Unread Shelf: July 31, 2023

I bought a handful of books this month, and a few others showed up in other ways, but this looks manageable, doesn’t it? Sure.

Okay that’s it

I gave myself an hour this time, and got to 157. Then my brain exploded. 200 is, I think, utterly impossible without actively cheating or trying to memorize a list, and I’m pretty sure I still missed a handful of capitals. I did manage to get at least one in every state, though, plus DC and two in Puerto Rico. What’s the dumbest one I missed?

JuneauAK
AnchorageAK
WasillaAK
MontgomeryAL
BirminghamAL
TuscaloosaAL
Little RockAR
FayettevilleAR
PhoenixAZ
TempeAZ
SacramentoCA
Los AngelesCA
San FranciscoCA
OaklandCA
San DiegoCA
San JoseCA
FresnoCA
DenverCO
LittletonCO
Colorado SpringsCO
Hartford CT
New HavenCT
Washington DCDC
DoverDE
WilmingtonDE
TallahasseeFL
MiamiFL
TampaFL
AthensGA
AtlantaGA
HonoluluHI
OahuHI
Iowa CityIA
Des MoinsesIA
BoiseID
ChicagoIL
SpringfieldIL
BloomingtonIL
PeoriaIL
SchaumburgIL
PalatineIL
NappaneeIN
South BendIN
MishawakaIN
GoshenIN
GrangerIN
ElkhartIN
GaryIN
PortageIN
Fort WayneIN
West LafayetteIN
LafayetteIN
IndianapolisIN
BloomingtonIN
MexicoIN
BedfordIN
EvansvilleIN
Santa ClausIN
MuncieIN
RochesterIN
Kansas CityKS
LouisvilleKY
LexingtonKY
FrankfortKY
PaducahKY
Baton RougeLA
New OrleansLA
RustonLA
BostonMA
BaltimoreMD
AnnapolisMD
AugustaME
PortlandME
BangorME
PortageMI
NoviMI
DetroitMI
FlintMI
Traverse CityMI
Ann ArborMI
LansingMI
FarmingtonMI
NilesMI
Benton HarborMI
MinneapolisMN
St PaulMN
Kansas CityMO
SpringfieldMO
St LouisMO
BiloxiMS
HelenaMT
ButteMT
RaleighNC
DurhamNC
Winston-SalemNC
BismarckND
FargoND
LincolnNE
Dixville NotchNH
Hart’s LocationNH
PrincetonNJ
Jersey CityNJ
NewarkNJ
TrentonNJ
HobokenNJ
AlbuquerqueNM
RenoNV
Las VegasNV
BuffaloNY
New York CityNY
AlbanyNY
Rochester NY
CincinnatiOH
ColumbusOH
SanduskyOH
ToledoOH
Oklahoma CityOK
TulsaOK
BendOR
PortlandOR
PittsburghPA
PhiladelphiaPA
GettysburgPA
San JuanPR
MayaguezPR
ProvidenceRI
CharlestonSC
PierreSD
Sioux FallsSD
NashvilleTN
MemphisTN
AustinTX
San AntonioTX
GalvestonTX
HoustonTX
DallasTX
Fort WorthTX
El PasoTX
Salt Lake CityUT
MoabUT
QuanticoVA
RichmondVA
NorfolkVA
Virginia BeachVA
WilmingtonVA
LynchburgVA
RoanokeVA
CharlottesvilleVA
MontpelierVT
BurlingtonVT
OlympiaWA
TacomaWA
Green BayWI
MilwaukeeWI
CharlestonWV
CheyenneWY
JacksonWY

Ouch

I was out of town all day today visiting my wife’s family, and along the way we played a stupid little game based on something I saw on TikTok yesterday. It was a live stream of, of all things, a man trying to remember as many cities in the United States as he could. The first question was how many do you think you can name, and then my wife and I would occasionally throw states at each other as I was driving. And I was doing well! I figured I could name at least one city in every state– I mean, surely I know the capitals— and at least two in most, with a handful where I could name a hell of a lot more than that, especially since we didn’t bother putting a limit on population. I figure most people can name a ton of cities near where they live so that’s going to even out, and once they get outside of a one-state radius or so it’s gonna get a lot trickier.

I figured I could do 150 pretty easily, ultimately, and if I sat and thought about it for a while I was thinking I could get to 200. Well, I just gave myself half an hour, after prepping for it all day, and I named 107. This includes a couple of states I went completely blank on, including some that are genuinely embarrassing– Virginia, for fuck’s sake. I’ll come up with four of them the second …

(Adds fucking Winston-Salem, NC to the list, because I was blanking on it and put “wherever the fuck Wake Forest is” in the margins.)

… I hit submit on this. Also not on the list: New Haven, CT. Also not on the list: the entirety of Connecticut, despite the fact that I was looking at a map. Also, Princeton, NJ, which you would think I might have thought of since it’s where fucking Princeton is. God.

So anyway, my brain went completely batshit dry as soon as I started doing this, which … okay, I drove for like six hours today and spent most of the rest of it outside and being friendly to relative strangers, no pun intended, so my brain is a trifle underpowered at the moment.

(One city from Kentucky, dude? One? That’s shameful.)

I’ll try it again tomorrow.

incoherent mouth noises

I have apparently decided to be stressed tonight, for no reason that I can really put my finger on. I’ve suddenly abandoned Diablo IV for, again, no clear reason, but I think I might be done with it, and various attempts to get into something else haven’t really been successful. I’m enjoying the book I’m reading but I don’t want to read it. Clean? Rearrange? Bah.

Rapidly reaching the point where take a pill of some sort and go to bed may be my only real option. Blech.

Quick social media note/proof of life

I shut down both my Twitter account and my YouTube channel yesterday; Twitter for no doubt obvious reasons and the YouTube because frankly it was getting to be too much damn work for too little return and I was feeling guilty over playing Diablo and not recording it, which is ridiculous. We’ve also been working hard around the house for the last several days and I’m tired and achy and haven’t been in the mood for posting. Other than that, nothing is wrong, do not panic.

And let me know if you want a Bluesky invite; that’s where most of my non-here energy is going lately. I don’t actually have any at this exact second but if anyone wants one I can let you know the next time one pops up on my account.

REVIEW: The Prone Cushion

About a month ago I got an email from a nice gentleman named Kevin who was representing a company called Prone Cushion. He said that he had determined that my site’s readers were the perfect audience for his company’s product– a cushion (“pillow” isn’t quite the right word, as we’ll get to in a bit) that was specifically designed to aid someone lying on their stomach while they read or fiddled with their phones. He was wondering if I had any interest in receiving one so that I could review it for my site.

I’ll be honest; I figured he was either a bot or he’d sent identical emails to twenty thousand websites, and I posted about it, and not in the most polite of tones. He replied, pointing out that he’d seen the post, and further pointing out that I was a) an author and b) a reader who c) frequently reviewed books, and as such it was not unreasonable that my site was frequented by readers— his product’s target demographic. So, uh, most likely human, and quite possibly smarter than my dumb ass to boot.

Chastened, I apologized and provided a street address and picked a color– I went with midnight blue, but it’s also available in “dawn beige” and a “luxury edition,” which is brown and two-tone, with some added piping along the seams and a leatherette fabric. (*)

Let’s start with positives: the build quality of this thing is actually pretty impressive. The fabric is plush and soft, and even at my rather higher-than-average human mass I didn’t feel like there was any risk of the skeleton of the thing deforming or breaking underneath me. There is a little set of risers underneath it that swings out to give you a few levels of elevation; those also have the fabric on them (the boy is using them in the picture above) so it’s not immediately apparent that they’re being used, but they’re solid as well– looking at them, I felt like they’d be a pivot point, but the cushion isn’t going to move when you’re laying on it.

All three of us tested it out. My wife laid on it for a few minutes and pronounced it acceptable, and liked it a bit more with some height added to it, but said that she couldn’t quite find a position where she felt like her chin and her elbows were both in the right place at the same time. My problem? I generally don’t lie on my stomach for any reason any longer; I used to be a stomach sleeper but this isn’t really something I can see anyone falling asleep on, and when I’m reading I lie on my back or my side.(**) And the problem with lying on the floor is that you have to get up from the floor, which … let’s just say that I go to rather extreme lengths to avoid ever having to be on the floor. And for me, personally, that’s a real hindrance to using this product– it might make lying on the floor a lot more comfortable than just sticking a regular pillow underneath you, and it does, but I still have to beached-whale my heavy ass off the ground afterwards, and I’m waiting for the day when one of my leg bones just snaps the hell in half while I’m trying to stand up. In theory, you could use this in bed as well, but if I’m already in bed I may as well just use my regular pillows rather than one that I’ll just end up putting on the floor anyway when I’m ready to sleep.

My son? My son loves it. It comes with a manual that suggests a handful of alternate use positions other than just laying on it, including putting it behind your back while sitting on the floor, say, to play video games or something, and I’ve caught him using it several times on his own, when he has access to our entire sofa plus a couple of recliners and a beanbag and a lot of the time there’s an air mattress in the room with him as well. It’s also occurred to me that if I end up taking this thing to school, it’ll get used all the time— my 8th graders will absolutely love it, and they’re always looking for any excuse to lie on the floor anyway. They’ll fight over it; I have no doubt in my mind about it.

And if it was priced in such a way to make it reasonable to buy one for a kid, or a handful of them for a classroom, I’d be giving this thing a full-throated endorsement, because not everybody is me, and while this particular thing isn’t going to be great for me I can imagine any number of, uh, I’ll say higher-mobility individuals enjoying it. However, that high build quality I was praising earlier comes with a price tag of $189 for midnight blue or dawn beige, and the premium luxury edition is $229. That’s grown-up money. It’s “Dude, I already bought you a bean bag” money. I have reason to believe I might have access to discount codes, and I’ll update if I do, but I don’t really think anyone is going to be picking up a few of these on a teacher’s salary. So forgive me for offering, shall we say, a somewhat nuanced opinion here, but if it’s intriguing to you and the cost isn’t an issue, I’d say go ahead and scratch that itch and pick it up. It’s not going to be something for everyone, I think, but the people who like it are going to like it a lot.

(*) So, yeah, this is a “product provided free in return for a fair review” scenario. They actually have an affiliate program that I can join but I don’t plan to, and while if it comes up organically I’ll happily refer people to this post, I’m not going to be sneaking Prone Cushion references into my Monthly Reads posts or anything.

(**) worth pointing out that if you sort of shove the cushion under your armpit, you can lie on your side on it as well. I did not test out this position but I’ve seen my son doing it that way. There are pictures on the website if you can’t quite visualize what I’m describing.

On to the next project

The new bed is fully in place, and the new mattress is going to arrive tomorrow, so depending on how long it takes for it to decompress from the tiny box they’ve stuffed it into he ought to be sleeping back in here by mid-week next week at the latest. I have a couple of observations about putting this bed together, if you don’t mind indulging me:

First, the build quality of the bed itself is really impressive. The whole thing is steel and decent-quality particle board; there was a small dent in one of the pieces of wood because the box took a hit at some point during the delivery process, and we’re going to see if we can get them to send us a new one, but I was able to hide it and it’s not going to make any kind of difference structurally. Everything went together really easily, all the predrilled holes in the metal pieces were in the right places, the welded joints feel strong, and once I went through and tightened all the bolts (suggestion: install everything with your hands to finger-tight and then go back with a drill once you’re certain everything fits right) it just feels rock-solid. It’s not making any noises or squeaking or anything and it just feels like it should have cost more than the slightly-over-$300 we paid for it. There may have been a bag of screws missing from the hardware box– I say “may have been” because it’s entirely possible we lost it during the unpacking process, but I really don’t think that’s what happened, because I was being careful. At any rate, a trip to Lowe’s solved the problem for an extra $5 worth of screws. Whatever.(*)

Let’s talk about the instructions, though. And if you think I’m about to complain about something translated from Chinese, think again. There are almost no actual words in the instructions, I assume specifically because they wanted to avoid translation issues. That said? The instructions suck. They get piece numbers wrong a few times– one page had a couple of part numbers handwritten in it, and even then they were wrong– and there are a couple of deeper issues as well.

One, this bed is reversible, which one would think would be a selling point– by which I mean that the stairs can go either on the right or the left of the bed itself, and once you figure out what you’re looking at it’s easy to figure out that, okay, if this goes here instead of here, that’s why this seems to have extra holes in it. But the instructions never mention this! In fact, the diagrams show the stairs on both sides and in both orientations at various points with no indication that anything has changed, which as one could imagine, can lead to some confusion to those not paying careful attention. I am proud to say that I made only one build error– that bottom three-part rail on the right side was initially put in upside-down, which was not the instructions’ fault and was easily fixed. But I’m generally pretty good at this kind of thing. If you’re not used to it, the moving stairs are gonna be a problem.

And, well, there’s this, too. Take a second and look at this diagram carefully before you keep reading:

Look at the bottom part of the diagram. Am I going blind, or is there some sort of haywire M.C. Escher shit going on with the directionality of the bottom third of this diagram? Like, these lines don’t line up correctly, right? This is apparently looking up from underneath the stairs, and I can’t put my finger on what’s wrong but I also just can’t parse it.

The good news is that all you really need to be realizing from this diagram is 1) put feet in the feet-holes, 2) screw all of the pieces of wood onto the frame, and 3) put those little brackets on the side of the hangar cubby, which– right– I did screw two things up, because I used the wrong bolts there and, uh, had to have my wife get two more from Lowe’s. But this fucking diagram is terrifying if you’re already not confident about how to put this type of thing together, and I’m genuinely not convinced that the actual diagram itself matches physical reality properly.

One way or another, though, the boy has a new bed, and once the mattress goes in and I get his whiteboard put up on the side there and, Christ, some more lighting– note that I had to pull some of my spotlights from my year of teaching at home to help me out in the top picture– I think the room will be good until he decides the trees and Pokémon are too little-kiddy and we need to repaint again. One way or another, I hope he likes the loft, because it’s never leaving that room.

(*) My wife, who actually got the job of having to buy the right screws, might disagree with my “whatever” here, just for the record.

The saga continues

We have been on a hell of a tear around here lately; the boy’s new loft bed isn’t finished yet and the mattress won’t be here until Monday anyway, but we tore apart his old bed (storage, with a storage headboard as well, so it was quite a job) first and moved that into the garage. Today also involved reinstalling the trim I removed yesterday so that the new refrigerator could be moved in, then putting the door back, then hanging up some smoke detectors that have been in the Wrong Place for literal years, so we got all kinds of stuff done at the Siler homestead today. Tomorrow I’ll put the desk together and add the stairs on the side and then the bed will be done, and sometime in the next couple of days there’s going to be some painting in the living room. Also, now that I’m an electrician, there’s a really good chance that our front and back porch lights are not long for this world, because I’ve never liked them.

I know I promised a pillow review. Probably not tomorrow, since I’m sure I’ll be posting “after” pictures, so let’s say Monday. I promise soon, though.