Monday, December 31, 2007
my oh my best of 2007
Best LA Radio Show Worth Getting Up at 9AM on a Sunday: Chris Morris, Watusi Rodeo (103.1)
Best New Neighbor: The Echo Park Time Travel Mart
Best Blog for Head-Nodding Agreement: Jezebel
Best Neighborhood Restaurant: Cliff's Edge
Best Greatest Hits Compilation I Wasn't Embarrassed to Buy: Led Zeppelin, Mothership
Best Magazine That I Subscribed to This Year in a Regrettable Magazine Subscription Binge: BUST
Best Book of the Year (If Not the Century): Cormac McCarthy, The Road
Best Daily E-mail: Very Short List
Best Live Show of the Year (That I Personally Saw): Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings @ El Rey (Honorable Mention: Beastie Boys @ The Greek Theater; Neko Case @ Walt Disney Concert Hall; Langhorne Slim @ Spaceland; Lucinda Williams @ El Rey)
Best Song to Sing Loudly into a Hairbrush: Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings, "Let Them Knock"
Best Chill Restaurant Downtown: Royal Claytons
Best Coffee: My New Bialetti Mukka Express; Coffee Table (Silverlake) (tie)
Best Named Building on My Commute: Women's Twentieth Century Club (Eagle Rock)
Best Onion Headline: Pitchfork Gives Music 6.8
Best Duets: Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova; Robert Plant & Alison Krauss (tie)
Best Parlour Game: Fortunes Chinoises
Best Annual LA Event of the Year: Los Angeles Times Festival of Books; Sunset Junction; Culver City Art Walk (tie)
Best Protest Song: Pink, "Dear Mr. President"
Best Source for Repeatable One-liners: 30 Rock
Best Scene in the Best Film of the Year: Dog chases Josh Brolin through the water in No Country for Old Men
52 books in 52 weeks
I think I recall this novella got some critical grief for collecting and recycling characters, but I found it sort of a fun imaginative exercise of what it would be like to live in Paul Auster's brain.
Note to self: Do not use those obsessive, unrequited affairs from your past as material for a book.
Despite Lessing's disappointing remarks about the evils of "blugging," I still totally enjoyed her version of the demon seed. If you think you may want to have children, don't read this book.
This is a compact meditation on the perils of trying to establish rigid control over the events in your life. Virginia Woolf meets Knut Hamsun meets Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
Well, I didn't make it to 52, but I did get 8 books beyond last year's total while completely switching careers, so there. Onward to 2008...
Sunday, December 30, 2007
sunday short stack

"If you fall down seven times, get up eight." - Japanese proverb
- Make sure you're not drinking milk when you check out this evil eye baby.
- The Guardian has a look at what we can expect in fiction for 2008.
- Some great unexpected titles are recommended here.
- This site allows you to see the last 50 images posted to LiveJournal.
- If you want to kill a large chunk of time, visit the series "A Year in Reading" over at The Millions.
- Celebrity Hotel Rooms shows you the life you'll never live, but really, don't you have something better to do with that $10K than rent a space in which you'll spend most of the time unconscious?
Friday, December 28, 2007
they had me at 'pencils down'
Cory Garfin, an L.A.-based fiction writer with no ties to Hollywood, has declared that his lack of productivity of late is actually because he considers himself “on strike” as a show of solidarity with the writers in town who actually get paid to write.
In fact, Garfin maintains that his support of the strike reaches back to well before the WGA officially called for a work stoppage in November of 2007. He claims to not have written much, “and frequently nothing good,” quite often over the last several years. He now says of those lulls: "I've been retroactively protesting."
“It’s wonderful to know,” he goes on to say, “that all of those times in the past when I thought I was suffering from writer’s block or laziness, I was actually a social transformer well ahead of the curve.”
Thursday, December 27, 2007
feed them!
Sunday, December 23, 2007
52 books in 52 weeks
I was not impressed by this book. The overnight adventures of one sister were mildly interesting, but the voyeurism on the sleeping sister seemed fetishistic at best, terribly dull at worst.
Gilbert's idea that despite our most elaborate of plans, we have absolutely no way of predicting what will make our future selves happy is, in my opinion, an essential truth of human nature. He makes many similarly incisive observations, but these popular science books don't quite hold my attention like novels do.
After The Mistress's Daughter, I was eager to read another book by Homes, and her last novel did not disappoint. What was most surprising and delightful to me was the way she took the traditional tropes of the Hollywood novel and put a modern and distinctive spin on them.
This engaging character study made me nostalgic for the time I've spent in England - especially my trip to Cambridge a few years ago - but it was possibly the least suspenseful serial killer narrative I've come across.
God Bless Tom Perrotta. I picked up this book wanting to spend a couple of days on the couch absorbed in a story and it did not disappoint. I'm still unsure how I feel about its conclusion, but that doesn't diminish my gratitude for the escape.
Considering these four books took up most of my semester, I will count them toward the total.
Upon my return to teaching composition, I went looking for a textbook that would excite me with little expectation I would succeed, but lo and behold, I found this reader. It was perfect for my science and technology focused students and perfect for my desire to explore unconventional genres and contemporary texts. I'm trying it out next semester with more of a business and education crowd, so we'll see if it holds its charm.
For one class I taught this semester at someplace other than my main gig, I was given a choice of three anthologies. I chose this one.
Both of the following handbooks are exceptionally helpful, though if I had to choose only one, I'd probably lean toward the Little, Brown - a decision based almost entirely on the introduction/conclusion section.
35. The Little, Brown Handbook (10th Edition) by H. Ramsey Fowler and Jane E. Aaron
36. A Writer's Reference
I may not get to 52, but the year is still alive, I'm on vacation, and some books are mercifully short.
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sunday short stack

"I've had a perfectly wonderful evening. But this wasn't it." - Groucho Marx
- John Dugdale collects the best and worst literary quotes of the year.
- The New Yorker gave me a new Jonathan Lethem story for Christmas.
- The Top 15 Unintentionally Funny Comic Book Panels
- The Economist has a history of the census, or as it's less well-known, the sin of David.
- Lars and the Real Girl is, well... disturbingly real.
- The Los Angeles homicide rate for 2007 may be at its lowest since 1970.
- A boy raised by wolves is on the loose in Russia.
Saturday, December 22, 2007
I think about you every time I pass a filling station
If you just can't resist the seasonal spirit, Anne Litt's KCRW show "The A Track" is also f*ing festive today.
picking on the phds
What is “psychogeography”? The jacket flap defines it as a “meditation on the vexed relationship between psyche and place,” and any number of well-spectacled young Ph.D.’s in sociology or urban studies will talk to you of Situationists and leave you with the bar tab. At its writerly best, though, psychogeography seems simpler to me: it is clear and vivid nonfiction writing with a sense of the past and an eye for the present that takes us close to the street. I mean “street” both literally, as in the color of the paving stones and the font of the signage and the shape of the sidewalk, and figuratively, as in the multitudes that pass by, the movers and shakers, the loiterers and bystanders, the beggars and mimes.
The book is illustrated by Ralph Steadman and looks pretty nifty.
Friday, December 21, 2007
yet another reason to go dutch
christmas spirits
Smoking bishop
"'A merry Christmas, Bob!' said Scrooge, with an earnestness that could not be mistaken, as he clapped him on the back. 'A merrier Christmas, Bob, my good fellow, than I have given you, for many a year! I'll raise your salary, and endeavour to assist your struggling family, and we will discuss your affairs this very afternoon, over a Christmas bowl of smoking bishop, Bob! Make up the fires, and buy another coal-scuttle before you dot another i, Bob Cratchit!'" (A Christmas Carol)
5 oranges * 1 grapefruit * 1/4 lb sugar * 2 bottles red wine * 1 bottle ruby port * 30 cloves
Bake the oranges and grapefruit in the oven until they are pale brown and then put them into a warmed earthenware bowl with five cloves pricked into each. Add the sugar and pour in the wine. Then, either (i) cover and leave in a warm place for a day, or (ii) warm the mixture gently (do not boil) for about three hours. Squeeze the oranges and grapefruit into the wine and pour it through a sieve. Add the port and heat (again, don't boil). Serve in warmed cups/glasses and drink hot.
what did you do to your face
My favorite coverage comes from the Fresno ABC affiliate who filed their report in the form of an Onion audition: Blue Man Seeks Acceptance.
The Central Valley is a land of racial and ethnic diversity. People of all colors live here - white, brown, black, and now even blue.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
santa baby

Cherry Blossom Platinum Designer Mouse @ mousenvy $45

Clear Cut Press Subscription $65

Gold External Hard Drive @ A+R $260
Rockwell Embroidered Coat @ Anthropologie $258

Summer Trip to Tallinn, Estonia @ Expedia $2725

Atomic Bonsai Kit @ Chocosho $20

I'm Not There Soundtrack @ Amazon $13
Rain Leaf Earrings @ Aesa

iPhone @ Apple Store $399

John Fleuvog Lover Boot in Spruce $275
Saturday, December 15, 2007
it is the future we're talking about
Have the worlds of science fiction and presidential politics ever been more closely aligned than they were in 2007? This was the year when Rudolph Giuliani told a young questioner on the campaign trail that “we’ll be prepared” if the United States is attacked by aliens from another planet; when Dennis Kucinich blithely confessed during a Democratic debate that he’d seen a U.F.O.; and when Mitt Romney revealed in an interview that L. Ron Hubbard’s “Battlefield Earth” was one of his favorite novels...
RUDOLPH GIULIANI
Former mayor of New York
Should tell reporters he’s read “Childhood’s End,” by Arthur C. Clarke: An advanced intelligence arrives from above, creating a utopia by integrating all of humanity into a single mind that thinks and acts as one.
Might also consider reading “The War of the Worlds,” by H. G. Wells: During a cataclysmically destructive event, an observant bystander happens to be in the right place at the right time and thereafter never stops talking about it.
GEORGE W. BUSH
President of the United States
Should tell reporters he’s read “Ender’s Game,” by Orson Scott Card: A gifted child from a privileged family defeats a race of inhuman warriors without ever having to leave the comfort of his war-simulator machine.
Might also consider reading “A Scanner Darkly,” by Philip K. Dick: A troubled law enforcer invites a series of increasingly desperate, damaged characters into his home and lives to regret the decision.
Saturday, December 08, 2007
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
let them knock
Sunday, December 02, 2007
sunday short stack

"The whole secret of life is to be interested in one thing profoundly and in a thousand things well." - Horace Walpole
- I'd like to see a showdown between Entertainment Weekly's 50 Smartest People in Hollywood vs. the Daily News's Top 50 Dumbest People in Hollywood. Maybe something involving chess and buckets of mustard.
- LAist editor Tony Pierce has been lured away by the LA Times siren song.
- John Updike writes on bizarre dinosaurs for National Geographic.
- Beware the time-sucking Chain Factor.
- While you're in the holiday spirit, buy something for the kids of 826LA (especially the new Echo Park location).
- Linda Thompson covers Tom Waits's "Day After Tomorrow" over at the fun NPR Song of the Day site.
- Someone has collected photos of cats caught mid-pounce in what seems like an everyman homage to Philippe Halsman.
- WFMU has Brian Wilson's 1989 rap debut, "Smart Girls."
- Robot cockroaches fool fellow cockroach brethren.
Friday, November 30, 2007
viral or not viral
preparing our children for the future
WASHINGTON—Faced with ongoing budget crises, underfunded schools nationwide are increasingly left with no option but to cut the past tense—a grammatical construction traditionally used to relate all actions, and states that have transpired at an earlier point in time—from their standard English and language arts programs.
A part of American school curricula for more than 200 years, the past tense was deemed by school administrators to be too expensive to keep in primary and secondary education.
"This was by no means an easy decision, but teaching our students how to conjugate verbs in a way that would allow them to describe events that have already occurred is a luxury that we can no longer afford," Phoenix-area high-school principal Sam Pennock said. "With our current budget, the past tense must unfortunately become a thing of the past."
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Sunday, November 25, 2007
sunday short stack

"It is amazing how complete is the delusion that beauty is goodness." - Leo Tolstoy
- The mayor of an Arkansas town has revealed that he has long been on the run from brainwashing satanists. His secret came out when his former family tracked him down through the website he ran about his own disappearance.
- Ten Video Games That Should Be Movies (and the Directors Who Should Make Them)
- From 1976, Dick Cavett interviews Mae West.
- Who knew Andy Kaufman was on The Dating Game?
- Zombie-American: "The thing that most people know, which is true, is that we are walking dead. What people don't realize is we do a lot of things besides just walk."
- Test your vocabulary; feed the hungry.
- PowerPoint can even suck the life out of the Gettysburg Address.
- The NY Times gives us their 100 Notable Books of the Year.
- Via A Fool in the Forest, a Charles Bukowski-John Bonham mash-up.
- The mug shot camera couldn't interfere with David Bowie's transcendent hotness.
Thursday, November 22, 2007
thanksgiving chez escapegrace
Puff Pastry Turnovers with Shrimp, Scallops, and Spinach
Turkey Breast Roulade with Crimini, Porcini, and Pancetta
Apple, Leek, and Butternut Squash Gratin
Sausage, Pecan, and Cranberry Stuffing
Spiced Carrots
Spinach with Shallots, Almonds, & Dried Cranberries
Gingerbread with Pears and Whipped Lemon Topping
Chocolate Pecan Pie (secret recipe)
Monday, November 19, 2007
the good place that doesn't exist
In a foreword to a new edition of Brave New World published in 1946, after the horrors of the second world war and Hitler's "final solution", Huxley criticises himself for having provided only two choices in his 1932 utopia/dystopia - an "insane life in Utopia" or "the life of a primitive in an Indian village, more human in some respects, but in others hardly less queer and abnormal". (He does, in fact, provide a third sort of life - that of the intellectual community of misfits in Iceland - but poor John the Savage isn't allowed to go there, and he wouldn't have liked it anyway, as there are no public flagellations available.) The Huxley of 1946 comes up with another sort of utopia, one in which "sanity" is possible. By this, he means a kind of "high utilitarianism" dedicated to a "conscious and rational" pursuit of man's "final end", which is a kind of union with the immanent "Tao or Logos, the transcendent Godhead or Brahmin". No wonder Huxley subsequently got heavily into the mescaline and wrote The Doors of Perception, thus inspiring a generation of 1960s dopeheads and pop musicians to seek God in altered brain chemistry. His interest in soma, it appears, didn't spring out of nowhere.
Meanwhile, those of us still pottering along on the earthly plane - and thus still able to read books - are left with Brave New World. How does it stand up, 75 years later? And how close have we come, in real life, to the society of vapid consumers, idle pleasure-seekers, inner-space trippers and programmed conformists that it presents?
Sunday, November 18, 2007
sunday short stack

"It is often merely for an excuse that we say things are impossible." - Francois de La Rochefoucauld
- "What does this have to do with The Odyssey?"
- Umberto Eco goes ugly.
- A former bottom-tier school in England has placed in the top 25% by organizing their entire curriculum around one theme, voted on by the students.
- Ed Champion reviews the new Steve Erickson.