Weird Stories August 14, 2008
Posted by nitagi in Uncategorized.Tags: books
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H.P. Lovecraft has for many years been at the back of my mind as an author I need to try. I finally bought, The Call of Cthulhu and Other Weird Stories, and started it a couple days ago. Lovecraft has a very interesting writing style. He has very little dialog (exception would include the short story, The Picture in the House, though most of that is one-sided). Some of the short stories include a narrator relaying a story of what has happened to himself or another person. ”I shall never forget that hideous summer sixteen years ago, when like a noxious afrite from the halls of Eblis typhoid stalked leeringly through Arkham” (p. 55) starts part II of the short story, Herbert West — Reanimator. The stories that do not have a narrator still feel like someone is telling me the story instead of me reading the story. Lovecraft also repeats a lot and uses words like hideous, gruesome, and perverse excessively. I think this might annoy some readers, but I rather like it.
I am very much enjoying myself reading these stories. I already sleep with my eyes open and turn pictures on my wall into giant spiders. Why not add dark disturbing dreams to that? I am new to the whole Cthulhu mythology, and I think only one or two stories of the eight I have read so far have eluded to this god. One of the notes in the back of the book explains the pronounciation of the word Cthulhu, which I was pronouncing very differently in my head. Apparently humans can only attempt to pronounce this word correctly. The closest humans can get is Khlul-hloo, with the first h silent, and the first syllable said “guttarally”. I need practice.
A Book Review and a Baby July 28, 2008
Posted by nitagi in Uncategorized.Tags: baby, books
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A book review:
I just finished the book, Barbarians to Angels: The Dark Ages Reconsidered by Peter S. Wells. Wells does not think the Dark Ages were dark at all. He goes through archaeology evidence to prove that this time period thrived after Rome fell. Archaeology that proves that people were eating well, living in populated cities (both new and old), and making art. He goes into much detail about London. London thrived during Roman’s height. After Rome fell, much of the stone buildings were dismantled and used for other things. Instead of taking this as an abandonment of London, as many used to believe, Wells looks at archaeology evidence that the people during the time period were using different materials to build their homes. I think what Wells is really trying to prove is that just because government, buildings, religion, art, and education were no longer Roman, does not make this time period worse off, just different.
I like this quote in the last chapter:
For the auxiliary soldier serving on the Rhine frontier at the end of the Roman period, for farmers in villages in central France, and for elites at northern centers such as Gudme, in Denmark, and Helgo, in Sweden, there was no abrupt fall of the imperial power. The changes that were taking place from the fifth to the eighth century were gradual; they would not have been perceived as abrupt or transformational to anyone living at the time. It is the way we think about chagne in the past, and the way we sometimes place too much faith in texts concerning warfare and mass movements of people, that can lead us astray. (p. 200)
And a baby:
My first nephew, Ethan James. He was born Saturday at 3:30am and weighed 5 pounds 8 ounces. He is a bit early, but is doing very well, and so is his mother.
Fantastic Fiction, yo! June 26, 2008
Posted by nitagi in Uncategorized.Tags: books, libraries, websites
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For the life of me I can not remember how I found this website. I use it a lot, for myself and for patron questions at the library. It is called Fantastic Fiction. Go check it out. You can search by author or title, and includes usually a little bio of the author, a list of forth coming publications, and a list of all their works. My favorite part is that the series are separted and listed in order. I don’t know how many times I have been asked what the next book in a series is. This website is great for that question.
I have to admit it is a pretty ugly site. Don’t let that scare you away, though.
