From the monthly archives:

April 2005

I’m like 900 books behind on my reviews. This is the catch up post.

The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass, by Philip Pullman. I gushed madly about the first book in this series earlier so I don’t need to go on too much about these two. The three books need to be taken together, the whole series is just really great. But the Golden Compass, the first book, is the best of the three. It was good because it focussed tightly on Lyra, the lead character. In these two books the focus broadens into the epic battle the series is all about and the intertwined stories of a whole bunch of characters at once. Its still well done but the overall whole is weaker than the first book. The second book introduces Will, the second lead protagonist, and Lyra shares lead in this book and the third book with him and seems to become less resourceful and individually heroic as a result. I also found the final resolution, the entire climactic point of the series (which I won’t spoil) to be kind of overwrought. But its been a while since I’ve read these books now and so I can find all kinds of things to nitpick: the three books as a whole are still really terrific.

House of Leaves, by Mark Danielewsky. OK. This is a book about a guy who works in a tattoo shop who finds a manuscript, written by a blind dead guy, which is a deep critical analysis of a nonexistent documentary by a famous filmmaker guy, who moved into this house and discovered that it was bigger on the inside than it was on the outside, and then videotaped his and others explorations of the house. Very Bad Things ensued. More and more Bad Things seem to happen to the tattoo guy the more he pieces together the manuscript.

This is a really creepy book. The story weaves between that of the tattoo guy and the video guy and the house. The book is heavily footnoted, and the footnotes occasionally crawl all over the page and sometimes across multiple pages. The text itself shatters the page, displayed sideways and upsidedown and in blocks. Format-wise, its really creative. Plot-wise this book borrows a lot from Blair Witch. The narrative often bogs down in the critical analysis. The central plot — the exploration haunted house — would be a lot scarier if it wasn’t being described third hand by scholars describing the movie of the exploration. The ending is hugely disappointing. But its still a hell of a lot of fun to read as an odd, creative, non-linear experimental kind of novel. Really unique.

Blink, Malcom Gladwell. I really enjoyed the Tipping Point, I love much of Gladwell’s shorter writing, and I was looking forward to this book. But it was only eh. Gladwell tells a really good story but I thought that unlike Tipping Point, in which all the stories coalesced around a well-argued central thesis, this book’s thesis wasn’t as clear. A lot of anecdotes in search of a point (kind of like my blogging).

Eastern Standard Tribe, Cory Doctorow. As much as I adore Cory this is not his best book. It starts out well — there are some good scenes near the beginning but then it goes ppffft. The ideas aren’t well explored and the characters are really thin. I have Cory’s short stories in my pile and his newest book on order so I’m hoping for better. (yes, I’ve read Down and Out and it was great).

Dr. Strange & Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke. I got this book out of the library, there were people who had it on hold after I did and thus I had two weeks to read 850 pages and if I was late I would have to return it anyhow. I was in a panic about it and did nothing for two weeks but work and read this book. But then I got totally caught up in it, lost a couple nights sleep, and finished two days ahead of time.

Its kind of funny that I can’t seem to make it through Quicksilver, Neal Stephenson’s eighteenth century historical tome. I find it too long, too wordy, too dense and too detailed. But here is this eighteen century historical tome which is also long, wordy, dense and detailed, and I had no problem with it at all. Maybe it was the fairies.

No, really, it was the fairies. As I mentioned in the gushing for the Pullman books, I like a well-told fantasy novel. In short, this is the sort of book I adore and thus I adored it. It was great fun and I wanted more when it was over. Two things I did not like: the pictures, which were pointless and very bad; and the footnotes, which were mostly pointless and boring. I began to skim them about 300 pages in and do not feel I lost any great effect of the book.

Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby: A Literary Reference (not on amazon). Matthew Bruccoli, Editor. I’m not sure why I’m posting about this one given that I’m probably one of four people on the entire internet who actually cares. The Great Gatsby is my favourite book; I reread it every few years and I find something new about it every time. Its a beautiful little jewel of a book. Plus I relate a lot to Fitzgerald’s story, of the writer who was famous at 25, destroyed by success, and totally washed up ten years later. :/

This particular book is kind of a companion to the novel — it contains all kinds of background information about the novel itself (a lot of the characters were based on real people, which would have been obvious to people reading it in 1926 when it was published, but not so much now), reviews of the book when it came out (most of which were moderate, at best), critical discussion, and my favourite part: letters between Fitzgerald and his editor as the book was being written and revised. Its a really interesting glimpse into the writing process and the emotional state of Fitzgerald as he was working on the book. How writers think when they write is a subject that has always fascinated me.

Getting Things Done, David Allen. I actually read this book a long while ago, before there was such a monster Internet cult about it. And I thought the book had a lot of terrific ideas for getting organized, many of which I incorporated into my own routine. But I can’t say that GTD totally changed my life or that I converted my entire organizational world to the GTD system. But over the years I’ve noticed that the book has grown in popularity and people are going absolutely NUTS over it. So I thought, OK, read it again, maybe I missed something the first time. And I didn’t. The system has a whole lot of good ideas (and I am using more of them this time around). But like a lot of business book there’s a lot of fluff in this book, a lot of verbiage in the beginning and the end that just made me sleepy. If you get curious about GTD I suggest skipping to Part 2 where he describes the system. That’s the good part. And I like 43folders and lifehacker for general-purpose organizational tips.

Right now I have like ten computer books in my pile I’m supposed to read but I just can’t bring myself to do it. Right now I want to read dumb fluffy things.

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umunhumunhum

April 29, 2005

in Uncategorized

hummer #2
If I look out the window, I can see Mount Umunhum across the valley. Umunhum is the Ohlone indian word for hummingbird, and yup, we got them.

The hummingbirds have recently returned to my yard in force for the springtime and I’ve had to start filling up the feeder every few days. I’ve seen pictures of folk’s feeders with eight, ten, twelve hummers at once but my feeder isn’t like that — my hummers fight for it, they battle each other off of it and they hide in the rosebush and then charge out and chase each other off the feeder shouting what I assume is hummingbird bad language. They do it to me when I go out there, too, and its surprising how scary a bird less than two inches long can be when its really really mad.

This last weekend a new hummingbird showed up at the feeder, a baby hummingbird, and the other hummers left it alone. It sat at the feeder for a good five minutes as I watched and drank the feeder nearly dry (“Best. Flower. EVAR.”) I haven’t seen the baby since then, but you know, they grow quick, especially when they eat their weight in sugar water every 20 minutes.

I put more hummingbird photos up on flickr.

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metro

April 26, 2005

in Uncategorized

OK, this is easily the dumbest idea I’ve heard all week. (of course its only tuesday)

Microsoft officials told WinHEC attendees that Metro is a “new fixed document format built on top of XML” that Microsoft will make available royalty-free. Microsoft is releasing publicly the specification for Metro on Monday, officials said.

According to information from Microsoft partner Global Graphics, Metro “is an open format that allows users to share, print and archive paginated-layout documents and used in document workflows.”

“As a Page Description Language (PDL), ‘Metro’ will offer significantly improved screen-to-print fidelity to meet knowledge worker demand for documents rich in graphics content as well as the high fidelity needs of the digital imaging marketplace,” according to a Global Graphics press release.

Mishra said that printers with Metro “interpreters” and/or those which are Metro-enabled will be able to best print Metro-based documents and photos.

You know, I was just the other day thinking that as a knowledge worker, PostScript wasn’t fulfilling all my document workflow needs. And that what I really needed was a Microsoft version of PostScript. Based on XML. Yeah. That’s what I need. That’ll really solve all the lingering icky problems that I’ve always had with PostScript, such as….um….

Hey, I wonder if it’ll be reverse-polish XML.

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T-mobile’s web site has a page where you can enter in your address and it’ll show you a colored map indicating how good T-mobile’s cell phone coverage is in your area. It zooms in pretty far so this is probably better than those strange regional amoebas you get from most call carriers.

Except. According to the map I should be getting no T-mobile coverage whatsoever at my house. According to the map I should have to drive all the way into town in order to get even a “fair” signal. And I’m sitting here on the couch looking at four bars on my Nokia.

I guess T-mobile doesn’t have anyone like that annoying Verizon guy actually driving around to check the actual signal. Although sending Catherine Zeta-Jones around would probably do wonders for subscribership.

(I got it from Gizmodo.)

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to the flame

April 25, 2005

in Uncategorized

A guy goes to the doctor. “Doctor,” he says. “I need your help. I think I’m a moth.”

“I can’t help you, ” says the doctor. “I’m just a general practitioner. You need a psychiatrist.”

“I was on the way to the psychiatrist,” says the guy. “But then I saw your light was on.”

(I heard it this weekend on Prairie Home Companion)

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