aamcnamara: (Default)
[personal profile] aamcnamara
In food-related news, project Avoid Dining Halls Over Fall Break progresses nicely. For lunch I had the leftovers of the rice-and-vegetables from last night, some potato chips I'd picked up in my wanders, and an apple previously scrumped from the dining hall plus sunflower butter.

When it came to dinnertime I was a little more ambitious: I'd gotten some frozen ground-turkey patties in Northampton and cooked them up last night to refrigerate. Today I broke them into pieces and put them in the rice-cooker along with a can of beans and a can of tomatoes, and cooked the result. Then I dumped all that into a plastic thing, stuck it in the fridge, and put some rice in the rice-cooker--with spinach (local! organic!) in the steamer-pan. Result: deliciousness. Thought I had made too much rice, until I started eating. Nom.

Best part: I have two days' worth of leftovers, and will only have to do rice and vegetables tomorrow and the next day in order to have just as much tasty food. I think we call that a win. Even if I had to wash All The Things afterward.

---

31.8 / 75


Today I invented time travel. Perks of being a speculative-fiction writer. Though admittedly it's a fantasy novel and the time travel is done with magic, which isn't how most people who write time travel mean that sentence. (Query: fantasy novels with time travel? They must exist, but I can't think of any.)

My Big Goal had been, as you know Dear Reader, a complete re-draft of this by the end of the month. That... may not happen. But progress feels good: I am hitting my forehead against new snags!

---

Have His Carcase, Sayers: Well, that was rather silly. But I liked it--though not as much as Strong Poison or Gaudy Night. Benefit is that now I get to reread Gaudy Night before I go on to Busman's Honeymoon.

"J.J." (Criminal Minds episode): That was good.

Date: 2010-10-12 01:35 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] vcmw
Time travel back and forth in a single big jump is more common than small-hop time travel in fantasy. The Dalemark Quartet book four by Diana Wynne Jones has time travel by means of object (as well as, I think, time travel by means of innate power). I think it's the Sage of Theare by DWJ has time travel because the person doesn't grow up the way they are supposed to and time gets all squiggly to try and put it right.

I don't remember Time Cat by Lloyd Alexander but I think that it had time travel.

Kids books often have "time travel to a special historical place" involved. Or to a mythological almost place - as Edward Eager's Half Magic, some of the E. Nesbit books, I think that Rudyard Kipling's Puck of Pook's Hill (which I haven't read) has time travel of someone somewhere?

Date: 2010-10-12 01:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aamcnamara.livejournal.com
Oh, that's right! I'd forgotten about Dalemark book four, probably because it's always confused me rather. And yes, there's the Eager one where they go back to medieval times with all the knights, too, isn't there?

May 2017

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 16th, 2025 04:45 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios