Books read, March 2009
Mar. 31st, 2009 11:59 pmPaul Bowles. The Sheltering Sky.
August Derleth (ed). Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos.
Richard Hammond. As You Do.
Tanith Lee. Drinking Sapphire Wine including Don't Bite the Sun.
Anna Sewell. Black Beauty.
( Books bought and borrowed )
August Derleth (ed). Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos.
Richard Hammond. As You Do.
Tanith Lee. Drinking Sapphire Wine including Don't Bite the Sun.
Anna Sewell. Black Beauty.
( Books bought and borrowed )
The Honey Badger
Mar. 12th, 2009 06:10 pm"But my childhood love of the natural world had forearmed me with a ready enthusiasm for when I finally came face to face with the honey badger in the wild. Actually, getting face to face with a honey badger is surprisingly difficult. They are blessed with the unique and, I should imagine, bloody surprising ability, if you've just caught one by the scruff of the neck, of being able to turn around inside their own skin. Grab one by the neck, look it in the eye and you'll quickly find that that's not its eye you're gazing into any more and its turned round in its skin so that it can stick its teeth out of its own arse and bite your nuts off. And they do enjoy a reputation for doing just that: tearing off the gonads of anyone foolish enough to provoke them. It might be some sort of bitter reaction to their diminutive scale compared to many other creatures - and, boy can I empathise with that one - or it could just be that they've learned over the centuries that jousting with sinister curved horns, snarling, pawing the ground and banging your chest are all well and good if you're a big, impressive animal want to signal your potency to an enemy, but if you're a small and irritatingly cute-looking thing and want to be taken seriously in the seedier end of the jungle, tearinq someone's bollocks off with your teeth does get your message across quickly."- Richard Hammond, As You Do, p 126
(no subject)
Jul. 5th, 2008 10:21 pmTwo shocks to the brain:
(1) The clip for Human Racing, which I have never seen before.
(2) Realising I still fancy Nik Kershaw.
ETA: Couple more clips I'd never seen: Dancing Girls (it's really cute; they went for humour and whimsy, rather than sexual fantasy); and Don Quixote. Gods, I wish I'd seen all these as a teenager. I'd have got endless mileage out the SF-y bits.
(1) The clip for Human Racing, which I have never seen before.
(2) Realising I still fancy Nik Kershaw.
ETA: Couple more clips I'd never seen: Dancing Girls (it's really cute; they went for humour and whimsy, rather than sexual fantasy); and Don Quixote. Gods, I wish I'd seen all these as a teenager. I'd have got endless mileage out the SF-y bits.
Study Debunks Bisexual Myth: it's not a phase, folks. (You can download the actual article from Developmental Psychology, Female Bisexuality From Adolescence to Adulthood, as a PDF).
Sex is for joy, not for judgment: interview with Emily Maguire, author of Princesses and Pornstars. "Maguire is deeply critical of the idea women should be defined by their gender or their sexuality and is scathing of the relentless public shaming of women who enjoy sex." Eva Cox, also interviewed, adds an insightful comment at which anti-racists will nod their heads: "She says part of the problem for women is that all the visible signs of discrimination against have been removed, leaving behind the insidious, invisible forms of cultural discrimination."
Richard Hammond holding a puppy
ETA: John Barrowman holding a puppy
Sex is for joy, not for judgment: interview with Emily Maguire, author of Princesses and Pornstars. "Maguire is deeply critical of the idea women should be defined by their gender or their sexuality and is scathing of the relentless public shaming of women who enjoy sex." Eva Cox, also interviewed, adds an insightful comment at which anti-racists will nod their heads: "She says part of the problem for women is that all the visible signs of discrimination against have been removed, leaving behind the insidious, invisible forms of cultural discrimination."
Richard Hammond holding a puppy
ETA: John Barrowman holding a puppy