Home

I will! Yes, this time I will!

  • Feb. 27th, 2007 at 12:03 PM
moon2, moon1, fragole, strawberries, sex, mondiali, S.E.L.E.N.E.
Yesterday, as I often do when I'm in Milan, I was wandering through libraries, just to have a look at the books. Suddenly, I found myself oddly driven by a compulsory need to buy, which rarely happens to me, so I bought a few books (AND The Rocky Horror Picture Show DVD!).

But what is most important here, is that, while roaming around through all these books, and seeing - oh my goodness! - so many of them, I couldn't help but thinking: when do they find the time to write them? I don't mean novelists, who may in many cases just write following their own imagination, though it's not always the case, but researchers, and journalists, and politicians, who write books about real life, and have to make researches to write even the worst of those books.
I said to myself: is it possible that people like Veltroni (Rome's mayor, and a major politician) or Vespa (a very popular journalist... well, more of an anchorman, I should say) have more time to write than I do? Ok, they must have housemaids or someone who makes all the dirty work at home for them, and actually I might have one too, I can afford one. But it's not only that, which eats up all my free time.

So, I took my resolution: as soon as I go back to Lyon, I'll start writing my book about Turkey, one hour a day. It can be done, I just have to impose a discipline on myself, I know I can do it. Yes, I know, I have already said the same thing to myself a thousand times, but if I don't say it, I'll never do it, so it's a start. I know I won't be able to write when I work 9 or 11 hours in a day, but I'll try to when I have shorter shifts.

Also because, in all this going through library shelves, I found exactly the book I want to write: The New Turkey by Chris Morris. I know, I know: "if it has already been written, why do you want to do it?". Well, there are reasons: first of all, it's not translated in Italian, as far as I know. And I don't think it's going to be: it was published in 2006, but written in 2005. So, much of what is in there is already old. I realized it fully while reading the introduction, where I found much of what I might have said more or less a year and a half ago. This is another good reason to write a new book: to update the old one.

But the old one can be a good starting point to write the new one, so I bought it, of course. 18.10 euros. I hope it's worth it. I have read a few pages, and I haven't been disappointed so far. Actually, it's excitingly the same style I want to use. And it excites me because, if a BBC correspondent did it, maybe my idea is not so crazy as I feared.

Revelation

  • Feb. 22nd, 2007 at 12:10 AM
moon2, moon1, fragole, strawberries, sex, mondiali, S.E.L.E.N.E.
(In italiano)

Now, almost 36 years old, I finally understand the usefulness of tidying up.
Things occupy less space when they are put where there should be rather then lying all over the place.
I couldn't believe it when I saw there was enough space in my bookcases for all of my books, and even more (not for long, yet, so I'll have to buy a new bookcase anyway).
If you click on the photos, you'll see the details.

Watch it closely now...
...because it's not going to last

The Time Traveler's Wife

  • Jan. 30th, 2007 at 12:54 PM
moon2, moon1, fragole, strawberries, sex, mondiali, S.E.L.E.N.E.

(In italiano sul Leggio) 
Have you ever read a book you loved so much that in the end you slowed down reading it because you didn't want to finish it?
The first time it happened to me, it was with War and Peace. It wasn't just that I liked it. Actually, it's so long that no one can possibly like all of it. But its characters had entered my life so deeply, that when I ended it I felt as if I had just lost a friend.

I have felt the same feeling recently reading Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler's Wife. I was literally sucked inside the story, to the point that I often dreamed of being part of it.

It's a story that may appeal to various kinds of readers:
- those who like science fiction
- those who hate science fiction
- those who like stories about time travels
- those who hate stories about time travels
- those who like love stories
- those who hate love stories.

All these elements (science fiction, time travel, love) are actually key elements in this novel, but all of them are treated in a totally unconventional way.

The cover says:

"This is the extraordinary love story of Clare and Henry who met when Clare was six and Henry was thirty-six, and were married when Clare was twenty-two and Henry thirty. Impossible but true, because Henry suffers from a rare condition where his genetic clock periodically resets and he finds himself pulled suddenly into his past or future. In the face of this force they can neither prevent nor control, Henry and Clare's struggle to lead normal lives is both intensely moving and entirely unforgettable".

Ok, no politics. Someone might be disappointed knowing my interest for politics in science fiction. But when a book is good, damn, it's good. And this one has a feature which is, I think, the key to all good science fiction: it takes normal people - the characters, and the situations, are utterly believable - and plunges them into a completely abnormal situation. A scientific experiment, so to speak, to study how life and human behaviour is affected by the unexpected.
That's exactly my own, personal definition of science fiction. Or of that 10 percent left out by Sturgeon's Law.

Update
Someone expressed a feeling of frustration in reading this review, meaning he would have wanted me to write a bit more. It's what I intended to do, but I wrote this at work and didn't have too much time to linger over details. Now I do, so I'll add a few words.

There is something else that actually stroke me in this book: for a first novel (and even if it wasn't the author's first novel) you can see the story is studied to the smallest detail (even if there are a few incongruities, which can easily get lost in 500 pages), and yet you don't feel it. The author manages in making everything look natural, not artificial.

She masters feelings and atmospheres just as she takes care of the scientific part of the book, and she shows competence (or at least ability to deal with her collaborators) in a wide range of fields, from genetics through music to visual art.

And in all of this, you lack the tension of "the end": since the main character moves through time, and sometimes happens to find himself in the future, everything is revealed largely before it happens. And yet, the story is full of surprises, many of them happening not in the future, but coming from the past. I find that, too, quite... well, surprising.

A minor change

  • Jan. 5th, 2007 at 12:52 PM
moon2, moon1, fragole, strawberries, sex, mondiali, S.E.L.E.N.E.
Especially for those of you who read this LJ from a news feed aggregator, or from your own Friends page, so you can't see changes on my LJ home page.
I have added "Now Reading" box in the sidebar. I hope I'll remember to update it :)

I thought I'd do worse

  • Aug. 23rd, 2005 at 2:03 AM
moon2, moon1, fragole, strawberries, sex, mondiali, S.E.L.E.N.E.
(The title is a reply to a post in annafdd's blog)

Interested Reader
You have a Geek Lore rating of 60%
Your knowledge of the speculative fiction field, while far from encyclopedic, is still solidly above average. You probably have a healthy interest in the field rather than a driving obsession; either that, or your memory's just not what it's cracked up to be...




My test tracked 1 variable How you compared to other people your age and gender:


free online dating free online dating
You scored higher than 0% on Geek Lore
Link: The SF/F Opening Lines Test written by winternight2 on Ok Cupid

Tags

PPP Direct
Powered by LiveJournal.com
Designed by Lilia Ahner