Weeping Angels of LA

Walking down the street in LA last night, I came across this a startling statue in the middle of the sidewalk. If you’re just the typical passerby, you’d still find the figure striking and interesting. If you’re a fan of Doctor Who, you’d find it alarming as well. Clearly this is one of the weeping angels. It’s wearing a mask to disguise itself, but I’m not fooled.

For perspective, my lovely spouse doesn’t really want to watch the episodes with the angels. You know. Because of the nightmares.

So, in honor of the Angels return in next week’s, er … four weeks from now’s episode of Doctor Who, for those of you watching it as the BBC demands of you, I thought I’d mention them. It looks like she’s staring into a mirror, so maybe she’s lost her power.

I didn’t blink as I walked by, all the same.

(This photo was blatantly stolen from Jason in Hollywood’s blog. He appears to be the only guy who has ever posted a picture of this. My phone was out of batteries at the time. Coincidence? Hah!)

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Multidimensional Electioneering

I’m sure all of you are pretty excited about the upcoming parliamentary elections in Britain. I know I am! Well, vicariously, anyway. This guy is seriously excited and it’s hard not to join in the fun. I’m sure he’ll start posting about it soon. Ahem.

Especially since it looks like this is going to be a pretty exciting election. Now that the Time and Space Dinosaurs have through their hats into the ring.

This has already been declared the “Doctor Who Election,” admittedly by the Doctor Who News Page, but clearly they are right. Nothing is effecting the polls more than the Doctor and his Tardis. Just look at this picture of the Liberal Democrat leader. Naturally you see the Tardis in the background; that goes without saying. This is the Doctor Who Election!

Try to pay attention.

But if you look beside the Tardis, you’ll see dinosaurs, given equal billing. They’ve already started to make their presence felt. And although they weren’t invited to the official debates, that snub will only make them stronger.

Actually, they’re time dinos. They can go back in time and intimidate the BBC into letting them participate. Or eating the opposition. We’ve tried to cover all the scenarios, but once you’ve entered the fourth dimension, it gets really complicated. I’m sure we’ll get into all the implications at election night headquarters, also known as the Funtime Lounge.

All I’m saying is that Britain will be led by time traveling dinosaurs after the election next month. You can bank on it.

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Musical Child, Part 2

Abigail loves her music class, as I’m sure I’ve mentioned before. This is only one of a great many songs she not only knows the words to, but the moves. Without further ado, I’ll let Abigail’s YouTube debut say the rest.

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Spring Playtime

It’s an odd feeling to be pushed back from the front door by a sub-two-year-old who is shouting, “Stop it! Stop it!” Particularly when that child has more strength than you would expect in a girl her size.

Abigail and the Twins. They're forming a band, with Abigail as the cat-themed frontwoman. I’m talking of course about Janna from across the street. She was insisting that we don’t go into our house because that would mean that Abigail would be done playing. This was very sweet, since Janna and her twin sister Hannah are only a little bit younger than Abigail. The hugging started pretty much the moment they met our daughter and really hasn’t let up.

When I asked how to tell them apart, I was told that her parents tell them apart by their personalities. This made me sigh inwardly because I figured this would be impossible to tell in kids that young. In fact, it was immediately obvious. Hannah is much like Abigail: interested in trouble to a point, but knows when you cut her losses. Janna is more likely to shrug off her mother and race toward the nearest busy intersection.

They were playing in our cul de sac when we were coming back from our walk with Maggie, so we let Abigail out to play too. Normally, Abigail isn’t allowed into the street at all, but we made an exception. It’s hard to explain why those girls are allowed off the sidewalk, but you aren’t.  Emboldened by this new experience, Abigail hopped up and down in the street shouting, “I’m looking for trouble!”

Soon we were joined by the other kids on our block, an older brother and sister pair – Ian and Sara. They are frequently out riding bikes around twilight, which makes Abigail very happy.  Largely because Abigail is obsessed with seven year old Sara. When she hears a bike outside, she immediately says, “Sara. I go to see Sara.” Oddly enough, the feeling seems to be mutual. You don’t usually find a girl her age that loves playing with a toddler.

We’re getting a lot of playtime with other kids these days. I think there are two reasons. First, Abigail’s ability to interact has improved beyond mere poking. Second, daylight savings has allowed us to be outside of the house after 5 pm. I think it should be a pretty interesting summer.

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Abigail and the Dodo

Things I learned while putting Abigail to sleep today:

“I want some water.”

“Mommy isn’t here. Just Daddy. Abigail isn’t here.”

“Daddy is a good girl.”

“I’s fixing Daddy’s chin.”

“This is Kermie’s ice tea.”

I love the way Abigail’s blankets release static electricity in the dark. It’s like watching a lightning storm from a plane. It’s just dark and then you’ll see a tiny flash in the distance. And then another one. This never happens to me with my blankets, but it somehow makes bedtime more magical with our little girl.

Thanks wikimedia!Tonight I asked Abigail what animal she wanted Bengal to meet today and, without hesitation, she said, “Dodo!”

I’m not sure whether she intended this as a nonsense word or if she is really familiar with extinct fauna, but I rolled with it. And it turns out that the Dodo that Bengal met in the jungle near the cave he lives in with his Momma and four brothers and sisters  came to live with them for a while. You see, he didn’t have anywhere to live after parachuting out of a passing plane (To be honest, I kind of talked myself into a corner with that one. As soon as I had Bengal ask, “Where did you come from?” I knew it was trouble.) and he needed somewhere to live.

Bengal’s cave was the perfect place. To end the story, I mean. ALWAYS end the story where the main character goes to bed.

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Hugo Nominees

At long last, the Hugo Nominees have been announced, adding more books to my reading pile than I had expected.There are only three that were nominated for either the BFSA or the Nebula:

Boneshaker by Cherie Priest
The City & The City by China Miéville
The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

Which adds three books that I need to read:

Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd-Century America by Robert Charles Wilson
Palimpsest by Catherynne M. Valente
Wake by Robert J. Sawyer

I think the Robert Charles Wilson book looks really interesting, which makes it sad that it’s not out on the Kindle. Since I’ve already ordered two other print books, it’ll have to wait until last on my list of reading materials. Hey, maybe it will be electronic at that point!

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China for the Trifecta

Well. China for the trifecta of awards that I’m reviewing the nominees of. Since he’s the only candidate nominated for the BFSA, Nebula AND Hugo award, he’s really the only guy with a shot. I personally hope he pulls it off because the man is a machine. I suppose, on a cellular level, we’re all machines, but that kind of ruins the metaphor, so please stop talking about it.

This weekend, China Mieville was named the winner of the British Science Fiction Association Award for The City and The City. As you may have read, I loved that book. It’s a truly remarkable achievement, one I wouldn’t have even tried to write. And I don’t think I’ve ever thought that about a book. This one was truly too hard to try to write and yet he did it. Well earned.

Wait a minute, you might say. Didn’t you promise to read all the nominees?

Yes. Yes, I did. And I’ve only read two of them. But Yellow Blue Tibia is apparently still waiting to be shipped and Ark … well, I’ll read Ark when Stephen Baxter gets his head around new technology. He’s on notice for comments unbecoming a writer of anything that begins with the word “science” OR “speculative.” Update: Apparently I had the wrong guy! Apologize to Mr. Baxter.

I’ll read the bone book when it arrives, even though it didn’t win. How’s THAT for magnanimous?

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Plague of Locusts

Easter is one of my favorite holidays. Mostly because the symbol of springtime and renewal has transformed over the years into an eight foot tall rabbit that lays eggs and sneaks into people’s houses to leave baskets of chocolates. That is an anthropomorphic personification I can get behind.

Abigail surveys her meager harvestAnyway, one of the rites of passage for children during this season is the Easter Egg hunt. This year, we decided Abigail was old enough to enjoy this sort of thing so we decided to go to the huge event they hold in Encinitas. This particular hunt had three major advantages. First, it had a special “Two and Under” group, so older children wouldn’t trample Abigail in the mad dash for plastic eggs. Second, that group went first, so clearly parking wouldn’t be a problem. And third, we didn’t look for any other ones.

This morning, we noticed right off the bat that advantage two was off the list. The cars were lined up quite a way from the park itself, and naturally we had declined to bring a stroller. Or a basket. Or sunscreen. Grandparents showed up to help with the basket, but it was a daddy carrying and shading day for the other two.

Once we got into the park itself, they lined us up, a huge pile of children who were supposedly not older than two. I’m willing to be generous with our definition of “two” here, because the folks running the show certainly were. Perhaps they should have been checking IDs. When the allotted time came, they herded us out into an open baseball field, littered with hundreds of tiny plastic eggs. An orange strip of tape was the only barrier between the pressing mass of children and parents and their roundish quarry. A man with a bullhorn shouted instructions that nobody could hear nor cared about.

Then they unleashed the swarm.

This was when we found out that our first reason to come to Encinitas wasn’t valid either. Parents shoved their kids forward, snatching up eggs and throwing them into their own kids baskets.  In less than a minute, the field was denuded of eggs. It was biblical. These families could have easily been one of Pharaoh’s punishments.

Abigail got three, and then won another one that was under dispute with another boy. He ended up dropping it in her basket, but it was already open. A fair compromise.

But I saw kids with 20 or more eggs in their baskets. I don’t know if you’re familiar with any two year olds, but they are not adept at the rapid collection and basket-delivery of semi-spherical objects. I saw a woman picking up eggs and tossing them into her kids basket. What contest were these parents trying to win exactly? Once broken open, these eggs revealed candies that I did not plan on letting Abigail eat. Most of them could be considered choking hazards for the age group in question. Getting 20-plus of these for your child should be considered a fail, not a win.

So bad it's absolutely awesomeTo make matters worse, the “Easter Bunny” they were charging $5 a picture with was some sort of rabbit-human hybrid. Instead of the typical happy rabbit mask, there was a hole cut out and you could see the face of the person inside. They had drawn whiskers and a nose on, but still. We went to the mall straight away and got Abigail’s picture taken with a real Easter Bunny. It cost us $35, but when you consider the savings in therapy sessions, I think we saved a bundle.

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New Look

Trying on a new theme. Let me know if you think it matches the new name.

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Spectrum Circus

You can add this to the list of things that are entirely Jessica‘s fault. She made the point that I’m reading and reviewing books anyway, so I might as well be involved with the Spectrum Circus, which happened to be looking for reviewers. I dropped a line to Heidi, who runs that site, as well as RedJack Books and, well, here you can find a rough representation of me in both drawing and text form.

The Spectrum Circus specializes in reviews of Science Fiction and Fantasy books put out by the independent press, which she defines as anyone releasing fewer than 40 titles a year. These are often books that are hard to find in other places since they don’t have the traditional distribution channels. I’m very excited to place my first review up there, which will be for the book Finch, which, as it happens, is nominated for the Nebula award. Who would have guessed it?

Some of you may be deeply concerned that this means I won’t have a review of Finch up here. I’m sure that concern is quite deep. Well, I’ll say a few words here, and link to my review over at the Spectrum Circus, so never fear, you won’t have to do any hunting to find out what I thought about your favorite fungus-themed detective novel.

In completely unrelated news, Doctor Who starts up its fifth – or thirty first, if you use the traditional calendar – season tomorrow. I’m very excited to see what this new incarnation has in store for us. He’s the 11th man to play the part and the first to be younger than I am, which I have a problem with. Any trepidation I have about the new actor is washed aside by the new producer, who wrote the best episodes that we’ve seen in the new series.

Wow. Link fest today!

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