07 August 2009

Friday fill-ins



1.
Looking forward to September is my favorite only summertime comfort.

2. My favorite John Hughes movies is (oh dear, I never saw one...)


3. Velvet
is something I love to touch. I even love to imagine touching velvet. In fact, when I have a migraine, I imagine a soft, dark green velvet pillow beneath my head. I still regret not buying a pair of green velvet gloves when I was Harrod's. I might have a bit of an unhealthy love of velvet. Maybe I shouldn't be telling you this.

4. The full moon delights me more than almost anything. Not everyone sees a man in the moon - some see a rabbit...

5. Somewhere, someone is writing a haiku
right now. I wish it were me.

6. When daylight fades I want to be home.


7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to watching "Real Time" with Bill Maher
, tomorrow my plans include finishing a knitted hat for Care to Knit,and Sunday, I want to spin with one of the pretty spindles I've been collecting and knit with the my Ravelry peeps.


Have a lovely weekend, everyone!




06 August 2009

Lord Alfred Tennyson , born 6 August 1809



The Eagle
by
Alfred Lord Tennyson


He clasps the crag with crooked hands;
Close to the sun in lonely lands,
Ringed with the azure world, he stands.

The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls;
He watches from his mountain walls,
And like a thunderbolt he falls.

05 August 2009

Dead can dance

I'm absolutely SOLD on audiobooks. How did I ever drive long distances (i.e., more than 10 minutes) without them? I listened to three in July.


First, I indulged in two Maisie Dobbs mysteries: Among the Mad, and An Incomplete Revenge. (Although I really want to read the series from the beginning, these two were available at the library and I needed books!) Each takes place in the early 1930s, and each shows how the horrors of the European War continued to be lethal long after the war ended. Maisie Dobbs is a trained psychologist as well as a trained investigator, and she uses both her training and strong intuition to solve her cases.

Maisie herself was injured when she worked as a nurse in wartime France. She recovered, but her fiance was injured severely, and still lay, insensible, in a nursing home. Among the Mad brings her back to the shell-shocked soldiers she had cared for in France, and presents a murderer whose alleged purpose is to bring attention to the way these injured soldiers have been treated by the English government. An Incomplete Revenge takes Maisie to the country during hop-picking time, where she investigates a series of fires that seem to occur yearly at the anniversary of a Zeppelin attack. A Romany clan is suspectected by the townspeople, as are the outsiders who come to earn money by helping with the harvest. The European War figures in this book, as well as an intrepid woman reporter looking for the story that will establish her as a journalist.

The third book I enjoyed in the car was a Miss Marple mystery: Sleeping Murder. Did Agatha Christie ever miss with Miss Marple? I don't think so. This book, published posthumously, depicts Miss Marple assisting a young couple investigating the Victorian house they just have purchased. Gwenda, the young wife, has frightening flashbacks that convince her she has not only lived in the same house, but witnessed a murder there 18 years ago. Miss Marple does not interfere in their investigation, but quietly makes inquiries in the town and suggests pathways for Gwenda and Giles to follow. Would it have been better to let sleeping murders lie?

Oh, and Dead Can Dance? I also listen to music in the car. Right now I'm listening to Aion, their Renaissance-tinged album released in 1990. If you never heard Lisa Gerrard's magical voice, and if you would like to be swept into another world, this is the album for you. It certainly is for me.

If the dead can sleep, I like to think they also can dance...