greygirlbeast: (Default)
[personal profile] greygirlbeast
It's very warm here in Atlanta, highs in the eighties yesterday and again today. I'm loving this early taste of summer. A sunny day out there, so I'm determined not to waste all of it in here at this dratted desk.

I thought that it might be interesting to do something I've not done before (at least, I don't think that I have) and show one of Vince's early working sketches for a Sirenia Digest story. The following was his first go at "To One Who Has Lost Herself," the result of e-mail exchanges between us shortly after I finished the story last week:


Copyright © 2006 by Vince Locke


There's really not much to be said about yesterday. I think the highpoint was when I walked down the back steps and almost stepped on a Dekay's Brown Snake (Storeria dekayi dekayi) that had just molted and was sunning itself. It was a beautiful little beast, about twelve inches long. We moved it from the driveway to a safe patch of yard. I've now seen two species of snake in our neighborhood, the Dekay's and a ringneck (Diadophis punctatus ssp). There ought to be green snakes, as well, and garter snakes, and maybe a few other species. And anoles. I've yet to see a lizard in Atlanta. I think I'm beginning to miss reptiles. I kept snakes when I was a child, and then, while I was in college, I had a fondness for lizards and turtles. At one point, about 1988, my bedroom housed a Tokay gecko, a smooth softshell turtle, a Barbour's map turtle (now endangered and protected), a common snapping turtle, and a yellow-bellied slider. Perhaps my office would benefit from a snake...

Later, we continued our Star Trek movie binge with Star Trek V: The Final Frontier. Mostly, I've been surprised that the Star Trek movies are a little better than I remember them being, even IV, despite it's atrocious score, the insufferable Catherine Hicks, the particularly wonky science, and all the chintz that comes with 1986. However, ST:V is every bit as gawdawful as I remember it being. Indeed, it's so bad one wonders that there was ever another Star Trek movie after it. Most of the SFX would have looked cheap and dated at the time (1989), production values seemed to hover near zero, Shatner's direction is the very definition of "hamfisted," and the climax...never mind the climax. This one should come with a warning label.

My thanks to [livejournal.com profile] headhouse for directing me to this truly wonderful site, Paleogeography and Geologic Evolution of North America. It has some of the best paleogeographic maps I've ever seen, and you can track the evolution of the continent from the late PreCambrian (550 mypb) all the way to the present. My favourite's, of course, are the three Late Cretaceous maps (100-75 mybp). Check it out, kiddos.

There's news of a ground sloth skeleton unearthed in the Florida everglades (not surprising), and, naturally, I'm very excited about the data and photos streaming back to Earth from the ESA's Venus Express. None of these things make it easy to think about the work I need to be doing, though. Indeed, I'm afraid that I'd much rather be looking at maps of North America during the Mesozoic or these magnificent images of the Venusian south pole than writing anything I need to be writing at the moment. Sometimes, all my life seems a binary opposition between writing and those things which kindly distract me from writing.

<i>Star Trek V</i>

Date: 2006-04-14 05:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sclerotic-rings.livejournal.com
You poor child. In my case, I was just starting my joke of a writing career by writing movie reviews for New Pathways at that time, and not only did my editor hold off on publication of the summer issue solely so that review of Star Trek V was able to run in that issue, but he actually called me at work the night the film premiered to tell me how great he thought it was. On cold nights, I still have nightmares involving him arguing with me about how Shatner's fees took so much of the budget that the production had to recycle motion control footage from the previous films, and his whining "They wouldn't do that!"

Date: 2006-04-14 05:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lunablack.livejournal.com
Corn snakes are total sweethearts, and should be native, too. They also don't get really huge (under 6').

Date: 2006-04-14 06:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frankiemouse.livejournal.com
i had to track down a copy of star trek v a good five years ago to watch it. at the time i had wondered how i had missed it. after watching it i wished that i had missed it totally. it's a horribly hokey bad film.

thanks for all the links they'll keep me busy in between my reading sessions today. i'm off and don't have to work yaaay!!!! it's overcast and 64df here. not yaaay!

Date: 2006-04-14 07:30 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sovay
I really like that sketch.

Perhaps my office would benefit from a snake...

It couldn't hurt.

Date: 2006-04-14 08:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asru.livejournal.com
To me, it seems so weird to hear of you coming across a snake while you were out walking. There aren't many snakes in the wild here (I think except adders). I've started to wonder if I'll ever come across any wildlife at all. I don't know what it is, the things that I used to see (frogs, hedgehogs, foxes) just aren't around anymore.

Date: 2006-04-14 10:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lizziebelle.livejournal.com
"Not in front of the Klingons..."

That's what my old roommate would say when my cat would look embarrassed when she would catch us being cuddly. *g*

Date: 2006-04-15 02:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] loosechanj.livejournal.com
They more than made up for V with VI.

Profile

greygirlbeast: (Default)
Caitlín R. Kiernan

February 2012

S M T W T F S
    1 234
56 7 891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 27th, 2025 04:01 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios