We haven't talked TV shows in a while and I want to share with you all how addicted the Mathewsies have become to "Lost". Yes, Lost (The TV series from ABC) is over after six seasons of which I had watched approximately zero episodes prior to the series ending. But, lo and behold, with the advent of Netflix in our lives (credit to Isabug...in fact, I think I might start referring in future to Netflix as Isaflix just so she can be fully aware of how much we appreciate her connection with Netflix) we have discovered Lost. I just want to write Lost in big bold letters or something...LOST!!!
Every night, we hurry through dinner and all of our evening chores so that like families of old gathered around the radio, we can watch episodes of Lost. We are now on Season 3, Episode 2. We talk about Lost. We talk about who our favorite character is, we talk about who The Others are, we talk about the Island, what the button is for, why the plane crashed, who's creepy, who's not, we talk about how when the Wii Fit says "visualize your ideal body" and I immediately think I want to look like Evengaline Lilly...
If you, dearest schwester and neicies (and other blog readers) have not watched Lost, you must. I repeat: you must start watching Lost on Isaflix (or the full episodes which are on line on ABC.com)!
Sadly, one day Lost will end and what then, I ask, will we watch next?
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand
Hello my darling readers! Have you all been reading with the new year? I read a couple of books from Isabug's parcel that arrived the day after everyone's departure including the A.J. Jacobs book (as written about on other blogs) and Little Princes. I really liked them both. Also, I just finished Laura Hillenbrand's (Seabiscuit) new book Unbroken --it's in the Audible library for those of you who are authorized with the secret code. I recommend it for a wonderful change up from fiction. Also, I recommend it highly as a "manly book" and I'd put it into the Jon Krakauer company. It's a very flat, level, detail-rich true story of Louis Zamperini -- who is still alive by the way -- a juvenile delinquent, Olympic runner, WW II airmen, Japanese POW, and all-around inspiration! Reading it took me back to Mere's and my little visit to the WWII memorial in Washington D.C with Grandpa and filled me with such affection for men like him and their ilk. Truly, they maybe are the "Greatest Generation" and tough beyond measure.
If you read Seabiscuit, you may remember the journalistic, dry quality of that book. And, while the story was about Seabiscuit there were a multitude of side roads into the lives of the people who intersected with that horse as well as the horse industry of the day. Unbroken is much the same -- rich with interesting facts, colorful people and the nature of the war in the Pacific. The story telling is dry but like a good wine, sometimes dry is just the perfect thing. Plus, I don't know about you, but while I feel pretty well-educated about WWII and the war in Europe, I'm not particularly informed about the War in the Pacific other than Pearl Harbor and maybe the Burmese Death March. I now feel so much smarter.
So...Unbroken -- great for long runs in the cold (or on the treadmill). Try it, you'll like it.
If you read Seabiscuit, you may remember the journalistic, dry quality of that book. And, while the story was about Seabiscuit there were a multitude of side roads into the lives of the people who intersected with that horse as well as the horse industry of the day. Unbroken is much the same -- rich with interesting facts, colorful people and the nature of the war in the Pacific. The story telling is dry but like a good wine, sometimes dry is just the perfect thing. Plus, I don't know about you, but while I feel pretty well-educated about WWII and the war in Europe, I'm not particularly informed about the War in the Pacific other than Pearl Harbor and maybe the Burmese Death March. I now feel so much smarter.
So...Unbroken -- great for long runs in the cold (or on the treadmill). Try it, you'll like it.
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