12.04.2008

Long time, no post

Look what I've been busy doing
http://www.hcboe.net/main/School/MHHSE/library.html

Scroll down and click on the puzzle pieces for Reference and Books.

You can also see our current checkout and visit stats all the way at the bottom of the main page.

We had our first after-school book club meeting in the library this afternoon. I would consider it a success, since there were at least 7 kids still in the library when I closed up at 4:00. Instead of a small group all reading the same book, it looks like we'll mosty be a large group talking about a bunch of different books. I'd like to include not just books, but also magazines, websites, music, movies. The kids want to start each meeting with a broad group discussion topic and then break into smaller groups for futher discussion, creating fan fiction/art, visiting websites, etc. We're also going to have occasional special events, including screenings of movies on our library's big projection screen. So far all the kids seem really cool and very enthusiastic/energetic. We're going to start meeting regularly next Monday. They want to meet every week. The only problem with that is that all our regularly scheduled monthly faculty meetings are on Mondays. I didn't think of this until I was leaving to pick up Sam from the babysitter. I seem to have a mental block against faculty meetings. I almost always forget about them. Anyway, I guess we could shift the meeting to Tuesdays on faculty meeting days, as long as I can remember to tell the kids in advance. More on this later...

9.26.2008

Poetry Friday

I had not written an original poem (other than my haiku reviews for my first Poetry Friday posting) in I don't know how long, until yesterday. It doesn't have a title at the moment. Hope you like it.

I look at everything
with a critical eye--
my eye is quick to criticize.
My fatal flaw
is finding yours.
I will never be satisfied
with anything this world provides
unless I learn
to inspect less
to expect less?
to reflect more
on the greater good
and respect effort
above effect,
rejecting my negative affect.

9.17.2008

Quick Update

Man, it's been a long time since I posted last.

Sam is a little over 6 months old now and snarfling down his solids. So far he's tried apples, bananas, squash, carrots, and green beans in addition to his rice cereal. I've had some people tell me that they didn't use baby food, but I'm just a little nervous about giving him stuff off my plate, even if it's squished up. I realize that back in the day their was no "baby food", there was just food, but then again, babies today live longer and I think are generally healthier than babies of yesteryear.

Hannah and I just completed a science project (poster & paper) on macaroni penguins. She did most of it herself, I just assisted with organization and physically putting the poster together. Doing something like this with her definitely sets straight my ideas of what our particular 9-year-old is intellectually capable of. Hannah is a pretty smart kid, but even smart 9-year-olds have trouble focusing on a science project for more than an hour or two, especially if the iceberg is breaking on Club Penguin. "But I've never seen it, Amy!" "I don't think that is quite as important as finishing your science project that is due tomorrow!" Hannah also has a knack for getting songs stuck in my head. All she has to do is sing or hum it once or twice (although she rarely stops there:). During the penguin project it was I'm Blue by Eiffel65. I was impressed by her document formatting skills, though.

I've of course been reading a lot. Right now I'm reading Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher at home and One Thousand Splendid Suns at work.

8.08.2008

Back in High School

On registration day for our students, I got my first taste of being a teacher in a gym full of high school students. It wasn't quite like I expected. For one thing, they weren't really all that loud for over a thousand people in one place. Also, I didn't have the same reaction as one teacher, who thought that none of the kids looked like they had put in any thought as to what they were going to wear on the first day of school. While no one was wearing formal wear or even dresses or nice pants, I'm sure many of them spent a lot of time agonizing over their carefully constructed "I just woke up and threw this on" look.
Some teachers are not surprisingly pro-uniform, although from what I've heard, many parents in our community are decidedly against the idea of their child being required to wear the same thing as every other student in the school. From what I remember of high school, I was never distracted by another student's hair/clothing/jewelry enough that I could not focus on the lesson. Also, being hormonally charged would not disappear just because the bodies were covered in uniform dress, although I do agree that parts hanging out would be disturbing and am glad that is prohibited.
I think the most important factor in how much a student will learn in any school is not what everyone is wearing, but rather what is being taught and how teachers are teaching it. Most everyone can probably think of at least one teacher in their school experience who was just so interesting that you couldn't help but learn something. I had several in high school - Coach Altizer - who taught history like he had lived it, Mr. Ramsey - who made geometry proofs entertaining, and Mrs. Ware - a giant personality trapped in a tiny body, who murdered our English papers, and cut us regularly with her wit. I hope to be that kind of teacher that students remember as being passionate about imparting knowledge and inspiring them to absorb that knowledge, seek their own ideas and continue to be involved in creating the future, however they choose to do so.

8.02.2008

100 Books List

    I saw this at MotherReader and thought it looked interesting. I've read a lot of books so far in my life and went through a short "great works" phase, so I definitely should have read more than 6 on this list. If you want to see how your reading compares --> Bold those you have read, italicize those you intend to read, and *asterisk* those you love.

  1. Pride and Prejudice — Jane Austen

  2. The Lord of the Rings — J.R.R. Tolkien

  3. Jane Eyre — Charlotte Bronte

  4. Harry Potter series — J.K. Rowling (I've read the 1st 3 in the series)

  5. To Kill a Mockingbird — Harper Lee

  6. The Bible

  7. Wuthering Heights — Emily Bronte

  8. 1984 — George Orwell

  9. *His Dark Materials — Philip Pullman*

  10. Great Expectations — Charles Dickens

  11. Little Women — Louisa May Alcott

  12. Tess of the D’Urbervilles — Thomas Hardy

  13. Catch 22 — Joseph Heller

  14. The Complete Works of Shakespeare (I've read Hamlet, Julius Caesar, The Tempest, A Midsummer-Night's Dream, Much Ado About Nothing, The Taming of the Shrew, Twelfth-Night, The Life of King Henry V, First Part of King Henry VI, Romeo and Juliet, and several sonnets)

  15. Rebecca — Daphne Du Maurier

  16. The Hobbit — J.R.R. Tolkien

  17. Birdsong — Sebastian Faulks

  18. *Catcher in the Rye — J.D. Salinger*

  19. The Time Traveller’s Wife — Audrey Niffenegger

  20. Middlemarch — George Eliot

  21. Gone With The Wind — Margaret Mitchell

  22. The Great Gatsby — F. Scott Fitzgerald

  23. Bleak House — Charles Dickens

  24. War and Peace — Leo Tolstoy

  25. The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy — Douglas Adams

  26. Brideshead Revisited — Evelyn Waugh

  27. Crime and Punishment — Fyodor Dostoyevsky

  28. Grapes of Wrath — John Steinbeck (I read about half of this and then accidentally left it at the beach)

  29. Alice in Wonderland — Lewis Carroll

  30. The Wind in the Willows — Kenneth Grahame

  31. Anna Karenina — Leo Tolstoy

  32. David Copperfield — Charles Dickens

  33. The Chronicles of Narnia — C.S. Lewis

  34. Emma — Jane Austen

  35. Persuasion — Jane Austen

  36. The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe — C.S. Lewis

  37. The Kite Runner — Khaled Hosseini

  38. Captain Corelli’s Mandolin — Louis De Bernieres

  39. Memoirs of a Geisha — Arthur Golden

  40. Winnie the Pooh — A.A. Milne

  41. Animal Farm — George Orwell

  42. The Da Vinci Code — Dan Brown

  43. One Hundred Years of Solitude — Gabriel Garcia Marquez

  44. A Prayer for Owen Meaney — John Irving (I tried to read this and got stuck in the first 30 pages)

  45. The Woman in White — Wilkie Collins

  46. Anne of Green Gables — L.M. Montgomery

  47. Far From The Madding Crowd — Thomas Hardy

  48. The Handmaid’s Tale — Margaret Atwood

  49. *Lord of the Flies — William Golding*

  50. Atonement — Ian McEwan

  51. Life of Pi — Yann Martel

  52. Dune — Frank Herbert

  53. Cold Comfort Farm — Stella Gibbons

  54. Sense and Sensibility — Jane Austen

  55. A Suitable Boy — Vikram Seth

  56. **The Shadow of the Wind — Carlos Ruiz Zafon**

  57. A Tale Of Two Cities — Charles Dickens

  58. Brave New World — Aldous Huxley

  59. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time — Mark Haddon

  60. Love In The Time Of Cholera — Gabriel Garcia Marquez

  61. Of Mice and Men — John Steinbeck

  62. Lolita — Vladimir Nabokov

  63. The Secret History — Donna Tartt

  64. The Lovely Bones — Alice Sebold

  65. The Count of Monte Cristo — Alexandre Dumas

  66. **On The Road — Jack Kerouac**

  67. Jude the Obscure — Thomas Hardy

  68. Bridget Jones’ Diary — Helen Fielding

  69. Midnight’s Children — Salman Rushdie

  70. Moby Dick — Herman Melville (I read part of it for an English lit class)

  71. Oliver Twist — Charles Dickens

  72. Dracula — Bram Stoker

  73. The Secret Garden — Frances Hodgson Burnett

  74. Notes From A Small Island — Bill Bryson

  75. Ulysses — James Joyce

  76. **The Bell Jar — Sylvia Plath** (this is one of the only books I've ever read more than once)

  77. Swallows and Amazons — Arthur Ransome

  78. Germinal — Emile Zola

  79. Vanity Fair — William Makepeace Thackeray

  80. Possession — A.S. Byatt

  81. A Christmas Carol — Charles Dickens

  82. Cloud Atlas — David Mitchell

  83. The Color Purple — Alice Walker

  84. The Remains of the Day — Kazuo Ishiguro

  85. Madame Bovary — Gustave Flaubert

  86. A Fine Balance — Rohinton Mistry

  87. Charlotte’s Web — E.B. White

  88. The Five People You Meet In Heaven — Mitch Albom

  89. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes — Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

  90. The Faraway Tree Collection — Enid Blyton

  91. Heart of Darkness — Joseph Conrad

  92. The Little Prince — Antoine De Saint-Exupery

  93. The Wasp Factory — Iain Banks

  94. Watership Down — Richard Adams

  95. A Confederacy of Dunces — John Kennedy Toole

  96. A Town Like Alice — Nevil Shute

  97. The Three Musketeers — Alexandre Dumas

  98. Hamlet — William Shakespeare

  99. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory — Roald Dahl

  100. Les Misérables — Victor Hugo

  101. I'll say I've read 25 since I can't fully count #14 since I haven't read all of Shakespeare. Some of these books I had never heard of - A Town Like Alice? The Wasp Factory? If you interested in other books I have read and enjoyed, visit my Goodreads.com shelves.

8.01.2008

Poetry Friday

We're going to try something new here. Reviews, haiku style. Now, I am just using the 5-7-5 syllable pattern, not a super-strict definition of haiku.

Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
Kids imprisoned by
Homeland Security start
youth revolution

An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
Prodigy gets dumped
by Katherines. What's his deal?
Oh, dingleberries.


Now if you can handle it, just for fun, three more original haikus. These are flashbacks from my late high-school writing period. I wrote 39 in one day. I was at the Governor's School for Humanities in Martin, TN and had a lot of free time. I just picked out 3 of my favorites. Hope you like.

My head is full of
static electricity
untapped potential

My feet are naked
sunning themselves like lizards
on hot desert rocks

Sinister insects
buzz around and land on me,
chew my flesh with glee


Thanks to The Well-Read Child for hosting Poetry Friday today.

7.30.2008

Sam-tastic!

Here are a couple more videos of the lil Samster. In the first, listen to Sam expound upon the mysteries of the universe in what Hannah refers to as babynese. He's learned to squeal and shriek since this was recorded, which can be cute also.


Now prepare to be amazed as Sam consumes his second ever serving of rice cereal, yum!

Finally Back Online

Ok, so at first I got a little lazy with the posting, but then our PC just quit accessing the internet and it took two visits from the cable company and two trips to the PC Dr. (bout 3 weeks total) before we were back up. Not being able to get online really made us think about how much we used the internet. At least 10 times a day we thought of something we could be doing or reading online. I use it a lot for reference too when cooking, trying to figure out what Sam's deal is, or just looking up anything else I think of that I want to know.

I read a few books in the past month, of course. Here's the lineup:


The Plague of Doves - Louise Erdrich
Seeker - William Nicholson
Clash of the Sky Galleons - Chris Riddell and Paul Stewart (Edge Chronicles)
Into the Dark - Peter Abrahams (An Echo Falls mystery)
Little Brother - Cory Doctorow
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Wall and the Wing - Laura Ruby (one of Hannah's new favorites)
An Abundance of Katherines - John Green


Right now I am reading Sold by Patricia McCormick and Hannah & I are reading Savvy by Ingrid Law together.

I also had an idea for Poetry Friday - haiku reviews. Hopefully I'll remember this Friday. I thought this might be better for me than trying to write critical or descriptive reviews, as I feel like I tend to ramble. Whenever I try to talk too much about a particular book, especially plot, I flashback to my 5th grade field trip where we met our penpals and I responded to the librarian's request to talk about the book I was reading with what felt like a 10-minute recap of everything that had happened in the story to that point. I swear it was like an out of body experience, like I was just floating above myself listening to myself go on and on and on and on. I think this is my first memory of my fear of public speaking, which I had pretty bad till my first day of teaching. It's hard to believe I talk to groups of people every day when I used to be so afraid of it. Anyway, enough rambling for now.

6.23.2008

Nerd Pride!

I must admit. I am a nerd. I always knew growing up that many others did not share my enthusiasm for neatly completed homework, books of miscellany, and plastic canvas needlework. Even in my "rebellious" teen years, I was known (if noticed at all) for being very quiet, having a tendency to put more than minimal effort into English essays and enjoying geometry proofs. I have accepted my nerdiness. Hannah, however looks upon nerds with all the disdain a rising fourth-grader can muster - which is quite a bit, believe me. The other day, she was preparing some "micro ravioli" - which seem pointless to me, as the "ravioli" are so tiny that there can't be more than 2 or 3 specks of meat in each one, but I digress - and she commented that they were "microscopic." Then she said, "Wait a minute. Do nerds use that word?" "Why do you ask?" "Because if they do then I don't want to say it." "Then no, they don't." Now, I have told Hannah many times that "nerds rule the world" and that there is nothing wrong with being smart because that can help a lot with getting what you want out of life - although it isn't everything - but she seems to insist on resisting anything she deems "nerdy." I hope she has a good experience in school this year and can find something cool about learning.

6.21.2008

Sam-o-Vision

I know most every parent probably thinks their baby is the cutest/smartest baby ever, and I guess I am no exception to this rule. In light of this, I will share with you 2 videos.
In this first video, Sam had fallen asleep with his eyes partially open while nursing and I caught him on video waking up. I've also discovered that I have become one of those parents who perpetually puts words in the mouth of their not-yet-speaking baby. Feel free to comment on what you think he might say if miraculously gifted with speech.



In the second video, I finally caught Sam rolling over. This was his 3rd rollover - the first was on the examining table at his 2 month checkup, right before his shots! Unfortunately the doc had turned her back when he did it, but she said he's not really supposed to be rolling over until 4 months. Super Sam!

6.20.2008

Monster Blood Tattoo & Lamplighter

I just finished Monster Blood Tattoo and its sequel, Lamplighter, by D.M. Cornish. Young Rossamund Bookchild begins his story as an orphan left on the steps of Madame Opera's Estimable Marine Society for Foundling Boys and Girls with nothing but his name pinned to his swaddling clothes. Constantly made fun of for his girlish name, Rossamund can't wait to be hired away to a ship on which he can use his training for life on the vinegar seas. When he is unexpectedly hired as a lamplighter, Rossamund feels disappointment at what he feels will be the continual drudgery of trudging out each night to light the lamps along the Emperor's roadway and again each day to extinguish them. However, his adventures begin as soon as he sets out, when he manages to board the wrong ship and be pressed into service of an unsavory man named Poundinch. Throughout both books, Rossamund seems to always find himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, yet he always pulls through, often to the astonishment of others. I won't spoil anything by saying to much, but I will say I was pleased that the mystery surrounding Rossamund's origins is somewhat revealed at the end of the second book. It irritates me when a book builds up suspense around a certain character and then never reveals enough to satisfy my curiousity. I was amazed by the amount of detail Cornish went into in building the world of the Half Continent in which the story is set. Each book contains a 100-page "Explicarium" with a definition of terms found in the story as well as diagrams and illustrations of various items and characters in the story. I got the feeling of being transported to another world while reading these books, as the characters and situations involved were so intriguing and exciting.

6.09.2008

48-Hour Book Challenge

Well, I feel like a doofus. I just looked at the results for the 48-Hour Reading Challenge. I kind of gave up on Sunday because I knew there was no way I could read 48 hours between Friday and Monday, so I didn't even report in today with my totals. Oh well, at least now I know better for next year. Incidentally my totals were 4 and a half books in 15 hours and 45 minutes (when I stopped counting Sunday).

Something Besides Books for a Bit



Now that the Reading Challenge is over, I realized I haven't really written about anything other than books for the last several posts, while I started this blog intended to share some family moments as well. In case I didn't mention, I have a 3-month-old son, Sam, whose favorite pastimes of the moment are eating, smiling, sleeping, pooping, and puking on me :P He is very cute in my opinion, so the more disgusting aspects of motherhood are tempered by his normally sweet face. He is becoming a very big boy - 24 inches long at his 2 month check and now tipping the scales at around 15 pounds. At birth he was 7 pounds 7 ounces and 21 inches long. The comment I get most frequently when showing him off is "look at all that hair!" It is just now starting to fall out, but there's still quite a bit. He's not anywhere near the recommended age for the exersaucer he's pictured in here, but we put him in it to see what he would do last week and he screamed when we tried to take him out. He seemed determined to grab one of those dangly toys, but his motor skills just aren't there yet. He seemed to have fun though.
We are currently breastfeeding and cloth diapering, which are both decisions I made based on health and cost. We have not had to buy formula or diapers at all, although we did have to supplement with formula a bit at first since I had a c-section and my milk was very slow coming in. The hospital gave us 3 free diaper bags and quite a bit of formula samples. A lot of breastfeeding sites tell people not to take the samples or "success packs" because they think it will sabotage breastfeeding, but I think more education and support for new mothers would be more likely to keep new mothers from giving up. Even though I had difficulties the first month, I am a stubborn enough person that once I decide to do something, there is very little that can change my mind. Sam has now been formula-free for a week and the 2 weeks before that he was only getting 1 oz a night before bed. After the first night I didn't supplement and he slept his regular 4-5 hours for the first stretch, I haven't gone back.
I have been very pleased with our cloth diapers, which many people in my immediate environment were very skeptical about before Sam's birth. I would tell people of my intention to use cloth and they would laugh and say, "sure you will." I know the image everyone had in their heads consisted of the Gerber white cloth diapers that require pins and covers, rather than the bumGenius one-size I planned to use. I had to start out slowly building our stash, but by the time he was 6 weeks old, we were cloth all the way. I have 8 bumGenius, 8 Haute Pockets (velcro), one Mommy's Touch (velcro), and 1 Happy Heiny (had to have the cow print:) They are all one-size diapers designed to fit Sam till he's 35 pounds. Hopefully they will last all the way till he's potty-trained. I invested a little over $300 in the whole stash, including cloth wipes and a diaper pail liner (using a regular flip-top garbage can) and should save at least $600 this first year by not having to buy disposable diapers/wipes.
Hannah, my step-daughter, is also a big part of my life. She is 9 years old and I have been helping raise her since she was 4. Recently, we have started arguing quite a bit, which I makes me sad. I asked her the other day why she had to argue with me about everything and she said, "Because you're usually wrong. And sometimes I just want to argue." I try to be as honest with her as I can and have explained to her that I want to have a good time with her, but when she's giving me attitude and arguing, it makes me not even want to talk with her. I'm hoping this is just a phase that will pass soon. I know she is under some stress with having a new baby brother, changing schools this fall, and her mother still being in South Carolina (she's been gone since last January [2007] and Hannah's only seen her about 5 times since then) and having a new baby sister on the way with her mom in August. One minute she'll tell me I'm the best mother in the world and the next she's giving me the evil eye. *sigh* In the grocery story today I didn't want to get strawberries even though they were on sale because all they had were the mutant baseball-sized strawberries that I don't think taste very good, but she really wanted them so I got them so she could see for herself. I made a comment about her thinking I didn't know what I was talking about and she said that she just needed to find things out for herself sometimes. My mother used to tell me "One day I hope you have a child just like you, then you'll understand!" For not actually sharing any genetic material, Hannah is so like me it's scary.

Kira-Kira

I finished Kira-Kira around 2PM today and I have to say that I enjoyed it more than I thought I would. As I mentioned in a previous post, I don't normally read this much realistic fiction, but when I think back, I can't think of very many books I have read that I haven't enjoyed, regardless of genre. Anyway, Kira-Kira shares the story of a Japanese-American family living in the South during the late 1950s. Katie, the younger sister, narrates the family's struggles against racial prejudice, economic hardships, and the mysterious illness of Lynn, the beautiful, intelligent older sister. Both of the parents in this story work long hours at poultry plants in order to buy a house, which they believe will help Lynn get better. This seems to work for a while, but then Lynn takes a turn for the worse and mortgage payments combined with medical bills force the parents to work even more, leaving Katie caring for both her younger brother Sammy and her ailing older sister. The story was very sad, yet not depressing to me in that Katie comes to terms with her sister's death and decides to keep hold her sister's memory close to her heart while also allowing herself to hope for future happiness.
I am starting Sirena by Donna Jo Napoli now, all I can tell as of now is it seems to be about mermaids/sirens.

6.08.2008

No Good Excuses

So there's no way I can now complete 48 hours of reading before the end of the challenge. Physically impossible even if I did nothing but read between now and then. Oh well, I'll try harder next year. This doesn't mean I'm not going to read though. I finished Emma-Jean Lazarus Falls Out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis and If a Tree Falls at Lunch Period by Gennifer Choldenko. It was interesting to read these two back to back since they have quite a few similar elements. In both books, the main characters are in 7th grade and deal with bullying by girls. I plan to read Kira-Kira by Cynthia Kadohata next. I don't usually read this much realistic fiction, but I do enjoy it occasionally.

6.07.2008

Read on!

2nd Day attempting the 48-hr Reading Challenge: since last post, I have read/blogged a running total of 8 hours and 45 minutes. I finished The Sisters Grimm #4: Once Upon a Crime and have started Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis. Read the previous post for a description of the 1st book. I will comment on the other later, since I am hostess for a shrimp broil here at the house and everyone just showed up.

6.06.2008

I finally begin my reading/blogging challenge


Well, I did get to finish Brave Story this morning, but didn't really get to start reading for MotherReader's challenge until about 3PM due to Hannah getting up at 7:30 this morning & being SO EXCITED about her Girl Scout trip to Chattanooga today (she left at 11:30 AM, her first trip without a parent, sniff, she's getting so big), but I did eventually get in 3 hours of reading, during which I read 112 pages of the 4th installment of The Sisters Grimm series (Once Upon a Crime) by Michael Buckley. If you haven't heard of the series, the basic premise is this -After the disappearance of their parents, 11-yr-old Sabrina and 7-yr-old Daphne Grimm are shuttled through a series of terrible foster homes before finally being rescued by their Granny Relda (whom had been presumed dead) and taken to live in Ferryport Landing, which they come to find out is peopled with fairy-tale characters, known as Everafters. The girls discover that they are descended from Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, whose collections of "fairy tales" were actually accounts of real events. The Grimm family has been keeping watch over the inhabitants of Ferryport Landing, which is surrounded by a magical barrier that the original Grimms created to keep the Everafters from leaving the town - a protective measure that has garnered the family no small amount of resentment from many in the Everafter community. Anyway, the girls become entangled in the family business of solving crimes occurring in Ferryport Landing, while also trying to untangle the mystery surrounding their parents' disappearance. In this 4th book, the girls, along with their Granny, Mr. Canis (her butler of sorts, aka The Big Bad Wolf) and Mr. Hamstead (one of the 3 Little Pigs) travel back to the girls' hometown of NYC to find the Faerie kingdom in hopes of getting some magical medical assistance for Puck, who was seriously injured in the last book - I won't spoil it by telling you how. I will tell you that they find what is left of Faerie, but also discover that their mother, Veronica was living a secret life and they must investigate her connections to Faerie in order to find a murderer. If you like fairy tales and/or mysteries/detective stories, you might want to give this series a try.

Now, I have to take a break to go watch a local production of Aida with my parents & co., but when I get back - more reading/blogging.

Summer Reading Challenge for Adults!

I was just thinking earlier today about how Hannah was so not interested in doing the summer reading program at our local library this year - actually ran away from the form when I tried to sign her up at the library 2 weeks ago - and how I wished there was some type of fun summer reading event for adults - not that I need any encouragement to read :) Anyway, I'm online killing time while waiting to see if Sam will wake up and want to eat in the next few minutes (went to bed at 10PM and not up yet!) and what do I find? The 3rd annual 48-hour book challenge from MotherReader! It starts tomorrow - actually I guess it's already the 6th, so today! Yay! I know, I get too excited about reading. Anyway, we're supposed to be cooking out on Saturday, but I plan to start reading/blogging for the challenge around 7AM - I always read while feeding Sam anyway, so I won't have a problem getting started. Now that I'm thinking about this I don't know if I'll be able to go back to sleep..I just had 5 hours in a row, that's way more than I got last night - last night he woke up every 2 hours or so starting around 1AM until we finally just got up around 6:30. I was pooped. Anyway, check out the challenge if you're interested. I don't think it's too late to sign up.

6.05.2008

Christening the blog

*sound of champagne bottle breaking* I hereby christen this blog! Prepare to be amused, entertained, or at least slightly less bored!
A little background...at present, I am 26, a new mother to a beautiful baby boy - Samuel Lewis Wheatley, a veteran step-mother to Hannah Alyssa Wheatley (9 yrs old), married to Aaron Lewis Wheatley, and will soon be working at Morristown-Hamblen High School East as a library media specialist. I spent the last 3 years working as LMS at White Pine School, a K-8 school, so this will be quite a major move professionally.
I love to read - a lot - and recently have been spending more time online, particularly on social networking sites ala Facebook and MySpace sharing pictures of my family and whatnot. I'll probably be doing more of the same here, as well as possibly sharing opinions about what I am currently reading.
Speaking of reading - right now I'm reading Brave Story by Miyuki Miyabe. In this winner of the Batchelder Award, Wataru undertakes a quest into the imaginary world of Vision in order to change his destiny. Recently, 11-year-old Wataru's life has fallen apart - his father has suddenly left his mother for a woman he dated long ago, claiming that she is his true love. After his mother attempts to kill herself and Wataru by leaving the gas running in their apartment, Wataru embarks on his quest to Vision to find the Tower of Destiny and convince the Goddess to change his fate. He is not alone on this quest, however. A mysterious boy named Mitsuru, who has recently moved to Wataru's school, is also determined to reach the Tower of Destiny. Mitsuru has somehow become a powerful sorcerer and it seems he will stop at nothing, even destroying the lives of many in Vision, to achieve his goal. I have not yet finished this book, but I would recommend it based on what I have read so far. It is very long - 816 pages, but the plot moves fairly quickly once the boys begin their quests. After a quick Google search, I discovered this novel has also been made into an anime movie in Japan and an RPG available on PSP - although I'm sure the book is better, as is almost always true.