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Name: Kate Country: United States State: California Metro: Sacramento Birthday: 1/2/1944 Gender: Female
Interests: Reading, music (listening, attending performances and festivals), gardening, hiking, snow shoeing, genealogy. Expertise: I don't consider myself an expert at anything ... only a very enthusiastic amateur at many things. Occupation: Other Industry: Computers (Internet)
Message: message meEmail: email me
Member Since:
4/9/2002
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| Once again I'm conspicuous by my absence -- this working 8 hours a day is for the birds! And I've been walking with the Walking Sticks (the local Volkswalkers group) as often as possible -- just to keep the collywobbles at bay & hopefully lose a bit of weight in the process.
It's been perishing cold here, at least by California standards. Snow level down as low as 1,000' and the Sierras brought to a standstill. It's all good, it's driven the drought away.
I have an insane urge to redo my web page. And I haven't the faintest clue how to do it, nor do I have the time to either read the directions or plunge ahead and learn from my mistakes. Sigh.
Only 2 more years until retirement, if I can hold out that long.
The Currently doesn't seem to be working, but I'm reading Written in Blood by Caroline Graham. One of my favorite English cozy authors. After I get done with this one & the next one, then I'm off to read Cranford with a friend, in anticipation of the DVD becoming available this side the pond. And then ... who knows what I'll pluck out of that heaving mound of books in the spare bedroom, just waiting to be read!
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| I am SUCH a sucker for these lists!
So I heisted
this from k8tthelate. Feel free to give a go yourself:
These are the top 106 books most
often marked as "unread" by LibraryThing's users.
Instructions: Bold what you have
read, italicize what you started and couldn't finish, strike through what
you couldn't stand, and underline what you loved.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Anna Karenina Crime and Punishment
Catch-22 One Hundred Years of
Solitude Wuthering Heights The Silmarillion Life of Pi : A Novel
The Name of the Rose Don Quixote Moby Dick Ulysses Madame Bovary The Odyssey Pride and Prejudice Jane Eyre A Tale of Two Cities The Brothers
Karamazov Guns, Germs, and
Steel: The Fates of Human Societies War and Peace Vanity Fair The Time Traveler's Wife
The Iliad Emma The Blind
Assassin The Kite Runner Mrs. Dalloway
Great Expectations American Gods
A
Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius Atlas Shrugged Reading Lolita in Tehran : A
Memoir in Books (but it's in my TBR mound) Memoirs of a Geisha Middlesex
Quicksilver Wicked: The
Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West The Canterbury Tales The Historian : A
Novel A Portrait of
the Artist as a Young Man Love in the Time of
Cholera Brave New World The Fountainhead Foucault's Pendulum Middlemarch
Frankenstein The Count of Monte
Cristo Dracula A Clockwork Orange
Anansi Boys The Once and Future
King The Grapes of Wrath The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel
1984 Angels & Demons The Inferno The Satanic Verses Sense and Sensibility
The Picture of Dorian
Gray Mansfield Park One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
To
the Lighthouse Tess of the
D'Urbervilles Oliver
Twist Gulliver's Travels Les Miserables
The Corrections The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Dune The Prince
The Sound and the
Fury Angela's Ashes : A
Memoir The God of Small Things
A
People's History of the United States : 1492-present Cryptonomicon
Neverwhere A Confederacy of Dunces
A Short History of Nearly
Everything Dubliners The Unbearable
Lightness of Being Beloved Slaughterhouse-Five
The Scarlett Letter Eats, Shoots &
Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation The Mists of
Avalon Oryx and Crake : A Novel Collapse: How
Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed Cloud Atlas
The
Confusion Lolita Persuasion
Northanger Abbey The Catcher in the
Rye On the Road The Hunchback of Notre
Dame Freakonomics Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance The Aeneid Watership
Down Gravity's
Rainbow The Hobbit In Cold Blood White Teeth
Treasure Island David Copperfield The Three Musketeers
Looks like I have some reading to do, especially those Russians. They're always so dark and ponderous, not exactly my cuppa tea (which would explain why I haven't read many of them, wouldn't it?)
Well I'm off to cook myself a bit of dinner, & then settle myself down with the next installment of Midsomer Murders courtesy of Netflix. I've hauled all my Caroline Graham books out with an eye to rereading them. I get these sorts of strange fancies when the weather is dark, damp & dreary -- the way it's been the last week or so. I'm finding out that I really need a light box, & possibly more medication. I can't afford either at the moment. 8-(
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| It's the season, isn't it? Things are proceeding mostly on schedule here -- the tree is up and decorated, and this year I love it! It's just the right shape, just the right height, etc.
I collect snow globes, and belsnickles, and rocking horses. True to my nature, I have LOTS of all of them, and they're all twinkling in the living room. For the first time in years, I look forward to sitting there at night, surrounded by all the spirit of Christmas.
All the presents are bought, all the packages that must be mailed are mailed, but one -- which will go out this morning and is only going about 40 miles up the hill, so it should be all right. There's only the wrapping left to do, and another batch of my world famous rum balls for The Kid, who demands them every Christmas. Nothing like family traditions, is there?
I however, am busier than I can even say -- I'm still on probation at the new job even though I'm full time permanent. Which means I don't get paid for holidays. I didn't realize that, took the customary 2 days off at Thanksgiving, and have been behind the 8 ball ever since. It didn't help that I went to Santa Cruz for a Christmas dinner with "The Ladies" (we all worked together back in '82-'83, and have been meeting regularly ever since then.) I'd intended to work on the train, but discovered the trains don't have WiFi. Couldn't work on my friend's computer either as everyone has the password on automatic in their computers & couldn't give it to me. Lost another couple of days there, but I just about have that made up. Looming ahead is Christmas, New Year's and my birthday -- my fellow Capricorn friend and I are going into the City. And I need to get those hours made up, all in the same week that they are lost.
Worst of all, there are so many movies out that I want to go see, and just don't have the time! I started reading the Golden Compass while I was in Santa Cruz -- it's delicious, and I can't wait to get the book & finish it (& read the rest of the trilogy), and to see the movie. Along with Enchanted, Mr. Magorian's Wonder Emporium, The Waterhorse, & Sweeney Todd. Me, who never goes to movies!
A wonderful Christmas season to each any every one of you! May your stockings be full as well as your hearts, and may you get exactly what you whispered in Santa's ear. Nollaig chridheil huibh!
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I have no idea why my red bars don't show up -- how frustrating!
Well I suppose I can't get away with just posting a quiz since it's been so long since I've written here.
Here's all the news that's fit to print: 1. We didn't do the puzzle. I finally read the box -- it's almost 10' long when it's finished! (if I did the math correctly, which is always problematic seeing as I'm enumerate due to dyslexia). It's sitting in its box, waiting for some saw horses & long planks and next summer.
2. The van had an encounter of the unpleasant kind, and didn't survive the experience. This was an unmitigated disaster -- it happened while I was in another town, training for my new job. And it was the sole means of transporting the goods to be sold in my little business. I had a big games the next weekend, so I rented a UHaul truck -- a financial disaster! The next two smaller games I got to by hook or by crook. The last games of the season I had to let go by, since I couldn't afford to rent anything else.
But I do know what I want to buy to replace it: an HHR. These are the cutest little guys, but cuteness isn't what sold me on them. The seats sit straight up! Yes, instead of some buckety, faux lumbar seat which just kills my poor back, they sit straight up. And there's enough leg room so that my left leg doesn't go weird on me (which it tends to do if it's cramped up too long, ever since I twisted it so badly in Texas several years ago). And the back seats fold down so you can have cargo room. I am really jonesin' for one -- but I can't afford it now. Sigh. So I got the old Ford Ranger back up on its tires, and hope it lasts for another year or so, until I can acquire an HHR.
3. The new job seems to be going well, despite the proximity to my daughter. I'm going to be made full time permanent starting Nov. 1, which is absolutely terrific! I love telecommuting -- love being able to walk in my office with a cup of coffee in my hand, sit down & go to work in my jammies. I love being able to get the laundry done while I'm working, love being able to decide to go sit on the patio in the delicious autumn sunlight and read for an hour or two, and then work longer at night to make up the hours. What's not to like?!!
Well, the pay could be a bit better. I still need to augment it, at least until I can get a raise. Not sure how I'm going to do that because I'm not sure I'm going to continue with the haggis biz. I'll get it sorted though, & let you know.
4. It's Indian summer! Last week was chilly and rainy, and I thought about soups and stews, and cocooning. Today was in the 80s, and I craved a BLT for dinner. Stopped by the store & got the bacon and a tomato and fixed myself one too. The last of the season, I'm sure.
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| What WAS I Thinking?

Look at that HEAP of puzzle pieces! The darn thing takes up my entire kitchen table! And before you tell me that it's not all THAT big, let me inform you that this is exactly HALF the pieces.
There's 7,500 of them.
What WAS I thinking? | | |
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