Posts Tagged ‘ books ’

to help in your escape from pattern.

Listening to: Björk — Mouth’s Cradle


AARGH.

And, to top it off, an old photo because my interwebs aren’t working. But before we get to that, the weekend:

School let out for a few days on Thursday, so I went back up to Montréal and killed a significant portion of my brain cells on Sims3 binges. Lots of cold, lots of snow, lots of peanuts (maybe prompted by the book I was reading at the time, Mr. Peanut by Adam Ross). I got my dress for the winter formal (more on that later), a bunch of tights, and a bunch of belts. Also started reading Pop: The Genius of Andy Warhol by Tony Scherman and David Dalton, which is a pretty good if not jargon-loaded biography of, you guessed it, Andy Warhol. (Also made me think of The Dandy Warhols, few of whose songs I can play on the radio right now). It kinda makes me want to start silk-screening my own photographs.

Speaking of my photographs, I’m thinking of getting an Etsy or finding somewhere else to sell them online to finance my artistic endeavors, such as film buying. I was discussing this at class today, and my teacher said that his baseline price for student art was $50 dollars, but would any of you actually fork over that much for a photograph? Any price suggestions?

Which brings us back to the original complaint. Today, as the first day back from break, epically sucked. First period I took a math (con)test and, due to my immense skill, answered a grand total of 10 out of the 25 questions. My English class group project, which is putting on a scene from Taming of the Shrew, is going horridly, thank you — the other half of my group decided to sleep through class in a foreshadowing of the rest of the project. And some people are just too… is infuriating the right word? Well, someone’s asshole rating went up today.

Conversely, things seem to go worse when I drink coffee in the morning.

’cause that’s my fun-day.

Listening to: Vampire Weekend — Horchata

It’s Sunday again! Which means procrastination today and school (read: more procrastination) tomorrow. Last night I forced myself to crawl out of my room and went to the boys varsity basketball game; we won 70-something to 40-something, which was nice and kind of exciting. Then we had s’mores outside, and later while I was reading in my room, I realized that half a graham cracker had lodged itself in the folds of my scarf. What was more strange about that was that I’d eaten every graham cracker I’d taken out of the box. Also last night I spent about half an hour on babynamesworld.com, looking at hundreds upon hundreds of terrible French boy-names. I finally had to relieve one of its last syllable to come up with “Calix”, which I think is a suitably badass name for the character it now describes, even though it starts with Blé’s least favorite letter. (But really? “Kalix”?…Ohwaitnevermind.)

Just under an hour ago, my independent study adviser took me and my neighbor to the bookstore in town, and my neighbor was awesomely kind enough to lend me $17 so that I could buy Murakami’s The Wind-up Bird Chronicle, which I can’t wait to start reading, but The Elegance of the Hedgehog is just too good to put down right now.  And I just vacuumed my first time in a month or so (I know, ewww), so now I’m feeling all clean and zen and ready to go and do yoga.

of the elegance of snow after dark.

Listening to: Switchfoot — Lonely Nation

There is SO MUCH SNOW OUT HERE.

Literally, the plow-pile outside is taller than me, even when I’m wearing my 4-inch heeled boots. Yesterday we did get those 20 inches, and maybe even a bit more, and still it looks so epic. The entire, very-hilly campus was white and flat, except that white flatness started somewhere around my waist. And I have a bunch of photos of it, but currently my D3000 has been commandeered by the yearbook committee, so maybe you’ll see them next post? Some teachers couldn’t get to campus, so I only had one class the entire day (granted, it was a half day, but still). So instead I enjoyed playing courier and leaping through the powdery fresh snow to deliver people their letters, lurking in all my favorite places, and shivering. Mostly that last one (not, in retrospect, that it was particularly enjoyable). I had an oatmeal party with my across-the-hall neighbor, because I’m kind of avoiding dinner at the dining hall because I don’t really want to see anyone at the moment. I finished reading After Dark and started reading The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery, which is another really good book that you all should read, even if you don’t like/ have time to read. Today at dance, my partner and I finally executed two, maybe three perfect lifts in a row, even though she was sick, and I was so happy. But I’m still avoiding everyone.

it’s uncomfortabling out here.

Listening to: Mates Of State — Get Better

This morning it was neither snowing nor sleeting. So we decided that it was “uncomfortabling,” because it was very. Tonight, though, we’re supposed to get 20-ish inches/ 50cm of snow between now and midday tomorrow, so it will be more “impossibling” by then. At photography class today, we spent ten minutes trying to figure out the MSN weather app, and then I was dismissed.

Also today I presented my proposal for an independent study (in novel-editing), which OMG GOT ACCEPTED and was probably the most nerve-wracking ten minutes of my recent life. My new military dress from Delia’s came in the mail yesterday (and I was assigned a new mailbox, since the lady at the post office decided that I was too tall to open my old one), so I’d totally have an outfit photo for you if I were physically capable of taking one right now (trust me, I’m not). But, in its stead, here is something over which I am currently obsessing: After Dark by Haruki Murakami. It is so amazing and unsettling and beautiful that I’ve basically been slinging it at everyone who’s passed me reading it over the past few days, yelling, “THIS IS SUCH A GOOD BOOK I KNOW YOU HATE READING BUT YOU NEED TO READ THIS.” Also the song “FlyPaper”  by K-OS, which just kind of fits the mood.

Another nice development is that the Powers That Be have decided that, since our entire campus is sleep-deprived, the class day will start a half-hour later on Wednesdays. Since Wednesdays are already my sleep-in, I will be enjoying my 1.5-hour naptime… awake, probably. Stupid breakfast.

not sentimental, no.

Listening to: Vampire Weekend — Holiday

I’m good at missing dates. authoraiINK’s birthday was exactly one year and 14 days ago, on December 9th, 2009. Yay for a year of procrastination!

Speaking of procrastination, it’s two days ’till Christmas and we just finished building our Christmas tree. Yes, I said building: We have a much-abused, 12+ year-old artificial tree which was looking kind of misshapen because I sort of tossed (read: threw) its pieces carelessly from the box. Then I almost set our carpet on fire because I didn’t realize that one of the large bulbs in our string of lights had shattered.

But anywho. Since I’m on vacation and such, I’ve been engaged in a few of my hobbies which were neglected during school, namely 1) stalking my neighbor and 2) reading. It actually works pretty well; I go to my neighbor’s house, eat her lemon squares, take a pile of her books, and leave. So far I’ve read Crescendo, the sequel to Hush, Hush by Becca Fitzpatrick; I’ve caught up on my current favourite manga series Alice in the Country of Hearts; and I’ve gotten angry that I can’t hate the ending to Cassandra Clare’s Mortal Instruments series because it hasn’t actually ended. It makes me angry because it’s like saying a heartfelt goodbye to someone you’re going to miss and then running into them again five minutes later.

Well, happy holidays and such. I have gifts to wrap, movies to see (The Black Swan), and Christmas trees to crush.

russia is likely more photogenic, though the snow here sparkles like flakes of glitter.

Listening to: Frou Frou — Breathe In

IT’S SNOWING HERE! But of course my joy had to be dampened with the knowledge that there’s more than 15cm of snow back at homsies. Sigh. Yesterday was exciting;  I learned how to play squash (but I will still call it squish); our boy’s varsity team won 1-0; and it seemed that between 9pm and 11:30 too many people were a bit too tipsy. But now everyone’s awake and not-expelled, so all is well in the land of Über-Prep.

As promised, I have a short story for you. It’s not the one that’s being published tomorrow, because that one’s far too long (4+ pages!) for a meager blog post such as this. This one is titled the soulcage.

They awoke early to the rooster’s nasal caw. He strutted up and down the hall, pecking them out of their cubbyholes, nipping at their sore heels. The girls emerged from their nests like bees from a hive. some stepped down on their toes like the ballerinas they’d once longed to be; others slumped and slipped and slithered like mud snakes. When they were all out, the rooster swaggered about them in a few loose circles, examining with a dull black eye the sad and tired countenances on their beautiful faces. Then, with the order to prepare themselves, he sent them out a small hatch door hidden behind their cubicles.

–You’re lucky. You look so ugly today.

–What are you talking about? We’re all super pretty, remember? We’re beautiful.

–IF YOU DO NOT PREEN WELL, WE WILL DISPOSE OF YOU.

The girls washed their faces above cracked mirrors in a tiny room with walls of peeling lead paint. They searched, hopefully, for new blemishes on their flawless skin, complimenting each other on their bed head and morning breath. They sighed over the beautiful clothes that the weaverbird gave them, clothes that in another life they would have coveted. This splendor only reinforced the irony of their plight: they were imprisoned because of their beauty; this was meant to be a gift. If they had been less appealing to the eye, they would be free.

–My feet! They expect me to walk all day in these?

–Well, you did it yesterday, didn’t you?

–QUIET! NO ONE COMES HERE TO HEAR YOU SPEAK.

When they started walking, the sky was gray. Nobody fed them at all that morning, which was okay with the girls – if they became emaciated and their hair began to fall out, they might be sent home, and anyway it was difficult to walk on a full stomach. Even though there were few observers beyond their glass cage, the girls filed out of the hatch door and down the hall in a long procession of stiletto heels and Fabergé eggs in birds’ nests of hair. Their footsteps echoed off the checkerboard marble floor, bouncing off the endless walls and ringing deep within their eardrums.

Ohmigod!

–Is she okay?

–WHO ASKED YOU TO STOP WALKING?

One of the models dropped with fatigue halfway through their first walk of the hall. The crow who stood guard by the singular door became enraged, screeching that it was their task to please the audience. Not that the audience was unentertained by the young girl’s plight – catastrophe was drama, after all, and watching humans simply walk was amusing for only so long.  From where she lay on a moldy couch near their cubbyholes, the sick girl watched her compatriots promenade. The clouds pressed against the windows above them, heavy like a sheet of dark lead poised to drop and bury shards of glass into their souls. But they knew that the glass would never break, just as they knew that only such a death would ever end their torment.

If it rains, and the birds leave, do you think that they’ll let us go back to sleep?

The idea is that you’re supposed to be able to read the left-aligned stuff with the right-aligned italics like fragmented thoughts/overheard words in the back of your mind. It works for some people, not so much for others.

I’m reading Animal Farm right now. It sucks how well-intentioned governments devolve, no? Hobbes is right; everyone fails at morality. Life sucks.

But not really. And that’s because we have PHOTOGRAPHY, which those poor saps on the Animal Farm never had. Here is a little blurb about said art form that I wrote for the art mag:

My camera is a gun. Sometimes people duck before I shoot, but I don’t shoot to kill — I shoot to capture. With my weapon of mass depiction, I hunt down beautiful moments. If they’re not beautiful to begin with, I’ll make them that way or fill my SD card trying. That’s part of why I love photography: with every picture I take, I can save something fleeting and make once-in-a-lifetime last a lifetime. I can rewrite history, stop time, and make fiction a reality. And after spending so much time behind a lens, life becomes more photogenic. I lift my spirits with the knowledge that even my darkest moments could look great on film. Then I can remind myself that life isn’t always so dark; in photos, all the world is a play of light.

I’m sure that I’ve mentioned before that almost all of my favorite photographers are Russians/ Eastern Europeans, which really doesn’t help with my obsession with that part of the world. One film photographer in particular goes by the name Oprisco; I don’t know his real name, but his stuff is kinda awesome, even if his entire website is pretty much gibberish to me ‘cuz it’s in Russian. But here is some of his work:

Stunning,  no? He also makes me really want a medium format camera so that I can shoot with 120mm film. Maybe one day I’ll ask for a Diana, even if the people on Flickr would disapprove. Yes; if you hadn’t noticed, the photographia link has been changed from my Carbonmade portfolio to my newly-created Flickr account. Never fear, though — you can still find my Carbonmade via our du sujet de… page.

friday foofaraw 19/11/2010: an apology for my procrastination that I’ll write… tomorrow.

Listening to: Blue October — Hate Me

Not that you should — hate me, that is. I’m just reeeealy busy and sort of lack dedication with regularity-type things, or something like that. In case you hadn’t noticed, the friday foofaraw feature kind of died. Well, maybe not died, per se, but it certainly crawled into a hole and went into hibernation for a long while. And for that, I’m sorry. The main problems with being consistent with it were the facts that I’m in schoolio and all and have tons of homework, and also because I often ended up sharing all of my cool interwebsy stuff the day I found it, aka not on Friday.

I’m leaving for (American) Thanksgiving break tomorrow, so I’ll probably have tons of time to procrastinate/ write/ play the Sims 3 Late Night/ finish reading Dark Divine and L’appel du sang, which I obviously haven’t finished yet. But until then, watch some stunt cats on infoMania’s viral video film school while I daydream about watching the new Harry Potter movie.

And! Also! My awesome Threadless t-shirt has officially been shipped. So hopefully it’ll be there by the time I get back!

see what I did there?

friday foofaraw 29/10/2010: your wedding dress is my french literature.

Listening to: Metro Station — Shake It

suc·cinct [ sək'siŋkt ] : expressed in a very short but clear way.

Like this post, where I know what I want to tell you but I’m too busy to put it into a nice and eloquent form (and I used all of my quick-eloquent-writing skill at class today). So let’s hit the ground running, shall we?

1.

I love Harry Potter. Very much so, actually — I even dressed up and went to the midnight release parties. I also have a soft spot for Alexander McQueen dresses. The combination of these two should be great, but:

This dress was designed by the late Alexander McQueen. It’s rather famous in the fashion world. However, the wedding dress used for Bill Weasley and Fleur Delacour’s wedding might as well have been as well. In the name of brevity, I’ll let you click the link to see the latter — it’s a very pretty, if very similar, dress. Currently the HP costume designer’s strongest argument is something along the lines of “But phoenixes are totally different birds than peacocks,” but… please, Temime, give credit where credit is due.

2.

Speaking of phoenixes, Kanye West’s short film Runaway is a rather pheonix-y affair. For a detailed film-critic analysis you can hit up Jezebel; I just wanted to show you the movie.

3.

This week I stole time during soccer game bus rides and got started on two books. One of them I bought in Montréal, so it’s in French (and I also might’ve purchased another, maybe it was written by Stephenie Meyer and had La Seconde Vie de Bree Tanner in its title –  but for the sake of my dignity we won’t speak of it), and the other was recommended to me by one of my teachers. This first book of which I speak is Dark Divine by Bree Despain; you should go check it out in the language of your choice, because even though I’m only on page 63 it’s been pretty good so far. The second is Bonjour Tristesse by François Sagan, which is both really good and much shorter than Dark Divine. What’s ironic, though, is that I’m now reading an originally English novel in French and a French classic in English. My French professor, for the record, shook his head and sighed when I told him.

Well, that is all for now. I’m sorry it was was so brief, but that’s part of the consequences of procrastination. Enjoy your weekend, because I still don’t have one.

 

friday foofaraw 15oct.2010: photos and paris and parties, oh my.

Listening to: St. Vincent — The Party

Hello, daaahlings! It’s that time of the week again — yes, Friday, that day when you people get to start your weekend while I suffer through one more day of classes. You have had a good week, yes? (This would be where you agree with me). You probably aren’t famous enough to be invited, but the party of the year was held the last day of this past month.  To celebrate the 90th anniversary of Vogue Paris, Carine Roitfeld hosted a masked ball at the Hôtel Pozzo Di Borgo.


All of those famous fashion types were there, from supermodels to über-designers to those people who just seem to show up at fashion-related parties. Among the present were Jean Paul Gaultier, Freja Beha Erichsen, Lara Stone, Marc Jacobs, Dita von Tesse, Gisele Bundchen, Miuccia Prada, and Diane Von Furstenberg. Tyra, if you recall, made headlines a while back (what a sad, sad society we are) with her fishnet stocking-turned-mask, and Kate Moss decided to be a party pooper and didn’t wear one at all.

But in case you ever happen to be invited to such a Bal Masqué, this month’s edition of Vogue Paris has an editorial to tell you exactly how to dress.

Well, exactly how to dress if you have several thousand dollars laying around and don’t mind baring your breasts for a night. If you live in 2112 and are planning to attend, you might want to check out this month’s spread on the cosmetics of the future, featuring model Eniko Mihalik and shot by Mario Sorrenti.

But since I haven’t been attending any balls this past week, I got a chance to catch up on some reading. Yes, I got to read an entire book. Well, it was a very slender book. And to be completely honest, it was more of a graphic novel than fine literature. But it was still very good. It’s called Skim, by Mariko Tamaki and Jilliam Tamaki, and I think that you should all do yourselves a favor and go check it out. I, personally, cannot wait to head up to Montréal and go to a legit bookstore, not to mention to have time to read the books I buy (I’ve had The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest out from the library for about a month now, and fast-reader me is still on page 89).

During our radio show on Tuesday, my cohost and I had an involved conversation on the quality of songs which can be obtained free on iTunes. This discussion was prompted by the song The Ballad of You and I by the band Mêlée, which was free on iTunes this past week. It’s one of those free-but-destined-for-greatness songs, à la Fireflies by Ocean City, so you should go and give it a listen.

Well, I believe that this wraps up this week’s Friday Foofaraw. Now go forth, grab your good literature, pop your skincare pills, buy yourself a $2,000 mask and dance the night away… or stay in and do your homework, because that’s what I’m going to do.

les choses belles.

Listening to:

I dunno if it’s a manifestation of my second-week-of-school homesickness, but lately I’ve been wanting new French books and music. (Which in turn makes me feel kinda dumb, because my spoken French is shit compared to the other Montréalers — or just the Montréalers, depending on whether or not I count — here.) I really want to get the Pony Pony Run Run album You Need Pony Pony Run Run, and whilst browsing the Renaud-Bray website, I realized that I’m about eleven episodes behind on the (k) series. I can’t wait until next month, when I can go to an *actual* bookstore and buy my books, my CD, and also the two t-shirts I’ve been coveting:

But that’s not for another month. Now, I have way too much stuff to do, like my homework (gah!) and day-logging (I’m keeping a log of everything notable that happens every day this school year for Blé — it’s not a diary, more of just a record) and writing and finding some way to appease my photography teacher, who I know would find some reason not to like my photos even if I were Cecil freakin’ Beaton.

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