Saturday, January 15, 2011

Catfish






Last weekend I watched 'Catfish', a documentary which touches issues of identity, fiction, reality and modern technology. It is not the film you expect it to be from the trailer, instead it captivates, questions, and on more than one occasion made me feel physically uncomfortable, just through the issues it dealt with. It is one of the best films I have seen in a long time, purely for the effect it had, and the debate stirred immediately after watching it. Whether this is a "real" documentary or a false one remains vague and undefined. While the film-makers claim it is 100% real, many have questioned its veracity, and I can see why. To me however, the question of whether it is "real" or not only adds to the effect of the film as a whole, and gels well with the issues it raises in itself. Can we believe something or somebody to be 'real' just because they say they are? This is film about fiction and reality, and at the end of the screening we are too forced to question some of the very same issues; whether this is intended or not, it is certainly thought-provoking and contextually relevant. 

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Cover me up





Whether you're an avid reader or someone who just






with reading,  cover design is a beautiful art, and one Penguin has experimented with over the years. You have to admit that sometimes - whether you read them or not - books look very nice. Though they can also look very horrible - naming no names here. I love comparing all the different covers and editions that are around. And I will pay extra for a well designed cover and nice typeface. I'm not ashamed to admit it. That's why I'm itching to buy myself a set of these Penguin postcards, 100 book covers - I think they'd look sweet stuck on one of my walls.  


p.s. the photo is from Christmas. A friend got gifted this book in a Secret Santa. Funny isn't it.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Breakfast with a Story

photo here

I woke up early.
I went for a run.
(whenever I get to a hill I say in my head 'you go girl' in an American accent).
I got back thinking about breakfast.
It would be a warm milky one.
It is my whole-hearted opinion that breakfast should always be accompanied with a bit of casual storytelling, more specifically, by a little French girl called Miss Capucine.
Such heart bursty feelings.


Once upon a time... from Capucha on Vimeo.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Wuthering





Currently in the middle of marking essays on, among other Victorian writings, Wuthering Heights. Back in September I watched the 1939 film adaptation starring Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon (perhaps the best name ever). Though the film doesn't stick very closely to the plot it does have the most melodramatic death scene you might ever encounter - see the penultimate image above.


In other news, "New Year" begins for me tomorrow. While most others diligently start afresh on January 1st I like to give myself a week to refocus before I begin to tweak things. Plus, it's handy to have an extra week to finish the mince pies and Christmas chocos, who also happen to be my faithful companions during January marking week. 

Friday, January 7, 2011

It was then that I discovered little dried sections of tangerine


My pleasure in them is subtle and voluptuous and quite inexplicable. I can only write how they are prepared.
In the morning, in the soft sultry chamber, sit in the window peeling tangerines, three or four. Peel them gently; do not bruise them, as you watch soldiers pour past and past the corner and over the canal towards the watched Rhine. Separate each plump little pregnant crescent. If you find the Kiss, the secret section, save it for Al.
Listen to the chambermaid thumping up the pillows, and murmur encouragement to her thick Alsatian tales of l’intérieure. That is Paris, the interior, Paris or anywhere west of Strasbourg or maybe the Vosges. While she mutters of seduction and French bicyclists who ride more than wheels, tear delicately from the soft pile of sections each velvet string. You know those white pulpy strings that hold tangerines into their skins? Tear them off. Be careful.
Take yesterday’s paper (when we were in Strasbourg L’Ami du Peuple was best, because when it got hot the ink stayed on it) and spread it on top of the radiator. The maid has gone, of course – it might be hard to ignore her belligerent Alsatian glare of astonishment.
After you have put the pieces of tangerine on the paper on the hot radiator, it is best to forget about them. Al comes home, you go to a long noon dinner in the brown dining-room, afterwards maybe you have a little nip of quetsch from the bottle on the armoire. Finally he goes. You are sorry, but -
On the radiator the sections of tangerines have grown even plumper, hot and full. You carry them to the window, pull it open, and leave them for a few minutes on the packed snow of the sill. They are ready.
All afternoon you can sit, then, looking down on the corner. Afternoon papers are delivered to the kiosk. Children come home from school just as three lovely whores mince smartly into the pension’s chic tearoom. A basketful of Dutch tulips stations itself by the tram-stop, ready to tempt tired clerks at six o’clock. Finally the soldiers stump back from the Rhine. It is dark.
The sections of the tangerine are gone, and I cannot tell you why they are so magical. Perhaps it is that little shell, thin as one layer of enamel on a Chinese bowl, that crackles so tinily, so ultimately under your teeth. Or the rush of cold pulp just after it. Or the perfume. I cannot tell.
There must be someone, though, who understands what I mean. Probably everyone does, because of his own secret eatings.
MFK Fisher. Serve It Forth.
via here

Monday, January 3, 2011

Exciting




I might be in one of these soon. By that I mean, a book! I've been asked to contribute to a collection. Top secret for the moment though, sssssshh, don't say a thing.


Photo from here

Sunday, January 2, 2011

It couldn't last of course





but like I say, just for those few months, we somehow managed to live in this cosy state of suspension in which we could ponder our lives without the usual boundaries. Looking back now, it feels like we spent ages in that steamed up kitchen after breakfast, or huddled around half-dead fires in the small hours, lost in conversation about our plans for the future.




Never Let Me Go. Kazuo Ishiguro.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Happy New One


Hi 2011.