TILTS, links, a long goodbye

I spent most of Friday and Saturday at the third and final TILTS 2011 conference at UT. I'm not exactly a digital humanist by trade, though I've worked on digital humanities projects (like eComma). But I'm interested in humanities computing, to use the older phrase, and the breadth of this conference's speakers was really wonderful — linguists, literary critics, anthropologists, bibliographers, librarians, and others. Intellectually and socially, it was a nice send-off.


Today I cleaned out — well, 95% cleaned out — the cube I've been sharing with T. since 2005, our second year in grad school. Then I stopped at the co-op and ran into Rita, who sold us Lahrs the Saab. I've been experiencing a lot of serendipitous meetings lately, even though many of my friends from graduate school have decamped for other cities. It's strange to be getting ready to leave myself. I've been living here for seven years now, and I'm going to miss it terribly, excited as I am about my new job in Wooster.


And now, links to share!


First of all, the fabulous Malinda Lo recommended Alcestis (as well as books by Jacqueline Carey and Robin McKinley) in a short piece she did for NPR last week. This was up on NPR's Facebook page, as well, which resulted in a number of my friends leaving "holy crap, I know her!" comments on the NPR post. Sometimes social media does give one a warm and fuzzy feeling!


On Thursday night, the 2011 Lambda Literary Awards were announced. Alcestis didn't win its category, sadly, but it sounds like it was a great evening, and all the winners deserve many congratulations!


250 books by women all men should read. (Also all people, but this is a response to an unsurprisingly dude-dominated reading list from Esquire.)


The opening of Jeffrey Eugenides's upcoming The Marriage Plot. I want it now.


A Times travel piece on Lake Geneva, emphasis on the Byron/Shelley/Polidori era of its history.


A super sensible piece on ebook piracy by Cecilia Tan.


A Q&A by lovely Austin bookstore BookPeople with Robin Black, primarily about her short stories.


The real origins of Memorial Day.


For some less-heartening news, "worst carbon emissions ever leave climate on the brink." And Laila Lalami posts Tom Lutz's open letter to his UC Riverside colleagues and students about the demolition of the UC system. I'm not sure which of those links is scarier.


I'm still finalizing my reading lists and syllabi, which means that I'm still reading post-apocalyptic novels, though now I'm back to some I've read before. At the moment I'm re-reading Riddley Walker. I'd forgotten just how virtuosic it is. I wish everybody who loved Cloud Atlas knew about this book, too.

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Published on May 30, 2011 21:19
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