Which Big Damn Hero are you?
You scored as Mal Reynolds. You're Mal Reynolds. A Browncoat for life. You're the Captain and what you say goes, or else you get ornery...
Which Big Damn Hero are you? created with QuizFarm.com |
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A personal blog surrounding the life and times of apckrfan and the apckrfan household. In addition to sports facts and book recs each day.
You scored as Mal Reynolds. You're Mal Reynolds. A Browncoat for life. You're the Captain and what you say goes, or else you get ornery...
Which Big Damn Hero are you? created with QuizFarm.com |
Labels: Quiz
http://quizfarm.com/test.php?q_id=79387
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Your results:
| You are mild-mannered, good, strong and you love to help others. |
Labels: Quiz
“I was sitting in a taxi, wondering if I had overdressed for the evening, when I looked out the window and saw Mom rooting through a Dumpster.”
THE GLASS CASTLE, by Jeannette Walls (Scribner, 2006) |
Labels: book of the day
1/31/1978:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Your Vocabulary Score: A+ |
Congratulations on your multifarious vocabulary! You must be quite an erudite person. |
Labels: Vocabulary quiz
“Ambitious.”—The Plain Dealer (Cleveland)
CROSSING CALIFORNIA, by Adam Langer (Riverhead Trade, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/30/2005:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Oxford scientist Dawkins combines top-notch scholarship with accessibility to end up with a dazzlingly readable, exciting book. He recounts the history of evolution, working backward from the present day to billions of years ago, when all life boiled down to a bit of bacteria. Along the way we meet the family, including porcupines, aphids, finches, and giant, prehistoric rodents.
THE ANCESTOR’S TALE: A PILGRIMAGE TO THE DAWN OF EVOLUTION, by Richard Dawkins (Mariner, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/29/1994:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Novice novelist Pickett hit the jackpot when director Alexander Payne whipped up a cult classic movie based on his first novel. It’s a road trip-buddy story: Two old friends—one a loser, the other a cad—drive around Santa Barbara wine country for a week before the cad gets married. A wonderful, memorable ride about searching for one thing (the perfect pinot) and finding another (yourself). A light-bodied read with more texture than you might expect. To life!
SIDEWAYS, by Rex Pickett (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/28/1973:
Labels: sports fact of the day
“Dazzling.”—USA Today
INTERPRETER OF MALADIES, by Jhumpa Lahiri (Mariner Books, 1999) |
Labels: book of the day
1/27/1978:
Labels: sports fact of the day
MISS LEAVITT’S STARS: THE UNTOLD STORY OF THE WOMAN WHO DISCOVERED HOW TO MEASURE THE UNIVERSE, by George Johnson (W.W. Norton & Company, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/26/2003:
Labels: sports fact of the day
THE LAKE, THE RIVER & THE OTHER LAKE, by Steve Amick (Pantheon, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/25/1972:
Labels: sports fact of the day
You know the drill by now: burnt-out American/Brit goes to France/Italy/Spain, buys dilapidated villa/cottage, and discovers paradise. But God is in the details. And the details of Hollywood honcho Doran’s adventures in Tuscany are truly hilarious. Doran’s eye for detail, along with his type A personality, so at odds with the Italian far niente mentality, keep the pages turning briskly toward an inevitable happy ending. If you need a winter’s dose of la dolce vita, you can’t go wrong here.
THE RELUCTANT TUSCAN, by Phil Doran (Gotham, 2006) |
Labels: book of the day
1/24/1976:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Music Enthusiasts: Stop Everything and Buy this Book
Labels: book of the day
THE AMATEUR MARRIAGE, by Anne Tyler (Ballantine, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/23/1977:
Labels: sports fact of the day
NINE HILLS TO NAMBONKAHA: TWO YEARS IN THE HEART OF AN AFRICAN VILLAGE, by Sarah Erdman (Picador, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/22/1927:
Labels: sports fact of the day
MILLARD FILLMORE, MON AMOUR, by John Blumenthal (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/21/1980:
Labels: sports fact of the day
FEBRUARY HOUSE: THE STORY OF W. H. AUDEN, CARSON MCCULLERS, JANE AND PAUL BOWLES, BENJAMIN BRITTEN, AND GYPSY ROSE LEE, UNDER ONE ROOF IN WARTIME AMERICA, by Sherill Tippins (Houghton Mifflin, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/20/1952:
Labels: sports fact of the day
What is it about Sherlock Holmes? A century after his demise he continues to delight readers. Now two masters of fiction take on the master detective. Military historian Carr (The Alienist; Bantam, 1995) and Pulitzer Prize-winner Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay; Picador, 2001), bestsellers both, offer lively reimaginings of Holmes at work. Carr’s has a whiff of the supernatural; Chabon pulls Holmes out of retirement to locate a lost parrot.
THE ITALIAN SECRETARY: A FURTHER ADVENTURE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES, by Caleb Carr (Carroll & Graf, 2005) | |
THE FINAL SOLUTION: A STORY OF DETECTION, by Michael Chabon (Fourth Estate, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/19/1955:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Two consecutive days of above zero weather here in lovely Fargo. I feel like breaking out into a rendition of Heatwave, but I'll refrain for the time being. Current temp at 6:35am is 22! Woot! I'll take that. It's been pretty darned brutal out the last week or so. Our cat sure is thrilled and has been pestering to go out much more frequently!
Labels: stuff
Rushin is fascinated by how far people will push themselves in competitions and the wacky things they will do in the name of leisure. His book is a collection of his celebrated Sports Illustrated pieces that have recounted him playing golf in the Arctic, exploring the world of competitive eating, and tailgating with a man who does it for a living. Eloquent ruminations on the things he loves about sports mingle with the absurd and colorful quirky pursuits he has covered for the magazine. It all makes for an ebullient celebration of the burning American desire to win.
THE CADDIE WAS A REINDEER, by Steve Rushin (Grove Press, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/18/2005:
Labels: sports fact of the day
P. J. Tracy’s mysteries offer a little something for everyone, which may explain why everyone seems to love them. Expect a quick pace, snappy dialogue, endearing characters, romance, suspense, and blood and guts. In Live Bait, Twin Cities detectives Leo and Gino worry that business is slow, until a series of murders promises to keep them plenty busy.
LIVE BAIT, by P. J. Tracy (Signet, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/17/1999:
Labels: sports fact of the day
THE WOMAN WARRIOR, by Maxine Hong Kingston (1976; Vintage, 1989) |
Labels: book of the day
1/16/1988:
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All aboard! Widow Tessie and daughter, Dinah, need to jumpstart their lives, so they board the Orange Blossom Special, a train bound for Gainesville, Florida. Carter chronicles their lives across the decades, from the 1950s to the 1980s, in a first novel that critics found “warm [and] wise” (Elle), “insightful and compassionate” (Harper’s Bazaar), and “high-energy” (O, The Oprah Magazine). If you’re in the market for a feel-good read, you’ve found it.
THE ORANGE BLOSSOM SPECIAL, by Betsy Carter (Algonquin, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/15/1990:
Labels: sports fact of the day
BLOWING MY COVER: MY LIFE AS A CIA SPY, by Lindsay Moran (Berkley Trade, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/14/1922:
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GARDENS OF THE MOON, by Steven Erikson (Tor Fantasy, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/13/1982:
Labels: sports fact of the day
Saturday’s games:
Sunday’s games:
New England @
Andrea Barrett is one of the very best short story writers alive. And her style is utterly distinctive—her stories are usually historical, and all are set in the world of science. Ship Fever won the National Book Award and was lavished with praise like “quietly dazzling” (The New York Times Book Review). Read it and when you have finished do not despair: turn to Servants of the Map (W.W. Norton & Company, 2003), her follow-up collection.
SHIP FEVER, by Andrea Barrett (W.W. Norton & Company, 1996) |
Labels: book of the day
1/12/2003:
Labels: sports fact of the day
THE MEMOIRS OF CLEOPATRA: A NOVEL, by Margaret George (St. Martin’s Griffin, 1998) |
Labels: book of the day
(sorry John!)
Labels: sports fact of the day
THE LAST DUEL, by Eric Jager (Broadway, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
Must have been a slow fact day if this is the best they could come up with:
Labels: sports fact of the day
If you read my fan fiction and haven't stopped by for a while, I've added tons of fan fiction links, both to the general links and the by fandom links.
Labels: site updates
A coming-of-age story for girls that charmed critics and readers’ groups. Evelyn is a high schooler who lives with her mother in rural Kansas, struggling to survive in poverty and realizing that her brains may be her ticket out. The book is a tender portrait of mother and daughter that Anna Quindlen called “authentic and intelligent” and that reminded USA Today of To Kill a Mockingbird.
THE CENTER OF EVERYTHING, by Laura Moriarty (Hyperion, 2004) |
Labels: book of the day
1/9/1971:
Labels: sports fact of the day
HISTORIES
You surmised that the digging of the
| WEDDING OF THE WATERS: THE |
Labels: book of the day
1/8/2004:
Birthdays:
Walker Cooper b. 1915
Bruce Sutter b. 1953
Dwight Clark b. 1957
Jason Giambi b. 1971
Mike Cameron b. 1973
Labels: sports fact of the day
RAMEAU’S NIECE, by Cathleen Schine (Plume, 1994) |
Labels: book of the day
1/7/1971:
Speedster Bobby Tolan of the Cincinnati Reds suffers a torn Achilles tendon while playing a charity basketball game with a group of his teammates in
Birthdays:
Alvin Dark b. 1922
Eddie LeBaron b. 1930
Tony Conigliaro b. 1945
Eric Gagne b. 1976
Alfonso Soriano b. 1976
Labels: sports fact of the day
Nick Twisp is a confused, horny 14-year-old, and Youth in Revolt is his diary. Youth in Revolt never hit bestseller lists, but it’s been a beloved word-of-mouth classic for 14 years. “An unstintingly hilarious black comedy,” says The
| YOUTH IN REVOLT, by C. D. Payne (1993; |
Labels: book of the day
1/6/1981:
Labels: sports fact of the day
http://www.darkhorse.com/profile/preview.php?theid=14-111
Labels: buffy, the god that is joss
Saturday’s games:
Sunday’s games:
NY Jets @ New England –
NY Giants @
Labels: NFL weekly picks
In 2004, the food world was rapt. Julie Powell, a secretary from Queens, was cooking her way through every recipe in Julia Child’s 1961 landmark cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Powell was documenting her progress—struggles and triumphs—on a blog known as the Julie/Julia Project, and readers were on the edges of their chairs, rooting for her. Would the aspic set? Would she cook all 524 recipes within the year? Would her marriage survive this insane challenge she set for herself? If you are a foodie or if you just appreciate a quirky mind, you must read this fascinating, one-of-a-kind memoir.
JULIE & JULIA, by Julie Powell (Little, Brown, 2005) |
THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE, by Michel Faber (Harvest Books, 2003) |
WHERE IS THE MANGO PRINCESS?: A JOURNEY BACK FROM BRAIN INJURY, by Cathy Crimmins (Vintage, 2001) |
THE MOON AND SIXPENCE, by W. Somerset Maugham (1919; Penguin, 1993) |
NO PLACE TO HIDE, by Robert O’Harrow Jr. (Free Press, 2005) |
Labels: book of the day
1/5/1959:
Labels: sports fact of the day
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/17495.html
King takes literary guilty pleasure crown
Posted on : Wed, 03 Jan 2007 22:27:59 GMT | Author : Entertainment News Editor |
New ( News Alerts by Email click here )
The Guardian reported that with 85 percent of those surveyed admitting that they have a favorite guilty pleasure author, King narrowly beat Harry Potter creator J.K. Rowling for the top spot on the literary list. The Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown and legal drama writer John Grisham tied for third on the list, while author Catherine Cookson and romance novelist Danielle Steele tied for fifth. Taking up the list's sixth spot was fantasy author Terry Pratchett, whose Discworld series helped confirm his position on the guilty pleasure list. It is commonly acknowledged that many of us want to be seen to be reading a book in public that makes us look good, Simon Trewin, co-author of The Encyclopedia of Guilty Pleasures -- 1001 Things You Hate to Love, told the paper, but as this survey demonstrates, most of us have an author we regularly turn to for an easy and enjoyable read. Copyright 2007 by UPI |
Labels: article
I've been lax in posting to this for a while. Sorry. Real life sort of got in the way. I'm going to be better about it as part of the New Year. So, to kick off the New Year, here are my sports facts of the day from Jan. 1 through Jan. 4 (let's see if I remember to post one every day!)
Labels: sports fact of the day