Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Failed

Master and Commander - by Patrick O'Brian

Forced myself through 116 pages of it but cannot get any further, as that I have no particular interest in sea-faring stories, the British Navy, or technical details of sailing. It's like Call of the Wild for the navy, complete with the hanging and the swearing. This is actually one story that I believe may be more interesting as a movie if only so I can skip over all the details about the length of the main-mast and staysail.

Monday, December 22, 2008

The Cheating Culture

The Cheating Culture by David Callahan (hardcover 295pages)

...is one of those books that I picked up to get an idea of what's going on in the society right now. It's got a lot of interesting (but mostly depressing, as you might've guessed from the title) information and was a surprisingly good read, considering its genre and prose style. The opinion part, of course, has to be taken with a grain of salt. It made me think. It also made me feel somewhat paranoid but for all that most of it is about things that would make me more cynical, it ended on a surprisingly positive note -- mainly consisting of the author saying: okay, we have all these problems, but this is what we can do about them and it can be done.

That being said, Lucy, if you're still reading this, I'd like it if you read this book some time, so we can talk about it. A lot of its premises are based on socioeconomic paradigms and I'm curious to see what someone who actually knows something about economics can say about it. (Like I've said, I've mostly read it for the facts and I don't know enough to evaluate the opinions.)

...

In other news, started Master and Commander but don't like it much right now.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

The Bluest Eye

By Toni Morrison, 216 pages with afterword.

In terms of shock value it's up there with A Million Little Pieces. I like it much better than Song of Solomon though -- the structure and style is a little different (I would say it's more lyrical both in terms of word usage and in the way it's fragmented) and it really worked for me. There are lots of themes and ideas in the book and it's definitely not a light read, or a happy read. That being said, it's also a surprisingly fast read (I started reading at around 11am and finished by 2pm, even with flipping back and forth a few times). As much as the book is about racism in the days just before WWII, it's also about people. The children's voice is astonishing accurate and that makes the story all the more stark and just...it's an amazing book. Not what I usually would go for, but wow.

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Memory Keeper's Daughter

The Memory Keeper's Daughter - Kim Edwards (401 pg)

The pacing is a little on the slow side until the last 1/3 of the book and small cliches keep on showing up, which is vaguely annoying. However -- and this is a very big however -- the author's insight into human nature is amazing. And by "human nature" I mean not the study of a tragic hero or a criminal mind, but of average people like you and me. The author has a good grasp of what makes people lie, what makes people cry, and how each decision has an effect that ripples not only into the future but into the past too, via memories. It hurts to read sometimes, and although this is not necessarily a book I'll buy and keep (not my type), I'd recommend others to read it at least once.




Hey look, I finished a book in the middle of a school year. Yay!

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Memory Keeper's Daughter

Started last night (told ya all that I'm crackin') and was very skeptical over the first few pages, because the main characters felt like they're being cast toward the romance-novel (pretty blonde with green eyes who smells of lilacs as one of the main character, to give you an idea) type. However it was (forgot which page I'm on, but definitely finished the first page) actually fairly good. Of course at this point all that means is that I want to keep reading it to find out what happens, but things are starting to look promising.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

I thought this should get saved somewhere.

kate (8:49:40 PM): ah yes, the perfect solution
kate (8:49:46 PM): hug lepers online!
lucy (8:49:52 PM): x))
lucy (8:49:55 PM): this is why I love you.
kate (8:50:11 PM): because I'm perverted?
lucy (8:50:23 PM): because you ruin everything.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Finished

A SHORT HISTORY OF NEARLY EVERYTHING

If the section on biology is anything to go by, the book has some concepts grossly simplified but is, overall, surprisingly accurate in a layman's description of...well, nearly everything.

It's not an easy thing to do. I'm fairly impressed, given that the book covers cosmology, physics, chemistry, biology, geology, oceanography, paleontology, archeology, and meteorology (which is not counting the things that the tangents touched on briefly). Not something you read to get in depth knowledge in any one field, maybe, and not even a book you'd read as an introduction to a field, but a very good summary of the development of science that is relatively broad and fairly easy to read.

It's like reading an abstract on Science. Not something I'd read a second time but then, unless you didn't take notes on your article properly and need to reference it later, you wouldn't read an abstract a second time anyway.

Worthwhile to read the first time? Yes.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Note

Finally got to the biology portion. It's near the end, but in a way that makes since, since biology is a fairly recent branch of science (and so much of it is delicate and depends on technological developments). ...which isn't what brought me to posting here, actually. I am posting because I read the comparison that DNA and RNA are like Spanish and Hindi. They aren't really. Their chemical properties are a lot more similar than that (heh, otherwise a bunch of the stuff I did in the lab shouldn't have worked). It's more like, say, Spanish and French. Both are romance languages derived from Latin, both share many grammatical rules and verb tenses, but the conjugations, pronounciation and spellings are often very different and even if you've never heard either language before in your life (in which case I suppose "you" might be analogous to a newly made protein), you'll still be able to tell, the first time you hear the two languages, that they are two distinctly different languages.

Definitely more similar than Hindi and Spanish, though.

Currently on page 400.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Books read

The copy of "Dostoyevsky: NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND; WHITE NIGHTS; THE DREAM OF A RIDICULOUS MAN, and selections from THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD" that I got from the discarded books pile from CHS way back. This is the Andrew MacAndrew version (what a name, huh?)

Am currently trudging my way through the somewhat intimidating A SHORT HISTORY OF NEARLY EVERYTHING by Bryson. I am on page 163 out of 478 (not counting notes and references). On page 162 I came across the quote where Fermi supposedly said "Young man, if I could remember the names of these particles, I would have been a botanist."

"?!" I thought.

Well, life goes on.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Finished reading

SURELY YOU'RE JOKING, MR. FREYNMAN
Worth reading at least once, I think. (I didn't finish the entire thing the last time I picked it up.) Though it does nothing to dispel the notion that physicists are insane.

Except now I have to return my books to the library and begin the long, long process of Other Matters in Life. I'll aim to finish a few more books before summer ends.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Finished reading

CRASHING THROUGH - Robert Kurson (hardcover, 306pgs)

Fairly good read, VERY interesting case study. (I like reading case studies, so hush.) I don't think I'll read it a second time, but it's definitely worth a first read. It's got fairly good scientific information about physiology, psychology, and a little bit of neuroscience all presented together in logical order. It goes into the case study in a way that's like story telling and, even if Kurson may be not be a talented writer, he is a GOOD writer. The part in the story about how May has trouble IDing the curbs had me sympathizing -- that's what it's like for me when I go out after dark without my glasses: I can't tell apart what is a curb and what is just a shadow. It's a strange feeling.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Finished

A MILLION LITTLE PIECES - James Frey (430 pgs, paper back)

Just like reading THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD, it takes a few pages to get used to the writing style, but from then on the perspective shifts and suddenly it becomes something that's horrifying, stark, but also almost lyrical and kind of -- the irony of using this word to describe a book about an addict is not lost on me -- psychedelic.

I like it in the sense that I'd liked I NEVER PROMISED YOU A ROSE GARDEN: it's a different life, so different that normally I wouldn't have been able to grasp the enormity of it, but the book itself charted it out for you. There's emotional investment there -- the story is, in a way, heartbreaking, and I kept telling myself that I'd put it down after just ONE more chapter and end up with three more, annoyed at myself because now I'm behind my day's schedule for other things.

I got a lot out of this book. It's going on my re-read list.

The cover proclaims it to be from the Book Oprah's Club (that's the order it's printed), just like WHITE OLEANDERS. I like this one better than WHITE OLEANDERS.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Finished

Finished reading THE GLASS CASTLE by Jeannette Walls (288 pages, paperback).

In terms of autobiographies about a really interesting life started with traumatizing childhood, it is less depressing than A CHILD CALLED IT, THEY CAGE ANIMALS AT NIGHT, but more than RUNNING WITH SCISSORS. The writing quality is better than RUNNING WITH SCISSORS but a bit like THEY CAGE ANIMALS AT NIGHT if the author for that book loved his family more (which admittedly would be hard to do, considering all those foster homes meant that he was never around his family that much, which contrasted with the author this book). Fairly fast read but definitely one of those books where, after you've read it, you feel bad for ever being dissatisfied with your own life. Amazing story. Not something I'd voluntarily re-read, but wow, the lives that some people go through....

Monday, July 14, 2008

Finished...

...the Hitchhiker's physics book (parents think I'm mightily strange but that isn't something the didn't know before)!


Just... REALLY fun.

I went and looked for the HOLISTIC AGENCY book today, but the two copies are out and on-hold. I'll have to request a copy from the other library but I don't know when I'll get it.

Meanwhile I got a copy of the GLASS CASTLE.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

*guilty look*

So I probably won't be doing 2 things I promised to do. Not anytime soon, anyway.

I'm still reading "Blind Watchers" but very slowly (btw, the author is more fun in chapters that involve biographies). I was distracted by "A Confederacy of Dunces" (you guys should add it to your lists!) and "Anansi Boys". I liked them both, in different ways. Anyway, and I still have two other books I want to finish before we leave (on the 21st).

So that also means Kate's reading list will wait :/ But I'll do that for sure once I get back. Meanwhile you guys feel free to to do the book-club thing without me for now.

p.s. Left a comment. I don't know, do you get notifications for these, Susan?

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Blind watchers, ch11

Am I the only one who feels miffed by the fact that Kolb said he has some idea about what the universe is made of (p293) and then completely failed to talk about it?

Aggh. Oh well.

Despite the enormity of the task faced by cosmologists, they are an arrogant lot.

Um, yeah. That was observed during the course of the narration in this book. But admission is good, I guess?

If you happen to ask a cosmologist, or any scientist for that matter, what he or she thinks is the most interesting problem in science, more likely than not the answer will be the problem that scientist happens to be working on at that moment. If that is not the answer, find another scientist with whom to talk.

I like the first sentence, because it's true and in essence what I like best about the sciences -- that you get to pick the thing you're most interested in to work on. The second sentence irks me. See the previous quote.

Oh and, the part where he talks about he's not as selfish as he should be because he likes to spend time lecturing people on cosmology instead of just doing experiments in cosmology? Is that being "unselfish", as he seems to think it is, or is it just another form of arrogance, as I'm inclined to believe? It does take a lot of confidence to go and lecture people -- in different countries too, according to him.

And then, alas, the book is at an end. Though not without a final reference to the "blind watchers". Figures.

Yay done.

Friday, July 04, 2008

Blind watchers, ch10

Count for references to blindness continues to increase.

But the accelerator is an important instrument for anyone interested in understanding the earliest moments of the universe, because in the fireball of energy produced in the collision of high-energy particles, it is possible to taste the primordial soup of the big-bang.

There is a moment, while reading this chapter, where I was laying down with my forehead resting on the book thinking that maybe, just maybe, this book will be a much better read for people who are not familiar with the sciences.

"English majors," I thought, except then I realized that English majors would probably have torn this book apart before we've even reached chapter three. Ah well, maybe art majors then. They might appreciate the drama that the author's trying to instill into cosmology.

There are some intentionally funny parts in this chapters though:

This era [a point in the history of the universe where the average temperature is equal to or higher than the melting point of brimstone] might have theological implications, but nothing of interest to cosmologists occurred at this time; the universe seemed to pass uneventfully through the temperatures of hell.

Boredom, I suppose, can be a special type of hell?

On a completely unrelated note: It's Pan-Gu (pronounced: pan-goo), not P'an Ku (have no idea where he got that spelling from), which is a folklore (think Native American). The Taoists and the Buddhists and all the other followers (China had a melange of different belief systems, most of which I don't understand or even remember) each had their own ideas. [Random FYI.]

There are many astronomical facts that cry out for a deeper and more consistent explanation.

The screaming! Make it stop! lol

Oh and in the page afterward, just as I was thinking how all this talk about primordial soup was making me think of edible kind of soup, I turned the page and saw the photo of the Campbell-styled can with "Fermilabs: Primordial Soup" written large upon it. I lol'ed. Lucy probably will appreciate this, too.

And the part where he says "Because the equation is so beautiful, I can't resist writing it..." made me think of those cartoon scenarios with a deranged-looking scientist in coke-bottle glasses twitching over a sheet a paper with tears running down his face, muttering to himself, "It's so beautiful...it's so beautiful...."

That's from comics, mind you. I'm a little concerned about people like that in real life.

Aside from that, I have discovered that Kolb is right on the bandwagon with everyone else who is trying to find the grand theory that'd unify Life, the Universe and Everything (and good luck to him). The sudden increase in "blindness" at the end of the chapter made me go "gah".

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Blind watchers, ch9

The count for references to "blind watchers" has started to go up again.

This chapter was just...

Just one year after the bang, in the formless fiery mist that existed long before the formation of planets, stars, galaxies, or even atoms....

Once upon a time, long long ago.... This is how the chapter started. Really.

After almost all of the electrons were swept into electrically neutral atoms, the photons was no longer chained by its interactions with the charged electrons, and at long last it was finally free to roam unimpeded across the universe.

Free Willy!
Kolb is apparently a writer of dramas.

Gamow roared through the otherwise quiet, scholarly world of physics as if still astride his BSA motorcycle with a group of Hell's Angels terrorizing Sunday School picnic.

Imagining physicists at a Sunday School picnic makes me laugh. (As a biologist I must say that BSA makes me think of bovine serum albumine, and thinking of a serum motor bike is very... o_O; )

Oh oh and this also made me laugh:

Young, white male physics Ph.D. student seeks a collaborator to share the joy of primoridal nucleosynthesis. Must be sensitive to the nuances of general relativity and unafraid to dabble in the big-bang theory. If you would like to build the elements with me, call me at (301) 953-5000. No steady-state cosmologists, please!

It reminds me of the time Victoria made that comment about chromosome crossing in 11th grade....

I've heard (well, read) the pigeon story at least five times (almost certainly more) from different sources already, but it never gets old.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Blind watchers, ch8

Remember what I said about metaphors in this book, and how they are over-used?

Try abused. Like the poem described by Billy Collin in his poem on poetry analysis:
But all they want to do
is tie the poem to a chair with rope
and torture a confession out of it.

They begin beating it with a hose
to find out what it really means.


The chapter is called "Expanding Fog". I guess that constitutes a fair warning?

But here are some quotes:

I am not odd enough to think that just any old mathematical equation is beautiful; those really weird people who think that all equations are beautiful are know as mathematicians.

So glad you made the distinction, sir.

No, I don't like all equations, for some leave me with a numb, empty feeling inside, like one has after listening to a Barry Manilow song.

lol WTH? Okay, you are "normal", we get it, can we move on now?

What a wonderful world, where we can enjoy both an artistic interpretation and a mathematical description of the same scene!" (This is on a J. M. W Tuner painting of of a "storm-tossed sea".

First of all: you geek. You have failed to convince us of your normality.

Secondly: painting does NOT equal math equations. I'm enough of a geek to admit that both has their aesthetics, but a scene of storm-tossed sea can't be summed up with merely an equation about hydrodynamics. Even if we want to reduce it to symbols and numbers (think about it) the number of things in nature that's represented in the painting requires at least another equation on aerodynamics (wind), saturation curves (humidity and rain), and light intensity (the painting is not a canvas painted black all over, therefore there is light). The foam in the sea can be described with equations, yes, and so can the waves themselves (simple harmonic motion with vectors where they break). The spray of water can be described with more vectors as the droplets travel their parabolic paths.

Yes, the entire scene can be described in math, but I think Kolb has it grossly simplified. The amount of stuff that you can put into one average 8.5 x 11 inches of canvas can take up to PAGES of equation to describe. And as we all know, repeat with me now, Prof. Kolbs, since you're so fond of repeating things: the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

As you can tell, that bit really bothered me.

Onwards!

The word "fog" is used too many times in this chapter, though "blind" is not used as much. The "expansion of the universe is an expansion of space, not an expansion of galaxies into space" got very, very annoying. Kolb is no doubt one of those professors who thinks that repetition is the key to life, the universe and everything. ("Reason conquering sense....")(Gaaaah make him stop! Please!)

I like the paragraph about how aesthetics can drive science though, because sometimes the moment when you figure something out after a long period of hard word, the solution does look beautiful.

The stars seem to reach out and seduce all sorts of people.

We GET the idea that the stars are fascinating (otherwise we wouldn't be reading this book), but this is laying it on a bit thick (well it's been a bit thick all the way through, but this makes it even...thicker?) Stop with the succubi analogy already. (It wouldn't be so bad if he varied his lines, or embellished that line a little with something else instead of having it stick out like that but no....)

I've also discovered that I don't like Hubble as much anymore, but the train (Kolb seems to really like trains) thing was amusing. The bit about the habit of mentioning astonomical discoveries in New York Times made me imagine one of those spectrum chart things next to the stats on Wall Street.

Most things you were taught in high school geometry is true only for flat spaces.

ZOMG and the earth is NOT FLAT! What EVER shall we do?

I'll owning up to like to play with the mental visualization games though (one dimension circle on two dimension space, two area on three dimension space, etc. I had to grapple with the difference between the fourth dimension and the fourth spatial dimension though, since they're apparently not the same thing). (Knowing our universe has a center in the fourth spatial dimension is cool, though.)

In conclusion?

Foooooooooooooooog.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Blind watchers, ch7

Because Lucy said to just post them straight. I guess non-fiction books about science and histories really don't have that many spoilers.

Chapter 7 is somewhat dull. I get the general impression (especially at the end, where he was writing how everyone was cheering for the football guy and not for the astronomy guy and how the top two science award had to be split between the astronomy guy and a biology person who worked out the digestive tracts of termites) (I'm thinking the lady who gave the lecture on endosymbiosis, and if that's the case, she DESERVED the prize, if not for showing us key proof for a part of eukaryotic evolution, then for sticking to it when all the male scientists made fun of her for being a woman who didn't know science).

The "panel" thing annoyed me. Part of it because he's basing an entire argument on the concluding remarks of papers (what each scientist puts in there varies, some choose to reiterate their argument, some tend to take a step back to the broader perspective, therefore it's not fair to compare them, since stylist differences can result in the comparison of two different things). Also I didn't agree with his point distribution, thought that could just be me not knowing enough about astronomy (which I don't).

Discovery!

I wandered by the library again to return some books and of course I couldn't resist the siren call of all those books. I've returned four books and got back another four, so at least net balance is still...balanced.

I checked out Daddy-Long-Legs by Jean Webster, having vaguely remember seeing the story from an illustrated children's book somewhere when I was little. Before I checked it out I made (the mistake?) of skimming the introduction and suddenly I find myself 56 pages committed to the story in the time it takes me to walk back home from the library. (I forgot to watch out for traffic, but I didn't get run-over either, so ha!)

I imagine that this story is what Anne of Green Gables would be like, if we changed the minor character set and did the story in letter-format. To illustrate:

When it was finally finished, and ourselves and the kitchen and the doorknobs all thoroughly sticky, we organized a procession and still in our caps and aprons, each carrying a big fork or spoon or frying pan, we marched through the empty corridors to the officers' parlor where half-a-dozen professors and instructors were passing a tranquil evening. We serenaded them with college songs and offered refreshments. They accepted politely but dubiously. We left them sucking chunks of molasses candy, sticky and speechless.

I lol'ed through most of the first 50 pages.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Blind watchers, ch5 (Lucy)

"And to discover how his vision would be changed if he modified the shape of his retina, he slipped a bodkin (a long, blunt sewing needle) "betwixt my eye & bone as neare to the backside of my eye as I could.' Again, he almost lost his sight." (pg. 120)

FREAKING OW, MAN. I'm not sure if I respect him more now or not D: Oh yeah, that's Newton. I shared this bit of information in the hufflepuff chatroom though. Someone there proclaimed that this made Newton "badass".

"This basis for the investigation of nature led to some strange statements by Aristotle- for instance, that women have fewer teeth than men. Either Aristotle was not a very accurate observer, he couldn't count, or he had odd taste in women." (pg. 123)

lolol. Hey, women without teeth need love too!

"The book was empty no longer." (pg. 133)

I literally screamed "gah!!" at this point. Too much is too much.

Blind watchers, ch6

After some consideration, I have concluded that this chapter can be summarized as the following: Greeks win at geometry and don't ever laugh at simple questions posted by the nice lady who works for you.

The thing with the stellar aberration and the dot reminds me of the chapter on optical illusions in my general psych book.

This chapter also had a lot more commentaries. Although I don't have anything against commentaries in particular and, in the case of history books (which is sort of is), commentaries can make the narration more interesting, for this chapter it was just irritating. From the part where he wrote, in parenthesis, "The obvious lesson is always be sure of yourself and never check your results!" (Which is, from my experience in science, such a spectacularly bad idea -- I mean not checking your results? Ever?) to the part where he wrote "I also wonder why the significance of scientific discoveries is so often dismissed by historians in favor of political, military, or economic developments." which, first of all, means that he probably didn't read that many historical books -- or at least, not a great variety of them because I've read ones that covered the scientific discoveries in great detail (though he was correct about biologists thinking that the Origin of Species should be mentioned in every historical text covering the Darwinian age). Second of all, scientific discoveries, I'm sad to say, often has applications that only become sociologically significant once we have the technology to apply the discovered knowledge at a more general level (meaning outside of labs in matters related to the public). There is a step between scientific discoveries and its impact on history (especially now, where everything discovered has to be vetted by a committee, published, vetted by another committee, tested, funded, tested again, before it becomes available to the general public -- okay, I lied, there are more than one steps). Whereas, say, warfare... example: Mr. President declares us to be at war, congress approves (or goes mum at the time, I guess, in our case), we are at war. Economy and politics, I feel, is not as disconnected from society as science can be (the general public generally don't care much about quarks, but they will care about inflation and any economic principle that might solve the problem with social security). Thirdly: duh. Historians are far more likely to have a background in liberal arts and social sciences than, say, quantum physics or molecular biology. Scientists, when writing books, are more likely to write about things in the field of science than, say, the significance of the meeting of troops at the Elbe River. Would it not make sense that historians, would do the same?

Did I just rant? Very well, I've just ranted.
End rant.

(Stellar aberration is a cool term, though. Just try saying it aloud.)

Friday, June 27, 2008

Blind watchers, ch5

Newton gets his own special chapter, with no references to him being blind. I guess this means that the author really liked him.

Meanwhile:

The book that Newton found, which had paramount importance to the development of science, was blank. Empty. p116

Yes, we know what a blank book means, thank you (also, blank book:chapter 5 = IT'S AN ELLIPSE!:chapter 3).

In te hunt for the truth, Newton became the hunted. p118

Anyone else gets the feeling that the author wanted to type "Duh duh duh!" after that line?

To exaggerate the leap made by Newton is nearly impossible (but I will try). p133

My first thought was: thanks, but no thanks. (Except of course I don't really get a say in the matter, do I?)
Yeah the author is a Newtonian, just a little.

To those who say Newton removed the hand of God from the heavens, I say he replaced a toilsome hand of brute force with a sublime hand of beauty. p 135

I lol'ed. Just a little.
If I ever want to know what hero-worship sounded like in the field of physics (which I didn't, but oh well), this is Exhibit A.

P.S.
(IT'S AN ELLIPSE!)

Blind watchers, ch4 (up to 112)

Just a post to add that Galileo, while you are a genius, you fail as a lawyer.

Did we just go for 30 something pages (76-112) without another reference to blind watchers?

ZOMG.

Blind watchers, p76-98

Posting by chapters is a good idea (for anything with a chapter, at least -- we'll worry about poetry collections and what-have-you when we get there). However, since I'm nearly done with chapter 4 and this post is supposed to be written up yesterday, not today, I figured I should get a little lee way with this post.

Also, I can't resist quoting this bit:

"We all know the apocryphal story. Galileo dropped two objects of unequal weight (most likely graduate students) from the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and noticed that they both hit the ground at the same time."

I have the vague memory that this is not the first time the author's alluded to grad student abuse. Anyone get the impression that he might not be too happy with his?

(It makes me think about how fortunate I am to be going into the field of biology, and not physics.)

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Blind watchers 21-71 (maybe we should start doing this by chapters)

Man, Tycho was quite the SlytherClaw (yes, you can't escape my sorting ways even here!). At least in youth. Then he goes all stubborn-and-arrogant Gryffindor on everyone.

"In fact, if today you open any encyclopedia to the section on solar eclipses, you will find a diagram showing Eath at the center of the solar system." (pg 35)

Er, really?

References to blind watchers: pg. 34, 36, 45 (but how could he resist this one considering Kepler's vision problems?), 66 ("myopic"), 71.

References to smashing celestial spheres: possibly more than to 'blind watchers' but I realized this too late to start counting. At least half a dozen. However, IT'S AN ELLIPSE! takes the cake XD

And I totally agree with Susan- the book is funny! I giggled all through the story of Tycho's daughter getting married, but it's a whole big paragraph so I'm not typing it. It's on pg. 41.

Also, we've discussed counting the value of human life in Econ classes :P It's a slightly different approach than asking a hitman, but that certainly works as well. (For the record, it involved medical care and compounds of future payments).

I'm not sure I enjoyed learning all that about Kepler, but I can't say it wasn't interesting. Also, he's a total Ravenclaw.

"The third problem with the model is that it is complete, total, and absolute nonsense." (pg. 54)

lol.

"our inevitable chronicler describes his blushing birde as 'simple of mind, and fat of body, with a stupid, sulking, lonely, melancholy complexion.'" (pg. 55)

I shouldn't laugh but LOL.

"Knowing that his place in history was secure, he composed this epitaph:

I measured the skies, now the shadows I measure
Skyborn was the mind, Earthbound the body rests." (pg. 69)


Nothing funny about that quote (it's kind of pretty), but totally made me think of Snape :D "Would you like me to do it now or would you like a moment to compose an epitaph?"

Blind watchers, image



Just because it's too amusing.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Blind Watchers p 21-75

The book does get better, thank heavens, though I'm not sure how much of this is due to the fact that it's becoming a funny read (IT'S AN ELLIPSE!). Part of the funniness is intentional. The author has a sense of humor and he wants us to know about it. Part of the funniness is purely by accident (IT'S AN ELLIPSE!) because, let's face it, he over plays the drama and the metaphors quite a bit.

It's funny, though.

Now I want to make an icon that says "Have quadrant. Will travel."

(And possibly one that says "IT'S AN ELLIPSE!")

And I also really need to start tallying how many times he alludes to the phrase "blind watchers." Lucy counted three times in yesterday's pages. I counted at least three more (though I think there are four in reality) in these pages.

Glee

I just skimmed the first chapter of The Science of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and it is awesome.

Still need to finish Blind Watchers first though, so now I think I'll try reading it at a faster pace.

I'll leave you with a quote:

Which brings us neatly to God. The Guide was begun just before reason trotted to the back of the bus and had a quiet smoke, leaving the front seats to be occupied by the gibbering prophets of the New Age.

The entire thing seems to be written like that.

These "the science-behind..." books, when done well, are such fun to read.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Blind Watchers; pg. 1-20 (Lucy)

"The author once dreamt that he was a partial derivative!" (pg. vii)

OMG. I am horrified and a little in love.

"Astronomers are haunted by the thought that discoveries are before their eyes but they are too blind to see them."
(pg. 7)

O, I see what you did there! ;P But that is a scary thought, isn't it?

"When our ancestors first looked at the sky, it was with blind eyes." (pg. 8)

O, I see what you did there. ...Again.

"..., we are still blind watchers of the sky." (pg. 9)

OK YOU CAN STOP NOW. xP



Well, I'm a bit disappointed. It's not a bad book, but so far it hasn't told me anything new. And since I've taken 2 college courses that concerned cosmology some of it almost sounds like baby talk. (I do believe iron was referred to as "hard to digest" for stars or something like that. I didn't mark down the quote). I do feel like I like the author though, he seems to have a good sense of humor.

Blind Watchers p 1-20

Page 15:

"The German painter George Busch warned that the new star augured the coming of all sorts of calamities, such as "'inclement weather, pestilence, and Frenchmen.'"

Nick and I lol'ed.

How do you pronounce "zeitgeist"?

P 17: "Perhaps our eyes cannot see what our mind is not prepared to accept" makes me think of Gaiman's London Below Inhabitants and Pratchett's Death & Co.

Then, P 18:

"Many dismissed the apparition of 1572 as a tailless comet, some sort of atmospheric phenomenon, a condensation of the rising vapors of human sin..."

...I was not aware that human sin obeyed the laws of thermodynamics, much less state change, but I guess?

And P 19:
"Scientific genius, like musical genius or artistic genius, comes in all shapes, sizes, and types. Each one had his individual tint and coloring."

In my experience, all the scientific geniuses are all boring and human-shaped. I think the author lives in a more exciting world than I do.

And Tyco's from Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern? Seriously? (Okay so it's Rosenkrantz and Gyldenstierne but!)

...

Current opinion: Contains disappointingly less science and more history than I'd hoped, but not too bad.

Books read

Over the past week I've read:

Right Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse (p261, paperback)
Which is funny with the sort of absurd humor that reminds me vaguely of Ros. & Guil. Are Dead (except this is fiction, not play, and it's very, very...not-Hamlet in any sense) but with less depth. Unfortunately I don't like any of the characters, as fun as laughing at their foibles may be.(Which reminds me: what on earth does Bertie do for a living, anyway?) After one book I think I can safely conclude that this really isn't my cup of tea.

Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx (p55 hardcover)
Mostly because if there's a book-based movie out that I'm interested in I will want to read the book first (though time doesn't always permit this). The writing's not particularly memorable (you don't get a strong sense of the author's style the way you get with Gaiman, for instance), but the story is good and it speaks louder than the writing. Reads like a short folktale, not literature. Also: short. It won't be on my re-read list but I know I'll remember the story for a very long time, so it balances out.

Re-read:
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman (370 paperback)
Every bit as good as I remembered and a lot more graphic than I remembered, too (though that is probably because I forgot a lot of the details over time). It's one of those fantasy stories that the author has put magic in. It also makes me want to paint. Or at least doodle Escher-isque scenes from London Below on the margins of my to-do list.

...
Starting Blind Watchers of the Sky today.
...

I got roped into Shelfari, so I'll be playing around with that, too.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Book 1

Going to pick up Blind Watchers of the Sky from the SC library today.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Kate's list, reposted,

Eggers, Dave A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Lewycka, Marina A Short History of Tractors
Mitch, Cullin A Slight Trick of the Mind
Pelevin, Viktor A Werewolf Problem in Central Russia
Shteyngart, Gary Absurdistan
Kingsolver, Barbara Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
Olsson, Linda Astrid and Veronika
McCabe, Patrick Breakfast on Pluto
Mitchell, David Cloud Atlas
Russo, Richard Empire Falls Foer, Jonathan Safran Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Blume, Judy Forever
Salinger, J.D. Franny and Zooey
Hartinger, Brent Geography Club
Pynchon, Thomas Gravity's Rainbow
Dickens, Charles Hard Times
Bradshaw, Gillian Hawk of May
Crick, Mark Kafka's Soup
O'Nan, Stewart Last Night at the Lobster
O'Neill, Eugene Long Day's Journey into Night
Eliot, George Middlemarch...?
Fry, Stephen Moab is my Washpot
Gaskell, Elizabeth North and South
Oren, Michael B. Power, Faith, and Fantasy
Docx, Edward Pravda
Senge, Peter Presence
Quindlen, Anna Rise and Shine
Pouncey, Peter Rules for Old Men Waiting
Swann, Maxine Serious Girls
Russo, Richard Straight Man
Gilbert, Daniel Stumbling on Happiness
Morrison, Tony The Bluest Eye
Morgan, Robin The Burning Time
Docx, Edward The Calligrapher
Harris, Sam The End of Faith
Appiah, Kwame Anthony The Ethics of Identity
Walls, Jeannette The Glass Castle
Hamer, Dean The God Gene
Doyle, Brian The Grail: A year ambling…
Solzhenitsin, Alexander The Gulag Archipelago
Krauss, Nicole The History of Love
Fowles, John The Magus
Feynman, Richard The Meaning of It All
Edwards, Kim The Memory Keeper's Daughter
Pollan, Michael The Omnivore's Dilemma
Stewart, Rory The Places In Between
Coe, Jonathan The Rotters' Club
Shteyngart, Gary The Russian Debutante's Handbook
Donohue, Keith The Stolen Child
Beaufort, Simon et al. The Tainted Relic
Setterfield, Diane The Thirteenth Tale
Slouka, Mark The Visible World
Didion, Joan The Year of Magical Thinking
Johnson, Ron Them: Adventures with Extremists
Ferris, Joshua Then We Came to the End
Bachelder, Chris U.S.!
Zamyatin, Yevgeny We
Crutcher, Chris Whale Talk

Kate's book list

And because she's Kate she has the authors listed first before the titles, but at least it's in Excel so I re-alphabetized it using the titles....

Author Title
Eggers, Dave A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Lewycka, Marina A Short History of Tractors
Mitch, Cullin A Slight Trick of the Mind
Pelevin, Viktor A Werewolf Problem in Central Russia
Shteyngart, Gary Absurdistan
Kingsolver, Barbara Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
Olsson, Linda Astrid and Veronika
McCabe, Patrick Breakfast on Pluto
Mitchell, David Cloud Atlas
Russo, Richard Empire Falls
Foer, Jonathan Safran Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Blume, Judy Forever
Salinger, J.D. Franny and Zooey
Hartinger, Brent Geography Club
Pynchon, Thomas Gravity's Rainbow
Dickens, Charles Hard Times
Bradshaw, Gillian Hawk of May
Crick, Mark Kafka's Soup
O'Nan, Stewart Last Night at the Lobster
O'Neill, Eugene Long Day's Journey into Night
Eliot, George Middlemarch
Fry, Stephen Moab is my Washpot
Gaskell, Elizabeth North and South
Oren, Michael B. Power, Faith, and Fantasy
Docx, Edward Pravda
Senge, Peter Presence
Quindlen, Anna Rise and Shine
Pouncey, Peter Rules for Old Men Waiting
Swann, Maxine Serious Girls
Russo, Richard Straight Man
Gilbert, Daniel Stumbling on Happiness
Morrison, Tony The Bluest Eye
Morgan, Robin The Burning Time
Docx, Edward The Calligrapher
Harris, Sam The End of Faith
Appiah, Kwame Anthony The Ethics of Identity
Walls, Jeannette The Glass Castle
Hamer, Dean The God Gene
Doyle, Brian The Grail: A year ambling…
Solzhenitsin, Alexander The Gulag Archipelago
Krauss, Nicole The History of Love
Fowles, John The Magus
Feynman, Richard The Meaning of It All
Edwards, Kim The Memory Keeper's Daughter
Pollan, Michael The Omnivore's Dilemma
Stewart, Rory The Places In Between
Coe, Jonathan The Rotters' Club
Shteyngart, Gary The Russian Debutante's Handbook
Donohue, Keith The Stolen Child
Beaufort, Simon et al. The Tainted Relic
Setterfield, Diane The Thirteenth Tale
Slouka, Mark The Visible World
Didion, Joan The Year of Magical Thinking
Johnson, Ron Them: Adventures with Extremists
Ferris, Joshua Then We Came to the End
Bachelder, Chris U.S.!
Zamyatin, Yevgeny We
Crutcher, Chris Whale Talk

P.S. That post by The Blog is strangely intimidating, considering that it came from a non-corporal conglomeration of data.

Sunday, June 08, 2008

You have angered the blog. I am alive, but just barely. I have been drinking unicorn blood to stay alive this last year.

I shall take my revenge by ridding the world of non-posters. These people think they can kill me, but they're WRONG. I have my supporters and I know where all of you live.

I have sent out my minions to hunt down the following people:
Anna
Victoria
That Kate
The Other Kate
Malvina
Christine

If your name is on this list, post soon or face the consequences. Remember: the blog is unhappy and the blog knows where you live!!!

Monday, June 02, 2008

Lucy's list, re-posted

Following the same bolding/italics format

Anything by Terry Pratchett: have read Reaper Man, Mort, Soul Music, Hogsfather, Thief of Time (the Deaths story arc), Carpe Jugulum and Masquerade - I wouldn't mind re-reading any one of those.
100 Years of Solitude
Absurdistan (by Gary Shteyngart)
Bartimaeus Trilogy: have read the first one
Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast (by McKinley)
Confederacy of Dunces, A
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency Douglas Adams!
Freakonomics
Pillars of the World

Yeah, that's why my book list tends to grow fairly easily.

Is anyone else doing this?

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Lucy's list

I don't really keep a list :/ These are a couple titles I've managed to save up somewhere:

Anything by Terry Pratchett. And no, that's not a book title.
100 Years of Solitude
Absurdistan (by Gary Shteyngart)
Bartimaeus Trilogy
Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast (by McKinley)
Confederacy of Dunces, A
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
Freakonomics
Pillars of the World

Here's Susan's list reposted. I italicized the few titles that I've read. In one case I also bolded it, because I wouldn't mind reading again.

A Million Little Pieces
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Atonement
Black Earth
Blind Watchers of the Sky Kolb, Rocky
Blink Gladwell, Malcolm
Bridge to Terabithia Paterson, Katherine
Brokeback Mountain Annie Proulx
Canterbury Tales, The Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheating Culture, the
Crashing Through Kurson, Robert
Darkly Dreaming Dextor Russell, Frank Eric
Deep Time Darling, David
Descartes' Error Damasio, Antonio R.
Divine Comedy, The- Dante
E: the Story of a Number
Education of Robert Nifkin, the- Pinkwater, Daniel
Einstein's Dreams Lightman, Alan
Ethnobotany Martin, Gary J.
Fabric of the Cosmos Greene
Faerie Queene, the- Spenser
Fixer, the- Malamud, Bernard
Fuente Orejuna- Lope de Vega
Geeks Katz, Jon
Gift, the Hyde, Lewis
Greener Than You Think Moore, Ward
Guns, Germs, and Steel: the Fates of Human Societies- Diamond, Jared
Hermes Serres, Michel
Hiroshima- Hersey, John
Hot Zone Preston, Richard
How to Cure Fanatic Oz, Amos
Humanoids, the Williamson, Jack
I Am The Cheese Grogan, John
Idiot, the Dostoyevsky
Iliad, the translated by Rober Fagles
I'm Okay--You're Okay Harris, Thomas
In Search of Memory Kandel, Eric R.
Junkbots, Bugbots, and Bots On Wheels Hrynkiw, Dave
Lamb
Language in Motion
Last Letters Home
Level 7 Roshwald, Mordecai
Leviathan- Hobbes, Thomas
Lysistrata
Man Who Mistook His wife For A Hat, the Sacks, Oliver
Marley & Me
Master and Commander: the far side of the world McEwan, Ian
Master and Magarita, the
Memory Bible, the- Small, Gary, MD
Myth of Sisyphus, the Camus, Albert
Name of the Rose, The Eco, Umberto
Natural History of California
Notes from the Underground
Odyssey" Homer- translated by Robert Fagles
On The Beach Shute, Nevil
Our Inner Ape De Waal
Out of Gas Goodstein, David
Painted Bird- Kosinski, Jerzy
Parable of the Sower- Olamina, Lauren
People's Act of Love, the Meek, James
Power of One, the Courtenay
Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures in Math
Reading Lolita in Tehran Nafisi, Azar
Republic, the Plato (PLATO WAS CREEPY. Just from what I learned this quarter)
Right Ho, Jeeves Wodehouse, P. G.
Road, the McCarthy, Cormac
Rubble Byles, Jeff
Russia, Youth, and the Present Day World Lindsay, Jeff
Satan Is Alive and Well On Planet Earth Lindsey,
Scion's Lady Bradley, Rebecca
Search for King Arthur, the
Selfish Gene, the Dawkins, Richard
Solaris Stanislaw, Lem
Star Thrower, the
Stones from the River- Hurstone, Hegi, Ursula
Story of English, the McCrum, Robert
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman
Tending the Wild Anderson, Kat
The Singularity Is Near Kurzweil, Ray
Ubiquity: The science of History Buchanan, Mark
Virtual Terror Fink, Jeri
Voyage of the Beagle, the Darwin
Wasp Russell, Eric
What Do You Care What Other People Think
Women on War Daniela Gioseffi

===

A lot of these sounded way too depressing D:

What I hope to one day read

Yes I changed the blog layout. I don't have time to make a new one yet, so we're sticking with something that's blogger-made.

Directions? Paste your own list, then copy this list, paste it, and bold anything you want to read.
(Also, using labels for the posts will make organization later easier. I hope.)

...

I actually managed to reduce the list to under 100 within the past two years?? When did that happen?!

A Million Little Pieces
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Atonement
Black Earth
Blind Watchers of the Sky Kolb, Rocky
Blink Gladwell, Malcolm
Bridge to Terabithia Paterson, Katherine
Brokeback Mountain Annie Proulx
Canterbury Tales, The Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheating Culture, the
Crashing Through Kurson, Robert
Darkly Dreaming Dextor Russell, Frank Eric
Deep Time Darling, David
Descartes' Error Damasio, Antonio R.
Divine Comedy, The- Dante
E: the Story of a Number
Education of Robert Nifkin, the- Pinkwater, Daniel
Einstein's Dreams Lightman, Alan
Ethnobotany Martin, Gary J.
Fabric of the Cosmos Greene
Faerie Queene, the- Spenser
Fixer, the- Malamud, Bernard
Fuente Orejuna- Lope de Vega
Geeks Katz, Jon
Gift, the Hyde, Lewis
Greener Than You Think Moore, Ward
Guns, Germs, and Steel: the Fates of Human Societies- Diamond, Jared
Hermes Serres, Michel
Hiroshima- Hersey, John
Hot Zone Preston, Richard
How to Cure Fanatic Oz, Amos
Humanoids, the Williamson, Jack
I Am The Cheese Grogan, John
Idiot, the Dostoyevsky
Iliad, the translated by Rober Fagles
I'm Okay--You're Okay Harris, Thomas
In Search of Memory Kandel, Eric R.
Junkbots, Bugbots, and Bots On Wheels Hrynkiw, Dave
Lamb
Language in Motion
Last Letters Home
Level 7 Roshwald, Mordecai
Leviathan- Hobbes, Thomas
Lysistrata
Man Who Mistook His wife For A Hat, the Sacks, Oliver
Marley & Me
Master and Commander: the far side of the world McEwan, Ian
Master and Magarita, the
Memory Bible, the- Small, Gary, MD
Myth of Sisyphus, the Camus, Albert
Name of the Rose, The Eco, Umberto
Natural History of California
Notes from the Underground
Odyssey" Homer- translated by Robert Fagles
On The Beach Shute, Nevil
Our Inner Ape De Waal
Out of Gas Goodstein, David
Painted Bird- Kosinski, Jerzy
Parable of the Sower- Olamina, Lauren
People's Act of Love, the Meek, James
Power of One, the Courtenay
Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures in Math
Reading Lolita in Tehran Nafisi, Azar
Republic, the Plato
Right Ho, Jeeves Wodehouse, P. G.
Road, the McCarthy, Cormac
Rubble Byles, Jeff
Russia, Youth, and the Present Day World Lindsay, Jeff
Satan Is Alive and Well On Planet Earth Lindsey,
Scion's Lady Bradley, Rebecca
Search for King Arthur, the
Selfish Gene, the Dawkins, Richard
Solaris Stanislaw, Lem
Star Thrower, the
Stones from the River- Hurstone, Hegi, Ursula
Story of English, the McCrum, Robert
Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman
Tending the Wild Anderson, Kat
The Singularity Is Near Kurzweil, Ray
Ubiquity: The science of History Buchanan, Mark
Virtual Terror Fink, Jeri
Voyage of the Beagle, the Darwin
Wasp Russell, Eric
What Do You Care What Other People Think
Women on War Daniela Gioseffi

[ETA: We're not doing re-reads right now. Re-reads = separate list, later.]

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Wow

This is really, really, really sad.

I was the last person to post here, too!