Pulse Editor Jacquelyn Lewis jacquelynlewis@dailyemerald.com Tuesday, December 3,2002 Oregon Daily Emerald On Thursday Sports editor Peter Hockadayand Pulse columnist Mason West pull the old switch-a-roo Stamp out impersonal mail with stationery Nika Carlson Living Columnist The holidays are filled with easy ex cess — high on quantity and low on substance. We gorge ourselves on fat filled foods, mall trinkets and empty conversation. We inundate the post with holiday greetings: Hallmark cards with briefly scribbled hellos and pho tos of Mom, Dad and kids in matching festive sweatshirts. While these cards are usually as worthless as the superficial sentiments behind them, they remind me of one of the few Christmas thrills I wish lasted all year round: receiving mail. The In ternet initiated the slow death of the hand-written letter. Bills and junk mail now fill mailboxes. It is a rare occasion when my mailbox is graced with a let ter. As silly as it may seem, these infre quent occasions are exciting. In honor of the long-lost letter, two friends and I began a snail-mail corre spondence last year. Once room mates and neigh bors, we are now scattered along the West Coast. E-mail proved unsausry ing. Its intangibili ty and ease pro duced boring updates when we D.I.Y. living were used to the intimate details of each other’s lives. Letters, on the other hand, are treas ured. They are touched, smelled, saved and reread. That permanence elicits an effort from the writer that most Inter net communications lack. I love know ing that someone took the time to write me a letter when they could have spat out an e-mail. A letter involves fore thought and effort, and it has a person al element that is nonexistent on a sterile screen. Letters breed richness. Good correspondence holds long, juicy words and intimate details. E-mails ex crete decapitated words like “u” in stead of “you” and criminal mis spellings like “boi” instead of “boy.” As a writer, I value the technical depth of a letter. As a sensory being, I value the physical quality of hand-writ ten mail. Letters carry more than words. They bring a bit of the writer as well. You can sense authors’ personali ties in their handwriting, their choice of stationery, their scratched-out mis takes and the occasional smear of breakfast that dropped onto the page. I wanted my friends to have this sense of me when they read my words. Stationery in my price range, however, failed to convey my personality. My so lution was as always: Make it myself. I dare not advise you to actually make the paper yourself. I took the modem Martha way out — I went to Kinko’s. Step one was to find some interest ing images. For my first attempt, I clipped a few pictures out of an arty magazine. While I do not recommend you send stationary decorated with a photo of a meat cleaver to Grandma, I Turn to Living, page 6 Nika Carlson Game review Aaron Shakra Pulse Reporter While the James Bond film series has reached its 40th anniversary and cre ator Ian Fleming’s novels have been around even longer, the mingling of James Bond and video games has had a sparse history. Research reveals long-forgotten 007 adventures from the 1990s —such as “The Stealth Affair” for the disk operating system (DOS) and “The Duel,” for Sega Genesis — but it wasn’t until 1997, when the Rare-developed “GoldenEye 007,” was released for the Nin tendo 64 console, that things started heat ing up for the Bond license. “GoldenEye” worked in so many ways. Here was a game that was so good, it set benchmarks not only for the world of Bond, but for the first-person shooter genre as a whole. Not to mention that it was based on a movie license (the 1995 Pierce Brosnan film of the same name), which has the ten dency to result in some of the most atro cious titles in the history of gaming (“Brave heart” the game, anyone?). “GoldenEye” became immensely success ful and left other game developers scrambling to capitalize on its success. Yet, while the oth er Bond releases — spin-offs of the subse quent “Tomorrow Never Dies” and “The World Is Not Enough” films — were more technologically advanced (in terms of both visuals and game play), they have been un able to match the “GoldenEye” quality level. This is quite a statement, considering the game is now more than five years old — in video game time, a near eternity. “James Bond 007: NightFire,” from EA Games, is the most recent title. It was obvi ously released to coincide with the media flurry surrounding “Die Another Day,” the latest Bond big screen adventure (which, in its third week of release, looks to become the highest grossing film in the series). However, it sets itself apart because it isn’t based on the film — it’s a standalone adventure. It’s the second in a series, actually. “Night Fire” is a follow-up to EA’s “007: Agent Under Fire,” an altogether acceptable first-person shooter that extended to driving cars and performing Bond-ian stunts. Whereas “Agent Under Fire” often seems like it was created simply as an exercise in the use of modem graphics technology, “NightFire” improves by taking everything that was good from the first game —using the same characters to create continuity and the same (albeit upgraded) graphics engine — and improves upon it. Even Pierce Brosnan’s likeness has been added to the character this time around (in “Agent Under Fire,” Bond was merely a generic face). The result is a game that is more finely tuned and intuitive than its predecessor. In other words, it’s downright fun to play. But does “NightFire” top “GoldenEye?” Only time — that is, more hours staring at the television screen with a video game Turn to Bond, page 7 ‘Journals’allows inside view of Cobain’s life Book review Helen Schumacher Pulse Reporter With its glossy, red cover, “Journals” is a col lection of excerpts from Kurt Cobain’s diaries that makes for an attractive coffee table read. Al though it seems sad that Cobain’s personal thoughts were published just in time for the holi day shopping season, “Journals” does provide an interesting glimpse into the mind of the North west’s most notable rock star, as long as you can get past the gimmicky-ness of the publication. Most of the material in the book is about Nir vana and Cobain’s love of music, such as his retelling of seeing the band Air Supply perform in the parking lot behind a Thriftway. “They played faster than I had ever imagined music could be played and with more energy then my Iron Maiden records could provide, this is what I was looking for. Ah, punk rock,” Cobain wrote, describing his musical baptism. “I came to the promise(d) land of a grocery store. I found my special purpose.” The story continues, describing how Cobain gave himself a mullet. “The next day I spiked the upper part of my head but couldn’t quite part with my stoner roots and the long hair in back, thus developing the first bi-level haircut in Montesano history,” he wrote. “I walked around for a week looking like Rod Stewart.” The lyrics to early Nirvana .songs'-are. V.i . ,< -A l .Cij i i *vi.,r.W. ? 3 I S.*« scrawled on spiral notebook paper: “Downer,” “Paper Guts” and “Aneurysm.” Gobain also in cluded music video treatment ideas for “Gome as You Are” and “Heart-Shaped Box” and sketches of possible album covers and T-shirts. There are several letters to friends and oth er musicians, starting with a note to Dale Grover, drummer for the Melvins, a band Gobain had an affinity for. In it, he discusses Nirvana’s first recognition by Seattle record label Sub Pop Records. Also included are let ters Cobain wrote to members of Bikini Kill and Screaming Trees, his father, high school friends and former bandmates. Seeing all these brings Gobain back to earth. Despite the persona built around him by the media, Cobain comes across as someone who is passionate about music and his band — not fame and fortune. Part of what makes “Journals” worthwhile are the drawings, observations and other ran dom artifacts that have been preserved to the page — a study guide for a driver’s test, a list of songs for a mix tape and guitar illustrations. There are also quotes that reassure fans Gobain was planning to take corporate music down from the inside. “I like to infiltrate the mechanics of a system by posing as one of them, then slowly start the rot from the inside of the empire,” he wrote, adding, “I like the comfort in knowing that women are the only future in rock and roll.” The book also shows Gobain’s darker side. He writes about trying to kill himself shortly after dropping out of high school, by lying on train tracks — and about his addiction to heroin. Reading another person’s diary has always held a certain temptation because it offers the possibility of getting an intimate peek into the inner world of the writer. “Journals” is no dif ferent, except that the reader is getting an inti mate peek at Kurt Gobain. However, it’s no sub stitute for the music itself. Contact the Pulse reporter athelenschumachen@dailyemerald.com