080) Tintin in the Land of the Soviets
- Tintin was the first comic I saw well carried by a library--this was junior high--I couldn't get into it.
But with Spielberg and Jackson on the move, I felt I better find out what was up. So when I happened upon the first Tintin story ever, waiting to be reshelved, I checked it out and brought it home.
In Making Comics, Scott McCloud talks about Hergé's typically European hyperdetailed backgrounds peopled with cartoony characters; in story the first however, no hyperdetails anywhere. It was made as a newspaper serial and is in plain black and white. By the end of the story, Tintin's looking like Tintin, but at first, he's just a goofy-looking manchild. And his dog looks like a Thurber terrier half the time.
As for story, it's the duos misadventures among the humorously wicked Soviets. Watch out!
It's all very 1929.
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about an hour
079) Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Spencer W. Kimball by Spencer W. Kimball, finished November 14
- Everytime I get one of these books, I swear I will read my lesson before church each week, but something always gets in the way--this time it was a calling in Primary. Teaching eight-year-olds makes reading the adult lessons hard to prioritize. But this year, for the first time, I've read every word.
President Kimball was the prophet of my childhood, and although I don't have many memories of him specifically, the general sense is a fuzzy one. But this seems to have been pretty accurate. To demonstrate, I'll just open the book randomly and type what is underlined on that page:
- Pages 172-173: We hope … that either before or after your series of Sunday meetings, depending upon your particular … meeting schedule, you will do what the Savior asked the Nephite disciples to do: After he taught them, he asked them to go to their homes and to ponder and to pray over what was said (see 3 Ne. 17:3). Let us keep that pattern in mind . . . And every child, without realizing the full portent, can absorb much from a sacrament meeting. They will absorb something every time. Wouldn’t it be a loss of a great deal of time and effort if every Sunday morning we had to stop and say, “Shall I or shall I not go to priesthood meeting? Shall I or shall I not go to sacrament meeting today? Shall we or shall we not go?” What a lot of wasted effort. … Settle it once and for all . . . We go to worship the Lord.
Pages 76-66: “I know it is true.” Because those few words have been said a billion times by millions of people does not make it trite. It will never be worn out. I feel sorry for people who try to couch it in other words, because there are no words like “I know.” There are no words which express the deep feelings which can come from the human heart like “I know.”
Pages 198-199: Love is like a flower, and, like the body, it needs constant feeding. The mortal body would soon be emaciated and die if there were not frequent feedings. The tender flower would wither and die without food and water. And so love, also, cannot be expected to last forever unless it is continually fed with portions of love, the manifestation of esteem and admiration, the expressions of gratitude, and the consideration of unselfishness.
Pages 148-149: And so it often seems to be with people, having such a firm grasp on things of the world—that which is telestial—that no amount of urging and no degree of emergency can persuade them to let go in favor of that which is celestial. Satan gets them in his grip easily. If we insist on spending all our time and resources building up for ourselves a worldly kingdom, that is exactly what we will inherit . . . The Lord has said, “… seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” (Matt. 6:33.) Too often, though, we want the “things” first . . . can keep the Sabbath, keep his mind and body and spirit uncontaminated, and give unstinted service to his fellowmen through God’s appointed way—unless the affluent man has total control and can hold all his possessions in trust, subject to the call of the Lord through his authorized servants, then that man, for the good of his soul, should certainly “go and sell that thou hast and give to the poor, … and come and follow me.”
There's a taste. Now go eat your supper.
better part of a year
078) Abraxas And The Earthman
- So apparently this take-off on Moby Dick
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three days
077) Gorgias
- So it's not a rare thing to hear Jesus and Socrates acclaimed as the great practicers of virtue worthy of emulation. And like Jesus, Socrates never wrote anything himself. So look at Gorgias as the Gospel according to Plato.
The book is in dialogue form and so zips right along (cf: my brother)--so fast that when I started disagreeing with Socrates, I couldn't slow down to determine just how I disagreed; I feel sorry for the poor schmucks who were actually talking with him.
Although I don't exactly see where Robert M. Pirsig
Anyway. Socrates.
Read up.
This was the Walter Hamilton translation from Penguin. It was a good one.
two days
076) Bighead
If this alone does not convince you that Bighead is a genuinely funny superhero spoof (right up there with Onion Jack), nothing will.
eight days
....previously in 2007....
075) Jack the Ripper: A Journal of the Whitechapel Murders 1888-1889
074) Summer of Love
073) The Borden Tragedy
072) To Kill a Mockingbird
071) Monster
070) Siblings Without Rivalry: How to Help Your Children Live Together So You Can Live Too
069) Whirligig
068) Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators in The Mystery of the Silver Spider
067) Characters and Viewpoint
066) Hybrids
065) How to Write Science Fiction & Fantasy
064) Downy Duck Grows Up
063) Humans
062) Hominids
061) Making Comics
060) Tales of the Black Widowers
059) The Pearl
058) The Dog Is Not a Toy: House Rule #4
057) Brother Brigham
056) The Foundation Trilogy: Foundation, Foundation and Empire, Second Foundation
055) Ode To Kirihito
054) Polygamy Was Better Than Monotony
053) Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar: Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes
052) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
051) Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
050) The Ruins
049) Favorite Stories
048) Criss Cross
047) Flight Volume Three
046) Nobody Is Perfick
045) First Paragraphs: Inspired Openings for Writers and Readers
044) The Universe in a Nutshell
043) Dune
042) The Gifts of the Jews: How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels
041) The Roald Dahl Omnibus
040) Troll: A Love Story
039) The End
038) The Complete Peanuts 1961-1962
037) The Penultimate Peril
036) The Grim Grotto
035) The Eyre Affair
034) Neverwhere
033) Chip Kidd: Book One: Work: 1986-2006
032) Jane Eyre
031) The Complete Peanuts 1959-1960
030) Devils & Demons
029) Talk Talk Talk: Decoding the Mysteries of Speech
028) Einstein's Dreams
027) The Long Chalkboard: and Other Stories
026) Babbitt
025) Frank
024) The Complete Concrete
023) The Rumpelstiltskin Problem
022) Bridge to Terabithia
021) Batman: The Dark Knight Returns
020) A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
019) Batman: Gothic
018) Wild at Heart
017) Stink: The Incredible Shrinking Kid
016) 50 Professional Scenes for Student Actors: A Collection of Short 2 Person Scenes
015) Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair
014) Frindle
013) Brain Wave
012) The Best American Comics 2006
011) Everything Is Illuminated
010) The Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ edited by Mormon and Moroni, finished February 7
009) Lisey's Story
008) The Maltese Falcon
007) Empire
006) Stargirl
005) Vile Bodies
004) Superman Adventures Vol. 1: Up, Up and Away!
003) A Walk in the Woods
002) Understanding Comics
001) Galápagos
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Tin Tin was a really popular kids tv show in Canada when I was growing up. I haven't seen it forever!
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