Decent But Not Great? So's Your Face

http://www.bhs.schoolloop.com/tourse/note?d=x&id=1201795819088&group_id=1198786673734&return_url=1202265789633 Got a huge burst of traffic this morning from this site which was nice enough to point to my post on memorizing Shakespeare with the comment “decent but not great.”  Hey, given that I write these things off the top of my head and otherwise have no training in these arts whatsoever (I ain’t no actor, any memorizing I do is strictly for fun), that’s not bad.  I can only imagine the traffic I would have gotten if they’d written a more positive description! What I did not notice at first was the lengthy discussion the students had over which links were helpful, and I was very pleased to see a number of students saying that they liked the information.  Except for one at the end who said that she liked them all except mine.  Oh, well.

Shakespeare's Wife : A Review

http://earmarks.org/archives/2008/01/31/178 But not by me.  This is Germaine Greer’s book about Anne Hathaway, and quite frankly I have no interest in reading it.  But the reviewer seemed to like it, and others among my readers may like it as well, so here you go. It’s not that I particularly dislike Greer, or Hathaway.  It’s just that this looks like a typical biography. Namely, I expect it’ll go something like this: Everything you know about X is wrong.  Here, let me show you with evidence that I found to support my case while ignoring all the evidence against it. If one person can write a book that says “26 was an incredibly old age for a woman to be married” and somebody else can write a book that says “26 was the average age for a woman to be married”, and both claim to have evidence, which should I believe?  The answer, to me, is that they cancel each other out and I don’t pay attention to either.

Books That Make You Dumb

http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/01/books_that_make.html Great example of what you can do with mashups.  These guys looked at the most popular books at every college (according to Facebook), and the average SAT score.  So “Lolita” is popular at schools when an average SAT score over 1300, while “The Color Purple” is popular down at the 850 range. Our pal “Shakespeare” spans the 1050-1150 range, where he’s kept company by A Wrinkle in Time, Anna Karenina, A Farewell to Arms, The Great Gatsby, and others.  Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice also fall in this section, although they both skew higher toward the 1150 mark. Interestingly Hamlet is called out by itself, and drops 100 points to the 1000-1050 range.