flemmings: (Default)
flemmings ([personal profile] flemmings) wrote2019-03-13 08:06 pm

Wednesday's Child

So, my nemesis at work used all the salt we ordered specially, for stairs and such, on thawing out the toddler playground, with no thought either for the preschool ice rink or the garbage/ diaper disposal area. Consequently, yesterday I slipped on the ice in the latter and landed hard. Was resigned to being crippled today because, in a fit of fed-up-ness, I neglected to ice the knees after I got home. This morning however I woke with nary a pain in either knee nor hip. Must have shocked my body into good behaviour, at least temporarily.

(The arms are another matter. I now have a certain muscular slowness in the neck region, very reminiscent of the whiplash I got after being knocked off my bike in the mid-oughties. At least I can still sit up and lie down, which then I couldn't.)

But limberness was as well, because I'd been hearing noises in the bathroom the last day or two, and since I was over my fed-up-ness, I went down to the basement to investigate. And there of course was my once-mended water pipe happily spewing water over the back basement. However I live in the future, where I can google plumbers and pick a five-star one. Who came three hours later, fixed everything in half an hour, and only charged me $250 plus tax. Call this a win.

Last finished?
Yangszee Choo, Night Tiger
-- it's a Choo novel with her brand of heroine, but still very satisfying

Plus a bunch of Agatha Christie short stories on a loose-end weekend.

Reading now?
Chakraborty, City of Brass
-- a doorstopper, labyrinthine as Dickens, with two parallel plots much more complicated than Night Tiger's parallel plots. One could get lost in this book except for a niggle that I hope will go away. And the niggle is that the first-person character for sure, and many of the third-person narrative characters, talk like New Yorkers. OK, fine, this is just their speech translated into its American English equivalent. But. Djinni who talk like New Yorkers lack a certain je ne sais quoi and don't feel like *real* djinni.

Pratchett, Snuff
-- for the anniversary of his passing and because I've only read it once and because I never did figure out why it's called Snuff in the first place.

Still with Murakami's Underground, still with the Japan flashbacks.

Next?
When there *is* a next, Zen Cho's new one and maybe Anne Leckie's fantasy as well.
incandescens: (Default)

[personal profile] incandescens 2019-03-14 09:10 am (UTC)(link)
Much sympathy on the fall, and iI'm glad it wasn't worse. (Am currently nursing a sprained ankle.)
incandescens: (Default)

[personal profile] incandescens 2019-03-15 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you. It's inconvenient, but could be worse. At least I'm not in the position I was three years ago, when I had a trip to Paris booked within the fortnight . . . I am going down to visit my parents in Southampton next week, but that shouldn't be too stressful, apart from the train journey in between. (Actually, once I get there, odds are they're going to be insisting I spend as much time as possible sitting down and with my foot up . . .)
incandescens: (Default)

[personal profile] incandescens 2019-03-16 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
Frankly at the moment I would be happy to be coddled.

I managed to fall over (again, on the same ankle) while walking into work this morning. It was due to uneven paving, and I think I would have been okay if my ankle had been its normal self. But as it is, it feels like it's back to square one, plus I skinned my right knee. I've had better weeks. Having next week spent sitting down currently sounds lovely.
incandescens: (Default)

[personal profile] incandescens 2019-03-16 11:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you. The sympathy is appreciated. I've had better weeks...