Proof That It’s Always About Books

I received many bookish gifts for Christmas (more on those later). In fact, most of the gifts with my  name on them turned out to be delightfully literary-based. I’m easy to buy for like that. One of the only non-literary themed gifts was from The Chef, who gave me a fancy, shiny, amazing new phone: a Samsung Galaxy S III. It’s heavenly, and I am in love (with both it and my husband). Really, it is perfection. Except, of course, for one small detail. It isn’t bookish enough. My solution? This, dear readers. This.

If it looks familiar, it’s because I wrote about something similar here. I’m over-the-moon with nerdy glee! A plain case would work just as well, but if you can put a bookish spin on something utilitarian…why not?

 

 

 

 

The Dead Writers Round-Up: 26th-30th December

  • Henry Miller was born on 12/26/1891. “Back of every creation, supporting it like an arch, is faith. Enthusiasm is nothing: it comes and goes. But if one believes, then miracles occur.” (Tropic of Cancer; Black Spring; Tropic of Capricorn)
  • Charles Lamb died on 12/27/1834. “Anything awful makes me laugh. I misbehaved once at a funeral.” (Tales from Shakespeare; Essays of Elia)
  • Theodore Dreiser died on 12/28/1945. “In order to have wisdom we must have ignorance.” (Sister Carrie; An American Tragedy)
  • Christina Rossetti died on 12/29/1894. “Hope is like a harebell trembling from its birth.” (Goblin Market; In the Bleak Midwinter) Continue reading

The Dead Writers Round-Up: 21st-25th December

  • Giovanni Boccaccio died on 12/21/1375. “People tend to believe the bad rather than the good.” (The Decameron; On Famous Women)
  • Dame Rebecca West was born on 12/21/1892. “A copy of the universe is not what is required of art; one of the damned things is ample.” (The Return of the Soldier; The Fountain Overflows; Black Lamb and Grey Falcon; 1900)
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald died on 12/21/1940. “Show me a hero and I’ll write you a tragedy.” (This Side of Paradise; The Great Gatsby; Tender is the Night; Babylon Revisited and Other Stories; The Pat Hobby Stories)
  • Jean Racine was born on 12/22/1639. “I am a man, and nothing that concerns a man do I deem a matter of indifference to me.” (Andromaque; Iphigenie; Phedre)
  • Edwin Arlington Robinson was born on 12/22/1869. “To some will come a time when change itself is beauty, if not heaven.” (Merlin; Collected Poems; The Man Who Died Twice; Tristram; Van Zorn)
  • George Eliot died on 12/22/1880. “I like not only to be loved, but also to be told I am loved.” (Adam Bede; The Mill on the Floss; Silas Marner; Middlemarch; Daniel Deronda)
  • Wallace Henry Thurman died on 12/22/1934. “One of the hardest things to teach a child is that the truth is more important than the consequences.” (Harlem; The Blacker the Berry; Infants of the Spring)
  • Beatrix Potter died on 12/22/1943. “Thank goodness I was never sent to school; it would have rubbed off some of the originality.” (The Tale of Peter Rabbit; The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin; The Tale of Benjamin Bunny; The Tale of Mr. Jeremy Fisher)
  • Samuel Beckett died on 12/22/1989. “Habit is a great deadener.” (Endgame; Come and Go; A Piece of Monologue; Dream of Fair to Middling Women)
  • Joe Strummer died on 12/22/2002. “When you blame yourself, you learn from it. If you blame someone else, you don’t learn nothing, cause hey, it’s not your fault, it’s his fault, over there.” (Songwriter, lyricist of The Clash)
  • George Crabbe was born on 12/24/1754. “Be there a will, and wisdom finds a way.” (The Village; The Borough)
  • Matthew Arnold was born on 12/24/1822. “And we forget because we must and not because we will.” (Dover Beach; The Scholar-Gipsy; Culture and Anarchy)
  • William Makepeace Thackeray died on 12/24/1863. “Bravery never goes out of fashion.” (The Luck of Barry Lyndon; Vanity Fair)
  • Quentin Crisp was born on 12/25/1908. “Fashion is what you adopt when you don’t know who you are.” (The Naked Civil Servant; How to Become a Virgin)

[All images are in the Public Domain and are courtesy of Wikimedia Commons]

Love at First Site: Small Demons Storyverse

I have a head for data and a mind that is always ravenously hungry for more: more facts, figures, dates, trivia, all kinds of minutia. Anything that is adjacent or related to what I am thinking, reading, writing, or doing. I collect it all: people, quotes, historical tidbits, pop culture ephemera. As soon as I discovered Small Demons, I knew that it would feed my intellectual gluttony, perfectly and obsessively.

I actually feel a bit shorted right now, as I am taking time away from the Small Demons Storyverse to tell you all about the Small Demons Storyverse. Time that I could be spending immersed in the Small Demons Storyverse. Got it, dear readers? It is a sacrifice I am making only because I love you, and think that you should know about this amazing site. I am going to keep it brief. You can use your new knowledge and run off to discover things for yourselves. To wit, their tagline is: the people, places and things from books, and everywhere they can take you. GO THERE NOW. You are welcome!

PS-You can make your own storyboards.