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000. I finally figured out what it was I liked about Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta: He's the type of civil servant who has the perfect name for public buildings. And whadya know: In 2001, the San José, California airport was renamed Norman Y. Mineta San José International Airport. A far cry better than, say, the Norman Mineta Traffic Administration Building or the Norman Y. Mineta Waste Reclamation Facility.
001. Say what you will about the silliness of the Da Vinci Code (conveniently out of litigation just before its film debut!) but you gotta admire the judge presiding over the copyright infringement case, who encoded his own secret message into his official ruling. Even funnier is the fact that, after the code was cracked, the judge said "I hate crosswords and do not do Sudoku as I do not have the patience."
010. More and more of the fiction offerings I see on used bookstore shelves feature titles spelled out in super-thin sans serif fonts winding around dotted lines, passing daisies or other such clip art, and all placed over bright stripes of blues, greens, yellows and pinks. It's like little chick-lit crocuses and tulips sprouting up all over! Awwww! I didn't notice them in such abundance this time last year, when the students usually start cleaning out their bookshelves and other such folks have similar fits of spring cleaning, but this year, the crocuses are out in full force.
011. I don't particularly like feeling that used bookstores are the places where books go when their reader doesn't love them anymore, but that's just the object empathy talking. I'd much prefer to think that the books just decided to get up and go themselves to find new friends. Then again, I can't escape the constant nudging of the personal: The used copy of Skinny Malinky Leads The War For Kidness that I received this week from an online used seller is signed by the author "to Barbara and Alvaro, with love." I wonder how they knew Stanley Kiesel, and I wonder what happened to Barbara and/or Alvaro that prompted them to give the book up. And I wonder what route the book took to eventually make it to me. So maybe giving it that kind of tragic abandonment history gives it that much-needed mystique.
By the way, I think I like the first book better; the second is darker as some previous folks said, and in growing darker (much like Harry Potter!) the book loses a great deal of the non-conformist whimsy that I loved about the first. Still, it was nice to see some familiar names again, and perhaps there's a bit of closure there, too.
100. I'm proud to state that this journal is still and forevermore free from any mentions of Kaavya Viswanathan. Oh.
Aw, damn...
001. Say what you will about the silliness of the Da Vinci Code (conveniently out of litigation just before its film debut!) but you gotta admire the judge presiding over the copyright infringement case, who encoded his own secret message into his official ruling. Even funnier is the fact that, after the code was cracked, the judge said "I hate crosswords and do not do Sudoku as I do not have the patience."
010. More and more of the fiction offerings I see on used bookstore shelves feature titles spelled out in super-thin sans serif fonts winding around dotted lines, passing daisies or other such clip art, and all placed over bright stripes of blues, greens, yellows and pinks. It's like little chick-lit crocuses and tulips sprouting up all over! Awwww! I didn't notice them in such abundance this time last year, when the students usually start cleaning out their bookshelves and other such folks have similar fits of spring cleaning, but this year, the crocuses are out in full force.
011. I don't particularly like feeling that used bookstores are the places where books go when their reader doesn't love them anymore, but that's just the object empathy talking. I'd much prefer to think that the books just decided to get up and go themselves to find new friends. Then again, I can't escape the constant nudging of the personal: The used copy of Skinny Malinky Leads The War For Kidness that I received this week from an online used seller is signed by the author "to Barbara and Alvaro, with love." I wonder how they knew Stanley Kiesel, and I wonder what happened to Barbara and/or Alvaro that prompted them to give the book up. And I wonder what route the book took to eventually make it to me. So maybe giving it that kind of tragic abandonment history gives it that much-needed mystique.
By the way, I think I like the first book better; the second is darker as some previous folks said, and in growing darker (much like Harry Potter!) the book loses a great deal of the non-conformist whimsy that I loved about the first. Still, it was nice to see some familiar names again, and perhaps there's a bit of closure there, too.
100. I'm proud to state that this journal is still and forevermore free from any mentions of Kaavya Viswanathan. Oh.
Aw, damn...
(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 04:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 04:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 05:01 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 05:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-29 01:04 am (UTC)Unloved books
Date: 2006-04-28 09:11 pm (UTC)I guess the story never entered his heart. Or, it entered his heart and killed him and whoever took care of the estate decided to sell the book. How else would that end up on half.com for three bucks? (the description never mentioned the inscription or cd. That was a pleasant surprise when I received the book.)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 09:14 pm (UTC)Even books that I end up not liking... I figure, the right person for that book is out there somewhere.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-28 09:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-29 05:38 am (UTC)If I hate it, I shred it.
Anything else on the scale goes to the Crazylady Book Store where it can live in a heap with others, maybe meet it's long lost twin or soul mate, and the be picked up by another obsessive book person.
sorry for the double
Date: 2006-04-29 05:39 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-04-29 07:39 am (UTC)I have one that says "Dear Chris - Enjoy this book!!! Happy Birthday! Love from, Philip" in middle-school aged type handwriting.
maybe they were cousins & Chris didn't like Philip. It's also the 4th book in a series, so maybe that's why he didn't keep it.
it still makes me sad.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-01 10:09 pm (UTC)