science fiction, fantasy and other (counter)culture, occasional gorkys zygotic mynci and frankfurt school references... as featured in 'banana wings', 'focus' (bfsa magazine) &, umm, currently working outwards from there; on bluesky (@ketelby.bsky.social), contactable by email at dsketelby@gmail.com, accept no imitations (pronouns: he/him)
Saturday, 30 September 2017
twenty-seven words about helicopters and rainbows
Tuesday, 12 September 2017
david foster wallace: where i was when i heard
Postscript (2017): time continues to pass. ‘Small daughter Megan’ prefers to be called Meg now and starts secondary school in a few days. Sam has a Master’s degree, lives in London; we see plenty of him but not enough. Leeds still exists. I’ve since seen Tom Hingley (frontman) perform Inspiral Carpets material: it was at the Watchet Music Festival in 2012 where Sarah, Meg and I and a thousand others singing along with “this is how it feels to be lonely” certainly felt like a moment. We chatted briefly to Tom afterwards and he follows me on twitter, hi Tom [*waves*]. Once in a while, I still find myself missing that greatcoat [‘that greatcoat’ = synecdoche]. Have I read ‘Infinite Jest’ yet? Well, it’s a long story...
Post-postscript (2022): some more time passed, this is getting predictable. It's the first anniversary of the January 6th Capitol Insurrection today during the third calendar year of the pandemic: how do we think 'consensus reality' is bearing up? In other news, it turns out (this may only interest a British indie Gen X'er demographic niche) that Carter USM's cover of 'This Is How It Feels' is good; I know this because of a Carter USM cover versions album that my brother Ed got me for my birthday, thanks Ed. I loved Carter USM back in the day: I mean, they weren't the Beatles or David Bowie or anything as I'd have probably acknowledged at the time, they only did a relatively small number of different things but on a good day, they did those things superlatively well. It also occurs to me that there's a gap in the market for a compilation CD box set of the best screams in popular music. Aaaarrrrggghh!!!
[See also: DFWCon]
it's bleak out on those moors |
Friday, 1 September 2017
Tuesday, 25 July 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of films seen since April
twenty-seven word reviews of books read since March
twenty-seven word review of a noticeboard outside where the home-care agency used to be; empty for a while, this unit's since been redeveloped as an antique shop called 'Presence of the Past'
Office closed, now – workers elderly, infirm themselves, perhaps.
NVQ3-qualified, though – no-one can take that away.
Why not visit Presence of the Past if you're in town today?
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of 'Britain in Focus' exhibition (Science & Media Museum, Bradford; with BBC4) and of photography collections by featured artists
update (July 2018): twitter conversation about Leeds, Peter Mitchell,
Shirley Baker, Quarry Hill, Red Riding etc here
twenty-seven word review of Martin's Parr's 'Boring Postcards' (London: Phaidon, 1999)
Saturday, 1 April 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of films watched during March 2017
Scott Pilgrim vs the World (2011, dir. Edgar Wright) – witty, hyperactive, glorious mess; references superhero comics, martial arts gaming, garage/ grunge music. I too became tough at vegan academy; dropped out though, completed pescaterian technical college.
The Hundred Foot Journey (2014, dir. Lasse Hallstrom; starring Helen Mirren, Om Puri) – rival restaurants; French countryside; pro-diversity message; you’ll see this film’s denouement coming from a hundred miles away; good, heartwarming fun though. Who doesn’t enjoy watching food, TBH?
Still the Enemy Within (2014, dir. Owen Gower) – documentary: how the 1984-5 U.K. miners’ strike was fought and policed; inspiring and moving; also discusses how ‘supportive others’ were mobilised – students, musicians, LGBT activists (seen ‘Pride’?).
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of books read during January and February 2017
Tessa Hadley’s Married Love. Short stories. Mutedness; unspoken conversations, unacted desires. One story: female undergraduate, 20 marries composer, 60; has babies. Choices cannot be unchosen; families comment, react; things work out.
Wednesday, 1 January 1975
brezhnev
Okay, so let's begin this 'weblog' - I'm running this on Windows 75, which requires three steam operators who (I don't make the rules) must be members of the TGWU. I got three sacks of coal in for this, which ought to be enough for one blog post. It's all a little bit noisy.
It might be about four decades before I get started on this properly, mind. One hopes that, by then, the technology will be a little easier - also that the Reagan/Thatcher axis won't have been in the ascendancy, entrenching money and class privilege, hollowing out the state, and smashing the power of organised labour. Fingers crossed!