Music:
The Life Pursuit by Belle and Sebastian
It ain't going to change your life, but it's funny, literate, and silly. In the tradition of current timeslips they seem to have been drawn back to San Francisco in the late sixties, and are producing a very mellow vibe just now - the first track starts off with a stomping Doctor and the Medics/T-Rex riff and then goes onto tell a cautionary tale about community service and bad girls.
Podcasts:
In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 - the list of programme titles in my itunes runs: Geoffrey Chaucer, Greyfriars and blackfriars, Heaven, Human Evolution, Pragmatism, Prime Numbers, Relativism, The Abbasid Caliphs, The Graviton, The Oresteia... Each program is 40 minutes of three experts trying to explain their field to an intelligent and enthusiastic layman, and ranges from marginally interesting to completely fascinating.
Books:
It's pretty redundant to plug Flashman, since the bandwagon is moving, but it's not too late to jump on board when there's lovely new editions selling 3 for 2 in Borders. I've gone back to the start of the series for Flashman and royal Flash, but I'm going to treat myself to my favourite, Flashman and the Redskins next.
I fincally read Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0099410672/026-2486995-0086000
Don't know why i waited so long - it's a huge historical romance of a cyberpunk creation myth, with great WWII action, geekiness unbound, Turing and Bletchley Park, a taxonomy of modern society based on Lord of the Rings and the definitive way to eat Captain Crunch. the codebreaking stuff is fascinating, as I expected, but it's also a very funny book.
TV
The new series of 24 is noisy, silly, and great fun.
DVD
Firefly - yes, I know I'm late to the party, but I'm really enjoying it.
The Life Pursuit by Belle and Sebastian
It ain't going to change your life, but it's funny, literate, and silly. In the tradition of current timeslips they seem to have been drawn back to San Francisco in the late sixties, and are producing a very mellow vibe just now - the first track starts off with a stomping Doctor and the Medics/T-Rex riff and then goes onto tell a cautionary tale about community service and bad girls.
Podcasts:
In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 - the list of programme titles in my itunes runs: Geoffrey Chaucer, Greyfriars and blackfriars, Heaven, Human Evolution, Pragmatism, Prime Numbers, Relativism, The Abbasid Caliphs, The Graviton, The Oresteia... Each program is 40 minutes of three experts trying to explain their field to an intelligent and enthusiastic layman, and ranges from marginally interesting to completely fascinating.
Books:
It's pretty redundant to plug Flashman, since the bandwagon is moving, but it's not too late to jump on board when there's lovely new editions selling 3 for 2 in Borders. I've gone back to the start of the series for Flashman and royal Flash, but I'm going to treat myself to my favourite, Flashman and the Redskins next.
I fincally read Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0099410672/026-2486995-0086000
Don't know why i waited so long - it's a huge historical romance of a cyberpunk creation myth, with great WWII action, geekiness unbound, Turing and Bletchley Park, a taxonomy of modern society based on Lord of the Rings and the definitive way to eat Captain Crunch. the codebreaking stuff is fascinating, as I expected, but it's also a very funny book.
TV
The new series of 24 is noisy, silly, and great fun.
DVD
Firefly - yes, I know I'm late to the party, but I'm really enjoying it.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-24 02:11 pm (UTC)Still, it is a subject I am very interested in, so I guess I am a self-selected audience!
no subject
Date: 2006-02-24 06:01 pm (UTC)