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1. What's a skill you'd like to learn?
Right now, I want to master using a pizza peel, so when it gets warmer I can use an outdoor wood oven.  Just can't seem to get the hang of it for some reason.

2. What's a hobby you'd like to try?
I dunno.  As I think I've mentioned before in this journal, I would like to get back into fencing sometime, and at my age it would probably be more as a hobby than anything else.

3. What's the best compliment you've ever received?
I'd have to say that some of the positive comments I've gotten from class observations from my department chairs while teaching have been some of the most gratifying.

4. What's one way in which you are awesome?
I mean, come on, how can I limit it to just *one* way.  After all, am I not an idol to millions?  Inspiration to children everywhere?  The man with the rear that makes the girls cheer?  All this and modest, too.

5. What's a gift you would like to receive (in case anyone asks)?
As I've gotten older I've become less and less into receiving gifts.  I think I'm more at a point where any material item I want, I'd rather just buy myself.  So, if you want to get me something, cash is fine. 
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I recently "fixed" the charger port on my phone, which hadn't been working right for awhile - the connection was "loose" enough that the charger wouldn't stay connected, which was especially an issue in the car, where hitting a bump could disconnect it (not ideal for podcasts, even less so when using GPS).  It seems the issue was nothing mechanical, but instead a buildup of impacted pocket lint in the port; I cleared it out and it's been working fine for a little while now.  Well, that'll hopefully save a trip to the Apple store (or comparable mall kiosk), since the nearest is all the way in Albany.

I picked up a few old Nintendo books from ThriftBooks and they arrived with a few nostalgic price tags on them, from Babbage's and Software Etc.  Haven't heard those names in a long time.  I believe those are both among the various stores that were eventually absorbed into Gamestop, along with Electronics Boutique, FuncoLand and some others.  (I still remember ordering games by mail from Funco's paper catalog... and there's definitely some that I should've picked up for cheap back then that aren't so cheap anymore!)

Tabby's been a holy terror the last few mornings.  She is effectively my alarm clock now, for which there is no snooze button until she's been fed, but sometimes it goes off early and she starts in with trying to wake me up at 5am or earlier.  (Hopefully the time change tonight will put that back on track...)  Then this morning, after feeding, she messed with Adrian a bit, then jumped on my barber stand by the door and knocked a bunch of mail onto the floor, which scared her; she then ran into the living room proper and proceeded to puke on the rug.  I don't know how a little cat that weighs 8 pounds at most can have as much energy as she does.


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The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
I should probably have turned in my nerd card years ago, as I've never actually read the Lord of the Rings trilogy.  Or even seen the movies.  I'm planning to go through those books via the Robert Inglis audiobook series, and although I *did* read The Hobbit in maybe third grade, I remembered exactly none of it (so I'm not really counting it as a "previously read"), and figured I should go through that first.  It's funny how some aspects come through as somewhat formulaic or cliched today, when in many ways this book was the wellspring of just about all modern fantasy stories (whether in written, screen or game form).  You can't really criticize something for reflecting trends that it *created,* right?  I'm on to the first few chapters of Fellowship now, and I have to say that I do find it a bit more interesting than The Hobbit - there is, so far, a bit more emphasis on character development in addition to plot, and I think Tolkien's writing - though by no means bad in Hobbit - improved quite a bit by the time he started the trilogy proper.  As a side note, Inglis' performance of the audio version is a gem.

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Yeah, that's a big one.  Humbert is absolutely one of the least likeable "protagonists" I've encountered in a book, and that's not a criticism since that's exactly the point.  Every time he mentioned how "handsome" he is I just wanted to punch him.  But, the writing really is pretty superb here, allowing us to see the mental gymnastics this guy will go through to justify and even celebrate his actions.  The line where he offhandedly mentions Dolores "crying every night" was a sobering glimpse of reality slipping past his BS.  I wouldn't exactly call it a pleasant read, but it was an interesting one.

Welcome to Night Vale by Joseph Fink & Jeffrey Cranor
This is tied-in to the well-known podcast of the same name, and captured a lot of what makes the podcast good in an extended written form.  The weirdness is on point, and the quality of the writing is excellent.  The biggest criticism I can think of is that of the two lead characters, perpetually-19-year-old pawn shop proprietor Jackie seems a bit more roundly developed than recently-fired-mother-of-a-shapeshifter Diane (or shapeshifter son Josh), and I almost wonder if splitting them off into two separate stories might have allowed both - Diane in particular - to get a bit more depth added.  That's ultimately a rather mild criticism, though, and I'll definitely read the next two Night Vale novels at some point.  

The Moonshine War by Elmore Leonard
A quick read involving a feud over premium moonshine whiskey during the Prohibition era.  The main emphasis is on action rather than character development, and that's fine for a novel of less than 200 pages.  Frank Long, who begins the story as a Prohibition agent trying to take the whiskey - but perhaps more for his own benefit than the governments - is probably the most interesting character, as his arc takes him from ostensibly working for the law, to bringing in a group of criminals to try to aid him, then turning against them (when it becomes clear they're going to turn on him) and joining main character Son Martin in defense of his product and his home.  Martin himself is a bit wooden, and the story begins with a boy who pops up a few times during the plot as sort of an observer figure, but really doesn't need to be in the story at all for it to work.  A decent quick read nonetheless.

Here is New York by E.B. White
A thin volume in which White discusses the character of New York City in the late 1940s, admitting up front that even by the time the book was first published aspects of it would likely already be outdated as the city is in a constant state of flux.  It's a neat little slice of life for that era, though, and the final pages in which White talks about the ever-present danger NYC is in due to the constant air traffic over the city - no doubt taken from the then-recent crash of a B-25 into the Empire State Building - seems rather eerily prophetic in a post-9/11 New York.

Cell 2455, Death Row: A Condemned Man's Own Story by Caryl Chessman
A memoir and one of several books by Caryl Chessman, who was convicted as the "Red Light Bandit" and ultimately went to California's gas chamber in 1960.  He recounts the series of events in his formative years that turned him into a criminal (though he maintains his innocence for the Red Light crimes, he fully admits to his criminal past prior to that), and asks difficult questions about the society that creates criminals like him, and about the punishment thereof, up to and including the death penalty.  It's a thought-provoking read, and the prose is legitimately very good - Chessman had actual talent as a writer - and it's somewhat haunting to consider that it was written by somebody who was actually slated for execution in his near future.  On that last point, I'm somewhat reminded of the self-portrait of John Andre, drawn on the eve of his own excecution.

Ten from Infinity by Ivar Jorgensen (Paul W. Fairman)
A short pulp novel from the '60s.  The premise is interesting - ten men, identical in every way, mysteriously appear around the country.  In execution, it's very much an average book.  The writing is OK, the plot is OK, the execution is mostly OK - but it's nothing that will stick in your mind for long after it's over.  In many ways I guess it's exactly what you'd expect from a pulp novel like this.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin - Lost Years by Kevin Eastman & Tom Waltz
The first Last Ronin book (compilation book, that is, or first comic series if you prefer) has received a lot of hype, but I think that's generally deserved; it was certainly a different side of the TMNT franchise as it went even darker and grittier than the Mirage comic series, let alone the friendlier takes like the '87 cartoon, the Archie comics or the live-action movies, and had a lot of surprisingly emotional moments, especially if you have any attachment to certain characters.  Lost Years is pretty much more of the same, in a good way.  It's a combination prequel/sidequel/sequel that fleshes out the original Last Ronin a bit, and goes a long way to setting up the next generation of turtles that it looks like will be further developed into a series of their own.  Lost Years is basically to The Last Ronin what the El Camino movie was to Breaking Bad - not at all essential to enjoying the original series, but it's well-done and nice to have around.

The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920-1961 by Jeff Kisseloff
This was a project to get through.  That's not a shot against it; it's such an interesting topic, and the insights from people who were there in TV's early days are invaluable.  But at 600+ pages it was definitely an on-and-off reading process for months (since mid-2023) to get through.  I admit that there were a few sections that I did skim a bit (especially once it got into the mid-50s, since I've read more about that era already).  But definitely interesting stuff and a book that will find a permanent home on my entertainment history shelf.

Fish Men Fear… SHARK! by Jerry & Idaz Greenberg
I bought this two or so years ago off the used rack at a local cafe.  I mainly wanted it for the title.  I mean, as scary as sharks may be, the fish men surely have greater concerns nowadays, right?  Of course, it's really meant to suggest that the sharks are fish that men fear, but I do find the awkward phraseology amusing.  Anyway, it's just a little 50-page book about sharks from the '60s, mostly made up of photos accompanied by some rather basic text.  Nothing earth-shattering, and I'd imagine that at least some of the science has been revised since it was written, but it's reasonably interesting with some decent images.
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What is the name of...

1. Your favorite book?
Oh, jeez.  I don't think I really have an answer to that one.  So I'll just say The Three Stooges Scrapbook.

2. Your favorite movie?
This one I *can* answer.  Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man (1995).

3. Your least favorite adaptation of a book to a movie?
While not *exactly* an adaptation of a specific book, my least favorite movie of all time would probably have to be A Christmas Story 2, ostensibly based on Jean Shepherd's writings, but lacking any of the charm, and missing many of the points of the books (and the original movie), with the idea of a boy learning life lessons and gaining an understanding of how family and the world at large works replaced with unfunny slapstick.  It comes off as more of a lame parody than either a continuation or an homage, and then has the gall to bill itself as "the REAL sequel," ignoring My Summer Story and the PBS specials that Shepherd was actually personally involved with.  I have seen movies that are objectively worse - Nukie comes to mind - but A Christmas Story 2 is the only movie that's ever made me legitimately angry while watching it.

4. Your least favorite adaptation ever of anything to a movie?
See #3.

5. Your first ever novel/comic book/movie character crush?
I think that list begins and ends with April O'Neil (TMNT '87).
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No context, as usual.

The Brotatoes
Hotwheels Sisyphus
Baleen Hair
Fibber McGee's Closet
Gethsemane Six
The Spider's George
Napalm Sundae
Beorn's Wonderful Animals
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1. Have you ever been the president of anything?
No.  My political career was limited to running for Vice President of my 5th grade class, with a platform of "more class parties" (which I would've had absolutely no authority to provide), and gave out Jolly Ranchers as part of my campaigning.  I lost by one vote to a kid named Scooter, who gave out chocolate.  I should've gone with chocolate, maybe I'd have won, and who knows where I'd be now.

2. What do you think is the most important leadership trait?
The ability to listen, and the ability to understand and learn from the past.

3. What time period did you find the most interesting to learn about in history class?
I mean, I'm a history teacher so I probably shouldn't play favorites too much.  My specialty is US history (esp. 19th century), but really, it's all interesting.

4. What's something you think about doing, but you haven't gotten back into in several years?

I'd love to get back into fencing at some point; I did that in high school and a little in college.  At age 40 and 20+ years out of practice, I doubt there's much opportunity left for any sort of major competition (unless there's some sort of senior tour), but just doing it for fun would be cool.

5. If you could add one more random holiday to February, what would it be?
National Stay Home, Eat Pizza and Play Video Games Day, I guess.  But really, eh, there's enough holidays already.
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Running on about 4 hours of sleep, since I didn't get home from a live wrestling show til after midnight last night.  At work (on lunch break), but it really seems to be dragging.

Apparently there's some other big event today?  Oh well.

Anyway, kind of an odd thing this morning.  I noticed a house down the street from mine has light/lime green siding.  However, I have no recollection of that house being green.  They certainly didn't have the siding changed in the last day, and it doesn't really look new anyway.  But just a strange thing.  Glitch in the matrix?  Proof we're in a simulation?  Or just lack of sleep?  You decide.
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Bit of a random selection this time.

1. At what age did you discover you had a favorite color?
Not really sure; my favorite color is gray but I probably didn't realize that until high school.  I don't really remember having a specific favorite color in childhood.

2. What type (genre) of film do you prefer to see in a theater versus one you'd watch at home?
Silent movies with live accompaniment.  Otherwise I'm good at home.

3. What's your oldest object or item since childhood?
If it counts as an "object," I have a golden pothos plant that's as old as I am, so I guess it'd be that.

4. In what book would you insert yourself as a side character or friend to the protagonist?
That's kind of a hard one.  A lot of my favorites - such as Bernard Cornwell's Warlord trilogy and Saxon series - are in settings that, while interesting, aren't necessarily ones I'd want to actually *be* in.  So I think I'll pick the old Three Stooges comics - 'cuz then I could hang out with the Stooges.

5. What's your favorite shape or type of cloud?
The Glow Cloud.  All hail the Glow Cloud.
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Staying up past my bedtime to watch the Royal Rumble.  Hey, I've watched wrestling since the late '80s; no reason to stop now!  And this is one of my favorite events of the year - even with all the current controversy.

I remember, especially in high school, always wishing the pay-per-view events would be on Saturday night instead of Sunday, since then I wouldn't have to get up early the next day for school.  Now, in the last couple of years, they've switched to having them on Saturdays... and guess who has to get up early on Sundays for work.

Anyway.

I'm also making today a bit of a "cheat day" from my diet and fitness routine.  It's not much of a cheat, since my calories and macros are all still within my range, but I did allow more calories than I've been generally taking in lately.  I also drank a Wild Cherry Pepsi that's been staring at me from the refrigerator since August.  (And I didn't enjoy it as much as I thought I would - maybe my taste has changed from that kind of thing?)  I've hit kind of a plateau for the second time recently - I'd stalled out for about two weeks, then dropped three or so more pounds, and am stalled out again.  I've heard that a cheat day here or there can actually help break those plateaus, so I'm giving it a try.  We'll see.  At least it hasn't meaningfully gone *up* recently, and I'm still at nearly 57 and a half pounds down since the beginning of August, but I'm kind of anxious to hit that 60-pound mark (and then continue from there).

Nothing too terribly interesting going on otherwise lately, other than some work schedule craziness, hence why I haven't had a "journal" post in awhile.  I've finished a few books lately, though - up to 6 for the year in total so far - so I'll probably put up a post breaking down thoughts on those soon.

Well, back to the show.  The Women's Rumble is over; now it's time for the 4-way title match.  Hope I can actually stay up late enough to see the whole event... but we'll see.
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No context etc.

Teeth Garage
Undercover Bears
Waluigi on Wiggler
Buttcraxx
American Goulash
Meat Thresher
Urban Yeti
Pore Gunk
Tokyo Sandblaster
Fusilli Jerry 
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1. Do you cook regularly or does someone else cook for you?
Myself, not that there's much choice at the moment.  Fortunately I've started learning more about "real" cooking over the last few years, so when time permits I can actually make some decent stuff.

2. Which are you better at making: sweet or savory foods?
I haven't gotten much into baking yet, so I guess savory by default (pizzas, soups, things like that).  I have made a couple of decent cookies, though, like Florentine lace cookies and a no-bake cookie from an old WWE cookbook ("Viscera's cookies").

3. If you had to work as a chef in a restaurant of your choice, which restaurant would best complement your current culinary skills?
Probably a pizza place, since I've gotten pretty good at those (and they're also my favorite to eat).

4. What is a cooking tip that you know, but other people generally aren’t aware of?
When making pizzas I use oil to stretch the dough instead of flour or cornmeal.  I find it easier to work with, gives a nice crisp to the crust when it comes out, and I don't make as much of a colossal mess with it.

5. Do you have a recipe you would like to share?
I'm not really advanced enough to really develop my own recipes yet.  But one of my favorite quick sides is home fries made with red potatoes, fried and seasoned with salt, pepper and a generous sprinkling of dill.
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My birthday present to myself last year was an SNES repro cart of Final Fantasy V, which I've never actually finished, despite having several versions of it already (PlayStation, GBA, Pixel Remaster).  I wanted to finish it for the first time in its original form before doing the PR version, and also just to complete the set of SNES Final Fantasy carts.

I'm up to the merged (third) world, just completed the pyramid dungeon and got Lenna and the airship back, so I think I'm around 2/3 through.  I've enjoyed it overall, but there are several things that definitely hold me back from putting it on the same level as its immediate predecessor or successor (which is admittedly a tall order; FF4 is a classic, at least in its uncut form, and FF6 is very possibly my favorite game of any genre of all time).  

The story is definitely inferior, lacking the emotional weight that FF4 and especially FF6 had, and I think Bartz/Butz is a much weaker protagonist than Cecil or Terra, not having nearly the same amount of depth or connection to the player, and in his more annoying moments resembling Tidus from FF10 more than anything.  Additionally, I think the overall design of the game lags behind those two games, with dungeon designs especially leading to frustration on more than one occasion, and causing issues with difficulty balance (the aforementioned pyramid stage at the beginning of the merged world, for instance, features a notable spike in difficulty just as the game's narrative takes Lenna out of the party temporarily, leaving you to deal with it at a disadvantage with only three active characters).

Of course, there is a lot to like too.  The narrative, if not as epic as 4 or transcendent as 6, is fine enough in its own right; a standard but not unenjoyable fantasy story, and the job system - the game's biggest hook - is a lot of fun to play with and customize the characters to the player's liking.  Personally, I've established Butz as the main physical fighter albeit with a bit of a magic twist, with him spending much of the game so far as a Mystic Knight but currently training as Hunter; Lenna as the primary mage, currently largely switching between Summoner and Time Mage (with the opposite's magic type set as the secondary ability; Faris as a primarily speed-based melee fighter, having already mastered the Ninja class, and currently taking a break from Thief to start also working on Hunter, and the Galuf/Krile slot adapting as needed, having had a concentration on Blue Mage but also spending notable amounts of time as a Monk, Red Mage, Black Mage and White Mage.

Squaresoft - as it was then known - had an unbelievable run from the SNES era through their first year or so on PlayStation (an overall range of about 1991-97, producing banger after banger notably including FF4, Secret of Mana, FF6, Chrono Trigger (which is also on the short list for my all-time top-ten, along with FF6), Super Mario RPG (which, yes, was developed by Square), FF7, and Final Fantasy Tactics (not to mention a few excellent games that they published for other developers, like the first Breath of Fire and one of my all-time favorite fighting games, the first Bushido Blade).  During this time they also put out a few very good if not quite legendary titles like the criminally-underappreciated Final Fantasy: Mystic Quest and Secret of Evermore, and I think that category is where FF5 fits - not quite legendary, but nonetheless a strong installment in an excellent run.

As to the Final Fantasy series overall, I pretty much fell off it after 10.  While I loved 7, I absolutely hated 8, haven't given 9 a fair chance as of yet (and I should, as it's probably a far better game than I've credited for) and, while I liked a lot about 10, especially the battle system, there was a lot of poor writing, poor voice acting and general silliness that put me off the then-current direction of the series.  Maybe I should also try to find time to give 12 a shot at some point, as I know many like it, but especially when it started moving in its current action-RPG direction I lost what little remaining interest I had in the series (and I have zero interest in MMORPGs, so I'll probably never play 11 or 14, and still have no idea why they were made part of the main line instead of an online side-series).  But we'll always have the early NES classics and that sweet spot between 4 and 7, right?
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Once again, presented without context.

Beavis Sinatra
Termites of 1938
Garlic Jackson
Well-Buttered Eels (not to be confused with the regular EELS)
Thugs of the First Water
The Pickle Union
The Talking Nixons
Bag of Lint
Aggro Craig and the Guts
Lee and Bill Ding
The Rock and Sock Connection

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1. What is your current main mode of transportation? e.g. car, bike, subway, walking, etc.
Just my ‘19 Outback.  93k miles and counting.

2. Are you satisfied with your current main mode of transportation (answer to question 1)? Why?
Yes.

3. Do you think you'll change your means of transit soon? e.g. buy a car, get rid of your car, walk more etc.? If so, why?
I hope not to.

4. If time, distance and money were not factors, how do you prefer to get from point A to point B?
Teleportation would be nice.

5. What was your worst transit experience?
A train car with the heat stuck on in late spring, between NYC and Poughkeepsie.
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1. In what ways do you expect/hope this year to be better than last year?
Continuing my wellness journey is my main goal priority.  Physically, I hope to be close to - or even past - my second main weight goal by my birthday, if not before (and, at my current rate, I should be able to do it).
 
2. In what ways do you expect/hope this year to be worse than last year?
Politics.  What's the deal with politics?  I don't get it.  Am I right, people?
 
3. What year would you travel back to if you could?
Assuming this is a year from my own history - I don't know that, at the end of the day, going backward is *really* something I'd want to do.  But, if forced to pick, probably 2004-2005, to go back to college junior/senior year at New Paltz.  I never really wanted to leave in the first place, and even there there's probably a few things I could do differently.
 
4. What was your worst year?
2007-2008.  Too many losses, including my father and grandmother.  I was off the deep end for a bit there.  2023 honestly probably ranks too; there were certainly some good points, but a lot of it was in a haze due to my sleep issues, there were also a lot of personal losses, and there was the breakup at the end of the year.  Not nearly as bad, but 2001, after high school graduation, might also rank, as post-grad aimlessness did lead to what was probably some form of depression.
 
5. What was your best year?
Tough call.  They all have good and bad, to varying degrees, of course.  As mentioned, junior and senior years of college (2004-2005) were great.  And I actually did have some fun senior year of high school too (2001).  Grad school (2009-11) was good.  But I honestly think - and hope - that I haven't had my best years yet.
  
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I think this is my shortest annual movies list since I started keeping them - without a few random documentaries and that Chuck E. Cheese thing, it would've been even shorter. In this turbulent year I focused more on books (and games). I even considered not bothering to post the list and just doing a combined 2023/2024 one next year, but whatever, here it is.

  • Call Me Miss Cleo [Celia Aniskovich & Jennifer Brea, 2022]
  • A Christmas Story [Bob Clark, 1983]*
  • Chuck E. Cheese in the Galaxy 5000 [David Orr, 1999]
  • Dead Man [Jim Jarmusch, 1995]*
  • Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves [Jonathan Goldstein & John Francis Daley, 2023]
  • Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story [Kimo Easterwood & Ron Cicero, 2020]
  • Hugo [Martin Scorsese, 2011]*
  • John Wick: Chapter 2 [Chad Stahelski, 2017]
  • Nope [Jordan Peele, 2022]
  • The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story [Adam Sweeney & Scott Barber, 2018]
  • Reality Bites [Ben Stiller, 1994]
  • Renfield [Chris McKay, 2023]
  • The Super Mario Bros. Movie [Aaron Horvath & Michael Jelenic, 2023]
  • Tár [Todd Field, 2022]

*Re-watch Total movies: 13
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I've posted this kind of thing on my LiveJournal for many years now (in fact, it was the last thing I really used my LJ account for), but may as well do it here now.

I also do an annual movie list and have previously put it in the same post, but that is so pathetically short for 2023 that I'm not sure if I'll bother posting it, or just combine it into the 2024 list.  Anyway, here's the book list for now:
 
  • The Adventures of Alexander von Humboldt - Andrea Wulf & Lillian Melcher
  • All I Need to Know About Filmmaking I Learned from The Toxic Avenger - Lloyd Kaufman & James Gunn
  • Astrophysics for People in a Hurry - Neil deGrasse Tyson
  • Baby Teeth - Zoje Stage
  • Batman: Noël - Lee Bermejo
  • Becoming Andy Warhol - Nick Bertozzi & Pierce Hargan
  • Before Shadowgate - F.X. Nine & Ellen Miles
  • Beowulf: A New Verse Translation - Unknown (trans. Seamus Heaney)+
  • Blacksad (Blacksad #1-3) - Juan Díaz Canales & Juanjo Guarnido (trans. Anthya Flores)
  • Blacksad: Amarillo (Blacksad #5) - Juan Díaz Canales & Juanjo Guarnido (trans. Neal Adams & Katie LaBarbera)
  • Blacksad: A Silent Hell (Blacksad #4) - Juan Díaz Canales& Juanjo Guarnido (trans. Katie LaBarbera)
  • Blacksad: They All Fall Down - Part One (Blacksad #6) - Juan Díaz Canales & Juanjo Guarnido (trans. Diana Schutz & Brandon Kandor)
  • Blizzard!: The Great Storm of '88 - Judd Caplovich
  • Bluesman - Rob Vollmar & Pablo G. Callejo
  • Capt. Stan's Hudson River Book - Capt. Stanley Wilcox & H.W. Van Loan
  • The Catcher in the Rye - J.D. Salinger*
  • A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens*
  • The City of Gold and Lead (The Tripods #2) - John Christopher*
  • Collecting Things - Paul Villiard
  • The Crimson Cage - John Lees, Alex McCormack & Ashley McCormack
  • Do a Powerbomb! - Daniel Warren Johnson & Mike Spicer
  • Elevator Pitch - Linwood Barclay
  • Gamemaster Classified: An Insider's Guide to Nintendo's Coming of Age - Howard Phillips & Matthew Taranto
  • Ghosty Men: The Strange but True Story of the Collyer Brothers and My Uncle Arthur, New York's Greatest Hoarders - Franz Lidz
  • Glacial Period - Nicolas de Crécy (trans. Joe Johnson)
  • Goodbye, Mr. Chips - James Hilton
  • How to Talk to Your Cat About Gun Safety - Zachary Auburn
  • I Found Puppets Living In My Apartment Walls - Ben Farthing
  • The King of the Golden River, or the Black Brothers: A Legend of Stiria - John Ruskin
  • Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly - Anthony Bourdain
  • Kon-Tiki - Thor Heyerdahl (trans. F. H. Lyon)
  • Mind at Play: The Psychology of Video Games - Geoffrey R. Loftus & Elizabeth E. Loftus
  • The Miracle of Trees - Olavi Huikari
  • Mostly Dead Things - Kristen Arnett
  • A Movie Making Nerd - James Rolfe
  • Nobody's Stooge: Ted Healy - Bill Cassara
  • Not Just a Stooge - Joe Besser with Jeff Lenburg and Greg Lenburg
  • The Pool of Fire (The Tripods #3) - John Christopher*
  • Railway Ghosts and Highway Horrors - Daniel Cohen*
  • River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West - Rebecca Solnit
  • The Rocketeer: The Complete Adventures - Dave Stevens
  • The Second Mrs. Gioconda - E.L. Konigsburg
  • A Selective History of 'Bad' Video Games: Unfulfilled Potential, Interesting Mistakes and Downright Clunkers - Michael Greenhut
  • A Short History of the Sailing Ship - Romola Anderson & R.C. Anderson
  • The Sleeping Father - Matthew Sharpe
  • Stone Circles - Hugh Newman
  • Stonehenge - Bernard Cornwell
  • Teacup Tales: Folklore of the Hudson Valley - Pauline Hommell
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Saturday Morning Adventures Vol. 1 - Erik Burnham & Tim Lattie
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin - Kevin Eastman, Peter Laird & Tom Waltz
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Collection Vol. 1 - Kevin Eastman & Peter Laird
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Collection Vol. 2 - Kevin Eastman, Peter Laird & Dave Sim
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Collection Vol. 3 - Kevin Eastman, Peter Laird, Eric Talbot & Jim Lawson
  • Uhtred's Feast: Inside the World of the Last Kingdom (Saxon Stories #13.5) - Bernard Cornwell with Suzanne Pollak
  • The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation - Jonathan Hennessey & Aaron McConnell
  • Vernon Dent: Stooge Heavy - Bill Cassara
  • Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts - Samuel Beckett
  • When the Tripods Came (The Tripods #0.5) - John Christopher
  • The White Mountains (The Tripods #1) - John Christopher*
  • You Feel It Just Below the Ribs - Jeffrey Cranor & Janina Matthewson

*Re-read

+Re-read in different translation


Total books: 60


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We got to have our "family Xmas observed" thing this past Tuesday, and in the process I saw last year's A Christmas Story Christmas, and maaan... that wasn't very good, was it?

I'll qualify this by saying that the original Christmas Story is easily my favorite Christmas movie, and would almost certainly even make it into my overall top-ten movies list if I were to make one.  Overexposed in recent years with the 24-hour marathons and such?  Maybe.  But I'd happily watch all 24 hours of it over the course of the holiday, given the opportunity.  I've also read, not yet all, but the majority of Jean Shepherd's short story work and consider myself a fan outside of just A Christmas Story.
But Christmas Story Christmas just didn't capture any of the magic of the original.  The overall plot was pretty cliched, and it relied primarily on the "memba this?" factor, with as many references to the original movie and cameos from its cast members shoved in for no other reason than to evoke nostalgia, with even some of the voice-over "memories" of characters just being audio clips from the original movie.  It even took the forced-nostalgia from *other* classic Christmas movies, with several gags lifted directly from the likes of Christmas Vacation and Home Alone.  The narration was clearly intended to evoke the narration of Jean Shepherd from the original, but didn't capture the voice of his writing, and the dream sequences that were charming with Peter Billingsley at age 12 (playing age 9) were just kind of off-putting with him at age 51. 

The biggest issue, though, is that the point of the original movie was to portray the magic of the holiday through the eyes of a kid, and that magic just doesn't come through with the focus on an older character (even if it is meant to be the *same* character).

It certainly could be worse, though.  The previous sequel, A Christmas Story 2, is, in fact, my single least-favorite movie of all time.  And I've seen some crap.  Objectively Christmas Story 2 may not be the worst I've seen based on tangible or technical elements - that would probably go to Nukie - but none of the films on my worst list, not even Nukie, actively made me angry while watching it.  Christmas Story 2 - which had the nerve to promote itself as "the OFFICIAL sequel" (disregarding the actual sequels that Jean Shepherd was actually involved with) - did.   So, at least this one wasn’t *that* bad, I guess?

At this point... just leave Shepherd alone.  He's gone, and you're not going to recapture his voice either in writing or on film.  We have the original Christmas Story, an all-time classic.  And we have the REAL forerunners and sequels that drew from his actual writings and that he was involved in the making of - My Summer Story (a.k.a. It Runs in the Family) and the four American Playhouse TV movies (Phantom of the Open Hearth, The Great American Fourth of July and Other Disasters, The Star-Crossed Romance of Josephine Cosnowski and Ollie Hopnoodle's Haven of Bliss).  Just let us have those and don't try to recapture the magic, because you never will recapture it.
 
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1. What are you hoping for in 2024?
Basically, just to keep pushing forward toward self-improvement.

2. What was your low point of 2023?
The first part of the year was rough, with the split as well as various health issues.

3. And your high point of 2023?
Getting into better health (still an ongoing process), and getting to teach a class again.

4. Do you make New Year’s resolutions or are they just a waste of time?
Nah.  I never kept them so there isn't much point.

5. Do you have any traditions for celebrating New Year’s Eve?
Nowadays, probably sleeping.
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Mom: “When you get older, you’ll realize that coffee and reading a book are one of the best things in life.”

Kid: “You know what would be better?  Cheetos and… riding a motorcycle.”
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