Weekend Update:
Disgusted

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It’s a lovely summer evening here in New York, with clear skies and cool, dry air. The heat wave that was supposed to be extinguished by thunderstorms seems to have spontaneously dissipated. I have rarely been more disgusted with the weather.

Kathleen, who is visiting her father and brother in North Carolina, was to fly home this afternoon, but given those predicted thunderstorms and the estimated delays, I urged her to rebook a flight for tomorrow, and to stay where she was. As she’s been having a very pleasant time, she was happy to humor me. So I’m the one who’s home alone.

Which wouldn’t be so bad, if I hadn’t had a completely inane day. The air-conditioning and the Vornado fans kept physical discomfort at bay, but there is no way to ease the psychological displacement of really humid weather. I was counting on some atmospheric violence to shock me out of my torpor. Curses foiled again!

There were all sorts of things to do, but not a volt of energy to get me off my duff. I read and read and read. Then I watched The Iron Giant, an animated adaptation of a kids’ book by Ted Hughes. Quatorze brought it over, about a hundred years ago, along with a number of other recommended titles that it has taken me a shameful length of time to get to. Truth to tell, I haven’t been watching many DVDs lately, not out of the kitchen anyway — and in the kitchen I play only movies that I know quite well. I’m ashamed to confess that I wept almost all the way through The Iron Giant. My eyes are still sore, and it’s difficult to read what I’m writing. What a sap I am.

What to do about dinner? What to do about dinner, that is, in the wake of my movie snack? Salami, Jarlsberg, Smartfood. I feel larded up enough for swimming the English Channel — well, I could be towed across, maybe; I can hardly get out of my chair and across the room.

Sixes and sevens isn’t the half of it!

Weekend Open Thread:
Big Bambù

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(To post a comment, visit The Daily Blague.)

Weekend Open Thread: Big Bambù

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Must Mention:
4 June 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Trading in Hungary’s largest commercial bank has been halted on the Budapest Exchange. (Zero Hedge)

¶ “What Are Farmer’s Markets For?” ( Good) And how about Corn-Flakes-Coated Chicken? (The Bygone Bureau)

While We’re Away

¶ The density of smart people. (The Atlantic; via 3 Quarks Daily)

¶ “Buffett’s PR Disaster“? Felix thinks so.

¶ Ten Over Eighty (Ward Six): Choire fumes; bucks younger rejects up with Affirmations. (The Awl)

¶ Reading about a 1920 gay witch-hunt at Harvard, it’s impossible not to feel good about social progress. (The Good Men Project; via Joe.My.God)

¶ Protestant Reformation –> Rock ‘n’ Roll. (JEH Smith; via 3 Quarks Daily)

Have a Look

¶ Saul Chernick (ARTCAT)

¶ The glory of good bones: Diana Mitford Mosley, with second husband and fourth son. (1904)

¶ Historypin. (Brain Pickings)

¶ Steve Martin, up close and personal. (Letters of Note)

Reading Note:
At the bottom of the garden

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The pleasures of reading Barbara Pym’s A Glass of Blessings are simple but amply sustaining. There is the lapidary writing, marinated in understatement, and a corresponding tact: Pym has very clear ideas about what’s right, what’s wrong, and what’s funny, but she is determined to avoid communicating them directly to her readers, some of whom, she trusts, will share her outlook without having to be cued. (Those who don’t will either be bored, puzzled, or — the lucky ones — intrigued.) You know that you’re going to be a fan of Pym’s artistry if the following exchange elicits not a laugh but a broadening smile:

“I don’t like knitting,” I said.

“No, I despise women who are always knitting,” said Sybil. “But it can be a useful occupation — the kind of thing one can do when talking.”

“I wonder if women brought their knitting when Oscar Wilde talked,” said Piers.

“I daresay not,” said Sybil calmly, “but that doesn’t mean they wouldn’t have liked to.”

There is the handsome figure of Wilmet Forsyth, the young married lady of modest leisure who narrates the book, along with the delightful suggestion that Wilmet is something of an unreliable narrator. It’s not that she has something to hide, but rather that she has something to learn. Her lesson is bound up in the poem that gives the book its title.

In George Herbert’s four-stanza, sixteen-line poem The Pulley, God pours the contents of a glass of blessings over newly-created man. Having bestowed strength, beauty, wisdom, honor, and pleasure, God holds back on the blessing at the bottom of the vessel, which is that of rest, so that the other virtues will be enjoyed “with repining restlessness.”

Let him be rich and weary, that at least;
If goodness lead him not, yet weariness
                 May toss him to my breast.

Wilmet Forsyth does not repine, but she is restless, and the novel opens with a double-barreled temptation. At church one morning, she spies the brother of her best friend, an interesting disappointment called Piers. Then, after the service, she learns that a new assistant priest will be arriving soon. Ingenuously unaware of the dangers to her heart as well as to her respectability, Wilmet dallies flounderingly with both men. As it happens, they’re both, while fond of her — fond perhaps because she is married and unattainable — interested in other people. At the end of the novel, Wilmet realizes that her life is indeed as blessed as it can be. (That her staid-seeming husband, Rodney, has also found his attentions wandering serves to strengthen the marriage, but it also helps that his mother, Sybil, decides to remarry, and to reclaim her house for herself, forcing the young couple to do what they ought to have done at the start.)

There is the pleasure of Pym’s ecclesiastical comedy. Three sorts of players occupy this uniquely English stage: the high-church clergymen, addressed as “Father,” the respectable ladies of the parish who expect the clergymen to remain celibate, and the laymen who bring to the more elaborate liturgies an expertise that savors more of military competence and commercial savvy than of spiritual piety. It is an utterly worldly church that is, pre-eminently, the hub of its parishioners’ lives, which unspool not in some charming county village but in what seems to be Bayswater. It might strike today’s reader as odd that a moderately fashionable and respectable young married woman, without children, plans her life around morning mass and parish receptions, but it would be a mistake to suppose that Wilmet is less religious than the churchgoers around her. Almost as though the Reformation had never happened, these people regard the church as a fount of meaning and familiarity. They have little interest in the doctrinal underpinnings, and rather expect the church to act as a buffer that protects the everyday from the transcendent.

There is also the pleasure of watching a lady novelist handle gay life candidly, at a time when homosexual acts were proscribed in England, and to do it without resorting to any simplifying terminology. When Wilmet divines that Keith, Piers’ beautiful but socially inferior flatmate, is more than a friend, she absorbs the blow to her vanity without a drop of nasty moralizing. 

I got into the taxi and we waved goodbye. I could not imagine Piers going back to the house, climbing the stairs, perhaps sitting down heavily in an armchair, letting out an exaggerated sigh, while Keith’s flat little voice began discussing me, criticizing my clothes and manner. I felt battered and somehow rather foolish, very different from the carefree girl who had set out across the park to meet Piers. But I was not a girl. I was a married woman, and if I felt wretched it was no more than I deserved for having let my thoughts stray to another man. And the ironical thing was that it was Keith, that rather absurd little figure, who had brought about the change I thought I had noticed in Piers and which I had attributed to my own charms and loving care!

Also rather gay is Wilfrid Bason, a reject from Rodney’s office who serves the parish priests as a housekeeper for a while. He’s a very sophisticated cook, but he’s also something of a thief — at least, he likes to borrow other people’s pretty things. That’s the extent of Bason’s outrageousness, but given this novel’s mild climate, he fairly screams his way through it. Pym shows him off as a ridiculous person, but without the faintest suggestion that he’s representative of his team.

Finally, there is the benediction of Pym’s great good nature. In a conventional novel, the following passage might adorn the expository beginnings, but in A Glass of Blessings it works rather more like a climax.

I tried to make myself useful but there was very little for me to do. The weather was glorious, but it seemed wanton to be lying in a deckchair in the mornings while Mary was arranging things for the coming retreat, so I took an upright canvas chair, or sat on a hard wooden seat of the kind that looks as if it might have been given in memory of someone. I half expected to see an inscription carved on the back. The only task Mary could find for me was to pick and shell some peas for lunch, and to put the pods on the compost heap under the apple trees at the bottom of the garden. Here, in a kind of greenish twilight, stood a pile of grass cuttings and garden rubbish, and as I added my pods to it I imagined all this richness decaying in the earth and new life springing out of it. Marvell’s lines went jingling through my head.

My vegetable love should grow
Vaster than Empires and more slow….

There seemed to be a pagan air about this part of the garden, as if Pan — I imagined him with Keith’s face — might at any moment come peering through the leaves. The birds were tame and cheeky, and seemed larger than usual; they came bumping and swooping down, peering at me with their bright insolent eyes, their chirpings louder and more piercing than I had ever heard them. I wondered if people who came here for retreats ever penetrated to this part of the garden. i could imagine the unmarried mothers and the schoolboys here, but not those who were striving to have the right kind of thoughts. Then I noticed that beyond the apple trees there was a group of beehives, and I remembered the old saying about telling things to bees. It seemed that they might be regarded as a kind of primitive confessional.

I went slowly back to the lawn, but to a deckchair now; the hard wooden seat seemed out of keeping with my mood.

Must Mention:
3 June 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Singing “Michelle” to Michelle. (BBC News)

While We’re Away

¶ Using IT to make Ho Chi Minh City’s traffic a little less awful — proposed. (The Infrastructurist)

¶ Twenty Under Forty. (That left Eggers and Whitehead out.) (NYT)

Have a Look

¶ We could live here! (NYT)

Reading the Feeds:
Elites and Entrepreneurs

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A word or two about Tyler Cowen’s recent entry at Marginal Revolution, “When does large-scale public ownership work?” The butt of this piece is a compare-and-contrast of the cultures of China and France on the one hand and of the United States on the other. Here is what Americans do not share with the French and the Chinese:

In part this is a puzzle but in part France and China have one important feature in common: it’s high status to be a ruler. Very smart Frenchmen often grow up wanting to work for the government. Hardly anyone in France thinks that is weird and so the French bureaucracy has some of the best talent in the country.

Americans get carried away by sentimental patriotism as eagerly as any buch of guys, but their love of country is pallid compared with what France and China inspire in their nationals: both countries are “middle kingdoms,” central sovereignties habituated to setting broad cultural standards and to solving regional problems in terms of sheer chthonic majesty. (Whether either France or China is “entitled” to this drastically superior self-image is, here, beside the point.) In both countries, being Chinese/French is a civil project that’s at least as important as any other that the government might foster (defense, industry). No wonder, then, that smart and ambitious graduates find civil service to be a top-drawer careeer.

The relationship between “being American” and the American government is starkly opposite: the government’s only task is to stay out of the way of Americans’ self-realization. Fervently patriotic Americans are like the appreciative children of very permissive parents: their taste for freedom cannot be exaggerated. And where once the canonical image of the free American was the cowboy, now it is the entrepreneur. Mr Cowen doesn’t use the word in his entry, but he carves out a space that only it could fill.

I also prefer to live in a society where the public sector does not have so much prestige. Very often governmental prestige stifles innovation and implies a series of more general insider, elitist, and sometimes authoritarian attitudes. It’s also worth a quick look at the histories of what France and China had to do to build up so much governmental prestige; not pretty.

My sympathies are altogether opposed to these sentiments; it will always be a matter of the deepest regret that I did not contrive to live my life in a society that exalted the public sector above all others. I believe that entrepreneurs are of rather marginal importance in a society as complex as ours, and even if they’re ten times more important than I think they are, they’re no model for the rest orf us. While I would not call myself an “elitist,” I will not deny or try to hide the fact that I was born, by whatever accidents, into the American elite and that I have spent my entire life in that atmosphere. Mr Cowen certainly does so now, whatever his origins. The odds are very strong that you yourself, the reader, are a member of the American elite.

What’s great about France and China — and wretched about Anglophone civilization — is that elite groups do not hypocritically pretend that they do not enjoy great advantages — the sort of advantages that will accrue to people at or near the levers of power so long as human beings walk on two legs. I don’t know that French or Chinese elites are qualitatively more responsible to their cultures than privileged Americans are, but at least they’re not vacuously pretending that they’re not Old Etonians.

Must Mention:
2 June 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Al and Tipper. (Everywhere, but we’ve stuck with the Times)

¶ Israel and the flotilla: a range of opinions, all aggregated at Real Clear World. ¶

While We’re Away

¶ Books with hyperlinks! Well, a new edition of a Jules Verne classic, anyway — all you need is a smartphone. (Chron Higher Ed; via Marginal Revolution)

¶ Universal language instinct? Not so much. (New Scientist)

¶ On the counterproductivity of incentives. (The Frontal Cortex)

Have a Look

¶ Pants Fail.

Dear Diary: Bananas

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This was supposed to be an entry about Tyler Cowen’s ideas about entrepreneurial regulators (he doesn’t like them), but circumstances required my presence at a long (and enoyable; not complaining) business dinner, as a result of which I am no longer fit to write about abstractions.

Will ate his first bit of solid food today — mashed banana — and we were all immensely impressed. The first few teaspoonfuls he interrupted with a lot of wishful spoonholding, but he was quick to realize that keeping his hands out of the way guaranteed the passage of sweet fruit into his mouth. Will took to spoon feeding so quickly, in fact, that we wondered if he hadn’t rather sweetly but impatiently been waiting for it for days, if not weeks.

If you know a grandfather as besotted with his grandson’s achievements as I am with my own’s, I hope that you will introduce us to one another.

Must Mention:
1 June 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Deepwater Horizon: the nuclear option. (The Oil Drum)

¶ Getting Slapp-ed at Facebook. (NYT)

While We’re Away

¶ Against “apps.” (The Baseline Scenario)

¶ Reversing Santa Clara County: the 28th Amendment movement. (Chelsea Green; via reddit)

¶ The best short take on Marilyn Monroe’s “scenius.” (Happy Birthday! You’d be 84!) (Hilowbrow)

¶ The Permanence Matters Initiative — a hardbound book ought to last a long time. (The Millions)

¶ Negroni Season! (The Awl)

Have a Look

¶ God’s throat, man’s brain: Michelangelo anatomizes in plain sight. (Scientific American; via 3 Quarks Daily)

Weekend Open Thread: Henderson Place

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Must Mention: 28 May 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Joe McGinnis lives next door! (Speakeasy)

¶ Avoiding phthalates. ( Good)

While We’re Away

¶ How viable is the state capitalism model? Too soon to tell. (Real Clear Politics)

¶ George Snyder thinks about eating, praying, loving — and buying paitinngs. He decides that Traverse City will do very nicely.

¶ Bob Cringely does the math on the Foxconn suicides.

Have a Look

¶ Are you ready to Enter the World of Boundless Sensual Enjoyments? (Brain Pickings)

Dear Diary: Neat

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A couple of neat things happened today — even without them, the day would have been grand — but the neatest thing may not, in fact, have happened at all. It may have been an accident, a coincidence. On their way out the door, Megan said something to Will about “Doodad,” and she and I saw him lift his eyes to me.

If I weren’t such a narcissist, that would have been the second-neatest thing. The neatest thing was Will’s falling into a deep nap on my chest, while we were sitting out on the balcony. I was stroking his back, absently, thinking about him but also about his life to come, in the city that stretched East before me — when I sit out there with Will, I’m supremely aware that his future is likely to be be full of intersections with thousands of slightly peculiar people (peculiar in the same way that all other babies are suddenly funny-looking) — and it was actually a few minutes before I realized that he had fallen deeply asleep. For half an hour, I sat with him perched on my right forearm, his head tucked to the left. I could gush about the profound gratifcation of being completely trusted &c, but what I meditated upon was the delight of having him asleep in my arms. He weights nearly seventeen pounds: there won’t be much more of that!

Actually, the neatest thing that happened was my carrying Will about in a sling, just like his mother’s, only larger. There is much to be learned about slings, and I had the good sense to follow Megan’s advice and buy a ten-pound bag of Carolina rice to practice with. I had thought that practicing with Will, with Megan there to help me, would be good enough, but I’ve become a quick study on points such as this, and I saw at once that Will is not to be confused with the outsized practice dollies at Metro Minis. It was only after seven or eight practice runs with the bag of rice that I was allowed to take Will himself on an errand to the Food Emporium. Megan came with, and I don’t know which of us was more beaming, I for carrying Will without having to hold him. or Megan for having a father who would practice with ten-pound bags of rice in order to pull it off. I will say this about slings: nothing is more tonic to a five month-old baby.

What made the day truly special was the dinner at the end: both Ryan and Kathleen came uptown for an impromtu steak. My hunch that Ryan would appreciate a baked potato that had spent over an hour in a hot oven turned out to be correct. For dessert, we had chocolate and coffee Häagen Dasz, which made us all wonder what Will’s favorite flavors will be.

Some day, of course, Will will look at me and call me “Doodad,” and nobody will think anything of it. Except me. I can’t imagine getting used to this angel.

Doodaderie: A Break from the Break

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Will arrived bright and early this morning. We haven’t even read the paper!

Dear Diary: Fun

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Even if I wasn’t quite as sparky today as I was yesterday and the day before, I continued to get lots of little stuff done, and some big stuff, and to enjoy life as, really, I haven’t enjoyed it in a very long time. That’s what breaks are for, no? Of course, my 62 year-old’s idea of “enjoyment” would send any healthy twentysomething grasping for a pulse. But I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

This week’s chicken salad involved doing things by halves: a dressing composed of half an avocado, half a small tub of Greek yogurt, the juice of half a lemon, and less than half a teaspoon of curry powder. The other half of the avocado was cubed and mixed with the white meat from a roast chicken, together with one minced rib of celery and two small spring onions — what my parents called “scallions.” Given the heat wave, the substituion of yogurt for mayonnaise was particularly welcome, but Kathleen had the bright idea of adding Zante currants, which I’ll try next time. We think that they’ll balance the yogurt’s chalkiness very nicely.

It was warmer than I liked (and it still is), but I wasn’t stalled by the heat. I simply took things easy. Having put the salad together, I washed up and went back out onto the balcony and finished the latest Donna Leon, which I believe is called A Question of Belief. My first e-book. When I sat down, I had no idea where I was in the (vitual) text, no sense of how much more I had to read. Now that this uncertainty was bothering me for the first time, I spent a little time with the doodads that appear on demand in the margins. They taught me something entirely new: I had read 53% of the book. How utterly coo-coo.

The reading was preceded by a moment of intense internal debate. Reading Donna Leon on the iPad was all very well, but it wasn’t going to do anything about the piles of physical books that I am trying to bring under control (= “make smaller”). I very nearly settled down with Deanna Fei’s A Thread of Sky, a novel that I’m well into and that I’m liking very much. My fondness for Asian-American fiction has lately been clouded, however, by a rather fishy “complicity”: I am hoping that my grandson will grow up to have primarily Asian friends. Having scolded myself for this improper-sounding objective, I observe that Will lives in a good neightborhood for realizing it.

Earlier in the day, on that round of errands that I looked forward to last night, I added a drop-in at Barnes & Noble. I’ve been in the new store at Lex and 86th precisely three times, including today, and what I wanted this afternoon was a “fun video.” As I trawled the DVD shelves, it became painfully clear that my idea of a fun video, right now, is The Ghost Writer, and only The Ghost Writer. I tried to console myself with Lust Caution, but although Ang Lee’s setting of Eileen Chang’s story is one of the great Chinese movies, it is not a “fun video.” Imagine: I was actually combing the Criterion Collection display for someting “fun” that I didn’t already own.

Here’s an idea for a “fun video”: Ewan McGregor remakes Yojimbo. Can you dig it?

Must Mention: 26 May 2010

havealookdb1

¶ High wind in Jamaica (NYT)

 While We’re Away

¶ Waiting for the Top Kill (The Oil Drum)

¶ “Something Amis?” (Nigeness)

 Have a Look

¶ Storyboard. (We’ll try anything.) (Brainiac)

¶ All the iPad needs to make it perfect… (via Meta Filter)

¶ Christoph Niemann’s goblins (NYT)

Dear Diary: Paradise — the Rental

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It’s awful. I’ve re-read yesterday’s diary entry several times, but if I didn’t remember what I thought I was writing about — a memory that’s completely independent of the words that I set down here — I wouldn’t know what I was trying to talk about. My excuse for avoiding specifics was that specifics would be deadly dull to read about. In fact, they’d have been even duller to write about. I was taking it easy. Sorry.

If I weren’t old and calloused, I’d nourish the hope that tomorrow or the next day might be just like today. But days like today happen once a month at best, doubtless because I’m a stupid dolt who doesn’t understand his own rhythm. I was busy all day, and on many different levels. I wrote up two reading items, the New Yorker story (a chunk of Jonathan Franzen’s new novel — exciting to read but a disappointing displacement of genuine short fiction) and Operation Mincemeat. I uploaded seven or eight CDs onto the pop-side laptop (the desktop is cordoned off for the classics), and edited the very eccentric playlist that wakes me up every morning. The paperwork that I did was not very serious but it wasn’t frivolous, either — a new medium. I read a lot; I started, finally, to read Steve Pincus’s 1688, a book that I’ve been dying to take up for months but that I insisted on setting aside until I’d finished Peter Wilson’s Thirty Years War. I did a number of little kitchen things, culminating in a very nice dinner of veal piccata, a dish that I haven’t made in over twenty years. Call it beginner’s luck: it was delicious.

I sorted out our Manhattan Theatre Club tickets. Don’t as me why, but Kathleen arranged for this year’s tickets to be held at the box office or in the patron’s lounge of MTC’s venues, with the result that I’ve had no idea of dates. It’s a good thing that I took care of this today, because Kathleen bought seats for Red that conflict with one of our MTC subscription evenings. All fixed.

I wrote a few letters, and I had a good talk with the Web designer who is helping me with the “tablet edition” of The Daily Blague. He’s also helping me with the tablet edition of Portico, a site to be known as Civil Pleasures. Getting these two sites up and running is the minimum required assignment of this spring break. I can’t wait to see this column of text fill the iPad screen from side to side.

So it wasn’t a day of mindless bustle; nor was it a day of “writing.” Thanks to the heavenly weather, I felt as though I were spending the day in paradise. A paradise where I have to clean up and pay the bills, true. But even more of a paradise for that very reason.

I’m looking forward to tomorrow. After a morning at home (the Book Review review, can we?), I’ll head out on a round of errands that will begin at Perry Process and Staples, carry me to Williams-Sonoma, and perhaps deposit me at the Museum. (And I know that I’ve already forgotten something here!) There may even be a croque monsieur for lunch.

Must Mention: 25 May 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Inspector General’s report on the Bushly dysfunctional Minerals Management Service. (NYT)

 While We’re Away

¶ James Kwak asks a question that occurred to us as well: “Why Does Steve Ballmer Still Have a Job?

¶ Miguel Syjuco’s Ilustrado. (The Rumpus)

Dear Diary: Fail

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For eight months, I’ve been engaged in a personal project so intimate that I didn’t know how to describe it. Until this past weekend, when I saw, startlingly, that I’ve been taking the elements of my everyday life apart and putting them back in the way that I want them arranged right now. The schedules, the possessions — the materiality of time and volume. Everything has been up for review. And everything is too boring to mention.

One unexpected boon connected with this project is that it doesn’t prompt me to ask: What took so long! This is  not a project that I could have undertaken any earlier. Because in the old days, in my life until eight months ago, I was still growing, still open to options. Now I’m more like a retired person, eager to give the heave-ho to items and routines that are still essentially speculative: one of these days, I’ll get round to this. Maybe so, but I’m not going to make any room for such possibilities. While trying to throw away as little as possible, I’m focused on what I’m actually doing right now, not on what might take my fancy six months hence.

And I feel the very opposite of retired: I’m finally, at long last, engaged. Completely hooked up. I know that this entry would be vastly more cogent if only I would spell out a few examples of the changes in my thinking about everyday life, and, especially, a few examples of objects and outlooks that I have jettisoned. But the building blocks that I’m talking about here are incredibly dull. To make things exciting, I ought to confess that I am never going to read all of Proust in French. But that happens to be a confession that I can’t yet make — I’m still holding out hope for that. All the shifting and relocation has involved bricks both smaller and less intrinsically interesting. At least to talk about.

Is this entry a fail?

Must Mention: 24 May 2010

havealookdb1

¶ Martin Gardner, 95. (NYT)

¶ Naughty Fergie:  The latest in a series of “excruciating misjudgments.” (Guardian)

Have a Look:

¶ Dunkin’ Doughnuts! Happy Birthday, Elsa Maxwell (Stirred, Straight Up, With a Twist)

¶ Brooks looks, sees tease.