Layla and Cocaine

Up to Clapton, Eric.

After that? … well, the Eurhythmics make an appearance, along with Evanescence.

“Evangescence” by Hugo von Hofmannsthal

And still upon my cheek I feel their breath.
How can it be, these days that were so near
Are gone, forever, to utter death?

This is a thing none thinks out to its last,
And far too terrible for any tear:
That all glides by, that all goes trickling past,

And that my self, unchecked, without pursuit,
Slipped from a little child, so sudden fast,
To grow strange as some dog to me and mute;

That I a hundred years ago was there,
And that my forbears, under grass and root,
Are mine, as close to me as my own hair,

As fully one with me as my own hair.

-Translated by Herman Salinger

And thereafter one gets, finally, to Faith No More.

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It’s fish-fry-Friday, but I did not get any fish today.

I stayed in the department rather late, even though after a short day of teaching I wanted to get out early … alas!

Julie visited my class today to hand out some surveys; it seems Melissa was a student of hers last spring. Everybody (not counting RJ and Lauren, who, along with one of my two Heidis, have dropped, I think) was there today, so after Julie left we did some grammar review, the quiz, and then took care of “administrative” things, in particular 1) splitting into 4-person groups for the group projects later and 2) exchanging essays for the peer-review aspect of the 1st essay. The bell rang, I collected homework, I advised Chris on some study-abroad matters, I ran into Prof. Steakley at the elevator, and I returned to my office, which remained rather quiet and empty once Kristi[e|i]n left.

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Stranded at Sam Waltons’s place

Music: Edie Brickell (from Volcano); other “E” singers and bands on the list include ELO, Elis Regina, Sir Elton, Elvis, Eminem, Enrique Iglesias, Enya, Eric Clapton, the Eurythmics, Eva Trout, and Evanescence.

The Clapton and Eurythmics are the things I know the best — the rest? I have it in my music directory, but it’s little listened to. Thus: the A-Z all the way through approach.

The Edie Brickell is really quite nice — the voice and the music, the former distinctive and the latter soothing and a bit bluesy.

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Amputation Jubilee: or, “The Day the Music died …”

Dirty Vegas & Dixie Chicks — that is and was this evening, with a little Don McLean thereafter.

The rest of “D” consists of Dream Theater, Dungen, Dunja Knebl, and Duran Duran. Dunja Knebl is the only obscure name there; she’s a Croatian folk singer I heard years ago (1999) in Zagreb one evening during our language and culture program.

I enjoyed that month greatly, although I had some issues with it, mostly dealing with its political and ideological leanings … in short: far right, nationalistic. Historical revisionism. Climate of fear. I always place Knebl in that context, justly or not, and so my enjoyment of her music is problematic. That having been said, there are a few rather pretty songs on the album, Iz Globine Srce.

I have episode 13 of season 3 of Battlestar Galactica to watch; it aired on Sunday, but I haven’t yet had the time or opportunity to watch it.

Last night I started and finished Cabinet of Curiosities (Preston-Child), an entertaining light thriller of sorts, which returned Agent Pendergast and Bill Smithback, the journalist of questionable judgment. Contrary to my expectations Pendergast indeed managed to go through a little “character development” — he was at least humbled (until the next book, in any case) a bit, and there were fewer occasions for his catch-phrase (“A bad habit, but very hard to break”).

Preston and Child’s language is amazingly non-metaphorical, though when the occasional poetic metaphors creep in, they can be a joy; the language is meant as a clean, transparent window to the story, its characters and actions, and I admit that occasionally a naively straight-forward story is a fun diversion.

I started Jasper Fforde’s Something Rotten on the buss; only 15 pages in at this point, but tonight or tomorrow I’ll read it, so I can return it Friday. Regina recommended Fforde a few weeks ago, and it turns out that a half-dozen other acquaintances/friends of mine know and like his work. Terry Pratchett for smart people, perhaps. I picked up several other interesting books (novels and short story collections) recently that I want to get to as well.

Another friend recommended Simon Winchester’s The Professor and the Madman and is currently reading The Ghost Map (“On August 28, 1854, working-class Londoner Sarah Lewis tossed a bucket of soiled water into the cesspool of her squalid apartment building and triggered the deadliest outbreak of cholera in the city’s history. In this tightly written page-turner, Johnson [Everything Bad Is Good for You] uses his considerable skill to craft a story of suffering, perseverance and redemption that echoes to the present day.”)

Last night’s cornbread is mostly gone — that’s why I can’t bake it often, for it’s addictively good.

As for “News of the Weird” … or semi-disturbing:

First, the very sad: Woman Becomes Quadruple Amputee After Giving Birth — “Claudia Mejia gave birth eight and a half months ago at Orlando Regional South Seminole. She was transported to Orlando Regional Medical Center in Orlando where her arms and legs were amputated. She was told she had streptococcus, a flesh eating bacteria, and toxic shock syndrome, but no further explanation was given.”

Second, the disturbing: I won’t be happy until I lose my legs — “I was six when I first became aware of my desire to lose my legs. I don’t remember what started it – there was no specific trigger. Most people want to change something about themselves, and the image I have of myself has always been one without legs.” She contrived though various self-inflected injuries, etc., to get her left leg amputated above the knee … she knows she’ll eventually want the right one gone, too.

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Tuesday in review

I had a hard time getting up this morning, as if someone else were sick but had transferred the exhaustion to me, but not the other symptoms. It’s the cold weather — the walls are thin, poorly insulated, and my bed is too close to the outer walls, so that my head freezes at night. I shiver.

I baked cornbread, but made a mistake … a silly one, really. See, I know it’s 1 cup of flour, 1 cup of cornmeal, 1 cup of milk, 1 egg, 2 tsp. baking powder, 1/2 tsp. salt, 1/3 cup oil … and 1/4 cup sugar.

Somehow I poured in 1/2 cup sugar!

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I hate foodies

Eagle lugging a deer head causes outage: “JUNEAU, Alaska – About 10,000 Juneau residents briefly lost power after a bald eagle lugging a deer head crashed into transmission lines.”

I am not fond of foodies.

That is a generous and kind way to express it. I, you see, love food, love good food, etc. But foodies … they get on my nerves.

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It’s 15 degrees and dropping

When I was in high school Jeremy Gress dressed in black, had painted his bedroom black, and listened to Depeche Mode. He wasn’t really that goth or such. This was all pre-Japanese-Lolita and such, the right time for Sandman but neither of us read it. Another thing about Jeremy was the car accident in which he had been involved, in which he was thrown from the vehicle and skidded along the gravely road. The lasting effect of the accident was his ability to dislocate one of his shoulders on demand, an instant get-out-of-the-straight-jacket free card.

What Jeremy had was a huge — ginormous, I like to say — collection of Depeche Mode cassettes, many legit, many bootleg, but enough to fill more than one shoebox. How could one group have produced so much music?

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Saturday, “Scientist Studies,” so many books …

Saturday

Let’s keep it short. It’s Saturday. I have better things to do than waste time online writing little missives for myself.

I had planned on Saturday being a productive day … do some shopping, some cleaning, you name it. But last night Jen called and asked whether I wished to join her and Christoph for some shopping — she at TJ Maxx, he at B&N — so I got up relatively early this morning to the sound of Ethan Stoller’s BKAB, showered, had a couple cups of coffee, and headed out the door after 9:30 for a trip west. B&N it was for me; I opted for a few hours of browsing books, music, and movies over clothes, kitchen supplies, and candles this time around.

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I was raffle number 13; I didn’t win.

1. Got up early, before my alarm went off, which, on a weekday, rarely happens anymore. It was about 7am, and the alarm was set for 7:15. I just lay there in bed, not wanting to get up, but unable to sleep and not wanting to hear the roar of loud music when the alarm did finally sound.

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Today was a day for completions, not for starts

Yesterday after burritos and bus passes I stopped by the library to get Kelly Link’s Magic for Beginners, a short story collection. Along the way I picked up several other books, most of which remain unread so far, though I did read the first section in Accidental Species, which contains intriguing and clever word play, but which also comes across as — perhaps — a bit too self-consciously literary.

Talking with Di reminded me of those page-turner Douglas Preston (and Lincoln Child) novels, so I picked up two when I was at the library: Relic and Cabinet of Curiosities.

Yesterday I acquired the most recent Battlestar Galactica episode (season 3, episode 12), which I watched last night after getting home — I spent the afternoon at Fair Trade, where I wrote, enjoyed a coffee, and undertook very little people watching –, and thereafter I picked up Relic and got about two hundred or so pages into it before I decided to go to bed.

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