sovay: (Default)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2009-04-19 03:58 am

We're linking tongues and moving on

Most of today does not bear repeating, but in the afternoon my mother and I went to the Museum of Science and looked at the frogs: they were still beautiful. The dart-poison frogs, which look like metallic glazes. The waxy monkey frog, sitting up on its branch with delicate, unsticky fingers and opposable thumbs. Bullfrog tadpoles, fire-bellied toads; even a clawed Xenopus, whose name I learned almost twenty-five years ago from a children's abecedary, As I Was Crossing Boston Common. The Brazilian milk frog is the one that I love. Its skin is like celadon, softly watered with black; it crouches with only its throat flickering and its eyes are wide rims of gold. There are three or four of them near the beginning of the exhibit, the first frogs the visitor sees after the initial materials. I can imagine them in clay and faience. They look like things recovered from the ancient world.

On a channel that unfortunately cut for commercials, I caught the last third of The Magnificent Seven (1960) earlier tonight. I need to rewatch it and Seven Samurai (1954); I saw them both at the same time, probably not later than my first year of high school.

The Pliny moment yesterday was the Great Meadows of Arlington and Lexington, burning. Being wetlands, they should regrow soon. I still think conservation land should not be catching on fire. I imagine someone was smoking, and I wonder if I can invoke contrapasso against them.

There are not enough good stories with shape-changing and frogs.

[identity profile] schreibergasse.livejournal.com 2009-04-19 07:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I also approve of anything by Ursula Vernon.

he's got a juvenile novel called Nurk which is apparently about Sorka the shrew's grandson
You could also get your local library to order it. (Either ILL, or buy to spread the gospel of Vernon). At any rate, that's what I'm planning to do.

there's a funny story somewhere well back in her deviantart gallery about an elf veterinarian and an orc poet.
MUST. READ.

there should be more with shape-changing and frogs.
Or you [sovay] could write it?

Anyway, sorry to hear that the non-ranine portions of yesterday were not worth the price of admission. I hope that they are, indeed, unrepeatable.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-04-20 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
You could also get your local library to order it. (Either ILL, or buy to spread the gospel of Vernon). At any rate, that's what I'm planning to do.

Hmm, that is a thought. My mother's got connections at the library--I'll ask her about it.

MUST. READ.

Definitely. It can be found by going to http://ursulav.deviantart.com/gallery/ and searching (in the search box under the gallery tab, rather than the one above) for "elf vs. orc".

The first chapter is rated mature*, so you'd have to be logged into deviantart in order to read it. The rest are open.

Or you [sovay] could write it?

I'd defintely read it, an she did.

*Even though there's nothing more explicit in it than the description of Sings-to-Trees' discovery that Celadon Toadstool is female whilst cutting off her shirt in the process of working on her wounded arm--the fact that she has nipple rings is mentioned, but that's about it.