So… What Do You Think?

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I think it’s bright and cheerful.

It’s a little different, so here’s where to look for things in order to navigate:

  • Categories: left sidebar
  • Archives: left sidebar under Categories
  • Search: left sidebar under Post Archives or click Search at the top navigation bar
  • Currently Reading and Recent Books: right sidebar
  • Recent Posts: right sidebar under Recent Books
  • Recent Comments: right sidebar under Recent Posts
  • Blogroll: right sidebar under Recent Comments

If you are interested, I have new posts elsewhere:


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Star Trek

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My dad got me interested in Star Trek when I was a teenager. We used to watch the new episodes of Star Trek: TNG when it was still on. Later, when I went to college, I discovered other fans among the girls in my dorm, and we used to gather on Saturday nights, when new episodes aired, and watch together. I really enjoyed the show a great deal, but I confess I was never able to translate my admiration for Trek into its other franchises. I didn’t care for the orginal series, though I did like Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I initially tried to watch DS-9 and Voyager, but couldn’t get into them, even when some of my favorite characters from the other series became characters on those shows (Lt. Worf is one of my favorite characters). I also couldn’t get into Enterprise, but it seems like I’m not alone in that.

I discovered some time ago that Spike shows a three-hour block of TNG reruns in the afternoon. Recently, I found out that G4 shows the reruns for two hours in the evening, too. I suppose there is such a thing as too much Trek. However, whenever I find sites on the Internet, it never ceases to amaze me how developed and fully realized the Trek world is. I suppose one could argue it is the largest and most famous “fandom” currently in existence.

I spent way too long on Wikipedia last night, reading about Trek. It’s funny — the way articles are linked encourages you to flip from one to another to another. Before I knew it, I had become seriously embroiled. In the process, I discovered there is a Star Trek wiki called Memory Alpha. It’s really quite good and extremely comprehensive. It’s kind of nice to imagine a future in which humanity might be like those representatives from the Enterprise.


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Benjamin Hendrickson

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Benjamin HendricksonOK, I haven’t watched soaps regularly in about 10 years. They come on during the day, and I haven’t been a stay-at-home-mom since 1996, when I went back to school to finish my education degree. I know it takes only weeks to get sucked back into the world of any soap, but initially, you just don’t know what the hell is going on and things are tough to follow.

My grandmother has watched All My Children, As the World Turns, and Guiding Light. When I spent summers in her care while my mom was at work or when we had a day off from school, we watched her “stories” with her. Later on, when I was a SAHM, I picked up the same three soaps because there was nothing else on during the day, and at least I knew who some of the characters on these three soaps were.

I was reading the AJC the other day, and there was an obituary for Benjamin Hendrickson, who played Hal Munson on As the World Turns, one of the soaps I watched. He committed suicide — friends attributed it to long-standing depression after the death of his mother in 2003.

It’s weird. When you watch soaps for an extended period of time, you become so invested in those characters. I remember when I was a SAHM, I had a friend who was also a SAHM, and we watched the same soaps. We used to call each other and watch together over the phone. It was really fun. Hal Munson was one of my favorite characters on the show, and I couldn’t tell you why, really. I also liked the character who was his on again/off again wife, Barbara Ryan. I always thought she was so sophisticated and pretty. I wonder how ATWT is going to handle the actor’s death, because from what I was able to gather, the soap was in the midst of a storyline involving the death of his character’s daughter.

At any rate, considering I haven’t followed his adventures for 10 years, I was moved when I heard about his death. Rest in peace.


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Summer Stuff

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I have actually made a unit lesson plan and done a few single day lesson plans, so I’m not being completely lazy. Aside from that, I’m just writing. Not much here, I guess, but I’ve been busier than usual on my other blogs.

At the Pensieve, I’ve recently posted about J.K. Rowling’s interview on the Richard & Judy show in the UK, the potion Dumbledore drank in the cave in Half-Blood Prince, and Draco Malfoy. I just completed a re-read of the Harry Potter series, so I’ve been a bit busier over there than usual. Oh, and the Pensieve turned two years old on June 23.

At my genealogy blog, I posted what I think is a kind of funny deconstruction of how I’m related to Mark Twain. A lot of people criticize genealogists for looking for famous folks in their family tree. I still laugh at the way I figured this one out.

At my education blog, which turned a year old on June 25, I have recently posted on the following topics:

There’s a lot there, as I have been doing the majority of my writing there for the last month.

I can’t remember if I said it here or not, but I also spent a week at a Schools Attuned workshop in Charlotte, NC. I learned a lot and may even earn a bunch of CEU’s out of the deal when I complete a few other requirements.

I have also finally started the summer reading I need to do to prepare for school.

I suppose I’ve been staying fairly busy.


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The Bandwagon

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Freedom is irrelevant. Self-determination is irrelevant. You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile.

— The Borg

I created a MySpace page because:

  • I was jealous that Steve’s high school friends stay in touch with him through his and mine don’t have a clue where I am.
  • People apparently can’t use Google to find anyone anymore or else don’t care to.

So that’s that. Go ahead and mock. My profile is at http://www.myspace.com/danahuff.


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Literature Carnival, Fifteenth Edition

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It’s been longer than usual since the last Literature Carnival appeared, yet this did not impact the number of submissions I received. I appreciate the fact that regulars continue to show faith in the carnival by submitting their posts, but the fact remains that none of the major book blogs have picked up on the carnival or even linked it. Perhaps my place is just too small a venue to draw notice. At least that’s the conclusion I’ve come to. I think a literature carnival is a great idea, and perhaps if we have someone with a bigger draw of readers, it can take off. Meanwhile, until I hear from another blogger willing to take it on, I am retiring the carnival, as it has become increasingly taxing to keep it going and I don’t have the time to devote to finding entries from folks who don’t submit either because they haven’t heard of the carnival or don’t see it as a benefit to submit because it won’t impact their traffic. It is my understanding that Blog Carnival will allow anyone to take over a carnival if it’s been dormant for long enough. I hope someone else does decide to run the carnival.

Meanwhile, welcome to the fifteenth edition of the Literature Carnival, and the final edition to be hosted by Much Madness is Divinest Sense.

Joe Kissell presents The Skin Project: Interesting Thing of the Day posted at Interesting Thing of the Day, saying, “Artist Shelley Jackson has created a short story that was published by tattooing one of its words onto each of more than 2,000 volunteers.”

Ashok presents Interlude: Shakespeare’s Sonnet 73 as an Introduction to New Criticism posted at Ashok’s Blog, explaing that it is “just a good old fashioned reading of a Shakespearean Sonnet.”

renee presents Lost and Found by Carolyn Parkhurst posted at renee.

GrrlScientist presents Harry Potter: Final Chapter posted at Living the Scientific Life, which she notes is “a discussion with my readers regarding the upcoming Harry Potter book (Book 7) and who will die.”

Thanks for stopping by!


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Brokeback Mountain

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I am probably the last person on earth to see this movie, and I hesitated to write about it here, because it’s so last year or something, but who cares. It’s my blog, and you don’t have to read about how much I loved a movie that came out last year.

One of the things people say over and over about Brokeback Mountain is that it stays with you. I felt that after initially reading the short story. It was so powerful, so spare, and so moving. I don’t often tell my husband he has to read something, because our reading tastes (most of the time) aren’t all that similar. It isn’t that he doesn’t like literature. I think he just sees reading true crime as research, and I think that’s the direction he sees himself going, writer-wise. One thing I read that Larry McMurtry said after reading Annie Proulx’s short story “Brokeback Mountain,” was that he wished he’d written it. That was how I felt after I read it. I can’t explain why, because it’s not like anything I write. It reminded me, actually, of Cormac McCarthy. The characters were so well drawn with so few words. They were so real. And their story was so moving. I haven’t stopped thinking about it since I read it, and after seeing the movie, well, I can’t say I’m speechless, because here I am blathering, but it was probably one of the most amazing movies I’ve ever seen in my life.

One of the things that pierced me to the core was the sky. The sky only looks like that in the West. The movie was filmed in Canada, but I was forcibly reminded of the landscape and sky in Colorado, where I grew up. You kind of forget that sky, I guess, but then when you see it again, like I did in this movie, it seizes you; it all comes flooding back. My family has lived in the West, mostly in Texas, since the late 1800’s. I kept thinking of the trips we’d make to see my great-grandparents, who lived in a very small town in Texas. It looked so much like the small towns in this movie. The house that Jack’s parents lived in was so much like my great-grandparents’ house. They paid $500 for it when they first married and lived there until they died in the 1980’s. Everything about the setting in this movie was totally authentic. It made me so homesick.

I think it’s a shame that Heath Ledger had to make this movie the same year that Philip Seymour Hoffman made Capote. I have not seen Capote yet, but Steve loved it and said Hoffman was totally deserving of the Oscar he won for best actor. If it had not been for Hoffman, I feel sure nothing would have stood in Ledger’s way of winning the Oscar. He was incredible. I am related to guys like Ennis, and Ledger perfectly captured that set of the jaw and the way they swallow their words. There is a beauty in their simplicity. It took me a long time to appreciate that.

One of the things I admired about the story, and then the movie, was the way that it dealt with Ennis and Jack’s relationship as one of passion and love — one that couldn’t be fulfilled because of society and Ennis’s fears. I can’t figure out how to explain this, but you don’t dwell on the fact that they are two men in love so much as that they are two people in love, and they can’t be together. It’s heartbreaking. On the one hand, it’s rather obvious that it’s two men, but somehow that isn’t where you focus. It is so subtle, and I just can’t figure out how to explain it. On the one hand, I hate to even say that, because it insinuates that there’s a problem with having a love story about two men. Let’s face it — in our modern American society, there still is, isn’t there?

Obviously you’d probably have to be living under a rock not to have heard some of the more famous lines, and having read the story, I knew how it would end. I was still sobbing at the end. It was so moving — the tiny little shrine Ennis created in his closet. I started crying when Ennis and Jack parted for the last time, and I didn’t stop until the film was over. If anything, I just sobbed harder.

The movie was incredibly faithful to Annie Proulx’s story. The women characters were fleshed out a bit. Some of the relationships were expanded a bit. I don’t remember the Thanksgiving scene at Jack’s being in the story. The Thanksgiving scene at Alma’s was rendered exactly as it was written in the story.

In all, the movie was pitched perfectly. The actors, screenwriters, and director are to be commended on their performances.


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The Future of the Literature Carnival

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I have been hosting the Literature Carnival for approximately six months now.  I had hoped it would catch on so that by this time, I would receive enough submissions that I could simply put them together (with some flair).  That hasn’t happened.  I have some mild interest from a few quarters, but aside from the interest of a few regulars, the carnival hasn’t really gone anywhere, and I’m not sure it’s doing any of the submitters any good to send their posts to me (at least, it’s not if generating traffic to their sites is a goal).

I wish I had time to be more aggressive about tracking down posts and getting people to link the carnival, but the fact is that I don’t.  I have three kids and a full-time job that is very demanding.  I admit, too, that my interest in maintaining the carnival has waned.  I have found myself resenting the obligation when there is not much support or interest.  It is different with the Harry Potter Carnival I also host.  In that case, I find the process of putting together the carnival interesting, and the fact that not many folks stop by doesn’t bother me.  In other words, I do it because I like it and find it interesting and fun.  I haven’t felt that way about the Literature Carnival in a while.

If you are interested in seeing the Literature Carnival continue, please contact me about taking it over.  I will not be doing any more carnivals after the next edition.  If I have no takers, I will delete the carnival.


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Matthew Pearl

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The Poe ShadowI went out tonight for the first time in a while, which is something I need to do more often. I went to the Decatur Library, home of the Georgia Center for the Book, which hosted a book reading, discussion, and signing for Matthew Pearl, author of The Dante Club (see my review). He has a new book out entitled The Poe Shadow; it centers around the mysterious circumstances of the death of Edgar Allan Poe. What I am about to share makes me appear a bit fangirly, which makes me nervous, since I know Matthew Pearl has at least seen my English class blog — he sent me an e-mail after finding a post in which I recommended that to my students that we all read The Poe Shadow over summer break and have a book club discussion. He graciously thanked me for recommending the book to my students. I was, of course, thrilled by this.

Tonight, when I was getting my book signed, I mentioned the blog post and the e-mail, and he said “Oh, you’re Ms. Huff!” Squee! OK. I won’t do that again, I promise. I was so excited that he remembered me. I wish my students had been there.

He is quite funny in person, and had some really interesting things to share about the writing process. It made me want to write again. I need to sit down and think about what I want to write about, but I definitely want to do some more.

I don’t know why, but I am always so happy and surprised to discover that writers are nice. I suppose I expect them to be too busy or too important to be nice, and when they are, as they invariably are, it makes me so happy.

I won a page of the manuscript of The Dante Club by correctly answering the following question: How old was Poe’s wife Virginia when he married her?

Do you know the answer? I’m not giving you my manuscript page if you do. That’s going in a frame in my classroom.


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