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I'm Reading...

  • Jeremy Byman: Madame Secretary: The Story of Madeleine Albright (Notable Americans)

    Jeremy Byman: Madame Secretary: The Story of Madeleine Albright (Notable Americans)

  • Thomas Merton: The Seven Storey Mountain
    Loves France. Interesting spiritual metaphors, a bit heavy-handed metaphysically. Not sure what I'll think about it when I finish.
  • J. K. Rowling: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7)

    J. K. Rowling: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7)
    I loved it. And no, I'm not going to tell you what happens. Go read your own book.

  • Glenn Yeffeth: Finding Serenity

    Glenn Yeffeth: Finding Serenity
    This book adds quite a bit to the enjoyment I have in Serenity and Firefly, discussing, as it does, themes and story arcs in a scholarly format, and applying them to the larger "story" universe. Being a book of collected essays, it's easy to read a bit at a time; I highly recommend.

  • Elizabeth Kostova: The Historian

    Elizabeth Kostova: The Historian
    Excellently done; very similar in style to Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norell. Yet again, however, I find myself reading a vampire-book. Who knew there were so many? They've definitely grown in mainstream popularity recently.

  • William Gibson: Neuromancer

    William Gibson: Neuromancer
    Picked this up on recommendation from everyone! Very enjoyable - I haven't finished, but I'm about five chapters from the end, and I'm getting the feeling that nothing will maintain itself as I understand it, which is lovely for sci-fi. I'm going to finish reading now...

  • Robin Hobb: Ship of Destiny

    Robin Hobb: Ship of Destiny
    The last of the Liveship Trilogy from Robin Hobb, and my personal favorite. I seem to be revisiting stuff I've read before, but that's nothing new for me - I love re-reading. To get the most out of this series, I'd start at the beginning with Ship of Magic. I like Hobb because she is strong on characterization, although others have criticized that because it necessarily entails being a bit slower on plot. The first book is mainly characters, but the narrative speeds up into the second and third books, and by the time you hit Ship of Destiny, you are fully entered into the conflicts and troubles of the LiveShip world.

  • Juliet Marillier: Daughter of the Forest

    Juliet Marillier: Daughter of the Forest
    One of my perennial favorites, although if you don't like first person narratives, you should stay away. A re-working of a Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale, this swan-story is gripping in its intensity and full of well-wrought characters. I'm never able to put it down.

  • Stephen Barnes: StreetLethal
    Picked this up on a whim, and boy, was it whimsy. Actually, it wasn't bad, seeing as how I expected it to turn out to be complete pulp, and while it will never hit my top thirty, it had a clever plot, an interesting set of characters, and what was probably a fresh look at cyberpunk when he wrote it in 1994.
  • Andre Norton: The White Jade Fox

    Andre Norton: The White Jade Fox
    I've never read any Andre Norton before, but I picked up a few in a used book store to check them out. I thoroughly enjoyed this one; the pacing is well done, the characters not bad, and the story exercises restraint, which is novel and allows for much more intelligent reading. A good "yarn."

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Out of Egypt (or Hiatus, or what-have-you)

It's nearly Christmas, and months and weeks have spun by in a work-blur.  I am working about 65 hours a week, enough so that I don't have a night at home more than once every couple of weeks.  My house looks like a small tornado has nested in the living room, where for the last week laundry, books, movies, presents, boxes, mail, and the occasional glass have rested haphazardly on the couches, floor, and entertainment center.  I currently have more clothing in my living room than I do in my closets. 
Intervention time?  Perhaps.  I would not be averse to a different manner of living, but I know it won't happen until after the holidays, when I will FINALLY reduce my workload to a more manageable 45-50 hours a week, and life will take a sharp and hopefully quick redirect to a more relaxed pace.  It would be nice to eat dinner while sitting down once in a while.  Not to mention return a few dozen phone calls, write a few dozen emails, and perhaps fold the ever-present laundry that has made itself at home on my loveseat.  Luckily that last can be accomplished while finishing two seasons of Veronica Mars.  I love multi-tasking.
Christmas is my favorite holiday.  I love giving gifts, seeing family, and singing my heart out in preparation for the Christ-child.  This year, every moment is bittersweet; I have not decorated, have not searched ever-so-diligently for the perfect gift, have not caroled loudly in reckless disregard for jaundiced ears.  I have worked and worked and WORKED so that others may do so, and I feel unprepared.  Last week I had nightmares about losing my ability to speak and frantically trying to help someone without being able to answer their questions.  I dreamt I slept through my alarm about four times.  Once I even dreamt that my alarm went off, and I woke up and went about my morning, only to discover that it was 3 a.m.  I'm ready to be done.
I will write a special post for Stackable Bards about Christmas, about the moment when we realize what Love was delivered to us that long-ago morning.  But here, I beg your forgiveness for my long absence, and I confess I am tired and worn out, that I need that Love more than ever, and that it will be with a profound sense of relief that I see the new year come, bringing some much-needed rest.