There was a little girl who had a little curl...

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Specimen Days

I wish I could see the world like Michael Cunningham. Or at least read like him. Because who else could spin such fantastical novles out of Virginia Woolf and Walt Whitman, two celebrated writers that I struggle with reading? I was lucky to be pointed towards his work over a decade ago, and have been bowled over by each of his novels. His first two books were more domestic in nature, coming-of-age stories that spanned decades and told the tales of families both born and made. With The Hours and Specimen Days his work has become more literary and more complex (not that this makes them better than his first two books, but you can see his style and skill evolving). His thoughts are wrapped in this neatly wound prose but then suddenly something explodes out of the swiftly moving storyline and you have to stop devouring the pages and let it wash over you. I thought The Hours was impressive and well-written, and I couldn't put it down, but I prefered the sweeping nature and overpowering emotion of Flesh & Blood. Something about The Hours was ultimately a little too neat for me, a little too clever. But Specimen Days has simply astounded me. The first two stories are amazingly thought out and perfectly crafted, and lines of Whitman dance through the pages and bowl you over with their context—not to mention the ways that they are interpreted by the characters. The third story wasn't as powerful for me, which may be a matter of taste, but the first two still haunt me. I feel as if I am still absorbing their impact, their meaning.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Thankful for...

• My husband and son
• Trees and flowers
• The beauty of water
• Good books
• Yoga (especially my favorite teacher and studio)
• People who believe in me
• Yarn and art supplies
• Millions of colors
• The science of baking
• Warm hearths

What are you thankful for?

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Extreme Yoga

Is what happens when you do yoga with a four-year-old. Turns out you need a lot of props, and when you least expect it a train comes roaring through. Ever tried to meditate while riding on a pretend speeding train?

Friday, November 17, 2006

Decades of sophisticated technological advancement...

and I still can't find a cough medicine that my child will actually deign to put in his mouth.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

wondering...

Why does going wireless seem to involve so many wires?

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

What would you do with $51.1 million?

The Boston Red Sox just spent that much for the mere priviledge of negotiating with a Japanese pitcher. It's projected that they will spend another $50 million or so on his contract.

Really.

Imagine what could be done with that money. I'm not really criticizing the Red Sox here, because it's indicative of a larger issue, that of what certain public figures like atheletes and actors are paid. The way that these huge sums of money are thrown around willy nilly, while people starve, don't have access to health care, etc.

I'm not proposing answers/solutions, just offering food for thought.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Distracted Driving

Is there anything more frightening than suddenly realizing that you just drove four blocks while your mind was someplace else completely? It makes you wonder — if my mind was someplace else for the last five minutes, who was doing the driving?

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Etiquette

If it's a beautiful, unseasonably warm day and you're walking on a very busy multi-use path you might not want to walk five-abreast, and if you insist on walking that way it would only be polite to keep an eye out for bikers and rollerbladers who are going much faster than you. It's kind of like a road — stay on your side of the path. (That would be the right side — as in right/left, not right/wrong.)

Thank you,

a little curl

Friday, November 10, 2006

alt.obnoxious

I have a hard time reading our local alternative weekly newspaper anymore. It's sad because I used to pick it up first thing every Thursday and devour it from cover to cover. And while it's true that I've kind of grown out of it — I'm not as interested in up-and-coming local bands and the bar and club scene as I used to be — the paper's also gotten really crude. I mean, if you can't express yourself without resorting to dropping f-bombs and other epithets to make a point, are you really that good of a writer? The whole in-your-face thing (both in content and language) is just obnoxious. If you have nothing to add to the mouldering mass of words out there other than snark and whining then you really have nothing to add at all. And then there's the ads in the back. They used to edit the images so that they were maybe PG-13, but now they're R going on NC-17. Honestly, sometimes I'm embarrased to have it in my house. Brown paper wrapper anyone?

rant.over

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Dear Democrats...

Don't screw this up.

Seriously.

The election was not about your social agenda, not about impeaching anyone. It was about solving Iraq. Period. I know it's an impossible situation. But please focus on that and not a bunch of lame power struggles.

Sincerely,

a little curl

Friday, November 03, 2006

Wondering...

If I don't participate in NaNoWriMo or NaBloPoMo does that make me a NoNoWriMo or a NoNoLaMo?

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Jumping the season

Last night, after all of the jack-o-lantern carving and trick-or-treating and scaring other trick-or-treaters and playing with Grandma and Grandpa and basically just running around like a maniac... my 4-year-old son asked if we could read some of his Christmas books. And I thought it was bad that Target was replacing all of its Halloween decorations with Christmas ones on the 30th. Now where on earth did that come from? Methinks we need some Thanksgiving books in the house. As my husband said, what happened to that holiday where we don't buy anything and just give thanks?