Wednesday, March 19, 2008 

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It's not at all obvious how to use Visual Web Developer 2008 Express Edition to debug JavaScript in Internet Explorer. So I wrote it up at the Cozi Tech Blog.

posted on Wednesday, March 19, 2008 8:34:22 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, March 15, 2008 

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It's been too long since I last posted an Odds & Ends.

Henri is a very amusing short spoof of French ennui.

Back in January, Emma and I were being repeatedly shocked by static electricity. We would inadvertently discharge by kissing or otherwise touching each other, or by touching laptops or faucets. Eventually, I realised that it was due to a combination of the microfiber upholstery on our new couch and the dry, unhumid air. We solved it by a combination of rubbing an anti-static dryer sheet (Bounce) on the couch and buying a humidifier. That led to a spate of jokes about the spark being gone.

It's started coming back again. I think it's time to fondle the couch with more Bounce.

The Bad Sex Awards are, perhaps, Britain's "most dreaded literary prize". Read about the 2007 Bad Sex nominees in the Guardian, with excerpts. The late Norman Mailer won posthumously

Ian Welsh makes a case that it's not your money, in rebuttal to anti-tax libertarians.

A few weeks ago I read that the last German veteran of World War I had died. Yesterday, I read that the last French veteran had just died.

Regarding the Spitzer prostitution scandal: normally, I would have given a Democratic politician the benefit of the doubt for a sex scandal. After all, unlike the Republicans—see Larry ‘wide stance’ Craig; David ‘Diaper’ Vitter (brother of my former professor at Brown, Jeff); Mark Foley, et al—Democratic politicians generally don't make a big deal of “family values”. Spitzer had done a good job of fighting corruption, but breaking up prostitution rings had also been one of his signature issues, as had prosecuting johns. The whole thing bespeaks such massive stupidity and hypocrisy that I say good riddance to him.

Several of us went to see Barack Obama at Key Arena last month (photos here), the day before the Washington state primary. The crowd more than filled Key Arena, with at least 20,000 in attendance. We ended up outside, as you can see from the photos, which actually served us well, as Obama stood outside and talked to the crowd for a few minutes before heading into the stadium. We got closer to him than we would have inside.

Anyway, John McCain spoke at the Westin Hotel that evening and only managed to half-fill the ballroom, which accommodates 800 people. In other words, the then-presumptive Republican nominee could only pull as many people as attended my caucus the next day. There are hundreds of thousands of Republicans within an hour's drive of Seattle, but only a few hundred of them could summon the enthusiasm to see their guy in person.

I thought our caucus went well. I helped the convener organize the whole event for eight precincts. As the Precinct Committee Officer (PCO) for SEA 11-1945, I chaired our precinct's caucus and was elected as a delegate for Obama, which means that I will be attending the 11th Legislative District and the King County conventions next month. I have no intention of trying to proceed further. I don't want to go to the Democratic National Convention in Denver in August.

posted on Saturday, March 15, 2008 7:05:34 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, March 13, 2008 

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The JavaScript engines in Firefox 2 (Windows) and IE6 can't handle the new Daylight Savings Time rules in the U.S. The Date() function returns a value that is off by an hour if the system time is between the second Sunday of March and the first Sunday of April.

More at the Cozi Tech Blog.

Update 2008/03/14: Mea culpa. This is not a widespread problem. It is caused by the presence of set TZ=PST8PDT in my C:\AutoExec.bat. Per KB932590, the existence of the TZ environment variable will cause the CRT to use the old DST rules. (I can't remember why I set TZ several years ago. It's part of the accumulated mess of files that I bring everywhere with me.)

posted on Thursday, March 13, 2008 8:58:27 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, March 10, 2008 

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Over at Cozi, we've started a new technical blog. I just put my first post up, describing a nasty problem we had late last year.

Here's the summary:

Internet Explorer 6 does not support transparency in PNG images. The best-known solution is to use the DirectX AlphaImageLoader CSS filter. It's less well known that using AlphaImageLoader sometimes leads to a deadlock in IE6. There are two workarounds. Either wait until after the image has been downloaded to apply the filter to the image's style, or use the little-known transparent PNG8 format instead of the filter.

More here.

posted on Monday, March 10, 2008 9:47:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, March 07, 2008 

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Title: The Sparrow
Author: Mary Doria Russell
Rating: 5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ballantine
Copyright: 1996
ISBN: 0449912558
Pages: 408
Keywords: science fiction
Reading period: 25 February-7 March, 2008

Father Emilio Sandoz, S.J., is the sole survivor of the first expedition to an alien planet, an experience that has left him physically maimed, traumatized, and reviled. He doesn't want to talk about it, but the Jesuit order who sponsored the expedition require answers.

Russell's narrative weaves two tales together: the expedition itself and the inquiry afterwards. This is a first contact for which the expedition crew, Jesuits and lay people alike, are not adequately prepared. The two alien races are more alien than they seem at first, operating from fundamentally different axioms. With the best of intentions, the humans' ignorance leads to great tragedy.

This is an astonishing first novel. Accomplished, nuanced, and moving, it deals in deep issues, examining what it is to be human, and the crisis of faith of a priest who believes himself abandoned by God. Bittersweet, yet often very funny. The characters are memorable and complex.

Unreservedly recommended, this is only the second book to which I am awarding 5 stars.

posted on Saturday, March 08, 2008 7:38:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, February 24, 2008 

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Title: Cursor's Fury
Author: Jim Butcher
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0441015476
Pages: 544
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 23-24 February, 2008

Cursor's Fury is the third book in Jim Butcher's fantasy series, Codex Alera, and the sequel to Academ's Fury.

Tavi is now a cursor, a special agent of the First Lord. Planted undercover in a newly-formed legion, Tavi suddenly becomes its leader when all the other officers are assassinated, just as an invading force of Canim have landed nearby. Meanwhile, his aunt Isana, is trapped in a besieged city, when one of the High Lords, Kalare, attempts a coup. Isana's brother Bernard and his wife Amara lead an attack against Kalare.

Exciting and entertaining, with almost every chapter ending in a cliffhanger for one of the principals.

posted on Monday, February 25, 2008 7:58:06 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: 1634: The Bavarian Crisis
Author: Eric Flint and Virginia DeMarce
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 1416542531
Pages: 690
Keywords: alternate history
Reading period: 13-23 February, 2008

Another book from the 1632 series. This one largely develops a new plot. The archduchess Maria Anna of Austria is sent to Bavaria to marry the newly widowed Duke Maximilian, and finds that she'd rather not. She flees Munich in the company of two Grantville women, triggering a major crisis.

The book is entertaining but it's marred by obsessively detailing the enormously complicated realpolitik of Mitteleuropa. Still, it's one of the good books in the 1632 series.

posted on Monday, February 25, 2008 7:57:15 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, February 17, 2008 

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Title: Domino
Author: Ross King
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 1995
ISBN: 0142003360
Pages: 436
Keywords: fiction, historical
Reading period: 15 January-12 February, 2008

George Cautley, a young gentleman of indifferent background, comes to London in 1770 and attempts to enter society, hoping to make his way as a painter. He becomes obsessed with Lady Beauclair, who sits for her portrait and spins him a tale of a castrato opera singer, who fifty years earlier fled Italy for London.

Lady Beauclair is not what she seems. Indeed, nothing is what it seems in this novel. Everything is a mask. Or a masquerade. Arch whispers. Veiled glances. Layers of face paint hiding blemishes. New portraits daubed on top of old. Deception. Intrigue.

posted on Monday, February 18, 2008 6:49:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, February 06, 2008 

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I sent this letter to the New York Times this morning:

I was struck by the juxtaposition of Anya Kamenetz's thoughtful column and Maureen Dowd's puerile nonsense on today's op-ed page.

Anya Kamenetz's makes a sensible proposal on empowering ready teenagers by lowering the age thresholds for voting, drinking, credit cards when they demonstrate maturity.

Maureen Dowd continues in her usual rut, going on again about Cheneyesque paranoia, Bill's legacy, Obambi, and tough dames.

Perhaps Ms. Dowd could take Ms. Kamenetz's maturity test.

We attended a Super Tuesday party last night. As a PCO, I know a fair bit about the local caucus process, but I was unable to give a good answer about who the super delegates are. What should I find in my email as soon as I got home, but a list of the Washington State super delegates.

Elected Officials

  • Rep. Rick Larsen (2nd District)

  • Rep. Brian Baird (3rd District)

  • Rep. Norm Dicks (6th District)

  • Rep. Jim McDermott (7th District)

  • Gov. Chris Gregoire

Democratic National Committee Members

  • Dwight Pelz - WA Democratic Party Chair

  • Eileen Macoll - WA Vice Chair

  • Ed Cote (coed@pacifier.com)

  • Sharon Mast (skmast@att.net)

  • David McDonald (davidm@prestongates.com)

Already Endorsed Obama

  • Rep. Adam Smith (WA)

  • Pat Noter WA DNC Member

Already Endorsed Clinton

  • Sen. Maria Cantwell (WA)

  • Rep. Jay Inslee (WA)

  • Former Speaker Tom Foley (WA)

  • Sen. Patty Murray (WA)

  • Ron Sims (WA)

Finally ...

Methinks the lady doth protest too much, -or-, please don't throw me in the briar patch. Conservapedia's most viewed pages:

  1. Homosexuality [2,329,656]

  2. Main Page [2,221,503]

  3. Teen Homosexuality [409,064]

  4. Arguments Against Homosexuality [329,586]

  5. Homosexual Agenda [326,164]

  6. Ex-homosexuals [314,408]

  7. Homosexuality and Choice [309,297]

  8. Homosexuality and Anal Cancer [297,073]

  9. Homosexuality and Health [290,954]

  10. Wikipedia [290,439]

posted on Wednesday, February 06, 2008 6:32:38 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, February 03, 2008 

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Use O'Reilly Maker to generate book covers. I've always wanted to write a book for cousin Tim, and now I have!

Via Pavel: Adolf Hitler - Vista Problems (YouTube).

The Photographer's Right: a handy one-page guide.

The general rule in the United States is that anyone may take photographs of whatever they want when they are in a public place or places where they have permission to take photographs. Absent a specific legal prohibition such as a statute or ordinance, you are legally entitled to take photographs. Examples of places that are traditionally considered public are streets, sidewalks, and public parks.

The tiny <code> font in Firefox has been bugging me for a long time. I finally figured out the obvious: Override the Monospace setting. Tools > Options > Content > Fonts & Colors > Advanced > Monospace: change Courier New at size 13 to 16. While you're at it, change the font to Consolas or Lucida Console or Monaco. Courier New is ugly.

My man, John Edwards, is out of the presidential race. Some analysis from Corrente and Meteor Blades of Edwards' candidacy.

I have never been enthusiastic about Hillary Rodham Clinton as a presidential candidate. She's accumulated 16 years of negatives from being relentlessly demonized by Limbaugh and his ilk; she's too damn centrist and corporate for my liking; and I remain troubled about her vote for the Iraq War and her refusal to apologize for it.

I am now an Obama voter. I have expressed some doubts in the past about his efficacy, but there's no doubt that his messages of transformation and inspiration are striking a chord with primary voters.

The Washington state primary on February 19th is a complete farce, at least if you're a Democrat. The Democratic presidential candidates are entirely chosen by the Washington state caucuses on Saturday, February 9th. Washington state law requires that a presidential primary be held, but the parties are not actually obliged to select any delegates as a result of the vote. The Republicans delegates will be allocated 49% from the caucus results, and 51% from the primary results.

I'm the Democratic Precinct Committee Officer for SEA-1945, and I'll be participating in our neighborhood caucus at Asa Mercer School. I need to phone participants of the previous caucus today, both in my own precinct and some adjoining, PCO-less precincts, to remind them of the caucus.

I've uploaded Vim syntax highlighting for PBwiki, a free, hosted wiki that I've used for a few different projects.

posted on Sunday, February 03, 2008 8:43:06 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, January 29, 2008 

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Miscellaneous links.

posted on Tuesday, January 29, 2008 8:19:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, January 23, 2008 

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Miscellaneous links.

  • Are you plagued by User Access Control prompts every time you run Notepad++ on Vista? See Notepad++ and the GUP for a fix.

  • According to The Onion, Bill Clinton is running again.

    We saw him speak at a fundraiser for Jim McDermott a couple of years ago. It was impressive to see him stand up for an hour and riff on all manner of topics without notes. The current incumbent is truly a mental midget.

    Not that I especially enjoyed the Clinton years. I often felt left down.

  • Larry Lessig is unhappy with the sleaze emanating from Hillary Clinton.

  • Joel Spolsky's article on the Five Whys showcases a useful technique to find the root cause of problems by iteratively asking why. He also links to a great New Yorker piece on the efficacy of medical checklists.

  • It looks like Harry Reid is trying to give immunity to the telecoms for illegally wiretapping US citizens. Senators Dodd and Feingold are planning a filibuster. Glenn Greenwald has more.

    I contacted Obama and Clinton, telling them:

    Senator ___, you are still a sitting senator.

    I have been underwhelmed so far by your actions on TELECOMS IMMUNITY. I expect you to go back to Washington DC and filibuster any attempt to grant immunity to the telecoms for wiretapping American citizens.

    Thank you.

    (Yes, I've gotten tired of asking nicely.)

    I also contacted Reid, Murray, and Cantwell.

    Some days I feel like a complete crank for caring about this stuff :(

posted on Thursday, January 24, 2008 7:20:56 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, January 20, 2008 

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Miscellaneous links.

  • Do you see the subliminal arrow in the negative space of the FedEx logo at right? Neither did I until I read about it at Edward Tufte's joint. Now I can't stop seeing it.

  • One more year to go until the next presidential inauguration on 2009/01/20. Who knows how much more damage Bush can pull off by then? StickerGiant.com has commemorative swag.

  • Impeachment is in the air. Watch Rep. Wexler's speech before the U.S. House of Representatives. Read about State Sen. Oemig's hearing in the Washington Legislature.

  • Three days ago, I was sent email by DraftBloomberg.com, asking me to sign a petition to draft Mike Bloomberg as an independent candidate for President. I promptly wrote back, refusing on the grounds that (a) I view Bloomberg as a Naderesque spoiler who's likely to take votes from the Democratic nominee, and (b) I find Bloomberg to be an uncompelling candidate who just happens to be rich enough to self-finance. Looking at their site a few minutes ago, I see that they've only managed to scrape up 1,522 signatures, which is pathetic.

  • Ron Paul enjoys an improbable level of support on the Internet, raising staggering amounts of money by appealing to the libertarian bloc. But there's compelling evidence that Paul is a Bircherite not a libertarian, with lucrative ties to white supremacists going back more than 20 years.

  • Harold Meyerson argues that we are entering a recession and the old remedies won't do, because the US economy is no longer fundamentally sound.

    Wages have been flat-lining for a long time now, the housing bubble isn't going to be reinflated anytime soon, and the upward pressure on oil prices is only going to mount. As in Roosevelt's time, we need a policy that boosts incomes and finds new solutions for our energy needs.

    Scholars & Rogues argue that getting out of Iraq can fund the necessary changes to get us out of a recession.

  • Although I'm generally willing to believe the worst of the Bush administration, I've never found the 9/11 conspiracy theories to be plausible. Matt Taibbi debunks 9/11 conspiracy theories to my satisfaction.

  • On a positive note, the .NET Source Code is now available. You can debug through the source of the Microsoft libraries, when you need to. Visual Studio 2008 only.

posted on Sunday, January 20, 2008 10:42:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, January 17, 2008 

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Miscellaneous links.

  • I mentioned Schneier on security theater recently. Via Pavel, I see that Schneier notes that a five-year-old was detained at SeaTac because his name appeared on a no-fly list.

  • Male fruit flies, when drunk, become much more likely to court other male fruit flies. Or, Oh God, I was so drunk ...

  • Health insurance companies are making out like bandits in Washington state.

  • Here's a damning RIAA interview, via Gabriel:

    When asked why the RIAA is going after an easy target--college students--the response made me cringe: "College students have reached a stage in life when their music habits are crystallized," Duckworth said. "And their appreciation for intellectual property has not yet reached its full development."

  • A useful, non-partisan guide to the caucus process in Washington state, via Will and Amy.

  • From Charlie Stross, fundies say the darndest things:

    • "Everyone knows scientists insist on using complex terminology to make it harder for True Christians to refute their claims. Deoxyribonucleic Acid, for example... sounds impressive, right? But have you ever seen what happens if you put something in acid? It dissolves! If we had all this acid in our cells, we'd all dissolve! So much for the Theory of Evolution, Check MATE!"

    • "A woman wants to abort a rape child? She should have thought of that before she walked down that dark alley without a male prescence, not to mention she should have thought before putting on revealing attire."

    • "Apes are just creatures twisted by Satan to mock Jesus by giving EVILolition credibility. Further more they are naturally lust crazed for human women. Since they are not natural creatures they should be exterminated forthwith as the tools of evil they are."

  • From the comments on Charlie's post, a very long set of answers from much more thoughtful people on what they've changed their minds about.

posted on Thursday, January 17, 2008 8:33:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, January 15, 2008 

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David Postman says that State Senator Eric Oemig is once again pushing for impeachment in the Washington State Legislature. Washington for Impeachment has the text of SJM 8016.

Here's the comment that I posted under Postman's article. It's based upon a speech that I gave at Toastmasters last year.

I've had enough. I'm sick of the lies. I'm tired of the scandals. I'm angry at the loss of civil liberties.

Scandals like the US Attorneys' firings, the Walter Reed outpatients, the Katrina debacle. Pardoning Scooter Libby, who outed an undercover CIA agent. Voter suppression. The War on Science. Theocracy. Corruption. The War on the Environment. Food safety. Toy safety. The Pat Tillman coverup. Terri Schiavo. 700+ signing statements.

The lies. Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Powell lied to the Congress, the American people, and the world, when they told us there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. There were no ties between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. Thousands of American troops are dead, tens of thousands are maimed, and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis are dead. Now they're trying to instigate a war on Iran.

Do you miss your civil liberties? The PATRIOT Act is an Orwellian nightmare. What about the "quaint" Geneva Conventions? Extraordinary rendition, torture, and the loss of habeas corpus. Illegal wiretapping of US citizens.

Where is the outrage? It's been a slow-motion coup for the last seven years.

We can't fire Bush. We can't try him in court. We can't have a recall election or a vote of no confidence.

We should impeach him for these crimes: lying us into Iraq; torturing prisoners; and illegally wiretapping US citizens.

Yes, it will be ugly. But if we continue to leave him in office, we become complicit. We already failed one test in the 2004 election. Impeachment will restore US moral authority. Leaving him in office sends the wrong message.

Military personnel and office holders take an oath to support and defend the Constitution.

We can defend the Constitution by Impeaching this President.

And the sooner, the better.

posted on Tuesday, January 15, 2008 8:06:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, January 13, 2008 

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Title: For a Few Demons More
Author: Kim Harrison
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Eos Books
Copyright: 2007
ISBN: 0061149810
Pages: 546
Keywords: urban fantasy
Reading period: 12-13 January, 2008

Another urban fantasy featuring the witch, Rachel Morgan, who runs an investigation agency with a vampire, in a world where ordinary humans were decimated by a virus and vampires, Weres, witches, pixies, and more live openly.

Morgan is reckless and addicted to living on the edge, and her friends will pay a heavy price before the end of the book. You'd want Rachel on your side in a fight, but you'd probably be exasperated with her the rest of the time. She battles demons, both metaphorical and literal, before bringing the book to a bittersweet conclusion.

This is the fifth book in an ongoing series. The books are heavily linked together and best read in order.

Enjoyable and fast-paced.

posted on Monday, January 14, 2008 5:36:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Coronado
Author: Dennis Lehane
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Copyright: 2006
ISBN: 0061139718
Pages: 232
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 12 January, 2008

A collection of short stories and a play, all characteristically dark. Tales of fucked-up lives, tales of people with shitty pasts and no futures, tales of revenge.

Lehane writes brilliantly. His spare description, his dialogue brings the characters to life on the page.

The play, "Coronado", is adapted from an earlier short story, "Until Gwen" — also part of this collection. The repetition does not feel redundant. The play fleshes out the short story, telling it in a different manner.

Recommended, but depressing.

posted on Monday, January 14, 2008 5:36:09 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: The Assassin's Cloak
Author: Irene and Alan Taylor (editors)
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Canongate Books
Copyright: 2000
ISBN: 1841951722
Pages: 686
Keywords: autobiography
Reading period: 1 January, 2007 — 12 January, 2008

This anthology of diaries contains several entries for every day of the year, drawn from 170 contributors across three-and-a-half centuries. Everyone from Pepys to Goebbels, from Che Guevara to Alec Guinness.

I spent all of last year reading this book, trying to read each day's entries as they occurred. I often failed and would have to read a week or more's entries to catch up. I fell behind towards the end, not finishing my daily devotions until yesterday.

The book was drawn from several years of entries in two Scottish newspapers, and most of the diairists are British. The 20th century is well represented, particularly the two World Wars. Some of the entries from a particular diairist tell a story; others are unrelated snapshots of their lives. Some entries tell of momentous events, such as the birth of a child, the death of a loved one, or victory in war. Others are banal records of an ordinary day, noteworthy only because they give us an insight into a lifestyle that no longer exists. Many of the diarists were famous, at least in their own lifetimes; some live quiet, unremarked, but not unobserved lives.

I wonder how many diaries are written now, in the age of blogging. Will a future anthology have to dig into the Wayback Machine and Google's cache to mine entries from blogs?

Recommended.

posted on Monday, January 14, 2008 5:35:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Title: Dancing with the Virgins
Author: Stephen Booth
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pocket
Copyright: 2001
ISBN: 0743431006
Pages: 528
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 6-11 January, 2008

One woman has been mutilated and another murdered on the bleak moors of Derbyshire. Detective Constable Ben Cooper and Detective Sergeant Diane Fry investigate.

The novel is at least as much about the tense relationship between Cooper and Fry as it is about the mystery itself. This is the second in a series of Cooper-Fry books. Cooper is a local boy, deeply rooted in the rural community, pleasant and trusting. Fry is a bitter loner, who transferred in from a distant city. Quickly promoted over Cooper, she can't understand his easygoing nature.

The mystery is effective, with enough twists to keep you guessing. The characters feel real and human, not authorial puppets.

posted on Monday, January 14, 2008 5:34:42 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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