The weekend what was

On Friday afternoon, since I got home from work early, I decided to watch Ghost Story. (It’s available on HBO Go.) The movie has a notable cast, with Fred Astaire, Melvyn Douglas, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and John Houseman among others — it was the final film role for all of the men, with the lone exception of Houseman — but it’s pretty goofy and not really what I was expecting.

On Saturday morning, I drove with my father to get his car inspected. It meant I had to get up early, on a Saturday — and my attempt to seriously nap upon my return home failed, unfortunately — but he’d done the same for me last month, so it was the least that I could do.

On Saturday afternoon, I finished reading Ben Loory’s collection, Stories for Nighttime and Some for the Day. I’m not sure there’s any way I can summarize the book, or the experience of reading its off-kilter, sometimes fairy-tale like stories, except to share this tweet (with scan) I made:

It’s a fun but weird book.

On Saturday evening, I watched another movie from 1981, Michael Mann’s Thief. (This one I’d rented from Netflix.) It’s an interesting movie, in that it feels like an artifact from a different time — a time when ’70s movies were becoming ’80s movies — and there’s some good acting in it, particularly from James Caan. But again, I can’t claim to have really loved it. It’s slow and over-stylized — though maybe the latter’s almost a given with Michael Mann — and it just didn’t thrill me.

On Sunday morning, I did the crossword puzzle (somewhat poorly), donated blood — partly inspired, I must admit, by Radiolab’s recent show about the red stuff — and discovered New Girl (it’s also on Netflix). I have, as of this writing, watched eight episodes, a full third of the first season. This is kind of how I like watching sitcoms: in large blocks. I find it’s easier to get emotionally invested with the characters, while ignoring some of the weaknesses that might become more apparent if I had a week to dwell on each episode. It’s how I encountered (and fell for) How I Met Your Mother and The Big Bang Theory, and it might explain why I’ve lately fallen out of watching those regularly, now that regularly means something other than watching a half dozen episodes back to back.

On Sunday afternoon, I wrote this:

“That’s me in the photo,” he says. “I’m there with a shovel.”

“And the plastic bucket and flippers,” she says, “I see. Were you at the beach or…?”

“That’s actually the mall,” he says. “One of those photo studio places at the one in Trenton? We went with the Hawaiian getaway theme.”

“Sounds romantic.”

“It was actually that or the landing on Mars. The place was kind of lackluster, didn’t have a lot of backdrops to choose from.”

“Why didn’t you just go to the beach? Wait, does Trenton have a beach?”

“I don’t know. Carol is — was — afraid of water. And planes. And hula dancers. That was the closest we ever got to Oahu.”

“She sounds like a real catch.”

He looks at her for a moment, then lets out a sigh.

“That’s what I used to think, too,” he tells her, shaking his head, “before she blew up the world.”

“Oh,” she answers. “I forgot that was her.”

“I want to say it wasn’t her fault,” he says, “that it could have happened to anybody. But not just anybody’s girlfriend was a mad scientist stockpiling plutonium.”

“That was Carol?”

“That was Carol. I mean, at first it was cute, just one of those little quirks that seem adorable at the start of any relationship. Like the way she’d giggle at movies, not just the funny ones, or the way she’d toy with her hair whenever she got nervous.”

“The way she was afraid of hula dancers?”

“That should have been a warning sign, I guess. Planes, the beach…I mean, those are normal enough phobias. But when you start coming home to robot armies designed to laser to death anything in a grass skirt, you start to worry, you know.”

“I didn’t know you were living with her,” she says. He knows that look.

“Not at her mountain lair, if that’s what you’re thinking,” he says. “I didn’t even know she had a mountain lair. Apparently she bought a hollowed-out volcano during the real estate boom.”

“And that’s where she kept the plutonium?”

“Well, it wasn’t at the apartment. We’d only been moved in together for about six months, but I think I would have noticed plutonium.”

“Six months?” she says. “That sounds serious.”

“She blew up the planet,” he answers. “I’d say she was a pretty serious girl.”

“It’s just, you don’t talk about her that much. I mean, this is the first time I’ve even seen that photograph.”

“I don’t like to be reminded of those days. The moon base doesn’t even have a mall.”

“Well if somebody’s girlfriend had given us all a little more warning she was going to detonate a world-killing plutonium bomb…”

“How did this become my fault?” he asks her. “I don’t want to fight.”

“There isn’t enough air even if you did,” she says. “They’re rationing the oxygen again.”

“That’s like the fifth time this month.”

“They brought in a few hundred new refugees just last week. Folks gotta breathe.”

“God I hope they’re not mutants like the last batch. All those third eyes and blistered skin.” He shudders.

“Well I didn’t see any hula skirts, if that’s what you’re worried about,” she says. “Not one single ukulele among them when we did our low-orbit pick-up.”

“Now you’re just being mean,” he tells her. “Besides, that was Carol’s thing, not mine.”

“It’s hard to tell. You two were apparently so close.”

He just stares at her. Neither one of them says anything for a while.

“I’m sorry I didn’t tell you about her,” he says finally. “It was a dark time in my life. Trouble at work, the stress of moving in together…the world blowing up. I forgot I even had that photo. If there was enough oxygen left, I probably burn it.”

With my weekly writing group. It’s not really a thing, more a sketch than a story, but I had some fun with it.

And on Sunday evening, I wrote this. That was the weekend.

Random 10 8-2-13

Last week. This week:

  1. “Good Man” by Josh Ritter
    These chords are old but we shake hands
  2. “Family” by Dar Williams
    Can you fix this? It’s a broken heart
  3. “Here Comes the Sun Again” by M. Ward
    Kingdoms and queens they all bow down to you
  4. “I Think I’m Gonna Kill Myself” by Elton John, guessed by Occupant
    Get a little headline news
  5. “Eclipse” by Pink Floyd, guessed by Betty
    And everything under the sun is in tune
  6. “Even if I Don’t” by Rachael Yamagata
    I could call, I could come visit
  7. “Fox Confessor Brings the Flood” by Neko Case
    How can people not know what beauty this is?
  8. “Curl” by Jonathan Coulton, almost guessed by Betty
    C’mon, baby, put the rock in the house
  9. “As I Went Out One Morning” by Mira Bilotte (orig. Bob Dylan)
    I spied the fairest damsel
  10. “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright” by Bob Dylan, guessed by Betty
    You just kinda wasted my precious time

It’s maybe the only reason you keep coming back here. Good luck!

Thursday

I arrived at the office today to discover a small wooden skull and a stuffed crow sitting atop my computer keyboard. As you might well imagine, this is not a normal turn of events for a Thursday morning. Had I not been almost entirely sure about who had done this — “you know it’s one of two people,” my boss laughed when she saw it — I might have taken it as some kind of ominous portent. That and the black spot left on an index card on my desk a few hours later. But it was all just a bunch of silliness. That’s just the sort of coworkers that I have. Need I remind you of the Dalek incident?

Alas, I only thought to take pictures once I’d returned the toys to their proper owner.

The rest of the day was pretty much normal. Sometime after lunch, I went looking for a training session that I thought was happening, because I had it on my calendar, but which actually happening for another three weeks.

And that’s about as exciting as the whole week’s been. Were it not for the deadly portents, having lost one of the earbuds from my headphones (and then realizing it didn’t make as much difference as I would have thought) would be the most exciting thing that’s happened since Monday.

So, in lieu of anything else, and apropos of nothing but it being (amazingly, finally) August, here’s my monthly music mix, that thing that I do for no particular reason but that I enjoy it, and like music, every month. Last month, I only had five songs. So this month I may have over-compensated. I have twenty-seven. This, quite honestly, is going to make pulling together a year-end mix a little more difficult:

  1. “Desperate Heart” by Gram Rabbit
  2. “Hit or Miss” by Odetta
  3. “These Ozark Hills” by Blackberry Winter
  4. “It Came Out of the Wilderness” by Pete Molinari
  5. “Closer” by Tegan and Sara
  6. “Entertainment” by Phoenix
  7. “Can You Get to That” by Mavis Staples
  8. “Shameless” by Lissie
  9. “Royals” by Lorde
  10. “Beautiful Tomorrow” by Beth Rowley
  11. “Be Good (Lion’s Song)” by Gregory Porter
  12. “Lose Your Head” by Dead Man’s Bones
  13. “In My Head” by Olivier Libaux (feat. Susan Dillane)
  14. “Only You” by Yaz
  15. “Questions and Answers” by Lou Doilion
  16. “Bones” by MS MR
  17. “Never Wanted Your Love” by She & Him
  18. “Mary” by Sparkadia
  19. “Back Then” by B. Story
  20. “Saint Judas” by Natalie Merchant
  21. “Hysteric” by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
  22. “Lucky” by Kat Edmondson
  23. “Dirty Paws” by Of Monsters and Men
  24. “I Still Believe” by the Call
  25. “Strong as an Oak” by Watsky
  26. “Gloria” by Patti Smith
  27. “Walking Song” by Kate and Anna McGarrigle

So that was Thursday.