Tales from outer turnip head...

Tales from outer turnip head...
Showing posts with label MineCraft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MineCraft. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Making a list...

I am not writing anything new today. I have things brewing in my head. I am making a list of what I might grapple with in the weeks ahead and am looking for comments/input/requests. [Comments in FB, comments in the reply field to the blog, PMs in FB, or emails are all appreciated.]

Teaching: Transformative Journeys: Leo Tolstoy wrote,

“All great literature is one of two stories; a man goes on a journey or a stranger comes to town.”  My students have been reading about Ibn Battutta, a famous Tunisian explorer who logged nearly 75,000 miles in his lifeline in the 14th century. I am encouraging them to find personal stories where a traveler leaves, is changed, and returns with a story. This weekend they are looking for similarities in the plot of the Wizard of Oz, a Hasidic Tale: "The Treasure", and a Rumi poem. I hope too have some observations by late spring on the stories they eventually find and tell.


Show: The Walking Dead: The 90 minute season finale is on tonight. I am mostly caught up on the comic, and have found the Sunday night ritual of a little TV with my wife is worth looking forward to all weekend. I am not sure there is any redeeming quality of watching this show, but I am willing to look for it just to give this guilty pleasure of mine a little weight of importance.

Game: MineCraft: I did not understand the hours of lego like building I saw so many children engaging in. I felt there was noting "to show" for their efforts save a 3-D cyber model of block like art. I have been inquiring and have learned about mods, shared servers, code manipulation, and survival mode. I purchased the XBoxOne version and have been sucked into the quagmire of MineCrack. I'll have a lot more to say on this once I get a little more gold mined and figure how to safely travel to the nether and return with a tale worth telling.


Book: The Handmaid's Tale: I am just getting into this dystopian novel, am loving it's fiction, and am interested in the non-fictional parallels in the world I see on the news. I feel like the book should be a product of a decade older than the 1980s, but about a not too distant future. The cultural references make it feel a little dated in a positive way, and the underlying truths frightening. I am not sure what to think as I am just getting started. I do know that I like it very much so far This is my first trip into Margaret Atwood's writing and I really like her style. I hope her other work is as quirky and simply worded as I am finding The Handmaid's Tale.

Weather: It's snowing: I want to write about spring, purple flowers in the ground, fire pit construction, and baseball. Clearly mother nature wants me to wait on this topic.