Let’s not and say we did

Nothing but unwise ideas and shit I shouldn’t write down in my head tonight, so I’m gonna sign off early and play Veilguard. Last teaching day of 2024 tomorrow; the rest of the week is basically babysitting.

In which I am annoyed, also anal

Can’t wait to see what sort of suggested tags the system throws up for this one.

So I’m definitely doing this stupid “read the entire Stormlight Archives in January” contest with myself, and I decided to make it even harder, because there are two novellas alongside the five canonical novels, and I decided I’m going to read those motherfuckers too. Pictured there is the doorstop-ass hardback copy of Wind and Truth, weighing in at 1344 pages and 2.31 pounds. Worth pointing out: while this is the longest book of the series, it is not the physically largest of the series, which still goes to Words of Radiance, the second book, which is about 300 pages shorter but presumably uses thicker paper.

Pictured next to it: the two novellas, which are somehow smaller than they look there.

And if you are like me you are already aware of why I want to have a conversation with someone about this, and why that conversation might involve hitting them upside their fool heads with one of those three books, or perhaps all three of those books stuffed into a pillowcase.

Because come on.

In which I am irate, vagueposting

I am, for only the second time since he has started going there, irritated with my son’s school. And, like, really irritated this time, not mildly irritated like the time he got in trouble over some bullshit that felt like the teacher’s fault in preschool. Sending-strongly-worded-emails irritated. How dare you make me disappoint my kid irritated.

And I don’t really want to get into details, especially since it’s 8:26 already and I’m showing signs of doomscrolling on top of everything else and I would really like to get away from my computer and go sit in a room with my kid with a book in my hand. I’m not gonna bitch about my kid’s school online, even in the mostly-anonymous format the blog affords me. But I really don’t need any external stressors right now because I know how my brain works and I’m likely to lash out at some poor fool who doesn’t deserve it because of unrelated stress, and I’m also irritated with my school for entirely unrelated reasons, and just … fuck.

#REVIEW: The Farseer Trilogy, by Robin Hobb

The alternate title that I almost went with was “In which I am disappointed, and disappoint”.

Here’s the thing: Robin Hobb doesn’t need my help, and it’s faintly ridiculous for me to be terming anything I write regarding the Farseer trilogy as a “review.” Assassin’s Apprentice turns 30 next year, and there are fully thirteen more books comprising four more series to go in her Realms of the Elderlings series. I read Assassin’s Apprentice many years ago, couldn’t really get into it, and I think I abandoned it, because there were lots of bits in the beginning that were familiar and that feeling vanished after the halfway point or so. (Spoiler alert: they killed a dog, and I think that’s where I bailed.) I have definitely never read Royal Assassin or Assassin’s Quest prior to the last couple of weeks.

The Farseer trilogy is the first use I’m aware of (go ahead, correct me) of a device I’ve previously referred to as “being like Name of the Wind,” a series narrated by the main character but from the perspective of a much older person writing about astonishingly well-remembered events from their youth. Recent examples include R.R. Virdi’s The First Binding and Richard Swan’s Empire of the Wolf series. It’s also an early example of another trend, that being a series supposedly about an assassin who does very little assassinating. Now, in the case of FitzChivalry, the main character of this series, technically he does a fair amount of assassinating, but it’s nearly always kept off the page– we’re told that he spent a summer or a year or whatever doing jobs for his grandfather/king Shrewd, and that he sure assassinated some folks real good during that time, but we almost never see it, and the one time we get to follow him along in a mission he decides, to my complete lack of surprise, that he isn’t going to assassinate anyone after all.

Lemme back up: the series begins when FitzChivalry, at the time referred to only as “boy,” is dropped off on the keep’s front door by his maternal grandfather, who explains to the guard who answers the door that he’s the prince’s bastard, and his mother and grandfather are tired of him so the prince gets him now. He looks just like his daddy, so he gets brought into the keep and basically handed over to the stable master for the early part of his life and ignored. Eventually King Shrewd decides he’d make a good assassin, and has him trained, and we’re off to the races, so to speak.

Here’s the thing: I really enjoyed the first two books, and I really wish I had just left it there, because — and just stop reading right now if criticism of this series is heresy to you, because I know a lot of people really love these books– Assassin’s Quest is Not Good, and it’s Not Good in the worst possible way: in a way that makes the books that came before it retroactively worse by highlighting all of their problems, which were previously able to be minimized or disregarded on account of all the other legitimately cool stuff going on.

Assassin’s Quest is eight hundred and sixty pages long and could have been an email easily half that length with nothing of value being lost. It’s bloated to a level that makes a disintegrating whale on the beach look svelte and demure. Nearly nothing happens, and most of what does is annoying or ultimately pointless. The second book ends spectacularly, with a whole bunch of shit going wrong and Fitz angrily swearing in front of Jesus and everybody that he is going to kill a certain dude or die trying, because That Guy has ruined his life and destroyed everything Fitz cares about and the only thing left is to make him good and dead.

Then Book Three starts and Fitz fails in this quest almost immediately, and fails in a particularly bewildering way– he is not able to directly kill the person, but the book goes into a bit of detail about just how many things in this guy’s bedroom Fitz poisons, right down to the studs of his earrings, and … nothing. No word about him barely surviving the poison, no word about him realizing it’s there and aggressively cleansing or throwing out everything he owns, nothing. He just isn’t dead. It’s as if the poisoning never happens.

Then they spend six hundred pages walking, with an interlude in the middle where Fitz takes an arrow to the middle of his back and convalesces for a hundred pages, and maybe he gets injured one other time, I barely remember. The villain damn near disappears from the narrative along with basically every problem mentioned in the first two books as Fitz and a handful of other relatively unimportant characters (and yes, I’m including the Fool here, because it’s never really very clear what his deal is other than to be mysterious and annoying) head off to go find his uncle, who has gone off on his own quest and gone missing.

Oh, and he’s in love with this one chick, and knocks her up and then abandons her, and he’s not exactly nice to her before the abandonment.

I didn’t like Fitz very much, and that was a problem even before book three.

I don’t mind travelogue fantasy, y’all. I love worldbuilding for its own sake. My love for The Lord of the Rings is unparalleled and pure. But they spend so. much. time in this series just walking and walking and walking, and there’s a road made of magic or something and it feels like it’s important but it’s really not, and then after six hundred pages of walking he finds the dude he’s looking for, who then proceeds to solve all of the problems of the previous two books, off the page, in one of the most fucking ridiculous and epic Deus Ex Machinas I’ve ever seen. Aeschylus himself might suggest that maybe they tone it down. The villains themselves are hella weak as well; there are Red Ships raiding the coast and sometimes they turn people into these conscienceless zombie-things and turn them loose? Where do they come from? What are their motivations? Who exactly are they?

Never discussed; never mentioned, ignored in the last eight hundred pages of this series, and I’m starting to think I’m angrier about how this ended than I previously thought. We aren’t at How I Met Your Fucking Mother Oh Never Mind I’m Gonna Fuck Aunt Robin, Kids, Even Though It’s Been Made Clear We’re Goddamned Terrible Together levels, but it’s close.

Magic is called Skill in this series, right? It’s basically telepathy except when Hobb needs it to be something else in which case it’s that too. Fitz and his people are being tailed by this group of Skilled individuals through most of book three. They’re presented as really dangerous. There’s a bit during that last fifty or sixty pages where it’s Suddenly Revealed that oh no there’s not just one group of Evil Skillzards, there are three!!3!one!!!

You’d think that would be trouble, but they’re literally all dead two pages later, in a book that couldn’t make a sneeze take less than a thousand words. I don’t even remember if any of them got names. It’s just OH NO MORE SKILL WIZARDS oh they’re dead never mind.

Yeah, I’m definitely pissed.

The worst thing is I might still check out the next series at some point. Again, I liked the first two books until Assassin’s Quest ruined them, and the next series changes venues pretty severely from what I’ve seen. And again-again, this is a hugely influential and popular series and everyone loves it but me, apparently, so you may have wasted your time reading this. I dunno.

Snarl

I am In a Mood tonight, and not especially fit for human company.

Feel free to talk amongst yourselves.

NEW RULE!

middle-finger-poster-flag-6185-pRegardless of everything I said about my new job in the post immediately below this one, henceforth no one anywhere is allowed to say the word “delivery” to me EVER AGAIN.

Signed,

This Isn’t Fucking Amazon

So much for that, I guess

tumblr_inline_n04m1jSVXI1rxlkcnSo as part of my list of Morning Things that I was going to do today, I planned on paying at least the 30% deposit for my booth at C2E2 this March.  Now, they want $912 for the booth, so even the deposit is just south of $300.

Shit shoulda taken five minutes, and only taken that long because I would have needed that extra three-digit number from the back of the card and so I’d have had to go find it.

It is now an hour and a half later, and I’ve invented some swear words in the meantime.  These people simply do not want my money.  I want to pay that bill with a credit card, because … well, fuck you, you don’t actually need a reason, I want to pay for it with a credit card because it’s 20goddamn15 and you can pay for everything with fucking credit cards.

They want either a paper “company check” sent to them (I don’t know what the difference between a “company check” and a “personal check” is, and my Prostetnic account doesn’t have a checkbook anyway) or a wire transfer or for me to give them a forty dollar convenience fee to use a credit card.

To do a wire transfer would be possible but it appears that I would have to open a checking account on my Bank of America card, which isn’t the account I wanted to use anyway, and then I’d have to pay them a fee.  I am not opening any additional accounts with anyone and I am not paying any third parties, particularly Bank of Fucking America, any sort of fee in order to pay Reed Exhibitions some money that they apparently don’t want from me anyway.  And I’ll offer my body as a masturbatory aid for horses before I pay any fucker $40 to use a credit card in 2015.

Irate emails have been sent; I doubt they will get me anywhere, which means Reed Exhibitions doesn’t want my money and I will therefore not be attending the convention after all.  Given that I was almost certain to lose money on the effort anyway I am sure as shined shit going to spend money so that I can send them money.  

Fuckit.

This has eaten my entire morning, by the way, and I’m way too pissed off to transition straight into writing right now, so I’m going to take a shower and eat lunch and then hopefully have an insanely productive goddamn afternoon.  I should send these fuckers a bill; my time is worth money and they have wasted a hell of a lot of it this morning with this nonsense.

In which see if you can make me

whuteverFirst things first, because this post is going to be a bit of a downer and you deserve something at least a little funny:  I somehow managed to make it through the entire day with a massive hole in the crotch of my pants that I didn’t notice until I went to the bathroom during my last-hour prep period.  I assume no one else noticed it; I can’t imagine a universe in which I don’t get the hell mocked out of me for it if they did.

I did something I’ve never done today:  got pissed off and stormed out of a faculty meeting.

(Second disclaimer, and lemme put this right up at the top of this post so I’m not misunderstood:  I am manifestly not blaming the people who brought me the information that caused me to storm out of the faculty meeting today; I am not shooting the messengers and they were just doing their jobs.  Nor am I pissed at my boss.  The fact that at least two of the people involved may well read this is in no way related to the early disclaimer.  🙂  )

I’ll try and nutshell the background for those of you who aren’t teachers:  Every three weeks our students get a math test and a language arts test.  The tests are the same across grade levels– in other words, every seventh grader takes the same math test– and are supposed to be the same across the corporation as a whole, although I’ll admit right here and now that the math team at my school has altered individual questions that we thought were unfair or poorly written in some way and we didn’t bother getting permission for it.  We’re required to display the results of these tests on what are called data walls, because us educators like having complicated names for things.  I generated an Excel document for everyone that takes the test results and spits them out into pie charts that are broken down for the test as a whole and each individual math objective (generally, three) that is being tested.  The data is genuinely useful; I can keep track of where my kids are at relative to each other, to the grade as a whole, and I can see where my instruction doesn’t seem to be working– if my kids bomb one objective that the other teachers did well on, that may be an indication that I’m doing something wrong.

The data, again, is displayed on a class level in the classroom.  No individual scores, no names.  Just how each whole class did.

Apparently some lord high muckety-muck downtown has decided that that’s not good enough.  We’re now required to do “student-centered” data walls; the charts aren’t enough.

A “student-centered” data wall is one where the kids are posting their results on the wall– supposedly thinly veiled by using student numbers instead of names or some such shit like that.  The idea is that the kids are “aware of” and “own” their results, which somehow isn’t the case when I give them their tests, discuss them, and then discuss the class results with them, which I do every time I give a test.  We’re supposed to create some sort of bulletin board somewhere in the room where we can have the kids put their little name-tag thing up in the band (red, yellow, green) where their score landed.  In case it’s not obvious, green kids did great, yellow kids passed, red kids… didn’t.

I’ve talked about him before but I can’t find the post: my freshman year Algebra teacher was the worst goddamn teacher I’ve ever had in my entire life, and a large part of what made me hate him as much as I did was his practice of rearranging the seats after each test– by test score.  The kids who did the worst would be in the front row, all the way back to the kids with the highest scores, who ended up in the back.  The very worst score in the room would end up right in front of his desk.  And you’d stay there until the next test, when, more than likely (because he was a shit teacher) you’d get planted back in the front row again.

I spent a lot of time in the front row my freshman year of high school, and over twenty years later I can still feel the humiliation.  Note that I teach freshman algebra now, so this clearly wasn’t a result of my poor math abilities.  I literally teach the same class I flunked when this asshole taught it.  And I do it better than he did.

Anyway.

Here’s what this means:  you fail a math test in my class, not only do you fail a math test in my class, but you are supposed to get up and move a doohickey (that is supposedly, but not really, safely anonymized) so that not only do you get to be reminded that you failed every fucking time you walk in the room but everybody else gets to know about it too.  If you’re the only kid in a class who failed?  You get to be down there in the red zone all by yourgoddamnself and if the class doesn’t already know who the one kid who failed was they’re sure as hell going to do their best to find the fuck out.

I’m not doing this.

No.

Fuck you.  And fuck that.

I put my hand up and said, out loud where everybody could hear me, that I don’t like this goddamn job enough that I’m going to humiliate kids in order to keep it.  And then I left the meeting.

I don’t know what happened after I left; I don’t know if there were further riots or not.  But I’m putting my foot down on this one:  I will not do this.  Not under any fucking circumstances, period.  And if they don’t like it they can fire my two-time Teacher of the Year ass and I’ll go to a district that isn’t fucked in the fucking head.  Or just get the hell out of this demeaning fucking career altogether and leave the public school system to fucking rot like the Indiana public clearly wants it to anyway.  Fuck it.  My job isn’t worth this.  No.

In case you can’t tell, it was a long fucking day.