That was the day that was...what?
Feb. 7th, 2009 06:33 pmOm nom nom. That short rib recipe? The leftovers, when reheated in a skillet with some of the sauce and wrapped in a tortilla, makes for a ymnmy -- and messy -- meal. If I had whiskers I'd be licking them, now.
Achievements of the day:
The cats have been brushed and clipped.
The kitchen is clean.
The last of the laundry is sorted and folded.
I have a new, ergonomic keyboard that is making me much happier.
I have been writing, and improvising yet another application of forensic magic.
I am debating if tonight's Sci-Fi channel offering [a very bad remake of Journey to the Center of the Earth] is worth mocking, or if I should give it a pass...
For anyone curious, the month's results of my sole new year's resolution to do more pleasure reading:
January:
Morning Child & Other Stories by Gardner Dozois
- I've known Gardner for umpteen years now, and while I know he's a smart editor and a good dinner companion, I sometimes forget how amazingly talented a writer of short fiction he is, too. Smart but not offputtingly Lookit-Me-Clever, thoughtful without being precious, and so well-crafted you can see exactly what he's doing but be damned if you can tell how. Not every story is perfect, but they're all damned good. If you read short fiction, or write short fiction, you probably should have this on your shelf.
The Black Tower by Louis Bayard
- historical police procedural, set in 1818 France. The tone is nearly perfect for the period, the details are wonderful, the story fascinating... and yet I found it slow reading, mainly because the POV character was not a good storyteller. Stylistic choice on the part of the author, but I think it as a mistake. Then again, he's a national bestseller with reviews from the NYT Book Review, so what do I know?
I never did finish KOP, despite it being on my bedside table for several months now. I may give it one more try, but....
Have started Peter Robinson's Friend of the Devil, while Marco Polo: From Venice to Xanadu by Lawernce Bergreen is now on the nightstand. Eclectic r meerkats.
Achievements of the day:
The cats have been brushed and clipped.
The kitchen is clean.
The last of the laundry is sorted and folded.
I have a new, ergonomic keyboard that is making me much happier.
I have been writing, and improvising yet another application of forensic magic.
I am debating if tonight's Sci-Fi channel offering [a very bad remake of Journey to the Center of the Earth] is worth mocking, or if I should give it a pass...
For anyone curious, the month's results of my sole new year's resolution to do more pleasure reading:
January:
Morning Child & Other Stories by Gardner Dozois
- I've known Gardner for umpteen years now, and while I know he's a smart editor and a good dinner companion, I sometimes forget how amazingly talented a writer of short fiction he is, too. Smart but not offputtingly Lookit-Me-Clever, thoughtful without being precious, and so well-crafted you can see exactly what he's doing but be damned if you can tell how. Not every story is perfect, but they're all damned good. If you read short fiction, or write short fiction, you probably should have this on your shelf.
The Black Tower by Louis Bayard
- historical police procedural, set in 1818 France. The tone is nearly perfect for the period, the details are wonderful, the story fascinating... and yet I found it slow reading, mainly because the POV character was not a good storyteller. Stylistic choice on the part of the author, but I think it as a mistake. Then again, he's a national bestseller with reviews from the NYT Book Review, so what do I know?
I never did finish KOP, despite it being on my bedside table for several months now. I may give it one more try, but....
Have started Peter Robinson's Friend of the Devil, while Marco Polo: From Venice to Xanadu by Lawernce Bergreen is now on the nightstand. Eclectic r meerkats.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 12:01 am (UTC)There's your answer. Me, I'm going to probably throw a netflix movie in in a moment.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 01:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 02:17 am (UTC)Have a lovely day! :-)
no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 02:23 am (UTC)Feline Farrier: Have Clippers, Will Travel.
(seriously: every kitten I get has their paws handled on a regular basis, until they accept clipping as Just Another Sign of Human Affection. Sadly, I haven't been able to convince them all that having their teeth checked falls into the same category...)
no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 09:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 01:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 03:58 am (UTC)Now if I can just get a keyboard tray at work... the home computer desk (a "JERKER" from IKEA) is set to my preferred height already.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 01:38 pm (UTC)Since I don't run Vista, a lot of the 'extras' are lost on me, but the ease of typing compared to the old keyboard is amazing, and the angle of my wrists is nearly custom-fit. Why I ever thought I could get by on a straight-edge keyboard I don't know (I was dazzled by the number of USB ports on the keyboard, clearly. I do miss that).
no subject
Date: 2009-02-09 03:07 am (UTC)I don't run Vista, either, but I do use a few of the hotkey shortcuts, notably the calculator and mute functions.
I've got 4 open USB ports on my monitor, two more on the front of the computer, and one of the 5 on the back is open until I find which box has the new cradle for the Palm TX in it. I've also got a multiple-format card reader built into the machine, so I don't have to fill up a USB port for that.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-09 02:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-08 02:06 pm (UTC)Alas, I haven't quite gotten the chair-and-desk configuration set perfectly -- I think I may have to put the desk on 2" risers to make everything work. This... actually would work out well. Hrmmm..... *goes off to contemplate lumber and glue*
no subject
Date: 2009-02-09 03:12 am (UTC)Scooter doesn't cause too much chaos on the desk -- he doesn't weigh enough to press the keys unless he jumps on them, but there is the ever-present spectre of cockatiel poop, so I try to minimize his keyboard time. He generally prefers to camp on my shoulder anyway. :)