Wednesday, March 31, 2010

i will surprise you sometime, i'll come around.

I've got some excellent (predominantly sports-related) links today:

--John Morgan of Field Gulls (collaborator with one of the very best in the business, Football Outsiders' Doug Farrar) is doing an excellent, play-by-play breakdown of some of the top prospects in the 2009 Draft.  Included: my man Eric Berry ("a place where nothing ever happens," as Morgan says); CJ Spiller; Taylor Mays; Gerald McCoy.

--SB Nation's Clemson blog, Shakin' the Southland, put up some comprehensive overviews of defensive coaching points, strategy, and terminology.  Defensive backs are given special attention, which is obviously my jam.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

first draft of the first chapter in (hopefully) my first novel.


Gene Lazenby has one primary goal in life: make it look easy.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

listen, listen. most of us believe that this is wrong.

--First, I'll use my immense star power to plug Patrick's new blog and Sam's new (excellently-titled) blog.  Godspeed, fellow Blogfricans.

--Since you're dying to know, here's what's in circulation on my iTunes right now:
  • "Gideon," by My Morning Jacket.  Powerful, with some excellent lyrics.
  • "Obstacle 1," by Interpol.  Interpol was/is more consistently excellent than Joy Division ever was.
  • "We Can Get Down," by A Tribe Called Quest.  So fresh.
  • "Church," by Outkast.  I'm loving Speakerboxxx.
  • "What It's All About," by Girl Talk.  Solely for the "C.R.E.A.M." section.
  • "Grounds For Divorce," by Elbow.  Dig the lyrics, the Peter Gabriel vibe, and the lead singer's uncanny resemblance to Stephen Fry.
  • "Can't Say No," by The Helio Sequence.  One of three excellent songs on a pretty bland album.
  • "Famous Blue Raincoat," by Leonard Cohen.  Gorgeous, gorgeous, gorgeous.
  • "The Rake's Song," by The Decemberists.  I love how much fun Colin Meloy has with evil.

Friday, March 19, 2010

books which have influenced me most.

Stolen from Chris Brown, who stole it in turn from Marginal Revolution, here are the 10 books (in order, at least through the top 4) which have most influenced me:

1. The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler.  
--A model for living decently in a patently indecent world.  In practical terms, it's a beautiful and endlessly readable book, and Chandler is probably the greatest influence on my writing.

2.  The Works of T.S. Eliot.  
--Eliot speaks to me as a writer because he shows me how to communicate in absolute terms.  He speaks to me as a thinker because he's as preoccupied with the Western tradition as I am.  He speaks to me as a reader because his poetry is as breathtaking today as it was when I first read him.

3.  The Roman Revolution, by Ronald Syme.
4.  Thucydides' The Peloponnesian War, translated by Thomas Hobbes.  
--Historians like to talk about revelatory moments, times when something suddenly clicks or a particular historical question reveals itself.  Learning from these books in Oxford provided me the former, showing me that there's no such thing as nonfiction, and that there's no value in history if it's abstracted from the people who need it.

5.  Hamlet, by William Shakespeare.  
--There were a lot of things I thought I understood about the Western tradition after reading Plato, but none of them (especially the conflict between reason and passion) were really clear until I read Hamlet

6.  The Conservative Mind, by Russell Kirk.  
--Kirk introduced me to Edmund Burke, the political philosopher whose insights and values are most closely calibrated to mine.  When I try to define my political beliefs now, Kirk's discussions of Burke, Tocqueville, and others serve as invaluable guideposts.

7.  The Greek Way, by Edith Hamilton.
8.  Homer's Iliad, translated by Samuel Butler.
9.  Suetonius' The Twelve Caesars, translated by Robert Graves. 
--These three books, more than any others, fostered my love of the classics and really got me enthusiastic about the sweeping heroism, complex characters, and occasional hilarity of the ancient world.

10.  As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner.
--Faulkner's ability to write transcendentally about the mundane aspirations of a white trash family, to elevate their quest from a spiteful demand to a grand tragedy, left an indelible impression on me; the notion that you can make something beautiful or meaningful out of ugliness is profound and profoundly interesting.

Friday, March 12, 2010

is it chemically derived?

--On my first day of spring break, I got about a gig of new music, specifically albums by Elbow, MGMT, Sigur Ros, Caribou, Interpol, Liars, Midlake, Jane's Addiction, The Strokes, The Black Keys, A Tribe Called Quest, Eric B. and Rakim, and Public Enemy.  More details will be forthcoming; Interpol's Turn on the Bright Lights is an early winner.