Friday, August 22, 2008

Happy anniversary to me!



Thursday Corey and I celebrated four years of marriage, and I'm happy to report that we still get along just fine...no big surprise considering we had over 108% chance of staying married for four years according to the marriage probability calculations over at Political Calculations. In case you were wondering. We went out to eat at a fancy schmancy restaurant called the Refectory, and had a great time. We even had our picture taken by the restaurant owner himself.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Barbecue Song

Everything you ever needed to know about barbecue by region...in a catchy little tune (redneck style). Classy.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Book review: The Kite Runner

Corey has convinced me that since I'm done with school, I need to practice exercising my brain by writing reviews for the books I read, so here goes:

I’m a little behind the popular trends in literature, but when I saw The Kite Runner on sale at Goodwill for a dollar a few months back, I knew I should pick it up. And Wow, what an amazing storyteller Khaled Hosseini is! Disregarding the first few nights I picked up the book and promptly went to sleep, once I got into the story it was nearly impossible to stop, and I sped through it at a breakneck pace (or at least ‘neck-ache’ pace, considering how long I laid in the same position on the loveseat).

In case you’re even more behind than me, The Kite Runner is a haunting coming-of-age tale of Amir, a boy raised in a privileged neighborhood of Kabul, Afghanistan, who grows up during the immense civil turmoil of the late 70s to the 90s. The actual kite runner (namesake of the story) is the family servant’s son Hassan, Amir’s devoted sidekick and the most loyal friend he could ask for if only he wasn’t ashamed to call a Hazara (a lower class) his friend, and who plays a pivotal role in the story by his bravery and faithfulness to Amir, a perfect character foil highlighting Amir’s own cowardice and unfaithfulness.

As a side note, kite running refers to chasing after kites after the string has been severed by the glass-enhanced string of another kite and its handler’s tactic maneuvers in the then-popular (at least in Afghanistan) sport of kite fighting. Hassan is the best kite runner, whose instinct always seems to take him to the exact location of a kite’s eventual descent. Forever trying to gain the approval of Baba (Amir’s term for his father), he finally wins the big kite fighting tournament and brings home the last wayward kite that Hassan has chased for him. And Baba is proud.

This story has a way of compelling the reader to join in celebration of Amir’s triumphs, but also to look on in horror (as though peeking out from instinctively covered eyes) at the devastation he sees. One cannot help but grieve with Amir the actions that can’t be revoked and the ensuing loss that haunts him, and to watch him battle his demons and eventually bury them as he creates a new and prosperous life in America with his father. Even though it’s not the life Baba imagined, he chose to move away from the Middle East and relocate to Fremont, California, taking on the lowly post of a gas station attendant in order to give Amir the chance of success that is no longer possible for him in ravaged Afghanistan.

Though they’re foreigners in a strange land, Amir and his father find a peculiar refuge among other Afghanis who man their posts at the flea market on summer Sundays, hawking their finds from the previous day’s garage sale scavenges. It is at the flea market where Amir meets his wife Soraya, a beautiful girl marked as ‘damaged goods’ from a past mistake and reckoned unmarriageable by most of the Afghan community. Though Baba has been diagnosed with cancer and is unwilling to undergo chemotherapy, he lives long enough to see Amir enter into a loving and happy marriage as well as find success in a writing career.

Eventually, however, Amir’s past sins resurface with the reappearance of an old family friend who offers him the chance to “be good again.” Amir is confronted with a truth that changes everything, yet gives so much insight into his own tortured relationship with his father. But more importantly, he’s given a challenge, one that will teach him that it may actually be possible for him to be brave and loyal after all.

This is a story of everyday joys and incredible trials, but through them, immense personal growth. Don’t get me wrong – there’s no fairy tale ending; even as a grown and matured adult, Amir is still flawed, and his actions still have consequences beyond his control. But he learns to have peace with himself, an achievement perhaps greater in its own way than all the bravery and honor combined.

I recommend this book not only for the remarkable narrative, but also through it, the portrayal of recent historical events in Afghanistan. I have to admit that my global awareness has been wretchedly shallow, and this book, though fiction, offers an account of what has been happening in Afghanistan over the past 30 years that will not soon be forgotten. Not the kind of story we hear in our American media, but a vivid depiction from the eyes and ears of those who lived it, and that personal touch is what makes it real.

Monday, August 4, 2008

showbiz pizza band performs usher

Apparently this video has already been making its way around the net (or the 'cloud' as I hear it's called by geeks now) for quite some time, but it's new to me, and it hit the perfect note of nostalgia and ...irony? ...wrongness? Well whatever it is, it's hilarious!

So apparently this guy bought the Showbiz Pizza band Rockafire Explosion and is able to program songs into it and what you have here is the result...



For more information, see mental floss' annotation (pop-up video style), and to see other songs that have been programmed into the band and learn more about it go here

Sunday, August 3, 2008

on Obama and McCain

I came across these interesting news articles on McCain and Obama... not necessarily having to do with their politics or the upcoming election, more on their pasts and who they are as people (and I suppose, candidates). While I haven't really done any research on issues and such to know whom I want to support in the election, after reading these articles I feel that I could support either, which just reiterates my stance of apathy as far as voting. I know that each possible outcome of the election could move America in vastly different directions as far as policy and such goes, so maybe I'm not totally free from the burden of responsibility of being politically literate and active. But didn't someone once assert that democracy was the safest type of government because it has the least potential for good or evil (i.e. it doens't do squat)? Plato, maybe? One of the many quotes/tidbits of information from Corey that I 'sorta' remember...

Would be interested in hearing your thoughts on the news articles or otherwise.

Friday, August 1, 2008

wordle




PS-Thanks to Jesse from the emergent cohort for finding and sharing this fun website