greygirlbeast: (chi3)
[personal profile] greygirlbeast
I think I'm simply going to stop trying to sleep. I'll avoid the nightmares, and won't have to complain about insomnia.

All of yesterday was spent proofing and editing "The Belated Burial" and "The Thousand-and-Third Tale of Scheherazade" for Sirenia Digest #38, and laying out the issue. And I might have even gotten it out to subscribers last night, except I discovered that a file I needed for the issue was in our storage unit in Pawtucket, so we had to stop everything and make the drive to Pawtucket to retrieve the file. Finally, at seven p.m. last night, I admitted it would be today before #38 was released.

We still have a lot of snow on the ground. And a lot of slush and ice. A whole month of snow. But there were some beautiful sights on the drive yesterday. Old North Burial Ground in Providence was splendid in all that white, the gravestones and monuments standing out in sharp relief. In Pawtucket, we stopped on Roosevelt Avenue and walked back to the Main Street Bridge (circa 1858) to get photographs of Slater's Mill and the Blackstone River in all the snow. Slater's Mill (which gets a brief mention in The Red Tree) is often cited as the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution in America. Built in 1793, it was the the first commercially viable cotton-spinning mill in the US. The sidewalks along Main and Roosevelt were icy and flanked by three-foot mounds of muddy, sandy slush, but the day was warmer than our days have been, and I couldn't resist stopping for a better look. There are photos below, behind the cut.

We've found someone here in Providence to convert the Death's Little Sister tracks (I only have them on cassette) to mp3s. And I'm choosing pieces to read for the podcasts. Someone yesterday suggested "vlogging," rather than simple audio recording. I'd never even heard of "vlogging." I'm going to stick to audio, I think. I can't imagine how perfectly, dreadfully dull it would be to watch me reading text off my iMac. I worry enough about how I sound, without also having to worry about how I look.

Remember when writers just, you know, wrote?





Sylvanus Brown House (1758). View to the southeast.



Slater's Mill (at the left) and the Blackstone River. View to the northeast.



Snow and rust. Old lock-and-dam machinery visible at the east end of the Main Street Bridge.



The spillway beneath the Main Street Bridge.



Slater's Mill (at left) and the Blackstone River. View to the northeast.

Photographs Copyright © 2009 by Caitlín R. Kiernan and Kathryn A. Pollnac

Unrelated:

Date: 2009-01-31 05:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jtglover.livejournal.com
Clockwork trilobite (http://gadgets.boingboing.net/2009/01/30/trilo-temporalis-the.html).

Re: Unrelated:

Date: 2009-01-31 06:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalamah.livejournal.com
Wow! What a thing of beauty.

Re: Unrelated:

Date: 2009-01-31 06:26 pm (UTC)
ext_4772: (Default)
From: [identity profile] chris-walsh.livejournal.com
You beat me to it. Well played. (I first saw it here (http://io9.com/5141712/a-trilobite-made-of-welded-steel-and-time). I figured "steampunk trilobite" was also a good name.)

Re: Unrelated:

Date: 2009-01-31 08:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jtglover.livejournal.com
Great minds, etc. ;-) What do you look for at io9? The last few times I've popped by, they've been doing a "best SF movies EVAR"-type thing, but listing only movies made since 2004, or something idiotic like that. I have liked the VanderMeers' art column...

Re: Unrelated:

Date: 2009-01-31 10:12 pm (UTC)
ext_4772: (Good Omens)
From: [identity profile] chris-walsh.livejournal.com
I haven't looked at it much, so any answer by me would be an uninteresting one. (Unless I made up a reason. "The girls in the Sci-Fi Suicide Girls section of io9 are HAWT, I tell ya. Antennae are SO Teh Sexay.")

(I apologize to [livejournal.com profile] greygirlbeast for my gratuitous and grating misspelling-speak. I did try using it for comedic purposes.)

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 Jun. 11th, 2025 10:23 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios