Today, I took in:
The 13th documentary (review tomorrow!)
I made:
a really lovely dinner with friends at a place that redefined daal for me
Today, I took in:
The 13th documentary (review tomorrow!)
I made:
a really lovely dinner with friends at a place that redefined daal for me
Today, I took in:
Joyce Carol Oates’ “By the River,” Donald Barthelme’s “The School,” and Stanley Elkin’s “The Conventional Wisdom” in 100 Years of the Best American Short Stories
an episode of Person of Interest
I made:
not much, it was a chilly day and I mostly did work and tried to stay warm
Today, I took in:
an exhibition on jazz in the UK, at Two Temple Place (not a great exhibition, but there were some good parts, and the interior of the building is fancy)
highlights from the Winter Olympics
I made:
together with my flatmate, a very nice brunch
a fair showing in a game of Exploding Kittens
Today, I took in:
the new Janelle Monae single, “Make Me Feel”; I can’t wait for the whole album
I made:
a nice walk around a park I haven’t visited in a while
Today, I took in:
a few chapters of The Sellout
I made:
an excellent karaoke night with my choir

Sunrise, London, England
Today, I took in:
“Some Notes on Attunement” by Zadie Smith
some of The Sellout
the last three episodes of this season of Grace and Frankie
I made:
a blog post on The Underground Railroad for Black History Month
Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad is an absolute pageturner; I read it in three days. The most immediately recognizable “oh that’s different” thing about this novel is that it posits that there is an actual, physical railroad ferrying slaves to freedom underneath the earth during the first half of the 19th century. But for me, the most notable thing about this novel is its approach to historical truth: everything written here is true, just not in the time that Whitehead writes about it.

“Now that she had run away and seen a bit of the country, Cora wasn’t sure the [Declaration of Independence] described anything real at all. America was a ghost in the darkness, like her.”
Today, I took in:
the rest of The Underground Railroad (review forthcoming!)
the Handel Hendrix House in Mayfair — Hendrix lived at 23 Brook Street for a couple years during the height of his fame, and Handel lived the latter half of his life at 25 Brook Street
I made:
a rash decision to accept a large canvas print of Sydney Harbor, which a colleague was throwing out unless it found a good home — the living room is now a bit more international
Today, I took in:
several chapters in The Underground Railroad
the last few episodes in Season 3 of Person of Interest — those Nolan brothers sure know how to craft suspense
I made:
not much outside of work projects