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Two bed one bath, 15 year fixed rate mortgage with 20% down, the whole adult package :) Not something I ever thought I'd be saying...

Some pictures behind the cut because it just looks so awesome and I'm proud that we got such a sweet deal, can you believe this house was on the market for two months with no offers? People have no taste, it's not new build but IMO it's even better because it's mid-century modern and eclecticly finished so everything looks good.... like apart from the couches we didn't buy a single new piece of furniture. It's all stuff we either already had, or stuff we picked up for free on the streets of New Brunswick.

Also, I wanna ask everyone's advice about flowers to plant in the front yard!

Biggish Photos Behind Cut )

You can see the images full size if you cut and paste the URLs btw, I'm just too lazy to set a click-through link for each one. If you know the name of the last flower, please let me know... I think I like that one the best.
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Wrote a book review for last month's bibliophages:

http://community.livejournal.com/bibliophages/18319.html

I also ended up reading I, Claudius and Claudius the God for this round -- the second mostly during the long car ride back from Montreal -- made me extremely nauseous but it was worth it.

The theme this month is Love Overcoming Obstacles (Or Not). Please sign up! The deadline is, um, tomorrow. -_-; Well, but would any of you be willing to join in this round with a recommendation list -- you only need to put three books on it -- if the deadline was extended to Friday? Because I totally would extend the deadline if I thought that even one person would be interested.

Montreal, by the way, was awesome. Met up with [livejournal.com profile] petronia Friday night and we saw Stars. XD My main thought is that this is perfect music to fall asleep to if you happened to have stayed up the entire night before reading (for instance) some autobiography by some guy in some band. Kind of like a light show with soothing pop noise. (I don't think this was supposed to have been the point. ^^; Oh well.)

Saturday night I went out for dessert, coffee and beer with my brother's friends, half of whom had ALSO been to the Stars concert. XD They are a great bunch of people, Alex is lucky to have found them. He keeps telling me that they are nothing like his (mostly male) high school friends, but there's an injoke-ness that's the same, even if this (mostly female) group is much more inclined to like 2-hour phone calls at one in the morning.
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Did you know that half of all cigarettes bought in the US are purchased by people with a history of mental illness? At least that's what the introductory-level psychology textbook I am skimming for work said. I suspect bias though - in the introduction to another chapter, the same book reports that 50% of all USians admit to having been "mentally ill" (mostly depressed or paranoid) sometime in the last 12 months, 80% at some point in their lives. Granted, the number of people who've had periods of suboptimal mood (the basis for point #2) is less than the number who've been in therapy or state-mandated treatment (the basis for point #1), but still.

Another claim in this book is that cigarette-smoking may not be just a form of self-medication for the depressed, but may actually cause depression. There's no proof, but we suspect this to be true, the book says, because the frequency/duration/severity of bouts of major depression in suseptible individuals is so closely correlated to the total number of cigarette smoked. Personally I think that coming after a paragraph that links depression to any kind of unhealthy activity -- like drinking or not getting enough exercise -- the claim is dubious at best.

I don't even know why I'm defending cigarettes, it's not like I smoke (or even have too many friends who do). But I hate unsupported claims.


Shows:
Spring Awakening - Saw this Broadway musical with a friend from college last Wednesday. If we'd spent 20 or 30 dollars (each) it might have been worth it, but half-price tickets were sixty-six dollars. $132 at full price! That's crazy. Anyway, the premise of the play is that in a provincial German town in the 1890s, teenagers are oppressed by parents, teachers, and the church, but nonetheless have Urges. Urges represented by 1950s rock'n'roll monologues while the other actors freeze and the lights go crazy. XD; Eugene didn't approve: he thinks that people in musicals shoud sing to each other, not to the audience. Otherwise, you might as well see a rock show! I like rock shows, though, apparently, because I had a pretty good time -- up to and including the point where the two leads sleep together (the culmination of an entire act of foreplay, omg).

Then the second act happened. Cut for spoilers and WTF-ery )

Mixed messages/wacky plot aside, the play was good. By which I mean, the staging was nice, the leads were attractive, the music was good (if not particularly memorable), and the vocal performances were very good. But next time I'll see either a musical, or a rock show, or a play -- none of this hybrid nonsense.


Empires and Mark Rose - Saw these bands in Hoboken with [livejournal.com profile] summertea last Friday. Empires is an unsigned band -- on a national tour. But! You're thinking. Without a record label and management team etc etc, how are they getting people to come to their shows? You can be an unsigned and have a strong local following, but once you leave your home town, probably no one has heard of you. The answer is The Internet -- Empires spreads the word through their website and myspace; the band members blog; one member is an ex-member of The Academy Is..., the band that built a following through amateur-looking webskits. (Althogh we're not supposed to talk about that: I was looking for interviews and downloads, right, in preparation for this show, and I found one radio interview where the members spend like three minutes explaining that which bands they were in has no bearing on what they're doing now, while the host tries to tell them that he understands, no really, he does, but couldn't they just please namecheck the bands already, he's trying to help them out here. XD)

In theory, using the Internet to build support is a great way to sidestep managerial interfere and develop a rapport with fans. In practice, it means your fans look like people from the Internet. ^^; Not that I can talk. Anyway, the audience was 95% female and 100% nerdy -- attractive guys mostly belonged to the bands and attractive girls mostly wandered in from the bar.

The music was okay. It was loud, and there was a lot of distortion, but you couldn't really dance to it. (It's better for singing along to, which of course was impossible.) I surprised myself by liking Mark Rose a lot more -- I reallllly don't like his old band, Spitalfield -- boring music for boring teenagers like Something Corportate, but without SoKo's sense of humor (just look at their name!). But Mark Rose as a solo act had a little more kick, was slightly more interesting. Mostly, though, I think it was because of this (the first article on eye contact. Sean from Empires had his eyes closed the whole time).


Speaking of shows, I kind of really want to go to this on Wednesday. The Cure! The Smiths! $12! Only in the Alternate Reality of cover band shows would Coldplay open for either of these two bands, let alone both. XD; And Wednesday is the perfect day, too, since I don't work until late afternoon on Thursdays. Unfortunately (?), I'm already driving to Upstate New York, thence Montreal, on Wednesday after work.

...Did I mention that I'll be in Montreal this weekend? Thursday afternoon through Sunday morning. Dropping my brother off at school and mini-vacationing. I, uh, must have forgotten to mention it.
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Where did my weekend go??? It's like it disappeared into this fever dream of bad Libertines fanfiction and compulsive wikipedia-ing of eighties post-punk bands...wait, that's not like what happened, that is what happened. ;_;

Suppose the weekend isn't over. Suppose, if I am very good tomorrow, I may finish on time for a late movie at Montgomery Cinemas. I want to see The Wackness (9:35pm) and/or Brideshead, Revisited (9:30pm). [livejournal.com profile] emblem, [livejournal.com profile] uminohikari, you up for it?

In other news, last weekend I went into the city with [livejournal.com profile] emblem and boyfriend (also my college friend Yin and their college friend Grace) to see the Buckminister Fuller exhibit at the Whitney and the Prefabricated Housing and Dali exhibits at the MoMA, and to go clothing/books shopping around SoHo -- so maybe it's just as well that I took this weekend "off" as I can only spend money at this rate for so long before I run out.

Read since last update:
The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Vol. 1 by M.T. Anderson (edit: mini-review with spoilers)
Victory of Eagles by Naomi Novik (edit: short reaction with minor spoilers, long reaction with MAJOR spoilers)
House of Many Ways by Diana Wynne Jones (edit: mini-review with spoilers)
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Montreal, cut for excessive detail )

Links:
The Paris Hilton Memorial Fellowship: short story by Rachel Shukert. via [livejournal.com profile] flyingsauce
Television, Gin, and Social Surplus: article on participatory culture. via Meta no Tame
The Ironic Urban Landscape of Death Note, or, Kira the Pop Sensation: meta in comments by the author of A Tithe to Hell.
A Tithe to Hell: loooong L/Light fanfic with the most canonically perfect beginning and ending EVER, and a gooey fanon middle. XD via [livejournal.com profile] sesame_seed

Long shot

Apr. 2nd, 2008 02:45 pm
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I'm going to Philadelphia tomorrow (Thursday) to visit a friend in Ze Hospital. I don't thiiiink any of you reading this are from that area, but in case I'm wrong, is there anyone who wants to meet up for dinner downtown, around 7pm?
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
...at least in Japan.

Irwin and I were the two best players in 4th grade Band, but the gap widened fairly quickly. XD
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
[livejournal.com profile] petronia was down from Montreal and I had dinner in NYC three times, spending THIRTY HOURS' PAY BEFORE TAXES on food and transportation. (Pay at the library, that is. I am making more now at Pearson, thank God.) New York City is so expensive: there's "sticker shock," and then there's "if I actually had to pay my own bills, it would be another four months before I could afford another week like this". Hooray for living at home?

More )

Overall: Ate a lot, spent a lot, drank a lot, fought off feeling like an extremely boring person -- boring not in the sense of "never does anything exciting" (though that's true as well), but in the sense of "doesn't have strong opinions or well-defined tastes". Rationalized that there's no competing with Sabina on this front. ^^; Also, everyone else was older -- 25, 26, 27, 28. If I still have nothing of interest to say at 30, then I'll start worrying. (Although I have worked in a LIBRARY and now work with TEXTBOOKS -- maybe I SHOULD be worrying.) Topics of the day were music fandom and younger siblings in precarious positions: I am a good person with whom to discuss the later, but a terrible person with whom to discuss the former.

In between, hung out with [livejournal.com profile] falxumbra and [livejournal.com profile] fiendery, started work, wrote (!!) a few pages (orz), finished three books, watched Juno and parts of three other movies, and worked out a deal to stay a few nights a week with a best friend from kindergarten happens to live near Paramus. My brother was home from school this week as well.

Books:
Carlo Emilio Gadda, That Awful Mess on the Via Merulana
Dana Facaros and Michael Pauls, Bay of Naples and Southern Italy
Joe Haldeman, Forever Peace
Thant Myint-U, The River of Lost Footsteps <-- currently reading
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Real life content ahead: Read more... )

I ended up leaving the transcript I'd come into the city for at the office. ^^; Ahaha.

Tons of people with black marks on their foreheads on the subway. It took me forever to realize that, duh, Ash Wednesday!

Finished Demian by Herman Hesse on the train. Saving the discussion for [livejournal.com profile] bibliophages, but I liked it.

Books to blog
Hiring the Best*
College of Magics
Demian
The Bridge to Terrabithia
Guns, Germs, and Steel*

*nonfiction

Currently reading
That Awful Mess on the Via Merulana (Quer pasticciaccio brutto de via Merulana) by Carlo Emilio Gadda. But I might have to stop soon, because it is really hard.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I hope everyone had a very happy retail holiday!

Christmas post @ the RL journal.

The books I got this year were:

Death of a Writer by Michael Collins. Does Collins realize that it is possible to introduce a new character or piece of scenery, etc, without immediately launching into that thing's entire history?
The Egyptologist by Arthur Phillips. I'm amused by how transparently clue-like the narration is.
The Complete Works of Lewis Caroll !!! <3<3<3.

I also got Pokemon Diamond from my brother (the story is more complicated than this. Ask in comments if you're interested) and to my everlasting shame, I have actually been playing it. I'll post my friend code here I soon as I figure out how to get one. (Do I need to do anything special to our wireless connection?)

I also read some. Finished in the last few weeks:

The Alienist by Caleb Carr
The Pinhoe Egg and Howl's Moving Castle (re-read) by Diana Wynne Jones
Murder Must Advertise and Strong Poison by Dorothy Sayers
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie (currently reading).

Except for the DWJ, it's been a Month of Mystery. ^^; (That reminds me that I really have to write a Theme Discussion post for [livejournal.com profile] bibliophages.) I think the last time I read this much mystery was fifth grade, when the month is over I might have to lie down.

***

Staring down pages and pages of [livejournal.com profile] yuletide recs. It's actually kind of horrifying. And [livejournal.com profile] bb_shousetsu is out! All hail the bounty of the season. Guess I know what I'll be doing with the rest of my time off.

I want to recommend Chrissie's yuletide story but I'm not sure she's prepared to have her name associated with it. XD Here are a few others instead:

Everything Changes (Except Oz). L Frank Baum's Oz series. The other one written this year is actually probably objectively better, but shippiness is beating backstory tonight.

The World's Fair. The Amzing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. Post-book, resolves some things without actually resolving them.

Equilibrium. Mirage of Blaze. Snapshots of Naoe and Kagetora's relationship at various points. If I have any complaint it's that the author reaches "obsessed" too quickly, and that's hardly a complaint, is it. XD Very creative interpretation of the prompt "romance".

A-Typical. Nobuta wo Produce. Finished this series, btw. All of the episodes in the middle felt like penultimate episodes -- like a major break from the status quo was just around the corner. It never happens, of course. ^^; The actual final episode was ridiculous, I laughed. Also: had high hopes for Nobuta, but was ultimately disappointed -- she never changes, just gets made into a commercial product. Overall, very sharp and observant, but nothing revolutionary. (And yet I am reading for it. XD)

Several Competent Wizards. Mairelon/Enchanted Forest/Sorcery and Cecelia crossover. NOW I CAN DIE HAPPY.

Duplicity. The Prestige. Absolutely brilliant, if you've seen the movie you should drop what you're doing and go read it right now.

Christingle. His Dark Materials. Will at Oxford, dealing. Very quiet and domestic and happy, it reminded me of another children's fantasy series starring another Will. (Susan Cooper's Dark is Rising.)

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