PlanetHuff Down

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I’m sorry if you’ve been trying to access any pages on PlanetHuff.com (including this one) over the last couple of days. Tech support appears to have fixed the problem, but I don’t understand what it was — I thought I spoke Geek pretty well, but I’m obviously not fluent.

If you continue to have problems viewing the web sites on this domain, please contact either Steve or me by e-mail (remove the (AT) and replace with @).


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Posted in IT

Lolita

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If at times Lolita is difficult to wade through, I suppose the reader can chalk that up to the narrator’s admitted psychiatric problems. This book was hard to finish on many levels. First of all, the language itself is dense and beautiful, but requires the constant attention of the reader. I was unable to simply flip through pages, and I often had to go back and re-read things I’d missed. I wish I had a footnoted copy of this book in order to translate all the French I’ve forgotten since high school, as Humbert was so fond of throwing French speech into the narrative. Second, the narrator is absolutely despicable and reprehensible. I have to say that anyone who uses the term “Lolita” to refer to a sexually-aggressive female adolescent probably has not read this book. It is clear that poor Lolita is very much a victim of Humbert Humbert — a point made clear even though it is told only through his point of view. He is an unreliable narrator. His language, his intelligence are meant to beautify his actions and evoke sympathy from the reader, and a quick glance at several Amazon reviews for this book demonstrate that many readers do fall for his story. Humbert Humbert is a creepy pedophile, even if he is gifted with language. He admits to hanging out in places where he is likely to see girls in his target “attraction range,” which is a trait common to pedophiles. He is unattracted to girls or women of any other age range.

Interestingly, Nabokov’s allusions to Edgar Allan Poe’s work really made me see Poe in a new light — a sort of Humbert Humbert, if you will. As an American Literature teacher, I know Poe married his pubescent cousin. I always thought it was weird. After reading this novel, I see it as weird on a whole new level. Humbert excuses his lust for Lolita through allusions to other times, when grown men took child brides. I had always excused Poe’s behavior that way, but I find now that I don’t. Poe’s behavior was pedophiliac. Humbert christens his first love Annabel Leigh (a clear reference to Poe’s poem “Annabel Lee”). I do think a familiarity with Poe is helpful to readers of this novel.

I think this novel is open to both a literal and symbolic interpretation, which is one of the reasons it was stimulating intellectually. Humbert represents Europe — jaded, cynical, refined, intelligent, formal, but also corrupt. Lolita, on the other hand, represents America — young, uncouth, unrefined, naive. America raped and corrupted by the Old World. I think that it is an interesting way to look at the novel, and it works. As Nabokov emigrated to America, I have to wonder if the clash in cultures he experienced didn’t contribute to some of the ideas expressed in the novel.

I am glad I read this book. In a way, I feel like an initiate into a special literature club. It was really hard, though, and I wanted to smack the narrator constantly. He’s very clever, but he’s evil. I argue with the notion that this is an erotic novel. Humbert’s pedophilia is anything but erotic. I don’t see how readers could walk away from this book and feel that Nabokov was endorsing the idea that a grown man and a girl child can have a normal sexual relationship. In other words, Nabokov does not glamorize pedophilia or make it seem in any way romantic — quite the reverse. I am, however, no longer surprised that it is controversial — it astonishes me that Nabokov found a publisher for such fare in the 1950’s. The novel is beautifully written, and even funny in places, but ultimately, it is so sad — even Humbert eventually acknowledges that he ruined Lolita’s life. I think Lolita is a very good study of the mindset of a pedophile, and I shouldn’t be too surprised to learn that psychologists might study it for that reason.


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Birthday Books are Here!

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I got my birthday books today. There is really nothing like brand new books, with their crisp white pages.

I have to hurry up and finish Lolita so I can read one of my new books. Which one?

Incidentally, if you heard a blurb about my school on the news, you were not hearing things. We were indeed featured on Neal Boortz’s talk show among other news outlets due to a recent brush with Fulton County Schools and eminent domain. Read about it at my education blog (“Groundbreaking” and “Eminent Domain”).


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World View Meme

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I was actually kind of impressed with the accuracy of this one:


Your World View

You are a fairly broadminded romantic and reasonably content.

You value kindness and try to live by your ideals.

You have strong need for security, which may be either emotional or material.

You respect truth and are flexible.

You like people, and they can readily make friends with you.

You are not very adventurous, but this does not bother you.


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Flight 93

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I made no comment yesterday in reference to 9/11. Each year on the anniversary, there has been some recognition. I don’t always write about it. Sometimes I feel like anything I could say would be feeble. How does one address such tragedy? The commemoration is always so painful, and I guess sometimes I try to avoid it. That is not something I’m proud of, by the way, especially when so many people died. After midnight, I caught the repeat of Discovery Channel’s special, Flight 93: The Flight That Fought Back. It was one of the most well-done documentaries I’ve seen, excellently narrated by Kiefer Sutherland. I don’t think that honoring the decision that people on Flight 93 made in any way detracts from what happened on the other flights — those other Americans had no idea what was happening. Flight 93 was armed with more information, which informed their decision. If you would like to donate toward creating a National Memorial to Flight 93, you can visit the National Park Foundation’s Flight 93 National Memorial information site.


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The Hours (The Movie)

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On July 1, 2003, I wrote in an online diary I no longer maintain:

I finished The Hours. I haven’t seen the movie, so maybe that’s why, but I just don’t see how one could make a movie out of this book. I mean, I’ve never read a book that seemed so intensely aware of itself as a book. It was almost like the book itself was the narrator, the thread that pulled the three stories together.

My memory crafted a much longer review of the book than that, but it would seem that’s all there is. I do remember feeling as if the book was good, but not the kind of thing I’d read again, and it was certainly not an uplifting book. I finally saw the movie on A&E today. I had been wanting to see it, but I hadn’t gone out of my way to rent it or buy it, and I just never got around to it. I have to say that the movie was extremely close to the book. I think, in some ways, it was better, because the actors were so incredibly good that they gave the book a kind of life that it didn’t have, at least for me. I especially liked Ed Harris as Richard, with whom I didn’t sympathize much in the book. Of course, Meryl Streep was great, as was Nicole Kidman (whom I defy you to identify as Kidman had you not known it was her). The scene in which Virginia Woolf pockets those stones and walks into the river was particularly well done. Through the magic of movies, the intertwining stories were actually more obviously related than in the book. The director was able to cut from one story to the next more fluidly than a writer can do with a pen, I think. However, I really disliked the omnipresent, overbearing soundtrack.

I think I feel about the movie as I did about the book. I don’t think this is one I could watch over and over. I’m not sure I’d want to see it again. It isn’t that I didn’t like it or think it was well done, because neither is true. It was just… depressing, I guess.


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Blackbird House

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Alice Hoffman’s book Blackbird House is subtitled “A Novel,” but it really isn’t. It is more accurately described as a series of vignettes, as the chapters do not feel complete enough to even be called short stories. Blackbird House, set on Cape Cod, takes place at different times between the pre-Revolutionary period to the present, tracing the stories of various owners of the home across over 200 years. San Francisco Chronicle reviewer Irene Wanner accurately described Hoffman’s narrative:

For the most part, these episodes operate without the formal short-fiction structure of conflict, climax and resolution; the book isn’t a story collection. Neither is it a traditional novel centered on a main character’s problem. Instead, setting and time serve as the book’s linking device.

I thought the idea was very intriguing, which is what caused me to purchase the book. In execution, it doesn’t work, largely because just as the reader gets to know the characters, the narrative moves on to the next story, most often introducing new characters with new stories. The reader never seems to find out the endings of any of the stories that Hoffman starts.

Hoffman weaves her narrative together with several symbols — the color red, the white blackbird, the red pear tree, and the sweet peas, most of which make an appearance in each story. I started to dread the sight of that white blackbird. In the apt words of Houston Chronicle writer Sharan McBride:

The trouble with Hoffman’s linked narrative is that tragedy and losses that seem moving and affecting early in the book begin to feel manipulative and programmed by the 12th story. And when a white blackbird appears or someone smells the wild sweet peas in the field, you know a loved one is going to get whacked as surely as you do when the camera looks up into the cold eyes of Tony Soprano.

There is too much sadness and grief, and perhaps because the reader never gets the whole story in any one of the vignettes, it is easy to wonder what purpose there is in so much tragedy. I think I just wanted more from this book, as a reader, than it felt like it was willing to give. Perhaps that was Hoffman’s goal. In the end, it seemed that the only permanent aspect of life was the house, which outlived each of her occupants, and was ultimately more interesting than all of them.


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Katrina: A Call for Action

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One of the teachers at our school, a rabbi, spoke to us as a school community about the importance of action after the horrible disaster in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He broke it down so beautifully and eloquently, that I don’t think one could help but take action after hearing him speak.

First of all, we are compelled to see it. We need to look at the pictures. We need to watch the news. As hard as it is, we have an obligation not to turn away.

Second, we need to feel it. We need to feel the compassion, the sadness, the devastation. We need to sympathize with our brothers and sisters who do not have what we do — homes, food, water, and in a great number of cases, shelter. Their jobs and schools are closed. Our loved ones are with us. Many of the survivors of this disaster lost family and friends. It is hard to let it sink in and feel such pain, but unless we do, we will not be compelled to act. And action is the only thing that will help.

Helen Keller once said, “I am only one; but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something.” This tragedy seems big, and it is easy to tell yourself you’re too small to do something. If everyone gives some money, no matter the amount, it will be amazing, incredible — the things we can do. You can do something. As a fellow human being, you are obligated to do something. It is only through human action that life can be made better for those suffering.

My school is raising money to donate to the American Red Cross. We are donating clothing through a clothing drive. It will be taken to a shelter downtown, where some of the refugees are staying. If you would like to donate, there are a number of safe places who will take your donations and help the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

If you would like to join your donation with those of our school, you can contact me via e-mail (change the (AT) to @) and I will put you in touch with the coordinators of our efforts.

Helen Keller also said, “Although the world is full of suffering, it is also full of the overcoming of it.” In order for our brothers and sisters in New Orleans, Mississippi, and Alabama to overcome their suffering, they need our help, and it is our duty, our responsibility to our fellow man to help in whatever way we can.


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Top 100 Meme

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It has been an incredibly long time since I participated in a meme, but Dana had a good one that brought back some memories. The idea is to post the Top 100 songs from the year you graduated from high school and highlight the ones you liked. The songs I liked will be bold. I found a site with the ARC Top Songs here.

  1. “Nothing Compares 2 U” — Sinéad O’Connor
  2. “Vogue” — Madonna
  3. “Vision of Love” — Mariah Carey
  4. “Poison” — Bell Biv Devoe
  5. “From a Distance” — Bette Midler
  6. “Love Takes Time” — Mariah Carey
  7. “Hold On” — Wilson Phillips
  8. “Because I Love You (The Postman Song)” — Stevie B
  9. “It Must Have Been Love” — Roxette
  10. “Pump Up the Jam” — Technotronic (*Dana blushes and hides her face*)
  11. “Rub You the Right Way” — Johnny Gill
  12. “Do Me!” — Bell Biv Devoe
  13. “The Power” — Snap
  14. “Cradle of Love” — Billy Idol
  15. “How Am I Supposed to Live Without You?” — Michael Bolton
  16. “Close to You” — Maxi Priest
  17. “Escapade” — Janet Jackson
  18. “Hold On” — En Vogue
  19. “Ice Ice Baby” — Vanilla Ice
  20. “Release Me” — Wilson Phillips
  21. “I’m Your Baby Tonight” — Whitney Houston
  22. “Blaze of Glory” — Bon Jovi
  23. “She Ain’t Worth It” — Glenn Medeiros featuring Bobby Brown
  24. “Love Will Lead You Back” — Taylor Dayne
  25. “All Around the World” — Lisa Stansfield
  26. “If Wishes Came True” — Sweet Sensation
  27. “Opposites Attract” — Paula Abdul featuring the Wild Pair (*Dana has no excuses and apologizes most sincerely*)
  28. “Unchained Melody” — The Righteous Brothers
  29. “I Don’t Have the Heart” — James Ingram
  30. “(Can’t Live Without Your) Love and Affection” — Nelson (*Gah. No excuse.*)
  31. “Impulsive” — Wilson Phillips
  32. “Two to Make It Right” — Seduction
  33. “Black Velvet” — Alannah Myles
  34. “Everything” — Jody Watley
  35. “All I Wanna Do Is Make Love to You” — Heart
  36. “I Wanna Be Rich” — Calloway
  37. “Roam” — The B-52’s
  38. “Sending All My Love” — Linear
  39. “Don’t Wanna Fall In Love” — Jane Child
  40. “Rhythm Nation” — Janet Jackson
  41. “Here And Now” — Luther Vandross
  42. “The Way You Do The Things You Do” — UB40
  43. “Downtown Train” — Rod Stewart
  44. “Feels Good” — Tony! Toni! Tone!
  45. “Something To Believe In” — Poison
  46. “Can’t Stop” — After 7
  47. “Dangerous” — Roxette
  48. “Unskinny Bop” — Poison
  49. “Step By Step” — New Kids On The Block
  50. “Groove Is In The Heart” — Deee-Lite
  51. “Black Cat” — Janet Jackson
  52. “Alright” — Janet Jackson
  53. “Come Back To Me” — Janet Jackson
  54. “Giving You The Benefit” — Pebbles
  55. “I’ll Be Your Everything” — Tommy Page
  56. “More Than Words Can Say” — Alias
  57. “Just Between You And Me” — Lou Gramm
  58. “U Can’t Touch This” — MC Hammer
  59. “Have You Seen Her” — MC Hammer
  60. “No More Lies” — Michel’le
  61. “Enjoy The Silence” — Depeche Mode
  62. “Janie’s Got A Gun” — Aerosmith
  63. “Love Song” — Tesla
  64. “Do You Remember?” — Phil Collins
  65. “Pray” — MC Hammer
  66. “Free Fallin'” — Tom Petty
  67. “I’ll Be Your Shelter” — Taylor Dayne
  68. “Praying For Time” — George Michael
  69. “Ready Or Not” — After 7
  70. “How Can We Be Lovers” — Michael Bolton
  71. “Girls Nite Out” — Tyler Collins
  72. “King Of Wishful Thinking” — Go West
  73. “Freedom” — George Michael
  74. “Something Happened On The Way To Heaven” — Phil Collins
  75. “What Kind Of Man Would I Be?” — Chicago
  76. “I Wish It Would Rain Down” — Phil Collins
  77. “Get Up! (Before The Night Is Over)” — Technotronic
  78. “Just Like Jesse James” — Cher
  79. “I Remember You” Skid Row
  80. “Everybody Everybody” — Black Box
  81. “Epic” — Faith No More
  82. “Oh Girl” — Paul Young
  83. “I Go To Extremes” — Billy Joel
  84. “Price Of Love” — Bad English
  85. “Romeo” — Dino
  86. “When I’m Back On My Feet Again” — Michael Bolton
  87. “Here We Are” — Gloria Estefan
  88. “Make You Sweat” — Keith Sweat
  89. “Whip Appeal” — Babyface
  90. “Forever” — Kiss
  91. “What It Takes” — Aerosmith
  92. “C’mon And Get My Love” — D-Mob with Cathy Dennis
  93. “Stranded” — Heart
  94. “The Humpty Dance” — Digital Underground
  95. “This One’s For The Children” — New Kids On The Block
  96. “When The Night Comes” — Joe Cocker
  97. “Miracle — Bon Jovi
  98. “Whole Wide World” — A’me Lorain
  99. “Jerk Out” — The Time
  100. “Knockin’ Boots” — Candyman

Wow. I don’t even remember a lot of those. I should upload the ones I liked to my radio blog, but not tonight. I need to go to bed! I really hope Steve does this — 1986 was such a good year.


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