Book Love Art
I have always been a lover of books, and of art. If you’ve followed my blog for very long at all, you’ve seen lots of Bryan Collins pieces floating around. I’ve even encouraged the purchase of his bookmarks in a previous post. Its why I am completely obsessed with Ophelia’s Quote Mugs. With that in mind, I’m sure you can only imagine my complete and utter joy when I saw this:
This is the photography handiwork of “Boy Wonder” Joel Robison. Joel lives in British Columbia Canada and apparently is self taught, playing with his camera and computer to master the self portrait. I love his stuff. He has work available on Etsy: http://www.etsy.com/people/boywonder, and I hope everyone who reads this post takes a look at what he has for sale and finds themselves a treat.
Brick and Mortar vs. The Online World
Featuring the Best Bookstores inTexas
Despite being an Amazon.com affiliate, I truly believe in being a patron of a brick and mortar bookstore. In my mind, online sales are a necessary evil for the true bibliophile who cannot afford to travel toWalesfrom theUnited Statesto pick up a copy of the next book in the Scarlet Pimpernel series. (I shop abebooks.com every three or four months for this exact purpose.) Online sales are for that student looking for the cheapest textbook because its that or don’t eat for a month, and where not eating for a day or two is fathomable, not eating for a whole month would counter the act of trying to improve your mind. I shop online if I’m gravely ill and cannot expose my disgusting germs to the outside world for a few weeks and am dying to read that biography that is just obscure enough that my favorite stores wont have it in stock for months anyway. I shop Amazon.com for Paul Collins books on the regular, because they are readily available there, but most his stuff is out of print and isn’t carried by Barnes & Noble (I really like the one at the Woodlands mall) and rarely seen at most used stores.
For this reason, I am signing paperwork on Tuesday to be an Event Coordinator at my local Half Price Books (Humble), my favorite family owned bookstore in the country and the easiest store to shop inTexas. I’d like nothing more than to generate traffic at a place I love while mostly still being a stay at home mom, as this job is only 20 hrs. a month and is a bit like a consulting gig.
That being said, Half Price Books isn’t the only great bookstore inTexas. I’m also a huge fan of Murder By the Book inHouston, mostly for the fact that they have become world famous and still manage to be the coziest place in the world. Murder By the Book is right around the corner from a Half Price Books, and though I stop at HPB first, if they don’t have the latest and greatest in stock yet, I have no problem popping over and buying a current pub if I have to. The real life story to this hypothetical scenario being when Carlos Ruiz Zafon’s Angel Game was first released.
Murder By the Book is great, but they are a bit of a drive for me. So when I want the same cozy atmosphere, comfy chairs, and intimate shelving units, but not the drive, another favorite place for me is Good Books in the Woods in Spring, off Oak Ridge, almost to the Woodlands. It’s a quiet little gem tucked away literally in the woods, a house turned bookstore. They have their own book clubs and writing workshops. They specialize in first editions, signed copies, and all that is old and interesting, but there are some run of the mill things you can find there too. It’s a bit more expensive than HPB on most days, but sometimes worth it if HPB doesn’t happen to have what you’re looking for and you’re too impatient to wait for it to be shipped to you. I say “a bit more expensive,” but their prices are always reasonable, I’m just used to my beloved HPB clearance section. (Visit Good Books in the Woods here: http://www.goodbooksinthewoods.com/)
As I’m headed back home, often severely hungry because I’m always hungry, on the southbound side of 45 you can also find Once and Again Books, often mistaken as an HPB because its quite similar. Honestly, I only shop there because its next to my favorite food joint: The Olive Oil, fabulous Greek Food. And it’s on the way home. But its nice, its clean, and in good order.
Now for myDallaspeeps:
I’m absolutely, positively in love with the Recycled Bookstore inDenton. The entire shopping experience happens, literally, in layers. There are stairs and cubbies and closets, all brimming with organized, clean, lovely used books. They also function in an old school fashion and will negotiate prices with you, something most stores just can’t do anymore. For my every day Dallas shopping, I stick to all the near by Half Price Books locations peppered all over the city, but on special day trips up the highway, a bookstore in an old Opera House is just the thing.
As for Dallas Half Price Books locations (and there are quite a few!), my favorites are of course the flagship for its enormity and coffee shop, and the Cedar Hill location for having been my college haunt and my first introduction to Half Price Books at all.
Now, Texans, really… with all these just moments away, why would you go online to shop unless you absolutely had to? Amazon.com, abebooks.com, hpbmarketplace.com, all those fabulous .com bookstore – are tools when you need them, not your first go to.
A Fish and a Girl With a Split Personality
Meet Elliot, Sarah, and Molly: 3 characters in a writing exercise.
Elliot
A betta’s side of a story
I look out from my bowl and see Sarah’s eyes. She’s my person. She has large blue eyes always attacked with a massive amount of eyeliner. She reminds me of what I saw of a raccoon in a national geographic magazine she left lying haphazardly by my bowl; among other things she leaves places, like her keys in the sofa and her shoes in the bathroom.
Her eyes are glossy, always, like she’s going to cry. That’s how they were when we met, and how they’ve been ever since. She tends to be sad, and buys betta fish when she is sad, apparently. Just last week she brought Claude in, his bowl is stationed by the television she leaves on too loud. I’m hoping he’ll be floating by the end of the week. He always whines about the noise. Of course, Sarah can’t hear him, just me, andLydia. Lydiais nice; she’s on the other side of the picture frame, a beautiful grayish pink color –Lydianot the frame. Tommy-Tom, I think is too far away, or deaf, because he never answersLydiawhen we call across the room for conversation. He thinks he’s all-important because he has been here the longest, and he has the largest bowl. Mine isn’t bad, though.
She’s a good person, my person. She saves us, like I said, when she is sad, from those tiny cups at Wal-Mart, and picks out large beautiful vases and bowls for us to swim in with ease. She’s a pro at it, and she talks to us after picking us out, asking us what color rocks we would like, what shape of dish shall we go in? And the sort. Other people look at her, some like she’s funny, some like she’s desirable, I can never tell exactly, I’m not a person how should I know what their faces mean if they aren’t my person.
She told me she liked me because I was so red, and that my hint of purple on the tail reminded her of her favorite color orchid. She keeps orchids everywhere too. On every surface there is either of vase of fish or vase of lush purple orchids. I like to think that I am her favorite though, because many of the others she brings home are ugly, brown, the unwanted ones – the fish, not the orchids. I am a fish.
She looks at me now and says, “Elliot, one day, my life will be as beautiful as you.” And she cries. I blow bubbles to make her happy, but she doesn’t see them so I dash in and out of my castle she set up for me. “And maybe I’ll have a castle,” she sobs some more. So castles today are not the key. I rub against my plant, it’s a lovely plant, and when the green reaches the air up top it blooms pretty white flowers. I like the white, it makes my red look more vibrant, and my purple so lovely. I am beautiful, but it’s not enough for her.
Sarah sleeps on the couch tonight. In all actuality, she sleeps on the couch every night because her bedroom doesn’t really exist. She found a door in the alley not long after she saved me. She dragged it in, cleaned it up, stained it the same color as the rest of the woodwork and nailed it to the wall. She tells visitors that it’s the door to her bedroom, but this is a one-room flat, large but still void of extra rooms. When she’s tired of the couch and wants to sleep in a real bed, she unfolds the couch and it becomes a bed. On those nights she also makes a show of getting undressed and putting on her “dainties,” she tells us we’re lucky because we’re the only boys in the world that get to see her do it. Her dainties are kept in a small blue painted bureau, blue to match the rest of her living room, and on top of that sits two vases where Lydia and I live. There is a picture frame between us, but I don’t know who is inside. Knowing Sarah it’s the people that come with the picture as hung above the television and Claude, a couple picnicking in the sun, or possibly some obscure artwork she found at the Goodwill, like the one behind my bowl, a large blazing blue phoenix. Lydiasays phoenixes aren’t supposed to be blue. However, Sarah’s a lazy girl when it comes to nightly rituals, and mostly – like now – she doesn’t bother with folding down the couch or dressing.
Whether she sleeps on the couch as a couch or on the couch as a bed, she always wakes up the same: “anti-meningitis exercises.” She drops her chin to her chest over and over again until satisfied. Then, she quickly pops off the bed and sporadically bends and stretches about the room. She is convinced that this will keep her safe from spiral viruses. She also does jumping jacks in the morning… while she gets dressed. There is a small bathroom I can view the sink from and I watch her hop around while she brushes her teeth and washes her face. She tells us that its good to be active in the morning and that she’ll never have a boyfriend or a room mate because only fish understand her morning necessities. When she says things like this Claude grumbles over the noise of the television that is almost on constantly and tellsLydiaand I that our person is crazy. We tell Claude that she’s his person too.
The problem with all these things, with her sporadic routines, and her desire to swear off boyfriends, is that she never sticks to them exactly. Some days she skips out on her routines altogether, some days she has a boyfriend – he lives across the hall and feeds us sometimes. The problem is, well, Sarah isn’t just Sarah.
Sarah
the obsessive compulsive orphan
Sarah had been staring at the phoenix painting above the fish bowls for nearly an hour. She thought she had seen it move, but of course it couldn’t have, that would just be crazy. Molly said she had painted it a few months ago when they had enough money for groceries and paint, but Sarah could have sworn she bought it for a few dollars at Goodwill. Now, she couldn’t remember. She heard someone turn a key in the hallway and thought for once Molly was going to be home, but instead it was the neighbor across the hall. She got to the peep hole just in time to see him vanish behind the door. He was cute, but too damn quiet. He freaked her out actually, always loitering in the hall near her door before slinking into his own apartment. He was very odd, indeed.
Molly
the artistic heiress
Molly sat up in bed. She didn’t remember coming home last night – or falling asleep. She looked down to see that she was wearing Sarah’s pajamas. That happened a lot – their apartment was dark in the evenings and they often did things by candle light and the laundry got mixed up a lot. Sarah was so paranoid about the electricity bill, as if Molly’s dad didn’t cover it all anyway. Mr. Eugene Pruitt afterall was a multi millionaire and would pay his daughter’s bills whether she liked it or not. She had wanted her parents to disown her and threaten to take everything away if she dropped out ofDartmouthto go be an artist on her own. Instead,Eugenelooked at his daughter and said over the rim of his glasses, “If that’s what you’d like to do.”
Her jaw did not drop, she was not remotely surprised, and he went back to reading Chesterton’s Collected Works from the Illustrated London News and said into his book, “Call us when you get where you’re going and send us your address.” She had called, but did not leave her address, her bills were being retrieved and paid within the month anyway. Automatic transfers through his bank, she noticed when she received her paperwork through the mail slot in the door. She assumed, she had to assume, she was never even given the option to see her monthly statements. Her father had odd connections with important people, and surely had arranged for her mail to be re-routed to him no matter where she had lived or stayed. Her cards from friends always arrived late, with multiple cities and dates inked over the right hand corner, but he didn’t look through it, he just liked having the option to do so. She never had the satisfaction of her father calling her to see what she’d been doing with her time, or why the phone bills were so high (or low). Two years after she’d moved away fromDartmouth’s campus, he’s called exactly at the end of every business quarter, no more and no less. He always left messages like, “Molly, this is Eugene and Meredith, ahem, your parents, ah, checking in. Love you. See you at _______.” Fill in any major holiday, and she dutifully boarded a plane and had lunch or dinner, whichever they could fit into their busy schedules. Once she tried not going, but a limo showed up at the gallery where she worked part-time, along with a well-built body guard named Jim, and carried her away to the airport. She promised her boss it would never happen again, as long as she was guaranteed time off on the holidays. Despite a few small occurrences here and there, Molly was their low maintenance child. Their cocker spaniel Candice was the one they had to fuss over. Meredith took “Candice the widdle baby” everywhere with her, Meredith remembered going places with her mother very few times in her life, she could count them on one hand actually. Instead she always met her mother places, with the nanny, or the limo driver, or the housekeeper. Molly had always been someone else’s responsibility, because of that, she’d turned out very independent, except of course when it came to paying bills.
Molly rolled slowly out of bed, groaning from a sore shoulder. She didn’t know what it was so sore from, and as she shifted, she realized the whole right side of her body ached. She hobbled past the bathroom to the peep hole of the front door. He could see Sean’s door and the purple rope he threw over the knob when he was home, so she would know. His schedule was crazy – what her’s would have been had she been born into a normal life. He went to school full time and worked at a bar downtown. That’s how they’d met, he was her bartender, the first night she’d showed up in this crazy city. He had a friend (his previous neighbor) who was subletting his apartment while he lived inBelize.
“Belize?” she’d asked.
“Sure, why notBelize?” he’d had a bit of a far northwestern accent, Maine, ironed out by years a few years in San Antonio, Texas, and altered even more now in Chicago. She tried to listen to her own voice sometimes, her own words as she stared in the mirror at her lips moving. She couldn’t tell what she sounded like really,Eugeneand Meredith had moved around too much when they were young to teach her any kind of slang from any particular region.
“Is it furnished?” That was so something Eugenewould have asked. Calculating Eugene. Meredith would have piped in, as well, ‘Oh it can’t be furnished, darling, I wanted to decorate it like…’ She would have had the latest designer’s work at the tip of her tongue. She read too many magazines, and talked to too many famous people. Rich snobs, the whole lot of them.
“Why would it be?” Sean had asked. “The guy lives out of his suitcase – he spent all of last year inMilan.”
“So why does he bother having an apartment here?” She was moderately, and appropriately, suspicious. Always be suspicious,Eugenehad taught her, people always just want your money, even if they think you don’t have any.
“Beats me,” Sean answered while he’d poured drinks for three new customers. She watched him and memorized the mixes. She’d never been a bartender before, and wondered if she’d ever want to try. California Dream, said the blonde, and Sean poured tequila, sweet and dry vermouth into a glass with ice cubes. Molly memorized the way he stirred and strained it into a cocktail glass.
“Mmmmm, and a cherry,” the blonde said, looking over her lashes.
“Sure,” he dropped one on the top and turned back to Molly after taking the cash.
She found out later that Trey and Sean weren’t really friends at all – they’d met twice. Sean just didn’t want to straight up ask the hot girl in his bar to be his new neighbor, how awkward would that have been? She would have moved in even if he had said it that way though, she might have even laughed and asked him out. But it had all worked out anyway, he helped her move in and then took her to pizza afterwards, like a true college gentleman.
Now, she went out to the hallway and knocked on his door. When he didn’t answer she went back, got her key from the top drawer of the table under the phoenix painting, and let herself in. There he was, asleep and all beautiful; his lips pouted a bit when he dreamed. She crawled in with him and passed out again.
Books to Movies to TV Shows
I’m a bibliophile – a crazed book junkie. But more than that, I’m a sucker for a good story. So, admittedly, when it comes down to it I can enjoy a well-crafted TV Show storyline just as easily as a classic like Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead.
I grew up with the token line “read the book, its always better than the movie.” I lived and breathed this credo, I pushed it on others as a bookseller. Up until recently, I’d vow that it was complete and utter truth.
But has anyone noticed how crafty these TV Show writers have been getting? Look at Lost, the whole nation was hooked. And then all the over-rated vampire dramas… True Blood, I must say, was pretty fascinating. The book series counterpart by Charlainne Harris, uuuhhh, cute and funny – but not something that would keep me going back for more except for the fact that I can’t stand being that person that has watched the show or movie and not read all the books, being that person hurts my soul.
The whole phenomenon of liking the show better than the books threw me for a loop. I’m not that person – I always enjoy the books better. Look at The Scarlet Pimpernel: God only knows I adore Jane Seymour, but nothing compares to just reading it all for myself. Jane Austen renditions I could eat up day after day, but you’ll never get me to concede that I’d take any of the movie versions over the books ever. East of Eden, Nicholas Nickleby, Wuthering Heights, Harry Potter, my list of loves goes on and on, and as fabulous as some of the movie versions get they just can never compete with the books.
Until lately. I saw White Oleander and despite its major differences from Janet Fitch’s original work, I loved it, and will re-watch the movie long before I’ll re-read the written format. Girl Interrupted… I adore Susanna Keysen, but man, Angelina Joli and Winona Ryder did such an awesome job, I was riveted. And finally, to my shame, I have a closet addiction to the TV Show The Vampire Diaries. Its lame, I know, the whole ‘I’m in highschool and I’m doomed to love this vampire from first sight’ business is such a racket and mostly I hate it. (The Twilight book series stressed me out beyond belief, I didn’t really care for it although it was entertaining – but overall, pretty awful.) Yet, here I was this week, hooked on the Vampire Diaries (thanks to Netflix) and I thought: The books are bound to be even better, after all they are books.
So, I bought the first two. I’m reading them. I’m HATING them. How did a TV Show screen writer write such riveting stuff based on a book that is not remotely riveting at all? The books are so young, and in comparison the show is so much older. The Elena of the book is so shallow and a huge jerk so far, completely obsessed with herself and her status, and the Elena of the show is actually a bit lovable with the makings of a heroine.
I ask my fellow book readers: How has this happened? Has book quality gone down so low? Has the technology and budgeting of the movie and television industry risen so high to make a lame storyline become something fascinating with visual stimulation? Is it a combination of the two? Does any other book lovers find themselves in this hypocritical dilemma? I love my books. I love discovering the latest Simon Winchester, I love diving into ancient classics, I love studying history and researching ideas and philosophies of the past, I even love my bubble bath reads (the books I call cotton candy for the mind and soul). And sometimes, I find myself loving the movies and shows just a tad bit better.
Reason for the Season?
I’m not a big fan of Christmas. I hate the consumerism, I hate the blow up creepy Santa Clause’s in people’s yards. Oh, also, I’m a Christian. That being said,
Nothing chaps my hide more than hearing fellow Christians tell me: “Remember the reason for the season!”
The reason for the season, if they looked a bit closer into history was to help aid in the conversion of pagans who already celebrated December 25th, Yule, Mother’s Night, Winter Solstice (whatever you wish to call it) with carnivals, gifts, food, and lots of hooplala. The theory was to keep the month of partying and give the holiday Christian symbolism so that they would not feel such a loss of fun when they converted.
For instance, mistletoe was a plant collected by Druids to ward off witch craft and protect the carrier, pretty much an all around healer. Now, we use it as an excuse to kiss people in doorways. Either way, it has nothing to do with Christianity and everything to do with “Christmas” or Winter Solstice Celebrations.
Now, with all that being said, I don’t mind that Christians today use it to celebrate the birth of Christ. I think the birth of Christ should be celebrated. But don’t tell me to remember the reason for the season when the season existed long before this particular reason. If you want to celebrate the birth of Christ without the consumerism and drunken partying – don’t overlap it on a holiday that was created thousands of years ago for that exact purpose. Pick a different day and celebrate it with all your reasons in tact and no distractions.
The Best of 2010/ 2011 Resolutions
Top 10 Books I Read in 2010:
- Her Fearful Symmetry – Audrey Niffenegger (January)
- Darwin’s Black Box- Michael J. Behe (February)
- The Girl from the Fiction Department: A Portrait of Sonia Orwell – Hilary Spurling (April)
- A Walk in the Woods – Bill Bryson (April)
- Daniel Deronda – George Eliot (July)
- Reading Lolita in Tehran – Azar Nafisi (July)
- The Book Thief – Markus Zusak (August)
- Well Enough Alone – Jennifer Traig (October)
- The Diaries of Adam and Eve – Mark Twain (November)
- 84, Charing Cross Road – Helene Hanff (December)
To Read in 2011:
Complete Bauer’s Novels list, I am currently reading Henry James off this list and I am reading the list in order.
Also these of Bauer’s Biography List –
Augustine – The Confessions
Margery Kempe – The Book of Margery Kempe
Michael de Montaigne – Essays
Teresa of Avila – The Life of Saint Teresa of Avila by Herself
Rene Descartes – Meditations
John Bunyan – Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners
Mary Rowlandson – The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration
Jean-Jacques Rousseau – Confessions
Benjamin Franklin – The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
Goals:
Read one non-fiction book for every completion of a fiction book
Write full reviews for every book I read and post them here
Pay off two credit cards
Set aside enough money to start our business
Read to my daughter at least 30 minutes a day
Take my dogs for more walks!
Prepare Ayla’s Latin lessons, work through them and prepare answer keys
Books I Read in 2010
(in order of completion date)
- A Separate Peace – John Knowles (Jan.)
- Get a Grip on Evolution – David Burnie (Jan.)
- Her Fearful Symmetry – Audrey Niffenegger (Jan.)
- The Origin – Irving Stone (Jan.)
- Cat’s Cradle – Kurt Vonnegut (Feb.)
- Darwin’s Black Box- Michael J. Behe (Feb.)
- The Templars – Piers Paul Read (Feb.)
- Forget About It – Caprice Crane (Feb.)
- The Girl from the Fiction Department: A Portrait of Sonia Orwell – Hilary Spurling (April)
- Crime and Punishment – Dostoevsky (April)
- Guinevere, Queen of the Summer Country – Rosalind Miles (April)
- A Walk in the Woods – Bill Bryson (April)
- The Angel’s Game – Carlos Ruiz Zafon (May)
- Ramses: Son of Light – Christian Jacq (May)
- Ramses: The Eternal Temple – Christian Jacq (May)
- Conspicuous Consumption – Vebler (June)
- Three Men in a Boat – Jerome K. Jerome (June)
- Anna Karenina – Tolstoy (June)
- Ramses: The Battle of Kadesh – Christian Jacq (June)
- The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy (July)
- Daniel Deronda – George Eliot (July)
- Reading Lolita in Tehran – Azar Nafisi (July)
- The Ghost and the Dead Deb – Alice Kimberly (August)
- The Ghost and the Dead Man’s Library – Alice Kimberly (August)
- The Book Thief – Markus Zusak (August)
- Whose Body? – Dorothy Sayers (August)
- Espresso Shot – Cleo Coyle (August)
- Murder on the Orient Express – Agatha Christie (August)
- A Pair of Blue Eyes – Thomas Hardy (September)
- The Sweet Far Thing – Libba Bray (October)
- Well Enough Alone – Jennifer Traig (October)
- The Monk – Matthew Lewis (November)
- Family Affair – Caprice Crane (November)
- The Pleasures of God – John Piper (November)
- The Diaries of Adam and Eve – Mark Twain (November)
- Love in the Time of Cholera – Gabriel Garcia Marquez (November)
- Finding Darwin’s God – Kenneth Miller (December)
- Tuesdays With Morrie – Mitch Albom (December)
- 84, Charing Cross Road – Helene Hanff (December)
- Where I Lived and What I Lived For – Henry David Thoreau (December)
- The Brief History of the Dead – Kevin Brockmeier (December)
- The Wind in the Willows – Kenneth Grahame (December)
For my 2009 list: https://anakalianwhims.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/2009-book-list/
Inappropriate Things to Do to Pregnant Women
… and for some reason the masses think its ok…
* Squeal loudly at them, directing half the conversation at their enlarged gut.
(Back to that whole: “Please look at my face when we’re talking” kinda thing. The kid isn’t out yet, it can’t see you making googoo faces at it, and talking baby talk at me isn’t going to accomplish anything anyway.)
* Rub the belly, attack the belly, poke the belly – pretty much any touching of the belly that you would not do if the person was not pregnant.
(We’re not Buddha, we can still feel that, if I didn’t want you rubbing my six pack at random in the super market I probably don’t want you doing it now – I can still feel that. And don’t take it personally as though I have somehow slighted YOU because I didn’t want you to molest me.)
* Hit on them.
(On what planet is it ok to hit on someone who is having another man’s child? Just because I’m having sex and there is obvious proof of that fact, doesn’t mean I want to have sex with you. Don’t look at me like that, don’t ask for my number, and don’t keep talking to me after I tell you I’m married and wave my wedding ring at you. Whether you have a twisted fetish or you’re just trying to make the “fat” girl feel good about her day – its creepy. Don’t do it.)
* Lecture them about their tattoos.
(Just because I have a tattoo and I’m pregnant, does not mean that I went and got that tattoo while I was conceiving, seconds after the strip turned pink, or eight months into my pregnancy. I’m not an idiot, I know that getting a tattoo while pregnant is not a good thing to do – why would you assume that’s exactly what I did? I had a lifetime to get a tattoo… I’ve only got 10 months of being pregnant. Use your brain.)










Conspicuous Consumption by Thorstein Veblen – Lost in “Education”
June 27, 2010 at 5:52 pm (In So Many Words, Reviews, The Whim) (books, capitalism, conspicuous consumption, economics, education, essays, great ideas, historical document, marxism, reviews, social commentary, sociologist, source documents, veblen)
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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