Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Lit Flicks Challenge
There's a new button on my left sidebar announcing and linking to the "Lit Flicks Challenge." It lasts until the end of February 2009 (six months). The LFC plan is 5 books/pieces of literature that have been made into movies (read them) and at least 2 movie adaptations of same (watch them) and review them. LFC's proprietor is Jessica; her brother, Blake, is running a corollary challenge whose idea is 5 movies adapted from books (watch them) and at least 2 of the books those movies are based on (read them).

Aside from the sheer pleasure of these challenges, there will be monthly activities and giveaways. Jessica deserves a ton of praise for this (does praise come in tons?) and for her "regular" blog, The Bluestocking Society, which is great, where she writes about and reviews lots and lots and lots and lots of books. Blake's blog is all about movies and reviews, and also needs to be added to one's day.

To start the challenge, a participant is instructed to answer 4 questions. Here goes:

  1. Are you more likely to see a movie if it’s based on a book?
    Honestly, I don't think so. I vacillate between thinking I do and thinking I don't so I guess the truthful answer is no.

  2. Do you prefer to read the book first or see the movie first?
    No preference. But whether I approach either with an open mind is a mine field inside my ridiculously judgmental head. I'm puzzlingly prejudiced about books and authors, completely irrational about it, really, so if my internal voice says the author is "good" I'll feel thrilled to watch the movie or read the book in either order whichever presents itself first. (Note to meme: one reason I'm excited about this challenge is to be forced to read and watch things on a schedule and therefore possibly foil the judgmental obnoxious voice in my head.)

  3. List one movie that was better than the book it’s based on, and one book that is better than the movie.
    Tom Jones was without a doubt the most boring movie I have ever seen. Considering that it's based on a quite ordinary but enjoyable novel by Henry Fielding, and that the screenplay was written by John Osborne who is absolutely one of the last century's most exciting playwrights (Look Bank in Anger, The Entertainer, Luther. . .), I never understood why it didn't work at all for me but I've gotten better nights sleep "watching" it than under medication.

    Believe it or not, my choice for the second part of the question is the 1988 tv version of Anna Karenina (WAIT! don't despair of my taste - I'll explain). I loathed the book when I read it when I was really too young to understand it, but it still makes me want to throw a book at Anna's head because she's so relentlessly pouty and unwilling to do anything to fix her situation. But in this version, Paul Scofield conveys an astonishingly two-part emotional impact - on the one hand, loving and care-taking but on the other utterly stodgy and almost imprisoning of his wife and child whom he, nonetheless, clearly and vividly loves. Since I found Scofield very attractive, this portrayal of a man who could not be dashing and exciting even though he wanted to appeal to his wife clicked with me and finally made me understand Anna's misery. Furthermore, Jacqueline Bisset was superficial yet conveyed affection and tenderness so wasn't the idiotic flibbertigibbet that Anna seemed to me in the book. In other words, I understood, appreciated and cared about the emotional truth of the characters because of this movie even though it had eluded me in the book.

  4. In your opinion, what film is the most accurate representation of the book?
    There are several in contention but the winner is the 1995 adaptation of Jane Austen's Persuasion. I thought the subtlety and richness of the characters was every bit as deep as Jane had written them and, amazingly, brought quietly and yet intensely to three-dimensional life. It's such an over-used word, but the "truth" of the characters was absolutely intact.

    I must also mention Amy Heckerling's Clueless. As attested to by the Writer's Guild of America's giving her screenplay the best writing award, Heckerling retained Austen's Emma's characters at the core of their emotional lives, and the essential plot, while changing everything on the surface. It was brilliant.

    And I need to add something about another movie from a book. When I was quite young, I saw the Audrey Hepburn/Mel Ferrer/Henry Fonda version of War and Peace which was directed by King Vidor. (It's pretty funny to see "writing credit: Leo Tolstoi".) I was absolutely bowled over by the cinematicness of the experience and was deeply moved by Natasha's and André's love for each other although in the end I was even more touched by Pierre's great love for Natasha and for Russia. Anyway, the experience was so profound that I spent several months reading a wonderful 2-volume edition of the book that is now almost in tatters because I loved it so much. I have no idea whether it really is the best adaptation of a book into a movie but I know that watching it changed my movie-going and reading it changed my reading and reading it would not have happened, at least not then, without having seen the movie.
I'm a bit startled - and embarrassed - to see that evidently I really like literary chick-lit but so be it. I also like many adaptations of detective books (Dorothy Sayers' Peter Whimsey stories, for example) and I thought the British tv series of Jeeves and Wooster (with Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry) infused the two men with liveliness and depth.

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Permalink | 4 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:10 AM

Thursday, August 28, 2008
Fantastic opt-out
H/T Daily Candy: Stop getting useless phone directories at home and/or office. The internet is almost always better. Well, okay, not always but if you want to: online at yellowpagesgoesgreen.org.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 3:23 PM

Thursday, August 7, 2008
They tuck you up. . . .
Interesting, thoughtful and fairly serious interview with David Thewlis here.  Love his quote of Billy Bragg's retake on a Philip Larkin "thing about the enemy of the artist [being] the pram in the hall."
His view of that was he didn't believe it at all. He's got several children and loves it and finds it inspiring. He gave me a poem he wrote that was a pastiche of Larkin's "They f*** you up, your mum and dad". He changed it to "They tuck you up, your mum and dad" and rewrote every line to make it a positive, loving, parental poem. It was a beautiful thing.
He and Billy Bragg are right: you can make/take time to be both an artist and a parent.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 10:42 PM

Bookstore moves and expands!
In Los Angeles, a wonder-of-wonder has occurred.  A bookstore has closed . . . because it's moving down the block and getting more space and more books.  Check out this story!  I've long been of the opinion that bookstores that do not have snobby attitudes and that do have specialized stock or knowledge can thrive even in this nutty time.  There are dozens of stores proving my point in and around Washington DC (of all places) and even a few in Dutchess and Ulster counties in New York.  I know there are many stories of bookstores that close and attribute the problem to B&N or WalMart or Sam's Club or some other monolithic monster.  But I really feel certain that if DC can support bookstores, other communities can do it.  If all the commuters I see reading every day are at all representative of the world at large, then books and printed matter aren't nosediving, they're just changing delivery methodologies or something like that.  So three cheers to Skylight Books - hurrah and congratulations to them!!

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 4:20 PM

Saturday, July 12, 2008
Robert Anthony Snow, 1955-2008

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 8:59 AM

Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Superb websites
Time magazine has compiled a list of 50 fabulous websites. I liked them all especially these:

Gas Buddy (time-tested and VERY helpful)
Howcast (much better than others like it)
Itotallylikeloveit (this is a delight)
Omiru (amazing, fun and useful)
Wikitravel (I basically am not a fan of wikis (topic for another day) but this is terrific)
Health.com (much better tone and therefore more useful (to me anyway) than the others)
Serious eats (Mario Vitali and lots of interesting stuff)
Mapjack (digital mapping made fun and visually appealing)
Mint (financial planning/scheduling made fun)
Nymbler (names made wild and crazy)
Picnik (photo editing gone easy as well as wild and crazy)
SearchMe (results of searching moving to a new level)
Someecards (not your average card shop, not even average e-card shop)
WebSudoku (no need for explanations)
CarbonRally (either silly or awesome, not sure yet)
Colourlovers (awesome)
FreeRice (tons of fun, instructional AND worthwhile, all in one!)
Kiva - and some others (personal loaning sites, very interesting and useful)
Petfinder (holy cow, I mean mackerel, I mean . . .)

Enjoy!!

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Permalink | 1 comment(s) | posted by jau at 5:56 PM

Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Some people do good things
Musing Laura reported yesterday on a terrific series of projects that Kirk and Anne Douglas undertook for the last several years, rebuilding over 400 parks and playgrounds around Los Angeles (read about it here). Kudos to them and thanks to Laura for mentioning it.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 3:49 PM

Saturday, January 5, 2008
Winter
I have no problem with winter, per se, but it seems that the first week in January always always always brings me a cold (nothing more severe, usually, thank goodness) and incredibly itchy skin. I didn't make the "first week in January" connection until I was reviewing my last three years' time reports at work, but there it was: one or two days out before January 10th, every year. This year I have both inflictions (yeah, that's a bit melodramatic but it's fun to be melodramatic when you keep sneezing) again. Maybe next year I should take the week as a vacation week and see if I can skip the whole thing.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:13 AM

Thursday, January 3, 2008
Sarkozy
A friend of mine send me this article today from the Australian Jewish News (yes, virginia, there is a niche publication everywhere for everything). During the recent election in France, there was no fuss or even mention of it - that I saw, anyway - but France's new president, Nicolas Sarkozy, apparently has a Jewish heritage. His mother belongs to the Mallah family from Salonika (Greece) who, in the 15th century, escaped the Spanish Inquisition (good for them!) and emigrated to Provence, France before proceeding to Salonika. Many of the family members hid in Marcillac la Croisille in the Corrèze region, western France, during World War II but many Mallahs who stayed in Salonika or moved to France fare far worse. In fact, 57 family members were murdered in concentration camps including one, Buena Mallah, who was the subject of medical "experiments" in Birkenau. In any case, this makes Sarkozy's victory last Spring seem particularly beneficial for France. To have elected a Jewish man as president merely half a century after Vichy's (at best dubious and at worst complicitous) acquiescence to the Nazis is remarkable. Good for them. (And, by the way, if you are ever in Paris, be sure to go to the the Deportation / Holocaust Memorial behind Notre Dame, on the Ile de Cite. It's the simplest, quietest memorial or museum I've ever seen and, perhaps as a result, is deeply moving.)

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:11 AM

Monday, October 8, 2007
Safety
Documentary crime shows on tv are usually dreadful. But there was a terrific edition of Kimberly Gilfoyle's show on Sunday. She emphasized positive action and what people did who lived through and survived some horrific things. At least this time, the emphasis was upbeat and strong. None of these survivors of dreadful events recommend living fearfully or with trepidation. Here's what they agreed on:

   1. don't trust people blindly,
   2. tell people where you are and where you will be,
   3. trust your instincts especially if you're feeling paranoid; bad things can happen,
   4. be strong,
   5. choose awareness,
   6. don't be quiet or feel "less than".

And three invaluable websites:
   -- http://www.girlsfightback.org/ -- how to defend and stand up for oneself, physically and emotionally; it lists where to take self-defense classes.
   -- http://www.anordinaryjourney.com/-- the author talks about her astonishing life and fantastic attitude of joy, along with many links and resources.
   -- http://www.sboard.org/resources.htm -- a wonderful resource itself that lists safe places in every state.

No one's alone or defenseless. We don't need to be attacked or injured, physically or emotionally. We do need to believe in and protect ourselves.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 1:46 AM

Monday, August 20, 2007
Getting slightly less warmer
Terrific and very interesting piece by Mark Steyn on, among other things, the reorganization of "hottest years" at the NASA website. Perhaps the skeptics among us aren't demons after all. Also check out his points about demonizing (nice segué, right?) Americans.

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Permalink | 1 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:13 AM

Thursday, August 9, 2007
Jean Piaget
It's happy 111th birthday to Jean Piaget whose writings excited me as much as anyone else's about children and learning (though I can't overlook Winnicott or Dr. Spock, among others). His descriptions and theories of how and when we develop cognitively are enthralling, not to mention helpful, as one interacts with children. And as to how one approaches learning and teaching oneself and others. His example of understanding how a liquid occupies two completely different sized drinking glasses was an "aha!" moment for me. He was one of the first respected social scientists to encourage recognizing the amazing things children can do if one notes and then capitalizes on their stages. Silly, for example, to expect an infant to stack blocks or Legos in any organized way since any familiarity of gravity and shapes is not there yet. But wonderful to discuss abstract ideas with a toddler who is observing and organizing the world both literally and conceptually.

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Permalink | 1 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:14 AM

Saturday, July 14, 2007
News on tv
Aside from the fact that I hate the plastic, pre-chewed news reports on many networks (including and especially CNN's smoooooooth news readers), there's another reason I like Fox's morning show (Fox and Friends, especially the early one). I don't know if the on-air people assemble the news items themselves, but they're aware of what they're talking about. They have actual conversations with each other about what they're covering - sometimes making unexpectedly interesting and clearly unscripted remarks. And they cover good news (yes, there is some good news in this crazy world) like schools reopening in Afghanistan and Iraq, that huge tip paid by a generous customer to a Pizza Hut waitress, Chris Gardner, and so on. Its anchors aren't the most intellectual people on earth, although some are, but they're smart, lively and very verbal (with the exception of the very blond blonde who's been relegated to promo detail). If anyone with BDS** chances by, I'm sure the lack of alarm and doom-and-gloom is distressing, but I love it and am appreciative.

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Permalink | 1 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:14 AM

Thursday, May 31, 2007
Climate change questions
It is probably generally agreed that we are in a warmish period globally, if not in every nook and cranny on earth. That being granted, however, there are two fundamental questions that follow, and only one is being publicly asked and pursued. That question is what has caused the warming and is it man-made or not? Those who believe the warming is man-made assert that warming is the result of our excess use of hydrofluorocarbons and other chemicals, bad tree clearing, and so forth. But suppose (just for the sake of argument) that they are wrong and that warming is not caused by man. Suppose it is cyclical, as some scientists assert. And if that's the case, then there's a huge second question: if we effect all the "fixes" that are proposed to lessen global warming (supposing, of course, that any man-made behavior actually changes the atmosphere anyway), do we not run the risk of dangerously impacting the atmosphere in an attempt to fix things that were not broken?

P.S. Don Surber reports on several snow storms in Germany, Argentina and South Africa - yes, it's May - and asks "What the hell has happened? Is global warming a lie? Or did we just beat it by Al Gore planting all those Guilt Trees in Kenya?" He points out that "[w] did end Global Cooling in the 1970s by switching from Right Guard spray-on to a roll-on." So I guess we're already on the way.

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Permalink | 3 comment(s) | posted by jau at 9:02 AM

Monday, May 28, 2007
Memorial Day tribute
Obviously there are many soldiers and others to whom we owe bows and thoughts of enormous gratitude. It's good to have a day or two every year to pause and remember.

Gary Sinise is one of the really good guys who pays active tribute all year long. Laura's Musings pays tribute to him today and it's clearly more than well deserved.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 6:07 PM

Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Stop and notice the roses
Spiced Sass, another site always worth visiting, wrote about an experiment in observation in which renowned violinist Joshua Bell set up outside a subway and played the violin. The idea was to see whether hasty commuters would notice and stop to listen, or not.

A couple of years ago, as I was going from my train to my office through Grand Central Station, I heard the strains of a violin. I moved to the center of the big hall and there was an artist-shirted young man playing something rousing and fabulous, very energetically. The music was simply extraordinarily. What made the time listening to him even better was that there were at least a hundred people gathered around, all entranced, all delighted. These were commuters and travelers so there were people of every hue and age. It was superb. Many coins and bills were given and much joy was received. So, yes, sometimes some people do stop and listen.

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Permalink | 2 comment(s) | posted by jau at 12:37 PM

Saturday, April 7, 2007
Good karma
During a difficult time last fall, I made myself feel better, and possibly helped cause something of a turn-around, by writing about something or someone good on an almost daily basis. Good karma and all that. Once things were better, I forgot to keep it up (hey, someone has to demonstrate the truth of the cliché about good intentions and some silly old road) and now there's a new iteration of the same unsettling situation. I know that part of the problem, unfortunately, is that I want something I can't cause or control by myself, and also that the others involved have feelings and opinions I simply do not understand and that they alternately deny or won't explain. I could just bury my head under a pillow and sleep a lot (a/k/a wallow in misery), which is my first self-pitying instinct, but what I will do is deliberately engage positive energy as much as I can. And remember to stick with it. Wish me luck.

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Permalink | 2 comment(s) | posted by jau at 12:22 PM

Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Global warning
One of the reputable members of the MSM is reporting the usually-overlooked point that animals contribute more to global warming than suvs and hair spray. The redoubtable Christian Science Monitor includes this article, picked up by several wire services, which should be read and absorbed before more of the ridiculousness runs even further amok. (Of course they feature a piece about the price of dealing with gw vs. not dealing with it, amusingly enough concluding that it will be an earth-shattering (pun intended), whopping enormous . . . 5% difference in the GDP worldwide. Forgive me, but that sounds miniscule especially when you consider that some places will have improved crop production, meaning a possible further lessening of that figure. And last week the CSM ran an article about adapting to a warmer globe, something I've been wondering about. Whether warming is temporary or permanent, whether it's short-term or long-term, geographers and business planners and engineers need to plan for its eventuality, from an adaptive point of view. We are not babies waiting for a bunch of Universe Parents to take care of us, after all. Or, anyway, we shouldn't be.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 3:03 PM

Wednesday, September 13, 2006
dahlia speed
While considering what to say for today's positive thing, I remembered the pleasure my mother always got from daisies. Which reminded me of the Dahlia flower stalls in Grand Central Terminal. The sales people are friendly and quick, and the flowers are gorgeous and colorful. Furthermore, because they're a direct importer, the flowers are extremely fresh and last a long time, as long as ten days or two weeks depending on the flowers. The flowers range from 'normal' (mums, gerber daisies, asters) to seasonal (heather, sunflowers) to commemorative (roses, lilies) to super (alstroemeria, freesia, sunflowers, tulips, orchids....) and fabulous (birds of paradise, lisianthus...). They have a master designer who can create bouquets and special orders - but best of all is that for less than the cost of a quick food lunch (honestly), those of us lucky enough to pass through GCT can have beautiful fresh flowers every week, all week long.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 10:29 PM

Thursday, November 24, 2005
Thankful tree
Michelle Malkin writes about her daughter's Thanksgiving exercise in which you trace your hands, cut out the outline, write on the fingers and palm what you're thankful for this year, then paste the hand onto a paper tree (thus: thankful tree). Her daughter's five things were "Friends. Food. My fish, Rainbow. And my little brother". It's hard to narrow it down but I'll try.
--My children (the charming and challenging center of my universe; it's a grand bonus that they're really smart, curious and lovely)
--TTCGITW (a/k/a my grandchildren, newly also in the center of my universe; truly individuals already, and a thrill to know)
--Living in America and being able to do almost anything if you really want to and work on it long, practically and hard enough; and the tireless people who have worked and sacrificed for our freedom and strength (soldiers, nurses, teachers, etc., etc.)
--My house (such a comforting, significant and energetic part of my life that it seems it's a living human friend who happens to have walls and floors instead of arms and legs)
--Books and ideas in general (my roots and my grounding)
--My manager (a caring and bright woman who has taught me by example and blesses me with respect and encouragement)
--Knitting, crocheting and teaching (which provide enormous satisfaction as well as being a link to many wonderful people)
--Blogging (because of which I now write and read enthusiastically and often about many things AND have learned in a vivid exciting way that there are thousands of thoughtful, literate, articulate, expressive, interesting people all over the country and world)
Oops, that's eight. I can't help it.

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Permalink | 0 comment(s) | posted by jau at 12:57 AM