May. 6th, 2023

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Roommate and I watched a Stephen Sondheim documentary and listened to "David Live" last night -- one of the Bowie interviews I was reading mentioned that he "found his voice" while making this live album, so the vocals are richer, more complex, more skilled, than his original album versions of classic songs. My parents loved live albums when I was a kid because they got to go to so many concerts for free (thanks to my aunt, she was a DJ) -- Joan Jett, Metallica... (I paused here to ask Mom for her Top 3 bands she saw live, because I know it impressed me as a kid, but she must be asleep!)

ETA: She said her Top 3 are Motley Crue, Faster Pussy Cats, and Hank Williams Jr. 

They never had "David Live" though! I used to pour through their music: a whole spinning rack of cassettes, another of CDs, the old turntable with shelf after shelf of vinyl ... but iirc they only had a handful of Bowie albums. "Aladdin Sane" and "Diamond Dogs" I remember for sure. But for the most part they were metalheads and rock-n-rollers.

Anyway, the album was great! XD I also read "Lazarus" finally -- Bowie's musical that he wrote before he died. I think it was the next year that I went to NYC, and by then the production was over. I thought I'd missed my chance to ever see it or learn the story. Had no idea until just this week that the book was published.

It was great: in typical Bowie-fashion it was opaque, off-kilter, stylized, with a mixture of glaringly-obvious metaphors and dense, hard-to-unpack ones. I love "The Man Who Fell to Earth," and "Lazarus" is a sequel to it, but as Enda Walsh says in the foreword, it's in many ways an autobiographical send-off for Bowie himself, and it's especially heart-wrenching to read this, knowing that HE knew he was dying, as he wrote it.

(So my roommate and I also spent a lot of time listening to the cast album, then comparing it with various Bowie versions and other people's covers)

Side note, I've heard that you can tell a writer's gender by certain conventions that men commonly use vs. women. When I first read about it, I wasn't exactly convinced. I popped my writing into it, my dreamwidth entries, and it switched my gender up for every new post XD (then again, maybe that's accurate!). But I did notice, for example, that one of my online friends "talks like a Reddit atheist" and is frequently assumed to be a straight cis male as a result, but is actually a bisexual cis female. Anyway, my point is that whatever stock I MIGHT have put into that has been severely shaken over the past few books, because I could've sworn Enda Walsh was a woman, and the author of "Machete Season" too. Meanwhile I thought Golfo Alexopoulos, of "Illness and Inhumanity in Stalin's Gulag," was a dude. The other books I guessed correctly, but only because I made note of their authors before reading XD It's harder to fuck it up when you just read a whole Wikipedia article stuffed with pictures and pronouns.

I'm up to 12K in my novella now. I paused last night and sent it to a friend for advice: "Do I write this next scene, or do I cut it entirely?" and they said, "Write it, and make it WORSE!" XD Exactly the type of writer friend I need in my life. Then I had a dream they sent me a box full of LSD, and I woke up touched...

Today, I should be getting some T.E. Lawrence books in the mail. A book of literary critique, the 60th anniversary making of the movie, and a coffee table book of the museum exhibit from a few years back. If the weather stays cloudy and cool, I'll go to the library and walk my roommate home (and return my overdue books...)
amado1: (Default)
What a day!

I got lightly hate-crimed in the morning; walked to the library; read Yentl; went to lunch with my roommate where we met a trans woman who's part of the Human Library here, so we both signed up to do that as well; ate at the picnic table together; wrote 2K for my novella; finished "Making Faces, Playing God"; explored the whole nonfiction section; read "Thin" about anorexia; walked home; found my scheduled food delivery had arrived 20 minutes earlier than it was supposed to ... and got stolen, ofc XD

Ay, the worst part is we pre-ordered the food at lunch, then saw a Vietnamese food truck on our way home and ALMOST stopped to get some. But we did the "responsible" thing and reminded ourselves we had a food delivery on the way XD I know it was stolen because I had Thriftbooks packages lying on the doormat, and the delivery driver sent me a photo of my food bag right next to those books.

Those books though! Literary criticism on T.E. Lawrence; Lawrence of Arabia: The 30th Anniversary Pictorial History; and the National Portrait Gallery's Lawrence exhibit, in hardcover. That last one is my favorite. It's stuffed full of interesting little tidbits. There's a portrait in there of Lawrence that I've never even seen before, in a sort of Picasso Blue Period style, and there's a section devoted to Henry Scott Tukes' portrait of Lawrence ... I knew there was a Tukes portrait, but I didn't know that it was found at Lawrence's cottage after he died.

The pictorial history seems much less interesting by comparison. But that's only natural because it's not as fun to read about a film adaptation that Lawrence wasn't involved with, when you can just read about Lawrence himself. I love the movie, it's one of my favorites, but still XD

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