Tag Archives: cbc

book review: axiomatic

Another book I grabbed at the CBC Calgary Book Sale last month, Axiomatic is a collection of short stories by Greg Egan. The first time I read this book was when Reyn and I were in Turkey. I’d never heard of Greg Egan and then these stories of jewels in brains and designer viruses and belief attractor zones were so intensely weird. Now, after reading a small pile of Greg Egan novels, I realize these stories are actually the more accessible chunk of his work.

There are two stories that are very similar in the collection. Both are about runners going into a disaster zone. Both involve describing these weird landscapes formed by the anomalous event. This was the only part of the book I wasn’t a big fan of, feeling like I’d already read that. It sort of highlighted the “ideas man” aspect of his writing. Apart from that one near repeat, the book was as good as I remembered it, and I’m super glad I own it now, since it’s long out-of-print.

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book review: stars in my pocket like grains of sand

I’ve gone on about Samuel R Delany books before and well, here’s another one. In Calgary I found Stars In My Pocket Like Grains of Sand at the CBC Book Sale for a dollar. If only every dollar a person spent made you think this much.

I can’t zip through Delany’s books, no matter how much I enjoy them. I need space to let them decompress, to be wrestled with, because that’s how they’re written. Glossing through things to get to the action, the pathos or whatever basically avoids everything interesting. This book is about two people in a galaxy where travelling 60 thousand light years is expensive but possible. There are two main factions the Family and the Sygn who form the political backdrop to the galaxy. There are aliens and assassins and Industrial Diplomats and a very internet-like thing known as General Information (the book was written in the early 1980s). But the space opera things you might expect don’t happen.

Rat Korga is the lone survivor of a world where he was a slave. His story takes up the first sixth of the book and is called a prologue. Then we hit Marq Dyeth and her world-hopping ways. And already I’m mangling everything up. In this book sentient beings are referred to as women, regardless of gender (and there are several alien species too who obey this grammatical dictum). So the males and females thorughout the book are referred to as She unless they’re currently an object of sexual desire, in which case He. Since the story of Marq and Korga is told primarily through Marq’s voice she is always she even though she is male. Korga (a huge acne-scarred nail-biting male slave who’d had anxiety wiped out of his brain and now wears the rings of a long-dead poet which allow him to think) is Marq’s perfect erotic match (down to 6 or 7 decimal places) and as such vacillates between pronouns depending on how lust drives Marq. So that requires a lot of paying attention.

And then there are the Evelm, the aliens who get the most spotlight time. Marq is part of an Evelmi stream (not family as there’s no genetic correspondence between the generations; they’re Sygn-aligned) and we never get a clear “Here is what an Evelm looks like” kind of statement, which leaves you to put a lot of things together yourself. It works from Marq’s point of view as she grew up in such a household. As an example, in Pride and Prejudice you don’t get Mister Darcy described as a bipedal mammal with manipulating limbs, two eyes, a nose, ears and a mouth that does both ingestion and communication duties. It’s the same sort of thing, doing away with the clunky expositions that happen so often in science fiction. You have to go with it, be carried along.

Marq is an Industrial Diplomat and brings up the cultural differences in other ways constantly. One of the refrains in the book is that even a world is a huge place, let alone a galaxy with over 6000 of them. Cultural differences between the north and south on his world are always being brought up as Korga missteps or does exactly the right thing.

But yes, it’s a beautiful weird book.

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out in cowtown

I love being away from home. If I could somehow make a life out of sleeping in people’s guest rooms or on their couches while they go about their business I would be possibly more content than I am. For a while.

I spent the weekend in Calgary with Caroline and Brian and Paisley. And was thankful P was in cute mode instead of something that would provoke “if you were a kitten I’d drown you” kinds of thoughts. She is pretty funny and has pretty wacky hair. And she likes to pick up rocks everywhere from down at the ol’ Knox West scenic hydroelectric dam, to the playground where children apologize for their hats being “storebought,” to Banff where the tricksy shopkeeps have the rocks cemented into the “rustic” floors, those dastardly fiends.

We ate Indian food and Korean food and homemade food. I also found a couple of used books at the Calgary Reads CBC Book Sale, where it was funny how the table of business books were so almost completely shunned. Like the CBC crowd in Calgary didn’t want to be associated with the filthy business of money in any way.

It’s funny how these friends I physically see so rarely (this would be the second visit in five years) can be so comfortable to be around. Funny in a good way. I didn’t see any of the other people I know in Calgary, but felt fine about that.

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cavernous apartment to replace a shack

There was a documentary on Newsworld tonight called Up the Yangtze. It was about a couple of kids working the tourist river cruises that swung by my old home (though the never showed Wanzhou specifically). I watched and recognized people. Not actual individuals but people who showed the exact same personalities King or Vivien or other students I’d taught. And the woman who worked in the kitchen who reminded me of the woman who ran the restaurant with the AC and grimy plastic curtain. Made me miss China. It was so grey and green and brown, just like I remember it.

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notes from a weekend away

I’m back from a great weekend away. It’s funny how really we didn’t do much, but it was still a good time. Sitting around talking about CBC and books can be quite enthralling with the right people, which Caroline and Brian definitely are. I mean, we went to the mountains since one of the main thing you do as a Calgarian is leave Calgary, but it was all very relaxed kind of stuff. I guess I can say that because I didn’t do any of the driving.

Near the Greyhound station in Brandon there’s a sign that reads: “Secure Your Future – Enroll in a cosmetology course today.” I thought a bit about my future and if it was flapping around enough that Brandon cosmetology was the thing I needed. I decided it wasn’t.

In Calgary I killed some time on Monday morning watching people with shopping carts ferry between the Uptown Bottle Depot and Payless Liquor, before I discovered The Sentrybox was right near the bus station.

Anyway, good times. Glad to get away. Oh, and Caroline have you found my “Thanks for having me” gift yet?

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curtis

Alison’s been gone for a week. The main floor is a mess because of her absence. Not that she keeps it clean, but because I’m considerate of other people and try to stay out of their way. (Unless we are discussing the former roommate who could be the subject of a children’s book.) This has been on my mind since I also raided her DVDs and watched the 13 episodes that were Twitch City. I don’t think I’d ever seen the second season of that show before. And since it was a CBC show not based on current events I’m sure it only returned after a multiyear gap. The first season is way better than the second. Like by a lot. Yep.

Maybe this’ll unclog Blogger.

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no weightlessness included

Wouldn’t this be awesome? Too bad they don’t want journalists. Also this morning I saw a story on cbc.ca about typos in a NB highschool yearbook. Why on earth should we care that they spelled it “liturature”? One of our yearbooks was missing an N on the cover; where was the CBC then? Stupid.

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like tree trunks they were

Last night/early this morning Sean and I saw 300. Here’s the point of the movie: Spartans were the manliest men ever. You’ve seen the best lines in the trailer, but the fight scenes, which is what the movie is primarily composed of are things of beauty. The dialogue, not so much. I was appalled that the credit sequence they used at the end of the movie wasn’t up at the front. It was an animated bit that was phenomenal (in much the same way that Casino Royale’s credit sequence was my favourite part of that movie).

Tonight on CBC I saw a review of the movie, and it talked about the violence (of course) and the racism involved. Which I don’t really get. The Spartans were fighting the Persians. The CBC seemed to be trying to do one of these allegory type things about how because they fight, people from another country it’s offensive to Iranians? No I don’t really understand what they’re talking about at all. I mean, there were black people in the Persian army, and none of the Spartan heroes were black. Is that the racism?

And through the movie I hated how my brain kept on trying to tie the rhetoric to Dubya’s War on Terror. That’s not what it was about. The New York Times did a piece about that last week. Fucking allegories. I do not like them. 300 was simply about men with huge cocks.

[UPDATE: Here's a critical review of the movie from Alternet, which seems a fairly typical "responsible adult" kind of response. Even though 300 wasn't my favourite movie, I still don't appreciate being lumped in with the cat-killing/Ann Coulter crowd.]

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the real crime is no one checked for boats

The Departed, one of my favourite movies of 2006, has been banned in China! From the CBC:

Reports from China say the movie was blocked because of a plot line in which Boston gangsters are shown trying to sell military computer hardware to Chinese villains.

I find it funny that the story refers to the movie’s Chinese as villains. I can’t remember any moustache twirling. In fact, they’re pretty much a MacGuffin. Their entire scene consists of Jack Nicholson being a prick (through a translator, who I imagine edits out the more offensive epithets – I think they were speaking Cantonese or enough slang that I could follow nothing) and then them purchasing a briefcase. They don’t even shoot anyone.

It’s so sad that none of my friends in China will get to see this wonderful crime drama now that it’s been banned. If only there was some intrepid capitalist hero who could get a copy into the country on some sort of device that could be copied and sold for a modest fee.

Oh wait.

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countdown to employment: t minus two

In the last couple of days I downloaded (legally) a bunch of Canadian hiphop I was pointed to by the radio3 podcast. Even though Wordburglar rhymed “Barrymore” with “Carey more” for the best lyric Bucky, I still like his stuff. Cadence Weapon gets a little serious for my taste, but still, he’ll play. And I love Hunnicut’s bit about Prince in the Farm Fresh song “30 in the Club.”

You know who else I like? Kid Koala. He’s coming to Winnipeg on January 23rd. I will be there. I think that might be the same day as Snoop Dogg, but it was an easy choice for me to make. A babyfaced turntablist/author of the best robot love story ever versus the man who brought us “bizzack” and “shizzle”?

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