Kh'bin oysgeforn felder un velder
Most of this week went toward construction—I was going to write that the kitchen has finally begun to look like a functional room rather than an art installation, but I think it is always going to look like a little of both—with some time off for good behavior, but there are now some genuinely bad things happening in my extended family and I am not sure how much I feel like posting substantively. I made chicken coconut soup for dinner with lemongrass, galangal, and kaffir lime leaves; I had to leave out the fish sauce so that my father could eat it. On the basis of its first episode, I am ready to declare Slings & Arrows (2003—2006) some of the best television I have ever seen. Remind me about A.S. Byatt. Here are some songs I have recently discovered.
Patrick Wolf, "The Bachelor (feat. Eliza Carthy)"
I will never marry, marry at all
No one will wear my silver ring
Susan McKeown & Lorin Sklamberg, "Prayer for the Dead"
Oy, ver vet nokh mir kadish zogn?
Ver vet mayn likht nokhtrogn?
Who will say Kaddish for me?
Who will carry my light?
Peter Doherty, "Last of the English Roses"
She knows her Rodneys from her Stanleys
And her Kappas from her Reeboks
And her tit from her tat
And her Winstons from her Enochs
Tori Amos, "Starling"
Starling, when he screams
He screams in black and white
Just like the magpie
The first is purportedly Appalachian in origin, although I believe it belongs to one of
cucumberseed's worlds; the second is a braiding of nineteenth-century Irish folk, twentieth-century Yiddish, and a macaronic prayer in eleventh-century Latin and Irish; the third, the internet tells me, is reworking Jean Genet's Notre Dame des Fleurs (1943). I can't explain the fourth in the least, but I like its language. Enjoy.
Patrick Wolf, "The Bachelor (feat. Eliza Carthy)"
I will never marry, marry at all
No one will wear my silver ring
Susan McKeown & Lorin Sklamberg, "Prayer for the Dead"
Oy, ver vet nokh mir kadish zogn?
Ver vet mayn likht nokhtrogn?
Who will say Kaddish for me?
Who will carry my light?
Peter Doherty, "Last of the English Roses"
She knows her Rodneys from her Stanleys
And her Kappas from her Reeboks
And her tit from her tat
And her Winstons from her Enochs
Tori Amos, "Starling"
Starling, when he screams
He screams in black and white
Just like the magpie
The first is purportedly Appalachian in origin, although I believe it belongs to one of

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The music and the chicken soup sound delectable.
Thanks and sympathy.
*hugs*
Nine
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From the moment Geoffrey gestured with a toilet plunger and Prospero's magic raised a storm.
*hugs*
Thanks.
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And then the lights blew, yet again.
That is a lovely moment.
Nine
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Have you read Possession? It's a novel I adored...
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I ran into several reviews which thought the same thing. I enjoyed it very much—as a formal novel, it unravels completely, but that's only because its narrator is under the impression he is writing a very different kind of book than he is.
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I tried Possession in college and bounced completely. Recently I tried Angels & Insects and fell in love; I have since read The Virgin in the Garden, Elementals, and The Biographer's Tale and I think she's a favorite. Probably this means I should try Possession again, but I'm willing to take other recommendations, too!
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Awesome.
but do give it another try sometime.
I will let you know what I think!
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Eh. Just treasure it all the more because it's candle-brief.
The songs are lovely.
I'm glad!
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Ooh. A novel about exactly the problem I am wrestling with. When I am done with Possession that's going on my list.
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I think the sentence should have read "Remind me to talk about A.S. Byatt"—I keep meaning to post about her work, which I have rediscovered since bouncing off Possession at Brandeis—but thank you for this summary! The Children's Book sounds very much like the one I want to read next.
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What I love about Byatt (I've been reading her since The Virgin in the Garden) is her thingliness: drawer within drawer in each cabinet. She's the V&A between covers.
Nine
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becomes a blade
then what, what will it take
to make it through another day
... if the pen and sword ally, who will stand against them?
I love starlings, and that song is lovely.
The braided song is wonderful; the first two melodies work so well together and oh that third! The harmonies...
I've already testified to the magnificence of "The Bachelor."
Sorry to hear about the bad things in your extended family... your soup on the other hand, sounds delicious, and I'm impressed that you took the time to get all those special ingredients. Sometimes I fudge it, and then, unsurprisingly, the result does not taste quite authentic.
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I thought of you when I heard it.
The braided song is wonderful; the first two melodies work so well together and oh that third! The harmonies...
My mother is responsible; she heard it on the radio and brought it home.
Sometimes I fudge it, and then, unsurprisingly, the result does not taste quite authentic.
Well, I couldn't use the fish sauce and I couldn't find the chili paste; it could have been a more faithful soup. But it was very tasty.
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And you can probably add the fish sauce to individual bowls.
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Appreciated. Thank you.
And you can probably add the fish sauce to individual bowls.
It's supposed to cook in the coconut milk along with the chicken and the spices; I don't know what it would taste like if added as the last step with the lime juice and the cilantro. But I could experiment.
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Thank you.
*hugs*
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!!!!
That is uber-macaronic, that is. *downloads happily*
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I think it's the jewel of the album. This is the one that's presently stuck in my head.
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The soup sounds lovely, even without fish sauce.
Thanks so much for the tracks--I'm looking forward to hearing them. Susan McKeown is brilliant--I've never met her, but we've a number of mutual friends and acquaintances. I've never heard anything from this recording, which sounds fascinating, before.
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Past a song called "Jericho," I had never heard anything of Susan McKeown's before; I didn't know Lorin Sklamberg recorded solo work, either. (I have four albums by the Klezmatics, who I love.) I like being surprised by the existence of good music.
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It is nice to be surprised that way.
I'll dig round--I think I've a Susan McKeown CD or two, somewhere.
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My goodness, she said mildly. Thanks for this, and for "The Bachelor." I hope that the bad things can be lessened, mitigated, or improved, as appropriate.
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You're very welcome!
I hope that the bad things can be lessened, mitigated, or improved, as appropriate.
Thank you.
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(I have a friend who loves Paul Gross and had me watch the seasons a few years ago.) This makes me realize that I should talk more about the shows, movies, books, comics that I love in here. But that would mean setting aside time and being organized. sigh.