2018 week three

Book Read:
3. Nick Cave: Mercy on Me — Reinhard Kleist

Kilometres Ran:
week three — 30.9

To date: 145 KM

We could have a debate about whether or not a graphic novel count as “a book” for the sake of reading 95 or 52 books in a year but there doesn’t seem to be much debate amongst the #95Books crowd whether poetry books count, and I’ve read and “counted” chapbooks that took a lot less time and effort to read than Mercy on Me. I even “read” and counted a collection of concrete poetry (Clean Sails). Though, I did not count Christian Bök’s MCV. I had to draw the line somewhere. And speaking of drawing lines, I really enjoyed Kleist’s visual biography of Nick Cave. I consider myself a Cave fan, though reading Mercy had forced me to confront the fact that I’m rather thin on Birthday Party knowledge, which has piqued my interest to revisit. I’m also now curious about Kleist’s Johnny Cash book (ahem, graphic novel), although I doubt any Cash biography is going to better Cash. Also, and no surprise, I learned that Cave is kind of a dick. I suspected, but don’t think I cared before. I don’t think I care now. I like his music and as a grown up I’m capable of separating his art from his inreallifeness. But I admit that most of what I know and like is contemporary to when I started listening to him i.e., Grinderman and late 2000s Bad Seeds. I went as far back as Murder Ballads because you have to. But aside from the appearance of “Higgs Boson Blues” Kleist’s Cave biography doesn’t cross the millennium. But for me to complain about that would be like complaining that Cash doesn’t focus enough on the American Recordings stuff. But for different reasons.

Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment

I went to physiotherapy this week for a check in on my knee and while there I mentioned in passing that I was having a pain in my left shin, which turns out to be medial tibial stress syndrome, which is just the fancy word for shin splints, which apparently if not properly cared for could lead to a stress fracture, which has forced me to reconsider the timeline of some of my 2018 goals. Burn the whiches. Dr. Physio believes that I’ve aggravated my left calf by (consciously or subconsciously) compensating for my right knee, and the treatment is more exercises and less running. Suffice it to say, very frustrating with less than a month until the First Half half marathon. Suffice it to also say, I will not be running a sub 1:30 half marathon on February 11. Also throws a wrench on the sub 3:15 BMO Marathon training plan. Other than that it’s been a great week.

2018 week two

Book Read:
2. Astrophysics for People in a Hurry — Neil Degrasse Tyson

Kilometres Ran:
week two — 52.7

To date: 114 KM

Two weeks into 2018 and I am way ahead on my reading, which allows me to mix things up a bit. Such as, Astrophysics for People in a Hurry isn’t the second book I read this year, I don’t want to write about the others right now. I suppose if the two of you reading this are into spoilers you could go over to my Goodreads page and see where I’m at and what I’m up to, but there’s really no fun in that. I don’t have much to say about Astrophysics. It was fine and interesting and I’m a fan of Neil Degrasse Tyson and I liked that I could hear him when I read the book, but there’s a lot in the book and while he keeps it as light as astrophysics can be, I suppose, it’s still pretty heavy. There are a few recent discoveries and progress within the field that are interesting. There was also a lot of stuff that I already knew from reading A Brief History of Time and from taking an astronomy course back in undergrad because I needed science credits for my humanities degree so that I would graduate a well rounded individual. Jury’s out.

I decided mostly consciously that this year I would not make resolution but rather I would set goals and in spite of that I resolved to try to be a little bit more social with my running, beyond a head nod or flashing the victory at passing Seawallers. So this morning I woke up earlier than a typical Sunday and jogged down to Vancouver Running Co for The Nation Run — a 5, 10, or 15 K social run. And I remembered why I don’t really like social runs. It was set to start at 9:30 a.m. and I timed my 2.5 K transit badly, arriving a bit too early (about 9:20), then stood around for about 20 minutes waiting for it to start. The hundred or so of us set off back over the Burrard Bridge for a photo opp at the inuksuk between Sunset Beach and English Bay. Then wait for everyone to arrive, then take some photos, then the 5s 10s and 15s set off for the remainder of our respective runs. I went with the 15s — off around Second Beach Pool then the Seawall around Science World and back to Vancouver Running Co and I was with the lead group up until the Seawall detour just past the south end of the Cambie Bridge and then I started to gas and lost them around Granville. I paused in the fog at the corner of West 1st and Creekside, looked left and decided to go to right. The route went left. I went under Burrard and through Vanier Park past the Vancouver Museum and up Whyte back to the store. My 15 K that was actually mapped as 14.7 ended up being 16.9 and then another 2.5 to get back home, which turned my day into a surprise 22 K. I wasn’t planning on that. But it was fun. I even talked to a couple people. No wonder I’m so tired.