So much reading to do this month!
I did a decent job. I didn't knock out everything, but I made good progress on each of my goals:
- Truman: I knew, because this book isn't mine so I'm not comfortable carrying it around and beating it up, that I only had one hope for finishing Truman this month since the library license for the ebook expired (which they did eventually renew). It was to download the audiobook, which I did. The problem is that the only audiobook version available at the library was an abridged version. So I did finish it, but not quite the complete version. I'm still counting it.
- Ethics (and Other Liabilities): this one I finished, and loved. Hooray!
- Fall in Love for Life: I made good progress on this one, but didn't finish it. As of this writing, I'm on page 157 of 205 -- and it's a quick read so I should finish soon!
K's update will follow shortly!
Sunday, March 31, 2019
Thursday, March 28, 2019
Alarms and Ads
I can't be the only person who thinks it should be highly illegal to use the sound of alarm clocks in radio and TV ads, can I?
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Monday, March 11, 2019
SLSO Show #4
Yesterday was an interesting show. The theme was death. But it was oddly not depressing. There were only two pieces, and no intermission.
The first piece was Stravinsky's Funeral Song, op. 5. It was written shortly after the death of his friend and mentor, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The piece was performed once, at a memorial concern for R-K, and then the score was lost to the ages. There were rumors about where it was, but searches by musicologists turned up nothing.
Over 100 years after its only performance, in 2015, the long lost score turned up in the dusty corner of a library at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. The piece was sad and powerful and lovely.
The second piece was the showstopper in length, but in my opinion paled in comparison in terms of its ability to move. It was Johannes Brahms' Ein deutsches Requiem, op. 45 ("A German Requiem"). It is a seven-movement choral piece, so I was predisposed to like it. However, the basis in Bible verses predisposed me to dislike it, so it balanced out around mediocre.
The first piece was Stravinsky's Funeral Song, op. 5. It was written shortly after the death of his friend and mentor, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The piece was performed once, at a memorial concern for R-K, and then the score was lost to the ages. There were rumors about where it was, but searches by musicologists turned up nothing.
Over 100 years after its only performance, in 2015, the long lost score turned up in the dusty corner of a library at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. The piece was sad and powerful and lovely.
The second piece was the showstopper in length, but in my opinion paled in comparison in terms of its ability to move. It was Johannes Brahms' Ein deutsches Requiem, op. 45 ("A German Requiem"). It is a seven-movement choral piece, so I was predisposed to like it. However, the basis in Bible verses predisposed me to dislike it, so it balanced out around mediocre.
Saturday, March 9, 2019
Ethics (and Other Liabilities): Trying to Live Right in an Amoral World -- Take 2
What an interesting read.
Ethics (and Other Liabilities) is a collection of essays which were originally published over the course of two years in Esquire magazine. Each essay addresses a different question, often stemming from an experience of the author or a friend of his.
The questions, though they were compiled and published in 1982, remain relevant. The specific details of the stories obviously seem dated, but in a funny way that just serves to remind the reader of the durability of the problems.
Stein is perceptive and economical in his writing. What I would really like to do is read it again, one essay at a time, and discuss each with someone else as we work our way through the volume.
I don't read many books twice.
Ethics (and Other Liabilities) is a collection of essays which were originally published over the course of two years in Esquire magazine. Each essay addresses a different question, often stemming from an experience of the author or a friend of his.
The questions, though they were compiled and published in 1982, remain relevant. The specific details of the stories obviously seem dated, but in a funny way that just serves to remind the reader of the durability of the problems.
Stein is perceptive and economical in his writing. What I would really like to do is read it again, one essay at a time, and discuss each with someone else as we work our way through the volume.
I don't read many books twice.
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
What I Watched -- Free Solo
S and I lucked out in finding Free Solo on TV while we were in Colorado. We would have missed it if our original flight hadn't been cancelled, so it was one of the silver linings of the slightly extended vacation.
The movie is every bit as astounding as one would expect of a documentary about a rock climber whose dream is to scale a 3000-foot wall with no ropes or other safety equipment. It's an astonishing thing to attempt, a physical and psychological accomplishment, and a triumph of nerves.
It makes my heart race just to think about it.
Bottom line: a stunning film.
The movie is every bit as astounding as one would expect of a documentary about a rock climber whose dream is to scale a 3000-foot wall with no ropes or other safety equipment. It's an astonishing thing to attempt, a physical and psychological accomplishment, and a triumph of nerves.
It makes my heart race just to think about it.
Bottom line: a stunning film.
Monday, March 4, 2019
What I'm Reading Now -- Fall in Love for Life: Inspiration from a 73-Year Marriage
On to the March goal, which hopefully I will have better luck with than February!
I'm getting started on Fall in Love for Life: Inspiration from a 73-Year Marriage. It was K's pick and looks like it'll be a quick read, plus something in small chunks for the airplane today.
The title pretty much says it all -- life lessons from a long marriage. I'm all ears!
I'm getting started on Fall in Love for Life: Inspiration from a 73-Year Marriage. It was K's pick and looks like it'll be a quick read, plus something in small chunks for the airplane today.
The title pretty much says it all -- life lessons from a long marriage. I'm all ears!
Friday, March 1, 2019
Goals 2019 -- March Edition
Reading! Yay books!
I'll be honest, my goal this month is a lofty one. I want to finish two books that I've been reading forever. One, Ethics (and Other Liabilities), should be fairly easy to get through. It's a short collection of essays, so it's easily broken up into short reading bursts. The other is Truman, which I've been working on for about 100 years. I'm two thirds of the way there. Is it too much to do the rest in a month? Probably -- especially since apparently the library's e-book license expired, so now I'm relegated to only making progress when I'm at home. But I'm going to try. I also have a my next postal book club book: Fall In Love for Life. It's really going to be a challenge to get through all three, but if our cold weather holds out, maybe I can do it!
K has two book club obligations: The Poet X and Where the Crawdads Sing -- because one book club is never enough! She also has a goal to read two additional books, though those haven't been selected yet. It'll be a surprise at the end of the month to find out what they are!
I'll be honest, my goal this month is a lofty one. I want to finish two books that I've been reading forever. One, Ethics (and Other Liabilities), should be fairly easy to get through. It's a short collection of essays, so it's easily broken up into short reading bursts. The other is Truman, which I've been working on for about 100 years. I'm two thirds of the way there. Is it too much to do the rest in a month? Probably -- especially since apparently the library's e-book license expired, so now I'm relegated to only making progress when I'm at home. But I'm going to try. I also have a my next postal book club book: Fall In Love for Life. It's really going to be a challenge to get through all three, but if our cold weather holds out, maybe I can do it!
K has two book club obligations: The Poet X and Where the Crawdads Sing -- because one book club is never enough! She also has a goal to read two additional books, though those haven't been selected yet. It'll be a surprise at the end of the month to find out what they are!