All Hallow’s Read

Brainiac ManiacNeil Gaiman came up with the idea for All Hallow’s Read—a Halloween/reading celebration during which you give scary books and comics to people. Did you participate?

I gave Sarah a copy of Stephen King’s Different Seasons, which I think I read for the first time when I was just about her age. I remember really liking it, too, especially the last novella, The Breathing Method, which incidentally, is the only one of the four novellas in that book never to have been made into a movie.

Dylan got a copy of In a Dark, Dark Room and Other Scary Stories by Alvin Schwartz and Dirk Zimmer.

The scariest thing I could get Maggie to try is Beverly Cleary’s book Socks. After insisting she couldn’t handle scary stories, when we got home from the bookstore, she was watching a vampire/werewolf movie on Disney (and no, not that one). What gives?

Anyway, if you didn’t participate this year, put it on your calendar for next year. I think it’s a great new tradition.

photo credit: Kelley Mari

NaNoWriMo Participant

Reading (and NaNoWriMo) Update: October 31, 2010

NaNoWriMo ParticipantI’m participating in NaNoWriMo. I decided to just buckle down and make a decision. It should be interesting, as I really have no idea what I’ll be writing about. I have jotted down a few ideas for potential plots, but I haven’t committed to any yet. You can follow my progress here at my NaNo profile, or keep visiting me here to check my status meter.

I began reading The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson just in time for Halloween. I already love her descriptions and think I will continue to enjoy the book. I also had a change to begin listening to Jamaica Inn in the car yesterday. Du Maurier sure does write a good creep in Uncle Joss, doesn’t she?

Right now we’re putting the finishing touches on Halloween costumes. Maggie will be a black cat, and Dylan will be Harry Potter (again). However, since we only have the glasses and the wand, he’s going to be Harry on the run in Deathly Hallows rather than Hogwarts Harry.

And for Halloween, a fun poll:

What is your favorite Halloween candy?

  • Fun size Snickers (43%, 3 Votes)
  • Milk Duds (14%, 1 Votes)
  • Smarties (14%, 1 Votes)
  • Some other kind of chocolate bar (share in the comments if you like) (14%, 1 Votes)
  • Something else (share in the comments if you like) (14%, 1 Votes)
  • Candy Corn (0%, 0 Votes)
  • Sweet Tarts (0%, 0 Votes)
  • Nerds (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 7

Loading ... Loading ...

Happy Halloween, everyone!

jack o lanterns
photo credit: St0rmz

NaNoWriMo 2011

IMG_7617

I really want to participate in NaNoWriMo this year. I really don’t have the time, and to be honest, I don’t even have the germ of an idea. Some of you know I’ve been in grad school for two years now, and I will be graduating in December. This November I will be wrapping up my work on my portfolio for grad school and preparing a presentation for a national English teachers’ conference. My friend Bud suggested I might spend the time revising my NaNo novel from last year, and my husband agreed with Bud. And they’re probably right. That is what I should do instead of grousing about not participating in NaNoWriMo this year. But I really wish I were participating. It was really fun to have the support of the rest of the NaNo writers. I felt a sense of camaraderie I don’t think I’ve ever felt as a writer. It gave me a thrill to enter my word counts each day, especially when I was ahead of my goals. I felt excited about what I was writing, too.

I have always been a writer mainly because no one ever told me I couldn’t. I can vividly recall making my own books when I was the same age as my youngest child—stapled pieces of notebook paper illustrated with my drawings. I pontificated on such subjects as healthy eating and bugs who live inside mushrooms. Then when I was older, I turned to poetry. I wrote a lot of awful poetry as a teenager. Finally about ten years ago, I wrote an entire novel. I never pursued publication vigorously. I admit to being completely clueless as to how one truly goes about finding agents and publishers. I finally published it myself on Lulu.

The NaNo novel I wrote last year languishes on my laptop. I haven’t tried to edit it. I haven’t even tried to read it. I can’t say why. I’m not scared it’s bad, necessarily. Well, I am, but that’s not why I haven’t read it. I think I am a bit scared of the time it would take to nurture it into print. If I am honest with myself, it is one of my most cherished dreams to become a real published writer with a book on the shelves that people actually want to read (and not just members of my family, who were so kind and supportive and bought my first book on Lulu). Bless all 18 people who have purchased a copy—as I said when I published it, that’s more people than would have read it on my computer. My mom’s cousin even told her it was good and she was proud to be related to the writer, which really puffed me up, and I’m being sincere. My dad even asked me to autograph it. But that’s not the kind of writer I really want to be. It reminds me too much of poor Emmeline Grangerford in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, spending all her time writing bad poetry that only her family admires, bless her heart, and then dropping dead and leaving that corpus of work behind her. *Shiver*

But I feel inspired. I feel inspired when I think of J.K. Rowling writing about her boy wizard in a café, feeling as low as she had ever felt in her life and living on government assistance. I feel inspired when I think of Stephen King typing Carrie in a trailer home, unable to afford a phone and receiving notification of his novel’s acceptance via telegram. I feel inspired when I read about the works of the Brontë sisters and Jane Austen, published at author expense and never really expected to do all that well. I don’t compare myself to any of these writers, but I know how they felt to want their writing to go out there into the world, and I also know how they felt to be afraid for that to happen. Obviously some people are going to hate it, and knowing that is like contemplating people hating your children. I mean, how could they?

I write all the time. But I don’t write creatively very much, and though I need for that to change if I am to be serious about writing, it’s hard to find the time. My high school English teacher is still a friend, and she occasionally chides me for going into teaching. She insists I should have pursued the writing with more gusto. I really want to. I really do. I really want to write something this month. I want to write alongside everyone else. I didn’t have any time to write last year either, I tell myself. Yet I did, and I actually finished—I wrote over 50,000 words. And Bud and my husband do have a point—I can and should work some more on that other novel. I really love my characters, Imogen and her father Jasper Medley. They are real to me. It’s strange what happens when you create characters and they take on life. I tell myself when I’m done with grad school, I’ll have time, but will I really? I mean, I didn’t write much for years, and grad school wasn’t the reason. Certainly being a mother takes up my time, but I was a mother when I wrote my other two novels.

I don’t have any grand conclusions. I am just throwing all of this out there. As I drove Sarah to see her dad today, I was thinking about all of this, and I knew I needed to wrestle with it in print, but I don’t know where to go from here. Do I sign up for NaNoWriMo in the 11th hour and see what happens? Do I take good advice and rip apart my novel so I could try to get it published? Do I do neither one? I don’t know.

photo credit: Clemson

Booking Through Thursday: Skeletons

the line-up

Just in time for Halloween, Booking Through Thursday‘s weekly prompt concerns skeletons: specifically, book skeletons:

What reading skeletons do you have in your closet? Books you’d be ashamed to let people know you love? Addiction to the worst kind of (fill in cheesy genre here)? Your old collection of Bobbsey Twin Mysteries lovingly stored behind your “grown-up” books? You get the picture … come on, confess!

Interesting question. I would counter that we shouldn’t feel embarrassed about our reading. If we like it, why care what others think about it? I have had total strangers on the Internet insinuate I’m immature because I enjoy the Harry Potter series. I say those folks are sadly limited if they feel you cross this age line that prohibits you from reading certain books. I also liked the first Twilight book quite a bit, and I didn’t think New Moon and Eclipse were terrible. I have read every genre from children’s literature, to romance, to science fiction, to fantasy, to cookbooks, and you name it otherwise, and I just don’t see any reason to be embarrassed by my reading habits. I think the only thing you should be embarrassed about is if you don’t read anything. Now those people I can’t understand.

photo credit: gfoster67

How the Irish Saved Civilization, Thomas Cahill

How the Irish Saved Civilization Thomas Cahill inaugurated his Hinges of History series with How the Irish Saved Civilization. When Rome fell, Cahill says, the Irish clerics not only spread Christianity, but also saved the great Latin works from being lost to the ravages of history. He also argues the Irish kept the flame of Western culture burning as the rest of the world descended into the Dark Ages.

Parts of this book were quite interesting. Cahill’s love for Irish mythology shines through in his description of the Táin Bó Cúailnge, which made me want to return to the Táin again. His descriptions of St. Augustine, St. Patrick, and St. Columba were interesting and definitely had me searching the Web to learn more about them, but in the end, Cahill never really proves his thesis. The first half of the book is good, but somewhere during the chapter “What was Found,” Cahill loses the thread of his argument and ultimately admits most of what we retained could have survived without the Irish, then attributes the survival of Latin literature to the Irish without really explaining how. He also makes the leap that because the Irish had the oldest vernacular literature in Europe, they were somehow responsible for or influential over the vernacular literature that followed. Readers can learn a great deal about the lives of Patrick and Columba and a bit about early Irish literature, but they won’t learn how the Irish saved civilization.

Rating: ★★★☆☆

I read this book for the Bibliophilic Books Challenge. This is my sixth book for this challenge, which brings me to the level of Litlover. I will not be able to read six more books before the challenge ends in December, so I’m going to call this challenge complete. I originally committed to just three books, so I surpassed my expectations.

Reading Update: October 24, 2010

flareAll the maple trees around here are beautiful shades of red and orange. Fall is my favorite season.

I think I am pretty much done with the R.I.P. Challenge. I gave up on Wuthering Bites, and I don’t see how I’ll finish Jamaica Inn when I haven’t even started it. However, I did read four books, which is two more than I thought I could, so I still met the challenge of Peril the First—for the first time ever!

I am still reading How the Irish Saved Civilization. If I have one complaint, it’s that I like books divided up into more chapters. I feel a sense of accomplishment when I finish a chapter, and the chapters in this book (at least some of them) are looooonng, which makes me feel less like I’m getting anywhere.

I am also going to begin Anne Fortier’s novel Juliet. Romeo and Juliet is fun to teach, and this will be the first year I have taught high school that I haven’t taught the play because it’s the first year I haven’t taught ninth grade. I love the play, but I needed a break. Instead, I will be starting Macbeth pretty soon. That one is great fun to teach.

I am looking for some good steampunk book suggestions that I can read for the Steampunk Challenge. I already plan to read The Dream of Perpetual Motion, and a friend in the know recommended Leviathan. If you have read any good ones, please share.

What are you reading?

photo credit: Aunt Owwee

Tiger Eyes

My Life in Books: Tiger Eyes

Tiger EyesI’m not sure I could tell you how many times I read Judy Blume’s YA novel Tiger Eyes. I know I read it for the first time in fifth grade, so I must have been 11. My copy had the cover to the left, but I’ve seen at least three iterations of the cover since then, and it remains, in my opinion, the one that best captures the fragile Davey Wexler, who is the heroine of the book. Tiger Eyes is one of my favorite books and is, in my opinion, one of the best YA books ever written. I think it’s Judy Blume’s best book, which is saying something, because she was my favorite author as a child. I read nearly all the books she published up until the mid-1980’s, including Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret; Then Again, Maybe I Won’t; Forever, Iggie’s House; Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing; It’s Not the End of the World; Superfudge; Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great; Blubber; and Deenie. Of all of them, Tiger Eyes was my favorite.

Tiger Eyes is the story of Davey, near-witness to her father’s murder in a convenience store. In the aftermath of his death, Davey spirals into depression. Davey’s mother takes her sister-in-law Bitsy and her husband Walter up on their offer to allow the Wexlers to move in with them in their Los Alamos, NM home, nearly all the way across the country from Atlantic City, NJ, where the Wexlers live. In New Mexico, Davey makes two important friends: Jane and Wolf. Jane is an alcoholic, and Wolf is the son of the man Davey cares for in the hospital as a candy striper. Over time, Davey is able to accept her father’s death and move on with her life.

If you follow Judy Blume on Twitter, and you should—she has the coolest Twitter bio ever (“Are you there, Twitter? It’s me, Judy.)—you know that filming for Tiger Eyes is currently taking place. Willa Holland is playing Davey.

Willa Holland

And Tatanka Means is playing Wolf.

Tatanka Means

Blume’s son Lawrence Blume is directing the film. You know what? It’s the first major motion picture adapted from one of Judy Blume’s books. I couldn’t believe it when I read that, but it’s true. It’s set to be released next year. I will definitely watch it, but I wonder if it can ever touch the novel. Judy Blume is producing it, and with her son directing, it should be easier to make sure her vision is achieved.

It’s hard to articulate what Tiger Eyes means to me. I loved Davey. She was like family. I feel like I grew up with her. She lived through a horrible experience, but she was strong, and she survived. For me, this book was about hope and the human capacity for love and resilience. My copy of Tiger Eyes was worn out, and I’m pretty sure the cover eventually just came off. It should be interesting to see one of the most important books of my childhood on the silver screen.

Lending Kindle Books

Amazon Kindle eBook Reader

One of the big advantages the Nook has had over the Kindle is the fact that Nook users can lend books to their friends, and Kindle users can’t. That’s all about to change. Amazon announced that it will soon be bringing lending to the Kindle—so long as the publishers agree. Users can lend books for a 14-day period. You will be unable to read any books you lend for the duration of the loan.

Another new feature Amazon plans to add is the ability to read periodicals via free Kindle apps, such as the iPhone app and iPad app. Android users and presumably Kindle for Mac and Kindle for PC users will have this feature some time later. Kindle users can already do this with their books, but not magazines.

The Nook still allows users to load ePub books to the device and borrow ebooks from libraries. Presumably this new lending feature on the Kindle can be used by libraries, but I’m not certain—it sounds like it would be a feature that individual users would find more convenient and easy to use than libraries would. No word on whether ePub books or library lending are features that will come to the Kindle, but to my way of thinking, the Kindle is looking like the better deal all the time.

No Vampires

Wuthering Bites, Well, Bites

No VampiresI gave Wuthering Bites a fair try. I actually read up to page 52. There will be no more vampires in my Wuthering Heights. Well, maybe psychological vampires, but not real ones. I honestly don’t think that mashing up Wuthering Heights with a vampire story is a bad idea, but the execution of the mash-up is what I object to. It’s sloppy. Every once in a while there is a random reference to the huge vampire problem Yorkshire seems to have developed. Some of it was funny, but funny bad, not funny ha-ha. I just can’t force myself through it anymore. What makes me sad is that my department chair bought me this book for my birthday. Oh, the perils of giving books as gifts! You just never know if the other person is going to enjoy it. I tried to! I really did want to like this book, and I think I gave it longer than I ordinarily would have.

I don’t think it’s my sense of humor. I can laugh at parodies of just about anything I love, but good parodies, you know? An example, so that you can see what I mean:

Mr. Heathcliff formed a contrast to his abode. Despite his dark-haired, dark-eyed gypsy looks, in dress and manners he seems a gentleman country squire. By his appearance, some might suspect a degree of underbred pride; gypsies are known for such arrogance, and I wonder if he could be one of them. Since the infestation of the vampires, the gypsy vampire slayers have become bold in their haughtiness. With some right, as it is their skill and courage to keep the beasties from devouring all of us and taking over our fair country. But I am running too fast, bestowing attributes on Mr. Heathcliff that might be unfounded. (4)

If you care, this is the passage’s “inspiration” in the original Wuthering Heights:

But Mr. Heathcliff forms a singular contrast to his abode and style of living. He is a dark-skinned gipsy in aspect, in dress and manners a gentleman: that is, as much a gentleman as many a country squire: rather slovenly, perhaps, yet not looking amiss with his negligence, because he has an erect and handsome figure; and rather morose. Possibly, some people might suspect him of a degree of under-bred pride; I have a sympathetic chord within that tells me it is nothing of the sort: I know, by instinct, his reserve springs from an aversion to showy displays of feeling—to manifestations of mutual kindliness. He’ll love and hate equally under cover, and esteem it a species of impertinence to be loved or hated again. No, I’m running on too fast: I bestow my own attributes over-liberally on him. (5-6)

So, yeah. There’s that. The biggest problem is that the vampires are just sort of plopped in there, and only serve to garble the plot. I decided to read the last page. If you plan to read this book, and I don’t recommend it, then close your eyes.

In this book, Lockwood marries Nelly Dean.

Yep. Here it goes:

In truth, it was more than the promised adventure that drew me; it was the seductive [!!!—sorry, had to interrupt; you may carry on] and fascinating Mrs. Dean. A gentleman I am, and a man of breeding and quality I do claim to be, but in fact, my own father was born into a family of shipwrights, and I learned honest labor before I was ever tucked off to Cambridge and the life of my betters. My parents and siblings and every last stitch and knob of kin have vanished, and if I wished to take a clever and loving woman to wife, what care I if she began her days below stairs? (361-362)

Wait, what? Stitch and knob? What the @#$%& is that supposed to mean? I Googled it, and I get three references to cars and one to a sewing machine.

Oh, and Hareton and young Cathy burn Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange to the ground. Gah. I wish I’d closed my own eyes.

OK, you can open your eyes now.

I don’t often make it a practice to review books I don’t finish, but I’m not likely to finish this one, and frankly, I don’t want anyone else to waste their time. Unless spontaneously bleeding from your eyes is, you know, your “thing.”

God, I hope this mash-up craze dies soon.

No Vampires Beyond this Point

Rating: ½☆☆☆☆

Update, 10/24/10: The BrontëBlog has reviewed this book (they agree with me, so you can assume I’m not crazy. In case you were.)

Booking Through Thursday

Booking Through Thursday: Foreign

Booking Through ThursdayThis week’s Booking Through Thursday prompt asks participants to contemplate foreign books: “Name a book (or books) from a country other than your own that you love. Or aren’t there any?”

It’s too easy for me to discuss British literature; I’m an Anglophile, and I teach British literature. In a way, it sometimes feels like as much my country as America does. In fact, I might read more British fiction than American fiction. I have quite a few books by Latino authors on my list of books to read, including One Hundred Years of Solitude and Like Water for Chocolate. I want to read some Isabel Allende, too. Haven’t done it yet. I really like Alexandre Dumas’s The Count of Monte Cristo, but I’m not sure I’d say it’s a favorite. In college, I enjoyed reading medieval Irish, Welsh, and German works translated into English. The Odyssey is one of the most amazing books ever written, too, and I have always enjoyed teaching it. It’s really hard to narrow down to one book!

I think of all the books I’ve read by non-American writers, The Thorn Birds by Australian writer Colleen McCullough tops my list. One of my former colleagues once described this novel as the book you held in one hand while you stirred the pot for dinner with the other. I remember not being able to put it down. The miniseries is breathtaking, too. In my mind, Meggie and Father Ralph are these gifts of characters. I cared so much about them, and I shed so many tears for them. I even tried to name my daughter after Meggie, but she’s pretty much a Maggie. One of the things I liked best about the book was learning about Australia. I defy anyone to read the book and not want to see Australia. Aside from the scenery, I just loved the sweeping saga of it. I loved seeing these characters for most of their lives as they loved each other, fought their passions, embraced them, and ultimately just felt consumed by them.

God forbid I ever have to select which books to take to a desert island and am given a limit. If they will let me pack my Kindle with everything I love and give me means to keep it charged, it might be all right, but otherwise I’m doomed. However, The Thorn Birds has to be on that list. It’s getting about time for me to re-read it, too.