seleneheart: (treehousehomes)
[personal profile] seleneheart
Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman

Image

Blurb:
When Walt Whitman self-published Leaves of Grass in 1855, he rocked the literary world and forever changed the course of poetry. In subsequent editions, Whitman continued to revise and expand his poems--but none matched the raw power and immediacy of the first edition.

This beautifully-designed volume presents the original edition Leaves of Grass in its entirety, along with Ralph Waldo Emerson's famous letter to Whitman.


This book has been in my physical stash for years, probably getting close to 10 years at this point. Thanks to this challenge, I finally got around to reading it. However, not going to lie - I struggled with it. The author's forward was thirty pages long and seemed to be one long stream of consciousness about how wonderful poets are. The first poem was 60 pages long.

However, the language was amazing, so evocative. Being published in 1855, I had a hard time deciding if he was an abolitionist or not. Some lines seemed a little bit romanticizing slavery, but others were definitely against it. I'm glad I read it though, and now it can stop accusing me of neglect.

With this book, I have a blackout! Yay!!

Image
seleneheart: (Simon Mirielle)
[personal profile] seleneheart
I look at my journal and don't know where the time went. I traveled in June, and then picked up a bug a few days later, which still has me coughing. I'm traveling again in a week - going to San Diego for ComicCon, although I wasn't able to get a pass into the events. I'll go to some of the free things, and just generally soak in the atmosphere.

Work still keeps me incredibly busy, but I'm grateful that I get to do it from home. I know how privileged that is.

Here's some stuff I've been doing:

Books
  • The Lies They Told - I get that this is an incredibly relevant and important book, but I found it insulting. I'm from Appalachia and I thought it was incredibly condescending to the people there. The author could not get the dialect correct, and it was so wrong that it was grating. I DNF'd it.

  • Into the Narrowdark - this is the second series by Tad Williams set in Osten Ard. I adored the first series, one of my favorites ever, and a bit underrated in my opinion. This is the 3rd book, and things finally got moving. The first two in the series seemed like someone setting up a chess board. They were incredible long with multiple storylines. It didn't help that I took over 2 years to complete the first book. But it's going now, and I already have the 4th book ready to go.


I belong to two book clubs and I haven't started either book for the next go around. I'll have time in airports and airplanes to get them done though.



TV Shows
  • High Potential - I finished season 2, and can't wait for season 3, which is not coming until September. Think Sherlock Holmes if he were a single mother living in Los Angeles working as a cleaning lady because her humongous brain gets her in trouble where she can't keep a job or a relationship. And he were Kaitlin Olson of It's Always Sunny fame. And also starring Daniel Sunjata from Rescue Me as her Watson.

  • How to Get to Heaven from Belfast - I saw this as a recommendation from [personal profile] mekare, saw also that it was from the creators of Derry Girls, and gave it a show. Highly, highly recommend. This is a genre-defying show that I can't even describe, but really loved. It has a bit of Twin Peaks vibe. I hope it gets another season.




Video Games
I started Little Kitty, Big City last week, and while I have beaten the game, I'm going back and getting some stuff that I missed. I appreciate when games let you do that instead of just ending it. *cough*Zelda*cough*

GameStop had a three for two deal on used games, so up on deck:
  • Tunic - I've wanted to play this for ages, so it's probably next. For the Switch.

  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 - game of the year, and everyone I know who plays it is obsessed with it. For the PS5. I may wait until the weather turns to start this one.

  • Pokopia - a cute game that might be more interesting that Animal Crossing. I'll probably get to this soon because it seems like a game that I can dip into and then back out without trying to remember what I was doing.


Also, I'm thinking about starting a gaming journal. Because I don't have enough journals yet.


My house came with a TV mount that I thought I was going to use at first, but then decided against. We took it down yesterday, and now I need to paint the wall behind it. I need to do general wall touch-ups anyway.

So that's me! Maybe I'll start painting today.

Profile

sofija: (Default)
sofija

May 2009

S M T W T F S
     12
345 6789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags