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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • Came here looking for this! I knew I couldn’t be the only fan of the Winchester. I first saw the movie playing at my neighbor dive bar, which was bunker like, and yep, could definitely get with the plan of holing up there until this all blew over.

    All the scenes are great and hilarious no matter how many times I see this movie.

    Fun fact: Have you seen Spaced? The old friend he comes across leading the group through the back fences is a character from a prior show they were both in together.





  • I read some really old school Gothic Horror for a lit class in college. Here’s a list of what I can recall from that class. Though if you are open to new school recommendations, Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garciais superbly chilling and really captures the old school vibe.

    Frankenstein (1818) Which I assume you’ve read but if not is really good!

    The Monk (1796) considered to be the OG gothic horror novel. It’s definitely a creepy one.

    Carmilla (1872) Predates Dracula, girl power vamp.

    The Turn of the Screw (1898) Madness or malignant spirits? Dear reader, this one’s up to you.

    The Heart of Darkness (1899) Recently re-read for a book club. While it works being taught as a gothic novel, it’s actually way more powerful in the context which Conrad wrote it, a scathing criticism of European imperialism in the Congo. Recommend the Norton Critical edition to add the important context. Otherwise, it has the classic gothic genre themes of self vs other, familiar vs strange, civilization vs savage, human vs monster, flipping those notions all on their head (in beautifully written prose) like a brilliant gothic novel should.






  • Well wow, your book experience here is incredibly profound! Mine doesn’t quite compare in intensity, but did rewire my brain a bit.

    I am doing a re-read of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness for a book club. I read this book years ago in college in a Gothic Lit class, reading it in the context of gothic genre traits: self vs other, familiar vs strange, civilization vs savage- and the inevitable dread accompanying the dissolution of the ‘vs’ and realization that civiliity is mere patina on monstrosity etc.

    I still had my old college copy, but sadly it was filled with underlines and highlights (I can’t believe I was so terrible!) so I got a clean copy, a Norton Critical edition. Omg. The amount of extra material included was vast. Essays on the history of the Congo, on Imperialism, letters to Belgium’s King Leopold, notes from Conrad’s own journey as a Congo steamboat captain, critical essays on the book itself.

    As ridiculous as it sounds, I had NO IDEA this book was a critique of Imperialism. None. Zero. Reading this in college I thought it was purely a fictional dark gothic fantasy. I didn’t know about the actual atrocities in the Congo and that Conrad had witnessed them first hand. I didn’t know public sentiment turned against King Leopold after this was published, because they too didn’t really understand what was happening there. I even read in one of the essays that American kids were being taught this book as a ‘journey to the center of self’ and devoid of any mention of imperialism. Yes, yes we were! That spoke directly to my experience.

    All of this suddenly coming into focus felt both enlightening and awful. How was this taught without context?? And how am I only realizing this now? I’m still reading through the essays, grateful I found them before reading the novella again.


  • Right, so… Do gravitational waves theoretically travel at the speed of light? I studied physics way back in the 90s, I recall the universal gravitational constant, I don’t think gravity waves were a thing yet. I’m just trying to get an idea of the wavelength.

    Edit: Yes, they are theorized to be light speed waves with a potential wavelength spanning the entire universe.

    Shit like this makes me regret changing majors. I miss thinking about the fundamental nature of reality in mathematical terms.