9/28/2005

Falcon web cam

I'm sorry I missed this cool webcam trained on the nest of a pair of falcons nesting on a San Francisco skyscraper. The fledglings have flown, but the web diary remains.

9/22/2005

Today's realtor postcard

I haven't done one of these in awhile, although the postcards have certainly been coming.

Today's realtor postcard comes from Jan Medina. She sold "this sun-filled Marina style home with a large lawn, garden, and patio...in less than three weeks." Two BR, 1 BA, eat-in kitchen. Offerred at $699,000 and sold for $900,000.

Here's the map.

Here's my last post on my neighborhood real estate.
The first flowers on my princess plant* opened today.

First flowers

*Tibouchina urvilleana

UPDATE: More here.

9/19/2005

Graphic novel review

Here's a review I wrote for a book called Parting Ways.

Parting Ways
Horror, Humor

Peter Orbach’s botched suicide got him tangled up in a corporate numbers game. Such is (after)life when a population boom forced Hell’s masters to institute a bureaucracy to handle the enormous influx of souls. In Parting Ways, writer Andrew Foley’s Hell is the place where you go when you die for “rehabilitation” before you get reincarnated, or as they say in Hell, recycled. In turns out suicide gets you a twenty year stint.

As a melty face demon named Hissrich explains to Peter on the Soul Train ride to Hell, “The way things are going in the world, it’s going to be impossible for even the purest of souls to survive without accepting at least the minimum wages of sin.” So with pretty much everyone doing at least some time in Hell these days, it’s no surprise the staff feels burned out and the higher-ups have outsourced key duties to harried subcontractors.

Months after countless hands of gin rummy interspersed with sporadic episodes of torture and evisceration at the claws of a jaded harpy, Peter learns his wife managed to revive his soulless body after the overworked “collections agent” prematurely escorted Peter’s soul to the afterlife. During the intervening months, Peter gains new insight into the phrase “corporate hell” while back among the living, life with Peter’s soulless doppelganger rejuvenates his wife’s flagging art career.

Much more than a mere satire of corporate life and urban anomie, Parting Ways expands on many levels as the philosophical scope of Death’s error comes into focus. Can you really change the world by changing yourself? Is it morally right to do good just to avoid punishment? What role does suffering play in the creation of art? Packed with subtle humor and visual nuance by illustrators Scott Mooney and Nick Craine and populated by plethora of deftly fleshed out characters in writer Foley’s “first major comics work”, Parting Ways unfurls delightedly over 147 black and white pages in this brilliant, irresistible book.

9/11/2005

"The man in the picture, by contrast, is perfectly vertical, and so is in accord with the lines of the buildings behind him. He splits them, bisects them: Everything to the left of him in the picture is the North Tower; everything to the right, the South." Link.

9/07/2005

"The remains of a massive Gold Rush-era sailing ship dating to the early 1800s have been discovered at the site of a large construction project in downtown San Francisco, archaeologists at the scene confirmed Tuesday." Link.

How did the boat get buried under downtown San Francisco? Because San Francisco built out over the boats.

Here's the Google map of 300 Spear Street where the boat was found. That used to be the Bay.