jade_sabre: (sweeney todd:  blood-spattered Johanna)
[personal profile] jade_sabre
1) I read Artemis Fowl: The Atlantis Complex, and I don't have nearly as much to say about it as I did about The Time Paradox. This is not to say I didn't enjoy it; I laughed at least once a page, because Colfer was playing fast and loose with hilarious dialogue and hilarious side characters and even point of view--often he would describe something with a particularly nice turn of phrase, and in the next line have the current POV character think something along the lines of if I'm saying things like that, I must be suffering from oxygen deprivation. The writing and the plot were much, much tighter than TP, like you could really feel his growth as a writer and the editor's steady hand working upon the novel.

That being said, it was almost too short; it felt, like A Conspiracy of Kings, as if we were being handed an incident full of important information that would unfold in the denouement, packaged within an entertaining adventure, letting us spend time with all of our favorite characters but really just setting the pieces for some grander showdown in the future. (Hint: All the even-numbered books in the series have involved Opal Koboi, and the next, allegedly final, book is going to be number 8, if you can imagine it.) I loved seeing Holly and JULIET yay Juliet and Butler and Mulch and Foaly (out of his element!) and Artemis again, and they were all wonderful, and at the end of the book I wanted--more. There were so many little things that still needed exploring--not that the book doesn't tie together, but rather that things are changing and we're stopped before everything really starts rushing to a head.

I do take issue with the fact that Artemis is allegedly celebrating his fifteenth birthday at the beginning of the story, because he was fifteen back in The Lost Colony. Of course, my dad pointed out to me that the target audience of this series is probably still 12-14-year-old boys, despite the fact that the series is ten years old and those of us who were twelve when we started reading are now twenty-two and still shipping Holly/Artemis like burning. And the series has grown up, too, though perhaps not as noticeably as say Harry Potter; the central themes in The Time Paradox were certainly older, perhaps in some ways too old for a fourteen-year-old to grasp; it's one thing to read about a character reflecting on personal change and growth and the choices you make to get there, and quite another to really have a grasp on how that's happened in your life. And the humor has gotten a bit more complex too (see: I-see-what-you-did-with-that-POV), even if Mulch is still around for the fart jokes.

Anyway, it was a fantastic little yarn, but mostly I am just impatient for the next one.

Also, Orion? Has got to be THE funniest thing I have read in a long, long time. OMG. His treatment of Foaly? Priceless.

ANGELINE FOWL, YOU ARE THE BEST.

Turnbull apparently shows up in the AF Files, which I think I have read, but it has been a while; it took me a bit to get a grasp of his character, and I'm not sure if reading the short story would have helped. I rather enjoyed him as a villain, although I have fears about what his marriage means for Artemis/Holly. (Well, not really fears. Actually, it sort of gave me hope, because you know Holly and Artemis wouldn't have to resort to such schemes, and in the end, the Roots did stay together, magic or no. But in terms of whether or not Colfer will go there again...not that there's anywhere else to go.)

HOLLY WENT ON A DATE WITH TROUBLE, I LOL'D. Fandom theory #579, confirmed.

ARTEMIS AND HOLLY NEED TO HAVE A LONG TAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALK i just. i want. so hard. I just. I can't even you guys this ship is as deeply embedded in me as Ron/Hermione (okay, so I don't overidentify with any of the characters, but it's been around for just as long) and the more it develops the more I am on tenterhooks of WILL HE OR WON'T HE? Because he has gone there and it is an open possiblity, which was more than I ever would have dreamed of when I was fifteen, but at the same time...I JUST DON'T KNOW, AND THE CONFLICT STILL HAS ME, WELL. CONFLICTED.



2) I rewatched Music and Lyrics the other night, the cute little rom-com with Drew Barrymore and Hugh Grant that Malone and I started watching at home one night, got about thirty seconds into the music video, and stopped and waited until Mom was around to watch it with us. The whole theme of creation and music isn't as deep as the theme of creation and writing is in Stranger Than Fiction--this is a rom -com, after all--but what impressed me this time around was Hugh Grant's acting job. He is very...adult, in this film--he knows where he is in his life and he's comfortable with who he is and what he's doing, and I especially liked that he is a musician, and he shows it--in quiet little ways, like the way he sits down at the piano in his apartment or in the store, like it's something he's infinitely familiar with. And even though he's "just" a pop music star, he writes his own stuff--he knows how music works, knows how to put it together, and it's all just...there. I just...really liked his character, and thought he did an understatedly phenomenal job of playing it.



3) I started rewatching Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon last night but stopped right before the final battle because I was pretty sure I wouldn't make it through without sobbing and because I needed to go to bed (woe, the adult schedule).

The first glimpse I ever caught of the movie was the scene where Jen and Lo are, um, making out in the cave, and Zhang Ziyi pretty much has the most perfect stomach ever--I was, what, thirteen? So the only time I've watched it all the way through I was probably around fifteen, or in other words, not old enough to understand the film. I caught pieces of it--hints of what formed Mu Bai and Shu Lien's relationship, and the aforementioned cave making out--but the plot itself escaped me, and somehow watching it last night by myself I was hit by the entire movie, all of it, and I couldn't watch the ending because I knew how it ended and I couldn't handle it because I was so immersed--every little motion and movement is fraught with meaning (dude, "Sir" Te's guard is supposed to be comic relief), and the scene where Mu Bai takes Shu Lien's hand is heartbreaking and the way everyone fights and it just--everything clicked into place.

THE SCENE WHERE HE TAKES HER HAND. I just. I can't. The subtitles on the film are rigidly formal--sometimes it works, but really you know they're not conversing like that, but oh well. And I have run out of words. Alas.



4) I have started reading The Demon's Lexicon because the library had it (and the sequel), but I am apparently Not In the Mood. Partially because I am reading a book called The Wall of Fame and it contains some truly atrocious metaphors that ought to be taken behind the publishing house and shot repeatedly, and partially because I have trouble getting into "tough" characters like Nick, and mostly because reading about Nick and Alan makes me think about Felix and Mildmay and, well, Felix and Mildmay are a really, REALLY hard fictional brotherly relationship to beat. Like, nigh-impossible. Especially after Corambis and their exchange of brotherly affection. (FELIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIX MILDMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY I JUST WANT YOU BOTH TO BE HAPPY FOREVER AND I FEEL LIKE IT IS OBTAINABLE AND THIS JUST OVERWHELMS ME WITH RELIEF, I LOVE YOU BOTH SO HARD.)

(yes, Jade just said she loved Felix. It--sometimes these things happen.)

Anyway, maybe I should go back to powering through Atrocious Metaphor Book--actually I think I will share one of them with you, because it was truly horrendous. This evening while reading I started a chapter and actually had to call Quark and read the beginning of the chapter to her because it was just that bad, but the real gem is this upcoming one. The book is about the origins and growth of a program called AVID, which helps underprivileged high school students take advanced classes and learn skills to succeed in school--which I am all for (even if one of the tutors asked the teacher "what do I do to avoid giving the straight answer to their questions?" and the teacher said "be Sigmund Freud and ask another question back!" and I went WHAT NO WHAT NO WHAT AND YOU CALL YOURSELF AN ENGLISH TEACHER). And it's a really powerful story, and there's a lot of good stuff, but it's buried beneath the writing and the author's bias (there are worse things than being biased in favor of such a good program, but still, and also he seems to be crushing on the program's founder). Seriously, why would you end a chapter about teaching the children about photosynthesis with this:

Mary Catherine stood back, listening. Sunlight fell on the leaves of the liquid ambar trees. The room heated by the morning sun was warm as a greenhouse. Through the windows the radiant splendor of light from the liquid-moving branches dappled the faces of students. They were absorbing energy through their eyes and ears. They worked together, combining molecules of knowledge. And she saw that the tables were like leaves--the pigmented students were energy converters, synthesizing questions into concepts. The process was organic and natural.

She witnessed a Tree of Knowledge, transforming inquiry into knowledge.



...i just kind of feel like i'm reading a really, really bad romance novel. With lots of smut. Except it's the kind of smut where it's so buried in purple prose you don't ever really get a sense of what's happening.

WHY BOOK, WHY.

eta: This morning I woke up to the following:
"Disseminiate AVID throughout the San Diego County Schools."

This was Mary Catherine's one-sentence assignment from the State Department of Education. The rest was up to her. The job was dauntingly simple. As simple as Johnny Appleseed, planting seeds of learning in frontier soil. But how to purify AVID's essence into a seed? And how to protect the vulnerable new hybrid from indigenous weeds, predatory bugs, exposure to the harsh sun, and funding drought?


You just can't make that kind of thing up. It is a testament to the power of the stories hidden beneath the prose that I still teared up at one point.




5) To end on a positive note: I made myself dinner and ate it and now am full of food! My fish is still alive! (His name is Ron, for those interested. My first dog was named Fred, and then one of my sisters got a gerbil and named it George, and our first betta fish was named Percy, and I think another gerbil was named Charlie, so...he is red and beautiful and I will post pictures.) My apartment is an utter mess! Ingrid Michaelson writes beautiful songs! Quark drew the picture that was in my head because she is awesome! [livejournal.com profile] crisium_rising writes THE MOST AMAZING Dragon Age fanfic ever! The libraries here have BOTH Virtu and Mirador (I literally gasped when I turned the corner and saw them both in their hardbacked glory on their shelf) AND they have lots of [livejournal.com profile] sartorias's novels (I brought home A Posse of Princesses and am.very excited about reading it! My books fit on the bookshelf! My apartment door locks! There are trees and mountains around!

Life is good. :-)

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Date: 2010-08-30 09:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] willow-41z.livejournal.com
Those are just awful biological metaphors. :D

I always enjoy reading your media posts, even if I don't know most of the works. I like the way you think and write! :D

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Date: 2010-08-30 09:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
THERE ARE SO MANY OF THEM. I called Quark because I turned to a new chapter and the first line was something about "The United Somnambulists of America were about to receive an educational wake-up call" and it took me two reads to realize he was not talking about an actual organization. Ugh.

Ditto you! I TRY TO BE INTERESTING. :-)

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Date: 2010-08-30 09:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beth-shulman.livejournal.com
She witnessed a Tree of Knowledge, transforming inquiry into knowledge. I - don't even know what to say to that. My head hurts from that whole excerpt.

But read The Demon's Lexicon. And the sequel's pretty good, too. But The Demon's Lexicon is smart. Really smart. Makes-me-giddy-remembering smart.

Also, I am now even more excited for my library to send me the Artemis Fowl book! I'm only hold number - oh, sixty seven. (You know, I was hold number 137 for Mockingjay and I got it two days after the book came out. That was great. This isn't going that fast. And it's a book I want to read even more. Oh well.)

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Date: 2010-08-30 10:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
yes. Feel the pain. It is a very real, very true pain. (APPARENTLY YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE ABLE TO RITE GUD IN ORDER TO WIN PULITZERS that's not fair maybe his editorial work is better than his creative nonfiction.)

I am theoretically enjoying it--I have a little teehee every time Goblin Market is mentioned--but I just really only care about Alan, and long for the rich complexities of Felix and Mildmay's relationship. There's something not-quite-on that I can't put my finger on--a combination of dialogue that's almost too realistic, and relationships and behavior that are overstated rather than naturally unfolding, I think.

BETH IT IS SO GOOD. SO GOOD. I LAUGHED SO HARD. AND SQUEALED. AND CLAPPED MY HANDS. AND READ LONG PASSAGES ALOUD TO WHOEVER HAPPENED TO BE IN THE ROOM WITH ME. :D :D

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Date: 2010-08-30 10:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] styromgalleries.livejournal.com
Woohoo books! I'm in the middle of Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens. And one about the Federal Reserve called The Creature From Jekyll Island that's taking me foreeeeeeevvvvvvveeeeeerrrrrrr to finish.

I've got the Artemis Fowl books on my shelf to read (I've only read the first so far) and despite the fact that I really really liked it, I've never been able to get myself up to reading the sequels. Don't know why. But I avoided the spoilers, just in case.

:D HI JADE HI!!! ♥

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Date: 2010-08-30 10:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeew the Federal Reserve ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww.

I understand. I feel like it was supposed to be one book, and then it was a trilogy, and then he just kept coming up with ideas/couldn't leave the universe behind/omg how are there seven books now. So you could end with the first one and that would take care of everything. You could end with the first three (what I thought would happen) and it would take care of everything. OR you could find yourself dying for number 8. THESE THINGS, THEY HAPPEN.

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] philia-fan.livejournal.com
I like your line about the stories buried beneath the prose -- so true, and a good excuse for why I sometimes cry at stupid, bad movies that I know are trying to make me cry and I resent it.

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
ah yes. I know exactly what you mean about those movies. *high-fives*

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] philia-fan.livejournal.com
Also, Jade, the agent thinks I should cut things out of the third part of my book, specifically the scenes in the mountains. (she is not specific about which things, just thinks it slows down there) My instinct is no, but want your opinion!

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tiegirl.livejournal.com
HOLY CRAP THAT IS SOME HORRENDOUSLY BAAAAAAAAAAAD WRITING!!!! I HAVEN'T READ SCHLOCK LIKE THAT SINCE ***TWILIGHT***

THIS PERSON WON A PULITZER WHAT.

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tiegirl.livejournal.com
P.S. Thanks for the reading recs
*notes AF, President's Daughter,DOL*

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Date: 2010-08-31 12:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] checkers65477.livejournal.com
I never could find the third book in Monette's series, so I gave up, even though I loved the first two. I had heard that the third one wasn't as good, but now I obviously have to read it so I can get to the fourth.

Jade, did you ever Read Luck in the Shadows? I think you'd really like that series. The first three books are great.

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Date: 2010-09-01 12:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
see, I thought Mirador was better than the first two (the plot, it is so amazingly well-woven together, and there are POLITICS and INTRIGUE out the WAZOO and the fact that Monette says she doesn't know what happens to half the characters breaks my heart because I WANT MORE), and it's probably better than Corambis, because Corambis is mostly about the characters and so most of my love for it is for the breath-of-fresh-air-ness of it.

ANYWAY I hear you about how hard they are to find. hence me gasping in the middle of a quiet library about it. GOOD LUCK.

also hunger games: should I bother?

also no! but I will certainly look for it. :-) :-)

CHECKERS: I NEVER COMMENTED ON YOUR POST ABOUT ALL YOUR NEW JOB STUFF, BUT I HAVE BEEN THINKING OF YOU AND WISHING YOU ALL THE BEST AS EVERYTHING GETS STARTED, AND I LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING A LITTLE MORE OF YOU IF/WHEN LIFE SETTLES DOWN SOME. ♥

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Date: 2010-08-31 07:39 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hi there! So, I just finished A:TLA a couple of weeks ago and LOVED it to pieces. I got myself on the internet to comfort my deep disappointment in The Ending That Shall Not Be Acknowledged to find some Z/K fanfics. Can I tell you that I positively, absolutely ADORE your fics? And that I think you are seriously the best A:TLA fanfic writer I've come across? I think it's got something to do with how you manage to keep everyone so in character and retain their voices in such a way as to make it seem canon and totally believable. And the subtlety- so severely lacking that's a breath of fresh air when I actually come across it in your fics.

SO I'm here to beg for more A:TLA fics, pretty please? And do you ever plan on finishing the one titled Experiment? Please do. You shall have my eternal love. :)

And you love the QT series too? You ROCK.

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Date: 2010-09-01 01:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
HELLO ANONYMOUS, I WOULD LIKE TO BE YOUR FRIEND, BUT SADLY YOU DID NOT SIGN THIS COMMENT.

Also I am kind of flailing with love and appreciation for your comment and and it means so much to me because I love writing IC ATLA because there's just so much there to work with and and I am glad you find it IC and (you will find I am not-so-good at subtlety when replying to reviews because I am, as previously mentioned, flailing) THANK YOU FOR YOUR KIND WORDS. :-)

WELL I--I did just write a drabble (http://community.livejournal.com/katara_zuko/1482408.html) yesterday and occasionally I am bitten by the Zutara bug, especially if given a prompt. Also I am horrible about keeping it all in one place, so if you actually managed to find all the fics I have written, congratulations! As for Experiment, I can only hide my face in shame and say that it was written a VERY LONG TIME AGO and--and I did finish one arc of it, but it started evolving out of what it was and into a sprawling epic and I am not very good at writing sprawling epics. /shame

PLEASE TELL ME YOU HAVE SEEN [livejournal.com profile] sounis, BECAUSE THAT IS THE PLACE TO BE FOR THE QT SERIES. :-D

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Date: 2010-09-01 12:41 am (UTC)
ext_10182: Anzo-Berrega Desert (Doctor/Rose TARDIS kiss)
From: [identity profile] rashaka.livejournal.com
The fight scene in the dojo is probably my favorite battle scene in any film. This film is so punishing, so brutal, and so beautiful.

A lot of people talked about Hero as a beautiful epic swordfighting film, but to me that was nothing like CTHD, because it lacked soul. CTHD works because not only is it gorgeous and well-fought and strewn with talented actors at the top of their game (old and young), but because the story has so much care. By the end, you can't help but be wrapped up in it all. And I had a lot of confusing reactions to the protagonist/antagonist character. I liked her, but I hated her too. I blamed her selfishness for everything that happened, but I couldn't hold a grudge against her either because the actress connects with the story so well, and ultimately you feel that she does regret.

AND HER POOR GORGEOUS BANDIT BOYFRIEND! What's he do to now? Dude needs a hug. (side note: When you are more emotionally hardcore than your caravan-killing desert bandit warlard lover, you know you're tough shit.)

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Date: 2010-09-01 01:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
I agree about Hero--I enjoyed it, but it's less about the characters and more about how legends come about (see: the main character does not have a name! we tell the same story fifteen ways!), and so you spend more of it trying to piece the stories together, rather than caring about the people within. Whereas CTHD is all about people's hidden motivations and what we do and do not allow ourselves to feel and how people are connected and THE SCENE, WHERE HE TAKES HER HEAD. Especially knowing what happens. *sobs*

I was sitting there going HEY LOOK, HE IS AN OTHER, except then it is totally subverted re: her being more emotionally hardcore.

artemis

Date: 2010-09-01 12:54 am (UTC)
ext_10182: Anzo-Berrega Desert (Doctor/Rose TARDIS kiss)
From: [identity profile] rashaka.livejournal.com
I'm still muddled about Artemis Fowl. I read the first book and listened to the second. Both of them had some entertaining elements, but they ultimately left me unsatisfied. The first felt too young---and weirdly, not because I have a problem with that age group, since I don't mind it normally. It just...felt young. And unpolished. And at the same time, familiar. As if I were reading a dozen elements or styles I'd already read before, thrown together in such a way that if you've never come across them, you would think them SO AMAZING AND FUNNY AND CLEVER, but if you've seen it before, then it just looks like it could use some shining up.

One problem is that the humor never worked for me. I don't understand why, because the sarcasm usually works for me, and I like the high-tech fantasy stuff ever since I saw the movie The Santa Clause, and all the little quips sound like someone who read a lot of Douglas Adams before writing. Except that Douglas Adams made me cackle about 4 times a page, and I think I chuckled maybe twice per Artemis book.

Artemis Fowl as a character is rather off-putting to me too... he doesn't have enough limitations. I understand the gimmick of the superhero Sherlock Holmes character, but I didn't feel the other aspects of his character or the story compensated for how annoyingly wonderful he was. I didn't feel sorry for him at all, even for his lost parents or his sick mom. YAWN. He's not enough of a child, and he doesn't have enough flaws. He has emotions (see: parents) that drive him to deviate from Evil Overlord Attitude, but he doesn't have enough flaws just within himself. I guess I feel that this extreme level of intelligence and monetary power needs more of a handicap if I'm going to care about what immoral things he does or doesn't do...


Anyway, I know a lot of people love the books, so there must be something there to appeal to people. It's just missing me by a wide streak. I think about the third book, remembering some fond enjoyment in 1 and 2, and then I think..."But there's other books I could read that I will like more, so why waste my time?"


Holly/Artemis freaks me out for the inter-species as aspect of it. And the potential cradlerobbing. But if the books eventually earn it, then good on them.

Re: artemis

Date: 2010-09-01 01:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
A lot of people have said the "I don't think I got into these at the right age" and I can respect that, because I definitely read the first one when I was twelve, so, there's that. I haven't reread the earlier ones in years; 1-3 were all there were for a while, so I practically have them memorized, and 4 is okay but not great, and then 5 blew my socks off, so. At this point I'm so wrapped up in all the characters that it is hard for me to back up and view it objectively; as a fan I can talk to other fans, but your points about Artemis's character have me sitting here going "...but he DOES have flaws!" They just develop as he develops a conscience.

I have also been shipping Holly/Artemis from a young age, and even though she is only like three feet tall and I have extreme difficulty imagining them in a truly romantic situation, they just fit. She might not be a genius like he is but she understands him and can figure out what he wants pretty easily and she knows how to take him down a notch without trying too hard and she can do so many things he can't, and there's just...no one else you could come up with for either one of the who would be as good a match. Period. They can try, but it just won't work. /shrugs



OT, so as not to spoil person on your flist we are trying to convince to read TT and QoA: I read QoA, and FINALLY found TT like two years later, and spent the entirety of it thinking Gen had amnesia, and being REALLY DISAPPOINTED when that was not the twist. Granted, I was like fifteen, and I did eventually realize that the twist is an awesome twist if you, uh, aren't spoiled for it. Just--just saying. :-b

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Date: 2010-09-02 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nessismore.livejournal.com
Lots and lotsa text, but I saw Ingrid Michaelson's name and I LUV HER!

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Date: 2010-09-03 12:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] queercherry.livejournal.com
Ron? I approve.

Also I don't care about anything you wrote at all. But now that you are in Seattle, will you watch tons of movies? And go do all the hipster things I would do if I was there? I think you should.

...you made food? Like, cooked? Or was it all premade? Showing off your microwave skills?

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Date: 2010-09-04 02:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
:D

also yes you would if you read bits of it. and well i've been watching movies in my apartment does that count. I AM WORKING ON GETTING OUT. one of the girls in my program lives in Fremont, so hopefully we will hang out and she will show me all the cool artsy things.

...okay so it was rice but I heated up the green beans on the stove and tomorrow I intend to tackle red beans and rice. :D

(no subject)

Date: 2010-09-06 07:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
y u love me so much

♥_♥

(no subject)

Date: 2010-09-13 04:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aged-crone.livejournal.com
I love Music and Lyrics. I even bought the soundtrack. And I have never ever seen *anything* so quintessentially 1980's as the music video for "Pop! Goes Your Heart." I never even *watched* MTV and I just about fell out of my plane seat (which is where I saw it first) laughing.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-09-14 04:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
YES, I KNOW, I KNOW. We were like five seconds into the movie and it was like, WAIT, STOP, MOM HAS TO WATCH THIS, SHE WILL LOVE IT.

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