Yesterday I spent several hours making up a test for my students to take tomorrow. Then I went home and watched Monty Python and the Holy Grail. I was going to pop some popcorn to eat while I watched, but then I noticed I had a week-old bag of spinach I hadn’t even opened. I was too lazy to actually make a salad out of it, so I sat down in front of the movie with a bag of spinach and a bag of croutons.
Monty Python is funnier when you’re eating spinach.
Friday was “Amazon Day.” That is, when my order from Amazon.com came in. I got a neat little book called Twisty Little Passages, the first book-length academic study of interactive fiction (aka computer “text adventure games,” like Zork, that people played in the 80’s) from a literary perspective. I played Zork and its ilk for many years, and I have fond memories of reading the text over the phone to my best friend Dann in junior high, and we would puzzle out together what to do next. Sometimes at 2 am. (I confess, we had to use hints for Zork I, but we beat Zork II fair and square.)
Anyway, the book was printed on acid-free paper, with a full-cloth hardcover binding (not just a strip of cloth down the spine). When you take the dust jacket off, the cover is deep navy blue, with silver lettering on the binding. It’s beautiful. I get so tired of the garish colors on paperbacks these days – bright reds and yellows, hot pinks, and day-glo orange. The colors clash when they’re placed next to each other on the shelf, and I absolutely refuse to organize my books by color scheme. The garish paperbacks are “dog books.” They run up to you and scream, “Look at me! Look at me! Pay attention and shower love on me!” Books like Twisty Little Passages are “cat books.” They sit on the shelf, looking quiet and mysterious, and seem to say, “Whenever you think you’re ready to read something worthwhile, come find me. I’ll be over here, doing my own thing.”
I need to buy more “cat books.”

