Posted in Star Trek, tv reviews

New Project

This summer I am starting a new project for this blog.  The project will be watching and reviewing the entire Star Trek series. This will include Enterprise, The Original Series, The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager.  I have yet to conclude if I consider the Animated series as canon or not.  I might stick that in there somewhere, as it is available on Netflix.

I will be going in order verse-wise, which means that I will start with Captain Archer. I have yet to decide if I will go by show or try to watch the DS9 episode amongst the TNG and VOY episodes they belong with.  It might be too complicated to do that.  But I shall worry about that when I get to it (as I have two full series plus five seasons of TNG before I have to worry about that).

This means I should be posting more often.  I will also be posting other book related things, but it will be primarily the reviews.

You can join in with me while I view. I shall post the episode I am watching on Twitter.

Posted in Uncategorized

The #UnderAVampireMoon Contest

So there is this contest.  Which involves an author whom I have been reading alot of.  And a series of which I so far own pretty much all of it (and in one case, two copies as my first copy fell apart).  So I’m going to talk about it here.

For those of you who haven’t known me long, or are just visiting here by mistake, one of my favorite book series is the Argeneau series by Lynsay Sands.  Technically its listed as a romance series, but there is mystery and a touch of sci-fi/fantasy as well.

What I like the most about it is that there is a scientific reason behind vampirism.  They aren’t demons, or evil or anything like that.  They also don’t sparkle. Instead its an aftereffect of a medical technology gone wrong.  Nanos (which for some odd reason always makes me think of Rodney Mckay, but that’s another entry) are in their bodies and help them heal (hence why they never die) and they use human blood to power themselves.  The more damage to your body, the more blood you will need.

So if you haven’t read it, I suggest you do.  The books have grown to include the Argeneau’s friends and extended family.  I think there is 15 books at the moment (don’t quote me! I don’t have my collection on hand at the moment).  

 

Website for the contest if you wish to enter: http://www.lynsaysands.net/contests/UAVMContest.html

Posted in book reviews, bookit

Book-it 2012

Once again, I am going to be doing Book-it.  For those of you new to reading this blog, Book-it is a reading goal. We call it Book-it after the elementary school reading program where you got free pizza if you read a certian amount of books.  It was meant to promote reading in younger people.

THe Book-it we have here doesn’t really have any prizes except being able to say you read 50 books in a year.  I suppose if you want to, you can make your own prize levels if you so wish.

This year I’m also going to attempt to review books that are new to me.  I have a few books I tend to re-read every year so I won’t be reviewing them unless someone specifically asks me what I thought.

The Book-it runs from Jan 1 to December 31, and the goal is to read 50 books.  The guidelines for books are that it be able to be bought on its own (Short stories can only be counted as individual books if you bought it separately. A book thats a collection of seperate short stories is 1 book, not whatever number of shorts it has).  Text books can count if you do alot of reading in it (so no to math books, but lit books would count.  I’m counting my history books this year).

Graphic novels if they have a good bit of text to go with them can count. Comic books don’t.

There is a sort of cheat system I’ve developed.  ONe semester I had to read a bunch of selected readings.  It wasn’t a full book so I didn’t feel I could count it as a book, so I develped a method so that they can count.  Basically 5-10 of those can count as a book as group.  It depends on the length.  Shorter ones have a higher group #, longer ones smaller.

I’ll have a page with a list of books that I have read.  As well as my 100 movies goal.

I’m always open to book recommendations if you have any.

Posted in general

Ethnic Identity and Me.

I’m an American, as many of you might have been able to tell.  I have a mixed ethnicity so its always been a little hard for me to identify as any particular group other then straight-out American. To make a list of the (confirmed anyway) groups I have in my family:  Irish (Scot-Irish most likely), Welsh, Scottish, English, German, and Greek.  For awhile my family thought they had found a Cherokee relative, but that seems to have been disproved and I keep hearing Poland in the mix, though I can’t seem to find out which side claimed that.  Currently my great-aunt’s research has a possible relative whose a French Jew (although whether this person is a Frenchmen who is Jewish by religion or a Jewish person who moved to France, I don’ know).

My Uncle believes that we are related to the people who guarded Constantinople (Great job, guys) and a ‘Vampire’ (If only I could unsee what I googled there).  I know my friend found our family coat of arms, so that disproves the Vampire Theory (of which I am glad)

My one friend is Irish-Italian.  Her family (especially the Italian side) are very much in touch with their ethnic heritage.  I don’t really have that same connection.  My aforementioned Uncle likes to claim he’s Greek while forgetting the rest.  My Father (his brother) likes to claim the German.  My mother’s family is primarily Irish but they don’t really celebrate in any particular Irish way.

I kind of wish I had that connection, those traditions.  Sure, my family has a set of their own (like Pork and Sauerkraut  with mash potatoes at New Years and watching the Christmas Claymation movies) but it doesn’t have that history.

I suppose since I’m mostly Irish, I should connect with that more, but I don’t.  Nor German, and I sometimes forget I’m Greek too (why couldn’t I have inherited those genes?  Would have liked not to be so pale).

My sister and I joke that we are Euro-mutts as we pretty much the UK and two other European countries.   I guess there is too much there to hold on to any particular group.   So I suppose I’ll stick to being just a plain American for now.

Posted in film, movie reviews

Film Review (ish thing): Tron: Legacy

Grade: A

This was a good movie.  It had a good plot, had hints of romance but didn’t over do it, had good visual effects and it was part of a franchise I happen to love.

The only issue I had with this movie was the computerized Jeff Bridges (Clu).  When the character was standing still, it was hard to discern it was computerized, but whenever he spoke and you were in a close up or he moved in a close up there was this slightly inorganic movement that didn’t match up.  It wasn’t anything major but it did remind you that this wasn’t completely Jeff Bridges.  (Wonder what he thought of his CGI younger self).  Although to be honest, this might just be on purpose to show that Clu was a program, not just a clone of Kevin Flynn.

Also, Tron has taken styling tips from The Stig. (Not really an issue just wondering if they ran out of a effects budget to create a CGI Tron)

The music was also good, and I like the improvement on the lighting effects (still has the idea that its not very bright in Grid-land, but

This isn’t a particularly good review, I realize that.  Its just something to get me back into writing in this blog.   As you can tell I haven’t posted since February (How is that possible?!?)

Next review I do will be better, I hope.

Posted in film, movie reviews

Movie Review: Green Lantern

I should probably start this off with saying I have never read a Green Lantern Comic.  In fact till recently I keep getting the Green Hornet and the Green Lantern mixed up.  My only previous experiance with Hal Jordan was as a secondary character in a  Oliver Queen fanfic.

I enjoyed the movie.  I’ll give it a B.

Cutting this because, well, SPOILERS.

Continue reading “Movie Review: Green Lantern”

Posted in Art

More Typography Quotes

Form follows function-that has been misunderstood. Form and function should be one, joined in a spiritual union.

Frank Lloyd Wright

“Designers provide ways into—and out of—the flood of words by breaking up text into pieces and offering shortcuts and alternate routes through masses of information. (…) Although many books define the purpose of typography as enhancing the readability of the written word, one of design’s most humane functions is, in actuality, to help readers avoid reading.”
— Ellen Lupton (Thinking with Type: A Critical Guide for Designers, Writers, Editors, & Students)

 

Posted in Uncategorized

Some Quotes

“As the saying goes, type is a beautiful group of letters, not a group of beautiful letters.”
— Matthew Carter

“Typography needs to be audible. Typography needs to be felt. Typography needs to be experienced.”
— Helmut Schmid

” Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind. ”

Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)

” Every designer or photographer should have an ongoing conversation
with the word editor –- you are all journalists. ”

Roger Black

” Drawing is what I always loved the most. I discovered drawing type
is drawing in a very pure form. Because a type designer does not draw letters.
A type designer designs words and words are structures that contain patterns
of black and white shapes, form and counterform.
It is a game that deals with space and rhythm.
Which is precisely what, for me, is the essence of drawing. ”

Cyrus Highsmith

Posted in writing

Its that time again…

Yes, that is right folks, Its November and that means I’ll be struggling to write 2,ooo words a day (my own personal goal, not necessaries what you have to do) amongst the papers, projects and other Real life obsticles that lay in my path.

This year I’m attempting a modernized version of the Persephone myth.  It involves immortals, mortals and a bad guy or two.  There is a bit of romance, some comedy and some action.  It is not a fanfic, so it might be doomed from the start, but I am trying.

I’m creating a playlist as I go for when I’m writing, usually reserving an hour before bed for the rush to the goal line.  Anyone have any tips they learned about writing?