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Hi, I'm Angela, a girl with a blog on five different psyches:
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His Majesty’s Dragon, by Naomi Novik

His Majesty's Dragon, by Naomi NovikI came across Naomi Novik’s Temeraire series via a recommendation from a reading community; the first book of which is His Majesty’s Dragon. It was described as “the Napoleonic War, with dragons”, which admittedly is the best way to describe it. My history is not very good, but I suspect it is very (very) liberal with its histories. Its focus is not on what happened on a large scale, but on how it affects a young dragon and his not-young-but-new handler, Will Laurence of the Navy.

I first bought the abridged audiobook–which admittedly would not usually bode well for a series starting off just so. I didn’t really realize it was an abridged audiobook until I was surprised at how…fast it was over. I needed to have more of Temeraire, and not soon after I was able to get the three-book set and read His Majesty’s Dragon the way it should be read: in full and its entirety.

(The series is now also available in unabridged audiobook format, and with Audible’s currently-running member’s sale on first books of a series, you can get it for $5.39 versus $35.93! Yay! And you can also read the first chapter online.)

“If you would like to have your ship back,” Temeraire said, “I will let someone else ride me. Not him, because he says things that are not true; but I will not make you stay.”

Laurence stood motionless for a moment, his hands still on Temeraire’s head, with the dragon’s warm breath curling around him. “No, my dear,” he said at last, softly, knowing it was only the truth. “I would rather have you than any ship in the Navy.”

The story so far

The book follows the dragon Temeraire’s hatching and training up to his first large-scale fight with Laurence. Both of them have quite a bit of “growing up” to do: Temeraire is obviously a very young dragon and eager to know and experience everything there is in the world, but while Laurence on the other hand is an experienced Naval captain, he is quite properly a newbie in the Aerial Corps where he needs to serve now as Temeraire’s handler.

This serves as a great introduction for us readers to the series as well, as we follow them throughout the story–we learn what they learn, and understand the environment as they do as well. We both see the Corps as an outsider–a group of rough men without hearth and home and held above the law, and is generally seen as an occupation not fit for a gentleman–and an insider, as Laurence and Temeraire and thrust into the habits and norms of the Corps during their training, almost unconsciously turning some norms upside down as they go along.

The setting could not be more dire: England has a strong Navy, but is sadly outnumbered by the French in terms of aerial strength and variety, and Bonaparte will soon turn his eye to England. Every dragon–especially Temeraire, who is looking to be quite a heavy-weight–is needed to boost the ranks.

A fast-paced yet personal ride

His Majesty’s Dragon is certainly fast-paced; you sense the urgency of Temeraire and Laurence’s training to be brought up to the Corps quickly. But no matter how action-oriented the scenes are, there is always a touch of the personal in it, that it never seems like one event right after another. The characters are fleshed out and believable, and the variety of the personalities Temeraire and Laurence come into contact with are refreshing. The writing is quite flawless.

Temeraire, as well, poses quite interesting questions. He is like a very articulate child: with all of the eagerness, curiosity, and idealism of a child, with a quick and intelligent mind and swift perception.

Temeraire’s and Laurence’s relationship as it progresses throughout the book is wonderful and touching to behold, especially set against the backdrop of the war. It is master-and-pet, most definitely, but sometimes you quite wonder just who is the master her ;) as I am sure most pet-lovers could relate to. However it is also a relationship between equals, a mutual and strong friendship that transforms them both.

The conclusion

This is definitely a series worth starting, and a book worth reading. It’s one of the best first-of-a-series books that I’ve read so far, as it brings you into its world gradually with two different mindsets and does it so well, moving the characters and the plot along with it. It is enjoyable and touching at the same time, striking a good balance between the two. It is difficult not to fall in love with the series.

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Writing centers

Sometimes I come across a stupidly simple idea, I wonder why have I never thought of doing it myself: such as this one. I came across this blog post about writing centers recently and I adore the idea. It’s targeted towards building the habit in children, but by golly, this is a great idea for grown ups as well.

A writing center

From Playful Learning:

…I decided to go with pegboard and customized accessories for the specific materials I wanted to make available. It was a long yet worthwhile process. The writing papers are readily accessible and visible, the art supplies are kept in buckets and can easily be removed for use, and everything an aspiring writer needs can be stored in one convenient place.

Brilliant idea, fabulous execution.

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Digital spring cleaning

I had the somewhat brilliant idea late last week to reformat my personal machine and reinstall everything. I haven’t done anything like this in quite a while–ever since I got my first Mac!–although I used to do it around twice a year or so on my Windows machine. Of course, one says you should never have to do it on a Mac, but I wanted to, for two reasons:

  1. Data all over the place. It’s quite unwieldy and confusing! This isn’t just personal data, but machine/application data, too. I have an app sweeper, but sadly I know there will be stuff that one can’t really get out because of ini files and such in wildly different places.
  2. Psychological trickery! ;) By reformatting my machine, and needing to set it back up, I’m tricking myself into feeling like I have a new Mac! I’ve been meaning to get myself an iMac over a year ago, but due to financial reasons, I’ve had to push it back again and again. I mean, I can’t even persuade myself to get a new S$200 Macbook battery! (I am currently permanently connected to the power socket now haha.)

As such it made a lot of sense to finally do this.

The process

I have a 1TB backup external drive, half of which (Largo) is my Time Machine backup, and the other half (Piro) is my general data drive. Piro still had a LOT of available space, so I decided I’d just dump all of my personal files on it and sort it all out back later.

Now we come to the OMG YOU MUST DO THIS OR SUFFER THE SAME FATE AS I tip: Back up with Time Machine JUST BEFORE you reformat. Or, OMG BACKUP THE DOCUMENTS DIRECTORY! Yes, I forgot to back up my Documents directory. I copied over whole folders–Sites, Pictures, Music, Resources, Downloads, Library, even majority of my applications, and even remembered to dump my MySQL data. BUT I FORGOT THE DOCUMENTS DIRECTORY. YAY. </sarcasm>

So after doing some backup (heh), and making sure Dropbox had finished all the syncing and is fully up to date, I fished out my trusty Mac OS X install disc, stuck it in the optical drive, and went ahead and wiped my drive and reinstalled OS X. It didn’t take very long–I took a shower in the meantime–and when I came back I was back to setting things up.

I decided here, that I would not let anything back on my hard drive unless I was going to use it. Cleaning up by deleting things is a very long, time-consuming process, and I’m prone to think, “eh, it’s not too bad to keep it there, that’s fine” and end up not doing a lot of cleaning at all. This time though, since nothing is on my machine, it’s clean by default. I’ve copied over/installed quite a few things already, but for the rest, it won’t get back on my machine unless I started looking for it.

The first application back on was Dropbox, especially since I keep quite a few things on there such as Adium logs and Firefox bookmarks, as well as various settings that I could sync up. That took quite a while to update, and I left it to run overnight, along with running Software Update to make sure I’m caught up with OS X updates and whatnot.

This was also a great time to do a lot more syncing to the cloud, and discovering new applications. I already have my .bash_profile and .vimrc files symlinked and synced with Dropbox, but now I also do the same for httpd.conf and php.ini. I also discovered GeekTool, which is absolutely fantastic and geek-squee worthy. It’s also quite a time sink, to be honest–there’s so much you can do with it, from testing things out yourself to researching what’s possible.

Desktop: work in progress

A reboot, quite properly

Having a clean machine feels quite invigorating, to be honest! I was having office machine woes last week, which ended up with my machine crashing and actually needing a reformat–but while it was frustrating during the event, it felt quite liberating afterward. And the new year is just the right time to do a bit of digital spring cleaning ;)

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