Mysteries @ MindSay

   

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Is it in our minds or is it real?
I decided to experiment and do some more ITCs. I've gotten great results on previous ITCs and wanted to try it again since I have moved. Here is a little more info on ITCs.

I didn't get anything really definitive this time but I only recorded for about 5 minutes. I also used a different technique to record by using my camera instead of the video camera while the video camera fed the feedback.

Here are the results. I'll post the unedited picture first then post the picture with an outline of what I see. Perhaps you see something different?










I didn't think this one needed any outlining.

I think I'll try this again when I have my computer set again to take video feed from my video camera. I would like to get a digital video camera so it would be much easier. So just another thing to save for! :D
 
 
   
 

Sister Fidelma
I have been enjoying a new heroine.

I have also been enjoying a new genre.

In general, I am not a fan of mysteries -- due to my insatiable NEED to find out how any story ends within a chapter of beginning it -- but with Sister Fidelma, there is much to interest and intrigue.



She is a religieux, a woman belonging to a holy order. The Abbey of  St. Brigid of Kildare. She is also a lawyer, qualified to the second-highest ranking in the land (the rank of anruth, which is another story for another day).  She is a princess.  She is attractive and knows it but without caring overmuch about it. She is strong.  She is brilliant. She is fallible.

If you have interests in mysteries, or in the Ireland of the 7th Century, or in the strange time of tension in Irish history where Roman and Irish church customs met and clashed, or even if you just like some cool historical fiction, I recommend the Sister Fidelma Mysteries by Peter Tremayne.  I just finished Act of Mercy and am starting Smoke in the Wind.

Of course... I have already peeked to the end of the latter book.  But! Before you start throwing things at me, know that the end of this one has little to do with the mystery and everything to do with Sister Fidelma's romance.

What? A nun having a romance?  You bet. I'm tellin' ya, Ireland in the 7th Century was pretty darn nifty.

:)  P.S. For antipodes: There's even Latin in these books, along with the Irish.  :)

 
 
 

   
Are You an Avid Reader?

Tristaprez hipped me to this awesome site called Shelfari.  It is a site that links you to other people who've read the same books you have and like the same genre of books that you like.  This site is absolutely addictive!  Seriously check it out and add me as a friend if you decide to join. :D 

 
 
   
 

mindfluff

There is literature and then there is just-a-book. Just-a-book is a misnomer maybe because there is a world of really awful crap that I won't touch- I see whole sections of this stuff in bookstores- but to me a just-a-book book is something by Grisham, Baldacci, Patterson, Turow.  Literature on the other hand is reserved for the classics and modern masters such as Murakami, Ozick, Roth--- understand?

 

And I have this need after reading some literature to goon a little spree and find a string of juts-a-books to get me ready for literature. It’s like a pretzels and cheese for the mind after eating gorgonzola gnocchi or brasciole.  So my literature recently have been Krauss’s The History of Love and The Makioka Sisters by Tanizaki.  The Krauss book is a novel about a book written stolen plagiarized copied translated and the people it couches. And The Makioka Sisters is a beauty Japanese post war novel about four sisters and their adjustment to the “modern” world. Both very different and both quite wonderful. Then I fell into the world of James Patterson again but  this time started with his Alex Cross books hoping they were less formulaic. Duh. Untrue. Alex is a handsome black doctor/cop who falls in love a lot, gets screwed, is corrected by his grandmother and betrayed by someone he works with. He is fit, tough and manly man. Sigh. I thinking the days when  one had to wait for the next book to come out one didn’t see the formula so clearly. Is that being generous? But I buy these just-a-books from a library book store where hard covers are one dollar and paperbacks a nickel so I can read and devour them five at a time. It reveals the formula quickly.

 

Great literature can fall into patterns too but I wouldn’t call them formulaic. I mean Wharton writes about the rich trans atlantic world of the turn  of the century. Austen’s pattern are the pieces of ivory which comprise her vicarage life. And Hardy the blackness of people caught in tempests of their own choosing and the headlong roll to the cliff of disaster. But the writing transcends the pattern or rather fits and illuminates it and just-a-book writers simply entertain and distract. Oh I would adore being a successful just-a-book author, they get rich and seem to have a ball and sometimes there stuff gets made into a wonderful movie. (Elmore Leonard falls  on the line between just-a-bookishness and REAL art I must confess and Get Shorty was a gem)  But anyway I have to decide if I am going to pick up another Carl Hiasen book or switch to Toni Morrison. Hmmmm… maybe after I eat some taco chips.

 
 
 

   
watching the detectives
there sure are a lot of detective shows on tv nowadays. there must be a mystery for every hour.

good-by life!
 
 
   
 

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