Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Cold cereal

Also on our breakfast table recently: Costco Oatmeal Squares, which are like Trader Joe's Wheat Pillows except 1) they are from Costco, 2) they are made of oats, 3) they are unconscionably crunchy. Waaaay too crunchy. Every cereal needs a crunch, this is true, but the middle of the wheat pillow should be wet after a minute or so, don't you think?

Taste was OK, but yeesh, it just filled my mouth up with dry fibers.

Nope, not this either.

Monday, August 25, 2014

SEVENS: Cold cereal

We have been eating Wheat Pillows from Trader Joe's, which are really called something else but that's what they are. Wheat pillows.

They have no salt, which makes them less than pleasant. Get with the program, guys! Salt is no longer the Little Satan to fat's Great Satan! There is a New World Order for Evil Foods! [citation needed]

Cereals with only two ingredients (Whole Wheat and Vitamin E to Preserve Freshness) do not make the cut. Sorry, Joe's Wheat Pillows. You will not be invited to the breakfast table again.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Friday, December 30, 2011

WHALES

Today we saw a) at least ten grey whales, going south and b) five or six killer whales going north.

I think I will never forget seeing the dorsal fins of the killer whales, looking like tiny black rose thorns on a table covered in wrinkled blue velvet.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Also also wik

T and I have been reading together, and we just finished The Nine Tailors, one of Dorothy L. Sayer's best mystery novels. All of the Lord Peter Wimsey novels are good, but The Nine Tailors is--h'm. Probably second-best. (Gaudy Night is best, and Busman's Honeymoon is a great favorite of mine too.) There are a handful of really great things about the book that are unique. For one, the evocation of the Fen Country as a place, and its inhabitants as a people, are really, really strong. Other LPW novels are situated in very distinctive settings (Five Red Herrings in Scotland, for example), but Sayers is from East Anglia and her attention to the place as a physical setting--its flatness, emptiness, bleakness, the constant attention to the management of water and the constant risk of flooding--really give the book a vivid physical setting.

Also very interesting is her use of campanology--the study of bells, or in her words, the "peculiarly English art of change-ringing"<--possibly paraphrased. The great church bells of Fenchurch St. Paul, where the story takes place, are characters in their own right. Gaude, Sabaoth, John, Jericho, Jubilee, Dimity, Batty Thomas and Taylor Paul--especially the last two--are important characters throughout, and play a central role (and in surprising ways) in the plot.

The book is short on Lord Peter's characteristic humor, which isn't particularly a drawback but does make it rather non-characteristic. Overall, it's a great favorite, and highly recommended to anyone in the market for a mystery.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Books of the Week

This House of Sky, Ivan Doig: For the Sibling Book Group. It reminds me a little of All the Strange Hours, tho' much more conventional in structure. Well-written. I enjoyed it.

Diary of a Madman and Other Stories
, Lu Xun: 400 pages of short stories from an early modern (written 1905-1925) Chinese author. Pretty interesting. More allusive and less plot-driven than most Western stories, which I gather is a feature of Eastern storytelling (at least Chinese and Japanese). Ah Q, the Real Story was the best, I thought, largely because the deliberately folksy tone came through so well. The translator's notes make it abundantly clear that translating even modern vernacular Chinese into English must be mind-bendingly difficult. Working with ideograms must just be a whole different ball of wax.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Things of dubious utility which I would nevertheless like to own:

In order of decreasing utility:
1) Prescription sunglasses
2) Another laptop
3) A katana
4) A Tesla roadster
5) An electromagnetic can crusher