All Consuming


Items qatesiurade consumed in…

October, 2008



  1. Wednesday 1

    Finished consuming…
    In Search of a Midnight Kiss — 4 people

    Worth consuming!


  2. Friday 3
    B00005ka70

    Finished consuming…
    Ultraviolet — 14 people

    Worth consuming!

    ?

    Finished consuming…
    City Of Dust — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  3. Monday 6

    Finished consuming…
    Religulous — 10 people

    Worth consuming!


  4. Thursday 9
    0312860722

    Finished consuming…
    Epiphany of the Long Sun — 5 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: gene wolfe colonization solar cycle


  5. Friday 10
    0312872577

    Finished consuming…
    On Blue's Waters — 8 people

    Worth consuming!


  6. Monday 13
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    On Blue's Waters — 2 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: gene wolfe quest colonization solar cycle


  7. Thursday 16
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    In Green's Jungles — 1 person

    Worth consuming! Tagged: gene wolfe colonization solar cycle

    61katedb-vl

    Finished consuming…
    Fleet Foxes — 39 people

    Worth consuming!


  8. Sunday 19
    51l0msp28ml

    Finished consuming…
    Heroes — 15 people

    Worth consuming!


  9. Monday 20

    Finished consuming…
    W [Theatrical Release] — 19 people

    Not worth consuming

    Finished consuming…
    Traffic — 5 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: driving perception behavior merging cars highways multitasking pavement markings self-perception

    Finished consuming…
    Burn After Reading — 123 people

    Worth consuming!


  10. Tuesday 21
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    The Numerati — 2 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: technology math blogging statistics data mining loyalty cards


  11. Wednesday 22

    Finished consuming…
    Brand Upon the Brain! — 22 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: orphans retro quirky silent


  12. Saturday 25
    0312424930

    Finished consuming…
    Balkan Ghosts — 8 people

    Worth consuming!


  13. Monday 27
    0312873646

    Finished consuming…
    Return to the Whorl — 3 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: gene wolfe colonization identity crisis ow my third eye! solar cycle


  14. Thursday 30
    0801843871

    Started consuming…
    The Cheese and the Worms — 4 people


    0618658947

    Started consuming…
    The Great Railway Bazaar — 4 people



Entries about these items

    0312424930

    Moving and evocative — 3 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I picked this up solely on the strength of Robert D. Kaplan’s later work, An Empire Wilderness, one of the best books about travel in America’s heartland I’ve ever read. Balkan Ghosts did not disappoint!

    I agree with the other reviewer that the first section, on the former Yugoslavia, had the least impact, but I think a lot of this is due to the power of the other sections; it suffers by contrast. It’s still a great probing into what a mess this part of the world really is, and why it is, and how it got to be that way, and why it’s a task beyond most if not all imaginations to ever satisfactorily tidy it up; Tito just clamped a lid down and let it stew and now it’s frothing over. How are we going to do it better or different (for another look at this area, I’d strongly recommend Joe Sacco’s Safe Area Gorazde).

    The sections on Bulgraria and Romania pull off the difficult trick of de-romanticizing these places—and then making them romantic all over again in a new way. I fell in love with the same people Kaplan did, especially his friend Guillermo.

    Strangely, I find the last section, on Greece, to be less engaging. I say strangely because he did live there after all—but the story here becomes much more of a dreary rehashing of recent Greek history. Still very informative—I’d always vaguely known Greece was another mess that had been glossed over but not to this degree. And he succeeds in making the argument that Greece is a Balkan country more than a Mediterranean one (though my Mom told me that decades ago—but I’ve an unusual mother).

    All in all… this is a library book I checked out that I can just tell I’m going to end up hunting down in hardcover for my personal library because I’ll want to re-read it a lot.

    A story about "Brand Upon the Brain!" — 3 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    In another one of those weird juxtapositions, I had just gotten into the Rumania chapters of Robert D. Kaplan’s Balkan Ghosts when this film arrived in my mailbox courtesy of Netflix. Rumania, Rumania, Rumania! Look at my birthmark!

    This film is a blast, very quirky and amusing and at times just a little poignant with shades of City of Lost Children as well as all those wild German expressionist silent films it draws on as inspiration.

    I would LOVE to have gone to one of the live performances and seen the floor show, as it were. The DVD gives a flavor in the extras, but I’m sure the live stuff was beyond compare.

    As it is, this is a good time on DVD!

    ?

    Amusing and thought-provoking — 3 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Data mining. Loyalty cards. Manipulation. Statistics. It all sounds kind of sinister, doesn’t it? But as Baxter demonstrates in this engaging little book, there’s an up-side to all of these trends as well. We can trade privacy for first-class health-monitoring technology in the home, a magic carpet that gauges our neurological health via its measurement of our footsteps, nanites that read our blood chemistry and report it to our physicians, etc. And we’ll never miss a deal on our favorite flavor of humus at the supermarket again, if we scan our loyalty cards into the reader on our “smart” cart, or even just have it in our pockets when we enter the store.

    Yes, Baxter says, it is a little creepy that so much about us can and will be known. But really, why all the secrecy anyway?

    Kidding, of course. This book also scared me a little. But it also demonstrated a certain inevitability to it all and suggested that it won’t all be so bad. After all, several of the “Numerati” he profiles have become themselves stellar privacy advocates, and who better to concern themselves with abuses of technology and knowledge than those who are best at developing and manipulating it?

    Disappointing — 4 weeks ago

    NOT WORTH CONSUMING

    OK, in all honesty I’m neither an Oliver Stone fan nor a fan of our current administration, so I approached this movie with some trepidation but still some hope because, well, I wanted to be pleased, was willing to be pleased.

    About 2/3 of the way through, though, I gave up and just waited for the end (I don’t walk out of movies unless they’re truly horrible, like Boxing Helena horrible). Oliver Stone is another director who’s bought into his own hype and dragged a lot of quality talent into the muck with him. Nothing but caricature (why bother getting an actress to play Condoleeza when the role as written and realized could have been played by a trained bird?) and slapdash and stock footage edited in to beef up poor storytelling (though possibly it’s suffering, this film, from contrast with the near-genius editing of Religulous, which I took in last Monday).

    This is a horrible story of a bad and embarrassing period in our history that isn’t quite over yet, but it’s still an important story that needs better treatment.

    A story about "Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (and What It Says About Us)" — 4 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    I work as a public safety dispatcher in a region of the country often cited in this book and so reading it was a singular experience. I expected to be a choir member being preached to—in my workplace the worst insult one co-worker can throw at another is to call her a “motorist”—and this expectation was met, but only sort of.

    I really kind of want everyone who drives to read this book just to remind him of how limited our understanding of what’s going on around us from minute to minute is in general, as well as when driving a car. We have blind spots both objectively in terms of visual obstructions and the built-in limitations of these wet gooey cameras we call our eyes AND in terms of how we perceive ourselves, as “above average drivers” and “not as drunk as that guy down the bar” and “duty-bound to report that truck driver who flipped us off when we cut in front of him on an icy two-lane”...

    But lest I rant, lest I rant… this is a fine and entertaining read even for a professional traffic crank like me. Vanderbilt does a great job of conveying his counter-intuitive surprises, that roundabouts are safer than grid-based intersections, that it really is better to “steer with the pedals” when you’re in a skid, that bicycle riders really aren’t safer using the sidewalk instead of the street. I’m guilty of that last one, just last night. Oops!

    We’re hearing a lot about moral hazards lately in terms of loans and finance. But there are worse ones out there, like the illusion of safety in a car: safety technology, safer cars, airbags, traffic lights, all subtly seem to urge us to take MORE risks.

    Arm yourselves against all that and read this book!!!!!

    61katedb-vl

    Quiet and brilliant — 4 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    It’s not TOO too often that I just hear a song on the radio and fixate on a band like I’ve done with these guys. My local public radio station was giving away a few of these CDs as thank you gifts for the pledge drive and played a song or two as enticements and I remember thinking, crap, too bad I pledged already, this would be way cooler than a tote bag…

    Then, fatefully, I thought hey, iTunes.

    A day or two later (I’m still on dial-up) and it’s funny but I no longer know which songs they played on the radio that morning! I love them all and can’t stop playing them… skip past songs I’ve loved deeply all my life on the old Shuffle while I’m out and about chasing a Fleet fix.

    The harmonies, the lovely, simple arrangements, the spare and elegant poetry of the lyrics, I like it all. They could fit in easily onto the soundtrack for “O Brother Where Art Thou” in that at times they have a very southern-hymn sound and at other times I think my mother, a 60s folkie of the first water, needs to hear them, too.

    ?

    First issue's pretty good — 6 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Just finished the first issue and I’m digging it. Radical Comics in general are producing some high-quality books and this is no exception. This is a nice, Blade-Runner-flavored blend with a dash of 1984/Orwell and maybe a little Luc Besson a la Fifth Element. A promising start!

    Worth looking at — 6 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    This one gets a worth consuming for reasons that have nothing to do with the narrative or acting. You’ve seen the story played out a million times with more or less appealing actors and its inherent cliches abound (there’s even a random person on the subway randomly giving flowers to the pretty sad girl) and it’s all pretty dull…

    But…but…but….!!!

    The real star of this film is Los Angeles and its architecture. I didn’t care that the lead characters bored me to tears or that their story was slightly nauseating because it unfolded on the hoof, as it were, all their conversations and dumb little revelations and self pity unfolding in front of some really great shots of every style of skyscraper, apartment complex, government building, plaza and hotel from almost every period, all beautifully shot in black and white by a cinematographer with a real eye for that sort of thing—halfway through the film and I completely forgave him for the hideous b&w bacon frying shot (gross!) and all the pore-inspecting close-ups of the two lead actors. Zoom back camera, that city has never looked so glorious!


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