Friday, 20 October 2006

(no subject)

Friday, 20 October 2006 08:46 pm
da: A smiling human with short hair, head tilted a bit to the right. It's black and white with a neutral background. You can't tell if the white in the hair is due to lighting, or maybe it's white hair! (Default)
Sarah Vowell is somewhat of an odd duck. You may know her from her voice-pieces on This American Life. Since I tend to like those essays, I bought her 2002 book, The Partly Cloudy Patriot. (Actually I bought this as a Christmas present for Dan's dad, who also likes her on TAL).

But: in addition to having an urbane and funny sensibility toward life, she's also a history nerd, and actually a bit snooty. But she's an excellent essayist.

This book has nineteen essays about what it means, to her, to be an American patriot. From going to Washington during Bush's inauguration and tearfully singing the Star Spangled Banner on The Mall, with tens of thousands of people (some satisfied, some heartbroken), to writing to a dead Congressman with her memories of him from when she was 8 and she helped on his campaign, this is an occasionally sombre, occasionally hilarious book.

I'm considering getting a copy of my own, actually. For, say, the next time someone inappropriately compares themselves to Rosa Parks and I want to remember one of her rebuttals for that situation . ("Call me picky, but breathing second-hand smoke, unfair dairy pricing, and not being able to mime (or lap dance), though they are all tragic, tragic injustices, are not quite as bad as the systematic segregation of public transportation based on skin color.")

Four of the essays are online as audio stories in her voice. "What He Said There" (about visiting Gettysburg) and "The Nerd Voice" (about Al Gore) are pretty good.

da: A smiling human with short hair, head tilted a bit to the right. It's black and white with a neutral background. You can't tell if the white in the hair is due to lighting, or maybe it's white hair! (Default)
Short review. If you like gumshoe mysteries, sci-fi that doesn't bother to explain itself (beyond "this is from the far future") and Deus Ex Machina up the wazoo, you might like this.

You might think this is a negative review, but it's not, really. This was a fun, very quick read. Such as for an airplane. (That's what dan's dad did; when he finished it, he gave it to me.)

I got a few chapters in before I remembered I'd already started reading this, once. But this time I finished it.

I told you this was a short review.
da: (bit)
Google Docs is awesome.

In the very least, it can be used as a LiveJournal post staging area. Or, for any other major form of blog. You can post new blog entries just by saying "publish / publish to blog." Boom, done.

Its spell-check is better than LJ's.

It produces clean HTML. And PDFs. And word documents.

You can upload documents into your Docs account by emailing them to a secret address.

Assuming you have an OK network connection, and you ever want to write something from more than one computer or share it with other people to collaborate on, it's a good answer, as far as I'm concerned.

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