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Friday, October 29, 2010

Terrifying in the Extreme

Halloween is this weekend.

And I'm usually not one for the gross or horrifying parts of Halloween (please do not let one of my children ever want to dress up as "person with a bloody axe in their skull" or something).

But then, sometimes, by coincidence, you find something that truly is terrifying and it's right around Halloween and so you put aside all your personal convictions and you post it.

Before the horrifying picture, though, let me show you the top two photos of a photobooth strip I came across in a box this week:


Cute, yes? I'm not exactly sure what year this is, but I'm guessing it was around 2001. My dad had a dental seminar of some sort in California and he took Merrick and me along where we ate an embarrassing amount of donuts at the breakfast buffet at the hotel and sat around watching TV while he was gone during the day. I also remember some very intense games of Skip-Bo. In the evenings, he'd come back and we'd go off to some grand adventure (I specifically recall the go-carts and how we made it our mission to beat the really smug and competitive girl there. I believe we succeeded).

Tragically, this nice photostrip is marred by the gem that holds the #3 spot in the strip:


The braces aren't helping, certainly, but wow, those eyebrows. Are they eating my face? Also, I appear to have forgotten to pack a comb on this trip.

(Go check out Merrick the Vampire, too). 

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Tell Me What to Read: Round 16

October has gone by so ridiculously fast I can hardly believe it.

Time to finish up your costumes (or start them (or not dress up at all, which is my general mode of operation)) and also suggest a book for me to read. You know the drill:

1. Comment with the title of one book you think I should read (any book you want). One title only, please, lest my brain explode.
2. I'll select one comment at random and announce it on the blog within the next week.
3. On the off-chance that I've already read the book you select, I'll contact you and ask for a follow-up suggestion (make sure there is a way to contact you either by blog or email).
4. I'll get a copy of the book and read it by the end of November.
5. I'll write a review of it here. Even if I hate the book, I will not hate you.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Amy's Eyes by Richard Kennedy

4 of 10: Amy's Eyes was just too weird for me. I can do talking animals and dolls that come to life, but this one was just so bizarre I just couldn't enjoy it.

It really pains me when I don't enjoy a book that someone recommends for Tell Me What to Read, because generally when someone is recommending a book in that forum, it's one of their favorites. And then for me to not care for it? It feels so personal (it's not, I swear).

I have to admit that my tolerance for bizarreness in a book isn't particularly high and this one was way past my level of comfort.

The book begins with Amy being left as a newborn at a school for girls by her father is who going off to sea to make his fortune. He leaves her in a little breadbasket and along with her a small Captain doll that he's made. As Amy grows up, she LOVES this doll and talks to it constantly. And then one day she accidentally stabs him in the head with a needle and he comes to life. And then when the evil schoolteacher finds out, she runs him out and Amy is so despondent that she turns into a doll and the kind schoolteacher hides her in a breadbox hoping that one day the Captain will return for her.

And this is the normal part of the book.

The captain does return for her and takes her away on his new ship (he's been willed it by the captain he served under when he first went off to sea). Of course, there are all these rumors about him being a former doll, so he can't get a crew, so he gets a bunch of stuffed and rubber animals, reads to them, stabs them in the head with a pin and makes these now-alive animals his crew.

And now they're setting out to find this pirate treasure that they have a kind-of map for. And the former captain's sister claims that the ship AND the map belong to her and she comes along, but she might be evil? No one can quite tell.

It will be hard for me to find a weirder book to read before the end of the year, is what I'm telling you.

Also this book is EXTREMELY long. There's all this talk about how bloated children and YA books have become in recent years, but this book, which is decades old, clocks in at a cool 448 pages. This is a lot of pages to read about rubber ducks with mutiny on their mind coming to life. And men made from long underwear and ALSO brought to life who are extremely religious and also extremely paranoid. 

I've read other books about dolls that go off on adventures, like Hitty Her First Hundred Years and The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, and enjoyed them far more.

Also an unused paperback copy of this book on Amazon is listed at a mind-blowing $136. I just needed to share that.

Copy borrowed from my local library

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Three Months

Dear Ella,

Of COURSE we think you are the cutest, sweetest, bestest baby there ever was. So we'll just skip over that part.

Once every couple of days, we'll make you laugh and then your Dad and I repeat whatever encouraged the laughter approximately four million times while you look at us with increasing disdain. "Who are these people?" I can almost hear you thinking. Sorry to tell you, you're stuck with us.

You love books and even when you're getting a bit fussy, you'll lay quietly on the floor and let me read you three or four books without complaint. I am now going crazy checking out board and picture books from the library. Thank heavens your presence in our family extended my checkout limit to 45 books at a time. Otherwise, you'd be forced to live like those children in the olden days and have only a single solitary book throughout your childhood (and it would probably be from your Grancie).

You love the bathtub, kicking your legs and looking very intent as if churning a small whale-tub full of water was your full-time job, but what you really love love love is the bath mat on the floor. I left you lying there yesterday for a moment when I went into the bedroom and when I came back you weren't trying to lick your fingers or stare at your hands like you often do when you are on your own. Instead, you had your hands palm-down on the rug and were stroking it. Oh, how I laughed. 

I assume that most parents hope their child will inherit the best qualities of each parent, and you really hit the jackpot, little girl. Both your dad and I occasionally drool in our sleep, and you are the lucky recipient of that gene in abundance. You are so welcome.

Before you were born, I really felt like I had no preference whether I had a boy or a girl. But now, I can't imagine having wanted anything but a girl, anyone but you. I find myself saying to you the same thing my dad used to say to me, from one of our family-favorite movies, "I wouldn't trade you for a dozen boys."

Love,
Mommy


Monday, October 25, 2010

One Crazy Summer by Rita Garcia-Williams

7 of 10: I liked One Crazy Summer, but not as much as I expected to. This story about three girls visiting their long-absent poet mother in California and getting swept up into the Black Panther movement didn't resonate quite as much as I would have liked.

One Crazy Summer is one of the National Book Award finalists and one that has been getting considerable buzz from the book world. I tend to really like middle grade historical fiction and this is time period I'm particularly interested in, so I went in expecting to enjoy it.

And I did. But not as whole-heartedly as I would have liked.

The story is told by eleven-year-old Delphine, who acts as mother to her two younger sisters since their mother walked out on them, seven years earlier. They all live in New York with their father and grandmother (the grandmother, as you can imagine, deeply disapproves of their mother and makes no secret about it). Delphine has heard rumor that her mother left because her father wouldn't let her name the new baby (who ended up being named Fern), but she has no idea if this is true. She has some memories of her mother, mostly of her writing poetry on the wall, but they are few and far between.

And then, this summer, Delphine's father decides that it is time for his daughters to get to know their mother and he sends them all to California for a month.

To no one's surprise, the mother is NOT thrilled to have three children suddenly descending upon her very quiet and private life, and the girls' dreams of visiting the beach and Disneyland and meeting movie stars are quickly dashed.

Instead, their mother sends them off each day to a Black Panther summer camp, mainly because they serve free breakfast. The girls don't really want to be involved, but Delphine slowly starts to take an interest in the movement and the world around her.

The character development was really excellent for both Delphine and Fern, but the middle sister I found quite flat and unlikable and the mother I also thought didn't get enough development. When their feelings toward her change dramatically by the end of the book, I thought, "How did we get here?" It was just too sudden and unexplained a switch.

I thought that for a book that focused so much on the Black Panther movement, there wasn't a whole lot of information about it - if I was a child reading this, I'd get to the end and think, "Hmm, I still have no idea what the Black Panther movement was really all about." Oh fine, I'm an adult who really has little idea what the Black Panther movement was all about. What a disgrace I am to history majors everywhere.

As I've mentioned in other book reviews, it makes me crazy when the pacing of the book feels off to me (when three chapters cover an afternoon and then two weeks go by in a paragraph) and this one did that. Maybe this is a pet peeve specific to me, but this is a problem that really unbalances me as a reader and makes it harder for me to really connect with a book.

On the other hand, the writing is quite beautiful and I enjoyed the reading of this book (which I can't say at all for Jumped which is also by Garcia-Williams and ALSO was short-listed for the National Book Award last year).

And this book had such an excellent sense of time and place; I felt like I really was in California in the middle of a hot sixties summer. I really appreciate a book that has such a strong and rich setting.

So far, my vote is for Mockingbird, but I wouldn't die of disappointment if this one won either.



Copy borrowed from my local library

Friday, October 22, 2010

Halloween Reading

I do not enjoy gimmicky holiday-versions of best-selling books, like Harry Potter's Magical Christmas Morning or Diary of a Wimpy Easter Bunny Kid (I am making both of these titles up, but if they exist, I would like some royalties).

Lest you think my heart is made of Grinch-y stone, though, let me assure you that I do love a well-written holiday book. When I was growing up, my mom would pull out The Widow's Broom every Halloween season. It's not a Halloween book, necessarily, but it does include witches and brooms and it has the slightly creepy feel that most Chris Van Allsburg books have. I loved that book, particularly because it only made its appearance once a year. There's something so fun about a book that isn't part of your daily rotation.

I love the idea of having a small set of holiday books too and, in her typical excellent Grancie fashion, my mom sent me the first book to launch my Halloween collection. I'd mentioned this book to her a few weeks earlier in passing and when it showed up on my doorstep earlier this week, I was thrilled.

The book is Ghosts in the House! and it is the cutest book I've seen in a long while. It came in when I was working on the Notable Book Projects at the University of Texas a couple of years ago and we all delighted in it. It's just so ridiculously sweet.

The illustrations are very retro and the story itself is delightful - a little witch moves into a haunted house, catches the ghosts, washes them and hangs them out to dry and then uses them around her house as curtains, tablecloths, and finally, a bedspread. You will die of the cuteness.

I've read it to Ella half a dozen times already and she stares at the pictures, especially the ghosts (they are done in a kind of tissue-paper/transparent kind of medium and they just look so fun).



I love this book because it's not scary or gross (I hate those kinds of Halloween books. . . ). And mainly, I love it because it charms me. And who doesn't like to be charmed?

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Texas Book Festival

When the return to Texas got a green light, one of the very first things I did was look up the dates for the Texas Book Festival. I'd been once, back in 2007, and I was anxious to go again.

And go we did. Bart, the baby, and I spent about 6 hours downtown, enjoying the festival's 15th anniversary (Laura Bush started it back when George W. was the governor of Texas).

As usual, the list of authors attending was very long and very impressive.

The one I was most anxious to see was David Wiesner, who was there promoting his newest book, Art and Max. From what I can tell, he doesn't do the appearance circuit very much, so I was particularly After very kindly telling us that, contrary to popular pronunciation, it's "Wheeze-ner," he read aloud Art and Max, which was thoroughly enjoyable. It's not my favorite of his books, but it's very clever and fun. He also read aloud Flotsam, which is one of my very favorites of his books, and it was just delightful to hear him explain each page, since it's a wordless book. I've read this book aloud dozens of times at the library and he pointed out things I'd never noticed.

He spent a little bit of time talking about his growing up and then about the process of making Art and Max.  He identified a few places in it where he'd done subtle (or not so subtle) tributes to his favorite artists. Perhaps my favorite part was when he talked about having a physician for a wife and how when she'd say something like "That hand doesn't look right," he'd say, "Oh, go away." Or when she looked at Flotsam and said, "You can't take a microscope to the beach! The sand would ruin it." To which he responded, "Ahhhh, what about in a ziplock bag?" "That might be okay," she told him.

We stayed in the same tent after he was finished and snagged some chairs to listen to Peter Brown, reading his book Children Make Terrible Pets. His presentation was definitely more geared toward the children in the audience than David Wiesner's had been, and we got several laughs out of his amusing reading. It was a short little presentation and we were done earlier than we'd expected.

Bart was interested in Nicole LaPorte's presentation about The Men Who Would Be King: An Almost Epic Tale of Moguls, Movies, and a Company Called DreamWorks, so we headed down into the basement of the Capitol Building for that one. Ella was less interested and I sat out in the hall with her, until Bart left early so that we could catch the next session.

Which was a major sour note of the day, sadly. See, it was a "literary death match" between four authors and a panel of three author judges. They'd each do some reading, apparently, and the judges and audience would choose a winner. Fun, right?

I was mainly interested in Bob Shea (a picture book author and illustrator) and Holly Black. Frankly, I didn't even know who any of the other ones were. And this was a terrible mistake, because when the first author stood up to do a reading from his book, it quickly became evident that this was NOT an event where children or people with any desire to avoid the most horrific reading you can imagine, should be. To prevent your brain from being sullied as ours were, I won't even tell you about the reading except to say that we lasted all of two minutes before we walked out. The only upside was that we didn't have children who were older than Ella with us who might remember or, heaven forbid, ASK us about some of the really awful things that this guy was reading (yes, that's a very small upside, I'm aware). I have no idea what genius scheduled this guy with a couple of children and teen authors, but that person is not my friend. And we missed Bob Shea. Tragic.

Anyway, we walked through the vendor booths and found a quiet and cool place to eat some lunch, then, in an attempt to salvage the day, went to hear the guys who started Awkward Family Photos (their book just came out, should you be wondering why they were at a BOOK festival). They were very charming and sweet and had the audience laughing most of the time. They were also very quick to acknowledge their good fortune and the luck that was involved in this becoming such a hit, not to mention the fact that they owed it all to the people who sent in their pictures. One girl stood up and was all, "So publishers were approaching YOU? No offense but that kind ticks off those of us who are doing everything we can to catch a publisher's attention." Ah, yes, what class. What taste. What style.

And then, finally, we went to the presentation we were most looking forward to - Scott Westerfeld. I had heard him speak on a panel last year at TLA, but Bart had just read the Uglies series over the summer and I figured he'd be fun to hear again.

He was far and away the highlight for us. Hearing his prepared presentation rather than just as part of a multi-author panel was night and day different. He was so interesting, so funny, and just so likable. He clearly is one of those people who is just interested in the world around him, in history and science and art and literature and hearing him talk just made me want to run out and read some encyclopedias so I could be half as interesting.

The day was definitely salvaged, is what I'm saying.

I can't WAIT until next year. Except this time I'll screen carefully every session we're considering attending so as not to scorch our ears off.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Immersion Blenders, Part 2

I am more than a little bummed.

See, CSN Stores offered me a gift certificate (and then to do a giveaway for another gift certificate next month) and I am not one to turn down free things for me AND for you. You may thank me later.

And after approximately a million of you were all "just buy an immersion blender" last week, I decided to listen to the Internet and use my gift certificate to get one.

And it arrived in the mail just a few days later and I nearly wept with joy when I pulled it out of the packaging and laid it carefully in my kitchen drawer and dreamed about how I was going to use it to make some divine chicken enchilada soup (I made it last year and we loved it, and that was when I had to do the annoying thing where you pour it into your actual blender and there is splattering and mess and what have you and also, after Rhiannon's comment, I'm totally paranoid about CRACKING my glass blender when I do this).

So, anyway, I was excited, is what I'm getting at. I'd ordered the Kalorik Sunny Morning Hand Blender because it was the one that America's Test Kitchen ranked as the #1 and apparently Cook's Illustrated also had many good things to say about it. I chopped up my vegetables and let them cook for a while and waited anxiously for them to be soft so I could use my new! life-changing! appliance.

Right, you know where this is going. Pull out your Kleenex for the sob fest that is about to commence.

People, it was such a disappointment. It immediately splashed hot soup on my arm. Strike 1. Then, unlike the lovely one I'd borrowed from Bart's cousins, I couldn't just leave it in the soup and move it around while it was submerged. I had to keep lifting it out of the pot and putting it down again in a new spot. This did not thrill me. Strike 2 and 3 and 4 and 5 and 6. And then the motor started smelling like it was burning out. I mean, really, I was blending for less than a minute (also, the borrowed one did a pot with FAR more vegetables in it in about 30 seconds and I should have done LESS because it turned out so ridiculously smooth and I like it a little chunky).

And now I'm left here to ponder whether or not to return it. But, see, if I return it, I have to pay to ship it back. And also they'll deduct the cost of shipping and handling from my refund, even though I got free shipping. And, suddenly I'm paying money out of pocket for something that was supposed to be free. Is it worse to just pay the $12-15 it would be to get a new one that was better (of course, now I'm mega paranoid that whichever I would choose would ALSO be junk-y) which is more than HALF the cost of the stupid thing in the first place or do I just deal with the fact that I now have an immersion blender but it's not a very good one at all? Or do I just sit here and feel peeved? (And think about how ordering things online stresses me out because of all the SHIPPING!)

Yes, I know. I'm complaining about free stuff. But, really, is it so much to ask that my free stuff work?

And, of course, it's not CSN's fault that this product they happen to stock appears to be a piece of junk and that I happened to be foolish enough to choose THAT particular product of the gazillion things they sell, and I know that shipping is not free and. . . and. . .I'm just totally bummed about the whole thing. That's all. (Kalorik, on the other hand? This IS their fault).

Also, I'm saying that if, when I do the giveaway next month, you happen to win? Do not order Kalorik's immersion blender. Unless you happen to like the salty taste of tears in your soup.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Things I Know About Love by Kate Le Vann

6 of 10: Things I Know About Love pulls a switch on the reader - that cover, the premise, the first half all lead you to believe it's going to be light, fun reading and then decides to be serious and meaningful. Tragically, it doesn't actually work.

I am firmly convinced a book does not have to be long to have good character development (see If I Stay). And some books can even manage to have lousy character development and still be enjoyable or funny. Hooray for fluff books and all that.

But what a book probably should avoid is trying to be deep and meaningful without having any real character development. That, my friends, is a hard trick to play. And when this book tried to move me at the end without ever having convinced me to love the characters, well, I was just actually a bit annoyed.

What is particularly unfortunate is that this book just charmed me in the first half. I kept noting things I wanted to quote in my review, like:

I think making a girl watch sci-fi on a first date is roughly equivalent to wearing a T-shirt that says, "By the way, I don't really believe in personal hygiene."
or

That's American for a blow-dry. But honestly, who pays to have someone dry their hair? Americans are constantly inventing new things to spend money on.
But it got much less charming when suddenly there weren't little funny lines about dating and haircare and it became all SOUL MATES AND THE CRUSHING REALITIES OF LIFE. 

Let me back up and tell you what the main storyline is. Livia (who lives in England) has had a fairly rough past couple of years, what with being diagnosed with Leukemia around the age of 14. Her friends have been lovely about it, but there is definitely some awkwardness there and she certainly missed out on many normal high school experiences. And the boy who dumped her when she went back into the hospital for a week because he couldn't deal with a girlfriend who once had leukemia? It's not doing a lot for her confidence.

Now, after graduation, she's going to America to visit her brother who is studying at Princeton. She's hoping for a new start, where people don't know her as "the girl who had leukemia" and maybe even have a little summer romance. And, of course, she'll be detailing the whole thing on her private blog.

And within days of arriving, she meets Adam, who happens to be from England too, and one of her brother's good friends (in fact, Livia met Adam several years earlier in passing). And after a brief hiccup, they are dating and he's also, surprise, totally Mr. Perfect.

If we examine the facts carefully, it is a pretty basic setup for a nice fluffy teen romance. But then, if you haven't guessed from the four million times I've alluded to it thus far, things take a turn for the mega-serious.

This book could have worked so well as just a fun read. The writing is fine, the humor is amusing, and the romance is sweet. Even as it is, it's not a BAD book. It's just forgettable and when a book veers into the territory this one does, you know it's trying hard to be unforgettable and meaningful.

But when mega-serious things happen to characters you don't really know or care about much, when the first half of the book has just been a few amusing laughs and a little backstory, you just cannot be all that saddened.

Or at least, I cannot. Perhaps you have more of a soul.

ARC sent to me by my lovely friend Kelly of Stacked

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

National Book Awards 2010

This is the third year in a row that I'm attempting to read all five National Book Award finalists in the Young People's Literature category.

This year, the finalists are:

This year, I've HEARD of four of the five (
Dark Water is new to me), and I've already read one of them (you can read my review of Mockingbird here). And I HAVE Ship Breaker sitting in my library basket as we speak. 

Now off to check out the other three and try to finish them all before the winner is announced on November 17th. With any luck, I'll actually be pleased with the winning book (I am still not over the fact that Frankie Landau-Banks didn't win. I should work on getting a life, but I'm too busy being affronted).

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Soup Season

Since we went the "take only what we can jam in our car and in a few USPS boxes" way of moving, our house is rather bare. And by "rather," I mean "very." If we're talking about things we could use in our house, the list would be long - a bar stool (or four), pictures on the wall (we got rid of most of our frames and just kept the images), a dresser, a full-length mirror, etc, etc, etc.

And yet, I am happy to live without those things. Instead, what I dream about is kitchen items. Mainly, I've been thinking about serving dishes (my lovely in-laws sent me two very cool red and white serving bowls for my birthday (from England!) and yesterday I bought five serving dishes at the Crate and Barrel outlet).

I tend to steer away from kitchen appliances because I like to firmly believe that you don't need a lot of single-use tools to be a good cook. And yet, despite all my high-minded thoughts on the matter, I am really longing for several one-task tools. Oh, the humble pie, it burns going down.

I am really anxious to replace the food processor we left behind (a friend took it and I told her she was getting what she paid for, since the handle was nearly broken off, the contact button was supremely fidgety, and food gets stuck in the lid) and also my ice cream maker, which I managed to break just days before Ella's birth.

But even the desire to replace a kitchen tool I've had for years is not as embarrassing as the sudden rabid need to ADD a kitchen tool to my collection.

An immersion blender. I. . .didn't even know I needed one.

And then I made this black bean soup that changed my life. The first time I made it, I made a really small batch, thinking that we might not like it, and I just used my standard blender which wasn't so bad because the entire pot of soup fit in the blender.

But then the soup was so ridiculously delicious that I ended up being forced to make it again just a few days later when we had Brian and Ralphie and their girls over for dinner. And this time I had to blend it in my blender in three separate batches which was a gigantic pain and I thought wistfully about how great it would be if I could blend it RIGHT IN THE POT.

And then when we had a little soup buffet two weekends ago, I made it again.This time, I borrowed an immersion blender from Bart's cousins who live in the next building over from us and the angels sang. It was so easy. So effortless, so fast, so delightful. I may have shed a few tears when I returned it to them.

If you, like me, are a poor sad soul without an immersion blender, this soup is still worth making (Bart apparently raved so much about it after having the leftovers for lunch, that he had to email me to get the recipe so he could pass it along to his coworkers). It is THAT good. Make it, love it, wish for an immersion blender.

Black-Bean Soup
adapted from It's So Tasty Too

Ingredients:
1 (16 oz.) package dried black beans
12-16 ounces bacon, chopped
3/4 cup roughly chopped celery
3/4 cup roughly chopped onion
3/4 cup roughly chopped carrots
8 cups chicken or vegetable broth
1 large tomato, chopped
1 cup fresh cilantro, chopped
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
1 1/2 tablespoons garlic, minced
1 jalapeno chili, minced, seeds removed
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
2 teaspoons ground cumin

Place beans in a large bowl. Add enough water to cover by 2 inches. Let stand overnight. Drain and rinse well. Cook bacon in heavy large pot over medium heat until done, about 8 minutes. Do not drain drippings. Add beans and all other ingredients. Bring to boil. Reduce heat to medium-low, cover and simmer soup until beans are very tender, stirring occasionally, about 2 hours.

If you have an immersion blender, process until slightly chunky puree forms. If you don't have an immersion blender, transfer soup to a blender and process until slightly chunky and pureed. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve hot.

This post contains a link sponsored by CSN Stores

Monday, October 11, 2010

Friday, October 08, 2010

Friday at 2:00 p.m.

Might apples and peanut butter be the perfect afternoon snack? Discuss.

(If you wish to suggest an alternative snack, we recommend bringing by samples so that an unbiased decision can be reached. Management thanks you for your cooperation).

Thursday, October 07, 2010

The Daughters and The Daughters Break the Rules by Joanna Philbin

7 of 10: The Daughters and The Daughters Break the Rules about three best friends, bonded by their celebrity parent difficulties, were just cute, fun books. 

These are not books that are going to be adorned by those fancy silver and gold stickers come January when the ALA hands out awards. And I don't think they are intended to be those kinds of books.

I expected these to be YA books and these books do technically fall into that category, with high school freshmen protagonists, it feels younger than that, and it's a book I'd be far more likely to hand to a middle school student instead. The fact that they are unbelievably clean makes them another good call for that age range - no swearing, one kiss at the end. Frankly, I'd have been comfortable giving these to the fifth graders in my elementary schools who just wanted some light, easy fluff.  

The books (which will include a third one next year) follow the lives of Lizzie, Carina, and Hudson, all daughters of famous New Yorkers (Lizzie's mom is a supermodel, Carina's father is a newspaper/online news mogul, and Hudson's mom is a pop singer).

Each book follows one of the girls as she comes to terms with her own life outside the parental spotlight. The Daughters is about Lizzie, who is asked to become a "new pretty" model (aka - not supermodel kind of pretty, more like big nosed and frizzy haired pretty) and has to decide how she feels about following in her mother's footsteps and if she's only getting the jobs because of who she is.  

The Daughters Break the Rules focuses on Carina who, when she accuses her dad of thinking that spending money equals parenting, loses all her credit cards and gets an allowance of $20 a week. Whoops. Suddenly she kind of likes the idea of having a dad who thinks money equals parenting. But she's determined to make it work and prove to him that she isn't addicted to shopping.

The characters occasionally drove me insane and sometimes are just flat out WEIRD (like when Carina goes to dinner with this boy and can't stop exclaiming over the ludicrous prices (a FOURTEEN dollar sandwich!). I mean, really). And as getting in trouble is pretty much my biggest fear, it's hard for me to watch characters do things that you KNOW is going to get them in mega trouble with the school or with their parents.

And as is so often the case in these kinds of books, it's almost like having adult teenagers, what with them skipping off alone downtown to buy themselves designer dresses and having professional photographers beg them to let them do a photoshoot, all without asking any parents. On the other hand, it's part of what makes these books fun. I assume some people really do get taken to high school by their private car and driver (far from the private mom and Astro van of my own high school days, let me tell you).

All in all, these books reminded me a bit of the Shopaholic books (except aimed at teenagers) - funny, a little silly, likable characters doing somewhat dumb things and then everything ends up all happy and fine.

Also, I love these covers. Darling, no?


First book checked out from my local library, second book received from publisher

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

What I'm Going to Read: Round 15

"It surely has to win at some point."

Famous last words - Kristen's book choice, Fablehaven, was indeed the winner this time.  Bart has read this one and told me I'd probably like it, so I'm looking forward to it. You guys always make me wish I had time to read dozens of books a day.

Other suggestions:
  • When We Were Bad by Charlotte Mendelson (GeogJen)
  • Two for the Road by Jane and Michael Stern (Elizabeth)
  • Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (Katie)
  • Enchanted, Inc by Shanna Swendson (Mary)
  • Someone Knows My Name by Lawrence Hill (Kayla and Laurie)
  • The Dark Hills Divide by Patrick Carmen (Carly)
  • The Help by Kathryn Stockett (Jody and Saskia)
  • East of Eden by John Steinbeck (Merry and Kimberly)
  • Life of Pi by Yann Martel (Sherry)
  • The Magicians by Lev Grossman (NGS)
  • The Element by Ken Robinson (Melinda)
  • Modoc by Ralph Helpher (Jenae)
  • For the Win by Cory Doctorow (Stuffed Eskimo)
  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky (Miri)
  • The Geography of Bliss by Eric Weiner (Heidikins)
  • Knightley Academy by Violet Haberdasher (Keira)
  • The Ladies Auxiliary by Tova Mirvis (Betty Books)
  • The Red Tent by Anita Diamant (Kelly)
  • The Story Sisters by Alice Hoffman (ACQ)
  • Paranormalcy by Kiersten White (Melissa)
  • The Road Home by Ellen Emerson White (Angiegirl)
  • Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson (Lisa)
  • Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese (Becca)
  • Embraced by the Light by Betty J. Eadie (McKinley)
  • Curse of the Narrows by Laura M. MacDonald (Jenny)
  • Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay (Jenn)
  • The Anthologist by Nicholson Baker (Life of a Doctor's Wife)
  • John Adams by David McColu (Sammy)
  • Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger (Katie)
  • I am the Messenger by Markus Suzak (Chrissie)
  • The Vintage Caper by Peter Mayle (One Crafty Librarian)
  • Gregor the Overlander by Suzanne Collins (Bart)
  • The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner (Mia and Jessica)
  • Writing Jane Austen by Elizabeth Aston (Main Hoon Emily)
  • The Lost Quilter by Jennifer Chiaverini (PCB)
  • Cold Sassy Tree by Olive Ann Burns (Mary)
  • An Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (Casey)
Of these, I've read:
 Here we go into October!

    Tuesday, October 05, 2010

    The Dam Breaks

    I have known since March that I was having a daughter. For those of you who wish to avoid math, I'll help you out by saying that that was seven months ago today.

    And in those seven months, I have not bought her a single item of clothing. Not one.

    We got a lot of clothing from several baby showers, lovely miscellaneous clothing items from kind friends, and then a family from church in Boston gave us seven boxes of their baby clothes ranging in size from newborn to a year. Much of that clothing was still brand-new and had the tags on it.

    Frankly, there was no reason to buy anything - Ella is swimming in clothing. I had friends that expressed their amazement, telling me how they couldn't contain themselves from buying clothing as soon as they found out they were having a girl. But we were in the midst of paying off our student loans at a breakneck rate and when clothes were coming in from every direction, I didn't feel like I needed to BUY any more clothing.

    And then, last weekend, I went in to Old Navy. And when I stopped by the clearance rack, there was a small sign stating that everything on the clearance rack was 50% off the lowest listed price. And I had a 10% off coupon burning a hole in my purse.

    I. . . bought a lot of things. But they were all about $2 each, except for this first dress which crept all the way up to $5. And they all kept telling me they really really wanted to come home with me and be worn by Ella.








    Poor little Ella, she'll probably never own something that wasn't bought on clearance.

    Friday, October 01, 2010

    Three Quarters Read

    I cannot believe the year is three quarters over.

    Since we've moved to Texas, my reading has really accelerated (not to the post-ALA/husband out of town heights of the first quarter, since my second and third quarter titles TOGETHER do not equal how many books I read in the first quarter, but never mind that).

    This quarter, I read 38 books, with a total of 10,947 pages. And I've read some far more decent books this quarter. I think.
    • Return to Paradise by Simone Elkeles
    • My least favorite of hers so far.
    • White Sands, Red Menace by Ellen Klages
    • As usual, the sequel was not nearly as good as the first book, but this one was still pretty excellent.
    • The DUFF by Kody Keplinger
    • Not a favorite.
    • The Summer of Skinny Dipping by Amanda Howells
    • Fine, but not great. I felt like it was trying too hard to be a teen romance with SUBSTANCE.
    • As Simple as It Seems by Sarah Weeks
    • I just couldn't get into this book. Also, I thought it'd be geared a little older. It was not.
    • Peace, Love, and Baby Ducks by Lauren Myracle
    • Okay, so I guess the books have NOT been more decent this quarter. . .
    • 11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass
    • Fun at first, but went on a little too long.
    • This Gorgeous Game by Donna Freitas
    • Much better than her first book, I thought.
    • Rose Sees Red by Cecil Castellucci
    • Weird, but nicely done. I really quite liked it.
    • Mississippi Jack: Being an Account of the Further Waterborne Adventures of Jacky Faber, Midshipman, Fine Lady, and Lily of the West by L.A. Meyer
    • For some inexplicable reason, I can't get enough of these books.
    • After the Kiss by Terra Elan McVoy
    • It's only been about a month, but I cannot remember a thing about this book except that it had two narrators.
    • Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
    • Uglies was a much better book.
    • School of Fear by Gitty Daneshvari
    • Wanted to be A Series of Unfortunate Events. Failed.
    • How to Take the Ex out of Ex-Boyfriend by Janette Rallison
    • Where it all began . . .
    • A Spy in the House by Y.S. Lee
    • Female spies. Quite awesome.
    • The Daughters by Joanna Philbin
    • So much better than I expected. Shopaholic for kids, kind of.
    • What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell
    • One of the best books I've read this quarter. Loved every article.
    • The President's Daughter by Ellen Emerson White
    • Just picked up the next three in the series yesterday. I suppose you could guess I liked it. . .
    • Trial of the Heart by Sierra St. James
    • Very Mormon-y. Cute, though.
    • Fame, Glory and Other Things on My To-Do List by Janette Rallison
    • Janette Rallison is vair vair funny.
    • The Daughters Break the Rules by Joanna Philbin
    • Delightful fluff.
    • All's Fair in Love, War, and High School by Janette Rallison
    • Not my favorite of hers.
    • On Becoming Babywise by Gary Ezzo
    • This book stressed me out so much.
    • Life, Love and the Pursuit of Free Throws by Janette Rallison
    • My least favorite of her books. The dual narrators were confusing. In unrelated news, I'm not very bright.
    • Me and Rolly Maloo by Janet S. Wong
    • Making a book a graphic novel doesn't make a lame story line more interesting.
    • My Double Life by Janette Rallison
    • Told Bart all about this book. Because that's what I do when I like a book.
    • Playing the Field by Janette Rallison
    • Cute but I like the ones about girls more. 
    • It's a Mall World After All by Janette Rallison
    • Darling.
    • The Case of the Terrible T. Rex by Michele Torrey
    • Wish I'd had these books at my schools last year.
    • Amy's Eyes by Richard Kennedy
    • Hmm, this book was just too weird for me.

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