Ramses Volume 3: The Battle of Kadesh

June 29, 2010 at 3:19 am (JARS, Reviews)

A review on the third volume of the bestselling series by Christian Jacq:

The character development is poor and I’m definitely disappointed with the level of historical accuracy and shallowness of all the well-known figures.  To me, it might be better to write a piece on Ramses from an unknown person’s point of view – character development can go as deep as the imagination, and the writing wouldn’t seem so lacking because what the character sees of Ramses would be based in what we find in museums and history books.  Instead, Jacq uses redundant phrases and paragraphs to describe the relationships between characters – much like Nicholas Sparks whom I despise.  But, it is an entertaining vacation read.

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Conspicuous Consumption by Thorstein Veblen – Lost in “Education”

June 27, 2010 at 5:52 pm (In So Many Words, Reviews, The Whim) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , )

Veblen was a famous sociologist and economist in his day (roughly turn of the century, writing his most well-known essay in 1899).  He even had his own movement! (Institutional Economics Movement).  Whether someone agrees or disagrees with his theories and how the world should be, there is no doubt about the fact that his observations on how the world is, carries a stunning amount of accuracy.

Why did we never read this for school?  The relevancy is uncanny.  The way the times haven’t changed is disturbing.  I am definitely adding this to my required reading list for when I home school my child.

This book in reality is a 100 page essay or so, not long in the slightest and should take the reader a mere hour or two to digest and properly process (depending on the reader).  What I plan to have my child address when I require this to be read are the following questions (and I’d like to know what you guys think too, if you’ve read this):

How do Veblen’s ideas tie into Darwin’s evolutionary theories?

How do they interact with Marxism and Capitalism?

How are his ideas relevant today?

How are the leisure class and ownership related, according to Veblen?  What are the roots of conventional ownership and of marriage?  Consider contemporary phrases like “trophy wife.”  (How does this affect gender roles?)

Veblen sees “emulation” as a key feature of social life in “predatory societies.”  How do the patterns of emulation change as predatory societies change?

What fundamental criticism does Veblen make of standard economics?

I actually have quite a few more that I have borrowed from other sites, essay questions and discussions to be had are all noted in a journal I am keeping of projects and assignments to remember.  My point in posting the blog today, however, is this:

How did something so famous, so moving and so relevant – something Penguin even published in their Great Ideas series – get neglected in my own education?  Not just high school with basic history, social studies, and economics, but also in college when half my life was filled with economic theory and consumer behavior as I earned a Marketing degree?  I am realizing more and more the importance of not just reading about movements and theories, not just getting summaries from textbooks, but reading the original documents!  How can your education be complete without going back to what started the ideas in the first place?  How can you presume to know anything about anything if all your information comes from a summary in a textbook and you’ve never even heard of the essay that initiated the need for that summary?

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Family Recipes

June 12, 2010 at 4:17 am (Recipes, The Whim)

I am due to have a kid in October.  No, I don’t know the gender yet.  Yes, I am going to find out – we just couldn’t tell at the last ultra sound.

With a new person coming into the house, my husband and I are committed to cooking more meals at home.  I already have some staple recipes of my own, and I have some my Grandmother and Mother-in-law have promised me, but I want to have a vast collection.  I could get cookbooks (which I have plenty of) and I could seek some out with google searches, but I wanted to at least feign some personal attachment to our home cooked meals.

So please, post your most famous, your most beloved, or just plain easiest recipes here – from dinner menues to baked goods.  I want my kid to grow up with good eatin’!

What I have so far is listed below.  This is just a list of meal ideas that are staples around our house or other family members, if something sounds good and you want a recipe let me know.  I want to have at least 30 good recipes, preferably more, so that each thing would only be eaten once a month…

1) Venetian Pasta Rolls

2) My Crab and Spinach Pasta Rolls

3) Spaghetti (who doesn’t have an awesome spaghetti recipe?)

4) Chicken Alfredo (I make my Alfredo sauce from scratch, so easy)

5) Chicken Parmesean

6) My Mother-in-law’s Lasagna recipe

7) I have a badass Cayenne Chicken recipe if anyone wants it

8) Lemon Baked Pork with Carmelized Onions (courtesy of Rachel Ray)

9) Does anyone have a homemade pizza recipe?  How do I make dough from scratch?

10) Grandmom Betty Rogers’ Stuffed Bell Pepper Recipe

11) Grandmom Betty Rogers’ Stuffed Cabbage Recipe

12) Chicken and Green Bean Casserole

13) Mother-in-Law’s Chicken and Dumpling Recipe

14) Grilled Cheese Sandwiches with tomatoe soup

15) I have an awesome Pork Orange Marmalade Recipe courtesy of Wally World

16) Peach Glaze Pork (great for holidays served with lots of sliced peaches on the side – I like fruity meat)

17) Mother-in-law’s Sloppy Joe recipe

18) Husband’s steak with my mashed potatoe/cheese casserole

19) Chili Cheese Dogs

20) Taco Salad/ Frito Pie

21) Chicken on Rice with Brocoli Cheese on the side (does anyone have a good brocoli cheese soup recipe?  preferably one with jalepenos?)

22) Sherry’s Awesome Baked Chicken with French cut green beans

23) Mac and Cheese (add hot dog chunks)

24) Cheese Enchiladas

25) Chicken Enchiladas with green peppers

26) Grandmom’s meat loaf

27) Larry’s Corn Chowder

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Ramses Volume 2: The Eternal Temple

June 1, 2010 at 3:15 am (JARS, Reviews)

The further into Ramses story Jacq gets the farther away he gets from history and truth.  I like my historical fiction to be based in a little more fact and so much of the story and so many of the characters are off base.  Its all rather disappointing.

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