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Rarely There

A collection of discourses - myriad, profound, uplifting...
Bah! Who am I kidding?!
It is just a blog.

Monday, November 29, 2010

The Lost Symbol



The Lost Symbol
by Dan Brown

Ages ago, when I recorded my thoughts on my then recent-reads by Dan Brown, I was looking forward to the next book involving Prof. Langdon. Now that I've read The Lost Symbol, I must say I feel terribly let down.

I typically reserve this little corner of mine for noting down books that I liked - a sort of self-imposed rule to share the joys... after all, what is the point of writing about all the books I didn't enjoy? However, I have to make exceptions every now and then, and this is one of them.

The Lost Symbol was frustrating to get through, to say the least. The writing was banal, the plot was anemic, the characters were stale and tiresome, the villain was one-dimensional and unsurprising. All of this would have been easier to handle if there was an overarching mystery minus the sermonizing.

Rather than languish in the disillusion, I'll quit with this brief report.

[Image source: knopfdoubleday.com/danbrown/]

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Sewing: Simple Kids' Quilt


This is a simple quilt, no fancy piecing, just square blocks stitched into rows and then into a 34x44 inch rectangle to make up the front, with appliqué heart in the center.

I had a plush micro-fleece blanket in red and pink print which is warm enough for Spring and Fall. I used it as backing for this quilt, sandwiching soft cotton batting in-between.

It started out as Ana's quilt with the Valentine's Day theme. But, Oggie uses it more these days as Ana is getting a bit too big for this smallish quilt.

This thick quilt with plush micro-fleece back makes it wonderful to cuddle up in winter.

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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Sewing: Kids Pants


The cotton and spandex knit fabric is one of my favorites to use for kids' clothing (pique, ribbed, jersey etc.) as it has a bit of stretch and is very forgiving when I ignore some of the basic tenets of sewing :))

I had enough fabric to make a size 3T elastic-waist pants for Og and a size 5T fitted-elastic-waist one for Ana and figured if not at this age, when else will they let me make matching clothes for them (and expect them to wear it and be happy about it)?!

Oh, and I don't use ready-made patterns much. I just make up the patterns - sort of draft it with newspaper, but, basically try something based on what I've tried before. I love patterns, don;t get me wrong... I just feel intimidated by them at times...



This sage fabric has been with me since Ana's toddlerhood when I bought it on sale and made a "designer" t-shirt for Ana. And then, when it grew small for her, I "stretched" it a little by sewing on a frilly extension.



The toucan on Oggie's and fairy on Ana's was the fun part for me. I probably should have found a good picture and traced the toucan better, but, free-hand didn't work out so bad - the bird simply looks fat and slightly disproportionate... I guess his colors give away his identity anyway :)

The fairy appliqué was easier as we had done numerous paper-chain fairies looking like this.

I cut out the colorful fabric shapes for hair and dress, glued it onto a white cotton backing fabric; then when dry, trimmed it all around, and reinforced the edges with satin-like zigzag stitch. I was wondering about the yellow hair on the fairy, but since we have many paper-chain ones with colorful hair, I decided not to over-think it.

The wings are made from the lilac organza fabric leftover from when I had sewn Ana's "Purple Princess" Dress.

Of course, there has to be a pocket in Ana's pants for all the little rocks and leaves and acorns and baby pine cones and what-not... and the fabric for pocket is leftover from the Summer Whimsy dress.

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The Third Chimpanzee


The Third Chimpanzee
The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal
by Jared Diamond
(2006)

Originally published in 1992, The Third Chimpanzee covers a broad range of topics drawing from author's personal experience and research on environmental determinism to anthropology, evolutionary biology, linguistics, archaeology.

Each chapter in this book can easily develop into a book of its own. It seems a Herculean task to paraphrase this book and do justice to it.

His later book Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies (GG&S) won the Pulitzer prize and is an astounding read. Many of the seeds for GG&S (and a later book "Collapse") were sown in The Third Chimpanzee.

The first part of the book talks about genetics and evolution. I found The Selfish Gene by Dawkins far more compelling. But, I am just a curious layman, so, I could be partial to the idea of natural selection as laid out in Dawkins' book.

However, the author's argument for aging was not only interesting but was quite funny. Much like some evolutionary adaptations in other species which seem contrary to their persistence and well-being, aging at first glance might seem antithetic to human evolutionary perfection.

The chapter on linguistics, tracing back to the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) peoples absolutely fascinated me. To be able to linguistically reconstruct human evolution must be formidable, especially since nothing much can be conclusive about languages prior to the oldest written record that archaeologists can find.

The impact of first contact on pockets of well-preserved cultures was another interesting chapter, considering that many of these isolated cultures barely knew about their own neighbors let alone far off lands.

The sections dealing with agriculture and art were thought-provoking. Some of the romantic myths about hunter-gatherer lifestyle was crumpled and tossed aside with the author's strong presentation of historical and research data.

And, until farming was mastered, the nomadic lifestyle relying solely on hunting and foraging left little room for pursuit of art and leisure. And, once the lifestyle afforded leisure, the class system was inevitable where a handful profited from the toil of the rest using power or force.

What makes us unique? The human animal branched off from its nearest ancestors - the pygmy chimpanzee and the common chimpanzee - not too long ago and rapidly evolved into a species with such uncommon traits that let them take over the whole earth.

Yet, despite our supposed superiority, we exhibit disturbing characteristics of self-destruction - by destroying our environment, by genocide, and by self-inflicted drug-abuse.

The chapter on genocide was very hard to read - all historical facts, not commonly discussed, but the Holocaust was not the biggest and the only mass murder of our own species as the author painfully points out the Zimbabwe history.

The second half of the book is the basis for the GG&S and Collapse books that came later. His talk on Why Societies Collapse is quite interesting, even if rather heavy and professorial.

The Third Chimpanzee is an eye-opening book which cannot be read in a hurry. Much like Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, this book left me with far deeper ideas to ponder on than mere day-to-day existence, or even the staggering vastness of our Universe. This book forces us to turn inwards, regardless of our particular flavor of belief-system/faith and probe our collective psyche and correct our course before it is too late.

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