Sunday, June 1, 2014

Missed it...Happy Birthday to the Norms

I missed both of you boys on all of the sites...

Happy Birthday Norm (III) and Happy Birthday Norman (IV)! I hope, Norm, your travails along the rails were as enlightening as I imagine the zen-like time could be.

I'm looking forward to seeing you two in a few weeks, up at the Cabin. I have a small writing project I'm working on to leave up there...a somewhat fictional gonzo treatment of a week in the life of a, eh, resident T.

Norman, Chilling--eyes on the sea-bass...
Until next time...


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Discovery at Powell's, the King of America's Independent Bookstores

I'd read plenty about Powell's Bookstore in Portland, Oregon. It's the de facto King of the American Independent Bookstore. Once we'd decided to go to Portland, this was one place I really wanted to visit.

In a later post on the regular blog I'll be going into some more detail about the discoveries at Powell's, but until then, Norm, here's something that you may appreciate:


These guys have a rare-book room, but this was definitely not found there. The cover art and the ad-copy inside are pretty neat.

I'm not sure how Powell's stacks up against Manhattan's the Strand...

I need to think about that with some more depth, but I certainly never saw anything like this chilling on the shelf in New York.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Update: Rellerindos

Norm, there's good news and bad news. First the bad.

I've just been informed that my new favorite hard candy:


...is only available for sale in Tijuana (and random spots that have regular TJ runs).

The good news is that a trip is being planned by my current source, and he said he would procure some for the both of us.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Just a Test

One two...

Buckle my shoe...

Downtown LA from 4th Street, just west of the 110:


Skyline of downtown Los Angeles, from the Slauson metro stop, one of my new daily routines, and in no way connected with the above picture:


This was only a test of posting pictures directly from my phone. It was a success...

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Happy New Year

2013 saw both a new Pynchon book and, in an easy way to trivialize a new Pynchon book, a new baby for Norm! Congratulations, brother!

Time to get over to this blog to type ramblings about authors is hard enough for me to make, and I have zero babies. But, in keeping with the general vibe of posts over here, I'm back with another random Dollar Bookstore discovery.

I finished the latest book I wrote about over here, Richard Flanagan's Wanting. I found it good, but certainly not as outstanding as I had hoped, but that's my fault.

Saying something truthful, like "Well, it's not as a good as Gould's Book of Fish," is like complaining Pudd'nhead Wilson isn't as good as Huck Finn--how could it be? In both cases, one is good book by a genius, and the other is a masterpiece.

But, since Flanagan doesn't get the recognition he deserves, sometimes his books end up on the margins, and for me in downtown Long Beach, those margins are manifested in the physical world by our Dollar Bookstore.

So the other day I found another new book to get to once my Christmas reading has finished:


The premise is that a stripper wakes up one morning to see her face all over the news as a newly wanted terrorist. After reading Wanting, I am curious to see how Flanagan deals with a more modern narrative. The first and last chapters of Gould's... notwithstanding, I've only seen his prose in specific historical time periods, and this idea seems like it could have some legs.

Also, having read Wanting, I know where to set my expectations so I won't face disappointment.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Thanksgiving Discovery

I know how swamped you've been, Norm...or at least I can imagine. Toddler, baby on the way, pregnant wife, very important jury service wrapped up...and then there's the j-o-b. On top of all that, there's books and reading.

Bleeding Edge I imagine is occupying whatever reading time you have for yourself, and then afterwards if you're still inclined is that skinny Mishima book, The Sailor Who Fell From Grace with the Sea.

So, here I am with some days off, and I took a sojourn from my housework and went down to my friendly Dollar Bookstore. I was perusing the disheveled shelves and saw a book by an author whose last name I recognized, Flanagan. A quick glance showed that it wasn't the author I thought, it was someone named Bob Flanagan. Hah, I thought, wouldn't it be cool if there were a Richard Flanagan book in here...that's why, after all, I was even looking though the "F" section.

Since the "F" section is pretty ragged, and around the edges last names starting E and G are easily seen, it's easy to imagine that within the section itself, nothing is really alphabetized. As I started to leave the aisle, my eyes caught another Flanagan name. It even looked like a Richard...could it be the same?

I grabbed the copy from the shelf and snatched it up, and before I even read the title of the book I noticed underneath the author's name it said, "Author of Gould's Book of Fish." Sold. I carried it around until I left and bought it.


I didn't bother to read the back to find out what it was about. Wanting is the title, and the lady with the rose on the cover only registered in my brain long after I was home and deciding to check out the meat of the story.

Here's a rundown, and Norm, since you know how Flanagan structures his stories, you can imagine how this one can turn out: In real life a guy named Sir John Franklin took his wife and left for Tasmania where, after a while, his wife fell in love with an aboriginal girl. Later, in real life, Sir John and his entire crew went missing on a trip to the North Pole--cannibalism was suspected.

Those are the real events that Flanagan uses to frame this book...

...And now I have to force myself to focus on other shit and not read it until later. It is just over 250 pages, though...

Another book to add to your already-too-long list, brother.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Not Really About Pynchon, But...

Here's one of a few pictures I'm trying to do something with:


III and IV, being blinded by the sun...