Monday, June 28, 2010
Sunday, June 27, 2010
The dress.

I bought this dress at a thrift store yesterday.
I wore it today.
My grandmother had a dress in the same pattern, something I didn't realize until this morning. It was made of polyester, and this is cotton. But it had the same gathered top, and nearly the same colors. All day I've been wearing the dress and remembering sitting on her lap as a child.
I am very like my grandmother: She was small and heavy. She was very blond. She read too much. She had trouble having babies. She was given to flights of wild and angry fancy. She was sharp. She was sarcastic. She didn't dance. She didn't like people very much. She adored me. She longed to travel. She was the smartest girl in her class. She hated her mother and loved her daughter. My mother hated her in turn. She brought me bags full of romance novels that she picked up for free somewhere. She liked bright patterns and skirts. She said "oh baby" when she wanted to create emphasis. She liked driving with the car window down. Her favorite writer was Mary J. Holmes. She died unpleasantly-- cancer linked to a botched hysterectomy. She had blue eyes like my sister.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Word of the Day: Poilus
poi·lu [pwah-loo; Fr. pwa-ly] Show IPA
–noun, plural -lus [-looz; Fr. -ly] Show IPA.
a french common soldier.
Origin:
1910–15; < F, in earlier slang: tough individual, tough, brave, lit., hairy, haired; MF, OF pelu ( cf. plew) < VL *pilūtus, equiv. to L pil ( us ) hair + VL *-ūtus, for L -ātus -ate1 ( e > oi by influence of poil hair < L pilus )
–noun, plural -lus [-looz; Fr. -ly] Show IPA.
a french common soldier.
Origin:
1910–15; < F, in earlier slang: tough individual, tough, brave, lit., hairy, haired; MF, OF pelu ( cf. plew) < VL *pilūtus, equiv. to L pil ( us ) hair + VL *-ūtus, for L -ātus -ate1 ( e > oi by influence of poil hair < L pilus )
Friday, June 25, 2010
From Paris in the Fifties, Stanley Karnow
Later, over drinks with him, I asked Beckett, “If you were marooned on a desert island and could only have one book, which one would it be?” He replied without hesitation, “Boswell’s Life of Samuel Johnson.”
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Sunday, June 20, 2010
My first published SF story has appeared:
http://www.short-story.me/science-fiction-stories/210-when-life-hands-you-lemons.html
I can't help but read it and wince, but still.
http://www.short-story.me/science-fiction-stories/210-when-life-hands-you-lemons.html
I can't help but read it and wince, but still.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Word of the Day: Fissile
fissile
/fissil/
• adjective 1 (of an atom or element) able to undergo nuclear fission. 2 (chiefly of rock) easily split.
— ORIGIN Latin fissilis, from findere ‘split, crack’.
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