Thursday, December 31, 2009

On the Seventh day of Christmas

 

I'm in Barcelona celebrating the end of 2009 and welcoming in 2010!


Hmm... I can't think of anything to do with the number 7 (to match the title)... I know! We'll be having 7 bottles with varying degrees of alcohol tonight! :p We've got 1 bottle of "fresita" which is a Chilean drink I picked up at the supermarket in Li�ge and is basically strawberries in chapmagne, it's for the "ap�ritif". Then with dinner 1 bottle of white and 2 bottles of red wine. Then two bottles of cava (Spanish champagne) for dessert and to ring in the New Year. And finally as a "digestif" a bottle of p�k�t (a special drink typical from Li�ge) "fruits des bois" (forest fruits macerated in that gin-like alcohol) which I also brought from Li�ge! So that's 1+3+2+1=7! Whew! I've been having trouble with this idea of mine of getting something match the Christmas Day number! We'll see if I manage to continue pulling it off...

I wrote up a post on year-end traditions last year, those in Spain include the consumption of Cava (Spanish bubbly) and eating 12 grapes during the 12 strokes of midnight to ensure good fortune throughout the new year. My mom says that when she was a kid my uncle used to cheat by peeling the grapes during dinner and then taking the seeds out so he could eat them faster, lol! But no cheating for us (unless buying seedless grapes counts)... ;o)

I'll leave you off with a very Spanish Holiday Greeting, the Freixenet TV add. It's one of the main two brands of Cava -Spanish Bubbly-  and one of the things people look forward to during the holidays here is seeing what gorgeous new TV spot Freixenet will be doing for the holidays (since 1977, some years it has been 5 minutes long!). If anyone has read my Christmas posts from last year then you might recognise this spot. The company decided to not make a new one for this year as a sign of solidarity to the families suffering from the economic crisis (they thought it would be too ostentatious, probably as a help to their own budget as well, lol!). Anyhow, last year's was so wonderful -with our Olympic synchronised swimming medalists- that I think it's just perfect!

So have a WONDERFUL time tonight! Make sure you eat your 12 grapes in time!!! And if you're out and about, beware the nasty combo of bubbles and wheels! See you next year! ;o)



PS: I'm not sure how punctual the writing/posting of the rest of this series is going to be... I've got even more limited internet access since I'm out of town, and when I get back I'll have a friend visiting so I won't be able to hang out at my parents' using their internet as much! I'll try to prepare as much as possible in advance (the previous two posts were "scheduled" ones, I love that option!)

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

On the Sixth day of Christmas...



Am remembering the six Christmas movies my Dad and I watch every year during the holidays!

Imagine a movie being made just based on the concept of a songwriter, and being totally structured around the songs he wrote for the film? Not nowadays that's for sure! But if it's the 1940s and that musician is Irving Berlin then... why not?! Bing Crosby's singing, Fred Astair's dancing. Some goofy songs, some lovely ones (particularly the first time we hear White Christmas). Definitely a must see! :o)



keep reading!

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

On the Fifth day of Christmas...

I saw five Christmas stockings hanging.



Well actually they've been hanging there for a while, but they're my favourite house decorations and there's five of them (for the five of us) and since it's the Fifth day of Christmas I thought it was a good choice. ;o)

My favourite is actually mine (with Santa carrying the tree). It was my mom's sole attempt at knitting a Christmas stocking (she made my 1-month older cousin's as well). My grandmother did the others.

Monday, December 28, 2009

On the Fourth day of Christmas...

I saw four angels atop a Christmas tree!



keep reading!

Historia de dos ciudades

Teniendo en cuenta que se acaba el a�o y, con �l, el 150 aniversario de la novela de Dickens, me ha parecido un buen momento para dedicarle a esta obra una entrada en el blog:

La verdad es que siempre me atrajo la misma forma en que est� narrada la historia, con todo ese juego de espejos representado en los dobles destinos y los personajes dobles (doppelg�ngers casi), y que la dota de toda una atm�sfera de premonici�n que no se limita a unas pocas escenas, como las de los pasos del destino que dice escuchar Lucie Manette en m�s de una ocasi�n... Y es que cont�nuamente tenemos la comparaci�n entre las dos ciudades: Par�s y Londres; las dos �pocas: finales del s. XVIII y mediados del s. XIX; los dobles destinos: el del dr. Manette y Charles Darnay, as� como dos formas de tejerlo: el hilo de oro de Lucie y la calceta sin fin de Madame Defarge. Vemos tambi�n pasar ante nuestros ojos a toda una galer�a de personajes con su doble f�sico: los marqueses de St. Evr�monde, hermanos gemelos; Jerry Cruncher y Jerry Cruncher, padre e hijo; Lucie y la peque�a Lucie; y, sobre todo, Charles Darnay y Sydney Carton. A todo esto hay que sumar el tema central de la novela: devuelto a la vida.

Por otro lado, la mayor parte de la trama parece transcurrir de una manera m�s o menos feliz hasta que se nos hace llegar a la Monta�a Magn�tica de una manera bastante forzada, tambi�n hay que decirlo ;), y todo se precita. Porque, conforme transcurre la acci�n, ya nos vamos dando cuenta de que el verdadero protagonista es Sydney Carton, un tipo con muchas cualidades que, sin embargo, no ha sido capaz de hacerse  un hueco en esta vida y que, por eso mismo, cae tan bien. ;) Por eso y porque lleva una vida solitaria y desordenada, con un jefe que lo vampiriza, y que ve en el propio Charles Darnay lo que podr�a haber sido y conseguido -incluyendo aqu� a Lucie Manette- si las cosas le hubieran ido de otra manera; pero que est� seguro que ya no conseguir� nunca a pesar de su buen fondo. Es este rendirse a s� mismo lo que crea una sensaci�n extra�a, unida a la reacci�n del resto de personajes: choca tanta rigidez ya que, si bien se entiende que alguien se abandone en un mal momento, no se entiende tan bien que todos a su alrededor acepten esto sin apenas resistencia. En cambio, lo que no har� por s� mismo, s� lo har� por los dem�s en el �ltimo momento y, lo m�s curioso -es todo un detalle- es que ya se nos hab�a advertido en cierta manera de esto con anterioridad:
"Soy el mismo Sydney, con la misma suerte. Ya cuando estudiaba me dedicaba a hacer los temas y los ejercicios de los dem�s muchachos y descuidaba los m�os.
- Y �por qu�?
- S�lo Dios lo sabe. Porque era as�."
Curiosamente tambi�n, en los �ltimos momentos, con la aparici�n de la peque�a costurera y la visi�n final, lo que se recuerda es la frase con la que comenz� esta historia: devuelto a la vida, comprendiendo al fin su verdadero sentido; pero es extra�o que se hable tanto del p�rrafo final y casi nada del personaje de la costurera, que siempre me pareci� de los m�s enigm�tico y, sin embargo, tambi�n de lo m�s capital. �Alguna idea? ;)

Historia de dos ciudades

Teniendo en cuenta que se acaba el a�o y, con �l, el 150 aniversario de la novela de Dickens, me ha parecido un buen momento para dedicarle a esta obra una entrada en el blog:

La verdad es que siempre me atrajo la misma forma en que est� narrada la historia, con todo ese juego de espejos representado en los dobles destinos y los personajes dobles (doppelg�ngers casi), y que la dota de toda una atm�sfera de premonici�n que no se limita a unas pocas escenas, como las de los pasos del destino que dice escuchar Lucie Manette en m�s de una ocasi�n... Y es que cont�nuamente tenemos la comparaci�n entre las dos ciudades: Par�s y Londres; las dos �pocas: finales del s. XVIII y mediados del s. XIX; los dobles destinos: el del dr. Manette y Charles Darnay, as� como dos formas de tejerlo: el hilo de oro de Lucie y la calceta sin fin de Madame Defarge. Vemos tambi�n pasar ante nuestros ojos a toda una galer�a de personajes con su doble f�sico: los marqueses de St. Evr�monde, hermanos gemelos; Jerry Cruncher y Jerry Cruncher, padre e hijo; Lucie y la peque�a Lucie; y, sobre todo, Charles Darnay y Sydney Carton. A todo esto hay que sumar el tema central de la novela: devuelto a la vida.

Por otro lado, la mayor parte de la trama parece transcurrir de una manera m�s o menos feliz hasta que se nos hace llegar a la Monta�a Magn�tica de una manera bastante forzada, tambi�n hay que decirlo ;), y todo se precita. Porque, conforme transcurre la acci�n, ya nos vamos dando cuenta de que el verdadero protagonista es Sydney Carton, un tipo con muchas cualidades que, sin embargo, no ha sido capaz de hacerse  un hueco en esta vida y que, por eso mismo, cae tan bien. ;) Por eso y porque lleva una vida solitaria y desordenada, con un jefe que lo vampiriza, y que ve en el propio Charles Darnay lo que podr�a haber sido y conseguido -incluyendo aqu� a Lucie Manette- si las cosas le hubieran ido de otra manera; pero que est� seguro que ya no conseguir� nunca a pesar de su buen fondo. Es este rendirse a s� mismo lo que crea una sensaci�n extra�a, unida a la reacci�n del resto de personajes: choca tanta rigidez ya que, si bien se entiende que alguien se abandone en un mal momento, no se entiende tan bien que todos a su alrededor acepten esto sin apenas resistencia. En cambio, lo que no har� por s� mismo, s� lo har� por los dem�s en el �ltimo momento y, lo m�s curioso -es todo un detalle- es que ya se nos hab�a advertido en cierta manera de esto con anterioridad:
"Soy el mismo Sydney, con la misma suerte. Ya cuando estudiaba me dedicaba a hacer los temas y los ejercicios de los dem�s muchachos y descuidaba los m�os.
- Y �por qu�?
- S�lo Dios lo sabe. Porque era as�."
Curiosamente tambi�n, en los �ltimos momentos, con la aparici�n de la peque�a costurera y la visi�n final, lo que se recuerda es la frase con la que comenz� esta historia: devuelto a la vida, comprendiendo al fin su verdadero sentido; pero es extra�o que se hable tanto del p�rrafo final y casi nada del personaje de la costurera, que siempre me pareci� de los m�s enigm�tico y, sin embargo, tambi�n de lo m�s capital. �Alguna idea? ;)

Sunday, December 27, 2009

On the Third day of Christmas...

I visited the Alicante "Christmas Market" and remembered the THREE much nicer ones I visited in Belgium and France.

Alicante:


keep reading!

Saturday, December 26, 2009

On the Second day of Christmas...

I saw two Nativity scenes!

The building of a Belen (the name for Bethlehem in Spanish) in the home is a big Spanish tradition (the introduction of the Christmas Tree in Spain is actually very recent, many families just do the Belen). The basis is just the Cr�che:



keep reading!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Christmas Questions?

Over the Twelve Days of Christmas I'm going to try and do a Christmas-related post a day. We'll see how well I succeed! (and how Christmas related they'll be) They're probably going to be short 'cause I don't have full internet access at the moment, but I intend to fully enjoy the season which in Spain truly ends on 12th Night! ;o)

To start with, two lovely bloggers I follow (Rhonda from Shellbelle's Tiki Hut and Nancy from Life in the Second Half) both posted this fun Christmas meme and I've been saving it up to start off my Christmas blogging!

So here goes my Christmas interview!

(1) What is your favourite Christmas movie/s?
A Miracle on 34th St (the b&w original w/ Maureen O'Hara and Nathalie Wood) and White Christmas (with Bing Crosby)

(2) What is your LEAST favourite Christmas movie/s?
most of the recent ones... they're all pretty bad so I actually can't remember them well enough to pick one! :p

(3) What is your favourite Christmas Song?
Just one? To sing or to hear? Both? Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas. Minuit Chr�tiens. White Christmas... my dad and I usually sing Carols together over the holidays and I just love most of them!



(4) What Christmas song(s) drives you crazy?
Any of them in "elevator music" or "on hold" versions.

(5) What is your favourite Christmas drink?
Gluhwein!!! I'm sad I couldn't make it to one of the German Christmas markets this year... the stuff they sell in Belgium isn't nearly as good! I enjoyed my last glass in Valence Sunday morning while walking around town.

(6) What is your favourite Christmas memory?

I think I'll go with Christmas 1994. We lived in Florida. My Grandmother was down from DC to spend it (her last) with us. My Uncle and Aunt were up from the Keys with 3 month-old baby Jake. And two of our best friends from Mexico were spending Christmas with us (two girls my Dad used to call his adopted daughters). Full house, lots of fun!


(7) What is the best toy/gift you've received on Christmas?
Oh my... these are some Salomonic questions!  I think I�d have to say my flute. And now that I think about it I wish I hadn�t stopped playing in college� 6 years of lessons just gone? I have to start again!

(8) What is the worst toy/gift you've received on Christmas?

I�ll be generous and say I�ve forgotten! ;o)


(9) What do you LOVE about the holidays?
Feeling happy, surrounded by loved ones, all in a joyful good mood.

(10) What annoys you about the holidays?
That they're so short! :p

(11) Do you prefer a star or an angel on top of a Christmas tree? Or something else?
An angel! We have several lovely papier-mach� ones from Mexico reigning atop our tree. :o)


(12) What is your family favourite recipe at Christmas?
My dad's stuffed turkey and candied yams. Miam!

(13) Are you a Grinch or a Who at Christmastime?
Huh? Well I know I'm not a Grinch so I guess I'm a Who! :p

(14) Christmas light displays - Love them or Hate them?
Love 'em! But I do think some people go a bit overboard at times...

(15) Santas at the mall - Fun times or Creepy?
haven't seen any of those in years, so no opinion!


(16) Christmas cards - do you send them, yes or no?
I used to, but for several years now I've been to disorganised/busy and this year is the same... :o(

(17) What is the best thing about Christmas, in your opinion?
Having all my family together and seeing their faces light up when I've figured out the perfect present. :o)

(18) What is the worst thing about Christmas?
The pushing of crazy commercial consumerism.

(19) When do you put the tree up and take it down?
We used to put it up the 2nd weekend of December, now we do it at the latest the weekend before Christmas. We take it down right after Three King's Day on January 6th.

(20) Out of the 12 days of Christmas, which day and item would you want your truelove to give to you?
Seven Swans a Swimming. As long as I can get the lake to keep them in as well!

(21) Why do you think that Grandma got run over by a reindeer?
Huh???


(22) Who is your favourite reindeer?
Dancer! With a name like that he must be a twinkle-toes!

(23) Do you believe in Santa Claus?
But of course! AND the Three Kings! My stocking gets stuffed every Dec 25th and there's something in my shoe every January 6th. ;o)

(24) What is your favourite smell at Christmastime?
the Christmas Tree.

(25) What would make you happy at Christmas this year?
For the whole family to be together. But with one sister in New Zealand and the other spending Xmas with her boyfriend's family in London... sigh! At least we've got aunts and cousins coming over this year!
   

Snowy Road Trip back South

So, you remember from my previous post how disappointed I had been by the lack of snow and then how excited I was my last night in Li�ge 'cause of a little bit of snow? Well I got plenty more snow on my way back down to Spain! :p

This is how things looked in Li�ge (on campus) when I left (I didn't have much time to wander around taking photos, had 2 meetings that morning and had to finish packing, last-minute chocolate shopping and loading the car, only got it all done thx to a friend's help!):



By the time I finally hit the road it was getting dark and I was stressed out about the possibility of driving at night through the Ardennes over snowy-icy roads (I wasn't worried about the dark since Belgian roads are all lit-up!). Well damn was I lucky!!! All along the drive the radio broadcast was punctuated by the "info routes" every 20', which kept informing me of a snowstorm moving across Belgium from the coast inland, with Brussels paralysed by the snow (and I later heard ditto the Eurostar, poor people stuck in that tunnel -which is a rather cool one by the way!), snow covering the country, accidents all over the place... except in the provinces of Li�ge and Luxembourg (Lux is the country, but the neighbouring Belgian province that covers the Ardennes is also called Lux)! In other words no problems at all on the E25! YES!!! And then I cross into France, and ditto! Radio talking about Paris under the snow etc, well when I got to my friend's house in Nancy, they hadn't even seen the tip of a snowflake! Situation which quickly changed since I woke up Friday morning to see this:



not too much, not bad, wasn't going to use it that day anyway since hanging out with my friend and her new baby and going into town for the Christmas market...

Things got a bit more complicated on Saturday when I was scheduled to continue on down the road. I woke up to find quite a bit MORE snow on the car:



but managed to have some fun with it anyway:



;o)

So I continued on South, pretty much following the inverse path I took in August on my way up. A beautiful crisp winter's day, with lovely white fields...



and highways covered in salt to keep the cars from slipping, but icky salt that kept being splattered up on my windshield and after a while making it impossible to see through (even worse when the sun was hitting directly on it, like a white wall instead of glass!) and so having to stop every 50km or so to pore water on it to clear it off (the windshield wiper liquid sprayer thingy being blocked, grrrr!)!!! The day's �tape ended up taking 90' longer than it should have. snif!

I spent the night in Valence instead of Lyon (my stop on the way up, big confusing city if you don't know your way around, which I don't). It's a lovely little city (about 100'000 inhabitants) I'll tell you about some other time (not much to see but what there was was beautiful!). I wandered around town Sunday morning for a bit to visit and enjoy the "last" of the snow:




Did you notice anything curious in that photo? Hmmm, apparently someone else had been having fun with the snow recently as well! Look in closer:



My original plan had been to head straight down to Barcelona (5h drive) from there, but when reading a little folder about "things to see" in the region I came across the mention of the tallest "donjon" (the keep or main tower from a medieval castle) in France just a short drive away and I knew I HAD to stop and visit! :p



Doesn't that "paysage" look gorgeous? The light came and went throughout the day...

Here's the Donjon overlooking the town of Crest:



And a more impressive look:



I spent a short hour (could have spent 2!) wandering up and down stairs (very impressive place and very informative if you're a fan of the middle-ages, which I am!), and then continued on my road... with a very dirty car:



thanks to all this damn brown stuff:



which I guess I should be thankful for since it keeps the roads from being icy.

For some reason (running late? tired?) I didn't stop for anymore pictures on the way down. I will say the countryside was gorgeous all the way down. I didn't see the snowy Pyrenees since I crossed at night. And the last snow caps I saw were on mountains around Tarragona. The thermometer didn't hit (and stay above) 0�C until Avignon. It hit the double digits when I entered the Comunidad Valencian, and then stayed above 15�C once I entered the province of Alicante. Quite a difference arriving home to 17�C weather when it had been -10�C when I left Nancy 2 days before! Unfortunately I had also changed gorgeous blue skies for grey rainy ones! It didn't stop raining until I left Catalu�a! But at least it "washed" the car... lol!

Now it's time to prepare and enjoy Christmas. I'm going to try to put together a "12 Days of Christmas" series... but I don't have internet at home any more (no point paying for 4 months of non-use) and I don't have time to figure out how to get service, too busy settling in and preparing Christmas! So I can only connect sporadically when I come to my parents'.

And I'm sorry I missed the Fishy Friday post last week... I was on the road and the days before was going crazy trying to get everything done for the trip. :p

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

what Cris did her last night in Liege...

GO CRAZY!!!!          ;o)

Ok, I know I've been too busy to actually write about what I've been doing here these 4 months, I'll get to it eventually (short version: teaching scientific English at the University). But in a packing interlude (I'm leaving tomorrow) I just wanted to share a few photos of what I did my last evening here...

I woke up this morning happy to see this:


 

because I hoped it would be a sign of possible snow before I left tomorrow. I had an ice-covered car 2 days ago (took me 15' to defrost it!), and was really hoping to have some snowy, goofy fun before heading south to the snowless lands.

Well this evening I was meeting friends to go ice-skating at the outdoor (but covered, it rains a lot here!) rink downtown in the Christmas market, and as I left at 18h I saw this:



COOL!!!!


(there were some Brazilians out enjoying their first snow earlier, lol!)

So, big event of the evening:



crazyness on the ice!



Spinning:



Helping a friend skate for the first time:



Warming up later with melted cheese:



then admiring all the snow downtown (where it almost never sticks, this is pretty rare here):



trying to catch snowflakes:



and going crazy again:



Back up on campus there was even more snow:



I hope some of it's still there in the morning so I can get some daytime shots before I go!

Now I've got to get back to my packing, and looking forward to getting home in time to hopefully still see this:


Also quite rare, to have snow-covered mountains behind Alicante! (photo taken 2 days ago by my mom)

Cuidando la apariencia del blog (detalles sobre Netiqueta)

Quiz�s porque el a�o se acaba, me ha parecido interesante escribir una peque�a entrada que resumiera algunos detalles aprendidos durante estos primeros meses de vida de Bajo un Sol errante. No pretendo hacer un repaso exhaustivo de todo lo escrito sobre netiqueta en la red, sino m�s bien nombrar aquello que normalmente se pasa por alto y que, mayoritariamente, tiene que ver con la apariencia del blog. M�s all� de vigilar la correcci�n en la escritura, �qu� hay? Pues, por ejemplo:
  • facilitar la lectura con los siguientes detalles: un tama�o de fuente adecuado que no obligue a forzar la vista; elegir un fondo claro y un color de fuente oscuro y no al rev�s por el mismo motivo (si el fondo es blanco, todav�a mejor); no abusar de los colores fuertes en el texto; darle una apariencia homog�nea, que no aburrida, a las entradas que escribamos, etc.
  • facilitar la navegaci�n por el blog: incluir utilidades como un cuadro de b�squeda, usar etiquetas, colocar el archivo del blog en una posici�n visible y mantener en orden la barra lateral siempre ayuda.
  • cuidar mucho la barra lateral: s� el orden es muy importante, ya que no s�lo acostumbra a albergar la mayor�a de utilidades de navegaci�n de nuestro blog sino que tambi�n incluye gadgets que definen nuestras aficiones y gustos. Hay que procurar que todo encaje sin solaparse.
  • facilitar a nuestros visitantes alg�n medio de contacto: tener activa la opci�n de comentarios y a�adir alguna direcci�n de correo electr�nico.
  • m�sica en el blog: no est� mal compartir nuestros gustos musicales pero, por favor, desactiva el autoplay. A nadie le gusta ir por la calle o el metro y tener que escuchar el iPod, mp3, mp4, m�vil, etc. del personaje de al lado, �verdad? Pues en internet pasa igual.
  • publicidad en el blog: evitar el pop-up (ventanas emergentes).
Bueno,  pues creo que ya est�. No ha sido tan malo, �verdad? Si alguien desea a�adir o puntualizar algo, por aqu� estaremos.

Cuidando la apariencia del blog (detalles sobre Netiqueta)

Quiz�s porque el a�o se acaba, me ha parecido interesante escribir una peque�a entrada que resumiera algunos detalles aprendidos durante estos primeros meses de vida de Bajo un Sol errante. No pretendo hacer un repaso exhaustivo de todo lo escrito sobre netiqueta en la red, sino m�s bien nombrar aquello que normalmente se pasa por alto y que, mayoritariamente, tiene que ver con la apariencia del blog. M�s all� de vigilar la correcci�n en la escritura, �qu� hay? Pues, por ejemplo:
  • facilitar la lectura con los siguientes detalles: un tama�o de fuente adecuado que no obligue a forzar la vista; elegir un fondo claro y un color de fuente oscuro y no al rev�s por el mismo motivo (si el fondo es blanco, todav�a mejor); no abusar de los colores fuertes en el texto; darle una apariencia homog�nea, que no aburrida, a las entradas que escribamos, etc.
  • facilitar la navegaci�n por el blog: incluir utilidades como un cuadro de b�squeda, usar etiquetas, colocar el archivo del blog en una posici�n visible y mantener en orden la barra lateral siempre ayuda.
  • cuidar mucho la barra lateral: s� el orden es muy importante, ya que no s�lo acostumbra a albergar la mayor�a de utilidades de navegaci�n de nuestro blog sino que tambi�n incluye gadgets que definen nuestras aficiones y gustos. Hay que procurar que todo encaje sin solaparse.
  • facilitar a nuestros visitantes alg�n medio de contacto: tener activa la opci�n de comentarios y a�adir alguna direcci�n de correo electr�nico.
  • m�sica en el blog: no est� mal compartir nuestros gustos musicales pero, por favor, desactiva el autoplay. A nadie le gusta ir por la calle o el metro y tener que escuchar el iPod, mp3, mp4, m�vil, etc. del personaje de al lado, �verdad? Pues en internet pasa igual.
  • publicidad en el blog: evitar el pop-up (ventanas emergentes).
Bueno,  pues creo que ya est�. No ha sido tan malo, �verdad? Si alguien desea a�adir o puntualizar algo, por aqu� estaremos.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Monthly Reading: November'09

Woah! Have I really only read 2 books this month?! I hope I didn't forget anyone... :o(
Why so little? Too much work, too much "life", too little reading time! :p


The Boleyn Inheritance by Philippa Gregory
Gregory seems to have decided it's not worth writing about Jane Seymore (the Queen who finally gave Henry VIII what he wanted: a son!) since this book follows her previous novel The Other Boleyn Girl and we appear to have skipped a Queen! It starts out with the impending departure of Anna of Cleves (wife #4) for England, with Jane Boleyn's (the Boleyn sister-in-law who accused her husband and Anne of...) hopes of returning to court to attend upon the new Queen and silly Kitty Howard's dreams of dresses and boys. With 3 narrators, it was hard to keep track of who's story it is we're reading! Each new chapter I had to double check who's the one whose supposed to be talking... A bit bland and confusing, but it's got me looking forward to the Tudor's take on young Kitty Howard after the holidays!... And I couldn't help feeling sorry for Anna of Cleves who was completely clueless as to what was expected of her and how to please the crazy English monarch! ;o)


A Spanish historical mystery novel set in the early XIVth century. A knight of St John (old rivals of the Templar Knights) with someithing of a reputation as a detective (il Perquisitore) gets sent on an assignment by Pope John XXII to find out if the Templars were really responsible for the death of his predecessor Celement V as well as the French king Philippe IV (historical background: both were cursed -to their 13th generation- by Jacques de Molay, Preceptor of the Templars, after the order was disbanded as "heretics" when he was being burnt at the stake... all died within a short period of time under mysterious circumstances, and all the king's offspring fared badly as well... ending up in the 100 years' war between England and France), as well as what happened to their treasure that was never found in their main fortress in Paris. The mission will take him from Spain to Avignon to Paris and then back down to the Pyrenees to follow the greatest pilgrimage route of Medieval Europe: el Camino de Santiago all the way to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia. (mental note: I want to walk that -or part of it- some day!) 
A pretty good thriller with some mysterious characters and a thrilling period of history as a background. I zipped right through it! :o)
How's your Spanish? You can download first chapters of any of her novels here.

Have also read a Star Wars novel from the Legacy of the Force series (#2 - Bloodlines), but am saving up talking about those as a group once I'm done with all 9. ;o)

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Fishy Fridays ep. 8

On our last Fishy Friday episode we had finished off with the temperate (or cold) sea water section (with the moray eels, the grouper and the scorpionfish). I'm sure those of you who, like me, are entering into the depths of winter now would enjoy a little bit of warmth... so it's time to start up with the TROPICAL SPECIES! Still marine species, mostly from the Red Sea or the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Be prepared for bright colours and snazzy defense systems!

We're going to start off small: small aquarium and small critters!

Sadly they're also critters who WON'T STOP MOVING!!! So the pictures might be a tad bit fuzzy... :p (I need a good tripod, but they're too damn expensive!)

As per usual clicking on a name will take you to its FishBase page for more scientific info,a dn clicking on a photo makes it bigger! And now, on with the show!



Funky, huh?! Wait 'till you see them close up! ;o)

keep reading!

Movie Magic: One Night At The Movies Long Ago

So there's little Blog-A-Thon going on today (we write) / tomorrow (we all get linked up to) organised by the Kid In the Front Row, and I thought it might be fun to join in! The idea is to all "share a memory from a memorable time we had at the movies, from some time in our past".

My only problem has been choosing just the one!

keep reading!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Monthly Movies November'09

A rather diverse movie-month! Little-known WW2 resistance fighters in Paris. A crazy mega music festival. Vampires and werewolves. Russian ex-Bolshoi musicians impersonating current Bolsho� musicians for a Tchaikovski concert in Paris. Corporate whistle-blowers. Dolphins. Even linguistically: Rumanian, Hebrew, English, Russian, French, Japanese...

Care to take a look? ;o)

keep reading!

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Movie Madness: The Cove



Woah!

What can I say, these guys sure know how to get their message out, albeit in a highly manipulative-tug-on-the-heartstrings kind of way.



keep reading!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Movie Magic: Le Concert





I think this is my favourite movie of the year so far.

I walked out of the cinema with tears in my eyes and yet feeling completely zen. A Franco-Russian musical fairy tale. :o)


keep reading!