felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
I was going to post about the Iliad, but right now I'm squeeing because I actually have an internet connection on my laptop. I've been using my roommate's computer and work computers for the last ten years.

I can actually chat again. How do I do that again? I haven't done it since the days of ICQ.

And yes - the Iliad is very, very good. The stuff about Achilles and Patroclus is very sweet, the battles are brilliant and ingeniously described, the stuff about the gods is beautiful, and descriptions of funerals and ceremonies was rich and wonderful. I'm glad I read it.

But I still help but be disappointed, because almost nothing I expected - the Trojan Horse, Achilles' Heel, the Judgement of Paris - was actually there. Nobody had warned me. It was strange to get to the end of Book 24, and Achilles was still alive and Troy unburnt.
felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
I have successfully removed my drive. What with all the wires coming out of it, my first thought (as anyone's would be really) was that it looked penaggalan.

Otherwise, it's been a quiet day -- website research, and nearing the climax of my novel. It's much shorter than it was -- I'm guessing it'll be 130 ordinary pages, or about 260 pocketbook-format pages. I'm at page 120 now.

I really like this version -- less dross, less exposition, more naturalistic conversations, fewer supernatural elements, much better tone. Several scenes removed that were just, frankly, awful -- I've become a brutal self-editor, killing anything I even have a slight doubt about. As always, I'm now embarrassed by the previous version, because I've gotten a lot more skilled since then.

I'm thinking this thing might be a success after all.

I'm also on the second book of The Dark is Rising series. Rowling clearly read this before she wrote the Harry Potter series -- some of the borrowings are quite obvious.
felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
Judging by the noise, I can only assume that our new upstairs neighbours are currently moving in granite elephants, neutron stars, and those God-created boulders used to settle the old philosophical paradox about the limits of an omnipotent being's powers.

Anyway, what can anyone tell me about changing the power source of my computer. Mine caught fire a few weeks ago, and my computer has been sitting idle since. The rest of my computer looks fine -- the mother board, drives, and various cards have been untouched by flame.

Is changing a power source the sort of thing one does by oneself, or something you need a professional for? And how do you go shopping for a new one? What are the criteria? What should you look for, and what should you avoid?

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felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
felis_ultharus

September 2011

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