Newsstands in Mongolia display the newspapers. I guess it helps people browse and decide if they'd like to buy the paper. Notice anything strange about the pages they have choses to display? Look closely....
Une Canadienne Errante
That's me! Just another wandering Canadian, moving around the globe, always looking for my next adventure and my next destination! I started this blog because, before I made the decision to move to Mongolia, I wanted to see what my new city would look like, but all I could find when I searched for images of Mongolia were landscape images. I had no clue what Ulaanbaatar looked like right up until the day I landed. This blog was born so maybe other people might have a better sense of what Ulaanbaatar looks like, if they want or need to know. I've been an expatriate in Ulaanbaatar since September, but before that, I lived in Korea, Kuwait, and France. I'm considering moving to Myanmar in June-- I'll keep you posted. I'm kind of a homebody and a loner, but I also like to walk around a lot, which provides plenty of opportunities for pictures and observations. Being a loner, I rarely share my observations with others, but I'll share some here. I never proofread and rarely edit, so sorry in advance for all the typoes that are likely to sneak their way into this blog.
Showing posts with label newspapers and magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newspapers and magazines. Show all posts
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Bookstores (oh, and porn, too)
I like reading. I like reading so much that I will often gobble down two or three novels or big books a week about anything, ranging from health, economics, science, psychology, travelogues, etc. Naturally, one of the first things I did when I arrived in Ulaanbaatar was track down all of the bookstores listed in my Lonely Planet. Let me just say that the selection of books here is even more dismal than LP made it out to be. The first bookstore I visited ("Books in English"), had a disappointing, tiny selection of out-of-date magazines (like, I mean, from 1996!) and extremely used books that weren't even particularly interesting, anyway. The next bookstore I visited was not much better, but that was actually okay because I still had two more bookstores to visit. Librairie Papillon is listed as UB's finest bookstore, although most of the selection is in French. That's actually okay, because I can read French. It's my second language. I was kind of looking forward to reading French books this winter and improving my French vocabulary and grammar from all the French I planned on reading. But when I got to Librairie Papillon, I found that, while Lonly Planet was correct in asserting that this is possibly UB's greatest bookstore, the selection is still pretty abysmal. Yes, there were books in French, but the selection was not as great as what Lonely Planet made it out to be. The wall of German books looked about as interesting as the French selection (actually, possibly even more interesting-- but that might be only because I couldn't understand half of the titles in the German section). There was also a backroom full of cheap classics in English (you all know the kind-- they've got navy blue covers and they cot about 5-10bucks, but if you can help it, you probably usually buy a nicer-looking edition from a different publisher with slightly bigger, more reader-friendly fonts). Let me say, I was disappointed with this one as well. There was one final bookstore to check out, Xanadu. LP said that this one had a small selection, and that it also carried a small selection of LP titles. When I arrived, I found that Xanadu does, in fact, carry a selection of LP titles, but they're mostly all out-of-date (by one or two editions!), and if you're interested in reading anything other than travel guides, if you're shopping at Xanadu, you'd better be /really/ interested in books about Mongolian history and culture, cause that's all there is!! Thank god (lower-case /g/, intentional) my younger brother bought me a Sony bookreader for Christmas-- I guess I'll finally be making use of that. And I miss my old bookstore that I used to frequent in Seoul-- What the Book-- I used to go there just to breathe in the smell of books and look at all the knowledge and stories I have yet to read!
I did find one other bookstore in Ulaanbaatar, although it wasn't listed in the Lonely Planet. I don't really understand why it isn't listed, because it's a hella cool bookstore. It's called the "Mega Hi-Fi Store" or, alternatively, "The Original Bookstore" and it's on Seoul Street. This store has a better selection of books, although they're entirely in Mongolian. Actually, they do have a small selection of guidebooks (you know the kind that are full of glossy, colour pictures and 3D-type maps that are really pretty to look at, but not terribly practical to actually bring traveling with you), but they were not Lonely Planets (this, I suspect, is why this bookstore is not listed in the LP). It also carries a few copies of Time and Newsweek (although, the last time I went there, I noticed that at the top of the Times, there was printed "Subscriber Copy-- not for resale"), but what I found much more interesting was the Mongolian porn. I'm not a pervert or anything, but I had to stop to take a photo of the Mongolian porn. Then, I had to flip through, and I found some totally awesome porn cartoons (like what you would find in the newspaper, but, you know, porn). Then, I sucked it up and bought a couple of copies to send to my bro for Christmas. It was kind of awkward, because it was very male-oriented porn, and I'm definitely a woman, and I didn't explain that it was for my brother because I didn't think the girl would understand me or believe me, and anyway, buying porn for your brother in kind of creepy in its own right. I only bought two magazines and each magazine is worth 2500 Tugrugs, which is about $1.95 in Canadian money!
I did find one other bookstore in Ulaanbaatar, although it wasn't listed in the Lonely Planet. I don't really understand why it isn't listed, because it's a hella cool bookstore. It's called the "Mega Hi-Fi Store" or, alternatively, "The Original Bookstore" and it's on Seoul Street. This store has a better selection of books, although they're entirely in Mongolian. Actually, they do have a small selection of guidebooks (you know the kind that are full of glossy, colour pictures and 3D-type maps that are really pretty to look at, but not terribly practical to actually bring traveling with you), but they were not Lonely Planets (this, I suspect, is why this bookstore is not listed in the LP). It also carries a few copies of Time and Newsweek (although, the last time I went there, I noticed that at the top of the Times, there was printed "Subscriber Copy-- not for resale"), but what I found much more interesting was the Mongolian porn. I'm not a pervert or anything, but I had to stop to take a photo of the Mongolian porn. Then, I had to flip through, and I found some totally awesome porn cartoons (like what you would find in the newspaper, but, you know, porn). Then, I sucked it up and bought a couple of copies to send to my bro for Christmas. It was kind of awkward, because it was very male-oriented porn, and I'm definitely a woman, and I didn't explain that it was for my brother because I didn't think the girl would understand me or believe me, and anyway, buying porn for your brother in kind of creepy in its own right. I only bought two magazines and each magazine is worth 2500 Tugrugs, which is about $1.95 in Canadian money!
Labels:
asia,
books and magazines,
bookstores,
central asia,
foreign porn,
lonely planet,
magazines,
Mongolia,
newspapers and magazines,
porn,
porno,
pornography,
trans-mongolian,
UB,
Ulaanbaatar
Sunday, October 3, 2010
The Story
A lot of people, upon hearing that I moved to Mongolia, responded with "Mongolia!? Wow! Why Mongolia?" Well, basically, it was a lottery. I was very sick and tired of all the bullshit in Korea, and I desperately wanted out of there. So, I went to the nearest PC Bang (internet cafe/world of warcraft den), looked through Dave's ESL Cafe and eslteachersboard.com and a few others, blanketed the ESL industry with my resume (as long as the school wasn't in Korea), and I sat back and waited. I had decided that the first place that offered me a job would be the place where I would move. So, a few days later, I got an email from a school in Mongolia that said simply, "Okay, we like your resume. We'd like to hire you." So I started preparing my visa for Mongolia and I started packing, and that was that.
Was this a poor decision? In some ways, yes, in other ways, no. Mongolia, itself is really nice. I actually really like Ulaanbaatar, and all of the people here. It's pretty cheap to live here (well, as long as you're not too free and easy with your lifestyle). I think it's going to be really fun to live here (even if the winter is going to be fucking cold). That's the good. The bad: it's only October, and it's already pretty chilly. That, in and of itself, is not that bad (I'm Canadian, after all-- I'm used to chilly weather). What's bad is that I'm lucky if I have hot water once every three days. In the past week, I've taken exactly two showers, and both of them were cold. I'm usually a showers-every-day type of person. The reason why I've only had two showers in the past week is because every time I turn on the water in my bathroom, hoping to take a shower, the only thing that comes out is cold water. Since it's chilly outside, and since my place is not heated, I just can't bring myself to step into a freezing fucking shower (when I was backpacking in SouthEastAsia, I took cold showers almost every day, but that's because the guesthouses that only had cold showers were cheaper and it's a WARM climate-- even if the water is cold, at least all the air around you is warm). So, in the past week, I've stood shivering in my very cold bathroom almost every day, holding my hand under a stream of cold water, trying to decide if the freezing cold water on a freezing cold air backdrop was worth it, and the only two times I came to the conclusion that it was worth it was when I was so filthy I could actually smell myself.
But that's not the worst of it. The worst is actually a situation at work. I should preface this with the following: in general, I like my students. I also think that my coworkers are pretty nice. But, when I was hired, I asked if there would be books and resources for me to use at school once I arrived in Mongolia. The answer was a resounding YES! So, imagine my surprise when, on my first day here, I sat down with my principal and my co-teacher and they explained to me that my co-teacher and I would share the book that we would use to teach the students. I thought that was fine. That's generally how it's done in Korea, as well. Then, they explained to me that actually, just my co-teacher would use the book to teach the students; I could LOOK at the book to see what topic she was currently teaching and prepare my lessons totally from scratch based on a stupid, measly topic. I just started laughing at them. I said, "No, it's not going to work that way. I teach 30 classes a week, my co-teacher teaches half that amount, so if anyone should have to create their own lessons for every single lesson, it should be the teacher who has fewer classes." They said, "Fine, we'll find a different book for your co-teacher to use, and you can use this one for the older classes." Wha?? You can find a different book for my co-teacher to use, but you couldn't have found a book for me to use? Something smells funny. Then, they tell me, "But for the younger classes, you really do need to make up your own lessons each time." I say, "That's fine, just as long as I'm able to print off worksheets for the kids, I can handle making up my own lessons for very young children." SO... today, I finally get all my shit together to print off a bunch of stuff for my classes, and they lead me to a room with a printer connected to a computer that DOESN'T WORK!!! I say, this isn't working. At first, they treat me like I'm a computer illiterate retard, until they realise they can't get the fuckin' thing to work, either. Then they lead me to a different room with a different computer, and they won't even let me use that one because, according to their demented perceptions of the situation, I just don't know how to use a computer. But, as it turns out, even on this computer, it will only print the first page of each document. Ummm, I need all my work, thanks, not just a fifth of it. So now, I'm hyperventilating and considering refusing to go in to teach the younger classes since the school gave me no resources and no access to print or make my own resources. Yeah, I'm kind of livid right now.
Anyway, here's a picture of a newspaper stand I saw on Peace Ave the other week. I might walk down there as soon as I log off. I need a long walk to clear my mind and calm myself down. Arrrrgh!
Was this a poor decision? In some ways, yes, in other ways, no. Mongolia, itself is really nice. I actually really like Ulaanbaatar, and all of the people here. It's pretty cheap to live here (well, as long as you're not too free and easy with your lifestyle). I think it's going to be really fun to live here (even if the winter is going to be fucking cold). That's the good. The bad: it's only October, and it's already pretty chilly. That, in and of itself, is not that bad (I'm Canadian, after all-- I'm used to chilly weather). What's bad is that I'm lucky if I have hot water once every three days. In the past week, I've taken exactly two showers, and both of them were cold. I'm usually a showers-every-day type of person. The reason why I've only had two showers in the past week is because every time I turn on the water in my bathroom, hoping to take a shower, the only thing that comes out is cold water. Since it's chilly outside, and since my place is not heated, I just can't bring myself to step into a freezing fucking shower (when I was backpacking in SouthEastAsia, I took cold showers almost every day, but that's because the guesthouses that only had cold showers were cheaper and it's a WARM climate-- even if the water is cold, at least all the air around you is warm). So, in the past week, I've stood shivering in my very cold bathroom almost every day, holding my hand under a stream of cold water, trying to decide if the freezing cold water on a freezing cold air backdrop was worth it, and the only two times I came to the conclusion that it was worth it was when I was so filthy I could actually smell myself.
But that's not the worst of it. The worst is actually a situation at work. I should preface this with the following: in general, I like my students. I also think that my coworkers are pretty nice. But, when I was hired, I asked if there would be books and resources for me to use at school once I arrived in Mongolia. The answer was a resounding YES! So, imagine my surprise when, on my first day here, I sat down with my principal and my co-teacher and they explained to me that my co-teacher and I would share the book that we would use to teach the students. I thought that was fine. That's generally how it's done in Korea, as well. Then, they explained to me that actually, just my co-teacher would use the book to teach the students; I could LOOK at the book to see what topic she was currently teaching and prepare my lessons totally from scratch based on a stupid, measly topic. I just started laughing at them. I said, "No, it's not going to work that way. I teach 30 classes a week, my co-teacher teaches half that amount, so if anyone should have to create their own lessons for every single lesson, it should be the teacher who has fewer classes." They said, "Fine, we'll find a different book for your co-teacher to use, and you can use this one for the older classes." Wha?? You can find a different book for my co-teacher to use, but you couldn't have found a book for me to use? Something smells funny. Then, they tell me, "But for the younger classes, you really do need to make up your own lessons each time." I say, "That's fine, just as long as I'm able to print off worksheets for the kids, I can handle making up my own lessons for very young children." SO... today, I finally get all my shit together to print off a bunch of stuff for my classes, and they lead me to a room with a printer connected to a computer that DOESN'T WORK!!! I say, this isn't working. At first, they treat me like I'm a computer illiterate retard, until they realise they can't get the fuckin' thing to work, either. Then they lead me to a different room with a different computer, and they won't even let me use that one because, according to their demented perceptions of the situation, I just don't know how to use a computer. But, as it turns out, even on this computer, it will only print the first page of each document. Ummm, I need all my work, thanks, not just a fifth of it. So now, I'm hyperventilating and considering refusing to go in to teach the younger classes since the school gave me no resources and no access to print or make my own resources. Yeah, I'm kind of livid right now.
Anyway, here's a picture of a newspaper stand I saw on Peace Ave the other week. I might walk down there as soon as I log off. I need a long walk to clear my mind and calm myself down. Arrrrgh!
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| Newspaper Stand on Peace Avenue in Ulaanbaatar |
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