Monday, September 21, 2009

Short stories


OK, peoples, once again I'm jonesing for your feedback. I am perusing numerous public-domain short stories for the purpose of recording them for LibriVox. I've already recorded one (a painfully lo-fi version of Saki's "Sredni Vashtar") and have a few others in mind (Hawthorne's "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment," Willa Cather's "Paul's Case: A Study in Temperament," and O. Henry's "Springtime a la Carte"), but I'd like your thoughts about any particularly memorable short stories.

Two caveats before we begin:
  1. Since all LibriVox recordings are in the public domain, most texts are fair game for recording only if their original publication date was prior to 1923. (Nothing more recent than that is allowable, or I'd be on Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" so fast it'd make your head spin.)
  2. Although I love numerous British short stories, I have a distinctly American accent and thus should probably focus on stories by American authors.
It doesn't matter if the story has already been recorded for LibriVox; they're OK with multiple recordings of the same text. So how about it? Any recommendations of crackin' good stories for me?

Monday, September 14, 2009

Magic

Late night/early morning post. At the moment the only sounds I can hear are the steady tick of the wall clock, the hum of the computer fan, and the occasional schussch of a lone car passing on the state highway below. The rich, sweet scent of a bag of French prune plums -- a gift from our very generous downstairs neighbor -- permeates the air.

In this blog, I tend to vacillate between discussion of reality and fantasy on a regular basis. (It's been a recurring theme in my life as well. You folks have no idea how many days I was late to school, despite living only a block or two away from the elementary, because I was busy imagining stories about leprechauns and magic mirrors and enchanted princes when I was supposed to be hauling my little booty to class -- nor how many times I got in trouble for daydreaming once I was finally there.) I suppose that with a title like "Magic," this entry might easily be construed as another leap into the realm of the fantastic, but that's not the intent of this post. What I want to know is: in your lifetimes of experience, Gentle Readers, have you ever encountered something you consider to be real magic?

For my part, I believe that human creative expression in all its forms is a kind of alchemical process. Like alchemy, it doesn't always work; even when it does work, it doesn't always work perfectly. But sometimes, when the stars are in alignment and everything is just so, something happens that can only be called magical -- the moment when a singer hits a particular searing, soaring note and you feel it vibrating sympathetically inside you; when an actor's performance so moves you that you forget you're watching a play or a movie, spellbound by the experience; when a painting is so luminous, so expressive, that you view the frame as a kind of archway to another world; and (my particular favorite) the author's magic: when words on paper or on a screen can make you feel exactly what someone else, perhaps even someone long dead, has felt; when people and things that have never existed come to life in your mind with so much clarity that you remember them better than some of your own memories. What other adjective describes with precision the effects of such acts of creation, if not "magical?"

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Variations on a theme

Nerd Brigade Part II: Electric Boogaloo is currently in progress. The guys are happily fighting kobolds, attempting to throw off a case of the plague, and eating pizza like there's no tomorrow. Many of their comments are highly amusing, but I'm not sharing them here.

My mother is coming to visit very soon (hi Mom!). I've managed to procure some tickets so that she can go see the national touring production of Wicked at the Paramount while she's here. Mom's never seen Wicked... this will be my third time, because I'm kind of an addict, and I'm wondering how it will compare to the others (the first at the Gershwin in New York in 2005, the second at the Pantages in L.A. in 2008).

One of the most interesting things -- for me, anyway -- about seeing multiple stagings of the same play or musical is being able to observe the way a particular role is interpreted by different actors. Though Glinda and Fiyero can be interesting roles, I'm always most curious to see what actresses will do with Elphaba. By the time I saw Wicked at the Gershwin, Idina Menzel had already left the role, so I never got to see her perform -- but those who did have described her interpretation of the character as restrained and aloof, but capable of great passion. The first time I saw the show, Elphaba was being performed by Shoshana Bean, and her interpretation was completely different. Her Elphaba was an optimist -- someone who, despite being mistreated and shunned her entire life, seems to regard each new opportunity as a chance to start fresh; someone who uses self-deprecating humor in an attempt to hide it when she is wounded by a cruel word or action; someone who sees the humor in a lot of life's absurdities; someone who is still doing her best to be authentically herself even though she is continually being made to pay for it. Bean's voice is energetic and expressive, and she sold "Defying Gravity" so thoroughly that it gave me delighted chills. I can't hear anyone perform the song now without comparing it to hers.

At the Pantages, we saw Teal Wicks as Elphaba. Her interpretation focused on the angry, exercised side of the character; she moved with plenty of energy, bristled easily, and sang with passion and fire. The "Defying Gravity" point of the show, where she decides to live by her own rules for good and all, was not a great leap because she portrayed the character as already being three-quarters of the way there from her very first day at Shiz. Her Elphaba was a much less sympathetic character, but she didn't take any guff from anyone.

I know next to nothing about Donna Vivino, who's slated to play Elphaba when we attend the show on the 19th. Looking forward to seeing her do her thing, though, and to see her particular variation.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

CM and the Nerd Brigade!

No, it's not the name of a new band. Captain Midnight, my charming and talented hubby, has donned his Dungeon Master hat and is busy introducing the joys of Dungeons & Dragons to maybe a half-dozen teenage boys from the ward. At the moment they're having long discussions about the differences between intelligence and wisdom, what constitutes constitution, and whether it's better to be a ranger or a paladin. They might actually be ready to start a campaign by the time the pizza is finished baking, but I wouldn't hold my breath.

I didn't get very far into tabletop RPGs when they first became a craze in the late '70s and early '80s. At least part of the problem was the way early D&D games were run -- it was all about battles, and they seemed to be never-ending, as the DM would roll, and roll, and roll again, and then roll some more. You could easily fall asleep in the middle of combat. Streamlined rules have probably improved the experience since I was in eighth grade, but I never really got back into it. And then I married a man with his own First Edition copy of the Fiend Folio.

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Who are you?

As you know if you've been reading this haphazard missive for more than a month or so, I recently got the chance to see a work-in-progress musical -- the theatrical adaptation of Catch Me If You Can. I hadn't planned on seeing it, but when offered a windfall ticket I certainly didn't say no. Catch Me is the (streamlined and slightly sanitized) story of Frank Abagnale, Jr., one of the 20th century's most successful con men. He was able to pass himself off successfully as an airline pilot, a doctor, an attorney and a university teacher, and he passed millions of dollars in bad checks before he was finally caught. The musical version was fun and high-energy, though it could still use a few judicious song deletions before it goes to Broadway.

During intermission, my friend Nick and I got to discussing Abagnale's exploits -- and, more specifically, how he exploited certain social and cultural assumptions. Early on in the play, Frank's dad declares that "a man is his uniform," and Frank uses this social shorthand to his advantage time after time, as people see only the uniform and never bother to notice the tall teenager who is wearing it. Abagnale also was able to exploit a very common Western practice -- confusing or conflating identity with profession.

When people ask a variation of the social introduction question "Who are you," how do you answer? There are numerous possible responses. You might respond to the question with your name or nickname, because it conveys immediate, coded information about your personality, family tree, religious beliefs and social status. You might also respond by declaring your religious or ideological beliefs -- "I'm a Christian," "I'm an atheist," "I'm a socialist" -- with the idea that these beliefs convey a deeper sense of identity. Or you might respond by identifying your star sign or birth order -- "I'm a Libra," "I'm the youngest in my family" -- to let the questioner know that you give credence to the mystic traditions associated with your date of birth.

In our society, we overwhelmingly respond with "I'm a --" and fill in the blank with the name of some profession: writer, singer, teacher, computer programmer, plumber, etc. I believe our society is obsessed with occupation as the primary indicator of identity. We focus so much on it, in fact, that when you come across a woman whose occupation -- wife and mother -- is unpaid, she is loath to admit it in a social context; similarly, when you come across a man who is currently unemployed, he will rarely admit it, preferring to describe himself as "self-employed" or "between jobs" rather than say he has no profession at all.

The polar opposite of Frank in the play, FBI agent Carl Hanratty, is painted as the embodiment of this cultural trait. "I am my job," he declares in one song -- and he means it. He spends all his time at the office, eats and sleeps at his desk, mans the phones even on Christmas Eve, and has even lost his wife and family to the siren song of profession. His fixed sense of self is like a solid rock in the middle of the stream that is Frank's flowing, ever-changing identity.

But profession, while a strong influence and decidedly necessary to one's continued existence, is really only one facet of a multi-dimensional personality. I think it's important to recognize the other aspects of one's identity as well: one's place in a family, personality type, beliefs, friendships, hobbies and interests, hopes and desires, passions and loves. If you choose to zero in only on what you do, you flatten out that personality into a single plane, and in the process lose track of all the other qualities that make up who you are. Likewise, if you have no fixed sense of self and are constantly changing to become whatever you think others expect, eventually you'll find that you have become a kind of sieve, incapable of holding onto anything in your personality that you can call your own.

So maybe the next time I'm at a party and someone asks me, "Who are you?" I'll just smile and say, "Guess you'll just have to watch and find out." (And I'll get pegged as "that weird chick drinking the apple beer" again. Ah well.)

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

On this day in 1993...

  • Slovenian composer Dragotin Cvetko died.
  • Georgia-based rock band Magnapop recorded a session.
  • The USS Francis Scott Key was decommissioned.
  • The first directly elected president of the Republic of Singapore, Ong Teng Cheong, assumed office.
  • One of Juliette Binoche's children was born.
  • The mystery novel The Crocodile Bird by Ruth Rendell was published.
  • Eritrea joined UNESCO.
  • Also, Captain Midnight and I got hitched. (Yay!)
Stuff I never would've known if not for Wikipedia. Well, except for that last one.

It's been 16 years, and he still makes little hearts pop above my head whenever he smiles at me.
Love love love!