Archive | September 2006

Best Spine-Tinglers

I’m still fisking the Penguin list of 100 Best Books. Today we visit those books that make your spine tingle and your heart beat fast.

THE BEST SPINE-TINGLERS (according to the Penguin List)

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson
Dracula
Bram Stoker
Frankenstein
Mary Shelley
The Castle of Otranto
Horace Walpole I read this book in college, but it must not have tingled my spine too much because I don’t remember a thing about it.
The Turn of the Screw
Henry James I cannot tell a lie; I’ve never read any James. My mom wrote a thirty page plus paper on James when she was in graduate school, and I had to type it—back when we used actual typewriters. That experience about cured me of any desire to investigate James’s prose for myself. Maybe someday.

Best Spine-Tinglers (according to Semicolon)

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson. It’s strange, yes, and classic.

Draculaby Bram Stoker. Dracula and Frankenstein’s monster are the staples of horror and tingling spines.

Frankensteinby Mary Shelley.

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. I’m enjoying this one now.

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier.

All But Two, I Think

Blest With Sons’ Shakespeare Game

Romance. Here is the tale of a married life. All the answers are titles of Shakespeare’s plays.

1. Who were the lovers? Romeo and Juliet
2. What was their courtship like? A Comedy of Errors
3. What did she answer to his proposal? As You Like It
4. What time of month were they married? Twelfth Night
5. Of whom did he buy the ring? The Merchant of Venice
6. Who were the best man and maid of honor? Antony and Cleopatra
7. Who were the ushers? Two Gentlemen of Verona
8. In what kind of place did they live?
9. What was her disposition like? The Tempest
10. What was his chief occupation? The Taming of the Shrew
11. What caused their first quarrel? Much Ado About Nothing
12. What did their courtship prove to be? Love’s Labors Lost
13. What did their married life resemble? A Midsummer Night’s Dream
14. What did they give one another?
15. What did their friends say? All’s Well That Ends Well

Does anyone think you know the two I couldn’t answer? The answers are at Blest With Sons.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born September 13th


Carol Kendall, b. 1937. I loved The Gammage Cup by Carol Kendall (b. September 13, 1917) when I was a child, and I still remember images and ideas from it. For instance, I’ve always had a desire to paint my front door red or orange or yellow. And I sort of like being different–sometimes just for the sake of difference. The Gammage Cup was published in 1959. The story of five non-conformist Minnipins who become unlikely heroes probably hit a nerve in the non-conformist sixties, but it’s still a great story. The Periods, stodgy old conservatives with names such as Etc. and Geo., are wonderful parodies of those who are still caught up in the forms and have forgotten the meanings. And Muggles, Mingy, Gummy, Walter the Earl, and Curley Green, the Minnipins who don’t quite fit in and who paint their doors colors other than green, are wonderful examples of those pesky artistic/scientific types who live just outside the rules of polite society. One of them, Muggles I think, isn’t consciously a nonconformist nor an artist; she just gets caught up in the adventures of the others and finds out that she, too, has her own desires and dreams and talents.

Today is also the birthday of Else Holmelund Minarik, b. 1920, author of the Little Bear stories for beginning readers. What is your favorite Little Bear story? I really like A Kiss for Little Bear in which Little Bear’s grandmother gets some friends to deliver a kiss to Little Bear. The kiss unfortunately gets “all mixed-up” when a pair of lovestruck skunks keeps exchanging the kiss instead of delivering it, but everything turns out all right in the end. I also like the quote from Little Bear’s grandfather when Little Bear suggests that Grandfather might be tired and need a rest. “Me–tired? How can you make me tired? I’m never tired,” says Grandfather, just before he falls asleep in his lawn chair. Then, there’s the story of how Little Bear visits the moon and comes back in time for supper. Oh, yes, and I love Little Bear’s Friend about Little Bear’s friendship with Emily. Little Bear is about as fun and as profound as Frog and Toad. Who ever said that children’s books were boring or unchallenging? They have to be better than adult books so that we can enjoy reading them over and over again until they’re memorized.

Also born on this date in 1916 was Roald Dahl, author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and James and the Giant Peach. To tell the truth, Dahl is too gross-out icky for my tastes, but lots of kids and adults love his books.

Finally, Mildred Taylor, b. 1943, is the author of Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry which won the Newbery Award in 1977. It’s the story of Cassie Logan, a black girl growing up in Mississippi in the 1930′ during the Great Depression.

Book-Spotting #19

Steven Riddle on Fiction vs. Nonfiction.

“What I’ve discovered over time is that nonfiction books very rarely present anything like nonfiction. That is, most postmodern nonfiction. When your view of reality is that reality is shaped by the language you use to describe it and by the oppressions, hidden or overt that define it, it would be difficult to present anything in an objective way, because there cannot be any objectivity.
Fiction, on the other hand, shows me the human condition, and because the author lays his cards on the table on way or the other, I can determine whether what is shown is truly reflective of human experience or is shaped by the bias of the author to lead me to an agenda.”

I tend to prefer fiction or nonfiction that’s told like a story, stories from history that I can evaluate in much the same way that I evaluate fiction. In other words, I can say, even if it’s essentially true, I don’t like this story, and I don’t really believe in the truth that is embodied in this nonfiction history. I think the author is trying to “lead me to an agenda.”

Queen Shenaynay’s Desert Island Cookbooks. She lists ten best-of-the-best cookbooks with annotations telling why they’re good and what they’re good for. I’m thinking Christmas gifts for some of my favorite cooks. Nonfiction you can believe in.

Carl V.’s Autumn 2006 RIP Reading Challenge. R.I.P. stands for Readers Imbibing Peril, and you can join in by having a reading goal for the autumn of five books that are “scary, eerie, moody, dripping with atmosphere, gothic, unsettling.” I need to get back to Wilkie Collins’ The Woman in White anyway.

Ms. Seasonal Soundings is sponsoring The Autumn Reading Challenge. I didn’t take the challenge because I have so many books on The List that I just read whichever one I happen to find handy that suits my mood. Like Stefanie at So Many Books, I’m somewhat ambivalent about book lists. On the one hand, I love book lists because I get new ideas about what to read. I like making lists of my favorites, or my favorites in this or that genre. I like keeping a list of books I want to read because otherwise I forget about books that I am truly attracted to. However, I don’t like being told what to read. I read whatever I’m in the mood to read. I sometimes make myself read a “classic” because I know from experience that I may have to work at it at first, but I also may get valuable insight and education from my perseverance.

Ana Iris Medina, d. 9/11/2001

AnaMedinaAna Iris Medina had 10 (or maybe 14?) brothers and sisters and consequently, a huge family, in New York and Puerto Rico. She was 39 years old when she died on this date five years ago as she began her day’s work at Aon Consulting, an insurance company, on the 101st floor of the World Trade Center. She left behind an eleven year old son, Leonardo Acosta, and her 87 year old mother, Monserrate Acosta. Ana was the caretaker for both of them.

On September 25, 200l, The Village Voice listed Ana Medina as “missing.” Her relatives were still looking for her, hoping that she might be still alive. They told newspaper reporters that she had a “pedicure with a mint-green color and white designs” and that she loved to watch her son play baseball. She also liked salsa music and dancing. By October 6th, Ana’s 40th birthday, her family knew that she would not be found in a hospital somewhere; she died in the World Trade Center. The family gathered to remember her at the small Pentecostal church she attended.

I found this note at legacy.com:

February 28, 2002
Dear Mom
hi its your son leony.I have benn very loney with out you.It has been a little strange that youre not with us anymore.You will always and truly in my heart.
Leonardo Acosta (Brooklyn, NY )

Leonardo Acosta would be sixteen years old by now. I imagine he’s still missing his mom.

Today is fifth anniversary of the attack on the World Trade Center towers in New York City and on the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. I thought it was important to remember those who lost their lives to some men’s misguided and evil sense of religious or cultural duty. You can click on the image to read more tributes to the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attack.

Week 5 of World Geography: Australia and New Zealand continued



Music:
Wolferl, the first six years in the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1756-1762–Weil
Mozart, the Wonder Boy–Wheeler
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Ein Kleine Nachtmusik K.365

Mission Study:
1. Windows on the World: Minangkabau
2. WotW: Sundanese

Poems:
Anne Bradstreet. We’re reading her poems not because she has anything to do with Australia, but because my American Literature at homeschool co-op is studying Bradstreet this week.

Science:
Boats

Nonfiction Read Alouds:
FACES: Australia through Time
KIDS Discover: Australia

Fiction Read Alouds:
Ice Drift–Taylor
And the Word Came With Power–Shetler

Picture Books:
My Grandma Lived in Gooligulch–Base
Koala Lou–Fox
Are We There Yet?–Lester
The Muddle-headed Wombat–Park
Diary of a Wombat–French
Pete the Sheep Sheep–French
Wombat Stew–Vaughan
We’ve already read several of these picture books, and so far my favorite is Diary of a Wombat while Z-baby likes Wombat Stew.

Elementary Readers:
Don’t Pat the Wombat–Honey
Walkabout–Marshall This book may be too hard for elementary age chidren, but I’m going to re-read it and see if I remember it accurately.
Storm Boy–Thiele Colin Thiele, the author of this book, just died last week. His most famous book, Storm BOy, was also made inot a movie. It’s about a boy and a pelican.
Blue Fin–Thiele
The Magic Pudding–Lindsay
The Complete Adventures of Blinky Bill–Wall

Movies:
Amadeus (for the older set)
Man from Snowy River

I got some of these ideas from the comments on my last curriculum post. Don’t be shy; if you have suggestions about what books, movies, or other resources we shouldn’t miss before leaving Australia to travel on through the South Pacific, please leave your ideas in the comment section.

On Writing

“So far as I am able to judge of what talents I have, for benefiting my fellow creatures by word, I think I can write better than I can speak.” —Jonathan Edwards

Timed Writing Practice: (These are suggestons for writing practice; you give yourself a set amount of time–five, ten or fifteen minutes– and then write whatever comes to mind.The idea is to free your subconscious to help you write and to clear some of the clutter from your brain so that you can write.)
1. Keep your hand moving.
2. Don’t cross out.
3. Don’t worry about spelling.
4. Lose control.
5. Don’t think. Don’t get logical.
6. Go for the jugular. Write with passion.

Taken from Writing Down the Bones by Natalie Goldberg.

14 kinds of journals you might want to consider:
1. Diary. My father-in-law kept a diary-type journal for about thirty years. He wrote in cheap spiral notebooks.
A typical entry: 28 Wednesday 9:06 PM. Home again. Church was extra good, but it’s good to be home. Nothing unusual today. Oh, yes, W. (his son) got a temporary job at the Post Office.
These diaries are not profound, but they are treasures, giving a beautiful picture of the ordinary life of a godly man who has gone to be with the Lord now.
2. Recipe or homemaking journal. Along with copies of your favorite recipes, write down names, occasions, and anecdotes associated with each recipe. Your recipe book could also become a family treasure.
3. Sketch book, with written notes to go with the pictures. I don’t draw, but I love looking at the sketch books of those who do.
4. Scrapbook with stories to go with the photographs. Lots of people do scrapbooking; writing stories to go with yur photographs makes the scrapbook that much more valuable.
5. Book of lists, to do lists, book lists, lists of things to study or think about.
6. Nature journal.
7. Vacation journal.
8. Idea journal or brainstorming journal. Keep a small notebook in your purse or pocket to jot down ideas as they pass through your brain. As I have learned to my dismay, those ideas may never pass this way again. Capture them while you can.
9. Commonplace book. A commonplace book is a repository for quotations from novels, fragments of poetry, lines from speeches or sermons that you may want to remember.
10. A journal written for someone else. For example, you may write a journal to be given to your baby when he or she gets married or a journal of all your memories about growing up. I have a journal for each of my eght children in which I try to write down things they have said and done. I plan to give these to them when they are grown.
11. Prayer journal. Write down your prayers and read back to see how God has answered.
12. Bible study journal. Write down what God is saying to you through His Word as you read the Bible each day. The prayer journal and the Bible study journal could be combined.
13. Reading journal. I have kept a reading journal, off and on, for many years, The idea came from a class I took in college called Advanced Reading Survey. In the class, I was required to read about thirty or forty pieces of literature that I picked out in cnference with my professor. For each book (or poem) that I read, I wrote an entry in my reading journal. These entries had five parts: a bibliographic title of the work, a paragraph about the author, a list of major characters (if the work had characters), a list of quotations from the work that I liked or wanted to remember, and a one or two sentence evaluation (whether I liked it and why).
14. Blog. My blog is my most useful and fulfilling writing journal at this point in my life. I keep or have kept some of the other kinds of journal in the list above, but I find that writing in my blog replaces some of them and draws on others for content and inspiration.