Tuesday, August 24, 2010

spacial delivery!

Steven and I are watching an episode of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon from last week.  So Jimmy does this thing where he shows books you should NOT read.  This was one of the books (and it truly is a real, legit book!)... we couldn't stop laughing...


I looked it up on Amazon... the summary is pretty intriguing:


"HUMANS OR HEMNOIDS:
AN UNBEARABLE CHOICE!
Planet Dilbia is in a crucial location for both humans and their adversaries, the Hemnoids. Therefore making friends with the Dilbians and establishing a human presence there is of the utmost importance, which may be a problem, since the bearlike Dilbians stand some nine feet tall, and have a high regard for physical prowess. They're not impressed by human technology, either. A real man, er, bear doesn't need machines to do his work for him.
But Dilbians are impressed by sharp thinking, and some have expressed a grudging admiration for the logical (and usually sneaky) mental maneuvers that the human 'shorties' have used to get themselves out of desperate jams. Just maybe that old human craftiness will win over the Dilbians to the human side. If not, we lose a nexus, and the Dilbians will learn just how unbearable Hemnoids can be...."


Also, this was in one of the customer reviews... which I love: 


"Fans of Dickson should be advised this book is an omnibus edition of three previously released works, 
'Spacial Delivery,' 'Spacepaw,' and 'The Law-Twister Shorty.'"


HA! :-)  This is for real folks... fo realz.  


So.... the question of the day.... what do bears do in the woods?

Friday, August 20, 2010

tinkering in santa monica...

So today is August the 20th, in the year of 2010.  Five years ago today, my husband asked me to be his girlfriend.  Well, that language usage sounds kind of weird... of course, he was not by husband at the time... nowhere near it.  The point is... we've been "together" (not married... still a few more days til the 6 month marker on that one... crazy) for 5 years.  Jeepers... 5 years... that is a whole hand... five fingers... a whole lot of time that has just flown by.  Anyway-- even though we agreed to not really "celebrate" the dating anniversary anymore (the marriage anniversary takes precedence now :-) ).... a whole hand is a big deal to me.  So I decided to come down to Santa Monica and visit my husband for lunch at his work (Fandango.com).  I actually drove to work with him this morning (trying to just worry about taking one car), then walked down the street to the local CBTL, had an iced tea latte, and read (one of) my current reads, Tinkers.  The author writes so beautifully... very poetic (in my opinion, anyway).  The perspective shifts back and forth between George (an old man who is dying) and his father, Howard, who suffered from grand mal seizures throughout George's childhood.  Here is an excerpt from a part from Howard's perspective as he has to go off to work each day (he's the local "tinker," doing odd-jobs for the village and selling random things when he can) and worry about whether or not he will have a seizure:



"Your cold mornings are filled with the heartache about the fact that although we are not at ease in this world, it is all we have, that it is ours but that it is full of strife, so that all we can call our own is strife; but even that is better than nothing at all, isn't it?  And as you split frost-laced wood with numb hands, rejoice that your uncertainty is God's will and His grace toward you and that that is beautiful, and part of a greater certainty... And as the ax bites into the wood, be comforted in the fact that the ache in your heart and the confusion in your soul means that you are still alive, still human, and still open to the beauty of the world, even though you have done nothing to deserve it.  And when you resent the ache in your heart, remember: You will be dead and buried soon enough.  .............. [skip paragraph]

Such vanity!  What gall to elect for yourself such attention, good or bad.  Project yourself above yourself.  Look at the top of your dusty hat: cheap felt, wilted and patched with scraps from the last wilted and patched felt hat.  What a crown!  What a king you are to deserve such displeasure, how important that God stop whatever it is He is tending and pitch bolts at your head.  Rise higher, above the trees.  Your crown is already hard to see amid the dust of the road and dirt of the ditch.  But you are still remarkable.  Rise higher, perhaps to the height where the blackbirds flap.  Where have you gone?  Oh, there you are, I think.  That is you, isn't it, that wisp inching along?  Well, rise higher, then, to the belly of the clouds.  Where have you gone?  Now higher, to where, if you are not careful, you might stub your toe on the mountains of the moon.  Where are you?  Never mind you; where is your home, your county, your state, your nation?  Ah, there it is!  And higher now, so that your hair and the lashes of your eyes catch fire from the sparks of solar flares.  On which of those bright bodies do you rule your kingdom of dirt, your cart of soap?  Very well, that one.  I hope you are right---there is little need for a tinker on Mars.  Now higher again, past the eighth planet, named for the king of the sea.  And higher again, past the shadowy ninth, which for now only exists in the dreams of men back on-- Well!  Where have you gone?  Which among those millions of glittering facets is where you belong?  Where is it you toil and drum and fall to the ground and thrash in the weeds?"

So yeah, I read some of that (good stuff).  Then went and had lunch (yummy) with my dear.  Then drove off in search of the hotel I booked a room at.  Missed the hotel, got a little lost, turned myself back in the right direction, found the hotel, checked in, and here I am passing the time until I will go pick up Steven from work at 8 pm.  The plan (if he isn't too exhausted) is to walk down to the Santa Monica pier and see what there is to see.  I haven't been there since I was a baby... so I'm a little curious :-).  Tomorrow we will (try not to) shop (too much) at the promenade.  Then back home to spend my last Sunday relaxing before baaaack to worrrrrk.  ::sigh:: Vacation?  What vacation?



I decided to take pictures of our hotel room; it's a nice, cute lil room.   Not that anyone cares... but like I said, it passes the time.

This is where I am blogging from... so professional 


Comfy bed... cute chair & lamps... cute pillows too ;-)


oh good... there's the bathroom 

There are these old photographs of Santa Monica that are in frames on the wall.  I love old photographs.

Santa Monica Pier... old school


These are my kinda beach people ;-)... is it really so weird to be fully clothed at the beach??






Sunday, August 08, 2010

whoaaaAHHH


“It happened fast. 
Thirty-two minutes for one world to die,
another to be born.” - The Passage






So this is the novel I just finished.  I'm no book critic... but this book was just sooo.... hmmm... cool.  Thrilling.  Depressing.  Mesmerizing.  Long. Very long.  It probably could have done without a couple hundred pages or so of "not-really-all-that-necessary" stuff... but hey.. it was still good.   If you're not into reading books just shy of 800 pages... then you'll probably avoid this one.  Also, if you are easily scared by things that go bump (or bite!) in the dark... then this may not be for you either.  But anyway... I'm not a critic.  The funny thing that I wanted to blog about was how the end of this book was (for me).  So it ends... and it is mad crazy cliffhanger city... like 4 different completely unresolved situations... not-a-clue as to what has happened or will happen to some of my favorite characters.  I was under the impression that this was a solo book.. self-contained... destined to just chill by itself on the shelf.  So I pretty much freaked out and got (maybe a little too) upset when I finished the last page.  I probably worried Steven (just a smidge... maybe... well maybe not... he knows how I am with "my books").   So I immediately went to the internet to do some research and hopefully find some consolation.  Success!  There will NOT be just one book... but three!  I can now rest easily.  But alas... I then discovered that the next book (to be titled The Twelve) is tentatively scheduled to be released sometime in 2012.  2012!!  Maaaaaan.  Lame lame lame.  Come ON Justin Cronin... give me a break.  I'm going to forget everything before then!  ::sigh::  Well, on the brighter side of this dark tale, I did discover that Ridley Scott (Gladiator) purchased the rights to make all 3 books into movies.  If everyone plays their cards right here, they should turn out to be delightfully (not to mention terrifyingly) promising films.   I'm just going to have to distract myself with other books in the mean time.


Oh, and how did I find this big lil nugget of reading pleasure?  Barnes and Noble and its mysterious ways has decided that I like science-fiction and has continuously sent me emails throughout the summer with "suggestions" for reading material.  I can't resist.  


Curious about The Passage?  Here is a short (really short... soo much missing!) summary from the author's website:

"First, the unthinkable: a security breach at a secret U.S. government facility unleashes the monstrous product of a chilling military experiment. Then, the unspeakable: a night of chaos and carnage gives way to sunrise on a nation, and ultimately a world, forever altered. All that remains for the stunned survivors is the long fight ahead and a future ruled by fear—of darkness, of death, of a fate far worse.
As civilization swiftly crumbles into a primal landscape of predators and prey, two people flee in search of sanctuary. FBI agent Brad Wolgast is a good man haunted by what he’s done in the line of duty. Six-year-old orphan Amy Harper Bellafonte is a refugee from the doomed scientific project that has triggered apocalypse. He is determined to protect her from the horror set loose by her captors. But for Amy, escaping the bloody fallout is only the beginning of a much longer odyssey—spanning miles and decades—towards the time and place where she must finish what should never have begun."



In my "research," I came across a random book review and really liked this description of the novel:  


"Imagine Michael Crichton crossbreeding Stephen King's The Stand and Salem's Lot in that lab at Jurassic Park, with rich infusions of Robert McCammon's Swan Song, Battlestar Galactica and even Cormac McCarthy's The Road."


2012... please hurry up.  Scratch that.  I don't want to be two years older and who-knows-where just yet.  How about this: science... please hurry up and invent a time machine so I can go ahead to 2012, buy the book, then bring it back to 2010 and read it.  There. Much better. 

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

new wife, new life, new blog

So the last time I blogged was last year or something (yikes)... I have not been so great with the whole blog thing, have I?  Well, things have changed since last year... the biggest change being that I am now a wife.  I am now a Nelson.  Officially.  And I must say... it IS pretty great.  Our wedding was a blur... but a glorious blur that still makes my heart swell when I think about it.  So many people say your wedding day "goes by sooo fast"... so I tried to prepare myself... tried to make it really last.  But I think that, no matter how hard you try, the day is going to fly by.  Perhaps it is just the nature of "the wedding day."  But it was good. So good.  We are blessed to have been able to partake in this holy sacrament in the Church... it was indescribably powerful and emotional for us.   We celebrated with the best of friends and family at a pretty lovely reception venue.  Dana Grant was able to capture our wedding perfectly with her amazing photography skillz.  And even though it poured rain (I had a feeling that was going to happen... but hey.. that's the risk you take with a February wedding)... somehow it all worked out.  So yeah... that's about it... the "short version."  We got married.  Steven is my husband.  I am his wife.  We still have a lot more growing to do together... and I am so excited for it all.  

Our invitation-- designed by Steven

Holy Angels Catholic Church

Villa del Sol d'Oro (reception venue)

My lovely bridesmaids

The dudez


The partAy


Sunshine & rain... we had it all! 


Yeah... we love each other :-)

Lovely day


P.S.  I just have to say... I HATE the TV show, America's Got Talent.