I dream a world… Daydreamers will enjoy this piece at The Boston Globe about why kids and adults need time to loll around and look at clouds. When we daydream we think of things that don’t exist — and the result can be something as cool as the Post-It Note! Apparently, great things happen when our brains are at rest.

Meanwhile, Galleycat is uncovering something else about vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Instead of Barracuda, some people might want to call her Book Banner. Ouch.

As always, Sara has something significant and thought-provoking to say about writing. Today’s question: is mine necessary? That’s actually a pretty heavy question.

The Big Read III: A Tale of Two Cities

Chapters 1-3

A Tale of Two Cities even smells classic, which probably has more to do with the age of this paperback, and the length of time since it’s been opened than anything else… but, I digress! Here I am, reading A Classic! A Classic, I say! Pay attention!

The book opens with the most famous Dickensian lines, quoted badly by nearly everybody. A lot of people like to wax eloquent on “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” but few people have actually noticed that Dickens was being fairly ironic. His next few passages indicate that the world was simply not that great, either in France or in England. On the night the Dover mail comes up the hill, in the muck and mire, the passengers on-foot, highwaymen are feared when a message comes for a man named Mr. Lorry of Tellson’s bank. The message he receives, and the reply he sends to the soaked and harried courier are confusing, but deliciously mysterious.

Even more confusing is the following chapter, where the message is debated. Could someone really have been buried — for eighteen years — and recalled to life?

All of this is couched in Dickens’ lyrical prose, sometimes mouthfuls of words, sometimes shorter sentences, which might come as a relief if one is lost in his perambulations. I enjoy the way he plays with words, and the way that the story is furled up tightly and anonymously in this storyteller’s cant. You won’t know anything — plot, characters, motivation — until he’s ready to tell you. In the hands of a master storyteller, one can simply enjoy the spooling out the prose as the tale is revealed.


Cross-posted at Finding Wonderland

TBR3: A Tale of Two Cities

Are you reading?
Chapters 1-3

A Tale of Two Cities even smells classic, which probably has more to do with the age of this paperback, and the length of time since it’s been opened than anything else… but, I digress! The book opens with the most famous Dickensian lines, quoted badly by nearly everybody. A lot of people like to wax eloquent on “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” but few people have actually noticed that Dickens was being fairly ironic. His next few passages indicate that the world was simply not that great, either in France or in England. On the night the Dover mail comes up the hill, in the muck and mire, the passengers on-foot, highwaymen are feared when a message comes for a man named Mr. Lorry of Tellson’s bank. The message he receives, and the reply he sends to the soaked and harried courier are confusing, but deliciously mysterious.

Even more confusing is the following chapter, where the message is debated. Could someone really have been buried — for eighteen years — and recalled to life?

All of this is couched in Dickens’ lyrical prose, sometimes mouthfuls of words, sometimes shorter sentences, which might come as a relief if one is lost in his perambulations. I enjoy the way he plays with words, and the way that the story is furled up tightly and anonymously in this storyteller’s cant. You won’t know anything — plot, characters, motivation — until he’s ready to tell you. In the hands of a master storyteller, one can simply enjoy the spooling out the prose as the tale is revealed.

Random Coolth

You know I have to be down with this: In honor of the late great St. Julia Child, Ananka’s Diary is having an original Girl Spy Outfit Contest. How COOL is that!?

And a second bit of coolth — In my continuing quest to be as cool as Kiki Strike, I’m playing with the idea of taking Russian this fall, and came across this bit of anime goodness via SFSignal:

How fun would it be to be actually able to READ that? (It actually says First Squad and is a Russian-Canadian anime collaboration from Molot Entertainment.)

I’m always a little shy when authors comment on my reviews, but I have utmost respect for people who fearlessly discuss things. Semicolon Blog didn’t care for Looking For Alaska, and said so. John Green responded, and it turned into an interesting discussion. It’s really nice when intelligent people can agree and disagree without screaming. [Note to politicians.]