Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the
week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they
are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
I've had a lot on my mind the past few weeks, and the weight of all the waiting, worrying, stressing was beginning to be too much. I decided to do some baking as a distraction; plus, who doesn't enjoy the smell of fresh baking?!
First up, carmelitas from Lulu the Baker. Just butter, sugar, oatmeal, chocolate, and caramel. Insanely sweet but oh. so. good.
I love oatmeal, so oatmeal apple cookies with brown butter icing and cinnamon dusting via Lauren's Latest were next on the menu. Moist and chewy with a bit of a crunch, the cinnamon in the cookie and the icing pulled it all together really well. Had one for breakfast this morning!
Decadent peanut butter banana chocolate chip cookies just had to make an appearance. I finally found a recipe that doesn't turn them into mini cakes over at Home Sweet Goodness. I have a client who loves peanut butter and she was ecstatic when I presented these yesterday.
And lastly, I do enjoy shortbread and this lime poppy seed shortbread with a Callebaut white chocolate drizzle and sugar sprinkle is delicious. I love baking with lime and this has just enough to give a pop of citrus.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Crafts as Far as the Eye Can See
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the
week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they
are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
After being holed up at home for most of the week working, I really needed to get out and clear my head. I bundled up, headed out, and arrived at the Butterdome Craft Show. This show is a big deal in these parts, with vendors from across Canada descending on Edmonton for 4 days of crafty goodness.
I had not attended for about 5 years so found myself wandering up and down the aisles in search of something unique, something worth buying. Alas, there was nothing that caught my eye enough. It was interesting though, to come across vendors who I remembered from my first show twenty years ago.
(FYI - "Butterdome' is the colloquialism for the University of Alberta's Universiade Pavilion, because of the buildings bright yellow exterior. The Pavilion is the multi-purpose arena which houses soccer games, field hockey games, ceremonial events (i.e. Remembrance Day service), indoor track, etc, etc, you get the picture. It is also where the world's largest dodgeball game took place in February 2012!)
After being holed up at home for most of the week working, I really needed to get out and clear my head. I bundled up, headed out, and arrived at the Butterdome Craft Show. This show is a big deal in these parts, with vendors from across Canada descending on Edmonton for 4 days of crafty goodness.
I had not attended for about 5 years so found myself wandering up and down the aisles in search of something unique, something worth buying. Alas, there was nothing that caught my eye enough. It was interesting though, to come across vendors who I remembered from my first show twenty years ago.
(FYI - "Butterdome' is the colloquialism for the University of Alberta's Universiade Pavilion, because of the buildings bright yellow exterior. The Pavilion is the multi-purpose arena which houses soccer games, field hockey games, ceremonial events (i.e. Remembrance Day service), indoor track, etc, etc, you get the picture. It is also where the world's largest dodgeball game took place in February 2012!)
Friday, December 7, 2012
Adaptation: The Hobbit
"I'm going on an adventure."
"And he gives me courage"
"Your home is now behind you. The world is ahead."
I've never read The Hobbit, or The Lord of the Rings. But I was mightily drawn into the films for the latter, so have somewhat high hopes for this one.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Holidays in the Tube
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the
week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they
are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
I came across these holiday ornaments of sorts on my travels this morning. They are mini televisions with holiday scenes embedded. You can turn the right dial and some of the figurines in the middle of the scene move around. They are cute but $80 plus battery costs did not make them cute enough!
I came across these holiday ornaments of sorts on my travels this morning. They are mini televisions with holiday scenes embedded. You can turn the right dial and some of the figurines in the middle of the scene move around. They are cute but $80 plus battery costs did not make them cute enough!
Friday, November 30, 2012
Book Mark: Top 10 Books According to New York Times
So, The New York Times has published their top 10 books for 2012. I always check out their list, mainly because it tends to be go for the more high-brow, possibly esoteric options than others.
Also check out their 100 Notable Books of 2012 as well, if you are looking for gift ideas.
Courtesy NYTimes.com:
FICTION
Also check out their 100 Notable Books of 2012 as well, if you are looking for gift ideas.
Courtesy NYTimes.com:
FICTION
Taking up where her previous novel, “Wolf Hall,” left off, Mantel makes
the seemingly worn-out story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn newly
fascinating and suspenseful. Seen from the perspective of Henry’s chief
minister, Thomas Cromwell, the ruthless maneuverings of the court move
swiftly to the inevitable executions. Both this novel and its
predecessor were awarded the Man Booker Prize. Might the trilogy’s
forthcoming conclusion, in which Cromwell will meet his demise, score
Mantel a hat trick?
Ware’s innovative graphic novel deepens and enriches the form by
breaking it apart. Packaged in a large box like a board game, the
project contains 14 “easily misplaced elements” — pamphlets, books,
foldout pages — that together follow the residents of a Chicago triplex
(and one anthropomorphized bee) through their ordinary lives. In doing
so, it tackles universal themes including art, sex, family and
existential loneliness in a way that’s simultaneously playful and
profound.
In an empty city in Saudi Arabia, a middle-aged American businessman
waits day after day to close the deal he hopes will redeem his forlorn
life. Eggers, continuing the worldly outlook that informed his recent
books “Zeitoun” and “What Is the What,” spins this spare story — a
globalized “Death of a Salesman” — into a tightly controlled parable of
America’s international standing and a riff on middle-class decline that
approaches Beckett in its absurdist despair.
Smith’s piercing new novel, her first in seven years, traces the
friendship of two women who grew up in a housing project in northwest
London, their lives disrupted by fateful choices and the brutal
efficiency of chance. The narrative edges forward in fragments,
uncovering truths about identity and money and sex with incandescent
language that, for all of its formal experimentation, is intimate and
searingly direct.
A veteran of the Iraq war, Powers places that conflict at the center of
his impressionistic first novel, about the connected but diverging fates
of two young soldiers and the trouble one of them has readjusting to
life at home. Reflecting the chaos of war, the fractured narrative jumps
around in time and location, but Powers anchors it with crystalline
prose and a driving mystery: How did the narrator’s friend die?
NONFICTION
BEHIND THE BEAUTIFUL FOREVERS
Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity.
By Katherine Boo.
Random House, $27.
Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity.
By Katherine Boo.
Random House, $27.
This National Book Award-winning study of life in Annawadi, a Mumbai
slum, is marked by reporting so rigorous it recalls the muckrakers, and
characters so rich they evoke Dickens. The slum dwellers have a skillful
and empathetic chronicler in Boo, who depicts them in all their
humanity and ruthless, resourceful glory.
FAR FROM THE TREE
Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity.
By Andrew Solomon.
Scribner, $37.50.
Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity.
By Andrew Solomon.
Scribner, $37.50.
For more than a decade, Solomon studied the challenges, risks and
rewards of raising children with “horizontal identities,” traits that
they don’t share with their parents. As he investigates how families
have grown stronger or fallen apart while raising prodigies, dwarfs,
schizophrenics, transgendered children or those conceived in rape, he
complicates everything we thought we knew about love, sacrifice and
success.
The fourth volume of Caro’s prodigious masterwork, which now exceeds
3,000 pages, explores, with the author’s signature combination of
sweeping drama, psychological insight and painstaking research,
Johnson’s humiliating years as vice president, when he was excluded from
the inner circle of the Kennedy White House and stripped of power. We
know what Johnson does not, that this purgatory is prelude to the event
of a single horrific day, when an assassin’s bullet placed Johnson, and
the nation he now had to lead, on a new course.
THE PATRIARCH
The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy.
By David Nasaw.
The Penguin Press, $40.
The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy.
By David Nasaw.
The Penguin Press, $40.
Nasaw took six years to complete this sprawling, arresting account of a
banker-cum-speculator-cum-moviemaker-cum-ambassador-cum-dynastic
founder. Joe Kennedy was involved in virtually all the history of his
time, and his biographer persuasively makes the case that he was the
most fascinating member of his large, famous and very formidable family.
WHY DOES THE WORLD EXIST?
An Existential Detective Story.
By Jim Holt.
Liveright Publishing/W. W. Norton & Company, $27.95.
An Existential Detective Story.
By Jim Holt.
Liveright Publishing/W. W. Norton & Company, $27.95.
For several centuries now, thinkers have wondered, “Why is there
something rather than nothing?” In search of an answer, Holt takes the
reader on a witty and erudite journey from London to Paris to Austin,
Tex., as he listens to a varied cast of philosophers, scientists and
even novelists offer solutions that are sometimes closely reasoned,
sometimes almost mystical, often very strange, always entertaining and
thought-provoking.
Adaptation: Rise of the Guardians
Although based on William Joyce's The Guardians of Childhood series, this story takes place about 200 years after that series. The focus of the film is on the Guardians (Santa Claus, Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, and the Sandman) enlisting the help of Jack Frost to stop the Bogeyman.
Hahaha - I laughed just reading the basic plot though I know it is meant as a darker tale. Looks to be good entertainment for the holiday season!
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Book Mark: 19th-Century Century Novel Dioramas
Artist Julia Callon’s Houses of Fiction is a series of photographed
models depicting rooms from five 19th-century novels by women writers. The models explore both the sedate
surfaces and the chaotic subtext of each novel. “The dichotomous representation of
women — mad or sane — is crucial to represent in this series,” Callon
writes. “Therefore, each story is presented as a diptych: one image
represents the passive, subservient woman, while the other represents
‘madness.’”
You can view all the models on Callon's site; below is just one set based on George Eliot's The Lifted Veil.
The Lifted Veil, No. 1
The Lifted Veil, No. 2
You can view all the models on Callon's site; below is just one set based on George Eliot's The Lifted Veil.
The Lifted Veil, No. 1
The Lifted Veil, No. 2
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Book Mark: 2012 Scotiabank Giller Prize
A little behind with this one, as it was awarded the end of October. Nonetheless, it is a significant win for humorist / travel writer / fiction writer Will Ferguson.
Courtesy CBC.ca:
Courtesy CBC.ca:
Will Ferguson has won the 2012 Giller Prize, the $50,000 award considered one of Canada's most prestigious literary honours.
Though best known for his humour and travel writing, the Calgary writer won for his dark novel 419 on Tuesday night, accepting the prize at a star-studded gala in Toronto.
"I want to thank the jury for putting together such a fresh list of books," Ferguson, who was dressed in a traditional kilt, said after taking the stage to accept the prize.
"I commend them for taking the books on their own merit, without preconceptions — which is how a jury should act."
Then, reaching into his sporran for a flask, the author concluded his speech by leading the audience in a toast.
"Ladies and gentlemen: To the written word," Ferguson said before taking a sip from the flask he procured from the pouch.
"And finally, to answer the question you're all wondering — yes I have something on underneath!"
A departure and a continuation
419 is a provocative tale of an email scam and a woman who sets out on a wide-ranging search for those she believes responsible for her father's death. It's different sort of writing for many fans of Ferguson, a three-time winner of the Stephen Leacock Medal.
"Everyone's saying it's a departure, which is understandable, but I think it's a continuum from Spanish Fly," he told reporters after the ceremony, referencing his earlier book.
"Spanish Fly was about con artists in the 1930s. It was a historical novel. So I didn't think of [419] as out of the blue, but I think of it as a continuation."
Ferguson didn't worry as much about writing in a genre for which he isn't as known.
"I think my publisher really took more of a risk than I did, to be honest, when I switched to literary fiction," he said.
Despite the kudos he's received for 419, he not ready to limit himself to one type of writing either.
"If a funny story grabs you, it grabs you. If travel grabs you, it grabs you," he said, noting that his next book will be a travel narrative about Rwanda, Burundi and potentially eastern Congo.
"I try to switch between fiction and travel. It uses different parts of your brain. No, I'm not giving up on travel writing, but I'm certainly enjoying fiction."
Book Mark: 2012 Governor General's Literary Awards
This year's Governor General's Literary Awards were announced a couple weeks ago at a ceremony in Montreal. Below is a list of the winners; all winners and nominees are available on the Canada Council for the Arts site.
English Winners
Fiction: Linda Spalding - The Purchase
Poetry: Julie Bruck - Monkey Ranch
Drama: Catherine Banks - It is Solved by Walking
Non-fiction: Ross King - Leonardo and the Last Supper
Children's Text: Susin Neilsen - The Reluctant Journey of Henry K. Larsen
Children's Illustration: Isabelle Arsenault - Virginia Wolf
Translation: Nigel Spencer - Mia at the Predators' Ball
French Winners
Fiction: France Daigle - Pour Sur
Poetry: Maude Smith Gagnon - Un drap. Une place.
Drama: Geneviève Billette - Contre le Temps
Non-fiction: Normand Chaurette - Comment teur Shakespeare
Children's Text: Aline Apostolska - Un été d’amour et de cendres
Children's Illustration: Élise Gravel - La clé à molette
Translation: Alain Roy - Glenn Gould
English Winners
Fiction: Linda Spalding - The Purchase
Poetry: Julie Bruck - Monkey Ranch
Drama: Catherine Banks - It is Solved by Walking
Non-fiction: Ross King - Leonardo and the Last Supper
Children's Text: Susin Neilsen - The Reluctant Journey of Henry K. Larsen
Children's Illustration: Isabelle Arsenault - Virginia Wolf
Translation: Nigel Spencer - Mia at the Predators' Ball
French Winners
Fiction: France Daigle - Pour Sur
Poetry: Maude Smith Gagnon - Un drap. Une place.
Drama: Geneviève Billette - Contre le Temps
Non-fiction: Normand Chaurette - Comment teur Shakespeare
Children's Text: Aline Apostolska - Un été d’amour et de cendres
Children's Illustration: Élise Gravel - La clé à molette
Translation: Alain Roy - Glenn Gould
Monday, November 26, 2012
Book Mark: The Biblio-Mat
Back in March I had a post about a Brazilian company that created a book vending machine. A bookseller in Toronto has taken this idea and flipped it about 90 degrees. Whereas with the Brazilian model one can select the book to be purchased, the one in Toronto is built to make a surprise.
From PSFK.com:
From PSFK.com:
This vending machine is great for book lovers who can’t decide on their next read. Built by Craig Small for antiquarian bookshop The Monkey’s Paw in Toronto, the Biblio-Mat gives you a random old book when you insert $2. Sporting the claim of 112 million titles and no two alike, the Biblio-Mat offers customers a literary surprise that can vary widely in size and subject matter.
The sound of an old telephone bell and a clunk signal that the mystery book has been dispensed. The machine was created as a fun alternative to a bargain bin where customers can dig through discounted books. You can check it out in the video below:
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Art Missing
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
A nifty example of art as advertising as art located on a local bridge. Sometimes the simplest concepts resonant the best!
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Movember
This is the window from a local business in celebration of Movember!
I support the cause and all.....but.....is Movember turning into another method for businesses to make money off a collective movement without having to do, like, anything? I have conflicted feelings about all the products supporting breast cancer research too. I donate directly to organizations rather than buy 'pink' breath mints, pens, appliances, etc. This way the orgs get all the money. I see no point in rewarding companies for doing what they should do anyway - be philanthropic! Why should consumers be put in the position of deciding how much a company is going to help people; that seems a cop-out to me and an easy way to not be responsible for one's own humanity. But, anyway, this unexpectedly turned out to be a half-asleep rant. Oops...!
Friday, November 16, 2012
Adaptation: The Central Park Five
Documentary Synopsis:
In 1989, five black and Latino teenagers were arrested and charged for brutally attacking and raping a white female jogger in Central Park. News media swarmed the case, calling it “the crime of the century.” But the truth about what really happened didn’t become clear until after the five had spent years in prison for a crime they didn’t commit. With THE CENTRAL PARK FIVE, this story of injustice finally gets the telling it deserves. Based on Sara Burns best-selling book and co-directed by her husband David McMahon and father, filmmaker Ken Burns, this incendiary film traces tells the riveting tale of innocent young men scapegoated for a heinous crime, and serves as a mirror for our times.
Labels:
2012,
Adaptation
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Sticky Snow
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
We were hit with a rather cool but surprising snowstorm this past Wednesday. A range of 6 to 14 inches of heavy, wet snow ( I call it 'sticky snow') blanketed the city. I snapped this of my balcony, where the combination of sticky snow and southerly winds created a nifty snow shelf under the railing. The shelf sticks out about 6 inches, free form and with no support. I'm curious as to how long it will last.
During a walk the previous day, I had snapped the following as it reminded me of spring. Spring seems an awfully long ways away now!
We were hit with a rather cool but surprising snowstorm this past Wednesday. A range of 6 to 14 inches of heavy, wet snow ( I call it 'sticky snow') blanketed the city. I snapped this of my balcony, where the combination of sticky snow and southerly winds created a nifty snow shelf under the railing. The shelf sticks out about 6 inches, free form and with no support. I'm curious as to how long it will last.
During a walk the previous day, I had snapped the following as it reminded me of spring. Spring seems an awfully long ways away now!
Friday, November 9, 2012
Adaptation: Zero Dark Thirty
I've been trying to decide how I feel about this film. I enjoy the director and her storytelling abilities, but the story itself is not really all that appealing. I understand why it is for so many, but I get hung up on political machinations of it all. I do admire the hell out of the people who actually executed the mission. And if they feel the film is 'accurate' then who am I to disagree?
Labels:
2012,
Adaptation
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Book Mark: 2012 Taste Canada Food Writing Awards
This past Monday, the best Canadian cookbooks were honoured at the 15th annual Taste Canada Food Writing Awards at a gala event in Toronto.
The 2012 English language winners were:
The 2012 English language winners were:
- Culinary Narratives: Unquenchable by Natalie MacLean
- Regional/Cultural Cookbooks: Made in Italy by David Rocco
- Single-Subject Cookbooks: Spilling the Beans by Julie Van Rosendaal and Sue Duncan
- General Cookbooks: Chef Michael Smith's Kitchen by Michael Smith
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Dr. Maya Angelou and Storytelling
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long
as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Dr. Maya Angelou made her way to our snowy city on October 28 for "An Evening with...". Her talk was part of the Unique Lives and Experiences lecture series. This was my second talk with Dr. Angelou, the first being maybe 10 years ago or so in the same location.
The stage below (I really need to get a new phone with a better camera) was a little bit odd when first entering the venue. The left side was blocked by a large curtain. The middle was set like a front porch, with Dr. Angelou's chair in front. And the right side held a piano and microphone.
I initially thought maybe there was some performance art taking place as well. This was true, to some extent, as a local singer started the evening with a couple songs. Then Dr. Angelou came out and enthralled us all for about an hour. When she came it out, it became clearer as to why the curtain and low lights - respect and grace. It was there to provide some privacy, as she required assistance from two individuals on and off the staff through the curtain.
It hit me at the end just how time may weaken the physical but not the mental. She was as acutely on point as last time, and she is just an amazing storyteller. It really is all in the narrative and how it reaches out the audience on varying emotional and psychological levels. But it takes a skilled narrator to propel the reaching out and there are not many of this calibre. I could just listen to her talk 24/7 about poetry, history, anything really.
Dr. Maya Angelou made her way to our snowy city on October 28 for "An Evening with...". Her talk was part of the Unique Lives and Experiences lecture series. This was my second talk with Dr. Angelou, the first being maybe 10 years ago or so in the same location.
The stage below (I really need to get a new phone with a better camera) was a little bit odd when first entering the venue. The left side was blocked by a large curtain. The middle was set like a front porch, with Dr. Angelou's chair in front. And the right side held a piano and microphone.
I initially thought maybe there was some performance art taking place as well. This was true, to some extent, as a local singer started the evening with a couple songs. Then Dr. Angelou came out and enthralled us all for about an hour. When she came it out, it became clearer as to why the curtain and low lights - respect and grace. It was there to provide some privacy, as she required assistance from two individuals on and off the staff through the curtain.
It hit me at the end just how time may weaken the physical but not the mental. She was as acutely on point as last time, and she is just an amazing storyteller. It really is all in the narrative and how it reaches out the audience on varying emotional and psychological levels. But it takes a skilled narrator to propel the reaching out and there are not many of this calibre. I could just listen to her talk 24/7 about poetry, history, anything really.
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Alexander McCall Smith
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Author Alexander McCall Smith was in town this past week as part of our local LitFest activities. I have actually only read one of this novels (hey, at least I've read one!) but had heard great reviews of his talks so decided to attend.
Before Smith came on stage we were treated to the drumming of a local African group. They were joined for part of the performance by a bagpipper. Imagine the combination of African drums and Scottish bagpipes. Insanely good!
Energy spiked, out walked Smith and a riotous good time was underway. Smith was thoroughly engaging and funny. I am still trying to comprehend that he writes a 1,000 words per hour. It boggles my mind 'cause I can only achieve that number if I write gibberish for the hour!
The only slight downer to the evening was the interviewer. This is the second time I've attended a literary event where an author was interviewed by another author, and both times have been let downs. Not a fan at all of this style (though maybe it is because I do not like the authors doing the interviewing?). Smith has a very natural story-telling capability and the interviewer kept trying to bring it back to what they wanted to ask rather than listening and bouncing off the narrative Smith was weaving. Oh well - I enjoyed the evening nonetheless. :-)
Author Alexander McCall Smith was in town this past week as part of our local LitFest activities. I have actually only read one of this novels (hey, at least I've read one!) but had heard great reviews of his talks so decided to attend.
Before Smith came on stage we were treated to the drumming of a local African group. They were joined for part of the performance by a bagpipper. Imagine the combination of African drums and Scottish bagpipes. Insanely good!
Energy spiked, out walked Smith and a riotous good time was underway. Smith was thoroughly engaging and funny. I am still trying to comprehend that he writes a 1,000 words per hour. It boggles my mind 'cause I can only achieve that number if I write gibberish for the hour!
The only slight downer to the evening was the interviewer. This is the second time I've attended a literary event where an author was interviewed by another author, and both times have been let downs. Not a fan at all of this style (though maybe it is because I do not like the authors doing the interviewing?). Smith has a very natural story-telling capability and the interviewer kept trying to bring it back to what they wanted to ask rather than listening and bouncing off the narrative Smith was weaving. Oh well - I enjoyed the evening nonetheless. :-)
Friday, October 26, 2012
Adaptation: Life of Pi
Really curious about this one, though am confident Ang Lee will have it well in hand.
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: End of an Era
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Make a pilgrimage yesterday to a bookstore closing. Greenwood's Bookshoppe officially closed its doors yesterday, bringing 33 years of independent book selling to a close. It was a sad moment, to make my last purchase there as it was the store where I purchased my first book in this city 20 years ago. It was also from the owners that I received a $200 gift certificate for best undergraduate honours thesis back in the day.
Here is my final purchase; the middle book seemed appropriate as it is all about changes in the publishing industry.
Support your local book sellers!
Make a pilgrimage yesterday to a bookstore closing. Greenwood's Bookshoppe officially closed its doors yesterday, bringing 33 years of independent book selling to a close. It was a sad moment, to make my last purchase there as it was the store where I purchased my first book in this city 20 years ago. It was also from the owners that I received a $200 gift certificate for best undergraduate honours thesis back in the day.
Here is my final purchase; the middle book seemed appropriate as it is all about changes in the publishing industry.
Support your local book sellers!
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Art Gallery
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Wow, has it really been over a month since my last post? Egads! I really should stop reading so much and start sharing more!
Here's a photo of our art gallery, taken the morning of my last day working downtown.
And a snap of the sunrise beginning, on my second-to-last day.
Wow, has it really been over a month since my last post? Egads! I really should stop reading so much and start sharing more!
Here's a photo of our art gallery, taken the morning of my last day working downtown.
And a snap of the sunrise beginning, on my second-to-last day.
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Freak Storm
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
This past Thursday afternoon we were rocked by a freakish hail storm. I got home with about one minute to spare before hail started propelling towards the earth. I snapped this as the hail was just starting to accumulate. One newspaper described the hail stones as being the size of butterscotch candies. That's a new one!
The next morning, I 'enjoyed' navigating the aftermath on my way to work:
This past Thursday afternoon we were rocked by a freakish hail storm. I got home with about one minute to spare before hail started propelling towards the earth. I snapped this as the hail was just starting to accumulate. One newspaper described the hail stones as being the size of butterscotch candies. That's a new one!
The next morning, I 'enjoyed' navigating the aftermath on my way to work:
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Of the North
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Someone asked why I have only posted photos taken of the south side of the river and not the north, since it is the "North" Saskatchewan river. I really didn't have an answer, so here's one of the north taken from the west during this morning's hike:
Then a bonus one pointed north and evoking Robert Frost:
Someone asked why I have only posted photos taken of the south side of the river and not the north, since it is the "North" Saskatchewan river. I really didn't have an answer, so here's one of the north taken from the west during this morning's hike:
And one of the north at almost water level:
Happy Saturday all!
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: View From A Bridge
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Taken this morning on the way back from hiking, looking west from the foot bridge spanning the North Saskatchewan river.
Taken this morning on the way back from hiking, looking west from the foot bridge spanning the North Saskatchewan river.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: Walk to Fight Arthritis
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books.
The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family
member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for
the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as
they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
This past Sunday I participated in the third annual Walk to Fight Arthritis, sponsored by The Arthritis Society. Over $2 million has been raised the past two years with around $1.6 million raised this year. Of that, $80,000 was raised in Edmonton by 300 participants. Yeah us!!
What I like about this particular walk is the "virtual walk" option. This is for people who do not live in a location where a sponsored walk is taking place or who are unable to physically take part. Because I was not sure where work would be taking me this year (for awhile looked like I was heading across the border) I signed up for the virtual option. I ended up staying put in one of the sponsored locations but decided to map out my own 5km walk route in the river valley. Least anyone think I flaked out on the obligation, fear not! I took some photographic proof for your enjoyment.
(Pictures from the 'official' walk location)
I started out around 7am and headed to Enzio Faraone park, which is the starting location of most of my walks. Sky was overcast but no rain thankfully. Decision: go left and cross the river or go right and stroll around Victoria park.
And the right side wins (Royal Glenora the white building on the left)!
And one last shot heading home. For those of you here, I'm beginning to think the crane by the science buildings at the UofA is a permanent fixture. It's been there like 10 years or so now, right??
This past Sunday I participated in the third annual Walk to Fight Arthritis, sponsored by The Arthritis Society. Over $2 million has been raised the past two years with around $1.6 million raised this year. Of that, $80,000 was raised in Edmonton by 300 participants. Yeah us!!
What I like about this particular walk is the "virtual walk" option. This is for people who do not live in a location where a sponsored walk is taking place or who are unable to physically take part. Because I was not sure where work would be taking me this year (for awhile looked like I was heading across the border) I signed up for the virtual option. I ended up staying put in one of the sponsored locations but decided to map out my own 5km walk route in the river valley. Least anyone think I flaked out on the obligation, fear not! I took some photographic proof for your enjoyment.
(Pictures from the 'official' walk location)
I started out around 7am and headed to Enzio Faraone park, which is the starting location of most of my walks. Sky was overcast but no rain thankfully. Decision: go left and cross the river or go right and stroll around Victoria park.
And the right side wins (Royal Glenora the white building on the left)!
Coming up on one of my favorite parts of this trail; the trees form a canopy over the trail and feels like walking through a 'nature' bridge.
A view out across the river valley and Victoria Park golf course.
Now, what would a walk in the river valley be without tackling some stairs? Probably a lot more pleasant but I did this set five times. Luckily it was not raining or it could have been a bit treacherous.
And after wandering through the trails around the park and up the hill, I came upon a favorite exit point:
One last burn to finish the walk!
A huge, gigantic THANK YOU to everyone who sponsored my walk. I am happy to say my arthritis did not make itself known throughout the walk or the day. This is always a bonus when the weather is overcast and chilly. Until next year.....
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Book Mark: Danuta Gleed Literary Award
Courtesy CBC.ca:
Toronto writer Ian Williams has won the $10,000 Danuta Gleed Literary Award for his debut short story collection Not Anyone's Anything.
The Writers' Union of Canada named Williams the latest winner on Thursday. He divides his time between Toronto and Massachusetts, where he teaches at Fitchburg State University.
"The writing in Not Anyone's Anything is fresh, funny and intelligent," the jury said in its citation.
"This is a solid first book with gripping, convincing dialogue, a fluid sense of urbanity and structural innovation that doesn't come off as trickery. You see the poet here, in the crisp choice of language and even in the line breaks, as Williams uses typography and unusual layout to suggest a split-screen view of life.
Williams told CBC News he was "thrilled" to be recognized. Though short story collections don't often get same attention as novels, he said he loves them because they are "just the right amount to be digestible."
"I think Canadians do the short story better than anyone else on the planet," he said on Thursday.
Not Anyone's Anything is a collection of short stories set in and around Toronto. Its characters include an aspiring pianist who asks her brother to mutilate her hands, an MBA who builds a science fair project with a nine-year-old to avoid a family crisis and a woman hunting for a breakthrough for a terminal disease.
In the collection, Williams experiments with non-traditional formatting. For example, one story has two narrative threads and the page is split horizontally: the intruder in the basement tells one story along the bottom, while the drama of the couple upstairs is told at the top.
"I wanted to create a book that really celebrated print," Williams explained, adding that his publisher, Freehand Books, "really took a risk."
The author is a fan of short fiction and longs for the day when readers download short stories in the same way they download music.
In addition to Not Anyone's Anything, Williams has published the poetry collections Personals and You Know Who You Are. The two runners-up for the award — Jessica Westhead (And Also Sharks) and Daniel Griffin (Stopping for Strangers) — will each receive $500.
The annual literary prize was created as a celebration of the life of Danuta Gleed, a writer of short fiction who died in December 1996. Her first collection, One of the Chosen, was published posthumously.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: The Emerald City
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
Going through my phone storage to free up space and came across this photo taken last year. I managed to score a front row seat to Wicked and took this photo before the show. The seat was a bit too close for someone short like me but it was delicious to finally hear the soundtrack live and in-person (and unencumbered by my croaky voice piping in periodically). Live theatre always makes me feel alive and full of energy, especially musicals. I just wish the feeling would last longer than a couple days!
Going through my phone storage to free up space and came across this photo taken last year. I managed to score a front row seat to Wicked and took this photo before the show. The seat was a bit too close for someone short like me but it was delicious to finally hear the soundtrack live and in-person (and unencumbered by my croaky voice piping in periodically). Live theatre always makes me feel alive and full of energy, especially musicals. I just wish the feeling would last longer than a couple days!
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Saturday Snapshot: New Perspective
Saturday Snapshot is a weekly meme hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. The guidelines are to post a photo that you or a friend or family member have taken and then link it back to Alyce's original post for the week. Photos can be old or new and be of any subject as long as they are clean and appropriate for all eyes to see.
With spring comes a change in projects, and a recent switch has provided me with a large cubicle (with actual walls - never had that before!) and two large windows offering this view:
The top right building is City Hall, with the pool out front. Not pictured to the left is the square where numerous festivals congregate throughout the summer. In the bottom right is the front of our new art gallery.
With spring comes a change in projects, and a recent switch has provided me with a large cubicle (with actual walls - never had that before!) and two large windows offering this view:
The top right building is City Hall, with the pool out front. Not pictured to the left is the square where numerous festivals congregate throughout the summer. In the bottom right is the front of our new art gallery.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday
Every Tuesday Diane at Bibliophile by the sea posts the opening paragraph (maybe two) of a book she decided to read based on the opening paragraph (s). This is the First Chapter First Paragraph meme.
My entry this week comes from Shelley Jackson's Half Life: A Novel
Blanche, white night of my dark day. My sister, my self. Blanche: a cry building behind sealed lips, then blowing through. First the pout, then the plosive; the meow of the vowel; then the fricative sound of silence.
Shhhh.
Blanch is sleeping. She has been sleeping for fifteen years.
I can tell you the exact moment I knew she was waking up. But allow me a day's grace. Let me remember that last afternoon, unimportant in itself, wonderfully unimportant, when I was still Nora, just Nora, Nora Olney, Nora alone.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Line By Line: Markus Zuzak, The Book Thief
“He stood a few meters from the step and spoke with great conviction, great joy.
"Alles ist Scheisse," he announced.
All is shit.”
“The Germans in basements were pitiable, surely, but at least they had a chance. That basement was not a washroom. They were not sent there for a shower. For those people, life was still achievable.”
“Papa sat with me tonight. He brought the accordion down and sat close to where Max used to sit. I often look at his fingers and face when he plays. The accordion breathes. There are lines on his cheeks. They look drawn on, and for some reason, when I see them, I want to cry. It is not for any sadness or pride. I just like the way they move and change. Sometimes I think my papa is an accordion. When he looks at me and smiles and breathes, I hear the notes.”
“Clearly," said Arthur,"you're an idiot- but you're our kind of idiot. Come on.”
Friday, May 11, 2012
Book Beginnings on Friday
Book Beginnings on Friday is a meme hosted by Gilion from Rose City Reader. Instructions are pretty clear: just share the opening sentence of your current read, making sure that you include the title and author so others know what you're reading.
This week's entry - Jasper Fforde's Shades of Grey
This week's entry - Jasper Fforde's Shades of Grey
It began with my father not wanting to see the Last Rabbit and ended up with my being eaten by a carnivorous plant.
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