Man, war ich heute gut.
1. Ich habe die Diashow vom Urlaub 2009 fertiggestellt und auf DVD gebrannt. Jetzt fehlt nur noch das Cover. Aber das ist nur noch eine frage von ein bis zwei Tagen.
2. Ich habe mir gestern ein Bastelset vom Möbelhaus mit den vier großen Buchstaben gekauft und es auch fertig bekommen. Weder habe ich die falschen Schrauben verwendet noch hat irgendetwas gefehlt.
Zwar bin ich gerade am überlegen, ob ich die Diashow vom diesjährigen Urlaub anfangen soll, aber vielleicht lege ich mir doch ein neues Diashow-Programm zu...
Außerdem brauch ich noch eine neue externe Festplatte ...
Und müßte die Urlaubsplanung für nächstes Jahr vorrantreiben...
Sonntag, 30. Mai 2010
Freitag, 21. Mai 2010
Best of...
So nach dem ich aus dem Urlaub zurück bin, hier ein paar Bilder. (Ich muß allerdings noch die Bilder meines letzten Urlaubs in einer Diashow verwursten, bevor ich hiermit anfangen kann).
Janet's Foss (Malham, Yorkshire)
(allerdings finde ich Alan Rickman als Sheriff immer noch tausendmal besser als Kevin Costner...)
ein paar Deko-Schafe müssen einfach sein...
Bolton Abbey
(leider waren kaum Bluebells da, aber dafür blüht meine im Garten)
Chatsworth House (The Palace of the Peaks)
- Jane Austen läßt grüßen
Das ist übrigens ein Ort, den ich ständig wieder besuchen werde (wenn es nur nicht so weit weg wäre).
Klein, aber fein Haddon Hall
(und hier grüßt Jane Eyre)
So daß waren einige von knapp 1900 Bildern. Ich habe ja gedacht, mit der neuen Kamera würde das weniger, aber die mach so klasse Bilder, vor allem bei wenig Licht, daß ich in den diversen Herrenhäuser Aufnahmen ohne Ende gemacht habe.
Labels:
Chatsworth,
Peak District,
Urlaub,
Yorkshire
Favourite Books
Sometimes I wonder why I like a book or why I don't.
I
like to read. A lot of people complain that children don't like to read
or don't know how to read. To tell the truth, my experience with
reading books at school isn't a good one. Looking back I can say, I
haven't read a book at school that I truly liked. There are several
reasons
1. I don't like to read I book because I have to. And more to that I don't like to read it in a certain amount of time.
If
you have ever read the book "The Perfume" you know what I mean. You
have to get yourself into the story. It's not easy to read and you have
to be in a certain mood.
2.
On occasions you only get an excerpt. I recall one from 'Jane Eyre'.
The one with Brocklehurst and the hair cut. I thought what a strange
story because it was taken from the context. Today I like 'Jane Eyre'
because I've read the whole book (I couldn't recall I've read that
excerpt until I reached the scene.)
3. They use authors because they are well known not because of what they've written.
I
had to stumble through Dickens' 'Hard Times' in English (my first
foreign language). First thing I did I bought a copy of the German
translation. Another point which doesn't count in Dickens' favour: He
has (in my eyes) a certain brutality in all his stories. I exclude 'A
Christmas Carol' which I really like.
Thanks
to the BBC I fell in love with an author who's a contemporary to
Dickens: Elizabeth Gaskell. Her novel 'North and South' criticises the
industrialisation as good as any of Dickens' novels and without his
'brutality'.
4.
The themes of the chosen stories. I'm not one into science fiction, so
Orwell and Wells are not for me (unfortunately both authors were on the
school reading list). And '1984' and 'Animal Farm' are also brutal in my
eyes.
But what kind of stories do I like. It is easy to criticise, but hard to come up with an alternative.
One
I have already mentioned. Elizabeth Gaskell. Maybe the reason why they
didn't choose her is that my English teachers were male. And love
stories…
I
do like biographies. It doesn't depend on the person. It is more his
surroundings I find interesting. In my eyes you can learn a lot from
that. What I don't like are autobiographies which rub the knowledge in
every word and sentence in the reader's face. I've read two of that
kind, both written in the style of a conversation. But there are
thousands that fit the description of an interesting (auto)biography.
Antonia Fraser has written several. I have to find the time to read the
biography about Bess of Hardwicke
I
do like weird little novels. All those stories where you can let your
imagination run wild. The best examples are 'Hofman' and 'The Love of
Seven Dolls'.
And
I like to read those stories in my own pace and at my chosen time. I
could be that I start a book read the first pages and put it away. And
half a year later I start again and read it without interruption. Or I
read two books parallel.
You see I like reading, but as I like it, not as others want me two.