Gratifying Response!

My friend Mark Morgan has been after me for a while to publish a bit of my writing on his website. Yesterday I finally got around to it, and the response to the story on his site has been most gratifying. Thanks to all you readers for the kind words.

So What's Sweet About The Sorrow of Parting?

Our little Emily heads off to New York today to spend a month with Kathy’s
parents. They live in Grand Island, a little island community just outside
of Buffalo on the Niagra river. Emily has grandiose plans to camp, go to the
falls, play with Socrates (Martha’s rabbit), visit lots of family, and buy a
number of Beanie Babies. She’s under strict orders to have a load of fun to
make us missing her worth it. Take care, kiddo!

A Fistful Of Reviews

Kathy and I have been trying to catch up with Netflix over the weekend and
last night. Here they are, from least to most enjoyable. The World Is Not Enough: lousy.
Sometime between the last Bond and this one, Brosnin got really old looking.
The classic Bond wit here evinces itself only as a series of execrable puns,
several of which are only possible because one of the Bond girls is named
“Christmas,” an unlikely designation that’s never explained. Add that to a
pretty uninspired plot, and you’ve got a recipe for a real stinker. Six String Samuri: this film has more
style than you can shake a stick at. Sword-wielding guitar players trek
across a post-apocolyptic landscape to compete for Elvis’ throne after he
dies. (No, not the throne he died on, silly…) I wanted to like this
film more than I was actually able to, however. It’s filled to the gills
with eye candy, but lacks much in the way of plot. Watching Jeffery Falcon
do his stuff is lots of fun, though. The Green Mile: This is director
Frank Darabont’s second film adaptation of a Stephen King story, and it’s a
toss-up for me whether this or The
Shawshank Redemption
was better. This one focuses on the guards on death
row and the prisoners in their care. To say too much more is to spoil the
surprises a bit, but suffice it to say that there are elements of what
Stephen King is known for at work. Don’t miss it.

Cold Sassy Tree

It’s a relatively rare thing that I pick up a book I’ve never heard of by an author I’ve never heard of and enjoy it immensely, but Cold Sassy Tree fits that description. (Well, strictly speaking, it doesn’t, since it was a tape of someone reading the book, and I saw that the Austin Lyric Opera is doing a production of the story on their website, but it’s close.) The book tells the story of Will Tweety, a resident of Cold Sassy, Georgia, and his family’s travails as Will’s grandmother dies and his grandfather marries a much younger woman. A beautifully told tale, chock-full of humor, drama, and pathos. Great stuff.

Cult of Productivity

Or not. Having a hard time getting in that secret, special writing mood this
week, hence the sporadic, infrequent, inconsistent, and otherwise irregular
updates. In happy prayer-answered news, my techconsulting.com domain sold
for enough money that we’ll likely be able to close on the new house
shortly. Wish I had 10 more just like it! Emily’s gearing up for a month in
New York. Kathy’s still pregnant, and the good doctor says she’s doing
swell. And I got stabbed in my balding head by a yucca outside of a mexican
food restaurant last night. Ouch.

Swimming and Drowning

I’ve not posted much this week. I’m trying to get into the habit of swimming
enough to do my health some good, which means that my little remaining free
time is eroded further. Add that to the fact that I’m already drowning in
activity, and I’m having a hard time keeping up. Plus, Deus Ex is coming out soon, so things will
get worse before they get better…

Girl, Interrupted

We spent the last of the Blockbuster coupons that came with our DVD player
last night on Girl,
Interrupted
. I wasn’t expecting to enjoy it too much, but was pleasantly
surprised; it was an excellent film. A sort of more-hopeful girl-cast One
Flew Over The Cukoo’s Nest
featuring an Audrey Hepburn-looking Winona
Ryder, it mixes pathos, humor, madness, and hope. Amusingly, the description
on the back of the Blockbuster box starts out with this sentence: “A young
woman is put into a mental institution after she commits suicide.”

House Update

The latest on the houses, for those of you who are curious, is this: the San
Marcos house is out of bankruptcy proceedings, and the current owner is now
very anxious to sell as soon as possible. The Denton house has showed 14
times, and we’ve had 2 requests for seller’s disclosures and 1 ridiculously
low offer (about 3/5 of the asking price). (Apparently, a lot of people will
avoid a house that they see has had foundation problems even though they’ve
been repaired.) To make things even more interesting, the 401(k) I thought
I’d be able to borrow from for the down payment on the new house is being
transferred from one company to another, and won’t even begin to be
available until mid-August now. Argh!

I Am Legend

A while back, my friend Ross, who was doing script readings for Arnold
Schwarzenneger at the time, mentioned a project called I Am Legend which he thought would be a super project for him. I read the script, and was intrigued by its originality, and agreed with Ross’ assesment. This past week, I finally got around to reading the book (by the author of the book upon which the execrable film version of What Dreams May Come was based). It’s a really interesting read with a really disappointing ending. For once, I’m actually in favor of the Hollywood version of a story.

Return to Schlitterbahn

Yesterday I took a sick day to help tend to family members. Liam had been up coughing and hacking for several hours during the night, and Kathy comforted him while wrestling with the same thing herself. (Because of her pregnancy, she’s not allowed much strong medicine, so it’s especially trying for her.) Midway through the morning, our friends from down the street called and asked if Abby wanted to go to Schlitterbahn, the world’s best
water park, with them. One thing led to another, and before I knew it, the
girls and I were all on our way while Kathy and Liam went down for naps. I
hadn’t been to the place for nearly a decade, during which time they’ve
added a phenomenal amount of stuff to the park — after 5 hours, we’d only
gotten through about half of it. Loads of fun.