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Posts Tagged ‘books’

Barbapapa?

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Today in my mailbox at work, I received a Barbapapa book from a Half.com seller, but no indication of who bought it for me. If you did, please let me know so I can properly thank you!

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Universal Truths

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007
  • People don’t work on Mondays or Fridays. Monday and Friday traffic? Awesome. Tuesday through Thursday traffic? Craptastic. Coincidence? I think not.
  • Enzo has rockstar kidneys. 8 months after being diagnosed with protein-losing nephropathy, he’s still going strong, and his kidney values from his last checkup were actually better than his values from the previous checkup. Take that, protein-losing nephropathy.
  • 99.5% of BMW drivers are assholes. The other 0.5% are my dad.
  • Blue cheese tastes like ass.
  • The music from The Phantom of the Opera is still awesome after 20 years, in spite (or because?) of the cheesy 80s synthesized drums.

As mentioned above, I recently listened to the Phantom of the Opera soundtrack again. I decided to listen to it in my car on Friday, and after a 50 minute commute flew by, I realized that keeping myself occupied makes commuting much more tolerable. To that end, I’ve decided to give audio books a try. I’ve acquired A Short History of Everything and Freakonomics, and I’ll give them a try over the next couple of weeks. Hopefully it will make that stop and go traffic feel oh-so-fun. Recommendations for other books are welcome.

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Finished

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

I finished yesterday. If you’d like to discuss, shoot me an e-mail or leave a comment here. Overall, I was entertained and thought it was a pretty satisfying ending.

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I Can Read, Too

Tuesday, August 29th, 2006

When I was a kid, I was a big reader, but in the past several years, that fell by the wayside for other hobbies, such as…sleeping, and not exercising. In the past few months, though, I’ve actually read a few books, and I thought I’d share my thoughts on them with you, dear readers.


Me Talk Pretty One Day

David Sedaris
I’d been wanting to read David Sedaris for a while, and ended up reading this one on and off over a couple months. It’s a collection of short essays about his life and his family, and was a light, enjoyable read. Somehow, he makes drug addiction funny.
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Empire Falls

Richard Russo
This was probably the most literature-y of the books I read, and I enjoyed it. The beginning was slow and hard to get through, and the end a little strange, but most of it was very good. Interesting characters and a bit of mystery thrown in for good measure.
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JPod: A Novel

Douglas Coupland
Microserfs is one of my favorite books, so when I heard Coupland was working on a sequel of sorts that took place at a game company of all places, I was more than a little excited. So it was with great anticipation that I read JPod on the flight to New York a couple months ago. One word: Crap. Okay, two words: Total Crap. I haven’t had a more disapointing reading experience in recent memory. I returned it because I couldn’t stand owning it. Any writer who writes himself into one of his stories, not even in an ironic way, should be ashamed of himself. Shame on you, Douglas Coupland. You are a poo.
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How to Be Lost: A Novel

Amanda Eyre Ward
Amanda described this book well as “good pizza.” Not a work of literature by any standard, but a good, satisfying, story that takes just a few hours to get through. A good vacation read.
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Life of Pi

Yann Martel
A great book, and a great story. I highly recommend this book.
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Hamptonia

Wednesday, August 31st, 2005

Got back last night from a nice family vacation in East Hampton. I took a redeye to New York Wednesday night and arrived (with eyes appropriately red) at around 6 am Thursday morning. I took a quick nap at my brother’s place (where my parents had arrived the previous day) before heading to Long Island with the dog in tow. My sister in law, her mother, and my niece had arrived the day before, so they were waiting for us when we arrived. And maybe I’m biased, but I have to declare here that my niece is officially the Cutest Baby of All Time. She walks like a pro now, and has a wide vocabulary consisting of words like “Mommy”, “apple”, “dog”, “shoes”, and “goggles” (which she learned while I was there, thank you very much.)

The rest of the time was spent doing some combination of the following: reading (finished the new Harry Potter book), swimming, hanging out with the fam, going to the beach, eating waaaayyyy too much, watching a few movies, and playing with my niece. You’ll notice that “sleeping” was not in that list. This is because my family has a strange aversion to allowing my sister and I to sleep in on vacations. This has been the case for as long as I can remember. Usually this involves my family walking into the room, not explicitly trying to wake us up, but talking at a normal volume, using the computer, etc. Eventually, we either break down and get up, or my Mom directly tells us to get up. Sunday morning, my brother first woke us up at 7:57am to give us donuts (which was, admittedly, very nice) and then the circus began. I eventually caved in and got up around 9 or so, but my sister kept sleeping. At 10, my Mom told my sister to get up.

Mom: Get up!
Sister: Ugh.
Mom: Get up! It’s late!
Sister: Why? Don’t we only have [quick_family_thing] to do?
Mom: If you don’t get up, people will be waiting for you!
Sister: Why?? What are we doing??
Mom (with great urgency): I don’t know!

Really, how can you argue with that?

My sister and I took the bus back to Manhattan Sunday afternoon where I got to see her swank new apartment. We watched a bit of TV, had dinner, and in the evening I met up with my high school friend Eli. I hadn’t seen her since high school, so it was nice to catch up. We met at Union Square, and I had a brief flash of panic when I thought I might not recognize her if I saw her, but we managed to find each other with no problem. We went to a tea house, then met up with a friend of hers and sat up on the roof deck of the apartment he was watching. In high school Eli and I would always have New York City vs. San Francisco debates (I being on the New York side, and she being on the San Francisco side) so we decided it was some sort of karmic retribution that she should end up in New York, and I in the Bay Area.

Monday morning I got up early to meet my other high-school bud Lisa before she had to go to work. We sat in Au Bon Pain and had expensive orange juice and had a nice lil’ chat. She filled me in on her exciting adventures, and I filled her in on my boring non-adventures. Good times.

Afterwards I picked up my stuff at my sister’s apartment before meeting my sister-in-law for lunch at the newly-redone MoMA. It’s very nice; nicer than the SF MoMA, I’m inclined to say. After lunch it was off to the airport via subway, then back to the good ol’ Bay Area.

It was a really nice, relaxing trip, despite getting less sleep than I get here. I also gotta give huge proppy shout-out thanks to Buddy for taking care of Enzo while I was gone.

In some sadder news, my dog Wendy was put to sleep early Monday morning. My parents put her in a kennel, and while she was at the kennel, her hind legs collapsed (she had pretty severe arthritis.) The kennel people took her to the vet, where they gave her injections of arthritis medication to try to get her back on her feet. Unfortunately, the medication is bad for your kidneys (hers were likely not doing to well to begin with) so her kidneys began to fail. Since her kidneys were failing, she started to have seizures. Fortunately, she held on long enough for my parents to return home, so they were there when the vet put her to sleep. (My other two dogs were put to sleep when no members of the family were present.) Wendy was 15 years old and had a very good life, but I was still really sad to see her go. She was the last of my childhood pets, so I think she was probably lonely after my other two dogs died. She’ll be cremated like my other dogs and sent back home.

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Happy Father’s Day!

Sunday, June 19th, 2005

I called my dad this afternoon and we talked for a bit. He’s off helping my sister pack, and I awoke him from one of his famous naps. Father’s Day is one of those holidays that I’m never really sure what to do with. Presents? Dinners? Pats on the back? I suppose it’s just a day for you to think about your father, and what he means to you. Without launching into a long sappy essay complete with: “‘F’ is for ‘Fun’ which I always have with Dad! ‘A’ is for ‘Amazing’ and…”, I shall say only this: I am my father’s daughter. Happy Father’s Day!

Yesterday I went on a run at the Dish, which always sucks, but makes me feel like I’ve actually worked out. Afterwards Buddy came over to watch Hero (the Visual Effects Supervisor works at EA now), then we had lunch at Maru Ichi (mmm…cold noodle plate…) and bummed around Mountain View.

I ran a few errands in the afternoon, where I discovered that grocery shopping while you have literally no food in your apartment is a strange ordeal.

I also read (and finished) Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, which Buddy lent to me. It’s a really enjoyable book (I actually laughed out loud at a few parts), but I still stand by my assertion that whatever your intentions, you cannot correct someone’s grammar or spelling without sounding like an ass. However, I just spent a couple minutes staring at the words “Fathers’ Day”, wondering to myself whether that apostrophe belongs there. Damn you, Lynn Truss.

Oh, and I’m at work.

Edit: Changed “Fathers’ Day” to “Father’s Day” because that seems to be the most common punctuation. Gah. Next year I’m just typing “HAPPYFATHERZDAYOMG!”

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Book Learnin’

Tuesday, June 8th, 2004

Recently, I’ve been started to read again. I read a lot as a kid, but pretty much stopped altogether as I got older, except for required reading for school (and sometimes not even that.) However, there are 2 nice bookstores near my apartment, so I picked up a couple to make sure my brain doesn’t turn completely to mush.

The first was Douglas Coupland’s All Families are Psychotic. His previous novel Microserfs was given to me by a friend, and is one of my favorite books. All Families are Psychotic was good as well, but a bit strange for me. The story became more and more far fetched as it progressed, which, I suppose, makes it live up to its title.

After that, I read The Da Vinci Code. Dan Brown is a good writer, although parts of it (particularly his pop-culture references) seem out-of-place. Mariel said it was like writing an essay and suddenly remembering a point you wanted to make. There’s no logical place to put it, so you end up cramming it in whatever paragraph you please. Despite this, it is a very entertaining and fast-reading book, although it’s obvious the story was a thinly-veiled excuse by Dan Brown for getting his wacky theories published. And wacky they were. Interestingly, I was more skeptical of his theories surrounding Disney movies than I was of his theories doubting the divinity of Jesus.

So now I’m at a point where I’m not sure what to read next. I started Seabiscuit, and on many occasions I’ve attempted to start Fellowship of the Ring. Buddy suggested Cryptonomicon which sounds good, but I think it might be too similar to The Da Vinci Code. Any suggestions?

Edit: Using the MT BookQueue and MT Amazon plugins, I made myself a nifty little books page.

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