Calling it

Saturday, November 4th, 2017 10:08 am
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Default)
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For the last couple of days I've been reading Stephen King's new book, Sleeping Beauties, which he wrote with his son Owen. It's a lot of fun, and warming to my Goddess-loving heart. I'm about at the last fifth right now, and I suddenly got a very strong sense of where the story is going to go from here. So I'm testing myself.

After the break below, I've written a quick summary of where the plot is headed and how I think it ends. I shall report back later as to whether I was right.

SPOILERS OBVIOUSLY

At the moment, the DA has pulled up to the roadblock... )



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Whoa

Saturday, July 23rd, 2016 01:48 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (VincentReading)
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The first trailer for Starz' series of Neil Gaiman's American Gods is out.





This looks AMAZING. I love that book, and am really hyped to see what they'll do with it. Great casting, great atmospherics. Am having YUGELY BIGLY hopes for this thing.

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serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Whoa)
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Another story is gathering in my head. It's another one-off, separate from the main series I've been writing. It's intense. (SHUT. UP.) So much so that my main problem is working up the courage to start writing it. I think it's gonna hurt, frankly.

But that's not what I'm here to talk about. I'd like to present to you a book I've had for many years, one that is little known, but revolutionary in its impact. It's a small book, and it's fundamentally a work of translation. It's called Prayers of the Cosmos, and it's by Neil Douglas-Klotz, who writes about religion and psychology and is also a poet and artist.

The book is very simple. It takes the two best known Christian prayer-passages (the Lord's Prayer and the Beatitudes), gives you the original Aramaic (with the King James version on the facing page), then a phonetic breakdown. After that, the book takes each line separately and gives you first the Aramaic, then the English, then a list of possible translations (more on that below), and then a little essay on that line and its components, the syllables and sounds in the words and their meanings. Then as a nice addition, there is an exercise in breathing and tuning you can do to use the line as a meditation point or mantra.

I tell you, the book is a revelation. I had no idea of the scope of the divide separating us from the original words of this man. It's unbelievable. Here's just one example:

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1. Our Birth in Unity )
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (CaseyZeke)
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For the Birthday...


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"Are you shitting me?"

"No."

"You've actually read this?" Casey's holding up Zeke's ancient, water-stained copy of The Lord of the Rings.

"I was bored at camp and it was the only book around." Zeke sounds annoyed. "What's the big deal?"

"I dunno," Casey replies, thumbing the browned pages... )
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (HobbitHug)
Hi, folks!

I've added a couple of items to my selling post again. Today I've got two page-a-day LOTR calendars here, Verlyn Flieger's scholarly Tolkien book, Splintered Light here, and for those of you into classic films, a lovely photobook from Japan all about that beautiful lady, Audrey Hepburn here. (Look to the bottom of the section at each link for the items.)

Take a look if you're interested, and please pass the links to anyone you know who might want to see, as well. I'll be posting more tomorrow. Thanks all!

LOTR books

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2014 04:46 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (HobbitHug)
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Hey, everyone!

Today I've added some LOTR movie books to my selling page. These are all in brand new condition. I bought them, put them on my shelf, and they've been there ever since. I don't think I even opened some of them!

The prices vary from $20 (for a big hardback) to $8.50. Please take a look and see if any of them would go well in your collections. They're over here. And please let others know about my sale too. I really need the exposure, thanks!

I'll be adding more stuff tomorrow!

Just BECAUSE, okay?

Wednesday, January 15th, 2014 04:11 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (NoWay)
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All at once the Colonel shoots upright with a start...frozen motionless finger in the air..."Piss! Piss!" he shouts..."My prostate!...." With his eyes locked in a stare as though he were hearing voices!...Here we go again, another song and dance! Then he pokes around his underpants, sticks his finger in his butt...and dashes off, he's gone!...

-- from London Bridge, by Louis-Ferdinand Celine
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Peck)
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Nicol Williamson, who gave such sardonic, witty life to the great Merlin in Excalibur, passed away on December 16.

His recording of The Hobbit was a masterpiece. Since we're all awaiting the film so eagerly, here is your chance to hear the master artist using that brilliant voice to bring life to Tolkien's little hero:




The Hobbit - read by Nicol Williamson
Part One




Part Two




Part Three



Despite the fact that he finally got sick of acting and left it all behind years ago, I and many others still feel he was one of the greatest to come out of Britain.

RIP, good man. You will (and still are) missed.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Reader)
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Here's something fun. If books could have sex, what would they be like in bed?


You don't fuck The Fountainhead. The Fountainhead fucks you.


Lots of fun in the comments with people chiming in on their favorite books. Here's what I wrote for LOTR:


Last night with The Lord of the Rings was intense and unique. His attention to detail made you feel like you’d been transported to another world. But now you’re in bed alone, and he stands at the window watching all of history sweep across the landscape with his immortal eyes, unable to do anything to stop it.


There's tons of fanfic about the characters, but I can't remember the last time I saw a fic about the book itself. So there's my little attempt.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (OrionNebula)
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From Neil Gaiman, an appreciation of Ray Bradbury.

...There are authors I remember for their stories, others I remember for their people. Bradbury is the only one I remember who sticks in my heart for his times of year and for his places. He called a book of short stories The October Country. It’s the perfect Bradbury title. It gives us a time (and not just any time, but the month that contains Hallowe’en, when the twigs tap on windows and things lurk in the cellars) and it makes it a country. You can go there. It’s waiting.


It's true, for those of us who were touched early by Bradbury's rich, mythical tales, October and Hallowe'en will always belong to him. Some of you may have seen the lovely film made from his most famous novel, Something Wicked This Way Comes - it brings into visual art the joyful frisson that fills that book.

But for me, Ray Bradbury burned into my consciousness with the first of his works I read. "The Martian Chronicles" is one of those rare books that qualifies not just as science fiction, but as science fiction poetry. Harlan Ellison, in discussing films and dramatic writing, once contrasted Bradbury with Harold Pinter, saying of the latter that while his writing looks like nothing on the page it sings in the actor's mouth, whereas Bradbury is gorgeous and lyrical on the page but nearly impossible to perform because nobody ever, EVER talks like that. It's Bradbury's lyricism that makes him so captivating and an utterly unique voice.

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From Rocket Summer:

One minute it was Ohio winter, with doors closed, windows locked, the panes blind with frost, icicles fringing every roof, children skiing on slopes, housewives lumbering like great black bears in their furs along the icy streets.

And then a long wave of warmth crossed the small town. A flooding sea of hot air; it seemed as if someone had left a bakery door open. The heat pulsed among the cottages and bushes and children. The icicles dropped, shattering, to melt. The doors flew open. The windows flew up. The children worked off their wool clothes. The housewives shed their bear disguises. The snow dissolved and showed last summer's ancient green lawns.


From Ylla:

They had a house of crystal pillars on the planet Mars by the edge of an empty sea, and every morning you could see Mrs. K eating the golden fruits that grew from the crystal walls, or cleaning the house with handfuls of magnetic dust which, taking all dirt with it, blew away on the hot wind. Afternoons, when the fossil sea was warm and motionless, and the wine trees stood stiff in the yard, and the little distant Martian bone town was all enclosed, and no one drifted out their doors, you could see Mr. K himself in his room, reading from a metal book with raised hieroglyphs over which he brushed his hand, as one might play a harp. And from the book, as his fingers stroked, a voice sang, a soft ancient voice, which told tales of when the sea was red steam on the shore and ancient men had carried clouds of metal insects and electric spiders into battle.

Mr. and Mrs. K had lived by the dead sea for twenty years, and their ancestors had lived in the same house, which turned and followed the sun, flower-like, for ten centuries.


From Usher II:

Full grown, without memory, the robots waited. In green silks the color of forest pools, in silks the color of frog and fern, they waited. In yellow hair the color of sun and sand, the robots waited. Oiled, with tube bones cut from bronze and sunk in gelatin, the robots lay. In coffins for the not dead and not alive, in planked boxes, the metronomes waited to be set in motion. There was a smell of lubrication and lathed brass. There was a silence of the tomb yard. Sexed but sexless, the robots. Named but unnamed, and borrowing from humans everything but humanity, the robots stared at the nailed lids of their labeled F.O.B. boxes, in a death that was not even a death, for there had never been a life. And now there was a vast screaming of yanked nails. Now there was s lifting of lids. Now there were shadows on the boxes and the pressure of a hand squirting oil from a can. Now one clock was set in motion, a faint ticking. Now another and another, until this was an immense clock shop, purring. The marble eyes rolled wide their rubber lids. The nostrils winked. The robots, clothed in hair of ape and white of rabbit, arose: Tweedledum following Tweedledee, Mock-Turtle, Dormouse, drowned bodies from the sea compounded of salt and whiteweed, swaying; hanging blue-throated men with turned-up, clam-flesh eyes, and creatures of ice and burning tinsel, loam-dwarfs and pepper-elves, Tik-tok, Ruggedo, St. Nicholas with a self-made snow flurry blowing on before him, Bluebeard with whiskers like acetylene flame, and sulphur clouds from which green fire snouts protruded, and, in scaly and gigantic serpentine, a dragon with a furnace in its belly reeled out the door with a scream, a tick, a bellow, a silence, a rush, a wind. Ten thousands lids fell back. The clock shop moved out into Usher. The night was enchanted.


From There Will Come Soft Rains:

Ten-fifteen. The garden sprinklers whirled up in golden founts, filling the soft morning air with scatterings of brightness. The water pelted windowpanes, running down the charred west side where the house had been burned evenly free of its white paint. The entire west face of the house was black, save for five places. Here the silhouette in paint of a man mowing a lawn. Here, as in a photograph, a woman bent to pick flowers. Still farther over, their images burned on wood in one titanic instant, a small boy, hands flung into the air; higher up, the image of a thrown ball, and opposite him a girl, hands raised to catch a ball which never came down.

The fives spots of paint - the man, the woman, the children, the ball - remained. The rest was a thin charcoaled layer.

The gentle sprinkler rain filled the garden with falling light.


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Who else writes like that? Bradbury was my introduction to science fiction, and he brought me into it as a form of mythology, full of beautiful, evocative colors and deep images. His stories sing.

Book recs

Friday, January 25th, 2008 11:37 am
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Reader)
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[livejournal.com profile] rabidsamfan just posted a request for book recommendations. She asked for children's and YA books, and I posted a list. I thought other folks out here might be interested, so here is my list:


All of E.B. White
All of Edward Lear
The Cricket in Times Square, by George Selden
All of the D'Aulaire books
Padddle-to-the-Sea, by Holling C. Holling
Dr. Seuss, of course
Takes from Shakespeare, by Charles and Mary Lamb
Books by Daniel Manus Pinkwater
Tejima's picture books
The Glass Slipper, by Eleanor Farjeon
The Pippi Longstocking books (These were a great inspiration to me as a girl growing up!)
Anything illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon
The Good Master, The Singing Tree, and Philomena by Kate Seredy
A.A. Milne
J.M. Barrie
Bambi, by Felix Salten
L. Frank Baum
Mercer Mayer
Chris Van Allsburg
The Little Prince
The Ship's Cat, by Richard Adams
The Gnu and the Guru Go Behind the Beyond, by Peggy Clifford - a grand book!
The Sheep of the Lal Bagh, by David Mark
Faithful Elephants, by Yukio Tsuchiya - the best inoculation against war I've ever read
The Cookie Tree, by Jay Williams
Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories and the Jungle Books
All of Marguerite Henry
Edward Gorey - I loved morbid humor as a kid
Books by Roald Dahl - The Magic Finger really bent my brain, but not all his books are quite that weird; Fantastic Mr. Fox is lovely.
Blue Willow, by Doris Gates

and last but certainly not least:
The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norman Juster


These are all books that I love dearly, and I think should be available to kids everywhere. Many of them are classics, as you can see, but some are out of the way and hard to find. But they're all gems. (I've included links so you can check out the lesser known ones.)


What kid's books do you have fond memories of?
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (ShootMeNow)
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Elijah and Orlando donated ink handprints to a children's charity in the U.K.


I am listening to an audiobook of Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Stranger Land. I swear, if there is a role other than Frodo that could have been written for Elijah, it's Valentine Michael Smith, the Man from Mars. It would be the perfect marriage of character and actor.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Reader)
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Bye, bye, used bookstores...


Think I'm kidding?

I only wish I were.


*sigh*


ETA: Do feel free to repost these links. Readers everywhere should be made aware of these shenanigans.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Default)
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...or just dealt with customers in general.





Medieval Helpdesk




Read more... )

(no subject)

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007 05:43 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Reader)
Tell me this is not the best opening line to a book EVER:


May I speak candidly, fleshling, one rational creature to another, myself a book and you a reader?


That's the first line in The Last Witchfinder, the latest novel by James Morrow. If you've never read Morrow, you're in for a treat. He writes books of such surpassing intelligence, incisive wit, stinging social commentary, hilarious absurdity, deep compassion, jaw-dropping beauty, and encyclopaedic religious knowledge that I am constantly amazed by his work. Each time I read one of his books, I think he can't get any better. But he does. He always does.


I've only just started this book, and already I've found things to delight me. Take a look: )


How can anyone possibly not love a mind capable of things like that?

But don't let the eyebrow-lifting wit fool you. Morrow is capable of prose of such depth, heartache and compassion that he brings me to tears regularly. He has an especial talent for endings. The final paragraphs of This Is the Way the World Ends put me in a sobbing fit, as did the ending of Blameless in Abaddon. His books always end on the perfect note, hitting you under the belt with just the right sting. I don't know how he does that, and I wish I could learn the trick!

The only other writers who have ever had such a deep and abiding effect on me have been Harlan Ellison and Professor Tolkien. Morrow's prose, his stories, his characters, and most of all, what he says about the world and humanity through them, are really incomparable with anyone else. He is utterly briliant, and I urge you to go get one of his books and enjoy a supremely satisfying experience. Any of them are great, but particularly relevant these days is City of Truth, Only Begotten Daughter, This Is the Way the World Ends, and the God's Death trilogy: Towing Jehovah, Blameless in Abbadon, and The Eternal Footman. Believe me, you will not regret the time spent in this man's incredible universe.

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