Jul. 17th, 2003

melwil: (Default)
1. What books are your comfort reading -- the ones you slink back to in times of stress?

The Anne of Green Gable books - I read the first one in grade two or three and slowly made my way through all the others when the oppertunity arose. Now I own them all. Also Nick Earls' Perfect Skin and Bryce Coutenay's Tandia

2. What was your favorite book as a child, and why?

Hmm. I loved all the Famous Five books, especially the first one which was the first novel I ever read. Also Heidi and Seven Little Australians.

3. What was your favorite book as an adolescent, and why?

*side note* When I was in grade ten I (easily) won an award for borrowing the most books out of the school library over the year. I also borrowed books from the public library and spent all my pocket money on books. I read a lot. *end side note*

I loved Bryce Courtenay's Tandia and The Power of One, also The Diary of Anne Frank, Chaim Potok's The Chosen and this rather trashy, but terribly interesting to my 12 year old self, book called Winter's Gold

4. What is the most-unread category of books gathering dust on your bookshelf -- the books you've bought but just never got around to reading?

The books about grammer and writing. Rather than reading them straight, I tend to poke through them. One exception is Stephen King's On Writing

5. What kind of books would you like to say you read, but never do?

Fantasy. I'd love to be able to read more fantasy.

6. What's the oddest book you ever read?

Hmm - a hard question. Probably Hunter S. Thompson's books, especially Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail, 72 for pure drug fueled writing.

7. What book were you never able to get through, despite the recommendations of people you respect?

The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings

8. What's the book it took you a couple of tries to get into, but was as good as promised once you finally made it?

The Corrections by Jonothan Franzen which I'm half way through now and loving. Also The Bell Jar which I'm also half way through. I have a habit of buying books cheap and then letting them sit on my shelves until I want something new to read. The I devour them.

9. What's your favorite short story . . . or do you even have one?

I like reading short stories but I find they don't stick in my mind like novels or non fiction books do.

10. The desert island. Three books (and collected works don't count; if you want *Lord of the Rings* it'll cost you all three slots). Go:

1. Rilla of Ingleside My favourite of the Anne of Green Gable books. It goes into World War One and I always love a good historical fiction.
2. A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute. I'd pick On the Beach but a book about the end of the world might not be a good idea on a desert island.
3. Apologia by Plato. A Loeb version so I could read the Greek to the seagulls and then reply with the English. My all time favourite piece of ancient writing, but I still think Socrates was an idiot.
melwil: (Default)
Yet another day at work and I'm looking forward to my three days off. I began learning how to do the paperwork today, which is scarier than being a plain Bread Bitch. I also had lots and lots of cheese to grate - a job that still amuses me.

I've finally gotten around to reading Draco Dormiens after being unable to get past the first page last time I tried. I can understand why it was so popular, but I can also understand the backlash against it. I have some problems with links to pictures appearing through the text, and I was picking up some rather obvious references that weren't referenced.

I've also been wandering around ff.net. I think the attraction of ff.net is that it's like watching a car wreck. On the M*A*S*H page came one of my favourite summeries

The gang all gets back together for a reunion at Klinger's new home in South Korea when the Koreans decide to go into another war and bring the US back into it...the whole place is off limits and no one can get home...but everyone's children are there too

I'm going to have to read this one, just to see what the writer does with that predicament *g*

However, I did find one little drabble that just cracked me up: America the Beautiful by S. Hornbach (West Wing)

Oh, look - Grease is on. I've got it on tape and I've seen it maybe a hundred times, but I'll probably watch it anyway. Mostly for Stockard Channing. And the great seventies look set in the fifties . . .
melwil: (Default)
I turned the radio up:

by [livejournal.com profile] allcanadiangirl and [livejournal.com profile] meegzi31

The songs that make you do that. Turn it up, turn everything else off, listen intently to every second, turn everything else off, lose focus on the rest of the world. Or, if you're not over-dramatic and music-obsessed like me and Meg, songs you really really really love and will still love fifty years from now.

Length of list to be determined by adding the last two numbers of your birth year together. For example, I was born in 1985, so I have to list thirteen songs. So on and so forth. No shirking, no complaining.



1981 = 9 songs

1. Ben Folds Five: Evaporated
2. Paul McDermott and Fiona Horne: Shut Up and Kiss Me
3. Schubert: Ave Maria
4. Simon and Garfunkle: Homeward Bound
5. Kathleen Wilhoite: No One Can Touch Me
6. K's Choice: Virgin State of Mind
7. Louie Say's: She
8. Jeff Buckley: Hallelujah
9. Ben Folds Five: Underground

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