À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for March.

Bought:

  • The Death of Sweet Mister, by Daniel Woodrell (used)
  • The Great World, by David Malouf (used)
  • The Conversations at Curlow Creek, by David Malouf (used)
  • Confessions of a Recovering Slut, by Hollis Gillespie
  • Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day, by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoe Francois
  • The Fatal Gift, by Alec Waugh (used)
  • A Spy in the Family, by Alec Waugh (used)
  • The Ballad and the Source, by Rosamond Lehmann (used)
  • The Music at Long Verney, by Silvia Townsend Warner (stories) (used)
  • The Naming of the Dead, by Ian Rankin (in Japan, no access to my bookshelves!)
  • The Murder at the Vicarage, by Agatha Christie (in Japan, no access to my bookshelves!)

Read:
  • The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen Scientist, by Richard P. Feynman
  • The Complete Stories, by David Malouf
  • The Hunt Ball, by Rita Mae Brown
  • The Hounds and the Fury, by Rita Mae Brown
  • Ms. Pettigrew Lives for the Day, by Winifred Watson
  • The Naming of the Dead, by Ian Rankin
  • Let`s Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste, by Carl Wilson
  • The Murder at the Vicarage, by Agatha Christie
  • The Tourmaline, by Paul Park

À la Super Eggplant, currently, I am…

Eating: Enough food to feed a third world country and that’s what I’m eating for every meal. Just STARVING lately but presumably due to STRESS.

Making: Absofuckinglutely nothing. Made a little progress on Ame’s friendship star beginning of last week. Since then: nuttin’, honey.

Reading: Dad’s and my March challenge short stories “The Complete Stories” by David Malouf which are breathtakingly good. Best short stories I’ve EVER read? I’m thinking so.

Watching: LOST which is fucking rocking my world. And other shows that really aren’t as good: Jericho (OK, not great); New Amsterdam (really kinda bad but the dude is so watchable, what can a lonely girl do?); How I Met Your Mother (I do not call last night’s episode returning with a bang, sorry kids) and some DVDs to help me out during the 2008 CD Reorganization Project, I’ll try to pop in and tell you about them before I take off. Have had many plans to go to U2 3D over the past few weeks. All have fallen through. I hope it’s still playing when I get home!

Listening: Obsessively to Jesse Malin “Glitter in the Gutter” which is in CONSTANT rotation, I just can’t stop playing it. Bon Iver “For Emma, Forever Ago” and Matt Costa “Unfamiliar Faces” are close seconds. Also getting to know the new Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks. A bit rougher/less produced than Malin but pretty damn good. Have been introducing other slackers to Nada Surf “Get Lucky”, The Scotland Yard Gospel Choir (self titled) (FUN!), Mike Doughty “Golden Delicious” and Missy Higgins “On a Clear Night”. Going to see The Raveonettes tonight although I haven’t gotten through the entire new album yet; everytime I start listening something else gets in the fucking way!

and p.s. thanks to Fuel/Friends and the LaBlogotheque Concert à Emporter of Stephen Malkmus, this morning I am listening to Reckoning (yes, that’s R.E.M. to you young’uns) which has not been listened to full on…in many years. So many good songs on this album.

Best of February

I know the rest of you complain about it, but February is my favorite month, even when it’s one day longer than usual…

The best movie I saw in February was probably There Will Be Blood, but I actually liked Cloverfield better. And honestly, why is no one going to see it? Monsters! Mayhem! New York mashed up! So much to enjoy there.

The best book I read in February was The Good Soldier Svejk by Jaroslav Hasek, a rollicking tale of a misfit, fumbling soldier’s sojourns. But I did LOVE both the sci fi/fantasy books I read this month as well (here and here).

The best gig I went to in February was a tie between Jason Isbell and Griffin House, both of whom havewho has serious stage mojo and far more rockingness than you can hear on theirhis studio albums. Isbell was fiery and intense and rocking out; House was sassy and sarcastic and living it up. [I’m an idiot, Griffin House was in March! Doh!]

My favorite tunes in February were Bon Iver “For Emma, Forever Ago” (never found a copy of the 2007 release, could barely hold my breath waiting for this one and it was soooo worth it, absolutely gorgeous heartaching music); Missy Higgins “On a Clear Night” (husky and gorgeous); Nada Surf “Lucky” (awesome and rockin’ and leading off w/ my favorite single from last year); and Clare Bowditch & the Feeding Set “The Moon Looked On”. Also loving some previews of new tunes by the Counting Crows (featured on Fuel/Friends). Enjoying, but still getting to know, The Scotland Yard Gospel Choir, new Mike Doughty “Golden Delicious” (“I wrote a song about your hips!” Yay! first heard in 06, finally on an album!). Bought a few others but haven’t listened enough to have an opinion — hopefully soon!

Random personal highlights: French movie night resurrected (and thanks for chili, Carla, and the Tarte Tatin, Jess!); long weekend in Vegas visiting Monica and Charlie (and Buddy and Ella!); annual milestone passed successfully; meeting Baby J for the first time (Curious George #1 recipient).

Lowlights? Not really a “lowlight” per se, but man I have been eating like crappyassola for at least a month. Gotta get back on track before my pants don’t fit! Not that I regret having sour cherry pie for breakfast and molten chocolate cake for lunch on the same day. Not at all!!

Best of January

The best movie I saw in January was Atonement, which was both really beautifully costumed and filmed AND the most faithful screen adaptation I think I’ve ever seen of a book. Lovely.

The best book I read in January was a tie between You Must Be This Happy to Enter, by Elizabeth Crane (short stories), who I’ve read and enjoyed before but this time I felt took the bar even higher, and Native Guard, by Natasha Trethewey (poetry), an xmas gift from my pops, really beautiful and entrancing poems about her personal history as well as civil war history.

The best gig I went to in January was Bon Iver. It was the only gig I went to in January but it was really, really good (and I’m going to see him again in April! And you know I only go see the same artist again that soon if I LOVED it).

My favorite tunes in January were Cat Power “Jukebox”, Matt Costa “Unfamiliar Faces” (quirky and fun!), and an old album Chris Bell “I Am the Cosmos”, which I picked up in San Fran. Bell (now deceased I believe) was in Big Star, who I started listening to last summer thanks to Rob Sheffield (yes I am a loser and didn’t know about that band back in the day). Also enjoying tunes from Zoey Deschanel and M.Ward (as “She & Him“), Crowded House offspring Liam Finn‘s debut I’ll Be Lightning, and another San Fran purchase Tracy Johnson (which to me is good old-fashioned female-vocaled pop music!).

Random personal highlights: Brunch in Chicago with Carrieoke and Cathy!!!; dinner with Cinnamon; rainy weekend in San Fran visiting Ms Silvia.

Lowlights? A month and a half later, I don’t remember any so they must not have been that bad!!Oh, I know! Four to six hour flight delays in both directions. Airports = hell on earth.

Essays: “The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen Scientist” by Richard P. Feynman

Science reading for non scientists. Great conversational tone / these are “transcribed” from three lectures he gave; there were a few spots that in person/out loud were probably very funny although a bit dry on the page.

Really, really enjoyed the first two sections / the third is (as he announces at the outset) a bit of a ramble and it lost my attention a few times. But worth reading nonetheless.

Thoughtful and concise and ready to converse. Written in ’63 (if I recall, book’s not next to me) but still very relevant today.

Fiction: “The Good Soldier Svejk” by Jaroslav Hasek

The February book in Dad’s and my reading challenge.

Eastern European classic, Dad bought it years ago based on a Kundera recommendation. Total farce, hilarious comic novel. Bumbling anti-hero, a miserable idiot…or is he? Really a lot of fun to read. The never-ending “Well that reminds me of” stories and the contretemps…just indescribable. We both loved it. Humbly report, sir…

Somewhat in the tradition of Don Quixote or Tristram Shandy, although Svejk is a bit more self aware than DQ.

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for February.

Bought:

  • The Watchman (A Joe Pike Novel), by Robert Crais (Elvis Cole gets his own spinoff!)
  • The Odyssey and The Iliad, Homer (buying the Robert Fagles translations, my other ones are Lattimore)
  • The Faithful Spy, by Alex Berenson
  • The Monsters of Templeton, by Lauren Groff
  • The Priory, by Dorothy Whipple
  • Saplings, by Noel Streatfeild
  • Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, by Winifred Watson
  • The Tourmaline, by Paul Park
  • The White Tyger, by Paul Park
  • A Great and Terrible Beauty, by Libba Bray
  • Dark Roots, by Cate Kennedy (stories)

Read:
  • Iron Kissed, by Patricia Briggs
  • A Princess of Roumania, by Paul Park
  • The Faithful Spy, by Alex Berenson
  • The Good Soldier Svejk, by Jaroslav Hasek

Note I am not including books I received as gifts (Bonus!) of which there happened to have been quite a few in February (Yay!).