| Fiona Apple |
[04 Aug 2006|12:10pm] |
Chastain Amphitheater August 2
Set List:
1. Get Him Back 2. *An older song that I can't remember because I didn't actually start writing them down until four. 3. Shadow Boxer 4. The Way Things Are 5. I know 6. Sleep to Dream 7. Limp 8. Paperbag 9. Tymps 10. Oh, Well
After ten songs she made her first address to the crowd. She said "Thank you" and then started to play again. It definetly wasn't a concert about witty banter or testamonials. It was all about the music.
11. On the Bound 12. Red Red Red 13. Not About Love 14. Better Version of Me 15. Get Gone 16. Fast As You Can
Encore: 1. Extraordinary Machine 2. Criminal
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[28 Jun 2006|12:43am] |
How Soccer Explains the World by Franklin Foer
I am very glad that I read this before the World Cup started. Foer gives a diverse amount of information that goes beyond the mechanics of the sport. He uses society's participation in the institution of soccer to reflect the social problems of racism, oppression, corruption and war. It is amazing how a simple game can be tied to all of these things, but at no time does Foer make these connections feel forced or contrived. It does not wax poetic about the beauty of the game as you would expect from a fan like Foer; rather it shows the gamut from the underbelly to clubs worthy of praise. I sincerely enjoyed this nonfiction, which is a genre I am attempting to find more merit in.
The Cheese Monkeys by Chip Kidd
Unlike other books I am reading right now, this one is not epic in scale, yet it deals with a topic that feels epic to me at this point. As the subtitle states it is a year in two semesters at college in which a young man comes to understand what he wants to study. He has a teacher who is provocative. This pushes the students to think in new ways, but in the end the teacher is not a god to be revered. It is a slight whirlwind, which I found to be appropriate given the nature of college. I felt a strong connection when Kidd discusses what is involved in finishing an art project, even if I am inclined to say that it was a bit exaggerated. I appreciated that it did not end with the character achieving all that I have yet to, because honestly I don’t think that I would have been able to stand it.
A Murder in Belmont by Sebastian Junger
This is a fast read that is like watching an episode of SVU. Ultimately this book is not about the solving of a murder (or string of murders). It is the true story of two men one white (Al) and one black (Roy). Al is convicted of serial rape and murder, but before he was caught Roy was arrested for a murder that fit the pattern of Al’s eleven or twelve murders. Roy is still in jeopardy even though he could not possibly have committed the earlier murders (especially not the ones that happened after his arrest). It is a look at race in the 1960s because even though Al had a personal connection with the author, Junger chose not to hark on Al in the same way he does Roy. There really is no conclusion, but is that good or bad? I’m not sure.
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| Self Analysis No . 83 |
[28 Jun 2006|12:18am] |
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A revelation: I am just like Johnathon. I feel guilty, selfish and childish.
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| Long time in coming... I finished these months ago |
[19 May 2006|08:25pm] |
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh I'm very proud that I finished this book because the whole time I was reading it people were sceptical that I would finish it. The ones who had started it said they couldn't get past the language and the ones who didn't just said that they heard it was hard so they never started. It is like the movie, but then again it is so not like the movie. Most of what happens in the movie happens in the book, but it doesn't necessarily happen in the same order or to the same people. They make a reoccuring role out of the young girl that Mark sleeps with, but she isn't a big part in the book. Also Tommy isn't the one who dies from the kitten's poop. And the biggest change is that the whole book is not told from Mark's perspective. It changes and it is always a slight challenge at the beginning of the chapter to figure out if the character who is speaking is one you've already been introduced to, or if they are entirely new. I've only seen the movie once or twice so neither the book nor the movie have endeared themselves to me completely. Oh! I almost forgot, Scottish accents rock! Even reading them is kinda hot.
A Million Little Pieces by James Frey After a book becomes this infamous you feel silly reading it on the MARTA. I imagine it to be like if you just started to read the Da Vinci Code now. He made stuff up (well yeah duh! you don't stay completely lucid during a root canal with no anesthesia by any stretch of the imagination). So considering it fiction, it is not well written fiction. His language is repetative (at least he didn't say phony) but it is an interesting story at least. You feel compelled to get to the end. A short recap is: a guy gets sent to rehab, he is incrediably willful and thinks AA is a bunch of crap, he starts an illicit relationship with a girl and we watch it spiral from there. Eh, you could read worse.
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[21 Apr 2006|11:43am] |
Your results: You are Wonder Woman
| Wonder Woman |
| 72% |
| Supergirl |
| 72% |
| Superman |
| 65% |
| Spider-Man |
| 60% |
| The Flash |
| 60% |
| Catwoman |
| 50% |
| Green Lantern |
| 45% |
| Batman |
| 45% |
| Robin |
| 39% |
| Hulk |
| 35% |
| Iron Man |
| 30% |
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You are a beautiful princess with great strength of character.
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Click here to take the Superhero Personality Test
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[17 Mar 2006|03:44pm] |
Lolita by Nabokov Lo.. lola.. Lo-li-ta.. It is so exquisitely written, but truly I think the annotated version is required. Maybe it doesn't have to be as in depth as the one I had, but unless you're got days to spend looking up all the various puns that Nabokov plays, it will come in handy. I read this one in parts. At one point I stopped and started reading "A Million Little Pieces" (pre-controversy). I thought "Pieces" was a good book, but then I lost it for a while so I went back to Lolita. I'm going back to "Pieces" now that I'm done with Lolita and it makes me realize more how amazing Nabokov is. He is a true writer. More than just displaying an interesting plot, he lays out words in such a beautiful way. He is talking about repulsive actions, but they are stated so eloquently. I wish I hadn't been so impatient to finish it and had just enjoyed it. Nothing I could write about it would do it justice.
The Breadgivers Books for school are so hit or miss. This one is definetly a miss. It is about Jewish immigrants in New York, but I kept comparing it to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and it couldn't stand up.
A Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion This is a relatively short book about a woman who becomes a widow and helps her daughter through a serious illness all in one year. It is amazing because it is a true story and it is told without the sappy Nicholas Sparks feel. Didion becomes a person searching for the cause of death as if it would tell her the exact moment her husband began to die. It is poignant, elegant and understated.
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| Family Dinner |
[09 Jan 2006|01:41am] |
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So dinner went well. I'd love to repeat it. I made enough for five people so I gave a plate to Johnathon. Nothing else really important to say other than that we should do it again. School starts tomorrow yaya!
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| Coldplay |
[08 Jan 2006|12:08am] |
I'm going through my notebook and I don't think I ever posted this for myself (I didn't bother to look up the real names of the songs)
Coldplay set list: Open Your Eyes Yellow How Long God put a Smile Trouble Fix You Permenant State Circles Wait For Me (Johnny Cash cover) Burning Ring of Fire Don't Panic Clocks Never Been Done Nightswimming (Micheal Stief) How Long Reverse
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[01 Jan 2006|02:45am] |
For everyone who was asleep or living under a rock (or in a cave a la Castaway) its the beginning of a New Year. Time to eat grapes! New quote for the new year:
Steven- "We are the worst Christians! We like gays, we drink, we allow premarital sex as long as it is in a loving monogomous relationship." Lindsey- "Is there anything your church is against?" Steven- "Evil?"
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| New book |
[24 Dec 2005|01:42am] |
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Cadavers by Roach This is an incrediably interesting book that is not made for the necraphobic. I learned all kinds of interesting safety features that were discovered by testing on cadavers, and many ways that we can die that have yet to be fixed. As it goes on it gets less about human cadavers, but the writer is funny so it remains interesting. I started this book during my four hour delay in Atlanta and continued it on the subsequent three hour plane ride to Colorado and I came to the airplane section while I was flying. A few facts from the book: -Human ribs are meant to be contracted from front to back (as in breathing). They are incrediably fragil from the sides so side impact crashes cause the most damage on the human body because the ribs shatter easily and puncture organs. -There is a school, at the University of Tennesse I believe, that studies the decomposition of the human body in different substances to aid in forensic police work. They just lay the bodies out in a field, with trees and ponds.
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[19 Dec 2005|08:09pm] |
Cam- "Man you must be cold" to a guy running in his bathing suit in the snow. Bathing suit guy- "Yeah... good thing I'm drunk."
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[11 Dec 2005|09:07pm] |
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This has been one of the most stressful weeks that I've ever had as a student so I ate out too many times to count... chastize me harshly.
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| Tegan and Sara |
[29 Nov 2005|11:24am] |
I'm embarrassed of you Atlanta! I shame you for being such brats just because they wouldn't make a personalized set list just for you. Speaking of set lists:
1. I bet it stung 2. I know I know I know 3. I hear noises 4. Monday Monday Monday 5. Not tonight 6. So jealous 7. Where does the good go 8. Speak slow 9. Downtown 10. This is everything 11. We didn't do it 12. Divided 13. Time running 14. Walking with a ghost 14. (I can't find this one. I wrote "I do I do" but they don't seem to have a song like that) Encore 1. Bruce Springsteen cover of Dancing In the Dark 2. You wouldn't like me
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[17 Nov 2005|11:48am] |
Manda.. or is it Nick: Why is every one so mean to me? Michi: Because you're different.
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| Twofer |
[10 Nov 2005|12:42pm] |
My Uncle Oswald by Roald Dahl This book made me wonder what Dahl must have been like. He is most well known for children's books, but this one was all about sex. He never explicitly describes sex, but his main character invents viagra and uses it to capture the sperm of the most intelligent or artful men of his time. People write the darndest things. His main character Oswald is completely self centered, sexest (sp?) and homophobic. Which is something that was a running theme in my next book as well.
American Psycho by Ellis Oh ... my... god.... about 3/4 of the way through this book I had to stop reading it for a while because I thought I was going to throw up at the end of every chapter. The things that Patrick does to women especially are described so graphically that it is revolting. Main critique is don't serial killers have a pattern, or ritual.. or something that they always have to do? Patrick is as if you put everything you've ever heard about serial killers in one. The odes to Genesis and Whitney Houston were stupid so I didn't even read the last one about .. Heuy Lewis and the News? It definetly makes me fear rich white guys. Don't read this unless you have a strong stomach. Every now and then someone will say a word like "cheese" and I'll get mentally grossed out because I'll think about this book. By far it is the most unpleasant reading experience I've ever had and I wonder how long it will take for me to cleanse my mental pallet.
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[03 Nov 2005|02:18pm] |
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My book design is on display on the second floor of the arts and humanities building. I'm excited!
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[25 Oct 2005|01:33pm] |
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I have so many very specific classes that I need to take that it is way too hard to try to figure out how to get them to fit together. WAH! After this semester I realized I can't take two honors classes and a GRD class at the same time, so I don't know what to do because all I have left is honors classes.
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