shannon_a: (rpg stormbringer)
I had a good day at work on Friday, doing some totally creative work of the sort that's been in short supply while I've been working this year to get Skotos' feet under it again. The work was a little script related to Touched and it was apparently successful, as Chris liked it. (I did too!)

There are probably still a few more stressful weeks at Skotos while a couple of major issues settle, and while I decide what's actually getting done pre-Hawaii, but in March I hope to have more creative work (and less stressful work) on my plate once more.



After work on Friday, Kimberly and I had some nice plans for Valentine's Day.

We BARTed down to downtown Oakland and got some dim sum that we ate at Jack London Square. We sat right at the Bay and got to see the last vestiges of red and orange in the sky as the sun dipped behind San Francisco.

We read a bit of Knight of Shadows, our current read-along book, then went over to the Regal Cinemas at Jack London Square, where we had tickets for Winter's Tale, which opened the same day.

We'd both read the book and enjoyed it to various degrees of enjoyment. (We both found it a bit long and slow.) And, we both enjoyed the movie. It's absolutely beautifully filmed and the actors in it are all wonderful. The plot is interesting, and though it has some problems (it goes too fast and it over explains things) it was a touching movie that was a moving experience. I was also impressed by how non-Hollywood it is. It's been at least a decade since I read the book, but as far as I can tell it wasn't corrupted in the way that books brought to the screen often are.

I'm fairly shocked to see that the film has gotten awful reviews. But then I've often thought film critics were idiots. I mean they not only liked the awful The Hobbit 2: Elves with Swords, but actually thought it was better than the luke-warm The Hobbit 1: An Unexpectedly Slow & Long Journey. If a film gets outside their boundaries for what a Hollywood movie is supposed to be like, they seem to have particular problems. In any case, I say Winter's Tale is a strong movie, Neil Gaiman says it's a strong movie, and the critics think it's as bad as Raiders of the Lost Ark, which K. says they widely panned back in 1981.

After our movie, we BARTed back to Berkeley, had some Ben & Jerry's and called it a night.

Good Valentine's Day.



Today has been much more pragmatic. I got my hair cut, picked up a prescription (which CVS and my doctor were taking turns deciding who was most incompetent about getting a refill ... but I managed to finally get it done filled after FIVE phone calls over three days), and got groceries. Kimberly got a well-loved jacket into the jacket-repair shop. And we both napped. Apparently Valentining is exhausting.



Oh, and I finished watching Doctor Who today. When I moved to Berkeley in 1989, PBS had still shown only part of "Trial of a Time Lord", and as a result I never saw all of that or most of Sylvester McCoy's episodes. I've been catching up as they've been released on DVD and today I saw "The Greatest Show in the Galaxy" which was totally weird ... and the last original episode of the show I hadn't seen.

Well, except BBC has released new episodes in the last year. I think there may now be six more that I haven't seen: "The Reign of Terror" (completed with animated episodes), "The Tenth Planet" (completed with an animated episode), "The Ice Warriors" (completed with animated episodes), "The Enemy of the World" (rediscovered!), "The Moonbase" (completed with animated episodes), and "The Web of Fear" (rediscovered!, with one episode sadly held together with still frames).

Unfortunately Netflix has become HORRID about getting BBC DVDs into their collection for some reason, so they only have one of those (and are still missing the back half of series 7 of the new show). I'm pretty excited to see never-before-seen Hartnell and Troughton episodes, as they were built on an aesthetic that largely disappeared from the show when it went color.
shannon_a: (Default)
Many books went out of the house yesterday (and will go out today): 1 grocery bag plus 1 backpack plus 1 box of 10 books minus 5 books that came back because I can Ebay them.

Much of what went is stuff that I'd been collecting in the '90s because they seemed interesting, but which never turned out to actually interest me enough to read.

Among them were a big chunk of Howard miscellanea, because I'd kept every different anthology I had no matter how much duplication there might have been. And that was a lot for someone that I've just barely read. I kept the 12-book Carter Ace edition of Conan, plus a six-book adjunct by some writers I liked, as well as the nice 7-book Baen edition of books about his other heroes, plus my two Conan Chronicles from Millennium, which are the more authentic Conan stories, plus two books of his more direct Mythos fiction.

Also, I ditched all of the Haggard from the Newcastle Forgotten Fantasy Library that I had. I'll admit it, the numbers on the volumes seduced me (24 in all!), but I've long moved past the point where I'll collect something like that simply for the joy of collecting, without much expectation of reading them. Since I've never been that interested in the whole lost-worlds theme, these were obvious books to go. I still have some Dunsany and Morris from the series. I find Dunsany somewhat hit or miss. I've never read Morris and should give him a try sometime.

Beyond that I pushed out the 12-volume set of Christopher Tolkien's rehashes and retreads of every scrap of paper that J.R.R. Tolkien ever wrote. I actually find Lord of the Rings a bit dry and long, so the odds of me ever reading those minutia were low. I did (of course!) keep the major Tolkien books, even ones that I haven't read like The Simarillion, but I just didn't see any need to keep what were essentially works in progress bound in hardcover on my shelves.

I also dumped many short story collections, because I don't really read short stories. I can see keeping them from a favorite author like Gene Wolfe, because I'll read a few of his every once in a while, but the random Isaac Asimov collections (which were among those I got rid of) were never going to be touched.

Finally, there was a ton of E.C. Tubb's Dumarest and a small set of the Virgin Doctor Who Adventures, which represented dupes I've gotten from lots as I have been collecting (and reading!) those series lately. (I just finished book #6 of Dumarest, and have already read book #7 and #9, and I've similarly recently finished book #10 of the Virgin New Adventures.) All of the good condition Tubbs went to stores, while the bad condition ones went to prisoners. The Doctor Who Adventures were the one thing I couldn't sell that I thought was worth keeping, so they went into a drawer at home to eBay someday. I didn't have luck when I tried to sell them singleton the other month, so instead I'll sell a lot after I get through buying them and make sure I don't have more dupes. (I'm a bit more than a half-dozen books short in the Virgin New Adventures collection, but most of them are the rarer and more expensive ones; happily, through perseverance, I've also picked up 3 or 4 or the rare/expensive ones for pretty cheap prices as I've collected.)



Lately I've been selling to Powells first, then giving Moe's the residue, then giving what's left to a books-for-prisoners program. I initiated this after Moe's started getting really bad in their bids, enough so that I walked away from one of them.

Strangely, the last two times I sold at Moe's they were really good again, even yesterday when the buyer who's given me very low prices before was buying. Maybe I was selling better stock, I dunno. But, they were hesitant on the Tolkien's, saying that they'd need to mark them down to sell, and I said they should give me a low price on them, and they did and they still gave more than I expected.

So, I ended up with $10 in trade credit at Powells and $120 at Moes, which is a world of difference. Still the Powells-Moes-prisoners ecology seems like a good one, because I don't have to take the Powells books out of my house (because the postman picks them up) and when I go to Moe's I don't have to bring anything back (since the residue goes to prisoners), unless I have books that I think are really worth selling on eBay (and that's pretty much only the case when I have a lot/collection).

I was pretty happy with the books that went to prisoners this time. Sometimes I drop off non-fiction or something and I wonder if they'll be useful, but this time I dropped off Howards and Tubbs, plus Asimov short stories, and a lot of them were short, visceral, and enjoyable, and I think someone(s) will enjoy them.



And my shelves and floors are now lighter of that many books, more than offsetting the Brusts, Tubbs, Eriksons, and Doctor Whos that I've brought into the house since I've started actually buying books again in the last year or two.

July 4th

Jul. 4th, 2010 11:46 pm
shannon_a: (Default)
A relatively quiet day. Well, aside from the couple of hours of fireworks which Lucy at first seemed to deal well with, before she became increasingly freaked out over the course of the evening.



I mostly read. I'm working on SPQR V by John Maddox Roberts and Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible, the fifth of the New Adventure of Doctor Who novels (the first original novels ever for the series, back after the series was cancelled, published through the 1990s). Also, some comics. I'm onto the third volume of my reread of Grant Morrison's Seven Soldiers (inspired by Final Crisis finally making it to TPB) and a first read of Darwyn Cooke's Kryptonite (also from the library).

It's all good stuff. Well, to varying degrees of good. The biggest problem with SPQR V is the faint whiff of Lysol that lies over its pages. That's the sort of problem that sometimes appears in library books, though smelling of Lysol is a first. The Doctor Who book is very slow. Great ideas, but poor pacing. Cooke's book does not smell of Lysol at all, but it's certainly trade-paperback-as-beautiful-artifact (meaning that all of the credits pages and such are done up like in-world stuff).



Kimberly & I did head out of the house a bit today. She took us out to lunch at Top Dog, which was delicious. We ate it on campus, at a secluded picnic table just below Stephens Hall. Very nice, all around.

We were considering going up to the mythical waterfall walk in the afternoon and we were considering going down to Berkeley Marina in the evening (for party & fireworks), but Kimberly was feeling ill much of the day, and I opted not to head out and do either on my own.

Maybe tomorrow. Well, not the fireworks at the Marina.



Also watched some Doctor Who on Netflix. I've been on a bit of a Doctor Who kick the last couple of months. It was my first fandom in the 1980s, and I've been slowly rediscovering the joy of it in recent years.

So I finished up The Three Doctors which I'd started yesterday. A fun story with great interactions between Troughton and Pertwee and also some fun Gallifrey history.

I found it very interesting, when reading about the episode, to learn that the reason that the Doctor was stranded on Earth during the early Pertwee era was that the show's budget was cut back. With ratings up by the time of The Three Doctors, they removed the limitation.

I also started Tomb of the Cybermen, mainly because it met the two criteria that I had: it was a Troughton story and it was available through Netflix-online-viewing. It's a pretty unfamiliar story. If I'd seen it before (and I had seen everything that was available/still-around by the mid 1980s or so) I don't remember it. It's a good story, with three characters (Troughton's Doctor, Jamie, and Victoria) who I've seen very little of. I love the comedic touches that Jamie and the Second Doctor offer to the show. I'm particularly amused by the fact that Jamie is a bit of a coward if this story is any indication.

[Edit: Apparently Tomb of the Cybermen was recovered from Hong Kong in 1992, which explains why it looks unfamiliar to me.]

I've been interesting in Troughton because I expect to read some of the Past Doctor Adventures (a later original novel series) about his Doctor soon.

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