What Is This Place?
This is an archive. If you've
just discovered my site, perhaps you'll want to read about how it
has evolved. Please return to the
Introduction page for recent news & updates. These entries
are the entries from 11/14/05 to 12/31/06.
News and Updates about Website and Books:
12/31/06
Back from Philadelphia. Got a *ton* of new books (well,
okay, 22). I love my industry. |
12/27/06
Back from Chicago. Received some cool things,
including books, for Christmas.
- Zits Supersized, by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
(Thanks, Ormans!)
- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, trade
paperback (Thanks, Ormans!)
- Crack of Noon, by Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman (Thanks,
Colleen & Travis!)
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, Braille edition
(Thanks, Colleen & Travis!)
- Thief of Time, by Terry Pratchett (Thanks, Mom &
Dad!)
- The Truth, by Terry Pratchett (Thanks, Mom & Dad!)
- Web Site Design Goodies, by Joe Burns (Thanks, Mom &
Dad!)
- By Faith: 31 Days of Faith and Bible Translation
(Thanks, Mom & Dad!)
- Driving Guide for the Independent Traveler: New England
(Signpost Guides) (Thanks, Mom & Dad!)
- A City in Winter, by Mark Helprin, illustrated by Chris
Van Allsburg (Thanks, Hobors!)
I also visited three bookstores (well, a library and two
bookstores) in Chicago, and bought another 22 books (~$50).
Nostalgia has awakened. My brother brought me a handful of
his old GameBoy games. I've been playing Zelda. Aquinas thinks
this is hilarious. My brother also brought my old Sega Genesis.
We couldn't get it to work while he was here, but I did a little
Feng Shui with the television and now it works. And Aquinas got
me some new controllers (and a replacement console) for
Christmas from eBay. The original Sonic the Hedgehog game seemed
easier than I remembered, but the music and sparkling 16-bit
graphics made me feel somewhat sentimental. And giggly. Anyway,
if it's somehow true that I never stopped being 12, it would
explain a lot. Anyone up for a game of Wiz 'n Liz? |
12/18/06
December has been a whirlwind month and will likely
continue at a similar pace.
This weekend my (visiting) brother and I bought a ton of
presents at the mall. Those kiosk people are really aggressive,
let me tell you! But it was a successful sojourn. I managed not
to buy *anything* for myself, perhaps largely as a result of
having spent ~$40 on (individually cheap) CDs and DVDs at
Princeton Record Exchange the previous day.
I will spend Christmas in Chicago with friends and with my
husband's family. When I get back, I will be staffing the
Princeton Univ. Press table at the 2006 MLA (Modern Language
Association) conference in Philadelphia.
And then, happy new year! |
11/25/06
The NJ Hobors successfully prepared a Thanksgiving
dinner for four (ourselves and two guests, my Chinese friend
Jing and her husband Jason), complete with a 9 lb. turkey! There
was fresh bread from the breadmaker, sweet potatoes with
marshmallows, rice, squash, stuffing, special Jello/fruit/nut
cranberry sauce, wine, and a store-bought cake we didn't even
touch. In retrospect, the sweet potatoes could have included
raisins, and we think the oven wasn't as hot as it said it was,
but all in all, it was a success. (And clean-up was easy, thanks
to the new rolling dishwasher.)Last weekend, I paid a
somewhat expensive visit to the yearly warehouse sale at JR
Trading Company, just up the road. YA fantasy fiction
acquisitions included the complete Tales of Otori by Lyn Hearn;
more than half a dozen somewhat random foreign language
phrasebooks were also purchased.
One of the phrasebooks I bought was for Mandarin Chinese,
which, with help from Jing on Tuesdays, I'm trying to learn a
little about. The Illinois Hobors gave me their book, from
Hippocrene Press, and I also have the Teach Yourself book (which
focuses more on the Pinyin). Not that it's at all possible to
learn Chinese from a book, anymore than it's possible to learn
swimming from one.
Meanwhile in German class, we've learned the simple past and
some modal verbs, but haven't covered attributive adjectives or
genitive case (to say nothing of the subjunctive). Vocabulary is
still pretty limited, and I still haven't got a firm grip on the
noun endings. This sort of . . . baroqueness . . . makes
me really appreciate the simplicity of Mandarin morphology, even
if the phonetics is impossible! Imagine, not only do the nouns
lack gender (and number, for that matter), the pronouns do too!
And there's no verb conjugation, period!
Two weeks ago, I went skating for the first time in about a
year; I hadn't worn my rollerblades in maybe a year and a half.
It was terrific fun, and heaven only knows how many calories I
burned. I should go more often. But that might mean reading
less. Hm.
I've acquired the last two books in the Fearless series,
which I'm nearly done reading. I have the two most recent George
R. R. Martin books too, but they'll take me a lot longer
to read!
If you're sitting around wondering what to get me for
Christmas, click here
to see my perpetual wish list. There's some stuff my husband
wants too, but he's not as good at keeping lists. |
10/2/06
Time for the woefully inadequate monthly update, it
seems. Movie content has shifted around a bit; the page was
getting too long.The Cranbury street fair yielded some
treasures again. In particular, there was an out-of-print
edition of the Princeton Science Library title Eye and Brain;
the beginning of a manga series called Ranma 1/2, which is
bizarre but entertaining; Edith Nesbit's House of Arden,
which I happily read right away; a Ruth Chew paperback I didn't
already own (Witch's Broom) and a nearly complete box set
of Laura Ingalls Wilder books.
A week's vacation in Maine with my husband and his Aunt Nancy
yielded some nice found-on-the-ground rocks and a couple of
excellent purchased specimens (malachite that looks like velvet
and malachite that looks like brains; a huge garnet in matrix)
and some souvenirs from a Shaker community as well as some
household odds and ends, and some scenic photos. We hiked, but
only a little.
I'm back and the school year is in full swing; I've now got a
two-weeks' toehold on the German language.
I'm fascinated by the writing of George R.R. Martin. (I've
read A Game of Thrones and I've started A Clash of
Kings.) The books are dark, but it's an honest kind
of dark, I think, rather than a nihilistic kind of dark. There
is no ultimate good and evil; there are good and bad people, but
who they are depends on who's telling the story. There's magic,
but it's peripheral; the plot is full of consequences of human
decisions and human acts. There are likable characters and
despicable characters, but the likable characters are far from
perfect, and the despicable characters can also be alternately
sad or amusing. It's a bit crude for my taste, but perhaps
that's just because I typically read kids' books. Anyway, it's
complex. I'm absorbed. |
9/3/06
In the past month, I've made more than $200 selling
used books online. Yea! To celebrate, I bought a German textbook
and some more books to help me with the website overhaul.
Hopefully, soon, I'll make some visible progress. . . Happy
Labor Day weekend! |
8/3/06
I'm reading a book at the office, a different book at
the gym, another book at home, and an additional, less dry, book
at home. I don't usually have four going at once, but it seems
to be working for now, except that none of them are 4"x6" and
all but one are bigger than 6"x9", so they're all too big to
carry around!It seems I have forty-eleven hobbies. In
addition to reading and working full time, I'm also: buying
books, selling books, babysitting, volunteering for fMRI scans,
knitting, learning Japanese braiding -- called Kumihimo (this is
a brand new hobby which is way cooler than Chinese knotting),
trying out wrapping paper to fold origami, thinking about
teaching origami to co-workers, becoming more culturally
literate thanx to NetFlix, becoming more culturally literate by
surfing the net at random, making friendship bracelets, making
sky fish, selling the latter two things on Etsy, quilting and/or
sewing (theoretically), and hopefully, this fall, acquiring
German.
Then there's the whole website overhaul thing: I want to
become familiar with my ISP, FrontPage, XML/XSLT, Javascript,
CSS, PhotoShop, and a host of other related things, like RSS and
the Google Maps API. And I'm supposed to be maintaining *this*
website, although you can see that's not happening.
There are other hobbies that are more or less mothballed at
the moment: the Atlanta Sunday paper comic strip archive, the
magazine archive, my stamps, coins, dice, marbles, rocks, board
games, and Pokemon cards, to say nothing of inline skating (who
needs gross motor skills, anyway?).
Hm. Was that forty-eleven hobbies or forty-twelve? I've lost
track. Must be time to go read the less-dry book! |
7/8/06
I've started a "store" at
spjg.etsy.com.
I've posted 9 finished friendship bracelets that I have on hand.
I plan to also post origami polyhedra and, possibly, woven paper
fish.I bought thirty-some-odd Andre Norton paperbacks at the
Cranbury Bookworm last weekend. In the, well, "fiscal book year"
from July 05 to June 06, I purchased a total of 332 books, up
from the previous year's 160. I guess I should probably learn
how to read faster. |
|
6/12/06
Two months later, I'm declaring the moving over.
On to the business of staying put. But now I'm
moving into my new digital real estate. As of 6/8/06, I'm
a customer of
1&1.Yup, I bit the bullet and acquired my own domain,
www.somepeoplejugglegeese.com, or www.somepeoplejugglegeese.com for short. I
expect that there will be nothing much there for a while, but I
was sick of waiting. I had the chicken and the egg problem: I
couldn't learn how to build the site without having a bona fide
server to put it on, and I didn't want to buy hosting for the
site without knowing what kind of hosting it would need. I
figured out some stuff about the hosting, but there's clearly a
long way to go. |
5/19/06
Okay, the agonizing process of moving is mostly over.
(Phew!) There are still a couple of pieces of furniture floating
around, and a couple pieces of furniture we still want to buy,
some boxes that still need to be unpacked, and some boxes that
need to get carried to the basement, but that's life.The good
news is that I've got my computer plugged in again, finally.
There was this issue with the outlet in my room (it only had
holes for two prongs). But now we've got spiffy fiber-optic
Internet and a wireless network, and my computer's got two
monitors plugged into it. I can't find my audio splitter for
attaching the cassette deck to my sound card, but I'm sure it'll
turn up. Or I'll go buy another one.
In the midst of it all somewhere, I had a birthday! Thanks to
all who got me gifts or sent me birthday wishes. I'm now the
proud owner of:
- A book on Chinese knotting (Thanks, Hobors!)
- A really cool amethyst/quartz geode thing (Thanks,
Hobors!)
- A nice used copy of The Phantom Tollbooth (Thanks,
Aquinas!)
- An octagonal wooden dice tray (Thanks, Chris B.!)
- Some extra bucks from Mom & Dad, Grandaddy & Grandmartha,
and Pop Pop. (Thanks, all!)
I enjoyed my visit to Nashville where I saw Grandaddy (now a
published author!) & Grandmartha.
I've attended two book sales recently, one at the Ewing
Public Library (yesterday), and one on May 6 at the Unitarian
Universalist Church of Princeton. The Ewing sale happens every
few months, and they always have good stuff. The UUCP sale is
just in the spring, I think. The folks running it were very
friendly (and gave big discounts, since it was getting to be
lateish in the day). As at the sale last year, I found some real
treasures! This year the big treasure was a copy of
Transformers: The Movie. This movie is out of print, and I'd
been looking at prices on eBay, which vary with condition
between $2 and $15, plus shipping. At UUCP, for more than 14
books, the movie, and a cassette tape, I paid $12.50 total. Here
again we see the principle of One Man's Trash Is Another Man's
Treasure kick into action for my benefit.
Also, this week I've made ~$30 from online sales of books
that people at my office were getting rid of. Yea me. |
[these things in brackets are supposed to be photos, but I've
been really lazy about photos for weeks and week and
weeks] [new apartment]
[new computer setup]
[new sparkly rock]
[new new new]
[everything looks different and new here]
[but you can't see it because these aren't photos]
[this should be a cover scan of A Suitable Boy by
Vikram Seth, which I enjoyed very much -- all 1400 pages of it] |
3/29/06
I enjoyed this year's
Bryn Mawr Book Sale! Read more
here. Notable purchases include: a double handful of mini
foreign language dictionaries and phrasebooks, (among which is a
Deutsch-Español dictionary);
a double handful of pristine Andre Norton paperbacks; a box set
containing Dragonflight, Dragonquest, and The
White Dragon by Anne McCaffrey; two books about books for
children; and a CD-ROM game called Amazon Trail, for which I
have strong nostalgic feelings, but which unfortunately only
took me about an hour and a half to play from start to finish.
On a related note, I'm enjoying a book called
Biblioholism. It
describes my life, I'm afraid.
My husband and I are moving to a new apartment in about a
month. This will mean more space for books! And a
wireless network for our computers, among other things. Mainly
just more space period. Yea! (NB: Friends help you move. Real
friends help you move books.)
I imagine that updates to the website, as well as the much
anticipated overhaul of the website, will continue to be
postponed while the physical objects in my life go topsy turvy
in the move. But I'll keep updating the book log. Hopefully some
day I'll actually finish the book New Times in Modern
Japan. . . |
[Bryn Mawr Books] |
3/4/06
I have purchased an antidestroyificationary device.
Otherwise known as a stereo cassette tape deck. This plus some
software called
WavePad will enable me to convert and preserve my analog
music.Also, I have finally acquired my own computer speakers.
Chris B. was throwing them out. One of them was rattling, but I
took it apart and fixed it, and they work. |
[cassette deck] |
2/10/06
I have bought a new computer! It's an HP Compaq minitower
with a Pentium 4 processor. Its arrival has precipitated much
behind-the-desk dust removal, major re-arranging of hardware,
and some ill conceived and poorly executed data transfer. But I
think we'll be back to normal soon, at which point "normal" will
be much improved. |
[minitower] |
1/14/06
Happy New Year!My husband and I spent our Christmas break in Atlanta at my family's house. We got
& gave lots of nice presents, and I bought a lot of clothes and
(unsurprisingly) some books. We also went to a comedy dinner
theater show at a place called
Agatha's,
and saw the new Georgia Aquarium.
Recently, I visited Boston on a trip whose purpose was to
help staff our Press's booth at the ASSA meeting at the Hynes
convention center. It was interesting to greet economists from
all over the world. I had some nice dinners too (Thai, Indian,
Afghani). Work on a revamped website (in XML) seems to be at a
standstill, (you'd noticed that, had you?) and as I've already
said, I've got a backlog of books to catalog. What books, you
ask? Well, I'll tell you. Gifts:
- Megatokyo 1 (Thank
you, Crouches!)
- The Arabian Nights
(Thank you, Elizabeth!)
- Galactic Empire (2 vol)
(Thank you, Elizabeth!)
- Eldest (Thank you,
Anjali!)
- Book of card games
(Thank you, Mom!)
- Book of dice games
(Thank you, Mom!)
- Forgotten Delights: The Producers
(Thank you, Colleen & Travis!)
From PaperbackSwap:
- Steel Magic
- Songsmith
- The Gate of the Cat
- Octagon Magic
- Titan AE
- The Magestone
- The Lost City of Faar
- The Stones Are Hatching
- Pegasus in Space
- Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
- The Merlin Effect
- Lirael
From home:
- Midnight's Children
- The Satanic Verses
- Pride and Prejudice
- Kim
- The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm
From Elsewhere (Chicago, NJ, Atlanta, online):
- The Second Chronicles of Amber
- Daybreak 2250 A.D.
- W.I.T.C.H 1 & 2
- The Guardians
- The Case of the Vanishing Boy
- Crisis on Doona
- Treaty at Doona
- Sassinak
- The Coelura
- Crystal Singer
- Casual Day Has Gone Too Far
- Garfield 1
- Garfield 1 in German
- Frog and Toad Together
- Caught in the Web of Words
- The Warden of English
- The Conch Bearer
- A Study of Writing
- Rocks and Minerals
- The Story of English
- The Wonder of Words
- A New Aristotle Reader
- New Times in Modern Japan
- The Travels and Adventures of
Serendipity
- Fearless 1 - 6 & 8-15
- Why Johnny Can't Read
- Death in Kashmir
- Death in Zanzibar
- Shadow of the Moon
- The Egypt Game
- Seven-Day Magic
- The Wishing Tree
- Sabriel
Also, some movies:
- VHS
- Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
- The Parent Trap
- The Phoenix and the Magic Carpet
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy (old version)
- DVD
- Titan AE
- The Incredibles
- Batman Begins
- Office Space
- The Return of the King
- Serenity
For reasons best known to herself (and mysterious even so),
Lucy Day has been buying Pokemon cards on eBay. Again. She's
even got a (frighteningly large) box to keep them in, and a
nifty spreadsheet to catalog the ones she's missing. She's
collecting from the Base set, Jungle, Fossil, and Base 2. For
now. |
[unsightly stack of unprocessed new books] |
12/11/05:
I enjoyed Thanksgiving break in Chicago. My husband and I
visited not only my husband's family, but also a number of
friends from college. And their friends. We played a marvelous
game of
Taboo, and a not-so-marvelous game of
Tenjo. We got towed from a street with an illegible
no-parking sign. I bought books at three bookstores.
In fact, I have many books (~30) sitting around waiting to be
scanned and added to the site. They used to all be on my desk,
but that got to be unbearably ridiculous. So I sent most of them
to roost elsewhere in the apartment. Unfortunately, there aren't
too many "elsewheres" left!
Friends of mine, the Penrys, recently went to Barcelona
(something to do with a computer science conference). They
brought back Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in
Catalan as a surprise for me! They said it was difficult to find
books not in Catalan in the bookstores in Barcelona. |
[HP1 Catalan] |
11/14/05:
I've been eschewing home computer use, and thus also
website updates, because a fan in my tower was making scary
dying noises. Long story short, I replaced the fan.
[Long story long, I shopped for barebones machines, decided
that $93.84 is rather less than the ~$200 I would need (even
buying online from
TigerDirect),
tried to plug my hard drive into an old (free) Dell OptiPlex
GX200 from PUP, found out that the memory somehow got damaged,
pilfered its cleaner, quieter, compatible processor fan, and
plugged everything back into my old GX1. Yes. I'm
still running on a machine from August 1999. Grrr.]
To continue another adventure in hardware repair (remember?),
Mike (network admin at PUP) manhandled the last stubborn screw
holding the green board with the burned chip to my old hard
drive so I could attach the replacement board. I have not
plugged it in, so I don't know whether the data is intact.
Keep your fingers crossed.
I'm reading some non-fiction. About time, too.
Geez.
I went to a skate meet yesterday. The good news is,
I've got competitors now. The bad news is, I've got
competitors now. The result is, I made an utter fool of
myself. . . twice.
Quickly changing the subject. . . . On Friday at work I
heard a spiel by a guy from
S R Nova
about all the things they can do to get information (books,
journal articles) into and out of XML format. It was a
beautiful vision of the future. They are applying
technology to publishing. They are changing the
industry. I will see it, and I will be part of it.
This is what I was trained for. It's very exciting. |
[hardware pic?] Recent Non-Fiction Reading:
[Everest]
[India]
[Japan]
|
| This is not all the stuff I've
archived.
|
! |
|