for attempted drug smuggling in South Korea.

5. After Maya Angelou died, I decided to reread I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.  While reading, I realized that I had never read the whole book -- only excerpts. Hypnotized by her writing voice, I quickly moved on to her next book, Gather Together in My Name, which covers the next three years of her life.  My new goal for 2014 is to read all the memoirs.  One thing about Maya Angelou:  She was not afraid to look the facts of her life calmly in the face and relate them, even the most cringeworthy ones.  A lesson for us all.

6. I always notice what people, both factual and fictional, are reading, and Maya Angelou was no exception.  In her late teens, she developed an appreciation for Dostoevsky, but she also mentioned a writer named Ann Petry in passing.  The name rang a bell.  Petry was the author of a children's novel called Tituba of Salem Village, which was based on the Salem witch trials.  Petry was also the author of a novel for adults called The Street.  Published in 1946, it was the first novel by an African-American female writer to sell more than a million copies.  I found a copy of The Street at the BEL and started reading it yesterday.  Petry isn't as gritty as Richard Wright, but she is unflinching.  Major book score. I'm never quite so happy as when I discover a new 1940s American novel.

7. Another author I discovered while roaming through the stacks at the BEL is Wright Morris.  His 1980 novel, Plains Song: For Female Voices is a beautifully laconic narrative featuring three generations of Nebraska women.  I was intrigued with the way Morris "mixed" the novel.  The high notes, the dramatic moments were layered deep, almost buried in the story.  Another interesting thing is the way he plays with time.  It seems to stand still or move excruciatingly slow, then unexpectedly, it speeds up, and a decade or more passes in just a paragraph or two.  Plains Song is illustrated with one photograph that appears at the beginning of each chapter.  It's an odd but fitting choice that enhances the atmosphere of the story and nearly becomes a character.  This is the most authentically Midwestern novel I've ever read.