Reasonably So


IS IT TOO SOON TO ASK FOR MY “GRILLMASTER” APRON?
17 June 2008, 2.58 pm
Filed under: books, food and drink | Tags: , , , , ,

My dears, I have a few things to report on. Food related things! I love food.

1) I just finished reading Heat by Bill Buford.

It was a graduation gift, and a great one, at that. It is an excellent book, and I highly recommend it if you like to cook, even a little bit. It reminded me that I can do whatever I want in the world as long as I have a good reason, forced me to realize that restaurant cooking is NOT my dream job, and inspired me to reach for more in my own kitchen–I can be an even better cook than I already am. This last point leads me to item 2…

2) I finished reading Heat on the morning of Father’s Day. Last year for Father’s Day, my sister and I cooked/grilled up a feast for my dad, and especially after being inspired to be a better cook, I was so ready to take that on again. This time my stepmom helped me. One of the things I’m trying to focus on lately is more seasonally-geared eating. I found a few recipes that seemed mid-June friendly and seemed like they would work well together. I didn’t take pictures (sorry), but I found some on the net so you can drool as you think about how good they probably tasted.

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THAT’S THE SOUND OF THE GIRL FINISHING HER THESIS.
24 April 2008, 10.06 am
Filed under: books, lifestyle | Tags: , , ,

PUBLIC APOLOGY: I am sorry I forced you to look at Quasimodo constantly for the last week and a half.

My eye is better (my cough is not). I turned in my final thesis on Tuesday, so you can only imagine the kind of things I’ve been doing for the past thirteen days. It’s not the past days I’m concerned about so much as those to come. I don’t even know what to do with three free hours right now, let alone the rest of my life.

In order to fill up some of those new hours, I picked up a book at the library yesterday. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender is the Night. I picked it up because of the following quotation from an essay by David Hare “…on factual theatre.”

In a famous letter to the novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway expressed reservations about his friend’s great masterpiece Tender is the Night. Scott, Hemingway said, had taken elements of his own relationship with his wife Zelda, he had added in events which had befallen their mutual friends, Gerald and Sara Murphy, and then he had laid on top of this factual mélange a third layer, this time of pure invention. This was, Hemingway said, no way to write, because the reader was distracted by the question of what was real and what was not. In his reply, Fitzgerald pointed out that this was, actually, one of the means by which writers of fiction had always operated. Elizabethan dramatists, including Shakespeare, had regarded it as normal artfully to mix facts about people who had really existed with what these same people inspired in the author’s imagination. Hemingway had the perfect right to doubt Scott’s success with what he called ‘composite characters.’ What he had no right to do was question the method itself.

Hare goes on to discuss documentary theatre as a form, based on his own experiences:

Never for a moment has it occurred to me that such works, using verbatim dialogue, organized, arranged and orchestrated with proper thematic care should involve less labour, skill, or creative imagination than those dreamt up in the privacy of a study.

I bet you assumed I only thought about chicken wings, ice cream, and arts and crafts! Au contraire, mon frère! I wrote that whole damn thesis about documentary theatre, and although I have never wanted to think less about it, I am choosing to read Tender is the Night because of it. I didn’t actually include any part of David Hare’s essay in my thesis, but I found it fascinating. Even in my post-thesis mayhem, I am extending my study. CREEPY, right? Definitely didn’t think I’d be into that, but then I think about how much I like to think and learn, so why should I stop?

As I dive into this book (slowly… I dozed off after 5 pages yesterday), I look forward to being transported into another world. I look forward to immersing myself in that world and swimming around in it, but then getting out of it and thinking about the structure Fitzgerald created, and the amount to which it bothers or intrigues me that the characters are composites or the events are dreamed up. In short, I’m reading for the excitement of reading, but I’m also going to have a little book club with myself about my reading.

Maybe that’s just a way to fill up the time, but I feel pretty good about it.

——————-

Work Cited:

Hare, David. “…on factual theatre,” Resource Material. Talking to Terrorists.

By Robin Soans. London: Oberon Books Ltd., 2005. 111-113.



THE LINE AS A CELEBRATED DAREDEVIL
27 March 2008, 10.35 am
Filed under: books, lifestyle, video | Tags: ,

I believe there’s a general consensus that the book versions of things are better than the movie versions. I certainly agree, but this is a pretty good interpretation of one of my favorite books. You’ve heard of this one: Norton Juster’s The Dot and the Line. It’s not only the origin of this blog’s name, but it helps me live my life, in a way. Cheesy? Sure. Useful for me? Absolutely. I wanted to share and let it speak for itself.

Let me know what you think.



HIPPIE GNU EAR!
10 January 2008, 11.31 am
Filed under: books, lifestyle | Tags: , , ,

DISCLAIMER: It has already been a new year for ten days, and I recognize that I have been a lazybones about posting. I will do my best to get my act together, starting today.

I feel like my first post of 2008 should consist of lists. I like making lists, and I like reading lists, so, henceforth, you will be reading my lists (AND LIKING IT!). The first list is a list of the lists; the lists follow after the jump.

List I: Selected books I read (and appreciated) in 2007.

List II: A bountiful holiday receiving season.

List III: My 5 most favorite websites.

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