Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

8.20.2010

from my siblings

Current Mood: anxious

What I’m Watching

  • How I Met Your Mother (season 4)
  • preseason football (Bengals, Packers)
  • Top Shot

What I’m Reading

  • Day by Day Armageddon: Beyond Exile by J.L. Bourne
  • Chad: i Can't Be Stopped by Paul Daughtery

What I’m Listening To

  • Avenged Sevenfold - Nightmare
  • Airbourne - Runnin' Wild
  • various hair metal bands (Winger, Warrant, Firehouse)

What I’m Playing

…I’d love to hear yours!

2.18.2009

words on a page

Current Mood: overly pensive and reflective, of late

SO. I have not written here in a long while. I think there is a relationship between how I feel and how much I write. When I am in a bad mood and things aren't going well, I clam up. When things are super busy and there's a lot to do, I feel compelled to procrastinate and write about it.

But perhaps more on that later.

When I was a kid I used to read all the time. We didn't have cable TV, just a few boring channels and I didn't get shows like Seinfeld or Married With Children. Computer time was limited by my parents - no more than two hours a day for non school entertainment, a rule that I bitched about but in retrospect was probably a good idea. Something I would think about for my kids, if and when that came about. I had a decent amount of video game exposure, but before DLC and online content, and without much money for new games, the ones I had got beaten pretty quickly.

Hours. And. Hours. spent playing Super Mario Kart.

So I read a lot. A LOT. Mom and Dad were pretty good about taking my siblings and me to the library pretty regularly, another thing I will do for my kids. I strongly strongly believe there's a correlation between reading and overall intelligence. At times (especially during the summer) I had a healthy competition with my older sister for books read, so that didn't hurt.

I had a nearly insatiable appetite for reading. More books than I could carry from the library, spending allowance on books from Borders, Waldenbooks, Barnes and Noble, Half Price Books and other places I remember quite well. I'd read in the car (I didn't get sick - sis did), and on the bus. I read while mom ran errands. I read at the dinner table. I read under the blankets at night, with a flashlight.

My favorites were always science fiction, fantasy, biographies, and pretty much any science book. Not much has changed in my tastes. I was really proud to always be well beyond my grade level of reading.

Then, I'm not quite sure when or how, I just kinda stopped reading books all the time. I went from a few books a week to like, maybe one or two a month. Then to just a handful of books a year. My guess was that was when school really ramped up? Late high school?

The other day I was wondering where all that reading went, and I think I still do read a lot - but not so much in book form. On the web. It...sneaks by that way? It never feels like reading a book, but I know I do a lot of it. I read somewhere that it is theorized that kids today may be reading just as much as past generations, but it's fragmented, and largely online, so maybe that's what's going on?

A lot of this sort of thing going on. I am helpless against it.

What brought on all of this? Roommate Greg loaned me Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six the other day, and I'm tearing through it (which makes me feel really good). Probably the most concentrated amount of book reading I've done in several months. Just made me think of my childhood, I guess.

5.21.2008

There really are no words

Current Mood: disgusted

From the Baltimore Sun:

"The New York Yankees' Jason Giambi sometimes wears a gold thong under his uniform while trying to break out of a slump, the New York Daily News reported.

As if that's not bad enough, the piece of lingerie apparently is communal underwear. Teammates Derek Jeter and Johnny Damon said they have also worn it. And on Saturday, a sign at Mike Mussina's locker read: "Pitchers need thongs, too."

New York Mets manager Willie Randolph, a former Yankees coach, said: "Giambi's a little freaky. I wouldn't go there."

In any case, Giambi might need to try something like a bustier. Even with thong enhancement, he's still batting below .200."

In other news, I just found out that Michael Stackpole is going to be at GENCON this year. I had fun last year, but recently I've heard some horror stories. I wasn't going to really go again, because I will probably have to work and it's expensive...but maybe I should dig up one of my favorite books and get it signed?

7.03.2007

Concepts Revisited

Current Mood: lonely
Current Music: "Somebody Get Me A Doctor" by Van Halen

This is an update of a series of blog posts about concepts that I love. Here we go.

Recently, I found a bit of text in a book I am reading called The Engines of Our Ingenuity by John Lienhard, about the evolution of technologies and the connection with culture. It mentions an example of social commentary, a previous Concept That I Love.

Photography turned to documentary reporting- the joining of the two ends of the transcontinental railway, an absolutely radiant young Sarah Bernhardt, a wild-eyed Baudelaire. And another thread appears. We see rotting corpses of Civil war dead and child laborers in factories. We see the urban poor. By the 1860s photography had become social commentary and a self-conscious historical record. Photography began as an unsolved technical problem, a teaser of the imagination. In just thirty years the ability to record images had turned into an extension of our conscience.