Sunday, March 22, 2009
Friday, March 20, 2009
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Rudy being Rudy
One of the many reasons I like Rudy Rucker is the videos he does like these. He's just goofing around with a camera, enjoying nature. Just a regular guy, like me.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Friday, March 13, 2009
Here's Rudy
I'm so happy to be reading Rudy Rucker again. He's not just my favorite author, he's also a teacher, a blogger and an artist. I thought this was a good video to post here as I am currently reading a book he wrote about an artist named Pete.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Sunday, March 8, 2009
The Secret Chamber!
Weekend project: Learn how to make a book that can hide things!
Friday, March 6, 2009
The CineFiles
The Films of Philip K. Dick
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Letterman vs. Palin
From the Home Office in Wahoo, Nebraska...
Monday, February 23, 2009
unintentional re-read
While reading the book of short stories by J.G. Ballard, I came across a story that I quickly recognized as having read once before. A story called Billenium in which the Earth's population has become a worldwide over-crowding problem. People are forced to live in small cubicles with a roommate, like prisoners in cells.
I could not remember where I had read this story before, so I looked at some of the other J.G. Ballard books I had set aside. Vermillion Sands and The Terminal Beach. These each had a bookmark tucked into the last page, indicating a fully read book. I had forgotten that these too, were short story collections which, it turns out I have probably already read. Billenium was among the stories in one of the two books, along with a couple in the new book that I haven't gotten to yet. Most of the current read is new to me though, and it led to my discovery of two books that I've read, that I was unaware of. I'm only about halfway through.
This has happened before, I special ordered The 57th Franz Kafka by Rudy Rucker from Borders one time. It arrived and I began to read it, when I realized that the first story was one thaat I recognized from another short story collection that I'd read a few years earlier, Gnarl! I compared the two books side by side and only read the four chapters in 57FK that I found didn't appear in the table of contents of Gnarl!.
So I re-read Billenium. It was short and memorable. They discover an unused room but end up sharing it, subdividing it, subletting the space and eventually end up packed in like sardines again just like before. I don't usually re-read books, unintentionally or otherwise. But I have before and might do so again.
I could not remember where I had read this story before, so I looked at some of the other J.G. Ballard books I had set aside. Vermillion Sands and The Terminal Beach. These each had a bookmark tucked into the last page, indicating a fully read book. I had forgotten that these too, were short story collections which, it turns out I have probably already read. Billenium was among the stories in one of the two books, along with a couple in the new book that I haven't gotten to yet. Most of the current read is new to me though, and it led to my discovery of two books that I've read, that I was unaware of. I'm only about halfway through.
This has happened before, I special ordered The 57th Franz Kafka by Rudy Rucker from Borders one time. It arrived and I began to read it, when I realized that the first story was one thaat I recognized from another short story collection that I'd read a few years earlier, Gnarl! I compared the two books side by side and only read the four chapters in 57FK that I found didn't appear in the table of contents of Gnarl!.
So I re-read Billenium. It was short and memorable. They discover an unused room but end up sharing it, subdividing it, subletting the space and eventually end up packed in like sardines again just like before. I don't usually re-read books, unintentionally or otherwise. But I have before and might do so again.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Imprint: Writer in Profile
J. G. Ballard 2001 interview
Saturday, February 21, 2009
BBC Profile
JG Ballard talks to critic Tom Sutcliffe about his life and work.
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