Updates from June, 2004 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Brian Sawyer 12:46 pm on June 30, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Fun with Heidegger 

    Here’s something interesting:

    1. Go to Google.
    2. Search for Heidegger.
    3. Click on the first link that comes up (when I searched, it was Ereignis).
    4. Scroll down about halfway down the page, perusing the links.

    Notice anyone familiar? Pretty cool, huh? Who knows how they found me?

    Please pardon my shameless horn-tooting. I’m such an online nobody that this sort of unrequested linkage still excites me. I actually remember consulting this page when I was a student, so I’m rather flattered to actually be among the outbound links.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:53 pm on June 28, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Wodehouse Is a Very, Very, Very Fine House 

    After considering reading Wodehouse a number of times, based on many recommendations, Rael’s offhand mention and a fairly recent article in The New Yorker recently put me over the edge.

    I’ve just read the first few stories of The Most of P.G. Wodehouse and have found them quite rummy indeed! Very much in the spirit of Jerome K. Jerome and exactly the sort of thing I’ve been in the mood for lately.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:32 pm on June 23, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson 

    On tour together this summer for “The Bob Dylan Show.”* See if they’re coming to a Minor League baseball stadium near you.

    *I know, the name of the tour sounds more than a little disrespectful to the coheadliner to me too.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:52 am on June 16, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Gmail Invites to Burn 

    Okay, so I’ve already given out Gmail invitations to everyone I know who’s expressed interest in getting one. Now, I have a couple left, but I think it’s ridiculous to capitalize on the bizarre demand for a free service by selling them or swapping for them.

    That said, if any of my friends, family, or cherished readers want them, I’d be happy to offer the invites I have left. So, let me know if you’re interested in beta testing Gmail. The only requirement I have is that I actually know you, either in real life or via my blog. If you can convince me that I know you, I’ll give you the invite. If not, please don’t bother asking. It’s that simple.

    For what it’s worth, I’ve been using Gmail for a couple months now and really like it.

     
    • Anonymous 12:53 am on June 18, 2004 Permalink | Log in to Reply

      You probably don’t know me, but I’ve read your blog, and I’d love to have an invite. My email is “gretzky-99@juno.com”. Thank you so much if you send one.

    • Brian 2:06 pm on July 7, 2004 Permalink | Log in to Reply

      Well, I was planning on saving these invites for people I actually know, but I seem to have already given them to everyone who’s interested. So, I’m happy to give you my last invite. Just let me know your first name and last name, and I’ll send it to you (if I still have it left when I hear from you).

  • Brian Sawyer 12:36 pm on June 14, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Best Job Ever 

    The June 2004 Newsletter of the OED features journal entries by OED editors on “19 April 2004: a day in the life of the OED.” Over at Language Hat, where I learned of the OED Newsletter, folks are having fun picking apart this account by Katherine Martin, Assistant Editor (North American Editorial Unit):

    I was working on a draft entry for the verb other (and the related adjective othered). Due to the complex and philosophical nature of these terms (and our mutual interest in the subject matter), Abigail and I decided to split them up–she took on the noun othering–so that we could discuss the definitions in detail and share our research.

    Oh, if only contributing to this discussion could be my job and not just what I fiddle about with over lunch. [sigh]

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:24 pm on June 14, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    It Is Finished 

    Somewhere between packing, moving, unpacking, picking up a previously stalled knitting project, painting walls, and performing other homemaking tasks (oh yeah, and working), I finally managed to complete A Suitable Boy. I don’t have the energy or interest to write a real review, so the length of my comments will be inversely proportional to the 1,474 pages of the book.

    • It was pretty good; it could have been better.
    • It was very long; it could have been shorter.
    • The ending was suitable; it was not suited to me.
     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:45 pm on June 10, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Talk to the Animals 

    No polyglot zoophilist’s library is complete without Harrap’s Rat-English Dictionary:

    Over 5,000 references, 80,000 translations and hundreds of new expressions! Contains usage notes to avoid being bitten, and slang signals on a wide variety of subjects. Contains examples to show how sounds are used.

    Here are a few samples from the E section:

    e [i:] v. left; e ip, left a bit!
    e e [i:i] v. right; e e ip, right a bit!
    ee [ii:] a. just right, ee ewp, ooh, yeah, that’s just right.
    ee eee ['i:ii] v. tr. to stop grooming; ee eee ip!, stop nibbling my head now.
    eee [iii] v. to stop; eee! stop that!
    eee e [iii:'i] v. to quit; eee e! quit it!
    eee ee ['ii:i] v. tr. to want; eee ee awp, I want that pea.
    eee ee ee [iii:'ii:i] v. to go away; eee ee ee eep! get out of the hammock now, it’s my turn.
    eee eeee [ii:'iii] v. to leave; eek eee eeee, let’s leave the vet’s and never come back, okay?
    eee eee ee [iii:'iii:ii] v. tr. to explore; eee eee ee e ee eek, Let me out so I can explore behind the filing cabinet!
    eeee [iiii] v. tr. to give; eeee! gimme! eeee awp! gimme that pea!
    eeee ee [iiii:'ii] v. tr. to take; eee ee ewep; I’ll take that corn, thanks.
    eeee ee ee [iiii:'ii:ii] v. tr. to steal; ip eee ee ee; hey, he stole my avocado!
    eeee eee [iiii:'iii] v. to abscond; eeee eee ee chrp; he absconded with my paper towel.
    eeee eee e ['iiii:iii:i] n. dinner. eeee eee e eep; I’m ready for my dinner now.
    eeee eeee [iiii:iiii:] v. to feed; eeee eeee pwip! feed me, I’m starving!

    (I think I originally saw this in a post at Language Hat, but it was a while ago, so I can’t quite remember.)

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:48 pm on June 8, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    New Don Q: Excellent Translation and Narration Make Perfect Audio Book 

    The audio book of Edith Grossman’s new translation of Don Quixote was the perfect driving companion for my trip across the country. At a whopping 40.5 hours, I listened to the 35 CDs almost nonstop but didn’t even finish it in the car (though only about 20 minutes were left for me to listen to after arriving).

    As I suppose I could have guessed, the text of Don Quixote is particularly well suited to the audio book format. Among other things, it’s largely a book about storytelling, and many long sections of the book felt very much in the spirit of The Canterbury Tales. Characters enter, tell their stories to the main characters (and to us readers in the process), and then go their merry way. It strikes me as the perfect book to read to a child a chapter a night, as each chapter stands on its own as an isolated adventure or even a story within a story. Like A Thousand and One Nights, it begs to be read aloud in installments.

    Of course, the success of a good oral story depends on the reader, who needs the right voice, interpretation, interest, and believability to tell the tale in a gripping, convincing manner. George Guidall is the perfect narrator for this story. From the first pages of the Preface, I could already tell that his voice was the one I’d imagine for Don Quixote (and, by extension in my mind, Cervantes himself). His narration always captures the humor of the book without turning it into slapstick comedy, and he effectively reads all characters, both male and female, as rich, distinct voices without resorting to caricature. For example, he characterizes his female voices by using a softer tone, not a higher pitch. He doesn’t try to sound like a woman; rather, he simply conveys the fact that a female is speaking. I often find this is a challenge for readers of audio books. There’s nothing worse than hearing a male reader go falsetto when reading a female character’s lines.

    Also, though I’ve never read or heard any other translation and so have nothing to compare it to, I found Edith Grossman’s new version remarkably crisp, current without being anachronistic, and generally easy on the ears, which, since I imagine that’s how the Spanish would have sounded to Cervantes’ original readership, strikes me as a success.

    In short, if you’re planning your own cross-country drive, or if you have some other long-term commitment to solitude that you need to fill with a good yarn, I highly recommend picking up this audio version of Don Quixote. If you’re just looking for something to occupy your daily commute, this might not be the book for you, simply because you’ll be listening to nothing else for quite some time.

     
    • radikal papi 9:41 am on June 9, 2004 Permalink | Log in to Reply

      I have been wondering about listening to books on cd but i have always wondered if i could concntrate that much on it and not lose my place distracted by other drivers and such things. Perhaps i will try it next time i road trip. glad you made it back east with no problems.

  • Brian Sawyer 12:36 pm on June 7, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Cross-Section of U.S. Gas Prices over Memorial Day Weekend 

    All prices are for regular unleaded.

    5/27
    Santa Rosa, California: $2.299
    Fernley, Nevada: $2.199
    Winnemucca, Nevada: $2.169

    5/28
    Wendover, Nevada: $2.279
    Lyman, Wyoming: $1.839
    Cheyenne, Wyoming: $1.899

    5/29
    Lexington, Nebraska: $2.159
    ??, Iowa: $2.079
    ??, Illinois: $1.999
    ??, Indiana: $1.999

    5/30
    West Unity, Ohio: $1.979
    Fredonia, New York: $2.119
    Little Falls, New York: $2.149

    If it looks like I filled up often, it’s only because I wanted to make sure I didn’t run out of gas out in the boonies. I actually made pretty good gas mileage: an average of 35.5 mpg for the whole trip.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 12:47 pm on June 1, 2004 Permalink | Log in to leave a Comment  

    Tolls on I-90 

    In case you ever plan to travel the length of I-90 (from the western border of Indiana to Boston), here’s what you can expect to pay.

    Indiana: $4.45
    Ohio: $5.45
    New York: $12.15
    Massachusetts: $4.50

    Total: $26.55

     
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