December 2006

101 Things Update

Well, it’s been a year since I started the 101 things in 1001 days list and I’m happy to say I’ve kept up with it.  I haven’t always made a lot of progress but I have definitely made progress.  We’re getting down to the tougher things on the list though so who knows how successful I will be in 2007.  It’s been interesting to look at the list every month and see things that I realize now were ridiculous to put on the list and think of other things that I wish I had put on the list. 

In December, I was able to mark off the Christmas cards and the birthday cards and that was good.  I am horrible about sending such things but I did it and people were happy that I did.  I’m hoping I can keep it up next year.

More music was downloaded.  More bookmark cleaning and blogroll updating (I still want a better blogroll system and hopefully in 2007, I’ll come up with that).  Not having a working dryer this month made putting the laundry away immediately so much easier.   I’m tempted to not go further in debt for another dryer and just keep going to the laundromat every week just because it was nice to not have clothes folded up at the foot of the bed or piled on the dresser waiting to be put away.  On second thought, no, the laundromat is already tiring and I don’t think I can stand much more of it.  Heh.

Here’s to scratching off another dozen things from my list in 2007, do you think I can manage it?

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The Secret of Sarah Revere

The Secret of Sarah Revere was surprisingly good. I’m not a huge historical fiction fan and I’ve found a lot of young adult historical fiction to be over-simplified BS – just more of the same stuff kids are hand fed in school history classes. Now my appreciation of this book might have something to do with my appreciation for Paul Revere – not the mythical hero from “one if by land, two if by sea” fame but the real man who did an awful lot more for the cause than just that one midnight ride.

I also found the author’s note to be interesting though the reader’s discussion questions were a bit bland. There’s a list of other YA historical fiction in the back of the book, I’m hoping some of those are just as interesting as this one was.

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The Yearly Alphabet

A – Astrid is Chris’s new girlfriend, she changes her hair color more than Michelle ever did – and she tends to sport a buzz cut when she doesn’t have unusually colored hair.

B – Last year blogs were big, they were even bigger this year.  Not only did we attend BlogherCon, allowing us to meet people like Nancy White (gasp!) but I was on a Blogher panel and I spent the year sharing Health & Wellness topics on Blogher.   Even bigger than blogs and Blogher were burritos.  Michelle started working at Burrito Brothers in May and has become quite the expert burrito maker which Prince J heartily approves of.

C – Who in their wildest dreams would have guessed I’d not only be an active member of Clubmom but a blogging member of Clubmom?  Not me, not in a zillion years.  But I started in June and have enjoyed every second of it.

D – TW gave a presentation about blogging for a group of Dietitians in Pennsylvania late in August.  A real grown up conference.  Who’d have thunk it?  D is also for Dexter the Showtime TV series we’ve added to our weekly television watching.

E – Elvis the Rat moved into our house – into my bedroom to be precise.  She and I have mostly made peace with each other, as long as she doesn’t make too many rat noises or escape from the bathroom when she is having "rat time" then we’re ok.

F –  Prince J along with his flute, made it to first chair at the end of fall. 

G – Gameboys entered the picture for both E and RJ, even though RJ swore for a full year that she didn’t want a Gameboy.  When the time came for her to create a birthday wishlist both a Gameboy and a Nintendo DS were on her list.  She got the Gameboy and uses Chris’s DS to play the game she likes.

H –  Chris moved home again and lives in the Florida Room.

I – IKEA was big again this year.  Michelle lucked out with a trip to celebrate her 16th birthday by purchasing a brand new bedroom at IKEA in Atlanta.

J – Jenn and Ronnie split up and Jenn has a new guy in her life.  She seems happy and she’s talking about going back to college in the new year.  (fingers crossed)

K – The hermits kicked the bucket, as did the dragons errr anole lizards.  All dogs and cats and turtles still here, though Chanel’s days are numbered.  Old age is catching up with her.

L –  Lists, lists, and more lists.  Life was full of lists.  Grocery lists, to do lists, chore lists, and the infamous 101 things list. 

M – TW finally had the mystery bump removed.  It took a 3 day stay in the hospital but it’s gone and we’re glad.

N – No grandchild for me this year.  Jenn ended her marriage and has a new apartment, a new boyfriend and a new life that she seems to be happy with. 

O – Out with the old, in with the new – that was a bit of a motto for us.  We worked hard to clean out a lot of old stuff from around the house – it’s still out in the garage though because we aren’t good at follow through.   

P –  Christopher has found his way to Leonardo’s where he makes pizza and is on his way to a manager position there.  Pirates were popular (SWEETNEY!!) with Michelle, RJ, Jenn and Chris.  Pirate swim team, pirate music, pirate movies, pirate costumes and pirate bandanas.

Q – It’s far too quiet around here now that the small children have gone off to Cambridge with their father for a six month sabbatical.  Sometimes quiet is nice, right now it’s taking a lot of getting use to.

R – Runewhatever aka Runescape has become the new favorite past-time for both TW and Prince J.  They’re constantly talking about quests and often sound like they are speaking some weird foreign language.

S – RJ enjoyed her stint as part of the Safety Patrol this fall and winter and Michelle entered Sante Fe Community College as part of the Dual Enrollment program.  She took four classes her first semester and has signed up for four more.  Synchronized swimming remained popular, and E added it to her life in the summer. 

T –  We are back down to only having one Toyota parked in our driveway.  Chris’s poor little white Toyota finally moved out, it was donated to charity and we hope whoever is using it (or using it for parts) enjoys it.

U – I did a great job of upsetting folks with my discussion of heteronormativity (or lack of) at Blogher, by using the phrase  "grow a pair" and by telling a friend she was behaving poorly as a CL at iVillage.  I’m sure I did more to upset folks, though right at the moment those are the ones that come to mind.

V – Vagina Monologues again this year, with the 1/2 child in tow.  (TW says no ABC list for the year would be complete without mentioning how VERY broke we are.)

W – The big kids’ father left NJ (finally) and moved back to SC.  He’s working at Walmart which is what he always said he was going to do after he retired from the AF.  Who knew he was so prophetic?  Web 2.0 in all its glory has taken over my work life and it hasn’t been all good.  It hasn’t been all bad, either though and World of Warcraft keeps Chris and his g/f busy on multiple computers around the house.

X – My "x" father in law had a liver transplant this summer and is doing amazingly well.  My "x" sister in law had a baby boy just a couple of days ago and is another family member who I still say should have stayed childfree – but do those girls ever listen to me?  Also my brother’s x g/f’s daughter had a baby this year too, another boy in the family.   

Y – Yugioh is still popular here, but now in the form of Gameboy games but Pokemon is still the favorite. 

Z –  We attended the Zellwood Corn Festival this year and Terri Clark can really wear a hat, can’t she? heh

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My 2006 Reading List

I read far too many books in 2006 to give a rundown of best/worst so all I’m going to do is make a list and be done with it.  Next year I’ll be tagging the books I read with "2007" so that will make it easier than sifting through the monthly archives – I wish I’d thought of that sooner!

I read a total of 149 150 books: there were 38 non-fiction and 111 112 fiction.  Of those, 21 22 were young adult/children’s books, 6 were audio, 10 were classics and 15 were GLBT or had strong GLBT themes.  Not a bad reading year.  Lots of favorites in there, not too many duds.  That’s all I can ask in a year of books!

If you’re interested in more reading lists from 2006, you can fine a nice group of them at Semi-colon

January:
Clearcut
Breakfast With Tiffany
Wed and Buried
THe Peabody Sisters
The Killing Art
Sky Pirates (The Edge Chronicles)
Over Easy
Uncontrolled Flight
What Do You Do All Day?
Grace At Low Tide

February:
Rococo
The Tent
The Devil’s Picnic
The Email Murders

March:
Hollow Chocolate Bunnies of the Apocolypse
Jesus Land
The Leopard Hat
Sock
Money Secrets
Night
For Whom the Minivan Rolls
Ourland
She Got Up Off the Couch

April:
Farewell Legs
A Dirty Job
Whale Season
The Wright Three
Anyone But You
Weekend Makeover
Emotionally Weird
In the Company of the Courtesan
Tithe
The Understudy

May:
The Tenth Circle
To Hell With All That (I didn’t finish it)
Carolina Isle
Pitching My Tent
Rose of No Man’s Land
The Egg & I
Odd Girl Out
Odd Girl Speaks Out
Hot Fudge Sundae Blues
Penelopiad
Girls of a Tender Age

June:
Valiant
Cloud Atlas
Witness
Dragonflight
If You Could See Me Now
Here Be Dragons
The Naked Woman
The Moonstone
Tummy Trilogy
Bullshit
The Day My Butt Went Psycho
Blue Shoes and Happiness
The Lost Painting
Are We There Yet
Dinner With Anna Karenina

July:
The Shadow of the Wind
Sea of Monsters (Percy Jackson)
Vanity Fair
The Ancient Child
The Book Thief
Kindred
Black Elk in Paris
The Night Watch
Four and Twenty Blackbirds
The Crucible
Adam & Eve

August:
The Odd Women
The Bullet Trick
The Stolen Child
The Sculptress
The Year of Magical Thinking
Tamburlaine Must Die
The Crying of Lot 49
The Prophet of Yonwood
The Woman Warrior
Some Pig
The Girls
The Effect of Living Backwards
Midwives
Mrs Shakespeare
The Land of Women
Gravity’s Rainbow (I didn’t finish it)
Kristin Lavransdatter

September:
The Story of Lucy Gault
Fan-Tan
Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency
Welcome to Lizard Motel
Snapshots of Bloomsbury
The Sun and the Moon
Soul Kitchen
The Secret History of the Pink Carnation
Voyage in the Dark
Anybody Can Do Anything
Drive
Freeglader (The Edge Chronicles)
The Dark Lady of DNA
Confessions of a Pagan Nun
Robinson Crusoe
Misquoting Jesus

October:
Maps for Lost Lovers
Soiled Doves
Crocodile Soup
The Masque of the Black Tulip
The Zombie Survival Guide
The Things That Matter
The Inheritance of Loss
The Devil’s Feather
Now it’s My Turn
The Birth House
Carry Me Down
The Secret River
The Teahouse on Mulberry Street
Mother’s Milk

November:
Killer Dreams
The Rules of Survival
Diary
Hancock Park
Frangipani
The Fourth Bear
Goodnight Nobody
From Here to Reality
Fun Home
The Emperor’s Children
Autobiography of a Face
There is No Me Without You
The Third Policeman
The Coroner’s Journal
The Ice House
As Seen on TV
Acorna’s Children
Lesbian Images
The Creation
The Painted Drum

December:
The Secret of Sarah Revere
Absurdistan
Class Matters
Liberty Square
Happiness Sold Separately
Dirty Blonde
Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman
No Reservations Required
The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
Black Swan Green
Tanglewreck
The Iron Girl
Stage Fright
A Bad Boy Can Be Good For a Girl
The Glass Books of the Dreameaters

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Absurdistan

Absurdistan is, well, it’s absurd. Amusingly absurd. Since I enjoy the absurd as long as it isn’t TOO absurd, I enjoyed it and I’m wondering why I never read The Russian Debutante’s Handbook.

Poor Misha wants nothing more than to live in NYC with his g/f and spend his father’s money. Well he’d also like to make a difference in the world. Maybe, as long as he can get to NYC where life is wonderful because that’s where his g/f and a lot of great food lives.

I hope he makes it.

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Class Matters

Class Matters is a terrific book for homeschoolers or for UU folks looking for a non-fiction book discussion. We spend a lot of time talking about feminism or racial prejudice or homophobia but we avoid discussions of class like the plague. Class Matters makes good solid points as to why we need to stop doing this. And it gives a lot of good tips for people who want to take part in classism discussions or movements.

Fabulous book, I’m going to buy it.

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Christmas Tyops

Mom got us a new toaster oven for Christmas. TW was excited because it is big and it does lots of things. Plus, it has automatic shut-off for people like me who leave sculpey clay in for three days ’cause we got distracted. Or like Chris who leave hashbrowns in there for 6 hours because we’re forgetful.

TW opened it up this morning and started giggling. Typo on the control panel! And, she laughs more when she opens up the instruction book to find another typo! POEWR of the OVER! Cool. I love this toaster.

The instruction manual.

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The face of the toaster oven.

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Click to Enlarge!

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The Problem with Kate Delafield

I’ve finally figured out what the problem is with Katherine Forrest’s Kate Delafield mysteries, the problem is Kate herself. Her personality varies almost completely from one book to another so it doesn’t even seem like she’s the same person. Kate Delafield has a personality disorder and I wish Katherine Forrest would help her fix that – and fix it so we always see the Kate Delafield who was in Liberty Square (and Sleeping Bones) and not the Kate Delafield who was in Hancock Park.

The entire Vietnam veterans storyline often feels tired and over done but in Liberty Square I never found myself annoyed with the characters for rehashing the problems with Vietnam the way I have with other books. I liked every single one of the characters. I liked the way Forrest covered the problem with being gay in the military, now and then. Even the sappy ending with everyone visiting The Wall felt like it fit and wasn’t forced.

Finally, a reason to like Detective Delafield (and her g/f) again.

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