Archive for Briançon
last stroke
Posted in Statistics with tags Briançon, COVID-19, France, Hautes Alpes, Karl Marx, Lac Laramon, lockdown, Oisans, pandemic, Paris, pool, Vallée de la Clarée, Vichy régime, Villejuif, Youri Gargarine on October 28, 2020 by xi'an
a journal of the plague year [latter August reviews]
Posted in Books, Kids, Mountains, pictures, Travel with tags amazon associates, Ann Leckie, book reviews, Briançon, Daniel Defoe, film review, films, French Alps, gender inequality, Gruyère, Hamlet, homecooking, homegrown vegetables, Japan, Journal of the Plague Year, MIchelin starred restaurant, Natsuo Kirino, NYT, risotto, squash vine, tarte aux noix, Université Paris Dauphine on October 10, 2020 by xi'anRead during the first week of our Alpine vacations a Japanese gore novel by Natsuo Kirino, Out, which I found in the book exchange zone at Dauphine earlier in July. The book is more impressive for a social criticism of the condition of working class women the Japanese society than for its psychological thriller nature, even though the later is well-enough conducted to induce a page-turning commitment… The four women at the centre of the story are drawn in fine and convincing details and the practical cynicism of most of them makes the novel avoid the easy and rosy idealisation of a crime sisterhood. The slow unraveling of the past of these women exhibits how they ended up in a food-packaging night-shift job by virtue (!) of a gender inequality inherent to the social structure. The book is not 100% perfect, especially in the final moments, even though the surprising readiness of Masako to turn herself (almost) into a victim is much more subtle than it sounds (spoiler!). Still a major novel, if one can manage to stand the gory details..!
Had another chance great meal in a Michelin-recommended restaurant in Briançon, Au Plaisir Ambré, with a surprising sea-food theme including Granville whelks tartare, lobster samosas and grayling en croûte (except the crust was not salt but brioche!), the later with the distinctive taste of river fish. The more pleasant as an earlier experience at a Michelin-starred restaurant in Paris was not so exciting, with a risotto smothered by Gruyère!, a culinary lèse-majesty! Also tasted wonderful tartes aux noix made by the housekeeper of one of our vacation rentals. Rich enough for a whole day of hiking.
Read the Raven Tower by Ann Leckie, of which I expected much and which I alas found quite poor (compared with the fabulous Ancillary series). Maybe because I found too many connections with the stunning Ka, which takes the raven’s perspective on human history. Maybe because the Raven is the bad guy/god in this story. Even taking the story as a theatre play (as it builds on Hamlet) did not really work for me. The few characters are not sufficiently deep, the interaction between gods and humans is rather simplistic (although the world-building shows promises) and the conclusion is botched in my opinion. The style is original and the book well-written, however. Plus the book is short and single-volumed! (But I do not get the rave reviews!)
a storm is brewing [jatp]
Posted in Mountains, pictures, Running, Travel with tags Argentière-la-Bessée, Briançon, French Alps, grande randonnée, hail, jatp, mountain storm, Oisans, Parc des Écrins, vacations, Vallon du Fournel on September 6, 2020 by xi'ansixteen ways to defend a walled city [book review]
Posted in Statistics with tags book review, Briançon, Engineering, fantasy, fortifications, French Alps, Italian Alps, P.D. James, siege, Vauban on September 2, 2020 by xi'anThe title of this book, sixteen ways to defend a walled city, enticed me to order it and after a slow beginning I became hooked to the story. I had forgotten I had read and enjoyed a book by K.J. Parker before, namely Devices and Desires, which was quite pleasant as far as I remember! (Not to be confused with another book under the same title by P.D. James.) The concept is somewhat similar, with the same universe if eons laters: boosted medieval warfare seen from an engineer’s perspective. (Devices and Desires started the Engineer Trilogy to make it clear to everyone!) Which makes for a pleasant change as devious ingenuity usually trumps frontal strength and there is at last attention paid to good, I mean in the sense of good delivery, resources, shortage, &tc.! The style is light and funny, the characters are somewhat too nice overall (until they die), but this makes for a tolerable kind of pastiche, most enjoyable to stand a heatwave! A second book just came out and I may be tempted to buy it, heatwave or not. Although the first one concluded in a rather definitive way, making a sequel unlikely… I may also complete the Engineer Trilogy.