a party I was at in the paper: “…a dear friend of mine threw a martini-drenched surprise B-day bash for his (biological) girlfriend just last weekend. Now, I knew all the mainly straight partygoers there quite well, of course (a few number among my most fabulous friends and drinking buddies), a cast of this city’s finest dancers, musicians, journalists and divine rogues, including the owners of two of the hottest and hippest nightspots in the city.”
I guess I’m a divine rogue, which suits me just fine.
A couple of my
many bookshelves have been elevated to the status of Friends of Meg’s Shelves! Read Not So Soft to get the whole sordid story of Meg and her bookshelves.
I just got back from
sharing New Year’s greetings with several friends who only made their way back to Montreal in the past day or so, but in doing so I determined that step one of my five-point master plan (of web stuff) for 2001 is a lock now. I got an email today that put step two a lot closer to fruition as well.
Last night did nothing
but confirm that impression I get at this time of year. Such moments are ripe for coincidence and happy convergence. And, at a great party I went to (but hadn’t planned to attend) at about 2am I’d made my way to the kitchen past a steamy dance floor and was chatting with a guy I don’t know too well, but who’s among the very first people I met when I first moved to Montreal for college. And who should appear, completely out of the blue, but one of my oldest friends – you might really say a sister, in a way – who lives in Vancouver. When you’re in your early thirties there aren’t many people in the world that you’ve known for over 25 years, but there she was at this party on Park Avenue. And more than that – her background and experience fits very closely with part of this odd plan I’ve been cooking up over the past couple of months. Hmmm.
Back in Montreal
now, though I still have a couple of days off, which I plan on spending by doing as close to nothing as I can. Christmas highlights? Food, wine, more food, good company, seeing my brother, and (finally) reading Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. A lot of friends picked it up and didn’t find it that interesting, but I’m really enjoying it. It’s not for the geekery and crypto stuff either – I’m enjoying it as a novel, as a story.
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