2010

Zombies vs Unicorns

Unicorns FTW!

Last night when I was just a wee bit into Zombies vs Unicorns, Michelle wandered into my bedroom and plopped herself down on my bed – which led me to gripe about kids always laying on my darn bed. My griping didn’t send her away so I figured I’d try asking her some stupid question, a normal surefire way to get her to wander off to do something more interesting… “Zombies or Unicorns?”

She said Unicorns (smart girl) which led TW to try and argue that Zombies were better… unfortunately TW is not very good at debating and she proved the Unicorn’s side over and over and over again with her arguments, which caused Michelle to continue to lay on my bed laughing her a** off. So much for surefire ways to get a kid to get off of your bed.

The zombies vs unicorn debate seems like a good debate but it isn’t. Unicorns win hands down. They’re smarter. They’re magic. The stories about them are better. Not that that zombie stories in Zombies vs Unicorns were bad, they were excellent – but they just proved that Unicorns are just plain smarter, meaner, more magnificent and BETTER.

Don’t believe me? Read the book. Princess Prettypants, the prettiest, sweetest, rainbowyest (that’s totally a word) unicorn in the entire book will kick your ASS and make you like it. No zombie would stand a chance.

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Death and the Lit Chick

How have I never read the other St Just books before? Death and the Lit Chick was fun! Particularly amusing, the crime/mystery writers arguing over how soon you must insert the dead body into the story before the reader gets bored… the dead body hadn’t been inserted by the point(s) being argued. I wasn’t bored! Also – I didn’t figure out the who did it, which was a bonus since I usually do.

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The Clue of the Velvet Mask

There have been moments this year when I have to laugh out loud at the old Nancy Drews  – Yesterday, there were a lot of moments like that. The Clue of the Velvet Mask included a bad woman in a “Javanese” costume and every time I read the word “Javanese” I laughed out loud. I mean really. I cannot even imagine what I thought of the word when I was 10… I wish I remembered.  

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Before I Fall

My friend, coworker, and fellow YA aficionado, Diane from Teen Book Fanatics has been trying to get me to read Lauren Oliver’s books for a long time. Just about every time I talk to her she asks if I’ve read one – or if I’ve read the new one – or just in some way mentions Lauren Oliver. So – finally I reserved one at the library way back in August but I kept putting off reading it because it’s long and it looked like it might be a little depressing (you may remember I was reading a lot of depressing YA there for awhile…)

Our library book supply has dwindled down to less than 10 books and there’s not much left to choose from so I started Before I Fall on Tuesday night. I read about ¼ of it because… it was indeed feeling depressing. It also has a “Groundhog Day” type of theme and while I’m a fan of the movie and I liked that other YA book I read with that theme – I wasn’t feeling this one. So I put it down for the night, picked it up again last night after Survivor… and I couldn’t put it down.

I’m still tired of the Groundhog Day type of theme and it doesn’t really have the happiest of happy endings, though it is the right ending – I liked it. I see now why Diane is such a fan. And, I’ll be reserving another Lauren Oliver title this weekend.

Thanks for the recommendation, Diane!

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The Bride’s Farewell

I have such a love/hate thing for Meg Rosoff that I didn’t think I was going to read The Bride’s Farewell. In fact, after hearing from Sassymonkey that she didn’t like it I was sure I wouldn’t bother with it. But a funny thing happens when your library is closed for more than a month – you get punchy and panic over the idea of not having enough to read. And when that happens and you see a Meg Rosoff on the shelf… it jumps into your library bag. Even so, you wait almost a full month before you decide to read it… when your choices are getting slim and it’s Nancy Drew or some book about how to find a job using social media or a really long Lauren Oliver book that you’re pretty sure is going to be depressing. That’s how I came to read The Bride’s Farewell.

And it’s also how I realized I loved The Bride’s Farewell. Rosoff still writes like Rosoff but this book is nothing like How I Live Now or What I Was. It’s not even like Justin Case. It’s another kind of book entirely. And I really enjoyed it. Bucking the patriarchy is my thing, after all. So is saving children. And poaching off of wealthy landowners. Oh. Wait. Go back to the patriarchy thing. Also, I like gypsies.

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Girl Parts

I picked up Girl Parts when we visited the Northbrook library early in September. I couldn’t resist the cover. Or the title. I probably should have resisted. The main characters are boys, which is fine – or would be if the boys were better characters. Also would have been nice to step away from the stereotyping just a wee bit, dude. Guys who spend too much time on the internet are “disassociated’ (aka dissociative disorder – the book uses “disassociated” throughout) and need a female companion to help them re-associate with the world. Guys who are having problems within their family and are depressed are disassociated and therefore need a female companion to re-associate. Guys in general appear to be disassociated for any number of reasons and they all need female companions – robotic female companions who don’t have control over their own wants and needs.

Girls who are depressed – no companion for them. Girls who spend too much time on the internet – oops outta luck.  Boys are the only ones who want (or need) a robo-companion to make out with (oh, sorry – bond with.) Queer girls are equally out of luck if you’re wondering. The female companion bots won’t hook up with girls – it’s bad.

It’s like Manga but worse – I actually like Manga.

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The Creation of Eve

When I finished my last book, late in the evening, I had no idea what I should read next or what I even wanted to read next. So I fumbled in the dark office for a book that looked interesting and I came up with The Creation of Eve. I had no idea what it was about but I like Eve and I like creation stories and I figured I’d like it enough to stick with it.

I did.

I might not have picked it up if I’d known right away that it was going to focus quite so much on the Spanish royal family in the early 1500s. I’m kind of glad I didn’t know because it’s really about Renaissance painter Sofonisba Anguissola – one of the few successful female painters of that time. Interesting story – some fact swirled in with the fiction (similar to The Stolen One that I’d just finished reading before I picked this up.)  I think it could have happened this way – it makes sense. Nothing rang untrue. I like that in a historical fiction.

This one is labeled as adult fiction but Cullen is a children/YA author and I suspect the with a little cajoling I could convince the almost 15 year old YA reader in the house to give this one a read.

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The Best Book I’ve Read This Year: No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think about Power

The day we came home from BlogHer 10, I pre-ordered three copies of Gloria Feldt’s new book, No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think about Power.  Then I wrote this, BlogHer 10 Recap: You Are Powerful, and pre-ordered another copy for my mom’s birthday.  I spent weeks waiting for the arrival of my copy. As the release date approached, I started choosing books from my TBR stack that I thought I could finish quickly, allowing me to start No Excuses immediately. The day it arrived, I was in the middle of a YA fiction that I barreled through – not just because it was fun to read but because I was dying to start No Excuses.

Gloria Feldt is brilliant. She’s a brilliant writer and a brilliant speaker. I was coming down from my BlogHer 10 Closing Keynote high and No Excuses arrived at just the right time.  I was getting tired of continuing to hear women putting themselves down, using misogynist language to describe themselves and other women, reading news articles about women and money (or their lack of it) and the dearth of women in power positions. I needed another jolt of inspiration to help me stay in the positive thinking/do something to make things better mode.

No Excuses was exactly what I needed.

I read the Prologue and tweeted to Gloria that I loved it so far!

I got to pages 75-76 and tweeted again that I was really loving those pages (BlogHer made its first appearance in the book.)

And then I stopped tweeting and got really serious about the reading.

When I finished the book, I immediately tweeted that Gloria Feldt had written the best book I’ve read all year. And I meant it.

It’s not that I learned anything that I didn’t already know, because I didn’t. The women she features throughout the book are familiar to me. I’ve met many of them. I’ve written about many more of them. I’ve read about them.  Women like BlogHer CE Beth Terry. Writer and activist Courtney Martin. Michelle Robson, founder of EmpowHer. Seeing her showcase them for owning their power was powerful.

Gloria’s analysis of the 2008 election wasn’t anything that I didn’t already know and hadn’t already said but she was saying it. Out loud, in print. That was powerful. Reading Feldt saying exactly what I’ve been thinking about women’s losses under Obama – the Stupak Amendment and the Paycheck Fairness Act (which you should contact your Senator about RIGHT NOW – time is running out AGAIN.)

Hearing again about the struggles of women in the workplace, about women who don’t even consider asking for more money, and women who ask and don’t get it  – makes me angry, a good kind of angry. Feldt’s commentary on James Chartrand was so damn on the money that I cheered out-freaking-loud. As I did again when I her thoughts about women “choosing” to leave the workplace.  

And then there’s the problem women have historically always had – we don’t press our advantage, we don’t continue to fight after we’ve accomplished a goal. We step back, we let others go first, we find others more deserving, we’re afraid we might lose because it’s not time yet. Talk about angry. Yes I am.  You should be too.

I could go on and on – every page inspired me and every page influences me. My co-workers have the pleasure of me pitching stories with woman power slants – or reframing stories so they really focus on the woman power issues. My partner has taken to calling me “Gloria” because I rant about a female Survivor contestant who has given up her power to a man (it’s going to come back and bite her in the ass – it always does and why don’t we know it by now?) I find myself saying “power to” a lot and I think I always have said that but I hear it differently now with a “not power over” message resounding in my head.

Gloria Feldt is like that. Her words seep into my life and have a way of turning what I already know or practice into something bigger and bolder – something just a little more powerful than it was before because I’m acting with an awareness that wasn’t always present before.

I cannot wait for my daughters to read No Excuses. Michelle, who is 20, has to finish her Third Wave Feminism and Feminist Theory classes first – she’s drowning in feminism as it is and RJ, who is 14, is shoulder deep in college guides  (don’t ask) but soon, very soon, I’ll have the next wave of feminists in the family to talk to about No Excuses – and about the ways that they are thinking about power – and ways that they can own their power. I can hardly wait. And if I find myself faltering – feeling tired – feeling discouraged, I can re-read No Excuses or track Gloria down on her blog or at SheWrites and I can be inspired all over again.

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Heloise Handy Household Hints

I took Heloise Handy Household Hints off of the currently reading list because I’ve set it down beside my desk, with the cover closed. I read about 100 pages straight through and then flipped through a bunch of different sections looking for specific topics. It’s the kind of book you just keep reading – whenever you need it.

And, I blogged more about it at BlogHer: I’m a Sucker for Good Advice, Hints and Tips.

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The Stolen One

I decided I needed something a little bit light so I picked up The Stolen One, a YA book that we probably plucked off of the shelf at the last minute, right before our library closed for a month. I wasn’t expecting a lot so I was very pleasantly surprised. I liked it a lot. What DID happen to Katherine Parr’s daughter, Mary Seymour? Did she die at the age of two? Or was she stolen away?

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