perlmonger: (books censorship)
I’ve been too stressed and busy to write anything this month, which isn’t good. It’s feeling like May could be a mite easier, though I probably shouldn’t write that...

Anyhow, belatedly, here are the two books I managed to finish in March:

Paradox by John Meaney Paradox, by John Meaney
I’ve put off reading this for years, purely on the spectacularly rational grounds that I loved To Hold Infinity so much; I wanted to read more in that ‘verse. A chance encounter with a copy in the used book stall in Bath’s arcade finally put my avoidance to rest. So was it worth the wait?

I’ll have to give it a conditional “maybe”. It certainly gripped me as a narrative, and has some nifty ideas, but ultimately it didn’t cohere as a novel for me. Part of this is because it’s so obviously the first book in a sequence; the loose ends are presumably addressed in the later volumes, but the overall kid-from-the-underclass-makes-good-and-bucks-the-system storyline was, well, a little too obvious from the off.

I do want to know the missing story between the first Pilots and the situation on Nulapeiron; I do want to know where Oracles originated; I do want to know what the significance of Kilware Associates is. However, I haven’t, after over a month, felt enough impetus to order a copy of Context (the next in the sequence), so I guess I’ve not been left that curious.

River of Gods by Ian McDonald River of Gods, by Ian McDonald
What can I say? This book is extraordinary: multi-layered and complex, yet endlessly fascinating and readable; I came away from it stunned, with an urge to re-read Midnight’s Children again (this is a good thing).

The evocations of place, the social, political and environmental extrapolations, the characterisation... The whole thing exceeds even the high standards I’ve come to expect from McDonald and I recommend it without reservation. My only quibble (and it’s a tiny one) is that the final parts of the narrative are perhaps a little too dense, but I suspect that (along with my need to keep referring back to remind myself who everyone in the massive cast of players was) will go on a second reading.
perlmonger: (no2id)
(data from NO2ID via spyblog)

The three Liberal Democrat abstentions:

Keetch, Paul
Oaten, Mark
Taylor, Matthew

I’d be very interested to hear the story behind those three...

Oh, and apparently David Taylor (Lab) voted in both Lobbies ;)

Also, recommended postings on the subject from [livejournal.com profile] etriganuk here, and [livejournal.com profile] landsmand here. Read them both.
perlmonger: (pete)
Prodded into posting by a meme: if you read this, post the lyrics to an anti war song in your journal, if you feel so moved to do.
here's mine... )
perlmonger: (fnord)
LJ suggests “undergarment” or “integument” as the correct spelling of “enbadgerment”.

This is possibly evidence of a conspiracy.
perlmonger: (pete)
I suppose it’s just a sign of my own advancing badgerdom, but people I care about seem to be dropping like pearly-wingéd flies.

So. Farewell then, Ivor Cutler: poet, musician, story teller, member of the noise abatement society. I only saw you perform once, at a WoMAD years ago; you stopped and refused to carry on until the audience was silent, and quite right too.

ETA: Grauniad obit.
perlmonger: (books censorship)
I’ve not posted anything for a while - lacking time, energy, brainpower at the moment - but I will at least carry on listing my books read. Also (¬G)IP: I’ve been meaning to give myself a book-related icon for a while, and this turned up on the first page of a most interesting “library” tag search on flickr. I’ll quote the creator‘s text here as he requests:
Book Banning is such an awful thing,... parents who want to care for their kids challenge books and then... they perhaps ar banned... Banned Book week is a great celebration... celebrate freedom of speech and press is what they want to say... and these parents who “care” for their kids i cant understand them... they let them watch tvtvtv and play violent videogames but books shall be difficult? weird ^^

“Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech.” --- Benjamin Franklin

“Without Freedom of Thought, there can be no such Thing as Wisdom; and no such Thing as publick Liberty, without Freedom of Speech.” --- Benjamin Franklin

“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions. It is the one un-American act that could most easily defeat us.” --- Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas

Anyhow. To my books...

» The Zero Stone - Andre Norton

An old friend, re-read after [mumble] years. It’s not one of her best, certainly not her best writing, but it still contains the elements that helped form my thoughts as an adolescent and, indeed, helped me keep a tentative hold on functional sanity. That Murdoc Jern ends the book as alone and alienated from authority as at the start, that neither the legitimate (the Patrol) nor the extralegal (Thieves’ Guild) organisations portrayed in the book are benign or trustworthy in other than very specific circumstances and on their terms, helped validate my own distrust of authority as a child and helped me accept my own isolation.

» Margrave of the Marshes - John Peel, Sheila Ravenscroft

An account of John Peel’s life that is almost as eclectic and disorganised as his programmes were wont to be. I could criticise the book for it’s frequent anachronisms and diversions, for the massive dislocation in writing style where Sheila takes over from John (and the initially dodgy quality of her writing too), for the bits missed out and those skimmed over... But to do so would be boorish and unfair: this isn’t a conventional (auto)biography, it’s ultimately a celebration of the single most important figure in 20th Century popular music. It’s fascinating, deeply personal and if you haven’t got a copy yet, why not?

» The Marzipan Pig - Russell Hoban

I’ve yet to read anything by Hoban that I don’t love. This slim volume is a replacement for the copy that I read to Rhiannon when she was quite small, between picture books and venturing into wordier realms like The Mouse and His Child or The Hobbit, and that stayed with her when the last channels of communication between her mum and me finally closed; I must ask her if she still has it.

It’s an enchanting little book that exhibits the joy in language and the surreal that informs so much of Hoban’s work - parts of it feel almost like a prefigurement of Kleinzeit. It’s OOP (it’s good: of course it’s OOP), but it’s well worth seeking out a copy, and for Quentin Blake’s illustrations quite as much as for the words.

» Looking for Jake and Other Stories - China Miéville

A dark and fascinating collection of stories. China is uncategorisable; there’s fantasy, horror, sf here, all mixed up and with a tasty inclusion of social and political commentary. There’s not a single piece of writing in the book I don’t like, though a couple left me a little frustrated: I want to know What Happened Next in Looking for Jake; what the underlying realities in Familiar are. I guess that’s up to me to create from the meeting between the text and my own reality, my own imagination.

It’s good to finally have Dead Tree copies of An End To Hunger and ‘Tis the Season (I’ve lost the URL to that one) too. They articulate my own anger about the cynicism of corporate greed, and the continuing enclosure of what was once the Commons respectively far better than I am able to. Unfashionable as it may be, the man cares, and that he combines that caring with political and social analysis and still ends up with hugely readable and enjoyable work is something to celebrate. Thank you China.
perlmonger: (1984)
The Commons are voting on ID card bill, as amended by the Lords, today. Like most (all?) measures of their ilk, they’re neither designed nor destined to achieve what their spinners spin; they’ll do bugger all to prevent ID theft (indeed, they’ll do exactly the opposite). The only help they offer in “war on terror” is to further ramp up the climate of fear that the government wants us to live in, to allow easier and closer monitoring of the people they fear most: their citizens.

Here’s qwghlm with some historical context:
Which brings me to the current continual talk of “threats” to our way of life and (depending on the loony extremeness of whoever you’re talking to) the “clash of civilisations” and “our way of life is under threat” - it’s bunkum. The acts of a few fundamentalists and flag-burners seems quite tame compared to the prospect of London and Manchester being razed to the ground at the whim of the Soviet president - even the prospect of thousands of deaths is a lot more preferable than that of millions. Perhaps this is the one thing that bugged me about The Power of Nightmares - the modern “nightmare” posed by international terrorism is nowhere near as terrifying compared to what was feared in the past.

Perhaps this why there’s all this chatter of late about a nuclear Iran - never mind that they’re years off producing a nuclear test, let alone a functioning and robust battle-worthy weapon, let alone one that can be integrated and reliably flown on a ballistic missile, although the breathy rumours about war and scary-looking glossy graphic would want you to believe otherwise, it seems. Maybe we’ve begun to realise that even the bloodiest conventional terrorist attacks are no good at stoking permanent fear.

Oh, and go read [livejournal.com profile] pecunium‘s recent post on the same subject. Substitute UK for US and New Labour for Republicans, and it carries over here just fine.

Welcome to the days you’ve made. You’re welcome. Welcome.

crawl back

Feb. 10th, 2006 11:28 pm
perlmonger: (pete)
Well, if this country has ever produced a better guitarist, I’d like to know who he or she is.

[livejournal.com profile] ramtops and I are just back from seeing the exceeding fine Richard Thompson, accompanied by the equally fine Danny Thompson on bass at Colsonall. Not a lot to say, really, except that it was utterly wonderful; the sort of thing that would tempt a chap to despairing destruction of his own guitars if it weren’t so uplifting.

Glass of wine, and then to bed I think.

G’night all.

[ETA] we had the best seats in the house, too: two next to the centre aisle in row B (it’s useful buying tickets the day the show is announced :). Being on the front row does my neck in, and this time we had the best of all worlds as, for some unknown reason, whoever bought the two seats in front of us didn’t turn up. We got a quizzical raised eyebrow from RT for that too, when he came on stage to an otherwise packed hall.
perlmonger: (pete)
» I Am Alive and You Are Dead, Emmanuel Carrere

A fascinating read, if a bit ragged around the edges (but, hey, so was PKD’s life). Why no index? Why no references? I’ve no real reason to doubt the truth of what’s there, but I’d feel more confident of it all with something I could follow up after the event...

» Accelerando, [livejournal.com profile] autopope

I need to re-read this; I was left feeling unsatisfied at the end, after reading passages that were amongst the best I’ve read anywhere. This could be because Charlie couldn’t quite hold the whole thing together, but I think it’s more likely I haven’t yet absorbed enough from the frenetic density of the energy and process of the book. Judgment reserved :)

» American Gods (the Directors Cut), Neil Gaiman

No reservations here at all: this really is one of the best fantasy novels I’ve yet read - and [livejournal.com profile] ramtops, currently about half way though would, I think, concur: there really aren’t many books around that leave both of us so moved. My only question (not having read the originally published version) is: what the gods did they cut? I really can’t think of anything that could have been excised without damaging the whole.
perlmonger: (plugh)
I’m currently reading River of Gods; no comments yet, as I’m only just into chapter 3, but something struck me on page 10:
After the train has passed, they scramble up on to the track and look for paisa coins they have wedged into the rail joints. The fast trains smear them flat into the rail.

I spent quite some time trying to remember where else I had read of people doing that - a book somewhere, but where? - before I finally realised, remembered, that my memory was of Real Life™. Yes, some years ago, I once went out at lunchtime with my workmates at Virgin Mobile (or v.omit, as it was fondly known to us) in Trowbridge to put coins on the railway line in front of trains and, later, peel the squished remnants off.

What struck me is that I assumed that my memory was of fiction, of something I’d read, not of your actual, personally experienced, meatspace reality.

So it goes.
perlmonger: (planet)
Tenser, said the Tensor analyses Doc Smith’s usage of language in the Lensmen series. Lovely stuff, though I would disagree that the first two in the series are “lesser prequels”.

It’s probably getting on time to add the whole lot to my to-read heap again.
perlmonger: (quartic)
There is something terrifying sad in my psyche when, on reading mention of Toilet Closures in [livejournal.com profile] brisingamen‘s LJ, my first thought was of functional programming...

Oh, joy :)

Jan. 25th, 2006 04:48 pm
perlmonger: (sothoth remix)
[livejournal.com profile] bradhicks has written a Mythos piece on the New Horizons PlutoYuggoth probe.
perlmonger: (excited)
I've been cursing the change in LJ, making all in-journal use the journalname.livejournal.com syntax. The stylesheet for my S2 layout layer has (or had) CSS3 [href^="http://www.livejournal.com/"] entries for links to colour in-LJ links differently and it wasn't until that stopped working (other than for me and [livejournal.com profile] ramtops, coded in there as special cases) that I realised how much I'd miss it.

Anyhow, turns out that Gecko, from at least the last Firefox release, also supports the CSS3 [href*=".livejournal.com/"] attribute selector syntax, so I've got my correctly coloured links back!! OMG!!! and for all LJ links now too, without any extra work.

Needless to say, neither syntax works in any released version of IE, but I care not: it's my LJ and anybody mad enough to read it who's also (differently) mad enough to use IE6 or worse will be getting a crap looking layout anyhow. I've not got round to checking Safari yet and haven't yet got any betas of IE7 running here; I'll be interested to see how they cope.
perlmonger: (1984)

  • "*" awareness (where "*" is "disability" or, especially, "autism" [livejournal.com profile] dkmnow)

  • "choice" ([livejournal.com profile] ccomley)

  • chopped and shaped (inspired by [livejournal.com profile] easterbunny)

  • compassionate conservatism ([livejournal.com profile] burkesworks)

  • ethnic cleansing

  • family friendly ([livejournal.com profile] minkboylove)

  • extraordinary rendition

  • for your convenience = "for our convenience" ([livejournal.com profile] etrigan)

  • illegal combatant ([livejournal.com profile] landsmand)

  • modernisation (as a synonym for "evisceration")

  • right-sizing ([livejournal.com profile] mr_tom)

  • security contractors (as euphemism for mercenaries [livejournal.com profile] dkmnow)

  • total quality management ([livejournal.com profile] landsmand)

  • user involvement ([livejournal.com profile] drpete)

  • war on terror ([livejournal.com profile] dkmnow)


Any more for any more?

baaaa...

Jan. 17th, 2006 11:29 am
perlmonger: (pete)
from elsejournal (with apologies for briefly identifying the source, 'cos it was flocked)

ok, it's a meme, but (with the proviso of one typo I noticed) the questions are lovely, and I can't much complain about the result either :)

badass apotheosis )
perlmonger: (skydancer)
Via Chris Clarke, a little reminder of what they have wrought for the Washington-London Axis of Evil.

It's Flash, but sometimes that's the right tool for the job.

2005

Dec. 31st, 2005 11:29 am
perlmonger: (Default)
It's 31st December, so I guess it's time for that first sentence per month meme thang. I've skipped memes if they came first. March was tricky: first post was an image link to Lawrence Lessig's original WIPO "balance" image post, the second was a flocked post of my command of the day (lsof|awk '/lib(z[^a-zA-Z]|ssl)/ { print $1 ": " $3 " - " $9 }'|sort -u; if you're curious), so you got the third.

  1. I don't (yet) know if the rumour that Brad is going to sell LJ to Six Apart has any truth behind it, but all I can say to danah boyd's posting on the issue is Word.

  2. Pepper has just hopped through the study fanlight and so to under [livejournal.com profile] ramtops' desk with a small (and as yet unidentified) rodent in her mouth, garnished tastefully with a leaf.

  3. Jonathon Rowe on closed-source consumables

  4. OK, the old scrote is dying, and I guess a fair number of people across the world actually care.

  5. Actually ripped some vinyl yesterday, for the first time in months.

  6. We're just back from Wychwood Festival.

  7. Sometimes, when re-reading a book, a passage leaps out and grabs you by the metaphorical throat in a way that, other than by some nightmare precognition, it couldn't have first time round.

  8. If yr in the UK, it's time to go ticky at pledgebank, or the cute kittie will get itme.

  9. OK... The last 24 photos from Team Waste Summer Camp I'm bothering to upload are there on flickr now.

  10. [livejournal.com profile] ramtops and I just had a... well, row would be a gross overstatement: a failure of communication, caused by a peculiarity in my mechanisms of perception.

  11. It's [livejournal.com profile] ramtops' birthday today - my best friend, business partner, fellow catslave and wife.

  12. We went out shopping (being as we were all vegged out) late morning, and had brunch with Saturday's Grauniad at Cafe Ceiturica in Southville, a bit of Bristol that gets more gentrified by the day.


May 2006 be better than 2005 - far too many people I know had a vile year. Take care and be well, all who read this.
perlmonger: (pete)
I'm used to present-giving being on the 24th; my Finnish background. Our joint present this year was our W2K/AS server lunching its boot disk: oh, happy day. No data lost, of course (you do keep backups, don't you?) but it's our DHCP and in-house DNS server, and feeds authentication data to samba on the linux server too, so we lost all SMB shares too. We bought a new 160GB drive from PC World (they're occasionally useful for something :) and... oh, arse, I can't be bothered to go into the details. Suffice it to say, the drive is up and running now in another box with a partial Windows install on it. [livejournal.com profile] ramtops' and my rusty and always partial understanding of AD was interrupted by tiredness, lack of patience and general pissed offness by the evening, so there it sits until we find the gumption to kick it again.

Yesterday was better, but nearly didn't happen. Lilith, the vile golden-eyed monstrosity, was but one-eyed on Saturday evening: her right eye was glued shut and looked inflamed. It didn't seem to be bothering her, even when [livejournal.com profile] ramtops cleaned it, so we decided to let the fault develop overnight. If she'd still been piratical in the morning, we would have had to find an emergency vet somewhere on christmas day and miss out on our planned excursion. However, by some miraculous (and probably deeply suspicious) agency, the pluth thing was firing on both eyes when we got up. So. To Chippenham.

A very fine christmas dinner, and even better craic, right into the early hours with our hosts [livejournal.com profile] purple_peril and [livejournal.com profile] gmul, and fellow guests [livejournal.com profile] beermat and [livejournal.com profile] agc. It really was a very good day indeed, and huge thanks and respect to [livejournal.com profile] purple_peril for cooking beyond the limits of sanity. We arrived with one of [livejournal.com profile] ramtops' infamous chocolate mooooose!!!!! too, as that is [livejournal.com profile] gmul's drug of choice; it also likely had some significant part to play in how late conversation lasted into the morning.

After much washing and clearing up in the morning, we returned home to an angry and offended Tribe (they don't like their blobs going off without asking for the permission that they would deny), and found that Harriet Jones was human after all; I had thought better of her, but I suppose that was naïve optimism in the face of all human history... Ho hum.
perlmonger: (Default)
A peaceful and hopeful solstice to all; and happy hanukkah, joyous yule, merry christmas too now, or when your celebration turns into view.

Blessed Be.

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