So Misguided

Plain words, uncommon sense

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Book Review: The Meaning of Night by Michael Cox

Fans of historical fiction must seek out this book.

The Meaning of Night by Michael Cox (McClelland & Stewart, 2006)

Michael Cox is a first-time author from Northamptonshire, UK. and he’s written the confession of Edward Glyver. Fictional? Of course … or is it?

Indeed it is.

Cox, however, has used a literary technique that I quite like. He adds another layer to the story by introducing J. J. Antrobus as the editor of the work. This fictional character borders that fine line between fiction and nonfiction. Allowing readers to be momentarily disoriented–is this a novel or historical work?

The device also allows Cox’s “editor” to add footnotes to the text, informing the reader, in a non-intrusive way, of tidbits of information–some of it fictional and some of it historical. I won’t tell you the end of the novel, but this device does increase the reader’s understanding of the story, in particular the knowledge that this “confession” has been found and the “true” story revealed to future generations.

The writing reminds me of Dickens, or a Victorian-England writer of your choice. The book starts out at quite a clip, has a little lull early on, and then you pretty much roar through the 600 page tome.

Quote: “After killing the red-haired man, I took myself off to Quinn’s for an oyster supper …”

See, speedy intro.

You might wonder how the reader is to sympathize with a main character who kills an innocent man, just to make sure he’ll be able to do it when face to face with his enemy, but this is a story of deceit, murder and revenge. Edward Glyver is definitely one of the most likeable of the leading ladies and lads.

More about the book

Edward Glyver, book lover, scholar and murderer. He discovers upon the death of his mother that he is not who he’s been raised to believe he is. In a twist of circumstances, the boy who had him expelled from school is the man set to inherit Glyver’s intended fortune.

There’s drama, passion, strong writing, a captivating story, interesting characters, and all sorts of goodies.

The Meaning of Night website has a number features about the book and the author.

You can download Part One in PDF.

Having read the book already, I’m less interested in that aspect, however, I did enjoy Michael’s message to readers:

Quote: Thanks for visiting The Meaning of Night website.

I hope readers of the novel will enjoy browsing the images and other material gathered together on the site, and that they’ll provide some entertaining insights into the world of the novel’s narrator, Edward Glyver.

What I’ve tried to do in The Meaning of Night is to create an imagined world that’s solid and circumstantial, but which exists somewhere apart from the mundane and the everyday, a world in which extraordinary things happen, but which still remains plausible and somehow real.

The novel is also a homage to the primal power of story, and to the great storytellers I admire ÔøΩ people like Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Conan Doyle, Robert Louis Stevenson and Rafael Sabatini. These are the writers I return to again and again, and who have inspired The Meaning of Night. If I’ve succeeded in creating a story that grips the reader from the first line to the last, then I’ll feel I’ve done my job.

So if you’ve already read the novel ÔøΩ thank you. If you haven’t, I hope you will soon.

Best wishes,

Michael Cox

Strong Winds Knock Down Tree in Kitsilano, Vancouver

Tree covers intersection at First and Maple, VancouverAt 3:15 today, James and I had just returned home. The wind was gushing and the trees were being whipped around. I decided to film the wind because it was so intense, howling and twisting the trees about. Just as I finished the first clip I turned around to film up the street and a huge tree on the corner of First Ave. and Maple came crashing down. I just missed catching it on film. One crack, no other sound, and then it was covering the entire intersection. The tree just missed a car parked behind the stop sign, and just missed a woman who was crossing the intersection.

My guess is the tree is 60-70 ft but I’m never very good at these things. The building is a three-story apartment and the trees are taller than the building.

The wind is still howling.

Here’s 5 photos. I’ll post the video soon.

UPDATE: This story is NowPublic (photos and video).

UPDATE 2: Here’s my YouTube video of the wind storm and tree knocked down in Kitsilano (post-fall).

Five (More) Things You Don’t Know About Me

Robert tagged me, then untagged me, but I’m still game. Here are five things most people don’t know about me.

1. I have a freckle patch. Aside from a few strategically placed freckles, all my freckles congregate on the inside of my right arm.

2. I used to pack parachutes at the Gimli airfield. I packed parachutes in exchange for free jumps. I was on pins and needles one day watching my friend spiral down. I was standing next to his mother assuring her that the parachute did sometimes take that long to deploy. It was a chute I packed. Fortune was on our side and he landed safely. The problem was not the chute. He panicked and instead of falling in a spread eagle shape, he curled into a ball. The chute deployed but the canopy when between his legs and he was caught up in it. Again, thankfully good fortune was on our side. He only suffered the embarassment of peeing his pants.

3. I designed the logo for the Beautiful Plains School Division. I don’t have a bigger image. It’s a book with three sized people on the right–representing teachers, high school and elementary school kids. I was 16 or 17 when I designed it.

image

4. I have $300 tap shoes. (They make me go faster.)

5. I’m learning to knit and play video games. Both are equally enjoyable and stressful.

Social Signal Launches in Second Life and hires Catherine Omega

Catherine Winters, aka Catherine Omega, is Social Signal’s newest hire, with the fancy title of Manager of Virtual Worlds. I lover her avatar. And Alex is looking really hot too. My avatar needs serious fashion advice.

Here’s Kate’s post on the event with photos.

And here’s Social Signal’s announcement of their latest business offering, plus a white paper on why businesses should take Second Life seriously.

I’m off to Second Life.

DailyLit.com Offers Books Via Email

The Montreal Gazette has a story today: “Books by email – a novel idea: DailyLit.com offers titles in snippets. Site offers hundreds of titles in the public domain – whose copyrights have expired”.

What’s the deal?

DailyLit.com lets you browse by author or title. You can view a detail page of your selection that includes the cover image and opening snippet, and DailyLit tells you how many parts the book is divided into (how many email snippets you’ll receive in order to read the whole book).

Clever idea but there are a couple of drawbacks. The books are anywhere from 17 parts to over 400. That’s a lot of emails. It would take you more than a year to read Middlemarch.

The good thing is that the service is free. The Gazette says, “The free service was launched in September and by word of mouth alone it has raked in 15,000 regular subscribers.” Clearly there’s a demand.

The about section of DailyLit describes the site as follows:
Quote: We created DailyLit because we spent hours each day on email but couldnít find the time to read a book. Now the books come to us by email. Problem solved. We will use this blog to write about new features and (hopefully) receive feedback from readers.

There’s no mention of who the “we” is, however, the Gazette quotes a female literary agent “Danziger” several times. No first name.

One of her points that resonated with me is that book publishers may consider doling out copyrighted titles on a paid subscription. Danzinger is “also pushing to have authors offer email snippets of their books as a marketing tool.” Fantastic idea.

Publishers and authors (not all, but many) will be resistant to the idea of giving away the content for free, but I say fear not. Reading a book over the course of a year can’t be that fun. Depending on your email platform, the messages will likely bounce as spam. But what you could get through (spam filters and people’s attention span), could engage readers, could give them a chance to sample new books, and, done right, could generate word of mouth for books.

Someone–Amazon, Indigo, indie collective, Random House’s booklounge.ca, HarperCollins’ First Look program, any publisher–should create a service that allows people to select the genre of books they’re interested in, and each day? week? month? sends them a little excerpt. The key elements would be 1) a company that wants to build stronger relations with their customer base, 2) a “buy the book” option, either direct online sales or with affiliates, that would complete the selling cycle and allow users to access the detail page info, and, most important, 3) an existing customer base of readers who want to discover new books. Opportunity is knocking.

Or DailyLit.com has plans to open up paid subs with publishers. Why not open up a web interface to the DailyLit database and allow publishers to submit snippets of new works. Everything remains free. New books and old books feed each other. Copyright and serialization are not an issue for the new stuff. Brilliant. Is anyone doing this already?

The New Year Awaits

Welcome to 2007. It is approaching 1 pm and I just dragged myself from bed. Travis and Susie had an awesome party. Thanks guys!

Highlights:
The coat boy
Boris’ enthusiasm at feeding me new foods
My stemless martini glass
Sara’s smooching resolution

Year of the Dog is on the way out. Time to embrace the Pig.

Happy 2007.

Book Review: The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly

The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly is a spin on Grimm’s Fairy Tales.

Twelve-year-old David recently lost his mother and now his father is remarried. Rose is pregnant and when little Georgie comes along the family moves into Rose’s larger family home. David is a reader and a recluse so he’s only happy tucked away in his attic room, where he can read old books and be miserable and jealous of his father’s new-found happiness with Rose and Georgie.

One night David slips away into another world, one of fantasy and adventure. He must make his way to the King, who has a book that might be able to restore him to his world. Along the way there are a number of stories that build upon the Grimm’s Fairy Tales.

I enjoyed this book and thought it was well crafted, but I couldn’t get rid of the eerie sensation that I knew the plot and what was coming next. The Book of Lost Things would be a great read for teens and adults but I suspect that someone uninitiated into the world of Grimm’s would find it more exciting than someone who’s well-versed in fables and fairy tales.

Another New Adventure: Monique Eats Fish

For those of you who have eaten in a restaurant with me, or–heaven help you–tried to make me dinner, you know that I have a long list of allergies. Surprise! This is no longer a problem. I went to a Chinese touchy-feely doctor who cured me. I am now “block free”.

It’s a miracle.

Debra Gibson is a Chinese medicine doctor, but she also does Korean hand massage, acupuncture, and a whole list of things I don’t fully understand. I had four sessions where I basically rested on her table while she got me to hold different glass vials. Every once in a while she’d move my arm and I’d have to resist against her. The first session I got a head massage.

I really can’t explain any of the medicine behind what’s happened to me, it’s all auto-magical as far as I’m concerned.

Here’s are the major food I can now experience:

– vinegar (used to be a tough one, no salad dressings, most sauces, pickles, olives … there’s vinegar in many, many things)
– fish (shellfish, salt water, fresh water, all of it.)
– beans, lentils, mushrooms

No more incredible stomach pain, vomiting, feeling like death is knocking on the door, hives, and other unpleasantries. I’m block free. NOTHING HAPPENS!

I started my little experiment of re-introducing foods 12 weeks ago. In the first 6 weeks, I ate all different kinds of mushrooms. I like cremini the best so far but I haven’t eaten all types of mushrooms so I still have lots to discover. I ate chilli with beans. I don’t quite like kidney beans. Sandwiches with mayonnaise. I definitely do not like mayo, although I did have chipotle mayo with some yam fries that were sprinkled with balsamic vinegar. Delicious. By week 7 I had vinegar–so far only balsamic, no white vinegar except in other sauces. I also ate a quarter of a scallop. Nice, firm, ok taste. No throat swelling so I thought that was great. Needless to say, the scallop was the scariest item to try. With fish I have an instant reaction, and not a good one.

Today was the big test. James, Scott and I went to Go Fish. A seafood shack at Fisherman’s Wharf near Granville Island. I had a one piece halibut fish and chips. I think James was more concerned than I was with the first bite. My anxiety has been lowered substantially by my other successful experiments. I also have been able to walk by the fish stands in Granville Island Market without any reaction.

The halibut was great. I tried the tartar sauce with dill. That was good. I tried the malt vinegar. That was ok. Everything now is just a matter of taste. Eating is an overwhelming experience. There are so many new flavours. It’s an explosion in my mouth. Sometimes I’m not sure if I like something or not. I have to try it a couple of times. It’s like being a child again.

2007 is the year of adventure.

Monique Leaves Raincoast Books to Join Work Industries

Now that I’ve had a chance to speak directly with most of my coworkers and other clients, it’s time to loudly and publicly announce that I am leaving corporate life and joining the growing army of entrepreneurs in my midst.

I will join Work Industries as a partner and owner in mid-January.

Work Industries is an internet consultancy focussed on web strategy, online marketing, content creation, outreach and online community building.

The company was founded by James Sherrett, who has been my sweetheart for 10 years. I’m now committed on both a personal front and a business front.

How’s it all going to work? James and I have worked together before and we’re a good match for each other’s energy and enthusiasm. I’m looking forward to it.

And James says he’s tickled. You can read his announcement here.

So Misguided is my labour of love and books are my passion so stick around because this blog is not going away. You can always contact me here at So Misguided, but if you want to talk shop, I can also be reached at monique at i workindustries dot com. Yes there’s an “i” in there. I work at iWorkIndustries.com

Andy Mckee on YouTube is really rocking my socks

Andy Mckee – Drifting – www.candyrat.com
Watch it here.

Tappers will love it.

Here’s what Don Ross on Candyrat.com has to say: “In my humble opinion, Andy is the most innovative and exciting fingerstyle guitarist to emerge in years. Still in his 20’s, Andy has developed a mastery of the 6-string guitar and the harp guitar that leaves me speechless. He is the most textural player of the instrument since Michael Hedges, and he creates sonic architecture worthy of the great modern composers for any instrument.”

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