Monday various

  • Here’s a question: Who inherits your iTunes library? Maybe a follow-up to that: would you want someone to inherit it?

    There’s a significant difference between shelves of books or stacks of records and folders of e-books or mp3s. There’s no re-sell value to the latter, for instance, either because of the difficulties of transferring the files or because of restrictions inherent in the licensing agreements we sign. So the only reason to bequeath your digital media is if you feel the person receiving it in your will actually will want it.

  • Ass-whooping on NPR.
  • In other news, they were still printing Nintendo Power Magazine?
  • Writing credits in documentaries: apparently a bigger issue than you might think.
  • And finally, Space Stallions!

    More information here.

Red Dawn of the Dead (or Sunday, Bloody Sunday)

I find it amazing, quite frankly, that it was a whole year ago that I was in Canada.

I have to say, just based on the short week I was there, Banff is definitely a place I would like to revisit. But, alas, not this year.

Nor did I try my hand again this year at the 3-Day Novel, despite the occasional e-mails that came in reminding me about it recently. I actually didn’t do any writing today, despite meeting with my weekly writing group. We spent more time talking about comics and books and the terrible, terrible abuses of adverbs. (Seriously, “He frowned moodily”?)

I have been, sort of, revisiting for the first time the novel I wrote that week. Not so much to wonder if there’s anything I can do with it, and certainly not to admire the writing craft on display in its pages, but simply because it’s been a year and I haven’t looked at it all since then. Maybe I’m just feeling vaguely nostalgic for that time, that freedom to just write, and the environment so conducive to doing so.

Anyway, for whatever it’s worth, here’s how that story I spent three days on starts off:

On the morning of April 37th, an unexpected chill in the air and the artificial sun just starting to rise, the last man from Mars fell to his death.

There would be no investigation, or at least nothing of any substance, even though suicides of this sort were exceedingly rare and almost impossibly difficult to pull off. The corporate owners of the Astraeus Building assured the local authority that they would give their full cooperation, even offering them unprecedented access to the rooftop gardens from which the Martian man had jumped. Only a select number of employees (and of course the AI responsible for tending these gardens) had this kind of access, and both the Astraeus Corporation and its parent company back on Earth were naturally eager to learn how the dead man had fallen from their site.

There was nothing to indicate corporate espionage; Astraeus had no direct competitors in the drug trade aboard the world-station, and anyone admitted to the hub was screened and tagged well before they would reach even the Building’s lobby. Beyond the novelty of the dead man’s origin, a fact that could only be proved conclusively after the initial DNA tests had been unsuccessful, there was nothing to suggest that he was anything other than a random malcontent. Astraeus was well within its legal quota of on-board addiction and overdose; statistically, there had in fact been fewer fatalities from their prodct this month than in any April on record. All the necessary paperwork was already on file with station central and at corporate headquarters. But of course there were always the occasional protests, the odd individual whose physiology — usually because of some undocumented, ill-advised, or illegal body modification — reacted poorly with whatever growth he or she had been sold and ingested. Astraeus was not immune to these difficulties. They were simply the cost of doing business in the orbital free-market.

Perhaps, then, that was all this was: the cost of doing business. Did it really matter, in the end, if the man was the last refugee of a dead red planet? Who even remembered Mars nowadays?

In the end, station authority agreed that it did not matter. A minor glitch in the AI system, which Astraeus promised to duly investigate and, if necessary, debug, was blamed for the Martian being on the rooftop in the first place. The drugs in the man’s own system — of which there were many varied growths and strains, all of which were easily cataloged against the company’s inventory — were a convenient excuse for the suicide. If anyone thought to ask why the gravitational containment field atop the Building had failed, allowing the Martian to fall thirty stories instead of just a few safe and customary inches, or how the last man from Mars had been admitted to the station hub in the first place — no fanfare, no warning flags — neither of these questions were noted in the final report. Brief mention was made to the slight chill in the morning air, with a note to the climate techs to look into it if they had an opportunity. No one suspected the station’s own safeguards had been tampered with.

And no one suspected that the last man from Mars had been pushed.

So that was today, more thinking about writing than writing itself. Plus the Sunday crossword, a pretty decent new episode of Doctor Who, an okay but still kind of disappointing Dawn of the Dead remake, and of course a brief run up and down the street in just my socks when my sister’s dog got off the leash and decided she didn’t want to come back inside after all.

Yep, just your average Sunday.

August songs

I make a mix of new (to me) music every month. It’s just this thing I do. This was August:

  1. “The Boxer” by Jerry Douglas (feat. Mumford & Sons and Paul Simon)
  2. “That’s the Way it Goes” by George Harrison
  3. “Now” by Mates of State
  4. “Extreme Ways” by Moby
  5. “Lux Aeterna” by Clint Mansell
  6. “Kill Your Heroes” by AWOLNATION
  7. “It’s Time” by Imagine Dragons
  8. “When I Write My Master’s Thesis” by John K. Samson
  9. “You Rascal You” by Hanni El Khatib
  10. “Talk a Walk” by Passion Pit
  11. “Follow” by Crystal Fighters
  12. “Settle Down” by Kimbra
  13. “Got You (Where I Want You)” by the Flys
  14. “Perfect Situation” by Weezer
  15. “Dreams” by Taken by Trees
  16. “Dig Gravedigger Dig” by Corb Lund
  17. “Paperbacks With Paragraphs Underlined” by Woodpecker!
  18. “I Was Made for Loving You” by Maria Mena
  19. “Goin’ Down” by the Monkees

A civilized Saturday

Last month, my mother had some car trouble. After all of that, when we finally had it towed to the nearest AAA garage, they replaced the engine. And then the “service engine soon” light came on when my mother went to drive the car again earlier this week. So my father and I took it back to the garage this morning — him driving there, me following so he would have a ride back home — to have it fixed. Turns out the engine’s fine. It was just a faulty sensor. At least, that’s what the garage says. The replacement engine’s guaranteed for up to a year.

Once we got back home — after stopping at the new local supermarket pictured above, whose many olives I was not in the least bit tempted to stick my hands into — we discovered that my car was having trouble of its own. Specifically, it’s now missing a window.

The landscapers my parents recently hired accidentally broke it, apparently when a rock whirled up out of an edger. They cleaned up most of the glass, and more importantly their insurance will pay for on-site replacement, but that’s still a few days from now. Until then, my car looks like this.

Other than that excitement, it was a pretty humdrum day. Allergies continue to pester me, but the weather’s been fairly nice otherwise. My sister and her husband are visiting for the Labor Day weekend, so all five of us went out to eat this evening.

And that’s pretty much it. Mostly car talk.