Sam's Backup Page (
cblj_backup) wrote2011-05-12 12:26 pm
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Well, I am back from a morning doctor's visit, or rather have been for a while but had catching up to do. Apparently my Vitamin D levels hover between ten and thirteen and should be hovering around thirty to thirty five. Small wonder I hate the sun, apparently it's totally useless to me.
Anyway, I got jabbed for one last test before they start giving me the big gun prescription vitamin suppliments, so now I have a ninja bandaid on my arm.
At the doctor's office I finished reading Priceless by Robert Wittman and John Shiffman, which is a memoir of Wittman's time with the Art Crimes unit of the FBI, mostly as an undercover operative. It's a little disjointed, like it's not sure what it's supposed to be doing, but the stories are fascinating and it's a good adventure book -- a mixture of crime, art history, and police procedural. One of the cases Wittman worked on was the Gardner theft, late in the game, and that part of the book got a little technical and political, but all round it's a good read. Excellent recommendation for fans of heist flicks and true crime. :)
SO, now I'm faced with the question of what to read next. I have two books checked out from the library and one I'll pick up when I return Priceless: "The Sushi Economy", which is about globalization and its impact on the spread of sushi as a delicacy, "A Night In The Lonesome October" which is presumably about October, and "Confessions of a Justified Sinner" which is, according to Wikipedia, part-gothic novel, part-psychological mystery, part-curio, part-metafiction, part-satire, part-case study of totalitarian thought.
I have to admit I'm eyeballing A Night In The Lonesome October suspiciously. Zelazny and I have not traditionally got on well.
Anyway, between that and being a bit low on blood (and Vitamin D), I think it's time to let the Cafe drive for a while.
[Poll #1740746]
Anyway, I got jabbed for one last test before they start giving me the big gun prescription vitamin suppliments, so now I have a ninja bandaid on my arm.
At the doctor's office I finished reading Priceless by Robert Wittman and John Shiffman, which is a memoir of Wittman's time with the Art Crimes unit of the FBI, mostly as an undercover operative. It's a little disjointed, like it's not sure what it's supposed to be doing, but the stories are fascinating and it's a good adventure book -- a mixture of crime, art history, and police procedural. One of the cases Wittman worked on was the Gardner theft, late in the game, and that part of the book got a little technical and political, but all round it's a good read. Excellent recommendation for fans of heist flicks and true crime. :)
SO, now I'm faced with the question of what to read next. I have two books checked out from the library and one I'll pick up when I return Priceless: "The Sushi Economy", which is about globalization and its impact on the spread of sushi as a delicacy, "A Night In The Lonesome October" which is presumably about October, and "Confessions of a Justified Sinner" which is, according to Wikipedia, part-gothic novel, part-psychological mystery, part-curio, part-metafiction, part-satire, part-case study of totalitarian thought.
I have to admit I'm eyeballing A Night In The Lonesome October suspiciously. Zelazny and I have not traditionally got on well.
Anyway, between that and being a bit low on blood (and Vitamin D), I think it's time to let the Cafe drive for a while.
[Poll #1740746]
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No book can be more October than Something Wicked This Way Comes. I can't read it at any other time of year; it feels wrong.
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I LOVE A Night in the Lonesome October - and while I like other Zelazny books as well, this one isn't typical of his writing, I think.
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I must say that "Confessions of a Justified Sinner" is a great title.
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That said - "A Night in the Lonesome October" is lovely. As another poster said above, it's not his typical writing, and it's not his typical warrior-poet narrator either.
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LOLling at Wildebeest!
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That said, Confessions of a Justified Sinner sounds interesting.
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BTW, how do you determine your reading list?
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I don't really determine my reading list, it just sort of happens to me. :D Finding the books is a combination of reccs from friends, stuff I stumble across on the internet, and "that looks like an interesting title" while I'm looking for other stuff. Right now I'm working through a backlog, but generally every time I make a hold-request at the library I try to get one "frivolous fiction/beach reading" novel, one "serious" nonfiction (like management books or cultural criticism or something else difficult), and one somewhere in the middle, like a biography or some hardcore serious literature. Keeps things balanced :D
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(Anonymous) - 2011-05-12 23:11 (UTC) - ExpandRe: can't read
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(Anonymous) 2011-05-12 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)As for your question, the justified sinner one sounds intruiging. In a wonderful way.
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You wil not regret it, and I would love to hear your reactions.
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That one's by Harvey Oxenhorn, and the more you've sailed in your life, the more hilarious it is. It's a chronicle of his voyage on the Regina Marie in the 80s. I'm very fond of it!
I have a list of books to read. Many of them have been suggested by you. I loved Made to Stick, I'm actually planning on buying it when it's in paperback and applying it (carefully) to my undergrad thesis. (the 'careful' part is because I'm a science major, and we have PROCEDURES for things.)
Lonesome October
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