deborahjross: (Default)
io9 offers a fascinating suggestion of what happens when we read text. "It's true that we miss those types of things routinely. But that's generally because we look for what writing is — and not what writing isn't. What writing is, generally, is a way to communicate meaning from one person to another."

It turns out that English abounds in words that are medium in size and usually have redundant letters ("redundant" has 2 ds; "letters" has 2 es and 2 ts). "It's possible to scramble those letters around while keeping them near where they would be, if the word were in its correct order. German, scientists found, is also a good language for that sort of thing." So we see what the word is supposed to be (we're reading for communication, right?) instead of what's actually there.

There's a very cool puzzle paragraph, where the letters of each word are scrambled except for the first and last, rendering the words intelligible. It's as if those first and last letters provide anchors, or clues to the meaning of the word, and our expectations and familiarity with English sort out the mishmosh in the middle. Kind of like Scrabble or crossword puzzles.

An Illusion that Explains Why Typos Are So Hard to Catch
deborahjross: (Default)
To play along, just answer the following three (3) questions…

• What are you currently reading?
• What did you recently finish reading?
• What do you think you’ll read next?


Here are my answers:
Currently reading fiction: Cinder by Marissa Meyer. YA retelling of you-guessed-it, but she's a cyborg in a dystopic future Japanese empire, and the Queen of the Moon has designs on the Prince but has the only cure to the plague, oh and Cinder's best human friend is her stepsister who contracts aforementioned plague... marvelous fun. Also Bernard Cornwell, Sharpe's Enemy - Sean Bean made me do it.
Currently reading nonfiction: Raphael Patai The Hebrew Goddess, not the best introduction if you're unfamiliar with Jewish theology and Jewish feminist thought, but just right for where I am, having just finished ReVisions: Seeing Torah Through A Feminist Lens, by Rabbi Elyse Goldstein. I'm struck by how even the most adamantly monotheistic religion keeps incorporating the goddess...

Recently finished: J. M. Frey, Triptych (reviewed elsewhere); Marianne de Pierres, Glitter Rose - eeriely evocative linked shorts by an Australian writer; Gail Carrigan, Timeless; Jack McDevitt, Firebird.

Next up: Franny Billingsley, Chime (YA); Laura Anne Gilman, Blood From Stone; Carol Berg, The Soul Mirror; Dalai Lama, Ethics for the New Millennium; Donald B. Kraybill, The Riddle of Amish Culture.
deborahjross: (Default)
David Brin's list of science fiction for young adult (teen) readers, with comment about each one. He also suggests some authors as the next step toward more challenging reading. What else would you include? Or leave out?

My favorite part of the list is the repeated comment, "Any book by this author will please a bright teen."

Contrary Brin: Science Fiction for Young Adults: A Recommended List

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Deborah J. Ross

November 2020

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