sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2021-09-21 03:13 am

I thought this was meant to be a carnival

The moon tonight was astonishing: so bright you could feel your pupils tighten as you looked at it. It looked brighter than the streetlights, one of those hole-punched full moons that look like somewhere else is spilling in. Its glow was visible over the edge of the roofs long after it had set behind them. You get that kind of moon in Tanith Lee.

I had a hearing with the Massachusetts Department of Unemployment this afternoon. It was conducted over the phone and took about fifteen minutes, which was much less than I had been braced for: when I was asked if I had any questions, my question was effectively was that it? I presume at some point I'll find out if it worked. It was not, of course, about the problem I have been having with them since June.

I would be reading Cordwainer Smith's Norstrilia (1975) if my copy were not in storage along with Space Lords (1965) and The Rediscovery of Man: The Complete Short Science Fiction of Cordwainer Smith (1993), which I can still remember reading in high school while waiting for the chorus to settle itself for rehearsal; I had discovered "The Ballad of Lost C'mell" in Groff Conklin's 12 Great Classics of Science Fiction (1963) and then I had scoured my parents' shelves for any stories by Smith in hitherto overlooked anthologies and then I scoured used book stores and then NESFA Press helped me out. Right now, I can find the originally published first half of The Boy Who Bought Old Earth (1964) readily enough, but the second half of The Underpeople (1968) remains out of easy reach. In the process of trying to find it, I ran across the claim that the Lord Redlady—the disgraced and tricksterish Commissioner of the Instrumentality who becomes the protagonist's first unexpected ally, "a thin man with a sharp, inquiring face" and a flamboyant style which does not contradict his occasional tendency to vaporize someone; he isn't my favorite character because the novel also contains the cat-girl C'mell—was based on the author's friend Michael Lindsay, of whom I hadn't heard. Now I want to read the memoir by his wife Hsiao Li. I have fewer expectations of finding that out of copyright on the internet.

I have decided I need to get my watch fixed. It's been 1:39 since last April. This is probably on some level accurate, but I still don't like having to pull out my phone to synch up with everyone else's broken time.
asakiyume: (miroku)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2021-09-21 12:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I was going to say, but then you said it: your watch is probably among the more accurate timepieces on the planet.

Your description of the moon was so beautiful. The light from somewhere else--I love when it seems that way. And I liked the notion of feeling your pupils tightening.

The business with Unemployment. Prayers for your needs and curses on the system that pulps real humans in its gears. Funny, I can offer these curses for the medical system, the unemployment system, the system to deal with homelessness, the system to deal with cross-border migration ...

This is two entries where you've mentioned Cordwainer Smith. I've heard his name before but never to really have an association... I will go look him up so I know more about who this guy is and what he wrote.
thisbluespirit: (Default)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2021-09-21 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I have decided I need to get my watch fixed. It's been 1:39 since last April. This is probably on some level accurate

Are you trying to summon an element? XD 0_o
selkie: (Default)

[personal profile] selkie 2021-09-21 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
…of course your watch… okay.

julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)

[personal profile] julian 2021-09-21 05:21 pm (UTC)(link)
"The moon tonight was astonishing..."

Rather.

Moon
movingfinger: (Default)

[personal profile] movingfinger 2021-09-21 06:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Do your cats get excited about full moons?
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2021-09-21 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd not come across Lindsay, but he's definitely interesting, isn't he? Very much in that tradition of slightly odd Brits turning up in far-away places and just setting out to do whatever they could when war blew up. (Is there a US parallel?)

'Lord Redlady' does seem rather a giveaway, even if Hsiao Li, Lady Lindsay, was actually a critic of the communists.
Edited 2021-09-21 19:24 (UTC)
selkie: (Default)

[personal profile] selkie 2021-09-21 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
*gently transfers it to a box in a room with a Geiger counter and an EMF meter*

Mhmm, yes dear, I'll write down natural causes
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2021-09-22 03:27 am (UTC)(link)
I actually came up with a couple of US examples straight after posting: Virginia Hall, who went to work for SOE in France despite having an artificial leg, then transferred to the OSS because SOE wouldn't send her back (and IIRC refused to be decorated by the King because it would blow her identity). And Evans Carlson, who was commissioned from the ranks, twice (Army and then Marines), and ended up in China in the late '30s, travelling with and studying the Communist guerillas, which led to him adopting the phrase 'gung ho' (which originally meant 'working together') and resigning his commission to lecture about the Japanese threat. He then re-enlisted after Pearl Harbour (by my count that's four enlistments), proposed the Marine Raiders, commanded the 2d Marine Raiders in the Makin Island raid, staged a famous month long patrol on Guadalcanal and then managed to be one of the USMC consultants on "Gung Ho!", though the Navy told the director they couldn't base a character on him. Ultimately he won the Navy Cross three times and retired as a brigadier general.

[personal profile] between4walls 2021-09-22 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow, I am just now learning from this that gung ho came from the acronym of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives. Amazing.

In weird OSS operatives stories, I've always been fond of Bernard Knox's. Spanish Civil War vet from Britain, quits the Communists over the invasions of Finland and the Baltic states iirc and moves to America, ends up in Italy with the partisans for the OSS and finds a copy of the Aeneid in a bombed out library, leading to a future career as a classicist. Have never forgotten this one OSS report of his later published in The New Republic with the laconic line "We had to shoot the man in the car."
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2021-09-22 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
and finds a copy of the Aeneid in a bombed out library, leading to a future career as a classicist.

Couldn't make it up!

I was delighted to come across speculation last night that "Waiting for Godot" is based on the time Samuel Beckett and his partner had to hike down into the French countryside, sleeping in haystacks, after the resistance network they were helping was betrayed to the Germans.
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2021-09-23 11:10 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this! And in the meantime I've read a bio of him, and wow! He had Sun Yat-Sen for a godfather! I'm definitely interested in a "structure of a future history which was not contiguous but a mosaic of snapshots that may have been bending eventually toward some kind of conclusion" and "a recurring concern with the way that real events are mutated into fiction by popular culture or even misread by and lost to official history." Very cool! And appreciating cats is a definite plus. But I think the fact that you used something by him as a yearbook quote says the most in terms of a personal recommendation.

I hope to check out at least "Ballad" and maybe some of the others later today. Thanks again!