I have always liked reading dystopian literature. Perhaps that is because it agrees with my generally pessimistic view of civilisation and where it is headed. Anyhow, having reread Brave New World earlier this year, and having just finished rereading Zamyatin's We, I have decided to complete what has always been for me the triumvirate of dystopian literature and reread 1984.
Does anyone have any other suggestions of good dystopian literature of which I may be unaware?
30.4.09
28.4.09
22.4.09
A Trip to the Record Shop ***Record Store Day Edition***
Last Saturday was Record Store Day. To celebrate, I went record shopping. Original, I know. This is what I picked up:
After buying it, the dude at Audiopile told me to help myself to a record from the bargain bin. I chose this:
Sadly, there are some big scratches on it, though some of the songs play through just fine.
After buying it, the dude at Audiopile told me to help myself to a record from the bargain bin. I chose this:
Sadly, there are some big scratches on it, though some of the songs play through just fine.
20.4.09
15.4.09
Man Bites Snake!
This may be the best news item ever. Or at least the best news item today. A Kenyan man was attacked and pulled up a tree by a python. The man bit the snake.
13.4.09
A Trip to the Record Shop!
The Ball is Round!
Today, I finally finished reading David Goldblatt's excellent book The Ball is Round: A Global History of Football. At 907 pages, no small feat. Though not my favourite football book, that honour is shared amongst Eduardo Galeano's Soccer in Sun and Shadow and Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch, this book is, as I said, excellent. Massive in scope, it is exactly what the title says, a history of the game on a world scale. But more than covering the spread and development of football, it gives the social and historical context in which football was and is played. The strongest chapters are the later ones, I'm guessing because there are more records available. These chapters detail the corruption and commercialization endemic in the world game. However, he ends with this:
Living with profound risk and uncertainty is now the destiny of humanity. We are lucky then that the game we have chosen as our collective metaphor, the avatar of our social dilemmas, should so closely parallel our predicament. To place the world under the sign of play is to expose ourselves to the caprice of the ball. We must be bold enough to think that we have the guile, the heart and the wit to bring it under control.
An over-intellectualisation perhaps, something I may have been guilty of once or twice, but apt nonetheless. All in all, an excellent, thoroughly researched work, and a worthwhile read.*
*When the hell did I become a book reviewer?
Living with profound risk and uncertainty is now the destiny of humanity. We are lucky then that the game we have chosen as our collective metaphor, the avatar of our social dilemmas, should so closely parallel our predicament. To place the world under the sign of play is to expose ourselves to the caprice of the ball. We must be bold enough to think that we have the guile, the heart and the wit to bring it under control.
An over-intellectualisation perhaps, something I may have been guilty of once or twice, but apt nonetheless. All in all, an excellent, thoroughly researched work, and a worthwhile read.*
*When the hell did I become a book reviewer?
3.4.09
Stalin vs. Martians
That is the trailer for an upcoming video game called, obviously, Stalin vs. Martians. I really have no idea why Josef Stalin is dancing or what the dancing has to do with what seems to be a pretty straight forward strategy video game pitting Martian invaders against the Red Army, but I do know this: Josef Stalin is coming to your house.* Soon. You've been warned.
*I'd recommend serving a nice poppy seed cake with tea.
1.4.09
My Little Pony Redux!
Because some things are just too awesome to not post, here is a blog entry about the next generation of My Little Ponies.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)