seperis: (Default)
seperis ([personal profile] seperis) wrote2018-12-12 02:52 am
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books: unnatural death by dorothy sayers

This is just quick thoughts:

(Note: If you see Hindi characters jump out, not my fault. I somehow made a hotkey--somewhere--that flips my keyboard to Hindi. I can't do it on purpose at Duolingo to save my life, but by God, when writing, I am suddenly in a different language. It's--weird. And I can't find the goddamn hotkey.)



1.) I did a little dance when Hallelujah got his 10,000 pounds. I keep thinking how his family reacted to it.

(His grandfather was an asshole; fuck him.)

2.) Good God Mary Whittaker was an ass. I mean yes a sociopath, but as Lady Mary said on the occassion a similar though not identical situation: I could live with you being a murderer but not as ass.

I can respect smart; I could even understand--in a very theoretical way--her point of view. Right up until the point there was a body count, then it was 'sociopathic ass'. And worse, she was cold-bloodedly stupid and pointlessly cruel. She created all the evidence against her after the fact by by sheer persistent paranoia. That's impressively dumb.

3.) I still cannot read Agatha and Clara as other than genteel lesbians living happily on a farm and everyone knew it. And I mean inside the text, so I have no idea what Dorothy was doing there, because the story went out of its way to not make them spinster buddies, and I'm a Regency reader who is used to the spinster buddies thing. For fuck's sake they were compare/contrast to Mary and poor Vera and how unhealthy the latter were compared to the former. Like, yeah, I do queer text reading and am in fanfic where I celebrate it, but in this case, it would be a pointless effort to try to read it otherwise.

IDK, I don't care, Agatha and Clara were happy lesbians doing some horsebreeding and homemaking, it's great. I got my romance hit. I really want a day in the life or something.

4.) I am charmed by Miss Climpson's punctuation and italics. I could read a book of letters from that woman forever.
toujours_nigel: sunrise over silhouetted trees (nature)

[personal profile] toujours_nigel 2018-12-12 09:28 am (UTC)(link)
I do think Agatha and Clara were supposed to be the contrasting Good Lesbians.
jadesfire: Bright yellow flower (Default)

[personal profile] jadesfire 2018-12-12 10:02 am (UTC)(link)
It's such fun seeing someone else read their way through my favourite book series. Cannot disagree with any of this, and feel I should also point you towards the Shedunnit podcast, specifically Episode 3.

Miss Climpson is an utter joy, and I would absolutely buy her hypothetical book.
jamethiel: A pile of books. The top one is open. (BookPile)

[personal profile] jamethiel 2018-12-12 10:59 am (UTC)(link)
The phrase "friend of Dorothy" came into being for a reason. It's almost certain she WAS writing them as a lesbian couple.
goss: Me - keyboard (Me- keyboard)

[personal profile] goss 2018-12-12 11:05 am (UTC)(link)
I somehow made a hotkey--somewhere--that flips my keyboard to Hindi

Ha! If you ever figure it out, please let me know! In addition to Visual Art, I also teach baby-level Hindi (letters and nouns mostly) at school and setting lessons and exams in Word is a PAIN, because I usually "insert symbol" one by one to make up words. D:
goss: Bert - show and tell (Bert - show and tell)

[personal profile] goss 2018-12-13 10:38 am (UTC)(link)
Oh! I hardly ever use the touch screen keyboard on my laptop, but that is something I will certainly try out for the Hindi letters now. Thanks!

Cool that you're using Duolingo! I am too, but right now I'm going through all their Intro lessons one-by-one, to pick up their language teaching methods, since the kids find Hindi symbols a real challenge to pick up (and my teaching training was Art, not a foreign language).

I only know basic grammar, but would one day love to be fluent. :)

goss: Cosmic Swirl (blunaris) (Cosmic Swirl (blunaris))

Re: Hindi Letter Tracing

[personal profile] goss 2018-12-16 08:25 am (UTC)(link)
Hindi Letter Tracing

Thank you for the heads up! I can let the kids know since I bet there are definitely those who would find it useful. :)

I'm still blown away most of them speak a minimum of three languages fluently and more than one, five. Five.

HA, SERIOUSLY, how? My brain can barely remember a random word in Spanish after doing it in high school for 3 whole years, how are they so good at multiple languages??? Totally envious here. :b

I have a theory that it's somehow a learned skill from childhood environment and not genetics. My cousin who grew up in India from age 3, came to Trinidad to live when she was 12 years old. So at that point Hindi was her first language, and English her second language. She started (English-speaking) school here in Trinidad, and in 3 months time was first in class for both Spanish and French. O_O
Edited 2018-12-16 08:26 (UTC)
goss: Bert - show and tell (Bert - show and tell)

[personal profile] goss 2018-12-16 08:38 am (UTC)(link)
Oh yes! Those are great for penmanship! :)

Pity that I have such limited resources at school though. I gave up on the teaching method of distributing worksheets a while ago. I teach a total of 16 different classes, 34 students per class (that's 500+ individual students per week), so the office wards me off from asking for photocopied papers, unless it's to print exams (and even then I get grief). /o\

Since I bought a laminator, I was thinking of laminating an alphabet set, and just have the kids trace using whiteboard markers on the sheets while with me in class, and wipe off after, so it's ready for the next class to use..?
nestra: (Default)

[personal profile] nestra 2018-12-12 01:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Miss Climpson is the best.
venetia_sassy: (101 Dalmatians // happy puppies!)

[personal profile] venetia_sassy 2018-12-12 01:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Miss Climpson is a continuing delight.

And I agree on all other points as well! I mean, with 2) one of my great-aunts lived in a similar set-up and no one ever actually said they were lesbians at the time, just 'great friends' but um, yeah. Wish I could have known my great-aunts. The other was a doctor and lifelong spinster.
that_mireille: Mireille butterfly (Default)

[personal profile] that_mireille 2018-12-12 07:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, yes, I don't think we're supposed to read Agatha and Clara as anything *but* lesbians. (There's another pair later on, too, in Strong Poison, that I'm 100% sure we're supposed to read that way.)
princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2018-12-12 09:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Miss Climpson fills me with sheer delight.

OF COURSE you are right about Agatha and Clara.
bratfarrar: A woman wearing a paper hat over her eyes and holding a teacup (Default)

[personal profile] bratfarrar 2018-12-12 11:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, they're definitely a couple, and there are some more in the bohemian set that shows up in a couple of the other novels.

Miss Climpson makes a number of other appearances, and is a delight in every one.
Edited 2018-12-12 23:03 (UTC)
linbot: linbot icon (self-portrait)

[personal profile] linbot 2018-12-13 03:25 am (UTC)(link)
If you are on a mac, keyboard switching defaults to apple-space which is pretty easy to hit accidentally. Mine sometimes jumps to hiragana for the same reason; I love Duolingo.
legionseagle: Lai Choi San (Default)

[personal profile] legionseagle 2018-12-13 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
Agreed on all points. Especially about Clara and Agatha. I mean, everyone from the old nurse onwards makes it clear that they've been dedicated to each other "forsaking all others" since school, for crying out loud (also, I'm deeply amused that the fortune that Mary Whitaker's after was created by Clara, independent businesswoman, with the support of Agatha, domestic partner -- I bet she was the one who arranged for delightful post-hunting suppers and teas to let Clara work up her business connection with buyers and intermediaries -- and not inherited wealth at all.)

Also, when I first went to university to study law, I opened my land law text book and there was the 1925 Law of Property Act, still there, still in force and still causing problems (though I think the great-niece point was subsequently settled in favour of the remoter descendants.)