Friday, September 14, 2012
Tacile
S asked me why I have gotten so interested recently in board games. What trigger my mind to focus on it. The kernel of it is probably Wil Wheaton's new web series Tabletop. A show where low level celebrities play board games.
Taking a step back and giving it some more thought, I believe it's my missing the social element that video games use to have for me which is driving me to the dice and cards. When I was younger, it was not unreasonable to expect a bunch of the guys to get together and play a video game from start to finish one weekend. Or to sit around playing a video game while talking about the our individual video gaming sessions. It was as if we were hunters sitting in our Africian lodge to discuss our latest exploits.
It might be the passage of time, the chains of responsibility I chose to add to my life, or the fact there simply too many good games out there, that my video game experiences have become more solitary. I have made attempts to play games at the same time as others. But I simply don't have the time, or rather the blocks of time, to complete a Japanese rpg like I use to.
That is not to say that one's time could not be swallowed in board games. The Internet has shown me the dark rabbit hole I cannot enter. But I don't think it matters as much with board games. The social play of a board game is a means to itself. It doesn't feel like a medium of long drawn out thought, but rather puzzles to be mulled over with others. The biggest difference For a board game is that you play the table, the players around you. Video games haven't quite mastered that yet.
I newly back into the hobby, so I assume my feelings towards it will change with time. I am having a game night tonight at snakes & lattes. Should be fun!
S
Monday, August 27, 2012
The Summer list
2. Spent almost three weeks at the cottage
3. Have still not seen Batman
4. Still have a half completed kitchen
5. Read "A Visit from the Goon Squad" and don't know how I feel about it
6. Attended an awesome wedding
7. Attended Fan Expo (at a different time)
8. Swam with my daughter three times on the hottest day of the year. Thanks puddle jumper!
9. Managed to play some card games I own
10. Completed over half my resolutions.
11. Somehow lost track of this blog.
And that is only a fraction of a very full summer. The best kind.
Now the best season of Fall is upon us!
S
Saturday, June 16, 2012
An ambitious laziness
Early on, in the first pages of this book, perhaps even when I started to think about reading the book, I remember reading a brief bio about how the author was a marathon runner. He had even written a book on the subject. The bio also mentioned his belief in a daily regiment of writing, exercise, and reading. This fact struck me as I began to work my way through the large tome that is 1Q84. It is a lot like running--the repetitive rhythms broken up burst of action, followed by long, slow stretches where all you can do is put one foot in front of the other, praying for the finish line coming into view.
Another thread that floats through 1Q84 is that of music. I recall, perhaps it was just a dream, the author menitioning in an interview that the book's inspiration was a piece of music. An orchestra piece by the polish composer janacek call the sinfetta. I listened to the piece and wonder if perhaps the novel was writing music through plot and language. A sort of narrative representation of what music as a story/slice of life. This paradigm explains the repetition and the cycles of words, plots and places that thread through the novel like a melody or harmony. Phrases acting like chords and dialogue as chapters acting as movements. Both metaphors elude to the surreal which is entwined with stunning normality(as an aside, I'm not sure how one can write about the surreal without a boring reality to contain it).
despite this thinking sparked by the book, I don't think I can recommend it. There's a sense of laziness in the book. The unnecessary passages of Dickens without the clever wit of Dickens. Long chapters that build nothing and are not entertaining enough to warrant their inclusion. This was beyond killing one's darlings but a question of editing. The word "like" was used everywhere to give a forced metaphor or simile. The characters felt unloved and inconsistent in composition.
I am hesitant to get into specifics, as any reveal of the plot will take away interest in the book, but I will say that it's resolution left much to be desired.
to be honest, I have a sense that my biggest walk away is that I know the truth of the book. I will not be tricked in dinner conversation when someone talks excitedly about the book. I will know they have only read the reviews and have not wrestled with the book. Even a poor book challenges the mind, it was unfortunate that this particular one had to be so long.
One final thought. Having finished the book, I found myself sitting and thinking about re-writing the book, to make it tighter and stronger. Invoke the character Tengo work in the novel to re-write the story of Fuki-erai. As though the novel's central question is "how can a story be told better?". I don't believe this was the author's intent.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
sitting on a deck
It a rare moment of calm, I find myself sitting on my brother-in-law's backyard. The weather is just right. I'm full from an excellent meal. Settling down after a fun day outdoors at Bronte creek. An evening calling me to relax.
The kind of moment you blog about so you don't forget in later more hectic times. Sorry to be completely self serving.
:)
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
The bird and the cat
In other, older, circles, the theme of animals have come up as well. At my work there has been a lot of discussions of peregrine falcons who inhabit the building across the way. I was able to attend part of the tagging ceremony and was impressed with the dedication of the volunteers working to recover a species. They even have a webcam.
I say this as someone who isn't really a birder and when considering our feathered friends, I prefer water fowl.
The other animals this week is my friend Becky starting to explore the video features of her camera. She made cats the focus of her experiments. See results below.People getting excited about cats. What's not to like.
Finally, I have been delving into web series with pa tv and geek and sundry. Felicia Day's the flog is a new thing for me and in the first episode I watched she had a link to baby animals in her favorite five things of the week.
Leaves me wondering what next week's theme will be.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Getting to the eternal question
The oldest question that is ever present.
I have just finished the last season of the new Doctor Who (that being the oldest question apparently, closely followed by "who is this God person anyway" to steal from D Adams).
The next series does not start until the fall, giving a moment to ponder what has been seen while the TARDIS hums quietly in the background.
Overall I have enjoyed the relaunch of doctor who. The work they have done over the past seven years and three lead actors efforts to recreate the adventure atmosphere of the original have been quite successful . I am hesitant to choose a favorite doctor as they truly play to different elements of the mythos, using a diversity of role models and stressing particular aspects of the how's history. I have also enjoyed the writing for the most part.
That said, it is a children's show. The pacing is often odd as the logical conclusion of violence or complex dialogue is withheld due to the target audience. The darleks are an example of a failure in writing. They just don't seem scary enough. The show's simplictic view of world politics is a bit offensive at times as well.
The main problem for me is that it is not particularly science fiction. More of a fantasy with scientific dressing. The history is very cliche and shallow. I never really sure what this epic storytelling is speaking to but it doesn't move me too much. Perhaps it isn't meant to.
Still this is spoken with love. The little moments that speak volume, set the mind on fire. Despite all its cliches doctor who is about glimpses of the different and weird. Now what is wrong with that.
S
Thursday, May 10, 2012
The lens poetic
There is a moment when the clouds clear and the body doesn't notice the dampness of the world. Simply glad that the rain has stopped. Savor and smile are the only orders of business, before life starts again.
If life was made of such moments alone it would be a great loss, and yet ever song is shaped by its silences. The pause between the note.
These are the thoughts at the end of rain before the sun comes out.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
No spring in one's step
Summer is fast approaching so hopefully that will get rid of the blahs going around (as foul moods are contagious in my not the least bit scientific analysis). I intend to enjoy the summer (Z is easier to get ready to go somewhere as there are fewer layers involved when it's warm) and get some outdoor swimming in.
Big notes I know, but it's a Tuesday. Never got the hang of Tuesdays Or Thursdays for that matter.
S
Thursday, May 3, 2012
That linking feeling
Looking over the past month and a half of blog entries, I noticed my abandonment of hypertext, aiming to just get the words out. In business lingo, I am not providing that value add services that establish my brand in the market place of ideas (I don't know which rhetoric bothers me more, capitalism or socialism. God, I am become an old liberal).
Joking aside, I really should incorporate more links. As much as my words should do all the heavy lifting, there are items and elements I discuss that would benefit from a quick pop out to the Internet. One cannot change the past, but I can make amends for the future. I don't plan on making everything a link, but I will try to highlight elements more with the internet's assistance.
In light of this I have put together a couple of links on subject matters that have been I rattling around in my mind. Enjoy!
Gaiman talking about writing: one of my favorite authors, Neil Gaiman has recently running a sort of series on writing questions. He answers questions then advises he will be compiling it into a mega blog post on writing. I assume the intention of it being the ultimate go to place for questions about writing and allows him to stop worrying he is repeating himself or getting annoyed about being asked to repeat himself, but I digress. I feel for the man because writing advice is either overly general/obvious (finish what you start, submit it to people who will publish that sort of thing, work on your grammar, etc.) or really specific (word order, paragraph structure, what to cut or keep, i.e editing). I can't imagine how Gaiman will satisfy the questioners without becoming their editor, which really isn't his job.
Art & Letters Daily have had a couple interesting articles about the nature of culture. They curators of the site have a low opinion of the instutionalization of writing. The concern that all writing is becoming separated from the world with writers writing for other writers. I must confess that I am in the middle ground of this argument. Or rather when I think about it I keep coming back to the same thought. We need both, writers professionally trained, but also interesting people who take up the pen to write their story or bare witness to one. I wonder if the problem is that readers are not omnivores. They find what they like and don't really challenge themselves. I may challenge myself with philosophical texts, but I like philosophical texts, but I loathe the thought of reading a modern romance
They also had a cool article on what a foreign reporter carries with them.
I have been enjoying the developments at Penny Arcade as they slowly become a very impressive web-based company. Also I feel that the flourishing partnership with Scott Kurtz has been great. The web television is quite cool.
I have been following some comics, some epic, some silly, some odd
Finally there be board games
Later
S
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Bike trail madness
This past weekend I rode up to work on my bike. Other than confirming I need to exercise more, I also discovered the piece meal nature of our bike trails in Toronto. I had to back track three times because the trail either ended for no apparent reason or the section was clearly noted as being "not for bicycles".
Honestly, if linking up these trails would get me off the road and peddling to work. If you love cars, isn't that what you want? More bikers on dedicated trails would mean emptier roads ( well for three seasons of the year I guess). Actually I was struck by the thought that maybe we should have more dedicated bike trails and freeways around the city as long as it supports large pedestrian only zones. By the time I got to work i was going old school (as my old school was in urban planning).
This all ended when I remembered I lived in Toronto where we don't plan any transit, let alone a multi channel one. It reminded me I should be thankful for any trails that keep me off the busy streets. Hope springs eternal that I will be proven wrong.
At least I got a good morning and afternoon of exercising. Plus the Toronto ravine park system is quite pretty, even in early spring. A perfect place to people watch as well. So in the scales of my life, the day was a good one.
S