05.28.09

Anime Series: Jigoku Shoujo

Posted in Movies and TV tagged , at 7:19 am by lilaenne

(Yes, yes, I know, another not-quite-horror series. I write about what I actually watch, and I’m in a horror mood lately. Cope.)

An unusual rumor is spreading, among both young and old, from city to countryside: a website, accessible only at midnight, where you can request vengeance against another person. Just type in their name, and the Jigoku Shoujo (Hell Girl) will take them away. Seekers with intense grudges will find this rumor to be true, and the price of revenge greater than they could imagine…
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05.25.09

Today’s experiment: categorically unnecessary advice

Posted in Books tagged , at 6:00 am by lilaenne

Free-Range Kids
by Lenore Skenazy

The best thing about working in a library is getting to skim the first 10 pages of every new nonfiction book that comes in. As reference is part of my job, I do try to look at every book, so that I have some basic concepts about the subject matter when trying to help people find info. In a given day, I’ll peruse political science, criminal justice, home carpentry and fad diets.

Except for the books on my own favorite subjects, those 10 pages are more than enough. Occasionally, however, the material and writing style grab my attention enough that I’ll bring a title along on lunch break for another chapter or two.

Or, in this case, every lunch break for a week so I could finish it.
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05.21.09

New tech and old memories

Posted in Movies and TV tagged , at 6:41 am by lilaenne

So, my husband and I signed up not too long ago for one of those DVD-rental-by-mail services. (Yes, I realize there probably is only the one, but I’m not putting a brand name in text where search engines can index it.) It’s been quite useful so far, as there are plenty of movies I’d watch once but not want to buy and store, and the library doesn’t have all of them.

An interesting side effect revealed itself when we sat down together to start compiling films to rent: neither of us had seen the other’s favorite childhood movies. So we scattered them through the list, and take turns snickering at one another’s cherished childhood memories as the films arrive. And since I didn’t watch anything else this week, today I’m gonna talk about…
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05.18.09

Light and Shadow

Posted in Books tagged at 6:31 am by lilaenne

Darkborn
by Allison Sinclair

I know I usually have some little anecdote here about how or why a book grabbed my attention, but I got nothin’ today. This may partly explain how I got myself into the middle of such an overwhelming number of books; I just got a little greedy when it came to dragging things home from the library, when I should have been waiting for something to really stand out from the crowd.

Not that I regret reading this one.

The premise here is one of a divided world – due to an ancient curse, half the people can exist only in darkness, the other half in continual light. The story is set in a rather unusual city, where through cooperative effort and well maintained walls, the two groups live practically side by side. Our main character, Balthazar, is a Darkborn physician and a member of the council that negotiates the peace between the two groups. He even maintains a friendship with a Lightborn, an assassin named Floria, whose house adjoins Bal’s childhood home via a sound-permeable paper wall.
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05.14.09

Anime Series: Red Garden

Posted in Movies and TV tagged , at 8:14 am by lilaenne

I have something of a love-hate relationship with horror and suspense in media. For the bad ones this pretty much sums up the reason; for some of the better ones (Silent Hill on film, the book The Ring) it’s the fact that I get freaked out enough to practically stop breathing, yet I’m enjoying the piece so much I have to know how it ends.

There’s a third way with horror though – one that ignores the “rule” that our cute spunky protagonist is given a noble motivation and an arsenal of cleverly homemade weapons, then manages to subdue the Big Terrible Evil Thing while suffering no more than a few scratches. Instead of a hero and a villain, two morally neutral antagonists want one another dead, and even accomplishing that won’t bring any personal satisfaction. Basically, life deals a few people the shittiest hands ever, and they play them as best they can. A story where gruesome supernatural fantasy is cut through with the worst of grim reality.

A story like Red Garden.
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05.11.09

One Down…

Posted in Books at 9:34 pm by lilaenne

Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness
by Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein

Another in the series of post-Freakonomics books where economists explain new concepts and applications for a popular non-fiction audience. This one’s on the subject of “Choice Architecture” – basically, being aware of the ways in which the presentation of options influences the outcome of a decision, and building said presentation to maximize certain choices.

This was an interesting and sometimes frustrating read for me, because I found some of the assumptions about how the world operates (standard assumptions among economists, as far as I can tell) to be the total opposite of mine. The twin ideas that the magic of the market will generally improve people’s lives, and that government intervention is always suspect, are often underlying their statements in an “everybody knows that” sort of way. Yet many of their suggestions require some sort of government intervention, usually buried inside of such neutral language as “credit card companies should be required to”. (See the chapter on the privatization of the Swedish social security system: the government chose a default fund that really is in the best interest of the citizens; the private companies that advertised their own portfolios just had pics of celebrities saying “buy our stuff!” and weren’t generally as good for the citizen as the default plan. Yet throughout the book the “market good, government bad” truism still holds. Curious.) The notion that a business’ goal of maximizing profits may be antithetical to the general public’s goal of, I dunno, not getting bled dry by the hidden costs of buying a house or a college education, is only mentioned within 20 pages of the end.

The first few sections of the book are worth reading for anybody: if nothing else, to understand how choice architecture influences your decisions (cost aversion versus reward seeking when setting goals, for instance) and to recognize times when your choices are being pushed in certain directions.

05.04.09

The Source of the Problem

Posted in Books, Housekeeping and info at 6:55 pm by lilaenne

Here are the books I’m currently in the middle of reading:

  • Postern of Fate, Agatha Christie
  • Bass Cathedral, Nathaniel Mackey
  • Darkborn, Alison Sinclair
  • Nudge : improving decisions about health, wealth, and happiness, Richard Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein
  • Miss Manners’ Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior, Judith Martin (3rd time through)
  • We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson (4th or 5th time through)
  • Confessions of an Eco-Sinner, Fred Pearce
  • Nine Greek Dramas, Harvard Classics Series (specifically, The Bacchae by Euripides)
  • Second Treatise of Civil Government, John Locke

Clearly, I’ve gone insane.

I want to read all most of them through to the end, but the difficult ones get set aside in favor of the mental equivalent of instant pudding. Or, in the case of the two re-reads, mental chicken corn chowder — reasonably nutritious, and so familiar and comforting.

Any advice on a plan of attack would be most helpful.