Coffee and Books (reading post)
Apr. 6th, 2022 10:03 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I accidentally cracked my coffee press while washing it (moral: never wash your dishes), so before yesterday's accidental omnibus meeting, I walked down to the second-nearest local coffee shop and bought a pourover apparatus. Hipsterdom circa 2011 here I come. I also bought a cup of coffee to tide me over.
I am not wholly convinced by the results of my first pourover, but I'm committed now.
Reading
I just re-read The Greengage Summer by Rumer Godden, a comfort read for its luminous intensity. Although I usually read it as a sort of sensory reverie, this time I was much more attuned to the movements of the plot and the geometries of desire, which were crueller than I had remembered.
I haven't read any other Rumer Godden books -- should I? I tend to look for books of the same flavour rather than books by the same author.
On the family visit, I collected a copy of Grace Paley's Enormous Changes at the Last Minute my mother kindly ordered for me. I haven't finished all the stories, but I devoured several. These are a little grimmer than I expected from her other collections. I expected -- because it's what I love in her -- that politicized slapstick domestic surrealism she does so well, but these were -- well, also crueller. Perhaps better for that? I'm not sure yet, because I was surprised.
In theory and in practice (wa ha ha) I've been reading through Cruising Utopia of course, and have read a few of the short essays in Mark Fisher's The Weird and the Eerie, which I think I'll discuss here next, unless there's hard lobbying for The Ghosts of My Life. There is some talk of taking up a further theory reading project with the copper bracelet crew, which would please me.
I'm re-reading This is How You Lose the Time War preparatory to teaching it. My brother also read it, and I think I have coerced him into making a video about the math and science therein. (He's the family mathematician, and also the family gamer, and he pointed out a possible connection to Halo, for which I am infinitely grateful.)
Oh yeah, and I'm almost finished The Starless Sea, which is propped up in a book stand on my kitchen counter so I can read a few pages each morning with my now-pourover coffee, like the newspaper from fairyland.
{rf}
I am not wholly convinced by the results of my first pourover, but I'm committed now.
Reading
I just re-read The Greengage Summer by Rumer Godden, a comfort read for its luminous intensity. Although I usually read it as a sort of sensory reverie, this time I was much more attuned to the movements of the plot and the geometries of desire, which were crueller than I had remembered.
I haven't read any other Rumer Godden books -- should I? I tend to look for books of the same flavour rather than books by the same author.
On the family visit, I collected a copy of Grace Paley's Enormous Changes at the Last Minute my mother kindly ordered for me. I haven't finished all the stories, but I devoured several. These are a little grimmer than I expected from her other collections. I expected -- because it's what I love in her -- that politicized slapstick domestic surrealism she does so well, but these were -- well, also crueller. Perhaps better for that? I'm not sure yet, because I was surprised.
In theory and in practice (wa ha ha) I've been reading through Cruising Utopia of course, and have read a few of the short essays in Mark Fisher's The Weird and the Eerie, which I think I'll discuss here next, unless there's hard lobbying for The Ghosts of My Life. There is some talk of taking up a further theory reading project with the copper bracelet crew, which would please me.
I'm re-reading This is How You Lose the Time War preparatory to teaching it. My brother also read it, and I think I have coerced him into making a video about the math and science therein. (He's the family mathematician, and also the family gamer, and he pointed out a possible connection to Halo, for which I am infinitely grateful.)
Oh yeah, and I'm almost finished The Starless Sea, which is propped up in a book stand on my kitchen counter so I can read a few pages each morning with my now-pourover coffee, like the newspaper from fairyland.
{rf}