5 Books that Won’t Impress a Boy

15 06 2012

Bored BoyI figured I would follow up on my last post, 5 Books that Won’t Impress a Girl, with a list of books that won’t impress a boy.

5. Confessions of a Guidette – Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi. Boys are not fans of celebrity memoirs. Besides, Jersey Shore kids are meant to be watched, not read. So let’s just hide that under the stack of Vanity Fairs, where it should be.

4. Eat, Love, Pray – Elizabeth Gilbert. Not only is this book unrealistic – she gets a book advance large enough to fund a year’s worth of travel and introspection – but we have to watch Julia Roberts in the movie adaptation.

3. A Room of One’s Own – Virginia Woolf. Yes, she is making a timely (written in 1928) and important point about women’s place in fiction, as writers, and the public sphere. But does she have to take so long to say it? I would like to see her and Hemmingway together for coffee.

2. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen. Girls read this because they all want a Mr. Darcy. Unfortunately, this puts too much pressure on us boys. The reality is: Colin Firth is not really Mr. Darcy, and most men are not good ballroom dancers. So, please stop asking us to take lessons. 

1. Any Play by Shakespeare – Shakespeare. To be perfectly frank: we can barely understand a sonnet, let alone be able to memorize one and recite it to you under the next pale moon.





5 Books That Won’t Impress a Girl

8 06 2012

Recently I read this article on the Paris Review blog: What Books Impress a Girl.

Rather than add to the conversation, I figured I would add my top 5 books that will never impress a girl. In fact, I’ve received more eye-rolling than amorous adulation from girls when they spotted these titles on my bookshelf:

5. The Death and Life of Superman – Roger Stern. Yes, it’s a book. Yes, I bought this in 92, when he actually “died”. I was quite sad when it happened. Despite that, my partner says, “you’re in your thirties, move on!”

4. Moby Dick – Herman Melville.“Have you seen the great white whale?” Boys like tales of the high-seas,  high-adventure, and revenge. Girls… well, they don’t.

3. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas – Hunter S. Thompson. A story about drugs, excess, and finding the American dream? Blegh. Girls do not go Gonzo for Gonzo Journalism.

2. Tropic of Cancer or Tropic of Capricorn — Henry Miller. Isn’t he a misogynist? And, aren’t his female characters mere fabrications of a thirteen year-old boy’s dream? Yes. And, sigh, yes.

1. The Twilight series — Stephenie Meyer. What are those doing on your shelf, next to the movies? And what’s with the Robert Pattinson action figure… I think we should talk…





Parity and Pearl Jam

28 09 2011

The strength of the Canadian dollar (or is it the weakness of the American dollar?) has finally reached the American book trade.

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I recently bought-in to all the Pearl Jam twentieth-anniversary hype and bought PEARL JAM twenty, the commemorative book. What I found most surprising — other than the realization of just how much these once vehemently anti-capitalist musicians are actually cashing-in on their twenty years as a band — is that the American and Canadian prices are equal!

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I wonder how long this has been happening. Perhaps Canadian book publishers were noticing Canadian consumers were heading south to buy their books at a cheaper price, thanks to parity, and complained. Or American publisher noticed their Canadian book sales were down.

Either way, I would like to have been in the board meeting at Simon and Schuster (the publisher of PJ20) when they made that decision. I guess that kind of makes me boring.

Anyway, Happy Anniversary PJ!

Oh, and Lukin is the best song in PJ’s catalogue.

“I’m going to Lukin’s…”





How I evolved as a Reader

25 09 2011

phonebookMy connection to books has changed greatly over the years. When I first started reading seriously (by that I mean reading literature) I refused to mark a book. I would have rather cut my own arm with a plastic picnic knife than dog ear a page, or underline a passage in a book. The edition didn’t matter. A small pocket paperback was just as sacred as a first-edition hard cover. No matter the format, they all had to look good on the shelf.

Gradually things began to change. It started with a dot. I would take a pencil and put a small, barely visible, point at the start of a poignant passage, then another at the end. To mark the page, I would tear up small pieces of paper, newsprint, post-it notes, whatever was nearby, and use that to save the place. My rational was that I could always erase the pencil mark, and the paper could always be removed.

Then, as time went on and I read more, I had a kind of epiphany. It may seem obvious to many, but to me it shook me harder than my older brother when I was seven. A book’s value isn’t in it’s form. Its value is in the ideas, stories and characters it contains. So long I harboured the illusion that my books were like trading cards, the more “mint” they were the higher their value.

Then I realized that a book’s value can only be reaped by harvesting its fruit (not to sound trite), and to do that you have to till the field. And that means, marking the pages, writing in the margins, underlining passages, and even taking the corner of a page and folding it inward.

Despite my inner struggle, I started “defacing” my books, even brand new ones. It was hard, but liberating. And the value was: it allowed me to engage with the book more. I reread passages. I noted my thoughts, even reflected on life. In a way, I was able to understand myself better by putting myself – my thoughts, ideas, and marks – in my books.

Now, my books have more marked pages than a New York phone-booth’s Yellow Pages in the 70’s.

The best part is,  now I quite often revisit books and look through my reading trail. This not only helps remind me of why I liked the book, but it also helps me to understand why I connected with the ideas, characters and story.

Basically, in order for me to evolve as a reader I had to get past the idea that a book, as an object, is sacred and should be left untouched. To really understand a book you have to interact with it. Just like the author, you have to take your pencil and put it to paper – then you’ll have a real conversation with the writer, the book, and yourself – and then you’ll find the true value of a book. 





How We Procrastinate

7 02 2011

This is a fun/interesting thing, a procrastination flow chart from Globalnerdy.com. Or probably more appropriately named, where the flow of our work goes when we procrastinate.





Everyone Loves a Deal!

27 01 2011





“The Oba” 2007-2010

21 10 2010

There comes a time in every man’s life where they must say goodbye to their first car.

I won`t go in to some long, soppy eulogy. “The Oba” was a great car. I bought it for $350 in 2007. I only wanted it to last me 4 months, just the summer, and it lasted 3 years. Yes, it`s an  ugly car, but The Oba had a great engine, and never let me down. In fact, it was such a reliable car that I used it to drive my old-roommate to the church on his wedding day.

I’ve travelled abroad a lot over the past three year. While I was gone I left it with friends, family, and even at storage facilities. It would sit for months, doing nothing, and every time I came back The Oba started up right away.

A couple months ago, while driving on the freeway to Pitt Meadows, the car started to overheat. I pulled over. Checked the radiator, there was no water. There was a busted hose; I got it fixed. Sadly, the damage was done. The head gasket was cracked, and that was that.

I thought about selling The Oba, as a parts car, but decided it wasn’t worth the hassle. Instead I donated it to CKNW’s Orphan Fund charity. All I got was a $70 tax receipt, but I think The Oba wanted it that way.

So, with that all done, I wish The Oba a good rest. It was the greatest car ever. I loved it as much as a man can love a car. Now, I will have to cherish the memories, and start taking public transit.

Rest in Peace.

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