alexseanchai: Katsuki Yuuri wearing a blue jacket and his glasses and holding a poodle, in front of the asexual pride flag with a rainbow heart inset. (Default)
let me hear your voice tonight ([personal profile] alexseanchai) wrote2013-01-22 09:18 am
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meme from [personal profile] oursin

I know very little about some of the people on my friends list. Some people I know relatively well. But here's a thought: why not take this opportunity to tell me a little something about yourself. Any old thing at all. Just so the next time I see your name I can say: "Ah, there's Parker ...she likes money and cereal." I'd love it if everyone who's friended me did this. (Yes, even you people who I know really well.) Then post this in your own journal [only if you feel inclined]. In return, ask me anything you'd like to know about me and I'll give you an answer*.

*Providing it's answerable/suitable for public posting.
sylvaine: Dark-haired person with black eyes & white pupils. (Default)

[personal profile] sylvaine 2013-01-22 02:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Oooooh, that's a cool idea!

I used to read all. the. time. There was a time during 7th & 8th grade where I had no friends at school, so I spent all my free time reading and finished on average a novel a day. Now it's considerably less. *g* Mostly I read fic, but I kind of miss reading actual books, too, so I'm trying to read books more. Right now I'm in the middle of The Hobbit and have started rereading the Dragonlance Chronicles (fantasy epic of my nostalgic, 8th grade heart!)

What's on your reading/to-read list right now?
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

[personal profile] oursin 2013-01-22 03:20 pm (UTC)(link)
When I was at what then counted as a 'new' university of no particular prestige, I captained our University Challenge team, which trounced several Oxbridge lineups to reach the quarterfinal, and fight that closely.
redsixwing: A red knotwork emblem. (Default)

[personal profile] redsixwing 2013-01-22 03:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I used to be in a chess club, and was actually fairly good at the game. Haven't played in years, but I still miss it.

Do you have a favorite non-electronic game?
blueswan: (Default)

[personal profile] blueswan 2013-01-22 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
In high school I sang in the school choir. I love music and singing, but now I only sing in front of the cats or people I trust. I sing everything from tv theme songs, to pieces we learned way back when for choir, to goldie oldies, to pop music from the 70s and 80s and even country. Sometimes I make up songs that feature my cat's names which they seem to enjoy. (If you appeal to a cat's vanity, you can make a valuable ally.) Do you sing? If so what?
sylvaine: Dark-haired person with black eyes & white pupils. ([gen:fami] read by candlelight)

[personal profile] sylvaine 2013-01-22 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yes, Harry Potter too, definitely, though like you I read the first five books much more often than the rest.

Ooooooh all of those sound like interesting reads! I may have to track down a copy of Ehrman's Forged and Madre, and naturally one day I will catch up with all of Tanya Huff's oeuvre. :P
myaibou: (Stand Together)

[personal profile] myaibou 2013-01-22 07:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm a middle-aged, straight, Christian, work-from-home mom, gay rights activist. Well, more active a few years ago than now as kids' activities and work are taking up more time than they used to leaving less time for other stuff, but as passionate as ever about LGBT equality.
fenella: (moose crossing)

[personal profile] fenella 2013-01-22 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Like the commenter above, I used to read a lot, too. I would get yelled at for reading under the desk in Grade 9 math class- usually Douglas Adams or Diana Wynne Jones :)

And ooh, Tanya Huff! I love that she wrote about the ghost of Ivan Reznikoff, my alma mater's campus ghost. And also her Smoke & ____ series makes me very happy, too. It was pretty much all the prior knowledge I had about Vancouver, before moving here for work.

And also, I have a HORRIBLE memory. Case in point- did we become LJ friends through the Tanya Huff fandom??
somnolentblue: statue of a woman from the waist up (Default)

[personal profile] somnolentblue 2013-01-23 12:30 am (UTC)(link)
IDK, what would you like to know?
topaz119: (ocean blue)

[personal profile] topaz119 2013-01-23 01:11 am (UTC)(link)
::waves::

hello, hello -- I love to cook, just get into the kitchen and mess around and see what happens. And I tend to read cookbooks like other people read novels... not so much for actual recipes, but just to see how the author pairs things off and what happens when different things get put together.
tifaching: (Default)

[personal profile] tifaching 2013-01-23 03:16 am (UTC)(link)
Hi! I love to travel and have been to many places across the U.S. and northeastern Canada. I've been to Mexico twice and London once. I have yet to see a rainforest and the gorgeous birds and wildlife they contain, but that's what I most want to get to in my life.

What's the best place you've ever traveled to?
echan: rainbow arch supernova remnant (Default)

[personal profile] echan 2013-01-24 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I played flute for 7 or 8 years, in grade school. Was in chorus for a bit longer than that. I love that feeling you get when you and someone else are playing/singing different things but completely in step and tempo synced and playing together.
somnolentblue: statue of a woman from the waist up (Default)

[personal profile] somnolentblue 2013-01-25 06:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Early Dexter, say S1-2, maaaaaybe, season 3. But especially S1.

Without spoilers, reasons I love (early) Dexter:

I adore Dexter's opening credits, which is really unusual for me; they're not as awesome now, since I've seen them umpty-billion times, but at first the recontextualization of quotidian tasks into violence was a really interesting re-framing.

I remain incredibly happy at the narrative arc of S1, the way everything comes together and is interwoven throughout; it might be one of the tightest span of 12 episodes I've seen - it moves at an incredibly pace, but everything in it builds on itself.

I really love the characterizations, although I don't necessarily like the characters. For a male-centric show about someone who's cop-adjacent, there are surprisingly vibrant women characters. They're all a mess in various ways (as is every other character on the show), but their messiness is a function of who they are instead of their gender (although their gender impacts who they are, like LaGuerta climbing the ranks in the police force and Deb's sister and daddy issues and Rita's relationship with domestic violence). I don't like the later seasons as much - by stretching out the central conceit as long as they have, way too many people have to be way too stupid way too often, but it really, really worked for me early on.

I like that people actually sweat in the show. They're in Miami; of course they're going to sweat. But how often do you actually see that on tv? It's ridiculous, but it's something tiny that made me happy. (I can't speak to any of the rest of the verisimilitude, particularly cultural, unfortunately.)

I wish they had let the show end gracefully instead of spooling it out, but, well, I still think the early seasons are awesome, and S1 remains one of my favorite seasons of anything.

I tend to get fannish about things for a few reasons. One of them is other people around me or whom I read being fannish; sometimes I do follow the group and draw from that kind of synergy. Also, there tends to be some sort of character that I peg to and favor: Daniel Jackson, Sam Winchester, Severus Snape, I'm looking at you. Also, there's often some sort of supernatural/scifi/fantasy element, for that is my happy place. For fannish creativity, I tend to have questions or something I want to answer; someone who's not me would probably not notice, but i tend to read heavily different characters and pairings than I write heavily.

With a show like Dexter (see also: Rome (highly recommended, btw, if you like period pieces at all); late-season Leverage; The Wire [with the caveat I stopped watching in S4 because I didn't find that story-arc engaging]), I like the show itself, but I don't feel the need to push it or ask questions or flail or read around the show. Part of it is probably the lack of scifi/fantasy elements that have always just flat worked for my in my leisure reading. Part of it is that I'm getting what I want from the show itself for whatever reason; I'm not... curious/engaged/whatever at a point of seeking or creating extra-textual material, I'm simply engaged at the point of the text. Like, these things are all really well-done*, and that's sufficient for my happiness with them.

*I don't know if I would say Leverage was always really well done - there's a lot in there that strains credulity, some v. strained plots/cons, and I pretend a lot of S3 doesn't exist. But, by late Leverage the actors were so identified with their roles to me that the space for my fannishness is eclipsed by that, if that makes any sense. The plots and pacing don't hit my sweet spot, but the acting/characters were really strong. (I ignore Nate, so take that as you will.)

[identity profile] dawn-bat.livejournal.com 2013-01-26 04:56 am (UTC)(link)
My current favourite books are the Temeraire series, by Naiomi Novik, partly because she is constantly *surprising* me, and I don't get really surprised by authors that often. Dragons. The Napoleonic Wars. A diverse cast of charactors, obtained in such a way as to never stretch historical credibility (though you do have to look at the series as a whole for that, and not book-by-book, especially the first one). What's not to like?
What's your current favourite book or series? (Other than Harry Potter.)