Websites with free services I use...
On a daily basis:
Facebook
Google
Gmail
Twitter
On a weekly basis:
Blogger
Grooveshark
Tumblr
On a willy-nilly basis:
Flickr
Google Reader
Picasa
Dare I list all the accounts / profiles / urls I've created over the years? That would take a while.
This has been... "Mundane List." (Made even more mundane by the fact that I probably forgot to list some sites I often use.)
Friday, February 26, 2010
Friday, February 19, 2010
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Desktop
The Internet (dot com)
Monday, February 01, 2010
Manhood for Amateurs
I recently had the pleasure of allowing Michael Chabon's recent essay collection Manhood for Amateurs: The Pleasures and Regrets of a Husband, Father, and Son to distract me from my academic readings. I can't remember how I came across it, but most likely I was browsing at a bookstore and started reading it. (This has happened more than once before.) I'm glad our library had it.
Chabon is an open geek, expressing his love for comic books and sci-fi television and movies, but he is also a husband and father, and, most of all, a man. He writes poignantly about all of these things in a series of shorter essays that show how he'll never understand females, how his "open and honest" approach to parenthood is often compromised, and how marriages and in-laws can be mixed blessings/curses.
I hadn't read anything by Chabon before, but I found Manhood to be a refreshing read (so much so that I've already checked out his earlier collection of essays, Maps and Legends). Sometimes, Manhood got a bit corny. Sometimes it got a bit artsy. But overall, it came through with a strong, convincing voice, exploring aspects of manhood, childhood, married life, and other things, and looking much closer at these things than people generally care to do. (Sorry for that last beast of a sentence, but time is of an essence.)
A recommended read for anyone.
Chabon is an open geek, expressing his love for comic books and sci-fi television and movies, but he is also a husband and father, and, most of all, a man. He writes poignantly about all of these things in a series of shorter essays that show how he'll never understand females, how his "open and honest" approach to parenthood is often compromised, and how marriages and in-laws can be mixed blessings/curses.
I hadn't read anything by Chabon before, but I found Manhood to be a refreshing read (so much so that I've already checked out his earlier collection of essays, Maps and Legends). Sometimes, Manhood got a bit corny. Sometimes it got a bit artsy. But overall, it came through with a strong, convincing voice, exploring aspects of manhood, childhood, married life, and other things, and looking much closer at these things than people generally care to do. (Sorry for that last beast of a sentence, but time is of an essence.)
A recommended read for anyone.
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