Samuel Pepys: Blogfather or patron saint?
Reading today’s Pepys diary entry, a thought occurs to me: is Pepys the patron saint of blogging? Is he the spiritual father? Or is he just my spiritual father?
A great while at my vial and voice, learning to sing “Fly boy, fly boy,” without book. So to my office, where little to do…and I to Mr. Wotton’s, and with him to an alehouse and drank while he told me a great many stories of comedies that he had formerly seen acted, and the names of the principal actors, and gave me a very good account of it.
Wintering—a novel (of/on/exploiting) Sylvia Plath
Kate Moses’s novel Wintering: A Life of Sylvia Plath uses Sylvia’s calendar, journal notes, and poems—especially poems—to novelize Sylvia’s life. According to the Salon interview.
How do I feel about this?
Let’s examine the last page of the excerpt published in Salon, specifically the last paragraph:
In the eye blink of a god, in a heartbeat, all that she clung to rises up with her like smoke, like ash, into the charged, dead air: The cakes of soap. Her wedding ring. His gold filling.
Hmm. Remind you of anything?
On the one hand, it’s really nice that someone is attempting to illuminate the interior chamber of Sylvia’s life. On the other hand, it’s a bit creepy, and more than a bit sad, that the best writing in the whole excerpt is a direct repurpose from her most strident poem. And that Moses had to work so hard to set up the “gold filling” part.
(On the other other hand, I think I need a “Books” category.)
Magnetic poetry, chez JHN
Mark Pilgrim provides a magnetic poetry generator at his website (the link goes to magnetic poetry generated from text on my site). This is the great thing: to use your site to generate the words, just append your URL after /magnetic/.
Bring on the funk
George Clinton has a website. Do you want to trade your funk for what’s behind the third door? Why yes, George, I do, if you’re it. Incidentally, the design was done by Luis Castanon, who won a contest... The only thing that’s missing? Discussion…
Keiretsu check-in
- Esta has mostly thawed out after being stuck at home for a few days by the blizzard.
- Craig has apparently been able to dig out enough to get to work, only to be confronted by an eternal truth: for a few days after a blizzard, snow is neither created nor destroyed, just moved from place to place. Specifically, in front of one’s car.
- Tin Man makes surviving the snowfall a heroic act: “When you put on a hat and scarf and gloves and trudge out into the snowy winter wonderland, you're not just keeping your body warm. You're helping postpone the eventual entropic death of the universe.”
- Moxie reflects on the hazards of fame: disguises and having one’s bandwidth sucked dry by fans of Joe Millionaire.
- Julie Powell managed to move on with the Julie/Julia Project in spite of having no water by skipping straight to lamb stew. Ah, lamb stew...
- William Gibson regrets having to miss his DC book signing but is making up for it by walking down the middle of Broadway, which has been rendered totally impassable by snow.
- Greg debunks the myth of the pacifist French by reminding us who sank the Rainbow Warrior, made the African colonial experience even more brutal, and elected a far-right-wing fella like Chirac to the presidency. Oh yeah, those French, a bunch of daisy waving peaceniks.
- Dave Winer, having struggled through configuring Manila for Weblogs at Harvard, is turning his attention to bringing Manila up to date. As a blogger who has stayed on Manila while Radio went zooming by, Dave, you have my thanks.
- Doc Searls, currently backing up his returned PowerBook (we devoutly hope), sends us to go try to find the 404 of Mass Destruction.
- Ross Mayfield is starting a new company, Socialtext. And he may already have competition from Microsoft.
Apophenia in our time
Okay, that was a little bleaker than I meant to make it, but I still wonder.
Anyway. For more speculation on PR’s themes, motifs, etc., check out the ‘PR’-otaku that Joe Clark (of Building Accessible Websites fame) is putting together. Also, be sure to keep checking Gibson’s own blog (and its attendant discussion forum, in which a listing of discussions of Gibson’s readings has sent me a bit of traffic recently).
Notes:
- This was written earlier this morning but unpublished due to problems with my website’s back end.
- Apophenia means finding patterns that aren’t there.
- After writing this, I read the Gibson book discussion a little more deeply and found a thread in which someone made the same observation. If I’m seeing things that aren’t there, I’m not alone.
Last updated Thursday, November 24, 2005 at 3:12:22 PM.
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