Two Books Recently Finished
By Kate,
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
I have recently finished reading (actually, rereading in both cases) two books for the
50 Books in 2007 challenge.
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood PrinceHere's how I started reading
Harry Potter – when home from college one weekend we went to the mountains to look at scenery. Well, everyone in my family takes a book, because otherwise you think you are going right over the edge as my father is undaunted by the precipitous edges of mountain roads and undeterred from driving at what I would classify as dangerous speeds (let's not talk about how nerve-wracking it is when he is too busy looking at the scenery to drive properly!).
At any rate, I was out of book! And feeling queasy! And the only book available was my little brothers 'weird wizard book' –
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (yes, I started with book 2). As I was green to the gills, I chose the weird wizard book. And was hooked.
By the time JK Rowling was adding in messages against slave labor and her political statements, I was too invested to not read future books. I lump Rowling into the same sort of existence as George Lucas – I do thank you wholeheartedly for your contribution to pop culture, but I think you are a big, fat liar when you say you had a grand plan from the beginning, and think you are really too full of your own self importance. Injunctions to keep people from reading books they bought when the store just happened to sell a few erroneously? I mean, really.
I feel like
Harry Potter has become later seasons of a good television show – the characters are all still there, and there is a shadow of the same show, but it is not the same.
By this point, I do not feel the need to "spoiler" the below, as I feel that anyone that really wanted to read the book would have, and everything else is pure speculation on my part, not based in any inside knowledge (ha).
I always buy the UK version, to keep my collection the same throughout, but I do read the US version when it first comes out because it takes a while for my book to ship from over seas. After reading the book the first time, I felt certain that Dumbledore was as dead as Gandalf the Grey. I didn't realize until it was pointed out to me how explicit they made it for American readers. Below is a short passage, first from the UK version, then from the US version.
[…] He told me to do it or he'll kill me. I've got no choice." "Come over to the right side Draco, and we can hide you more completely than you can possibly imagine. What is more, I can send members of the Order to your mother tonight to hide her likewise. Your father is safe at the moment in Azkaban […]
[…] He told me to do it or he'll kill me. I've got no choice." "He cannot kill you if you are already dead. Come over to the right side Draco, and we can hide you more completely than you can possibly imagine. What is more, I can send members of the Order to your mother tonight to hide her likewise. Nobody would be surprised that you had died in your attempt to kill me — forgive me, but Lord Voldemort probably expects it. Nor would the Death Eaters be surprised that we had captured and killed your mother — it is what they would do themselves, after all. Your father is safe at the moment in Azkaban […]
And that's all I have to say about that.
Bad Heir DaySeriously, why do I have this book? When I was in middle school I used to buy Harlequin Romance novels, because I read all the time and these were abundantly available - 6/$1 at the local library. Most were stupid, quite a few I didn't finish, but they were, by in large, not even close to raunchy or randy. They were truly romances. I can actually remember a few that I actually liked. Well, about as much as I liked Baby-Sitters Club Super Summer editions in elementary school – they were fluff.
Anyway, this book was another UK import, and I believe that there must be British Chick Lit out there that does not involve women who are constantly on the wrong end of things with double entendres and who don't comment at least once a book on the state of their underarm hair, but I haven't found it. This book was fluff, but not really good fluff, and I think is a perfect candidate for some form of removal (I am loathe to rid myself of any book, really, but I don't want to accidentally reread this one again).
Labels: 50 Book Challenge 2007, books
Liberal or Conservative?
By Kate,
Monday, February 19, 2007
You know I'm a sucker for quizzes... I thought this one was interesting, though I don't know that I agree 100% with its findings. I think that if I was given a spectrum to plot myself on, rather than yes/no answers it might be more accurate.
Your Political Profile: |
Overall: 75% Conservative, 25% Liberal |
Social Issues: 75% Conservative, 25% Liberal |
Personal Responsibility: 25% Conservative, 75% Liberal |
Fiscal Issues: 100% Conservative, 0% Liberal |
Ethics: 75% Conservative, 25% Liberal |
Defense and Crime: 100% Conservative, 0% Liberal |
Labels: quiz
It Can't Be That Narrow
By Kate,
Sunday, February 11, 2007
In Sunday School this morning talk turned to those occasions where we may have been called (and the degree of rightly so) narrow-minded in our beliefs.
It's true that I believe there is one way to Heaven, and that faith in Jesus Christ, Son of God is it.
And that is an exclusionary statement. If I believe the only way for one to go to Heaven is by accepting the free gift of grace, then by definition I believe there is no other way.
But this isn't something I made up. This is God's truth. And it
is narrow.
And then my husband said something that I thought was great:
There is no other way to be saved [than being a born-again Christian], but how can the way be called narrow when it is wide enough for all to come through? When it is sufficient for everybody?
Wow. Sometimes my husband amazes me, and in this statement he doubled up with the amazingness of God to just really give me a moment of wondrous reflection.
For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.
John 3:16-17
Want to know more about what I believe? Check out the
Four Spiritual Laws. Or
email me. Or leave me a comment. I'd love to talk to you.
Labels: faith
Visiting My "Pretty Clothes"
By Kate,
Today I had cause to go in our guest bedroom closet. Among other things that we store in there, the entirety of the clothing storage space is taken up with my pre-baby clothes. Oh, they are so pretty. I have a formal dress (well, technically it is a two piece set) that I never even got the chance to wear - the tags are still on! I ordered it right before I found out we were pregnant, and by the time it came in I was already just a bit too big for it.
Not that I wear rags now, but I really want my pretty clothes back. I should visit them more often.
Labels: ruminitions
50 Book Challenge
By Kate,
Friday, February 09, 2007
My 50 Books for 2007
- Timeline, by Michael Crichton (blog post)
- Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, by JK Rowling (blog post)
- Bad Heir Day, by Wendy Holden (blog post)
- Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, by Chuck Barris
- The Godfather, by Mario Puzo
- Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
- The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
- Angels and Demons by Dan Brown
- The Painted House by John Grisham
- Catch Me If You Can by Frank W. Abagnale, Jr.
- College Weekend by RL Stine
- The Last Battle by CS Lewis
- Tara Road by Maeve Binchy
- Holes by Louis Sachar
- The Refiner's Fire by Lee Kingman
- Captain Corelli's Mandolin by Louis de Bernières
- Light a Penny Candle by Maeve Binchy
- Timeline, by Michael Crichton (does it count that I reread it?)
- Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton
- Firestarter, by Stephen King
- The Stand, by Stephen King
- The Summons, by John Grisham
- Little House in the Big Woods, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- Little House on the Prairie, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- Farmer Boy, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- On the Banks of the Plum Creek, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- By the Shores of the Silver Lake, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- The Long Winter, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- The First Four Years, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- Needful Things, by Stephen King
- The Client, by John Grisham
- The Magician and His Nephew, by C S Lewis
- The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, by C S Lewis
- Prince Caspian, by C S Lewis
- The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, by C S Lewis
- The Silver Chair, by C S Lewis
- A Horse and His Boy, by C S Lewis
- The Last Battle, by C S Lewis
- Where the Heart Is, by Billie Letts
- A Walk to Remember, by Nicholas Sparks
- Dwelling: Living Fully from the Space You Call Home by Mary Beth Lagerborg
- Little Altars Everywhere, by Rebecca Wells
- Summer Sisters, by Judy Blume
- A Bend in the Road, by Nicholas Sparks
- The Brethren, by John Grisham
- Forrest Gump, by Winston Groom
- The Wedding, by Nicholas Sparks
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, by JK Rowling
- 24 Hours, by Greg Iles
- The Bourne Identity, by Robert Ludlum
- Murder on the Chesapeake, by David Osborn
- Just Give Me a Little Piece of Quiet, by Lorilee Craker
- Scarlet Feather, by Maeve Binchey
- Digital Fortress, by Dan Brown
- 1984, by George Orwell
- Bleachers, by John Grisham
Books that are on my "to read" list, at some point
Bad Girls of the Bible, Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
Labels: 50 Book Challenge 2007, books
A Challenge, A Book, and A Spoiler
By Kate,
My no-longer-Secret Pal, Lori, has challenged everyone to join her in the
50 Book Challenge 2007 (if that link doesn't work for you, it's because you might have to be a registered member of that forum to read it. I can't remember.) Basically, the name says it all - read 50 books in 2007.
I don't think it will be very hard to do this, but I think it will be interesting at the end of the year to look back on what books I read this year.
The first book I am counting (I have read some others recently, but I'm only counting books I've finished since I decided to do the challenge) is
Timeline by Michael Chrichton, that I wrote about two days ago.
Since I last read a Michael Chrichton book, I have read several Dan Brown books, and I think all of them are what I refer to as
Grishoms (can you guess why?). This means, they have a niche, and they stick to it. Their works are fine, their works are popular, but their works are all, to an extent, indistinguishable and ultimately disposable. This book was very different from
Jurrasic Park on the surface, but when it comes down to it, they just substituted medieval folk for dinosaurs. Really, there are more similarities than differences. Luckily, I liked
Jurassic Park just fine, so I liked this book just fine, too... but I'm not going to really remember it too much.
The reason I mentioned Dan Brown is that I find I like his brand of "thriller" more - they are actually more "thrilling". And Dan Brown works better for Mommy Books.
Mommy Books are books that I can read while keeping one eye on the baby playing in the den or at the playground. Mommy Books can be read in 1-3 minute bursts, without losing a lot. And Mommy Books are mostly what I have time for as of late.
So, if you like Michael Crichton books and haven't read
Timeline, I say go for it. For the spoiler, even telling how I was spoiled provides a spoiler, so I am going to "black box" the whole thing. If you have already read the book or seen the movie, or if you just don't care if it spoils you because you probably never will, go ahead and highlight it - but don't say I didn't warn you!
When Kris told me there was a movie made of Timeline, I checked it out the IMDb.com page. I even linked to it. But just by checking the page, I knew something was up when I read that one actor was listed as both Robert de Kere and Rob Decker. So I knew not only who out of the "suspects" was actually from the future also, but suspected much ahead that there was someone from the future! Ah, well. There's not much I can do. I knew through the whole movie - at least from the anniversary dinner - that Bruce Willis was dead in The Sixth Sense, and I still thought it was a good movie. Unbreakable, now, that's another story.
Labels: books, movies
Go Heels!
By Kate,
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Go Heels!
Not that this wasn't expected, of course. But it's still sweet.
ESPN.com knows more than me.Labels: sports
What I'm Reading...
By Kate,
So I'm reading the Michael Chrichton book,
Timeline. (By the way, all of the images are from and links to Amazon.com) My mom had bought a big bag of books for my dad, and he already had this one, so I thought "Why not? I wasn't much for
Congo, but
Jurassic Park was ok, before they made the movie, and even then, Jeff Goldblum did a pretty good job in his role."
(Even to myself I am a rambler. I actually shortened this "quick" thought by a good paragraph.)
Basically, a group of people go back to the High Middle Ages (1367). Or at least in theory, since I'm almost 200 pages and no Middle Ages action going on. And I say back, but I'm simplifying the whole process they claim. I will say this - my mind was much more willing to understand the cloning of dinosaurs from DNA found in petrified mosquitoes (and even the subsequent spontaneous gender-changes) of
Jurassic Park than it is taking to the whole ideas of quantum physics at this level and level of fictionalization.
At any rate, it keeps making me think of other books I should really reread.
A Wrinkle in Time, for one. Heck, the whole series. I've read
A Wrinkle in Time dozens of times, but I know I have only read
A Swiftly Tilting Planet,
A Wind in the Door,
An Acceptable Time and a few others once or a few times each. There are others I haven't read at all, and I really would like to. I never really completely wrapped my mind around a tesseract - oh, I could fold up my skirt hem and let an ant walk across it, whoopdiedo, but it just felt too fake (not like
Back to the Future - that's clearly how time travel works. Deloreon optional.)
Then I started thinking about another YA novel of the same feel,
Invitation to the Game by Monica Hughes. Have you read this one? It's set at an indetermined time in the future, and these kids think they're being invited to play a VR game to get their minds off of being jobless, but really they're preparing to be dropped of on an alien planet. It's actually less weird than that sounds. It would be a quick little read - good for the beach. I should try to rummage up a copy.
Then there's John Christopher's
Tripods Trilogy. I read this one in sixth grade. I assume it tied in to the Middle Ages, because everything in sixth grade tied into the Middle Ages. We even had this big end of year banquet in period dress (kind of) for our parents. Although I have a vague recollection that they found an old subway (transit form, not sandwich shop) and tins of food and that it, too, was set in the future, but made to look like the past. And at a certain age they got brain control caps put on. Wow. I have read some really weird books! Actually, I looked it up. As a class we just read
The White Mountains, but I really think I read more than that, but I can't remember any of what happened. We also had to learn the Shelley poem
"Ozymandius", which I have always thought had something to do with the book, but I honestly can't tell you why I think that. Was it in it? I remember liking it enough to look up the other books, but I don't think this is high on my reread list, unless a copy falls into my lap.
Another book this novel has reminded me of - one that I do want to pull back out and reread - is
A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurthur's Court. You know, the book by Mark Twain? OK, maybe you saw any one of the movies based on it; besides the obvious ones of the same title there were
A Kid in King Arthur's Court and Martin Lawrence's
Black Knight (I saw the former, I passed on the latter). I think this one was still the funniest (and meant to be funniest) of all of them.
At any rate, this started out as a quick post, and now I have even more on my list! And now I'm thinking of time-travel-esq movies (
Bill & Ted's, anyone?), so I really had better go just fix dinner!
Edited to add: After starting dinner, I checked out the whole Wikipedia page on "Ozymandius", and found this:The trilogy of novels The Tripods, set in a post-apocalyptic world where people live a 17th-century existence among the ruins of the 20th century, an insane character claims his name is Ozymandias, and asserts, "Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair." The protagonist, Will, remembers reading the name in a poem.
So I'm not crazy! It did tie together!
Edited AGAIN to add, this book ("Timeline") is also, apparently, a movie. My sister-in-law was telling me she saw it and it had Paul Walker in it. I don't know who he is. Her examples to me did not help. Seriously, Kris, The Fast and the Furious? But I checked it out on IMDb and Ethan Embrey is in it. You should have gone with him! OK, he's ninth in the listings, and even on page 184 I know he's not a major character, but he's the name I recognize from the list. Did this really come to theaters? And that would have been when I was actually going to movies - quite a bit! - so I would have thought I would remember it. Ah, well.
Labels: books
Last Train to Clarksville...
By Kate,
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
So I was listening to the radio the other day in the car (oh, for the old days when my car still had a radio...) and the DJ was about to spin "Last Train to Clarksville", which you may well know is the first hit single by the Monkees, released in 1967.
Well, anyway, as the DJ is tossing to the song, he throws in that the song is about a guy going to Vietnam. OK, this fits easily with the lyrics, but that doesn't make it true. I've made up all sorts of stories to explain the narrative of "Hotel California", some of which fit, but that doesn't mean that's what the song is about.
So I did some "websearch" (it's like research, but since it's all using web sources that are not necessarily validated I refuse to call it that), and found out the DJ is right! The song was written by the
Boyce and Hart (who also wrote and released "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight", which I can never not sing when it comes on, and am, in fact, singing right now), and here's a quote about where the name came from by Bobby Hart:
We were just looking for a name that sounded good. There's a little town in Northern Arizona I used to go through in the summer on the way to Oak Creek Canyon called Clarksdale. We were throwing out names, and when we got to Clarksdale, we thought Clarksville sounded even better. We didn't know it at the time, [but] there is an Air Force base near the town of Clarksville, Tennessee - which would have fit the bill fine for the story line. We couldn't be too direct with The Monkees. We couldn't really make a protest song out of it - we kind of snuck it in.
Check the lyrics.Anyway, I thought it was interesting.
Labels: music
My Favorite New Snack!
By Kate,
Friday, February 02, 2007
Well, I love
carbs. Bread? I love it. But they are my arch-nemeses.
And I don't crave sweets all that often. Really, if I have a specific snack craving it would be like, dry roasted peanuts or a slice of homemade bread.
But my new favorite snack is sweet. Just a little sweet.
Here's the trick - throw a few yogurt cups in the freezer. About 3 hours before you want a delicious treat, move one to the fridge. Getting that timing right has been tough to figure out, but oh so worth it! It's like ice cream. Yum.
My favorite yet has been a Yoplait Light Fat Free Orange Creme cup. It tasted like a smooth and creamy orangecicle.
I like to eat them with one of le bebe's spoons. They are just the right size for savoring each bite!
Labels: food