Saturday, 23 December 2023
Jólabókaflóð
Thursday, 16 December 2021
Jólabókaflóð
I blogged about it last year. I made it a word of the day then, I will do the same now. So Jólabókaflóð is an Icelandic term meaning "Christmas Book Flood" and it is the word given to their tradition of giving book on Christmas Eve and spending the rest of the night reading it. I think it is a great tradition which I haven't quite done as of yet, except for the reading book part. This is how I spend myfree time waiting for Christmas to arrive. 'Tis the season to be reading, after all.
Thursday, 24 December 2020
Christmas Book Flood
Happy Christmas Eve everyone and to make you wait for the 25, I thought I would share something new I learned today: the Icelandic term Jolabokaflod. I don't have the accents, otherwise I hope I am spelling it right. It means "Christmas Book Flood" and it is a tradition of giving book to each other and spending the rest of the night reading them. As per the image above. I love it and I am tempted to turn it into a new Christmas tradition. I already follow half of it: I binge read during Christmas time. In any case, this is our word of the day.
Monday, 18 April 2016
A Volcanic Memory
Tuesday, 24 May 2011
Un volcan et un certain air de déjà vu
Quand même, quand j'étais enfant, mes frères et moi (surtout PJ) étions fascinés par les volcans. Comme par pleins d'autres trucs, mais les volcans ont fait l'objet d'une attention particulière. Ils étaient les lieux terrifiants de bien des jeux enfantins. Maintenant, ils font annuler les vols. Il n'y a pas à dire, ça les rend déjà plus banals.
Saturday, 17 April 2010
Eyjafjallajokull, or The Beauty of the Beast
I have to say, however, that from the pictures and videos I saw of Eyjafjallajokull, it is quite impressive, even beautiful. Volcanoes, like cats, have the grace and nobility of predatorial beasts.
Friday, 16 April 2010
No Journey Into Apocalypse
My wife and I spent the day in a daze, being not quite here but not quite there, and also of course because of the spectacular way nature asserted its power over us. People call such an event an "act of God". As a Godless man of the existentialist kind, I consider such event as absurd, showing a blind but overwhelming force that shatters human plans with violence, yet without rhyme or reason. Still, they are utterly terrifying.
So we will miss England for a few more days. We will also miss the colours of sunset, which the volcano was supposed to make particularly bright. Like Hellfire? The comparison comes automatically to my mind. But I will not see it. I often miss displays of Apocalypse. By that I mean that I witness them from afar, but I am never part of it. I missed 9/11 by then days or so and when I travelled to England later, it was in a plane empty and silent like a graveyard. my wife and I were in Montreal when 7/7 happened. This time will be the same, although we are experiencing the strength of the volcano, even as far as here.
Thursday, 15 April 2010
Sur le plancher des vaches...
Tout de même, se faire annuler un vol à cause d'un volcan, ça donne le vertige. Toute frustration mise à part, il faut admettre qu'on se sent bien impuissant face à pareille manifestation de l'absurdité des forces naturelles. Quand j'aurai digéré le contretemps, j'essaierai de pondre un billet existentialiste là dessus.
Petite anecdote en guise de conclusion: mon petit frère a déjà eu une fascination toute geekesque pour les volcans.


