Sep. 18th, 2019

rfmcdonald: (Default)

  • Bad Astronomer Phil Plait notes that mysterious Boyajian's Star has nearly two dozen identified analogues, like HD 139139.

  • James Bow reports from his con trip to Portland.

  • Caitlin Kelly at the Broadside Blog notes the particular pleasure of having old friends, people with long baselines on us.

  • Centauri Dreams describes a proposed mission to interstellar comet C/2019 Q4 (Borisov).

  • The Crux notes how feeding cows seaweed could sharply reduce their methane production.

  • D-Brief notes that comet C/2019 Q4 is decidedly red.

  • Bruce Dorminey notes a claim that water-rich exoplanet K2-18b might well have more water than Earth.

  • Gizmodo reports on a claim that Loki, biggest volcano on Io, is set to explode in a massive eruption.

  • io9 notes that Warner Brothers is planning a Funko Pop movie.

  • Joe. My. God. notes the claim of Donald Trump that he is ready for war with Iran.

  • JSTOR Daily looks at how people in early modern Europe thought they could treat wounds with magic.

  • Language Hat considers how "I tip my hat" might, translated, sound funny to a speaker of Canadian French.

  • Language Log considers how speakers of Korean, and other languages, can find word spacing a challenge.

  • Lawyers, Guns and Money looks at the partisan politics of the US Supreme Court.

  • At the NYR Daily, Naomi Klein makes a case for the political and environmental necessity of a Green New Deal.

  • Peter Watts takes apart a recent argument proclaiming the existence of free will.

  • Peter Rukavina tells how travelling by rail or air from Prince Edward Island to points of the mainland can not only be terribly inconvenient, but environmentally worse than car travel. PEI does need better rail connections.

  • The Russian Demographics Blog examines how different countries in Europe will conduct their census in 2020.

  • Window on Eurasia shares the arguments of a geographer who makes the point that China has a larger effective territory than Russia (or Canada).

  • Yorkshire Ranter Alex Harrowell looks at a 1971 prediction by J.G. Ballard about demagoguery and guilt, something that now looks reasonably accurate.

  • Arnold Zwicky considers models of segregation of cartoon characters from normal ones in comics.

rfmcdonald: (photo)
Visiting the Sunday Antique Market down by St. Lawrence Market this past weekend, I considered myself fortunate to find a
1973 paperback edition of the Graeme Gibson book Eleven Canadian Novelists. I had looked forward to having a chance to reading these interviews, to see what these people were saying abut their craft. I also looked forward to reading, if I had to admit, the interviews with the authors who did not rise to prominence. Gibson's interview with Margaret Atwood, at the time of the anthology's writing his still-new partner, was also something I looked forward to reading. All this for $C 5!

Graeme Gibson, Eleven Canadian Novelists, 1973, front cover #toronto #canlit #book #canadianliterature #graemegibson #inmemoriam #elevencanadiannovelists


Graeme Gibson, Eleven Canadian Novelists, 1973, back cover #toronto #canlit #book #canadianliterature #graemegibson #inmemoriam #elevencanadiannovelists


And then came the news yesterday of Gibson's death in London. Now I really have to read this.
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