sovay: (Default)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2006-06-12 10:15 pm

A moon-faced memory with eyes downturned

This has been a really good evening. I spent it with [livejournal.com profile] gaudior, [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks, [livejournal.com profile] eredien, [livejournal.com profile] lignota, [livejournal.com profile] weirdquark, and [livejournal.com profile] syonakeleste, and there was BPAL (the combination of Kumiho and Dorian makes me smell like high tea served with lavender) and dinner (one can never go wrong with mozzarella and fresh basil) and a fantastic vid for Princess Tutu that has only increased my desire to see this anime (meta-Hoffmann!). We were all in agreement that May 2006 should be stricken from the record.

I am also delighted with the concept of a ghost umbrella, as explained by [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks—if one owns an umbrella for more than a hundred years, at least in Japan, it will develop sentience and a malicious sense of humor, so that you may be out in the rain with no shelter nearby and suddenly the umbrella will twist free of your hand and proceed to hop away home, laughing all the while. But it will also guard your house. And I imagine this works; I should think that most burglars would be dissuaded by a close encounter with a sentient umbrella. Or a vampire squash. The combination would probably guarantee that salesmen never visited your house again; and possibly your in-laws as well.

Amanda Downum's "Dogtown" has no umbrella ghosts, but it does have ghouls and ambiguities: and these are both excellent things.

Oh, and green tea Pocky is crack. But I'm sure some of you knew that already.
ewein2412: (harriet writing (no text))

[personal profile] ewein2412 2006-06-22 08:23 am (UTC)(link)
It's in my grandmother's house, which has been our family's summer home since 1928. We think it may have come with the house, along with quite a lot of other random furniture. I have been getting anxious about it, because so many things break and get thrown out (we still use the house as a summer cottage, and I swear to you, this is the ONLY umbrella that doesn't fall apart or go walkies eventually, so we end up using it every year). Last year I very nearly brought it home with me as a protective measure. My aunts and I tend to do this with artifacts that no one else seems to care about... but you know, if it is PROTECTING the house, maybe I ought to leave it there.