Tuesday, June 5, 2012
…Today someone asked how old I was and I told them but I added a year
to my age and after the amended age was already out in the spoken air it was
too late to retrieve it, so for one day I was more mature than I wanted to be,
than I ever want to be.
I say this having just read Anna Quindlen’s memoir, “Lots of
Candles. Plenty of Cake” where she says
younger is not better. She reports that
a Gallup poll of 340,000 people showed unequivocally that we get more content
as we age.”
I guess I disagree.
I guess I think there’s a difference between being content and being
uninhibitedly spirited.
I’m not saying I’m not happy, because I am. But I’d start all over at age sixteen again
if someone would give me the chance.
I’d do it in a heartbeat.
...In a few days Angelina Jolie will turn 37. It seems as if she’s fifty or something.
…Breaking Bad,” the greatest television show ever, begins its fifth
season in July. You really should watch
this. Get Season 1 on Netflix or get the
dvd’s. You’ll be very happy.
It’s about a Chemistry teacher who has lung cancer and sells meth with a
former student. I know that sounds
wacky, but the acting, direction, writing and cinematography are astounding.
…It’s the 25th anniversary of Paul Simon’s groundbreaking
album “Graceland.” That’s another thing
you should get. (I’m not steering you
wrong here.)
…The comic book movie “Avengers” has broken all kinds of records. Its domestic gross topped $523 million in
less than four weeks.
“Battleship,” a film based on a board game is hot, too.
“Men in Black 3” about aliens sold $70 million in one week.
Where I live these are the kinds of movies the cinaplexes play, nothing
art house. For that it’s a long drive
into the city.
That’s pretty much why I don’t go to the movies anymore.
I’m not a snob, but I have to have a film shake me emotionally and not
with special effects.
…This quote says what I can never come up with when people ask me why I
don’t write happy things:
"I've been asked why such a happy person like me
writes such unsettling dark novels and I think the answer if because it helps
me be happy in my real life to explore all the darkness. I do ruin lives in my novels, but I try not
to end them. I try to give people some
sense of hope, though I never have people walking off into the sunset with
everything solved." -Caroline Leavitt
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment