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Me and Sylvia, on the Potomac (September 2010)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Improvement makes straight roads; but the crooked roads without improvement are roads of genius.

— William Blake


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Wednesday, November 19th, 2003

🦋 Hypertextual kid

Sylvia has mastered (well she is working on it) the art of clicking links. We are over at PBS Kids right now and she is clicking merrily thru the Clifford stories -- and remembering what links do what, too.

posted evening of November 19th, 2003: Respond
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🦋 Woo-hoo!

The server came back to life half an hour ago, my mailbox is full, mostly of spam...

Actually it's a bit less spam than I would expect to get in 3 days so I may have lost some messages. (How's that for a metric?) If you sent me anything and I persist in not responding, I may not have gotten it.

posted afternoon of November 19th, 2003: Respond

Monday, November 17th, 2003

E-mail server is down for the nonce, so if you have written me and got no response fear not; I will hopefully get the message within a day or two when things are working again. I'll post a note here when it is back on line.

posted evening of November 17th, 2003: Respond

I finished The English Passengers tonight -- what a dark book it is! I was moved to think about the meaning of the word "earnest" this afternoon, when I said to myself that this book was not (pejorative sneer) earnest in the way that The Life of Pi and The Corrections were -- this thought floated through my head complete with the sneer despite the fact that I had greatly enjoyed both those books, especially the latter -- what did I mean?

Kneale does not make such a point of evincing sympathy for his characters as does Franzen -- and indeed, few of the portrayals are sympathetic -- I would say the only ones that are, were Tim Renshaw, Captain Kewley and Peevay, and all with a great deal of ambiguity. So the sympathetic characterizations which I found so compelling in The Corrections -- and which were present in The Life of Pi as well -- are not a feature here. This is probably what I meant to get at with my pejorative use of the word "earnest"; the word is not very well used then, as Kneale is certainly earnest in his scorn for his characters.

posted evening of November 17th, 2003: Respond
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Wednesday, November 12th, 2003

🦋 A book I'm looking for

I am going to throw this out into the æther and see if any help comes my way...

When I was young, I read a book that I loved and reread several times. I have forgotten the author's name (I believe he was French) and the title. Here is all I know for sure about the book:

  • It was set in the Neolithic era. The characters were a family of cavemen who did things like discovering fire, inventing written language, etc.
  • The narrator's uncle was named Vanya.
  • On the cover of the book (a paperback) was a print of Picasso's The Minotaur.
If anyone knows the book I'm thinking of I would be greatly indebted to you for providing me with that information.

posted afternoon of November 12th, 2003: Respond
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Tuesday, November 11th, 2003

My first genuinely weird Google hit came in today: fish blog education. Hope you found what you were looking for, matey!

posted afternoon of November 11th, 2003: Respond

Sunday, November 9th, 2003

Oh well, never did hook up with Tim. It was very nice seeing Bill and Kathy. If you're passing through DC, let me recommend you go to the Hirschorn Museum -- they have some excellent exhibits, and the fountain in the courtyard is quite spectacular on a sunny day. Sylvia's and my favorite exhibit was a room full of paper that you could walk through or lie down in.

posted evening of November 9th, 2003: Respond

Saturday, November 8th, 2003

We're in Washington, DC today visiting Arielle. Later on I'm hoping to meet up with Tim Dunlop, and tomorrow with Bill and Kathy. Ellen and Sylvia are back at our hotel taking a nap and I went for a walk and found a nice coffee house called Soho at Dunlop Circle. Lunch today was decent Malaysian, not that exciting but tasty, and Sylvia was really enthusiastic about the Prawn Mee. (Which she would not have been if it had been a really good Prawn Mee, i.e. extremely spicy.)

posted evening of November 8th, 2003: Respond

Thursday, November 6th, 2003

🦋 Shop organization

Hey, did I mention I've been working on organizing my shop space in the basement, for a couple of weeks now? It's going really well -- I'm just about in shape to start working on the bookcase. What I have done: I built a lumber rack, and stacked most of my lumber on it; built a shelf with separate compartments for my carving tools; built a fixture for hanging my clamps; cleaned off most counter surfaces; and went a bit of the way towards organizing the big closet where I keep hardware. The last thing is going to be building a rack for clamping up panels and holding them even while the glue dries, which is necessary for the bookcase project. I have a pretty simple design in mind and will be building it next week.

posted evening of November 6th, 2003: Respond
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I am zipping right through The English Passengers, nearly halfway now, and enjoying it. A geographical issue is bothering me -- if the voyage begins at London and has as its ultimate destination Van Diemen's Land, why would they be going to Jamaica and then to Africa? It seems to me that the logical route would be to head directly south around the Cape of Good Hope and across the Indian Ocean; a side trip to Jamaica means you have to cross and recross the Atlantic.

The narrative style of the book -- each chapter is told from the point-of-view of a different character -- encourages me to go back to my reading of The Corrections, where I kept noticing how many different characters I felt sympathy for; I would expect something similar to happen here. But it does not, or not exactly -- I do sympathize with several of the characters; but the book is very broadly comic and much of it is caricature.

posted evening of November 6th, 2003: Respond
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