New tumbleblog for stashing interrrrresting stuff. Between del.icio.us (still processing thousands of bookmarked URLs) and tumblr and stumbleupon and twitter … I’m getting all Web2.0′d out.
June 15, 2007
[URL] morguefile.com Where photo reference lives.
morguefile.com Where photo reference lives.
A place to keep post production materials for use of reference, an inactive job file. This morgue file contains free high resolution digital stock photography for either corporate or public use.
The term ‘morgue file’ is popular in the newspaper business to describe the file that holds past issues flats. Although the term has been used by illustrators, comic book artist, designers and teachers as well. The purpose of this site is to provide free image reference material for use in all creative pursuits. This is the world wide web’s morguefile.
Amazing resource. (Oooh. Shiny! Pretty pictures!) Thanks, SourGrapes.
June 14, 2007
Dashiell Hammett’s old studio apartment is up for sale
Dashiell Hammett’s old studio apartment is up for sale.
(That would be me that socketsite.com refers to as their “plugged-in reader.”)
307 sq ft. *only* $249K
Book sorting progress
… of sorts.
Doesn’t help to be tied down here because the solar guys were supposed to put the panels back up on the new roof today but never showed. Maybe tomorrow his nibs will work from home and set me free to sort some more …
Sour Grapes offers in comments re Barchester Towers If I win you can have it. I’ve got it already.
Thanks. I was just feeling left out because I wanted to enter the contest too! I’m pretty sure I have a copy somewhere — probably in a box marked “classics” or “misc” or “fiction” or …
The book sorting goes apace. Well, “at a pace” anyway.
All travel books (except for USA travel) are out of their boxes and shifted over to adjacent bookcases, sorted by continent and country. The BENELUX titles and others of the ilk are a problem. I found multiple copies of some titles, which seems always the case, but not that many multiples. Even with the travel books settled, I get sidetracked thumbing through old travel books about Venice and travel memoirs and … well, I get sidetracked a lot.
After I shifted and sorted the travel books, I moved the cookbooks that were in the shelves over there over thataway to fill in the empty shelves where the travel books had been (adjacent to the bulk of the cookbooks) so now all the cookbooks are in one bank of shelves instead of scattered around. There are still boxes (six or so) that are boxed up because there’s no shelf space plus an additional box with a set of “Grande Diplome” cookbooks that I picked up used somewhere and two boxes that are filled with the Time-Life cookbook series that I picked up used here and there over time. A friend asked if I’d be willing to give her a set of Time-Life cookbooks and I said sure, but she’s got to get herself over and pick them up.
Most of the cookbooks still in boxes are “community cookbook” sorts of titles. I’ve sorted the titles on the shelves into “baking” “country-specific” “barbecue” “old” “San Francisco” “California” sorts of categories.
On the shelves after sorting, I discovered multiple editions of the Household Searchlight Recipe Book: three from different years in the ’30s, two from the ’40s and a couple from the ’50s. (The name changed to the Searchlight Recipe Book in 1942.) Different editions! Keep them all! Well, no. Turns out even though the books have different edition numbers and different publication dates, the contents of the 1st-14th editions are the same, according to this site.
I have multiple editions of Fannie Farmer’s cookbook, two copies of Larousse Gastronomique, multiple copies of James Beard books, two copies of Rene Verdon’s The White House Chef Cookbook (and tell me, should that be a general USA cookbook or should I put it in “San Francisco” because Verdon ran Le Trianon here for years?) There are, of course, multiple copies of some Sunset cookbooks, multiple copies of other titles. I filled up two boxes worth of duplicates for the library. The weirdest, though, was the duplicate copy of Madame Chang’s Long Life Chinese Cookbook. Two copies? How did that ever happen?
The cookbooks are pretty well sorted now, although I may find that I have a French dessert cookbook in with dessert cookbooks and another copy in with French cookbooks. Those will sort out in time.
Next up is to start getting the SFF in order. My SFF books are the most likely to have duplicates because my brother and I had copies of the same books in our collections and those collections combined after he died. The most egregious example of too many copies of a title is a Heinlein title for which I wound up with two paperback copies, two hardbacks and one mass market paperback.
I’ll take the empty bookcases that had held cookbooks and setup a rough sort (A-Z by author, ‘natch) of the SFF books and winnow out the duplicates. I won’t be able to get all of them on the empty shelves I have remaining, but I can at least sort through them in alphabetic shifts. Thanks be that I had the SFF boxed separately from the fiction, and labeled so I could find them in amongst all the piles.
After the pass through the SFF is complete, I’ll start sorting through all the boxes labeled MISC and VERY MISC and NFIC and, of course, those boxes that are somehow unlabeled. I’ll get the books organized in some sort of fashion so I can easily see that I have two copies of How to Build Your Dream House for Less Than $3500 and get rid of duplicates. (Yes, I know I have two copies, maybe three of that book. I’d bought one for myself, you see, because I’d loved my parents’ copy. I gave a copy to my brother because I knew he’d love it. I may have bought a spare at some time too. …)
I’ll rough-sort the misc and pull out the fiction titles and the juv and sort the rest into some broad categories: science, essays/memoirs, biography/autobiography, history, reference, gardening, computers … I don’t know. I need to think out the sort before I get seriously into it or I’ll wind up sorting and resorting and …
I also have all the boxes of books that are already labeled “science” and “physics” and “law” and “reference” and whatever that I needs must go through because there was some higglety-pigglety-ness in the boxing up before the move and who knows what may have been tucked into an almost-full box at the last minute.
Once I can lay out all the PHYSICS or GEOLOGY or SOFTWARE DESIGN books in one place I can get a handle on duplicates and other titles that I don’t need to save shelf space for.
Maybe along the way I’ll find my copy of Barchester Towers and Vanity Fair and Morrison & Boyd’s Organic Chemistry. Why own a book if I can’t find it?
Yes, I am being unduly obsessive/compulsive about this (Why do you ask?) but I’m also using the exercise as one enormous procrastination project while I mull over the rewrite on the great American crime novel.
Productive procrastination, I call it. (The dupes and discards will be given to the library to use or sell! It’s for the library! Think of the public libraries!)
(And I have visions of my darlings having to sort through all of Mom’s old books after I take my dirt nap, looking for those of value. Better that I weed the collection now and save them at least some of the effort.)
An hour with Gavin and next year’s budget
Found a link at the Sentinel to a video of Gavin presenting the 2007-2008 budget. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click on the photograph of Gavin to commence viewing.
The video (and the presentation) clocks in at just under an hour. Luckily, with a video you can click on the pause button if you just can’t spend an hour watching him go over his proposed $6b budget.
If Gavin hasn’t had a speech coach, he doesn’t need one. If he has had one, that person should crow. I love watching Gavin in action. Smooth, so very smooth. Even those who don’t like his message usually admit he speaks well. Watch the hands. Watch the movement back and forth with the microphone. Watch the facial expressions and listen to that roughened voice with just a bit of folksy drawl. Self deprecation. Public nods to the good things done by those rascally supervisors. Thanks, Tom Ammiano. Thanks, Ross Mirkarimi. Close your eyes and you can almost picture Clinton (that’s Bill Clinton, not Senator Clinton) up at the podium.
If you don’t have the patience to listen to Gavin ‘xplain the budget, he did mention something cool near the very end of his presentation. This year you can access the proposed budget on line, hot links and all.
Well, that’s all very well and good but I couldn’t for the life of me find the proposed $$ for the public library. (Shouldn’t the library be under Arts and Culture or somewhere like that? I searched everywhere) I finally had to break down and pull up the Mayor’s Budget Book to find the answers to my questions.
June 13, 2007
RIP Mr. Wizard
RIP Mr. Wizard.
During the 1960s and 1970s, about half the applicants to Rockefeller University in New York, where students work toward doctorates in science and medicine, cited Mr. Wizard when asked how they first became interested in science. [ref: International Herald Tribune]
Symptoms Found for Early Check on Ovary Cancer
Symptoms Found for Early Check on Ovary Cancer – New York Times
By DENISE GRADY
Published: June 13, 2007
Cancer experts have identified a set of health problems that may be symptoms of ovarian cancer, and they are urging women who have the symptoms for more than a few weeks to see their doctors.
The new advice is the first official recognition that ovarian cancer, long believed to give no warning until it was far advanced, does cause symptoms at earlier stages in many women.
The symptoms to watch out for are bloating, pelvic or abdominal pain, difficulty eating or feeling full quickly and feeling a frequent or urgent need to urinate. A woman who has any of those problems nearly every day for more than two or three weeks is advised to see a gynecologist, especially if the symptoms are new and quite different from her usual state of health.
[...]
Take note. Read the rest of the article too.
Ray Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451 Misinterpreted – Amy E. Boyle Johnston
Ray Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451 Misinterpreted – Amy E. Boyle Johnston, LA Weekly.
[...]
Bradbury, a man living in the creative and industrial center of reality TV and one-hour dramas, says it is, in fact, a story about how television destroys interest in reading literature.
“Television gives you the dates of Napoleon, but not who he was,” Bradbury says, summarizing TV’s content with a single word that he spits out as an epithet: “factoids.” He says this while sitting in a room dominated by a gigantic flat-panel television broadcasting the Fox News Channel, muted, factoids crawling across the bottom of the screen.
His fear in 1953 that television would kill books has, he says, been partially confirmed by television’s effect on substance in the news. The front page of that day’s L.A. Times reported on the weekend box-office receipts for the third in the Spider-Man series of movies, seeming to prove his point.
“Useless,” Bradbury says. “They stuff you with so much useless information, you feel full.” He bristles when others tell him what his stories mean, and once walked out of a class at UCLA where students insisted his book was about government censorship. He’s now bucking the widespread conventional wisdom with a video clip on his Web site (http://www.raybradbury.com/at_home_clips.html), titled “Bradbury on censorship/television.”
As early as 1951, Bradbury presaged his fears about TV, in a letter about the dangers of radio, written to fantasy and science-fiction writer Richard Matheson. Bradbury wrote that “Radio has contributed to our ‘growing lack of attention.’… This sort of hopscotching existence makes it almost impossible for people, myself included, to sit down and get into a novel again. We have become a short story reading people, or, worse than that, a QUICK reading people.”
[...]
“I was worried about people being turned into morons by TV,” Bradbury says in the censorship/television video clip. The collection of clips includes his explanation of how he wrote Fahrenheit 451 in nine days in a clip titled (oddly enough) FAHRENHEIT 451.
The Bradbury site also includes a wonderful obit for Marguerite Susan McClure (Maggie) Bradbury, who died in 2003.
Anthony Trollope
Welcome to Anthony Trollope
We’re bringing Trollope’s world to life with character descriptions, plot summaries, details of Trollope’s career as well as free e-texts of the novels to download.
It’s the 150th anniversary of Barchester Towers. Stop on by. Grab a piece of cake!
The folks behind the site are giving away 50 copies of Barchester Towers. You can’t win unless you enter. Deadline 30 June 2007.
Must be resident of UK to win. (It’s not fair, Mom!)
Sic Press: Book Repair & Cleaning Supplies for Booksellers
Sic Press not only sells supplies but also a how-to book: UNBOUND: Book Repair for Booksellers ($16).
Sic Press also offers (free!) on-site informative how-to videos with titles like “How to Remove a Bookplate” and “Re-attaching a Single Cover.”
Useful info on the Web for the bibliophiles with beat-up old books amongst us.