Psycho-Babble Social Thread 938559

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Re: test for double quotes

Posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:51:58

In reply to Re: test for double quotes, posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:48:31

"man on wire dvd"

 

Cormac McCarthy

Posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 0:13:52

In reply to Re: test for double quotes, posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:51:58

There are some more moving passages than this, but this is written so beautifully......

He camped that night on the broad Animas Plain and the wind blew in the grass and he slept on the ground wrapped in the serape and in the wool blanket the old man had given him. He built a small fire but he had little wood and the fire died in the night and he woke and watched the winter stars slip their hold and race to their deaths in the darkness. He could hear the horse step in its hobbles and hear the grass rip softly in the horse's mouth and hear it breathing or the toss of its tail and he saw far to the south beyond the Hatchet Mountains the flare of lightning over Mexico and he knew that he would not be buried in this valley but in some distant place among strangers and he looked out to where the grass was running in the wind under the cold starlight as if it were the earth itself hurtling headlong and he said softly before he slept again that the one thing he knew of all things claimed to be known was that there was no certainty to any of it. Not just the coming of war. Anything at all.
(p346)

 

Re: Cormac McCarthy

Posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 0:34:36

In reply to Cormac McCarthy, posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 0:13:52

thanks for reminding me how much i love his writing, i will move on with The Border Trilogy.

right now i am re-reading "infinite jest", i pick it up every couple years when i need a good companion (as it is so long). i also recommend that to anyone here. the author took nardil for many years.

 

Re: Cormac McCarthy » evenintherain

Posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 0:48:43

In reply to Re: Cormac McCarthy, posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 0:34:36

Is this the bloke who killed himself not so long ago?
What was his name?

Some of Mccarthy's passages had me in floods of tears.

 

Re: Cormac McCarthy

Posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 18:49:31

In reply to Re: Cormac McCarthy » evenintherain, posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 0:48:43

yeah, unfortunately he did kill himself a year and a half ago. he was on nardil for 15 years or so and then went off it. his depression returned and when he tried to go back on the nardil it didn't work anymore. he also did a bunch of ECT, which didn't help. really sad.

anyway, his name is David Foster Wallace. His writing is not for everyone, but i thought "Infinite Jest" was a lot of fun (and often funny). it is not an easy read but well worth the effort.

 

Re: test for double quotes » sdb

Posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 20:04:37

In reply to Re: test for double quotes, posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:26:04

You had me worried there :)

 

Re: Cormac McCarthy

Posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 20:16:20

In reply to Re: Cormac McCarthy, posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 18:49:31

In the night as he slept Boyd came to him and squatted by the deep embers of the fire as he'd done times by the hundreds and smiled his soft smile that was not quite cynical and he took off his hat and held it before him and looked down into it. In the dream he knew that Boyd was dead and that the subject of his being so must be approached with a certain caution for that which was circumspect in life must be doubly so in death and he'd no way to know what word or gesture might subtract him back into that nothingness out of which he'd come. When finally he did ask him what it was like t be dead Boyd only smiled and looked away and would not answer. They spoke of other things and he tried not to wake from the dream but the ghost dimmed and faded and he woke and lay looking up at the stars through the bramblework of the treelimbs and he tried to think of what place could be where Boyd was but Boyd was dead and wasted in his bones wrapped in the soogan upriver in the trees and he turned his face to the ground and wept.
(p400)

 

Re: test for double quotes

Posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 20:26:15

In reply to Re: test for double quotes, posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:51:58

I remember reviews of that from some time ago.

Maybe the video shop will have it?

Speaking of wires, I enjoyed the series "The Wire", which is a series set in Baltimore involving the various protagonists in the drug trade and the war on drugs.
But more than that it is about the absolute triumph of capital and the fear and wonder of us who have to live within this wreckage.

I needed English subtitles on though. There's lots of wonderful slang.

 

Re: test for double quotes

Posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 21:03:24

In reply to Re: test for double quotes, posted by sdb on March 9, 2010, at 14:51:58

"Man on Wire" really is wonderful.
It is available to stream on Netflix if you have it...
http://www.netflix.com/Movie/Man_on_Wire/70084167?strackid=600790fc978b6171_0_srl&strkid=635381215_0_0&trkid=222336

 

Re: test for double quotes to Sigismund

Posted by sdb on March 11, 2010, at 12:22:24

In reply to Re: test for double quotes » sdb, posted by sigismund on March 10, 2010, at 20:04:37

> You had me worried there :)

I am sorry I was very tired.

 

Re: test for double quotes to Sigismund » sdb

Posted by sigismund on March 12, 2010, at 5:30:00

In reply to Re: test for double quotes to Sigismund, posted by sdb on March 11, 2010, at 12:22:24

Evelyn Waugh?

I tried to read 'Put Out More Flags', and something to do with Guy Crouchback, which a friend had said was wonderful but I felt I didn't understand or something, and of course I saw (and did I read?) Brideshead, which I enjoyed more because many of my political friends hated it.

I admired (in a terrible way) his drinking habits....the drives in the country with stops for cocktails at 11am (keep the riffraff off the roads).

I feel I missed him.

At one point I read some *really* good PG Wodehouse, and then I read some of his which just didn't make it. Farce is like that. Timing is everything.

No need to be sorry. I'm sorry too.

 

Re: double double quotes » Dr. Bob

Posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:39:49

In reply to Re: double double quotes » evenintherain, posted by Dr. Bob on March 6, 2010, at 9:56:36

I've read the road, and would never, ever make it two minutes into the movie!

Have you seen it? I saw a trailer--what a botch-job of a soundtrack! IMHO

 

Re: Cormac McCarthy » evenintherain

Posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:42:11

In reply to Re: Cormac McCarthy, posted by evenintherain on March 4, 2010, at 19:48:33

Yes! Awesome it is!

I just stumbled across this thread--will read the rest of thread later.

McCarthy is some writer!

 

film: no country for old men » evenintherain

Posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:48:06

In reply to Re: double double quotes, posted by evenintherain on March 6, 2010, at 14:33:18

Felt that was an excellent screen adaptation.

And barely any intrusive music! Well, Cohen's brothers can make some excellent films--and they use the same cinematographer--I forget his name.

Have you seen the man who wasn't there? A sleeper--black and white. Who was it that said if you get enough cliches together, they begin to speak amongst themselves? The effect is strangely moving. One of my favorite films.

 

Re: double double quotes » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:07:19

In reply to Re: double double quotes » Dr. Bob, posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:39:49

The people I saw it with felt is was a bit bleak.

Not me though.

 

Re: double double quotes

Posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:08:29

In reply to Re: double double quotes » floatingbridge, posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:07:19

Although I would have put a bullet through my head in the first year.

 

Re: film: no country for old men » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:11:14

In reply to film: no country for old men » evenintherain, posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:48:06

That's a coen(sp?) brothers movie?

About a barber kind of person?

if so I saw that.

I liked it.

 

Re: the road

Posted by Dr. Bob on March 14, 2010, at 1:25:36

In reply to Re: double double quotes » Dr. Bob, posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:39:49

> I've read the road, and would never, ever make it two minutes into the movie!
>
> Have you seen it? I saw a trailer--what a botch-job of a soundtrack! IMHO

I did see it. Augmented by winter in Chicago...

Bob

 

Re: double double quotes » sigismund

Posted by floatingbridge on March 14, 2010, at 4:06:10

In reply to Re: double double quotes, posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:08:29

> Although I would have put a bullet through my head in the first year.

Well, I clearly identified with the wife (novel). I'd be out of there (never mind that my current prescriptions would be unavailable). Though, there is the child....

 

Re: film: no country for old men

Posted by floatingbridge on March 14, 2010, at 12:23:50

In reply to Re: film: no country for old men » floatingbridge, posted by sigismund on March 13, 2010, at 20:11:14

> That's a coen(sp?) brothers movie?
>
> About a barber kind of person?
>
> if so I saw that.
>
> I liked it.

Yes, the barber. And I'm a wickedly awful speller :)

 

Wallace » evenintherain

Posted by floatingbridge on March 14, 2010, at 12:31:37

In reply to Re: Cormac McCarthy, posted by evenintherain on March 10, 2010, at 0:34:36

The NYer had an interesting piece on DFW last year. I admire that you have the head for his novel(s). Short stories are all I can do. "The Depressed Person" comes to mind. Great and regretted reading it for at least a week. Don't remember the name of the collection.


> thanks for reminding me how much i love his writing, i will move on with The Border Trilogy.
>
> right now i am re-reading "infinite jest", i pick it up every couple years when i need a good companion (as it is so long). i also recommend that to anyone here. the author took nardil for many years.

 

Re: the road » Dr. Bob

Posted by floatingbridge on March 14, 2010, at 12:38:26

In reply to Re: the road, posted by Dr. Bob on March 14, 2010, at 1:25:36

What did you think of it? I would have liked to have seen Guy Pierce...though I imagine it's only for a moment.

 

Re: the road » floatingbridge

Posted by sigismund on March 14, 2010, at 22:54:56

In reply to Re: the road » Dr. Bob, posted by floatingbridge on March 14, 2010, at 12:38:26

Yeah, he appears just at the end.

"Memento" was a good film he did.

He started on Neighbours, I think, something I've never watched.

 

Re: film: the man who wasn't there » floatingbridge

Posted by evenintherain on March 15, 2010, at 1:36:53

In reply to film: no country for old men » evenintherain, posted by floatingbridge on March 13, 2010, at 13:48:06

yes, i do remember seeing that one in the theater. enjoyed it, though it didn't stick with me, perhaps i should have paid more attention.
>
> Have you seen the man who wasn't there? A sleeper--black and white.
One of my favorite films.

 

Re: the road » sigismund

Posted by floatingbridge on March 15, 2010, at 2:12:42

In reply to Re: the road » floatingbridge, posted by sigismund on March 14, 2010, at 22:54:56

> Yeah, he appears just at the end.
>
> "Memento" was a good film he did.
>
> He started on Neighbours, I think, something I've never watched.

Yes, I've seen Memento at least 10 times--that's why I like Mr. Pierce. Imagine my
disappointment 3 minutes into The Hurt Locker (a film I have some problems w/ BTW).

I believe the fellow who inspired the
short story that inspired Memento died in 2009.

Don't know Neighbours....



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