Second Saturday

If anything, today was perhaps less exciting than yesterday, and that’s saying something. But it was nevertheless a perfectly nice day. The weather, for one, was obscenely nice. Seriously, less than a week ago there were rumors of very light snowfall in New York City, and today you wouldn’t be at all uncomfortable walking around in short sleeves.

This evening, I’m allowed myself to be talked into watching The Human Centipede. But I’ll be joined via Twitter by Heather and Beentsy, so I at least won’t have to suffer alone. I’m not expecting the movie to actually be good or anything like that, but the live-tweeting of it should be amusing.

Update: The movie was about as bad as I expected, but we had a blast riffing on it.

First Saturday

Because I had the day off, today felt an awful lot like Saturday. So I’m pleasantly…well, not quite surprised, of course, but nonetheless pleased to “discover” that tomorrow is Saturday, “too.”

The Forgotten English word for today is “dollydaw,” meaning “one foolishly indulged,” which seems altogether apt.

It was a quiet day all told, and aside from a quick trip to the supermarket to pick up some cold cuts for lunch and milk for later, I spent it mostly just hanging around the house. I helped my father replace a light bulb on the stairs, then put the screens back on the kitchen windows. Exciting stuff.

I also did a little reading, finishing Ninni Holmqvist’s The Unit, which I can’t say I really loved. There’s a strong dystopian idea at the heart of the novel, and it has a lot of promise, but ultimately the world that Holmqvist creates felt very thinly sketched and unconvincing. I didn’t find the characters particularly compelling or believable, and I was much more intrigued by the idea of the book than its execution. I feel like Holmqvist kind of gets at the problem herself near the end of the novel:

My new writing project had remained more or less untouched over the past few months. The only thing I had done was to read through what I had already written: thirty pages or so, a good start — though I say so myself. But a good start doesn’t go far, not if you no longer have any idea how you want the narrative to proceed, and particularly if you can no longer remember what you wanted to achieve with the story. It was as if the train had left, the train carrying the theme and my motivation.

I think there’s an intriguing novel to be built from the idea of rendering certain segments of the population “dispensable” — even segments that, conspicuously, mirror the author’s own biography — but this just wasn’t it for me. Maybe it was the translation, maybe it was having read it so soon after Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale — by which this suffers considerably in comparison. Whatever the reason, despite its modest triumphs and moments, the book just ultimately felt underdeveloped and unconvincing.

A day of doubtful etymology

The Forgotten English word for today is “dowlk,” which is “a word of doubtful etymology, but signifying the downy plumage of a bird.”

Of course, as everybody knows, the plumage doesn’t enter into it.

I had to work, despite the Veteran’s Day holiday, but I’m taking tomorrow off as part of a just-for-the-heck-of-it three-day weekend. Our office is just a block from 5th Avenue (and the New York Public Library), so we’re pretty close to every holiday’s parade route — today’s included. The photo up above is actually from a few blocks further uptown, maybe around 50th and 5th, but it was a beautiful day for a parade.

And, honestly, if anyone’s deserving of it, it’s certainly our veterans.

French dog?

According to my Forgotten English desk calendar, today is Lord Mayor’s Day, which

is a great holiday in [London]. The populace is particularly rowdy, turning into lawless freedom the great liberty it enjoys. At these times it is almost dangerous for an honest man, and more particularly for a foreigner, if at all well dressed to walk in the streets, for he runs a great risk of being insulted by the vulgar populace. He is sure of not only being jeered at, but as likely as not dead dogs and cats will be thrown at him…When the people see a well-dressed person in the streets, especially if he is wearing a braided coat, a plume in his hat, or his hair tied in a bow, he will without doubt be called “French dog” twenty times perhaps before he reaches his destination.

It’s almost a relief, then, that practically nothing happened here today. Mostly just work, and lots of it.