Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall And John Oates
I was SO excited to buy this yesterday! Up until a year ago I never thought I'd ever buy music digitally...I really prefer having hard copies of music on my shelf that I can grab quickly and put on my stereo. But between saving four to five dollars by going on the Amazon MP3 store and being able to skimp on gas money (to go to Target or Best Buy) to go straight to my laptop...I can't argue with the convenience. Not to mention my iAudio player makes everything sound as good (if not better!) than the stereo.

Anyhow...the bird and the bee!! Their newest album is awesome!!!They are faithful to Hall and Oates while maintaining the beautiful quirky sounds of the bird and the bee. AND, unlike other groups and singers, they aren't too worried about changing the pronouns of the songs. So what if Inara George is singing about a woman? She doesn't care so why should we.

The best tracks on "Interpreting the Masters Volume 1" are, quite simply, ALL of them!!:)

But I'm just amazed at how much I love the trippy bounce of "I Can't Go For That" (always been my favorite H&0 song!) and the deliciously earnest and frothy "Heard it on The Radio" (the only song on the ablum that's not a cover!)

USA TODAY and other publications haven't been too keen on the album, but I definitely CAN go for this great ablum...

Friday, March 19, 2010

Lost Girls and Love Hotels: A Novel (P.S.)

Lately I've been catching up with all the things that had lost their buzz for me...maybe because I'd been tired or a little less passionate than I'm used to being about books. Anyway, the important thing is that I'm loving books more than ever and lucking out in finding some great ones.

The great thing about short story collections and non-fiction is that I can read them and still fit in a novel...all three types of books in different rooms of my place ready for me to pick up where I left off.

The problem with the zombie ones and Lost Girls and Love Hotels is that I can't put them down. Lost Girls is so quirky and funny and dark and mysterious plus (this is shallow!) the cover is very eye-catching!:)

As you may be able to tell from the cover Margaret is not the best role model in the world, but she's been through a lot and is trying to escape her painful past (and less than thrilling job at Air-Pro Stewardess Training Institute) by losing herself in drugs and sex in Tokyo's exotic night life.

Those scenes can be pretty explicit, but the sadness and genuine pain she's in when she's trying to forget is unbelievably barren and almost strangely familiar to anyone hoping for a little oblivion.

Lost Girls is unlike anything I've read in a while;I have a feeling I'm going to be staying up late tonight reading this all the way through...having putting zombies aside....temporarily, of course!:)

p.s.

I just found out that the book is being made into a movie: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0920462/

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Hey Now

You've got to hear "Hey Now" by Augustana; it's just so so beautiful and raw and makes me think of something Jeff Bridges said in an article I read in Filter magazine:


"Be kinder than necessary 'cause everyone you meet is facing some kind of battle."


Sometimes when "Hey Now" shows up unexpectedly on my MP3 shuffle I catch my breath at how gorgeous and sad and comforting it is...and I think it's also talking about being kind to yourself, too! We all go through dark and lonely times (some people definitely have it worse than others and a very small number somehow manage to skate through life with very few problems) but giving into the pain in a permanent way is not the answer, is never the answer...somehow Augustana doesn't make all this sound trite and that's why I love the song with all my heart...
Lonely Werewolf Girl
Oh how I love this book! I may have already blogged about this before...don't think I have, but IF I have, I apologize. It's THAT good, though. Earnest, sweet, funny, very engaging, sad and chock full of great characters, wacky adventures and unique story lines.

When it comes to the supernatural I've always thought if a writer were going to somehow tie in eating disorders it would be connected to zombies. But in Lonely Werewolf Girl the title character battles depression (among other things) after being thrown out of her house when she lashes out at her father because he and her mother hound her about not eating.

Sounds a bit odd, maybe, and even a bit over the top, but it's not. Martin Millar knows the heart and mind of a teenage girl...and perhaps that's one of the best things about this wonderful book...

Wednesday, March 10, 2010


I've often had dreams about foxes. Dream dictionaries state that this means there is an enemy hiding among your friends, but I don't buy this theory at all. In my dream, the foxes are always beautiful and friendly and I can see the burnished red color and texture of their fur as if they really are in front of me.

Dream symbolism is nothing more than an attempt by someone else to confine people's imaginations and lives into little square boxes where there is no room for anything but pat little cliches to thrive. I say let your dreams mean what you want them to...or even better....maybe just realize they don't have to mean anything at all!!:)