Authorlouisa

Last week’s Tweets (up to 2011-06-19)

  • ? @johnleach: today I got up at 12 and didn't change out of my pyjamas. Mostly watched cartoons and X-files. Awesome day. #
  • The cat's sitting between me and my keyboard so I can cuddle him while I work. The cat is also farting. I think he's doing it deliberately. #
  • Top ten myths about introverts http://t.co/ty3N2RG via @jerrybrito #
  • Listening to @johnleach moaning like a moaning minnie. #
  • Bloomin' squirrels at my strawberries again! #

Last week’s Tweets (up to 2011-06-12)

  • Got forgotten about for half an hour at the vets – spent the time watching a kitten chase its tail though so not too bad :) #
  • The printer and the scanner conspired to make me miss the post pick up by exactly 20 seconds. Damn you technology! #
  • @Scampering: replace "cat" with "dog" and "basket" with "sofa" and that's what's happening here too ;) #
  • Looking for some creative (writing/photography/misc) regular prompts. Any suggestions? #
  • The builders' radio station seems to be back-to-back '80s film theme songs. Currently playing: St Elmo's Fire/Man in Motion. #notcomplaining #
  • ? @really_good: Buff the chicken died overnight – not unexpected but still :( #
  • Realised I have a new life goal: to be able to burp on demand so I can perform a rendition of the Futurama theme tune. I'm so classy. #
  • Painted my toenails for first time in about 4yrs. Used "acid green" polish I got in Liverpool in 1998. I teach (yr8) kids younger than that! #
  • Have done nothing today, nothing at all. Has been awesome. :) #

Last week’s Tweets (up to 2011-06-06)

  • Had a somewhat disappointing curry last night. The arguments and banter were top quality though. #
  • @rosienottage: they don't *have* to be covered but I prefer covered for cheeky chicken containment reasons ;) #
  • I think at least 50% of the people I follow here and on @really_good have visited @YSPsculpture over the last two months. Popular place! :) #
  • @Squiggle: awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww! :) #
  • #wheniwas10 my favourite outfit was a grey & lemon tracksuit and lemon socks. Stylish – compared to the shell suits that came later at least #
  • @Squiggle: hehe, you'll be a crazy cat man in no time. did your little furry man have a good first night? #
  • Forgot to pick up a doc from the printer so having to rewrite it on the bus. The notepaper i'm using has the logo 'plan ahead'. #irony #
  • I love it when the dog wakes up suddenly and her ear is pasted across her forehead like a justin bieber swishy fringe. #
  • Doing that thing where you start sweating *buckets* just after you stop walking. It's very pleasant. #
  • @tim_waters: i like horses and am fine around them – i used to ride. but @johnleach hates them, and they stole my blackberries last year. #
  • Just looked out into the garden and now I can't see anything. *shakes fist at bright sun* #
  • Been cleaning junk out of the old house – not quite as bad as i thought it would be… #
  • Listening to @johnleach meowing the X Files theme tune while making lunch. #

John & Lily-dog in the horses’ field

The woods at the end of our garden are awesome. AWESOME. They’re a mixture of ancient woodland & newer (early 20th century) plantings. They have a stream, countless springs and a canal running through/next to them. Deer, ducks and pheasants are spotted with surprising regularity and horses & cows graze on the farmland at the edges. They were a hive of industry 100+ years ago: the old quarry cliffs remain exposed, some of the dug-outs are still massive holes in the dirt, and there are the mysterious remains of structures everywhere. They were a leisure spot back then too: the shape of a large pond with man-made islands and a mini-jetty remains, and there are stone-walled lined paths & steps throughout. More recently, the eastern end hosted a prisoner of war camp (for Italian prisoners in WW2) and a fireworks factory that exploded in the 1950s or thereabouts – the shells of the buildings remain. We’ve walked in the woods almost daily for 15 months now and we regularly find new bits that we haven’t seen before. As I said, AWESOME.

Today though, we didn’t walk far – just to the horses field. Lily sprained her leg on Monday so we wanted to take it easier on her behalf. Also, we’re lazy and it was hot.

The horses’ field is down near the canal. This is the view from about halfway across the field – you can see the bridge over the canal on the left.

This is the view from the same spot facing the other way – speckled with daisies, buttercups and pink clover flowers at the moment.

(I forgot to take any pictures until I was halfway across the field – a genuine mistake but admittedly, there is a bit of a blot on the landscape when looking across the whole field from the woods: a red corrugated steel warehouse, mostly covered with trees but noticeable all the same.)

While I was taking pictures, John and Lily had a little rest in the sun:

A sunny day in a field with her favourite humans, after a dunk in the beck? Lily got a little blissed out:

Make that a lot blissed out:

Everyone got quite comfy:

Until …

There is a reason we call it the horses field… They came over to investigate/bully us out of there. So we picked ourselves up and headed back into the woods and home.

Some books that I possibly like, maybe

A few times over the last couple of weeks I’ve referred to different books being on my “favourite books list” – but yesterday I realised I’ve never sat down and worked out said list so, frankly, anything could be on there.

As a result of that realisation, and in a bid to avoid doing anything actually useful, I decided to make the list of my top 20 favourite books yesterday afternoon. They’re not — by any means — the best 20 books ever written or the most important books to society in general, or anything like that. They’re just books that strike a chord or mean a lot to me for one reason or another, or frankly that I just enjoy and I (have and) will re-read every year or so. I wouldn’t even say it’s definitive as my choice in books depends heavily on mood and context but I can safely say these are books that I probably liked that afternoon, maybe.

(In alphabetical order. I missed out “the” on some of them, not sure why, but I’ll be blowed if I’m renumbering everything now.)

  1. Box Office Poison by Alex Robinson. The only graphic novel on the list – I have a lot of favourite comics but this one makes it onto this list because the characters felt developed enough for a novel.
  2. Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham. The first time I picked it up, I stopped on about page 5. The second time, I thought I was a frickin’ fool for putting it down the first time. When someone asked me my favourite book, my snap answer is usually Triffids.
  3. Death of Grass by John Christopher. Like Wyndham, apocalyptica always seems more real when it’s happening in the UK – and when it’s something as possible as a devastating plant virus. Also, Leeds gets nuked.
  4. Drop City by TC Boyle. This book hits all my book-buttons. Love it.
  5. e by Matt Beaumont. Not exactly a literary classic but I love the humour coming from the different points of view. Very fun.
  6. Good Evening Mrs Craven and other stories by Mollie Panter-Downes. There is no word for this book of short stories other than “delightful”. Really evocative of the era.
  7. Happiness ™ by Will Ferguson.
  8. How I Paid for College by Marc Acito. Reminds me of my own not-quire-so-crazy youth. My teenage years didn’t include fraud, blackmail and stealing a buddah but it evokes those heady days all the same.
  9. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith. It says in the intro to my book that Dodie read the whole book allowed to her partner to see if each sentence worked by itself – and you can tell. Really well crafted. I also love the characterisations of the animals ;)
  10. Little Children by Tom Perrotta.
  11. Microserfs by Douglas Coupland. Not something I re-read regularly nowadays but a book I used to finish reading then immediately start again. I found it randomly in Southport Library in early 1997 and it introduced me to the idea of geek culture. It inspired me to start my first website a few weeks later :)
  12. Miss Pettrigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson. I felt so uplifted when I finished this book. Talk about carpe diem.
  13. Miss Wyoming by Douglas Coupland.
  14. Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld. I described it on The Really Good Life the other day as: “in a parallel universe somewhere, I am American, went to boarding school and Sittenfeld stole my teenage diary”. So much detail, so accurate neurosis!
  15. Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates.
  16. Scepticism Inc by Bo Fowler. I picked this up completely randomly when I very first moved to Leeds in 2000. An absolute gem of a find – really funny.
  17. The Chrysalids by John Wyndham.
  18. The Kraken Wakes by John Wyndham. Like Triffids, the first time I read it, I struggled with it. It’s pretty slow/long but it tells such a story – over nearly a couple of decades. Now I’d rate it as highly as Triffids.
  19. The Rotters Club by Jonathan Coe.
  20. The Way of the Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman. Another I can barely read now because it’s so clunky but I read it regularly from about 13-19. I didn’t really get it then but like Microserfs, I think it put me on a path – or showed me the path I’d not realised I was already starting on.

After writing the list, in an effort to avoid doing even more chores, I decided to work out some stats: how many were 50+ years old, how many had been made into films, how many were in which specific genres/themes/styles. I read my numbers out to John and he demanded to know how many fit into multiple categories. A Venn Diagram was surely the answer – and a way to waste even more time! ;)

books-venn-diagram

(There is one error with this one – I Capture the Castle should also be included in “coming of age” as well as “over 50 years old” and “turned into a film” – but even with a lot of shuffling, I couldn’t work out how to fit it in. It’s corrected in the simpler one below.)

Then, on the way to having a curry with the team last night, I was talking to John about the Big Book Venn Diagram and realised that some of the books on the “top 20” list were filler-ish – that I hadn’t had to refine my choices enough and that those “filler” were the ones that would be more likely to change (in fact they did, I made some substitutions during the drawing). So this morning, I cut it down to a “top 10” and drew a new Venn Diagram (although keeping all the same categories). Because it’s simpler, I also tried to make the circles more to scale. Apparently I like books set in other eras ;)

10-books-venn-diagram

Now I should probably do something slightly more productive ;)

Last week’s Tweets (up to 2011-05-30)

  • RT @johnleach: been on holiday. No computers or internet for 4 days. Was blissful. Except for the rain. [and the wind] #
  • RT @comicnrrd: a new comic featuring, you guessed it, MY CATS!: http://is.gd/rOnJog [scarily like my life atm] #
  • @jeremyjarvis: that too. #
  • @Scampering: our cats do spend an awful lot of time on the bed – they probably feel it's their domain and we can't be trusted with it ;) #
  • @Scampering: i had a cat and a dog "assisting" me while I was sawing some wood yesterday. not really where I want that sort of assistance! #
  • @Scampering: heh, the claws say "you're playing with that yarn wrong, minion" ;) #
  • Fighting with a bastard java applet thing. Why on earth do people still put content in them, why? #
  • Laughing a bordering-on-hysterical laugh. #
  • Dog is at the vets to have a tooth out. House is very quiet without her. Feel @johnleach & I should randomly bark/run around to compensate. #
  • The groggy doggy is back from the vets – op went fine. Is currently snoring *really* loudly on the sofa. #
  • I'm pretty sure neither the 8year old or 18year old versions of me ever thought I'd get this excited over broad beans & having a door fitted #
  • The cat just stood underneath the dog so they could eat the dog's post-op food out of the bowl at the same time. Somewhat cute. #
  • Tried to have a day away from my laptop but the desire to draw a giant venn diagram lured me onto it. #