those basterds!

Finally saw this film. Absolutely entertaining, love the dialogue, a Nazi film couldn’t be more enjoyable, blah-blah-blah, I’ll bore you with my praises. Didn’t realize how much I missed Tarantino’s crazies until I saw this.

Didn’t care much for Brad Pitt (I enjoyed Casey Affleck’s performance more in The Assassination of Jesse James – and Pitt here is basically playing James again it seems, accent and dirty clothes and all), but good grief Christoph Waltz!

His performance is divine. I want to see more of this actor. Just so I can stop saying, “He’s my favorite Nazi”.

the likeness

Detective Cassie Maddox takes the name Lexie Madison for a case. She gets stabbed, the case folds, and Cassie is taken out of undercover work. Later, a young woman who looks like Cassie is found dead in the tiny Irish village of Glenskehy. The woman’s name? Lexie Madison.

“Lexie” lives with four friends in a house called Whitethorn in the village. One of the detectives on the case thinks one of the friends is the murderer. Now Cassie’s assignment is this: enter the house and pretend to be the dead girl. Serve as bait.

I first encountered Tana French’s writing in In the Woods, which also features Cassie (her partner, Detective Rob Ryan, serves as narrator). French remains as sharp as ever. Writing so superb that you can feel the hush of Whitethorn House as the door closes. Beautiful.

two from katie ford

Good poems make you want to write something pretty. :) Here are two from Katie Ford.

“Colosseum” is excellent. A bit long, so just read it over here. When one is the site of so much pain, one must pray/ to be abandoned.

She talks about her collection in this interview. (I want a copy of it eeee. ♥)

Here’s another poem:

Source.

Nocturne

by Katie Ford

I can see the whole city, lights edging the harbor like yellow pins in uneven
cloth beneath the hands of a woman cutting the measured lines of a dress:
when it is done she will put it on to see if it fits.

Blackish harbor, facing east no facing west, lights
meaning anything but exit, ships waiting for dawn so they can navigate out,
fog in the cove, cigarette smoke in this

restaurant at the top of the Prudential.
Please do not use your hands to touch my face.
Please let me be decided.

Lights fringe the harbor, she is sewing a dress a centimeter too small,
you tap off the ashes, I lean into the winding smoke because it is not a myth,
because I can bring even an ending into the body.

The city now unsettled beneath us. My face eye-level in the class.

Please help me get up from this table.
Please put that thing down.

She turns an edge under. Smoke is taken in, smoke like a text
etched into two tablets of lung. Here, and here: Sinai.

Atoms fill their due portion of each ash.

Please look somewhere else with your eyes.

She undoes the knotted threads where she wants the blue and gray strips closer
to each other, crop of lavender, dust.

Please do not touch my face.

When she is done she takes off her clothes, raises her arms to get into the dress.

Please do not touch my face.

The harbor at its darkest, stillest, like a question in a throat.

I stared at the ruin, the powder of the dead 
now beneath ground, a crowd 
assembled and breathing with 
indiscernible sadnesses, light 
from other light, far off 
and without explanation. Somewhere unseen 
the ocean deepened then and now 
into more ocean, the black fins 
of the bony fish obscuring 
its bottommost floor, carcasses of mollusks 
settling, casting one last blur of sand, 
unable to close again. Next to me a woman, 
the seventeen pins it took to set 
her limb, to keep every part flush with blood. 
 
 
*
 
 
In the book on the ancient mayfly
which lives only four hundred minutes 
and is, for this reason, called ephemeral,
I couldn't understand why the veins laid across 
the transparent sheets of wings, impossibly 
fragile, weren't blown through in their half-day 
of flight. Or how that design has carried the species 
through antiquity with collapsing
horses, hailstorms and diffracted confusions of light.  
 
 
*
 
 
If I remember correctly what's missing 
broke off all at once, not into streets 
but into rows portioned off for shade as it
fell here, the sun there 
where the poled awning ended. Didn't the heat 
and dust funnel down 
to the condemned as they fought 
until the animal took them completely? Didn't at least one stand  
perfectly still?
 
 
*
 
 
 
I said to myself: Beyond my husband there are strange trees 
growing on one of the seven hills. 
They look like intricately tended bonsais, but 
enormous and with unreachable hollows. 
He takes photographs for our black folios, 
thin India paper separating one from another.  
There is no scientific evidence of consciousness 
lasting outside the body. I think when I die 
it will be completely. 
 
 
*
 
 
But it didn't break off all at once. 
It turns out there is a fault line under Rome 
that shook the theater walls 
slight quake by quake. After the empire fell
the arena was left untended 
and exotic plants spread a massive overgrowth, 
their seeds brought from Asia and Africa, sewn accidentally
in the waste of the beasts. 
Like our emptying, then aching questions,
the vessel filled with unrecognizable faunas. 
 
 
*
 
 
How great is the darkness in which we grope,  
William James said, not speaking of the earth, but the mind 
split into its caves and plinth from which to watch
its one great fight. 
 
And then, when it is over, 
when those who populate your life return
to their curtained rooms and lie down without you,    
you are alone, you 
are quarry. 
 
 
*
 
 
When the mayflies emerge it is in great numbers
from lakes where they have lived in nymphal skins 
through many molts. At the last  
a downy skin is shed and what proofed them 
is gone. Above water there is 
nothing for them to feed on—
 
they don't even look, except for each other.
 
They form hurried swarms in that starving, sudden hour
and mate fully. When it is finished it is said 
the expiring flies gather beneath boatlights 
or lampposts and die under them minutely, 
drifting down in a flock called snowfall. 
 
 
*
 
 
Nothing wants to break, but this wanted to break,
built for slaughter, open arches to climb through,
lines of glassless squares above, elaborate 
pulleys raising the animals on platforms
out of the passaged darkness. 
 
When one is the site of so much pain, one must pray
to be abandoned. When abandonment is 
that much more—beauty and terror 
before every witness and suddenly 
you are not there. 

recent raves

The Blind Side – Leigh Anne Tuohy, Sandra Bullock’s character, is a Republican and sends her children to a private Christian school. While watching the film I was thinking: If ever we meet and we begin talking about her political views and her faith I may walk out on her heck I may even end up hating her but I love her in this film. Bullock’s portrayal is enjoyable. At times, Leigh Anne actually reminded me of my mother (minus the Southern accent and the crazy hourglass figure and the knowledge of football).

I did enjoy this film. I just can’t say how much of it is true, of course.

Letters from Iwo Jima – Yes, I should have seen this right after I saw Flags of our Fathers. Harrowing, heartbreaking. Boy, did this film hurt.

In “Flags of Our Fathers” the battle itself happens mainly in flashback, since the movie is in large measure about the guilt and confusion that survivors encountered upon their reluctant return home. In “Letters From Iwo Jima” the battle is in the present tense, and it is home that flickers occasionally in the memories of men who are certain they will not live to see it again.

Source.

Florence + The Machine (Lungs) – Been a while since I last loved an entire album. This is A-plus.

‘s all good

The idea was to return to the place where the question was asked and the answer was given.

We had dinner and took pictures of each other.

No pictures of the food because we practically swallowed those whole. Later we had wine.

* * *

Earlier that evening I made a collage and gave it away as a gift.

I’ll keep what I wrote here a secret.

* * *

All of this is new to us, but we’re all for fantastic discoveries. ♥

* * *

On the writing front:

I’ve a poem up on Writers’ Bloc. Click!

In the e-mail:

Dear Ms Victoria,

We would like to inform you that your story “Salot” has been accepted for our online horror anthology, Demons of the New Year.

[redacted]

Thank you very much.

Sincerely yours,

Joseph Nacino & Karl de Mesa

Here’s the TOC. :D

* * *

From “What the Living Do” by Marie Howe -

I’ve been thinking: This is what the living do. And yesterday, hurrying along those
wobbly bricks in the Cambridge sidewalk, spilling my coffee down my wrist and sleeve,

I thought it again, and again later, when buying a hairbrush: This is it.
Parking. Slamming the car door shut in the cold. What you called that yearning.

What you finally gave up. We want the spring to come and the winter to pass. We want
whoever to call or not call, a letter, a kiss — we want more and more and then more of it.

But there are moments, walking, when I catch a glimpse of myself in the window glass,
say, the window of the corner video store, and I’m gripped by a cherishing so deep

for my own blowing hair, chapped face, and unbuttoned coat that I’m speechless:

I am living, I remember you.

* * *

Happy Valentine’s Day.

big story sale

I got this lovely news in the mail today:

Dear Eliza Victoria:

We are delighted to accept your story “December” for a forthcoming issue of the print edition of Story Quarterly and, if possible, for Story Quarterly Online, the electronic edition of our print magazine, where work is reproduced as protected PDF files and in the form of audio (MP3) files.

[redacted]

Sincerely,
J.T. Barbarese
Editor, Story Quarterly at Rutgers-Camden
Rutgers University
Department of English
Camden NJ 08102
http://www.camden.rutgers.edu/storyquarterly/

If this works out, “December” will be my first pro sale. Story Quarterly has published the likes of “Margaret Atwood, Anne Beattie, Frederick Busch, Joyce Carol Oates, T.C. Boyle and Jhumpa Lahiri.”

Great crowd! I love it! :D

* * *

To all those who attended the event yesterday, thank you, and thank you also if you were among those who stopped in their tracks to talk to us lowly researchers. Heh. The article’s over here, m’lovelies. ♥

MANILA, Philippines—Some 80 questions were asked in the first-ever Philippine Daily Inquirer Presidential Debate held Monday at the University of the Philippines (UP) Theater in Diliman, Quezon City, but those who came wanted to ask more.

Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III should have been asked about Hacienda Luisita, “and why he has not done much as a senator,” said C, 54, a businesswoman.

Another, who decided to be anonymous, said: “Noynoy should have been asked about Hacienda Luisita. Up to now, no forum had personally asked him about this issue.”

But Elizabeth San Diego of Quezon City disagreed. “I have already read and heard a lot about the case of Hacienda Luisita so I did not want to hear more about it anymore,” she said.

Amer Amor, a professor at UP Baguio, said, “I expected that someone would ask former Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro about his links to President Arroyo.”

A 20-year-old student leader said he would have wanted to ask Sen. Manuel “Manny” Villar: “How much money does a candidate have to spend on political ads?”

Here’s an article about the forum itself, in case you failed to attend. Orayt. :)

here be presidential candidates

There was Wi Fi in the University Theater but I didn’t know the password, so no liveblogging, and zero Tweets. ARGH.

But I wrote down some notes during the event (which I attended with the boyfriend because that is how we roll) like those journalists of yore. Old school yo.

Here we go.

- Debate is telecast live over at DZBB. GMA Network is now apparently the media partner of the paper. (I thought ANC was going to live-telecast the thing?)

- Full house.

- ERAP ISN’T HERE? Awww. And here’s why!

- Ayyy loud cheers for Villar o.

- “pose for history” LOLZ

- Forum (debate?) begins. Noynoy, JC, empty chair, Gordon, Jamby, Nick Perlas, Gibo, Bro. Eddie, Manny Villar

- Rules and stuff:

- question for Villar: Power or wealth ampota. =))

- on advertisements: “use of children” – Jamby. BURRRN VILLAR!

- This is a Villar hatefest!

- JC thinks “most modern contraceptives are abortifacients”. Stupidest statement I’ve heard in a while. (An old man behind me whispered, “Baka naman noon pang 1986 ‘yung iniisip niya.” LOLLLLL go Lolo!)

- Jamby: If not for the “inconsiderate minority” we could have passed the milk bill. BURRRN AGAAIN VILLAR

- Perlas: principled-dwellers daw sila, not bottom-dwellers.

- Okay, the questions are too fucking long.

- Jamby: “Yes I can say something good about him [Villar]. Maganda pag-tina ng buhok niya.” POWTEK. =))

- Jaykie writes: “I will reverse that thrust.” – Jamby. I can’t recall the context but oooh. Haha.

- And now Jamby talks about insertions.

- Jamby thinks 60 pesos ang isang kilo ng galunggong. Crowd basically goes “Are you crazy???”

- Then she says she’s a vegetarian so she doesn’t know. Lusot. LOLZ.

- Gibo, Gordon, and Jamby give pretty substantive answers. Noynoy sort of flouders; disappointing.

- If this were a debate/public speaking class, Gibo will get a 1.0.

small world

I am so not ready to start this work-week. *yawn*

But I had a fun weekend. On Friday, the high school gang (or at least a quarter of it – where the hell is everybody?) was finally able to meet Jaykie. June thought he looked familiar (Jaykie thought so too), so it was possible that they were classmates in a G.E. subject back in college. (They couldn’t remember which.) One of Jaykie’s org mates, Tope, is actually June’s office mate now. Jaykie also attended the same high school as a friend of ours, Ace, who left Bulacan for Quezon City during our sophomore year in high school.

Akalain mo ‘yun. :D

7 pm @ North Park Trinoma

Saturday was basically spent eating too much Ruffles and rootbeer and oh, did you know that Vanilla Macaroon is an excellent flavor for ice cream? I think it’s a Selecta product. And no, my dear, they didn’t pay me to say this.

And ugh, no, no writing done. I’ll fix that this week. ;)

* * *

The Inquirer’s first presidential forum tomorrow at 10 a.m. Sounds exciting.

The presidential forum follows a three-on-three format—three panels of three interviewers each, with three rounds of questioning per panel.

All told, the nine presidential candidates will face nine questions or sets of questions each, from the nine panelists, supplemented by nine predetermined interlocutors from the audience (who will ask one question each).

Unlike many other presidential debates, there will be no general question addressed to all candidates. Instead, each candidate will answer a total of nine specifically tailored questions or sets of questions.

Do you have your ticket? I’ll be there for sure.