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December 31, 2009

Countdowns of 2009: The Best Blog/Diary/Journal Entries of the Decade

Let’s party like it’s ten years ago today!

My Favorite Blog/Diary/Journal Entries of the Decade

* Names have been changed to protect the not-so-innocent.

99% of these probably don’t make sense to anyone, even the other people who were there.  A few of them barely still make sense to me.  I think that’s the sign of a decade well-lived, don’t you?

June 12, 2000

(2009 Note: This is a clear example of why not to write comics with your friends, about your friends, that only your friends could understand.)

The Fighting Fitzpeople

July 4, 2001

The most EMBARRASSING thing that ever happened to me…..

THE MOST embarrassing thing that EVER happened to me was, well, see, one day, the clasp on my bra broke and so my mom brought me another one, and I put the broken bra into a bag in my binder.  2 Weeks later, Eugene stole the bag out of my binder and left it in the Spanish room.  Chris M. found it, waved it around, and Sra. L. HUNG IT IN THE DOORWAY w/ a sign that said “¿De quien es esta bra?”  So I made a sign the next day that said “Don’t go through others’ binders (Eugene!)” so Ann made a sign that said “Don’t leave your bra in the Spanish Room (HAYLEY!!!)”

December 26, 2002

Amy and my BRILLIANT theory to the world of Harry Potter… it was actually MY theory, but I’m letting her share the credit.

Our idea as to why Voldemort wanted to kill Harry and James Potter is as follows:

According to a theory on Mugglenet.com (and our own slightly slow common sense), Harry and James were both heirs to Gryffindor – they lived in Godric’s hollow, and Harry succeeded in pulling Gryffindor’s sword out of the Sorting Hat during his battle with the Basilisk, the monster of Slytherin. Voldemort, knowing this and being the heir to Slytherin, targeted them because he wanted to finish Salazar’s work and end the quibble that had arisen between the two Hogwarts founders.

To further confuse you, Neville is a parallel to Peter Pettigrew, as they both were tag-alongs to three more popular and powerful wizards in their year.

Ginny is a parallel to Lily, because they both have red hair and are at nature good people and physically beautiful.

Since Neville is a parallel to Pettigrew, and has shown interest in Ginny, who is in turn parallel to Lily, we think that Pettigrew was attracted to Lily.

Voldemort, knowing that Pettigrew had lusted for Lily, and had had his heart broken when James married her, got Pettigrew to unleash his hidden wrath towards James by betraying James and Harry’s whereabouts to Voldemort.

We know that Voldemort did not have any interest in murdering Lily until she got in the way of him killing Harry. He even told her, “Stand aside, silly girl!” Therefore, we know that he, being the heir of Slytherin, was only after the heirs of Gryffindor – James and Harry – and not Lily, who was just Lily.

So that is our theory as to why Voldemort wanted to murder Harry and James Potter.

teehee, gigglegiggle. bahahahahahahaa.

WE ARE BLOODY BRILLIANT!!!!!!

KTODSPAF,

<3Hayley

August 5, 2003

This was the best night of my life.

August 3, 2004

6 Girls
+ 7 Boys
+ 10,000 Marshmallows
+ 10 Sidewalk Chalks
+ 2 Cars
+ 1 Policeman
+ 1 Creepy Whisper
+ Midnight
__________________
One Crazy, Crazy Night

November 1, 2005

My new goal is to try and blog more like Meg Cabot, who somehow always has enough to say that it takes her a lot of words.

Sometimes, I am very daunted by words. I’m always afraid that somehow, I will run out of them, and then I won’t have anything to do with my life. I go to the library or a bookstore, and I see all of the books there, and I think…

Holy crap.  Look how many words have been used up.

It just doesn’t seem like there are that many more combinations of them that are possible.

And whenever I read something absolutely wonderful, like the ( tropopause monologue ) of Angels in America, I think, “That combination of words is so breathtaking… and no one can ever use it again and claim it their own. There are so few breathtaking combinations of words that can be mine.”

I get paranoid about everything I write after that, because a) WHAT IF I INADVERTANTLY COPIED SOMEONE ELSE’S ENTIRE BOOK? and b) WHAT IF SOMEONE ELSE PUBLISHES MY COMBINATIONS OF WORDS BEFORE I GET THE CHANCE TO, AND THEN NO ONE WILL BELIEVE THEY’RE MINE?

Then I hate words for a few minutes, and try to get by without them. But thinking without words is difficult sometimes, and if someone comes in, communicating without words can be awkward.

It is a dilemma.

August 25, 2006

Dear Veronica Mars,

I have been watching your show far too much on YouTube. Can you teach me how to solve mysteries? I lose stuff a lot.

Sincerely,
Hayley

December 25, 2007

Best. Christmas. Ever.

The moral of the story is, if you’re two years old and you get a Barbie fork stuck so far up your nose that X-rays can’t find it (and they try to drug-test your mother because it’s 1989 and you accidentally told them it was a spoon up your nose and they assume you got the idea from watching your mother snort blow, when really it was a fork all along and your mother did no such thing!) and you eventually sneeze it out all over your poor harassed mother at dinner and it almost breaks your neck because your dad is holding your head in place; and then you refuse to talk about it for almost a week before very seriously telling your father, “I did it because there was a booger I couldn’t reach”… then you’ll laugh about it until you’re bawling eighteen years later.

Not that I ever got a fork stuck up my nose when I was two.

My Barbies still aren’t allowed to eat dinner.

December 23, 2008

I saw the Rockefeller Center tree, and watched the skaters circle round and round the golden-lit rink.

I was ignored in Gucci (again) but didn’t have to suffer through being called fat by Swedish Prada models in Bergdorf’s (although yesterday, Lily Cole called me ‘quite cool’ and asked where was ‘the queue to the wash-up’).

FAO Schwartz’ giant stuffed animals were everything I ever hoped they would be.  There was a duo of siblings in matching Fair Isles Christmas sweaters jumping around on the giant piano, and they were precious.

AT FAO SCHWARTZ YOU CAN HAVE MADE YOUR OWN CUSTOM MUPPET.  If I am ever rich, I will have my own fleet of Muppets.  That is, now that I know it is possible, the epitome of all my life’s dreams.  Fleet of custom Muppets.

I had dessert at the Plaza.  It was so beautiful it was almost scary, and there is no portrait of Eloise on the wall anymore, just a case of 2004-rerelease Eloise memorabilia for sale in the side lobby.  The waitstaff all wear tuxedos with tails and have cufflinks.  Dessert was served with literal silver spoons, despite the fact that I clearly was not born with one in my mouth.  The chocolate pot de creme with chantilly cream and chocolate streusel was divine, and it was free, because a middle-aged Armenian man who was too mild-mannered to Richard-Gere-in-Pretty-Woman himself out more than to order us French fries surreptitiously, which he sent back when we didn’t want them, paid for it.

I used the strategy I learned for such occasions on Long Island: ”Thank you,” and leave immediately.

The lights on the ironwork were almost enough to make me wish I were rich enough or self-deprecating enough to stay at the Plaza for Christmas, though.

And if I did, I would completely pour a pitcher of water down the mail chute.

March 23, 2009
http://hayleyanneperkins.com/blog/?p=3

I’ve been trying to think of an appropriate way to christen my new blog as Hayley Anne Perkins, but my ideas always seem to fall short, at least in my own mind.  I’m very conscious of the implications of blogging to an audience that comprises more than just your best friends and your mom… I’m vaguely terrified of saying, or rather typing, just the wrong thing in just the wrong way and coming across as a terrible person.  Or at least as a person with an overinflated sense of self-importance, which is just as bad in a blogger.

So to break the ice: my ode to NYC Teen Author Festival 2009.

To preface this extremely bizarre gobbledygook — NYCTAF09 (I’m lazy and enjoy acronyms) was awesome.   I had an amazing time meeting all of the authors and several readers, and everyone was really nice and extraordinarily “chill” for it being an autograph signing… given my boy band expertise, I’m used to autograph signings involving at least three fainters and a tablejumper.  I was glad to see that everyone was patient and open to conversing with everyone else in line as they waited, and it was a treat to see the way that the writers complemented (and complimented!) each other.

While most people at the event today brought or bought stacks of books by their favorite writers, I brought the ultimate book: the Dictionary.

I asked every author to sign over their favorite word, and I promised to take the collection of Best Words and write a little mishmash of a piece.  Elise Broach said that I should try to get them all in order, and I seriously considered it until I started trying to decipher the autographs, and I realized that I was forgetting the order already.  Sigh.

The form was promised to Judy Blundell for her choice — “poem” — and the tone to Heather Duffy-Stone… “lusty”.  Unfortunately for all parties involved, poetry is the second-furthest thing from being my forte (with Math beating it easily).  Anyone I’ve ever dated can attest.  Therefore, given that this is not only a poem, but a poem using nonsense words, I hope no one takes it TOO seriously as a test of my writing ability!  Unless you love it, in which case, this is totally how I write…

You couldn’t see it, but my eyes got very shifty at that last sentence.

And I have to say, David Levithan saying that he was excited to read the finished endeavor pretty much killed me.  So here goes.

Ned Vizzini Stole My Pen
A Lusty Poem

Twin popes –
one pulchritudinous, the other feculant
in appearance –
both indefatigable in their vast perversity,
though incredulous of the idealism of the other:
one a bonvivant in deep meditation on generosity and grace,
the other in love with his epiphany on ecstasy,
sneaked into the basement of the church
ignoring the musical comedy rehearsal
upstairs.

One facetiously donned a crash
the other merely a lush apron
as they prepared to bake treats
for their family reunion
beneath the moon.

There could be no peace between these two brothers.
Discussion broke down in their unctuous disregard for each other
like a luffing sailboat’s disregard for the wind
when fighting its way through a sluice
(in simile, not metaphor);
Something was always wrong.

As delicious purple rhubarb dumplings
vied for space amongst the donuts
an ephemeral smoke began to rise:
almost magical in its majesty
And the brothers watched,
thunderstruck.

As they watched in wonder,
the metal of the pots against the stove –
fulminate metals –
began to coruscate,
shooting sparks into the air.

The pastries were ruined.
The brothers found between them a new sublimity:
they no longer had to bring dessert to the reunion
thanks to a force majeure.

LOVE – Nora Baskin
PURPLE - Jessica Blank
POEM - Judy Blundell
MEDITATION – Coe Booth
ECSTASY - Elise Broach
PEACE - Susane Colasanti
EPIPHANY (BUT NOT IN A RELIGIOUS SENSE)* – Sarah Darer-Littman
GRACE (NOT CHRISTIAN GRACE)* – Matt de la Pena
LUST – Heather Duffy-Stone
GENEROSITY – Gayle Forman
LUSH – Aimee Friedman
UNCTUOUS – Madeleine George
POPE – Maureen Johnson
TWIN – Kristen Kemp
PULCHRITUDINOUS – Justine Larbalestier
WONDER – David Levithan
DUMPLING – E. Lockhart
CORUSCATE – Barry Lyga
FAMILY – Carolyn Mackler
RHUBARB – Sarah MacLean
SUBLIME – Megan McCafferty
DELICIOUS - Lauren McLaughlin
LUSH - Neesha Meminger
SOMETHING (BECAUSE “SOMETHING IS GOOD”) – Billy Merrell
CRASH – Blake Nelson
BONVIVANT – Micol Ostow
INCREDULOUS - David Ozanich
EPHEMERAL (BUT ONLY FOR TODAY) – Matthue Roth
FORCE MAJEURE - Marie Rutkoski
SNEAK – Lisa Ann Sandell
FACETIOUS (BUT FOR REAL) – Courtney Sheinmel
DONUT (NOT DOUGHNUT) – Brian Sloan
IDEALISM - Jennifer Smith
PERVERSITY – Rachel Vail
INCREDULOUS – David Van Etten
LUFF – Ned Vizzini
SLUICE – Adrienne Maria Vrettos
INDEFATIGABLE - Cecily von Ziegesar
MOON - Melissa Walker
THUNDERSTRUCK - Lynn Weingarten
FECULANT - Scott Westerfeld
VAST - Suzanne Weyn
MUSICAL COMEDY - Maryrose Wood
METAPHOR – Lizabeth Zindel

FULMINATE” and “MAGICAL,” I am so sorry, but I can’t read your autographs or remember who wrote them… if it was you, please reclaim your Favorite Word in a comment!

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December 30, 2009

Countdowns of 2009: Books

Clearly, I did not write one-a-day, but it just seemed too many categories.

One a day until it’s time to party like it’s ten years ago!

Bests in Books of 2009

The full list of my recommended reads (to date) is here, but these are my choice books of 2009 — some new releases, some new discoveries, and some that reminded me of their brilliance this year!

James Bond, 007: Dr. No

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December 21, 2009

Countdowns of 2009: Television

This Wednesday’s #YALitChat on Twitter had the theme “Bests of 2009 in YA: Books, Music, Movies, TV, Anything!”

I’ve been thinking ever since.

So, to finish out 2009, here are my own lists of The Bests of 2009, one a day until it’s time to party like it’s ten years ago.

Bests in Television of 2009

I watch a lot of television.

There were several ways that I debated writing my countdown — best new shows, best overall shows, best characters, best moments.  So rather than trying to choose only one, this list is less of a countdown than… an awards show, with lots of categories, pretty dresses, and shiny gold men.

Best New TV Show

Glee

Glee

This should not surprise anyone.  Just as it was for me in high school, my love for show choir dramedy is a compulsion. Time seems to be measured this fall in minutes until Glee, and moments watching Glee.

Runner Up: The Vampire Diaries

Best New Season of a Returning Show

Castle

Castle

Any comedic crime drama about a novelist cannot be bad.

That is a statement just itching to be proven wrong, but until it is, Castle is king.  There is no sophomore slump for this show, and I’ve loved seeing more of Alexis (Castle’s sage teenage daughter) and banter between secondary characters Ryan and Esposito.  Castle is one of the few “cult appeal” shows that I think the second season surpasses the first in quality, and I’m eagerly looking forward for more.

One particular highlight was that the victim in the episode “Vampire Weekend” was clearly cast to resemble Robert Pattinson-as-Edward Cullen, and it amused me.

Runner Up: Bones

Biggest Shark Jumping Escapade

Heroes

Heroes

Heroes has been moving downwind for a long time.  I, personally, liked the second season.  I liked West.  I liked Claire/West.  I liked Molly, and I still liked Mohinder.  I thought that Monique’s power was awesome and that Micah was continuously the most fascinating character on the show.  I loved Elle, Season Two Sylar, and GabriElle.  I did not like Maya and Alejandro.

So of course, Molly is gone, West is gone,  Micah is gone, Monique is gone, Elle is very very dead, and Maya has stuck around as persistently as the virus that seeps from her eyes.

And instead they give us a really creepy carnival… because who doesn’t love a good death-filled scuzzy carnival?… and some sort of plotline about Parkman and Sylar being each other?  I can’t even follow that.  Nor can I get behind it as a viewer.

And suddenly, because she is in college, and hot, Claire is a lesbian.

I am totally OK with Claire being a lesbian.  I am not OK with how the show has handled that particular storyline, and I think that the ways it is shown are total cop-outs to try to regain male viewership.

Lame.

Runner Up: Criminal Minds

Best Bounce Back from Possible Shark Jumping

Bones

Bones

I have been nervous about Bones‘ eventual decline ever since the supreme awesomeness of season three’s Gormogon story arc concluded, because… well how could they beat that?

They haven’t beaten it, nor have they approached its level of intrigue, but Bones has been consistently excellent through the last two seasons, and seems to really be hitting its stride in the development of the whole slew of new characters introduced in season four.

Mister Nigel Murray makes my heart sing.  Daisy doesn’t make me want to punch her in the face anymore.  I do not like Wendell, but it’s because I actually dislike him as a character and not because he’s an unlikably written character.

It took a whole season, but Bones has its mojo back.

Runner Up: CSI: New York

Best Overall Episode

"Preggers," Glee

“Preggers,” Glee

Again, no surprise.

Runner Up: “Stress Relief,” The Office

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December 19, 2009

Countdowns of 2009: Movies

This Wednesday’s #YALitChat on Twitter had the theme “Bests of 2009 in YA: Books, Music, Movies, TV, Anything!”

I’ve been thinking ever since.

So, to finish out 2009, here are my own lists of The Bests of 2009, one a day until it’s time to party like it’s ten years ago.

Best New Movies of 2009

Here’s the thing about movies and me: I don’t see a whole lot of them, and they pretty much stick to a small range of themes/actors/aesthetics/plotlines.  I’m splitting this list in two parts — Movies of 20o9 That I Saw And Liked, and Movies of 2009 That I Will See and Will Like.

Movies of 2009 That I Saw and Liked

Saw in theaters November, Illinois
Saw in theaters November, Illinois

The Boat That Rocked (Pirate Radio)
DIR.
Richard Curtis
CAST
Philip Seymour Hoffman    …     The Count
Tom Sturridge    …     Carl
Bill Nighy    …     Quentin
Will Adamsdale    …     News John
Tom Brooke    …     Thick Kevin
Rhys Darby    …     Angus
Nick Frost    …     Dave
Katherine Parkinson    …     Felicity
Chris O’Dowd    …     Simon
Ike Hamilton    …     Harold
Kenneth Branagh    …     Sir Alistair Dormandy
Tom Wisdom    …     Mark
Jack Davenport    …     Twatt
Ralph Brown    …     Bob
Rhys Ifans    …     Gavin
Talulah Riley    …     Marianne
January Jones    …     Elenore
Emma Thompson    …     Charlotte

I doubt I need to reiterate my love for this movie again.  Just look at the cast list if you don’t believe my faith in its grooviness.

Saw in April, NYC
Saw in April, NYC

How To Be

DIR. Oliver Irving
CAST
Robert Pattinson     …     Art
Powell Jones    …     Dr. Ellington
Mike Pearce    …     Nikki
Johnny White    …     Ronny

The best part of this movie is Ronny, played by Johnny White.  Ronny is the agoraphobic, nitrous oxide addicted best friend of the movie’s protagonist, and many of the film’s more humorous moments take place in Ronny’s flat.  Ronny enjoys spying on the deli across the street with his binoculars because “the delicatesseries look quite delicious.”

When I saw the film, the cast (minus Pattinson) did a Q&A after the showing and Johnny White stuttered a lot, which made me love Ronny even more.

Then the subway ticketing machine ate my $104 at 3:30 AM (after the midnight showing) and I felt very much like the poster for this film was the poster for my life, which is pretty much the point of the whole movie if you’re in your twenties and want to have some sort of independent, creative profession.

Saw in August, Illinois
Saw in August, Illinois

Taking Woodstock
DIR.
Ang Lee
CAST
Demetri Martin     …     Elliot Tiber
Emile Hirsch    …     Billy
Paul Dano    …     VW Guy
Kelli Garner    …     VW Girl
Henry Goodman     …     Jake Teichberg
Imelda Staunton    …     Sonia Teichberg
Eugene Levy    …     Max Yasgur
Jonathan Groff     …     Michael Lang

This movie was completely different than I expected it would be — I was picturing something more like Across the Universe (2007), lush and full of music and colors.  Instead, this movie is… almost depressing.  It does a really good job of showing the ’60s counterculture as a dirty, hungry, damaged phenomenon as much as it is one of beauty and ideas, and I’ve never seen another film that balances the two sides quite so well.

Demetri Martin is also completely adorable, and Jonathan Groff is absolutely transcendent; he was my favorite part of the movie.

However, I never needed to see the parts of Emile Hirsch that belong inside his pants.  Never.

Saw in May, NYC
Saw in May, NYC

Little Ashes (Sin Limites)

DIR. Paul Morrison
CAST
Javier Beltrán     …     Federico García Lorca
Robert Pattinson    …     Salvador Dalí
Matthew McNulty    …     Luis Buñuel
Marina Gatell    …     Magdalena

I’m very fascinated by Spain in the period between WWI and the Spanish Civil War, and Federico García Lorca is one of my favorite poets.

However, I won’t pretend like Pattinson’s crazy mustache wasn’t a major draw in my interest in this film.

It’s just so curly!

While it’s clear that this is a lower-budget indie film, and not all of the acting is impeccable, I really enjoyed this movie and found it emotionally wrenching, particularly the ending.

Any movie about Lorca cannot end happily, and even though you know what’s coming, Little Ashes succeeds in making it shocking and disturbing and painful anyway.  Javier Beltrán does a beautiful job playing the tragic poet.

I got unbelievably lost trying to find the theatre for this movie in NoLIta, and then all of the trailers were actually commercials for really weird, bohemian things like German hybrid cars and oil paints and stuff.

Saw in July, Illinois
Saw in July, Illinois

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
DIR.
David Yates
CAST
Daniel Radcliffe    …     Harry Potter
Rupert Grint    …     Ron Weasley
Emma Watson    …     Hermione Granger
Jim Broadbent    …     Professor Horace Slughorn
Michael Gambon    …     Professor Albus Dumbledore
Bonnie Wright    …     Ginny Weasley
Tom Felton      …     Draco Malfoy

This is the first Harry Potter movie that I actually liked, and it’s the first one that everyone else I know hates.

Yes, they cut out huge portions of the book.

Yes, they alluded to the actual canon ships (Harry/Hermione shippers, get out! To paraphrase JK Rowling: “Harry and Hermione? Eurgh!”).

But I personally choose to believe, until I am almost inevitably proven wrong, that the cut portions from HBP will be added to the first of two Deathly Hallows films so that the audience has Voldemort’s backstory fresh in their mind as the story goes forward, and I think that the pacing of HBP was great the way it was.

Plus, the shot of Narcissa and Bellatrix at Spinner’s End was absolutely perfect.  It was exactly as I always pictured it.

However, I am not OK with the minimization of Harry/Ginny’s kiss.  THAT WAS NOT SEVERAL SUNLIT DAYS, that was a few musty nanoseconds!

Movies of 2009 That I Will See and Will Like

Nowhere Boy, Sam Taylor Wood The Princess and the Frog, Disney Productions Angels & Demons, Ron Howard Adventureland, Greg Mottola Julie & Julia, Nora Ephron Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Phil Lord & Chris Miller Whip It, Drew Barrymore Sherlock Holmes, Guy Ritchie

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December 18, 2009

Countdowns of 2009: Music

This Wednesday’s #YALitChat on Twitter had the theme “Bests of 2009 in YA: Books, Music, Movies, TV, Anything!”

I’ve been thinking ever since.

So, to finish out 2009, here are my own lists of The Bests of 2009, one a day until it’s time to party like it’s ten years ago.

Best New Music of 2009

  1. “Jump,” Glee Cast (cover of Van Halen)

    \”Jump\” (Glee Cast) HQ on YouTube

    I don’t know if any song in 2009 makes me happier than this one.  I’ve said that about many a Glee song, because the show — and its music — just keep impressing me more, but this has been the pinnacle in my opinion.  I have to dance in my seat when I hear it.

  2. “Fireflies,” Owl City

    \”Fireflies\” (Owl City) on YouTube

    Who isn’t including this song on their 2009 countdowns?  Pure whimsy in musical form.

  3. “Shades of Gray” by Open Till Midnight

    Listen on MySpace

    I am a huge fan of Open Till Midnight.  This song is supremely easy to listen to on repeat and is beautiful, poetic lyrics and a catchy hook that are indicative of the band’s style on the whole.

  4. Brick by Boring Brick” by Paramore

    \”Brick by Boring Brick\” (Paramore) on YouTube

    I love Paramore’s lyrics, Hayley Williams’ voice (and name!), and the soundscape of their songs, as well as most of the other acts on the Fueled by Ramen label.  I’m that person.

  5. “F*cking Lights,” Sam Bradley & the Men

    \”F*cking Lights\” (Sam Bradley & the Men) on YouTube

    Clearly not the style of music I listen to most often, but I love Sam Bradley’s voice and the guitar part to this song.  I wish I could find a cleaner recording than this.

  6. “World War III,” Jonas Brothers

    \”World War III\” (Jonas Brothers) on YouTube

    I like the Jonas Brothers even though I am in my twenties.  Their music is fun, and so are their concerts, and I will publicly admit that when I saw them this summer, I yelled “MARRY ME, NICK JONAS!” four times.  And texted their big screen-thing.

  7. “America’s Suitehearts,” Fall Out Boy

    \”America\’s Suitehearts\” (Fall Out Boy) on YouTube

    The album came out in 2008, but the single was released in 2009, therefore giving me an excuse to slip Folie a Deux into my countdown list.  This album is pure genius, as are most things Fall Out Boy, and I love the topsy-turvy poetry of Pete Wentz’ lyrics.  This song is no exception, although the video creeps me out a little bit.  It’s also very similar to the “Brick by Boring Brick” video.

  8. “Let Me (Get It) [Acoustic Viafore Mix],” statespeed

    There aren’t any online sources to listen to this mix of the song, which is vastly superior to its electrified version, and that’s a shame.  It’s a lovely, simple song by a lovely band.

  9. “Party in Your Bedroom (Acoustic),” Ca$h Ca$h

    \”Party in Your Bedroom (Acoustic)\” (Ca$h Ca$h) on YouTube

    Please kindly ignore that this is a fanvideo, all of the live acoustic videos were muffled.  In terms of feeling, this song reminds me of “Fireflies,” if a bit more cynical.  I once accidentally hung out with Ca$h Ca$h at Pete Wentz’ bar all night and ended up on The Real World: Brooklyn.  Then I got lost on the subway and ended up in the wrong burrough at 4AM, in a thunderstorm, crying because I was wearing leggings as pants.  It was an interesting night.  This song is lovely regardless.

  10. “Remember December,” Demi Lovato

    \”Remember December\” (Demi Lovato) on YouTube

    Demi Lovato is one of the most impressive musical artists I’ve seen perform live.  She is a madwoman onstage, playing three instruments while singing and having great charisma.  She’s also cute as a button!

  11. BONUS: The Beatles 40th Anniversary Digital Rereleases

    \”Hey Jude\” (The Beatles) on YouTube

    There will never be another band quite like The Beatles.

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December 15, 2009

Book Bloggers Get Blogged: A Girl and Her Books

Filed under: Book Bloggers Get Blogged — Tags: , , , — admin @ 3:04 pm

Book Bloggers Get Blogged!

In talking to Chelsea (The Page Flipper) and Heather (Book Woman), I thought it would be a fun to turn the tables and do a series on my blog of interviews with YA book bloggers — let them be the stars! So now every Tuesday, another Book Blogger will be featured.

If you’re interested, please e-mail me.

Ashley D., A Girl and Her Books

1.  Describe yourself without using any qualifiers relating to reading, blogging, or writing… who are you outside of your literary life?

A 21 year old college student who graduates this month! Ashley enjoys baking, cooking, cleaning, organizing, photography, her iTunes collection, twitter, tumblr, texting, knitting, inside jokes, talking really fast, Christmas lights nicknames and her friends. Ashley is also sometimes a conspiracy theorist a la Hodgins from Bones. Ashley also enjoys talking about herself in the third person, her friends do not.

2.  You’re trapped in a dystopian society like that in Fahrenheit 451, where all books, periodicals, scriptures, texts, or other forms of written communication have been banned… but in this society, every person can hoard away one piece of writing to keep for herself.  What is the one written piece that you choose to keep, and why?

Can I keep the whole Harry Potter series?! Or is that cheating because it’s a series. Even if it is cheating I still think I choose Harry Potter.

3.  Congratulations!  You’ve been given the position as Personal Assistant to any author of your choice (all time periods and genres allowed)… who is it, and what’s the biggest problem you have to overcome working with them?

Meg Cabot. I adore her and all of her books. My biggest problem working with her would be the fact my best friend adores her, too. We’d spend most of the day texting each other about the fact I was a PA for Meg Cabot and yelling EEEEEP! (something I have done a lot of recently, which is very un-me.)

4.  When it comes to reading and reviewing, which aspect of a book is the most important to you?  The plot?  The characters?  The setting?  Something else entirely?

How quickly I can read the book. I know that sounds weird to say but I have a stack of books that I have tried to read and I just cannot. People recommend books they think I will ‘love’ and three chapters in and I have this need to read something else. The book just hasn’t hooked me in and I have no interest in it. So I guess in a roundabout way plot.

5.  If book blogging weren’t an option, how would your reading habits be affected?  Would you be as motivated to read if you couldn’t widely impart your thoughts on books to other readers?

My reading habits would not be affected at all. I honestly read what I want, take a picture and sometimes post my thoughts.

6.  You’re giving a dinner party for three contemporary (living) YA authors and three dead classical authors.  Who are they, and who do you seat next to whom?  Why?

This is a tough question for me, I’ve kept coming back to it.

Contemporary: Cassandra Clare, JK Rowling, Nora Roberts.
Classical: Louise May Alcott, Laura Ingalls Wilder, and Mark Twain.

Living, dead, living, dead, living, dead. I’m Type A, any other way would not do.

7.  What’s your favorite punctuation mark?  Why?

A comma. My thesis professor wrote all over my paper about my use of commas.

8.  What literary device could you happily never see used again?  (Simile, metaphor, spoonerism, hyperbole, etc.)

Metaphor. Same reason as punctuation mark, thesis professor.

9.  What is your favorite local bookstore?  What’s a bookstore that you’ll never set foot in again?  And do you have a ‘dream bookstore’ that you’d either love to visit… or would love to design and own one day?

My favorite local bookstore is Bookmans in Arizona. Any of them are amazing and the workers are so nice. And amazing because I can order from my couch. As for a bookstore I’ll never step into again there is a tiny one in Phoenix that looks nice from the outside, but inside it’s horrible and smells like smoke. I died a little inside. And Bookmans is my “dream bookstore” everything is pretty much 50% off and they have random treasures, too.

10.  Have you been to any Teen Read Week events or other Writers’ Conferences?  What was your favorite meet-and-greet or interview experience?

No, I have not.

11.  In your opinion, what is a YA novel?  How is it different from a children’s novel, and how is it different from an adult novel?  What makes someone a YA reader — because it’s clearly more than a matter of their being “a young adult.”

It’s weird because I work at a library and they have a lot of books listed as MS (Middle School) that should be YA, and a lot of YA books that should be MS, so my opinion on the genre is a little skewed. Even if I didn’t work at the library I think my opinion would be skewed because YA is a wide genre and I like that. Generally there is a little more romance, or a little more horror than a middle school book. To me though a YA book is able to almost bridge gaps. At work all of my coworkers and I love YA and were in our 20s, but so do our bosses who are in their 50s. Which is an amazing thing, but at the same time when a book is well written, like many YA books are, they should be able to.

12.  What’s your guilty pleasure reading snack?  And what’s your guilty pleasure to read while snacking on it?

I generally don’t read and eat. My guilty pleasure reading habit is definitely trashy romance novels, my friend and I read them jokingly to find the worse ones.

13.  “Don’t judge a book by its movie!”  As a connoisseur of all types of books, which genre do you think translates the best from page to screen?  What’s your favorite book-to-movie adaptation?  Conversely, what’s a book that you hope never to see filmed?

Romance translates really well, in my opinion, it just works. And my favorite book-to-movie adaptation is Pride and Prejudice. I honestly think it was done really, really well. As for a movie I hope to never see be made I have to go with Breaking Dawn, however since I’m pretty sure it’s going to be made I will love seeing how they can pull it off.

14.  What are your plans for the future?  Do you see yourself working in the literary community?

After I graduate I plan on going to grad school for Library Science and working in a library someday, not as a page (my current job).

15.  Describe your perfect reading location… are you in a coffee shop sipping cappuccino or curled up at home near the window?  Reading on a Kindle in the Big City or taking in the smell of a dusty hardcover?

The hammock in my backyard when it’s 70s and breezy with my iPod.

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December 11, 2009

A Christmas Story

For Halloween, I posted a “scary story” that I wrote at age eleven and lovely commenter Jacee left this request:

I guess it’s just that your writing has always been so You, regardless of how much it has improved.

Anyway, loved this little ‘blast from Hayley’s past.’ (How about a feature? *Waggles eyebrows.*)

Comment by Jacee — October 29, 2009 @ 1:18 pm

Rummaging through one of my old backup CDs today, I found something worthy of her request (and fittingly embarrassing for a nostalgic holiday like Christmas) — my seventh-grade retelling of The Nutcracker.  For some reason, only half the file survived and the other is in unintelligible dings, but here you go.  In seventh grade, I was in the midst of writing “my first novel” and felt like a Very Serious Writer, so that may excuse that this story is very little more than a long list of Things That Are Pretty In Ballet And At Christmastime.

But, probably not.

Just please remember: I wrote this at twelve.  Forgive me.  And have a very happy holiday season.  I know I’ll be decorating my Christmas tree and eating cookies this afternoon!

Clara and her Nutcracker Prince

Once upon a time, on Christmas Eve, in a grand, large house in Nuremberg, Germany, a girl about nine years old, wearing a fine, rich party dress of pale blue velvet, the sash about her waist dotted with gay blue sprays of flowers, stood on tiptoe at the picture window, watching the snow swirl over the path that led up to the door.

“Move aside! I want to see,” complained her brother, younger then she – six years old – his plum breeches and jacket dusted with confectioners’ sugar from stolen crescent cookies, as he pushed her away.

“Fritz, there’s room enough for the both of us if we each take a side and not the center,” said the girl, exasperated, brushing crumbs off her dress where Fritz had pushed her.  Just then, the two children, fighting for a better view then the other, saw four candles bobbing up the walk in the darkening December sky, glittering with stars.

“They’re here!  The Clausses are here!” shouted the girl, her flaxen curls whipping over her shoulder as she turned and ran to the door.  Fritz scrambled after her, his short, stumpy legs racing, but still, she beat him to it.  She flung the heavy oak door with an evergreen wreath, ornamented with red bows, gold beads, and alight with tiny white candles, open; washing the visitors with welcoming, rosy light.

“Merry Christmas!  Please come inside!” she said, her blue-green eyes shining like gems.

“Thank you Clara!  Don’t you look nice?  May we go into the parlor?” said Frauline Clauss, setting her plump two-year-old, Merisha, down on the floor on her plump, sturdy legs, and removed her scarlet-red cloak.  Merisha, her dark, fine curls dusted with gentle snowflakes, toddled heavily up to Clara and held up her butter-colored linen dress, dripping with pure white lace, up so high it revealed her pantaloons, the color of fresh snow, up to see.

“Yook, Cyara, yook!  My dwess is pwetty!  I’m a big guwl, at a pawty!”  Exclaimed Merisha, mispronouncing, as she always did, her Rs and Ls.

“Oh, yes Merry-berry, you are so big!  You must be a big girl, to be at such a grown-up party!  Mother and Father will bring Marie out in a minute, for you to play with.  Would you like that?”  Clara asked, catching the eye of the oldest Clauss girl, Teresa, her best friend, who gave her a small wink and a slight smile.  Merisha smiled and nodded, then stuck her index finger in her mouth, and chewed on it thoughtfully.

“Wiew Mawie have a pwetty dwess too?”  She asked suspiciously.

“Well, yes, of course,” answered Clara and Teresa at the same time.  Teresa had come up and was standing beside Clara, the hood of her deep crimson cloak pushed back on her neck, revealing her dark, shiny hair and enormous pale turquoise bow.

“Wiew Mawie’s dwess be pwettiew then mine?” asked Merisha nervously, eyeing her dress with sudden distrust.  Teresa knelt and gently took her sister’s finger out of her mouth and held her hands.

“Merry-berry, do you know what?” she asked, her eyes on Merisha’s.  Merisha shook her head.  “Your dress is very pretty, and nothing will change that.  Even if Marie’s dress is pink, yours will still be very pretty.”   Teresa stood up again and Merisha smiled.  Meanwhile, Fritz and Teresa’s younger brother, Johann, had paired up and were running and whooping, up and down the hallways of the foyer.

“Johann kept sneaking taffies and got his suit all sticky,” whispered Teresa to Clara as she removed her cloak and handed it to Apia, the maid.  Teresa’s dress was a pale turquoise; with a smocked bust and edelweiss patterned white lace edging the bottom, square cut neck, and balloon sleeves.  Johann was wearing a little sailor suit, the color of the evergreen trees that guarded the house on both sides of the front walk, the trimmings as red as the winter berries the birds ate off the bushes.

Then, countless more numbers of guests arrived– the Rievangentds, all dresses in white like a flock of angels, the Gustavs, who had a tiny baby, in a long white lace gown and cap, whom everyone admired, the Jaques, immigrants from France several years ago, who were always right in with the fashions and the daughter, Clarice, had lovely auburn hair, which Clara envied.  Then, at the door stood a frightening old man, his gray hair frizzy and wild, a black silk patch over one eye, the other eye gray and hard as steel.

He wore a long, black cape and a black suit with a red tie.  He leaned heavily on a black onyx cane with a tarnished silver owl head at the top.  Behind him stood a boy, Clara’s age, with well-combed wavy black hair and eyes that seemed sapphires implanted in his face.   He carried gifts of all sizes, wrapped in gay, shining papers and with ribbons more enormous then Teresa’s hair bow.

Promptly Merisha, Marie, and all the other small children began to whimper at the man’s odd and slightly mangled appearance. The boys brandished toy swords and cap guns, ready to attack the enemy. The older girls all gasped and threw their arms around each other in fright. But Clara ran up to the old man and threw her arms around his neck.

“Godfather Drosselmeyer!” she cried in delight.

“Clara, you look marvelous!” he said, twirling her around in the air.

Clara’s eyes drifted away from her loving Godfather’s face to the boy. She smiled shyly, then looked away and blushed.

“Clara, this is my new assistant, Michel,” said Herr Drosselmeyer as he gestured toward the boy.

“What happened to Pyotr?”

“Pyotr?”

“Yes. He was your assistant last year. The one who replaced Freindle.”

“Oh, oh, yes. Pyotr,” he made a sound of disgust, “Pyotr told many of the village boys and girls I was a wizard, and they kept bringing me sisters, brothers, enemies, all wanting me to turn them to toads. Or rats. Snakes, lizards, pigs.”

“Oh.” Clara was a little surprised that anyone would think that her dear, dear Herr Drosselmeyer was an evil wizard. Just then, Apia and her other maids Heidi, Jenica, and Florentine opened the white doors to the parlor and the women, on the arms of the men, walked inside, their full skirts brushing the doorframe.

Then, the children rushed in the door and then stopped abruptly in awe of the giant Christmas tree. The huge evergreen, full and fat, fragrant and proud, stood towering almost to the ceiling. It glittered with tiny blown glass animals, golden beads, silver stars, small white birds made of feathers dipped in glue, reflecting in the light made by hundreds, it seemed, of tiny white candles in golden lace-paper holders. Under the tree, presents wrapped in shining foils, colored papers, and large, glistening ribbons were piled high.

On the long, well-polished cherry wood buffet table next to the redbrick fireplace, large roast chickens, surrounded by bread stuffing, potatoes, celery and herbs were next to fragrant hams, shining with glaze and filled with soft, hot apples. All around them sat quivering jellies, green, red, and white, and bowls filled to bursting with roasted and parmentier potatoes, thick, creamy soups, dotted with herbs. There were oblong dishes full of green beans with butter or asparagus hollandaise.  There were soft white rolls, slices of hard dark brown bread, and bread made from rice.

There was a large wreath of fragrant evergreen bough over the fireplace mantle, under which a warm and welcoming fire burned, fed with colorful wax-dipped pine cones which Clara and Teresa had made one crisp afternoon in October, when they were just starting to run out of last year’s.  On the mantle stood small elf statues, made of porcelain and china, painted with the colors of cardinal, grass, poppies, lemon drops, sugarplums, and the ocean.   There was a small rented orchestra, from which floated sweet strains of gay Christmas music.    Clarice, her auburn hair combed until it shone like ice, wearing an ivy colored velvet dress with balloon sleeves and red lace edging the neck, sleeves, and hem, was looking at the shining silver flutes, deep-polished violin, viola, and cello.

Clara listened blissfully to the clarinet and oboe’s pungent strains.   The adults were whirling gaily in a waltz, the women’s skirts swirling and the scent of sweet perfumes filling the air as they passed.   Frauline Silberhaus (Clara’s mother), was greeting her guests as graciously as one could hope, even though Marie, in a pale lavender linen dress with a smocked bodice, was pulling at her skirt.   Clara, Teresa, Clarice, Floria Rievangentd and Opal Gustav, watched their mothers swirl and dip on the arms of their fathers.  They also had a small quarrel, over whose mother was the finest.   Frauline Silberhaus, in a bright lilac velvet dress with leg o’ mutton sleeves and a high neck, all studded with seed pearls, was indeed beautiful.   Like a sugar plum, Clara thought, as her parents whirled past and the scent of her mother’s perfume, Lily of the Valley, lingered behind to tickle her nose.

Then, the cook, Lies, and Apia, the maid, called to everyone that they could sit at the long, shining table covered with a snowy lace tablecloth.   The children all sat at one end of the table, the adults at the other.  Clara was sandwiched between  Michel and Teresa.   As she ate her chicken and potatoes, ham and apples, and white roll spread thickly with sweet, creamy butter, she couldn’t help but glance over at Michel once in a while.  Teresa noticed this and bit her lip to keep from giggling, but kicked Clara’s ankle gently under the table.  As she sipped her creamy rice soup, with bits of potato, beef, and small slivers of beans, she glanced once again and caught his eye.  She blushed and didn’t look over again.  Teresa’s giggling didn’t make her feel any better.

Clara was absolutely stuffed, but even so, she managed to eat a slice of creamy apple chiffon pie, with a swirl of sweet whipped cream, and vanilla ice cream.

After supper, the adults all sat and talked of the news of the town, and the children played a game of Needle-in-a-Haystack.  Then, seeing that the children were restless and the adults were quieted, Herr Drosselmeyer gestured to Michel and nodded.  Michell left the room into the hall, and pulling it by a rope, brought in an enormous present, wrapped in lilac and blush colored foil, with a blush bow at the top.  The children all rushed towards the box, and the adults leaned forward in their seats.

“Children!  Sit in a circle around the box.  Let the littlest ones up front, so they can see.  That’s much better…tallest to the back.  Good!” Herr Drosselmeyer instructed.  Once the arrangement pleased him, he untied the hug ribbon and the walls of the box collapsed and disappeared, revealing three life-sized dolls.  One, a ballerina, standing on her toes.  The second, a soldier, sword in hand.  Last, a mouse, with a crown on it’s head and a regal robe on his shoulders.

The ballerina had red-gold hair in sausage curled pigtails, tied with very large white bows, printed with Christmas trees and cardinals.   She had very pale, creamy white skin with red circles painted on her cheeks.   She had lifelike blue eyes, which looked almost as though they could laugh and cry like the childrens’ own.  She was wearing a stiff skirt made of white net tulle with white, green, and red satin drapes.  Her bodice was white satin and closely enveloped her stiff body.  She wore green stockings and red satin shoes with ribbons around her ankles, and she stood on the tips of her toes.  Her pale, stiff arms were parallel to the ground, with her elbows bent so her hands faced towards the sky.

The soldier had painted cheeks like the ballerina’s, but he wore a bright red and blue soldier’s uniform with silver medals and trimmings.  He stood at attention, with sword in hand.  The mouse was covered in gray plush, and had a regal golden crown on his head and purple-blue gold trimmed robe over is shoulders, clasped at the front with a ruby brooch.

When Herr Drosselmeyer clapped his hands, the ballerina sprung to life.  She danced backward, moving her legs up and down, touching her toes to her knee, while alternating legs.  She did quick, perfect turns, and high, quiet jumps.   Then, she landed from a perfect jump with ten leg-beats, and stood in quiet, serene stillness.  Drosselmeyer clapped again, and the soldier began to march.  Then he went into perfect, high militarious jumps and turns, intertwined with military marches and salutes. Then, the mouse began to dance.

He moved fluidly and silently, in a way that sent shivers up and down Clara’s spine.  Then, they fell silent, and the children stood up and screamed cheers until they were hoarse.

All the children, that is, except Fritz.  He sat there, on the floor, and frowned.  He thought the dolls were dumb, especially the soldier. That wasn’t how REAL soldiers marched and fought.  He stood up and whispered something to Johann, who nodded and whispered something to Pierre (Clarice’s younger brother), who whispered something to Tomas Gustav, who whispered it to Sebastien Rievangentd.  Then, they all sat down and, stony faced began to complain and boo and hiss the dolls.  Then, Fritz stood up and said, “That thing,” he pointed disgustedly to the soldier doll, “is a disgrace to all of Germany’s army.  And every other countries’ too.  We,” he gestured towards his friends, “will now show you how real soldiers march and fight.”

All the boys stood up, pulled out their dull silver swords and cap guns, and began to march in a straight formation, led by General Fritz Silberhaus.  Then, they stopped, turned to face the dolls, and at Fritz’s call of “CHARGE!,” they lunged at the dolls, poking with their sword and shooting their cap guns.  The girls screamed and cried and threw themselves over the dolls, being constantly poked by dull metal and hit by the corks of cap guns.

Then, Drosselmeyer, eyes practically on fire, swooped down in front of the boys and shooed them away.  The ladies rushed to the aid of their sobbing daughters and, in a cloud of perfume, pulled them up.  None of them were really badly hurt, Teresa had a darkening bruise on her upper left cheekbone where Johann had smacked her with the barrel of his cap gun, Clarice had a small red mark on her neck where she had been shot with a cap gun, and Clara had a long, shallow cut on her face where Fritz had cut her with his sword.  Floria and Opal had long, wide bruises on their legs where their brothers had kicked them.  All of the girls had rumpled dresses and tangled hair, and they all fell against heir mothers, sobbing.  The boys were being scolded by their fathers and were sent out to the hall, with Apia to watch them, for ten minutes.  The girls calmed down and were sitting playing with their dolls, some floppy rag dolls, some expensive china dolls, imported from places like Austria, America, or the Oriental Empire.

Clara’s doll was a china doll with a stuffed cloth body, pale white skin, shiny, curled brown hair tied with a violet silk ribbon, and wearing a violet silk dress, white apron, white stockings, and violet ankle-boots.  Her name was Meg March, and she was from America, a character in a story called Little Women.  Then, Clara’s doll brushed the cut on her face, and Clara cried out, softly and sharply, in pain.  Herr Drosselmeyer, doctor as he was, reached into his bag and put a slimy balm on her cut.  It stung and burned for a moment, then her pain subsided, her cheek numb.

Then, just as the boys were being allowed back in, Herr Drosselmeyer handed Clara a package wrapped in bright, shining blue paper, with a yellow ribbon.  She eagerly untied the ribbon and threw the lid off the box, then flung the sheets of thin, translucent tissue paper away from the gift inside.  Then, she pulled out a strange wooden doll, with a very large wooden jaw.  He had a painted soldier’s outfit with silver and gold painted metallic medals.  His arms moved up and down from the shoulders, his legs bent at the knees so he could march.  It’s a nutcracker! Thought Clara with delight.  She had seen the cheerful, smiling dolls in the frosted window of Schuelebenn’s Confectionery every year around this time, starting around Saturnalia and taken out around the New Year, and she had always wanted one.  She had never asked, but Herr Drosselmeyer knew everything, even the unspoken.  She hugged the Nutcracker, and danced around the festive, fanciful hall, showing him to all the guests.

“Oh, Godfather Drosselmeyer, thank you!” she cried, holding the nutcracker out to one side as she threw herself at her godfather, so as not to crush the nutcracker (or hurt her godfather, who was quite elderly).  But, as she did, her grip loosened, and Fritz lunged.  He grabbed the nutcracker, and holding it high over his head, began to spin violently, so the nutcracker flew out of his hands, purposely mind you, and smashed against the hard wood floor with a nauseating crunch.  Clara shrieked and sprinted towards her injured soldier, and as Fritz was about to jump on his head, she shoved him out of the way and fell to her knees, sobbing.  She scooped up her beloved nutcracker, the right side of his jaw completely cracked off.  Teresa, Clarice, Floria, and Opal ran to Clara and collapsed around her, crooning sympathetic words and offering her their small, lean purses with only a few marks each to her so she could buy a new one.  But Clara was inconsolable, sobbing and shaking, her eyes buried in the nutcracker’s soft fuzzy “hair”.

Michel and Drosselmeyer ran to Clara and shooed the girls away. Michel pulled a clean, white handkerchief out of the pocket of his navy blue velvet suit-coat, and handed it to Drosselmeyer, who bandaged the Nutcracker’s jaw.

“I’ll fix it in the morning Clara. You won’t be able to tell he was ever injured,” Drosselmeyer said, glancing out of the corner of his eye to see Fritz being pulled out of the room by his ear. Michel, who had disappeared, returned pushing a doll’s bed, brass, with curlicues and carved stars, and the soft, cushiony mattress covered by a lace coverlet, into the room. He stopped beside Clara and gently took the nutcracker away. She held firm for a moment; she was not going to let any boy touch him ever again! – Then, reluctantly, she let Michel take him and lay him in the bed, covered by the lacy doily. Then, Drosselmeyer helped Clara up; she was a little weak from crying, and said-

“Never mind the Nutcracker. He is a soldier, of course, and will be fine. Have a good time, the party will be over soon and I don’t want you to have a ruined Christmas night!” he looked at the orchestra and said, “Jingle Bells.” And the orchestra began to play. The children, two by two, began to promenade. Although all the girls wished it, Clara was chosen by Michel, and they led the small troupe of dancer around and around the hall, laughing. Teresa, who was dancing with Sebastien, winked at Clara and laughed and Clara stuck out her tongue at her best friend. Teresa looked hurt for a moment, then began to laugh. Although no one else knew why they were laughing, they began to laugh to, and the peals of laughter soon overpowered the music. Madame Jaques, who was wearing a blush-rose velvet dress with an ivory brocade shawl, looked at Michel and Clara, and turned to Frauline Silberhaus.

“I think your daughter is a little in love,” she said, in her heavily accented, but musical and fluid German.

Frauline Silberhaus looked at Madame Jaques and said, “No, that’s absurd,” and she laughed, but the laugh was tense, because when she looked into Clara’s eyes, she knew it was so. The large Grandfather clock, a gift from Drosselmeyer after an expedition to Scotland, chimed ten, and the party was over.

The Gustavs were first to leave, the baby, Angelinne, had to be put to bed. And as Opal donned her periwinkle cape, trimmed with pure white polar bear fur and embroidered with silver snowflakes, and her white gloves, which were a present from Clara she had received tonight, looked at Clara, standing guard over the tiny doll’s bed with Michel at her side, and shook her head. She didn’t understand that girl. The Rievangentds left soon afterward, and Floria, who was green with envy because she had not been chosen by Michel, did not even look again at Clara, as she tied the hood of her red cloak over her black curls and pale orange dress.

The Jaques left a few minutes later, after Clarice had kissed Clara’s cheek and told her what a nice party it was, and, as they walked out the door, Madame Jaques gave Frauline Silberhause an “I told you so” look. The Clausses left last, and as Teresa walked past Clara, she whispered “Luck is with you tonight!” in her ear softly, and Clara felt her ears darken scarlet. Drosselmeyer had already packed the dolls into his shiny black Renault automobile, and called to Michel. Michel turned to Clara and softly said, “It was a lovely party,” then he shook her hand. Clara found she could not let go, it was as if one of Drosselmeyer’s “hand in the cookie jar” spells had been placed on her. She looked square into Michel’s eyes and heard her mother, somewhere distant, far away, calling “Clara, Clara! It’s time for bed! You must let them go, it is hard and dangerous to drive at night!” and she thought maybe she heard Drosselmeyer calling Michel, but she wasn’t sure, she was far away, in a cloud, not in Germany, not on Earth, but somewhere far, far away, flying farther and farther away. Her mother came towards her and placed a hand on her shoulder, and was gently pulling her away, back to Earth. Drosselmeyer was doing the same to Michel, but the children refused to release hands. But Drosselmeyer pried their fingers apart and pulled Michel away, towards the door.

Later, as Clara was undressing and putting her nightgown on, she kept thinking about her nutcracker, alone and unprotected, downstairs in the dark. As she untied her sash, she saw Fritz grab the doll. She slipped the dress over her head and saw the nutcracker fly through the air. She stepped out of her stockings and saw it smash…. and smash….and smash again. She threw her nightgown over her head and, a blur of white lace, flew down the stairs wearing nothing but her nightgown and dressing shoes. She ran down the stairs for a long time, it seemed to her, forever. She ran down and down and down but never moved, she passed the same glittering chandelier, which reflected rainbows on the white and blue fleur-de-lis wallpaper although no light was hitting it.

She finally reached the hall where the tiny bed lay, overpowered completely by the enormous Christmas tree. She had to stumbled over to the Christmas tree, which had only two small candles, burned nearly to nothing, left lit. She grabbed one so she could se where she was going, and sat down beneath the tree beside her injured soldier’s tiny bed. She intended to carry him upstairs to her room so she wouldn’t have to worry about him there, all alone, but it was so late (the grandfather clock had just struck twelve midnight), and the tree was so dazzling, she couldn’t help but fall asleep.

Later, she awoke when she heard a strange skittering across the hard wooden floor, and a squeak.  She opened her eyes looked around in disbelief.  She saw the toys, cookies, and the tree, but they seemed ten times too large. Have they all grown up… or have I grown down? She wondered, stupefied.  Then, an enormous mouse, with seven heads, each wearing a numbered golden grown with a single ruby on each, and a sapphire on the largest, the one for his main head.  He had a large army of mice behind him and they all carried swords, and three pushed a cannon and a huge supply of ammunition…. Gum drops? And the toys were all alive, the cookies too, and they had hand grenades of jawbreakers, and bombs of powdered donuts.

Then, she saw the nutcracker, his jaw in a sling, at the head of the army of toys and cookies, and the mouse king-general yelled, “CHARGE!”  The mice rushed at the toys and cookies, and the Nutcracker’s army began to fight.  Three mice had captured Meg, who had been left downstairs in a dazed walk upstairs with mother.  Meg was… yes, she was screaming…as they tied her down to the railroad track of Fritz’s toy train.   A mouse started the train up and Clara covered her eyes, not daring to watch, but the nutcracker saved her and shooed her away to be a nurse for the injured cookie (she used frosting to re-attach broken limbs).  Fritz’s jungle-man doll and Marie’s rag doll Byurght, climbed up the tree and bombed the mouse’s army camp below, but Byurght fell – right into the mouse king’s arms, and he threw her aside and she collapsed.  Now, all the cookies were crumbled and the toy’s springs were not springing and their gears were all grinding, but the mouse king attacked once again.

Seven mice surrounded the nutcracker and the mouse king held his sword above the nutcracker’s throat and laughed an evil laugh.  Clara shrieked, “Oh, don’t you hurt my nutcracker!” and in rage, she took of her small, narrow, satin dressing shoe and aimed at the mouse king’s head.  She threw with all her might and hit him square between the eyes.  He swayed and fell down, dead.  His army, now outnumbered, ran away through the cracks in the walls in terror.  But, they didn’t get away before the nutcracker had cut off crown number seven.  Then, he placed it on Clara’s head, and then, a brilliant pink and gold light filled the dark hall, so bright that Clara had to cover her eyes with her lower arm.  But, she did look out as he golden hair swirled around her face and her nightgown whipped back in the wind.  Her nutcracker was now a handsome prince.  Why, he looks just like Michel! Thought Clara.

“Clara, first you were kind to me, and now you have saved my life!  Would you please come back to my kingdom with me and be my princess?” asked the handsome prince as he bent to kiss her hand.

“Of course!  The prince of Germany was my nutcracker?” she said, astonished.

“No! Of course not! I’m Prince Lemonpop, from the candy kingdom.  My stepmother turned me into a nutcracker two months ago, and she said I could only be a boy again if I could get a girl to love me, be the general of an army, win a battle, and retrieve the seventh crown of the evil mouse king, Jubileo.  A tall order to fill, wasn’t it?” he said, and laughed.

“Th…The CANDY kingdom?! You’re the prince of candy?” she asked, nearly yelling with delight.

“Of course!  Caramel! Pudding!” he called, and two fuzzy bumble bees with a dark brown sleigh between them appeared out of nowhere to whisk them away.

“Taste the carriage,” urged the prince with a smile.

“Taste the carriage?” Clara asked wrinkling her nose.

“Just taste it… I promise it’s good!” he said and broke a small chunk off his side of the carriage and handed it to her.  She sniffed it suspiciously and then- “It’s chocolate!” she cried in delight, and stuffed the sticky, sweet mass into her mouth and small rivers of chocolate oozed from the sides of her mouth.  As she giggled, she raised her hand to wipe her mouth only to find that her simple white nightgown had transformed into a shimmering, iridescent gown of shimmering satin and glazed lace, embedded with diamonds and silver glitter.  Then they passed into a snow-laden forest with silver trees and tiny, pearly birds. The snowflakes turned, flipped, and danced for them.

Then the snow queen, in a frosty white dress, on the arm of her frozen cavalier – “Jack Frost!” Clara cried in delight later – pointed their way to a licorice bridge over a river of vanilla seltzer. Clara dipped her hand over the side and sipped the frothy delight, then hiccuped, and the price laughed.  Then they reached the most marvelous, dreamy place Clara had ever seen.  There was the lake of seltzer, which changed flavors, the prince said, with every hour, like the river.  Currently, it too, was vanilla.  It also could be chocolate, orange, grape, strawberry, lime, raspberry, caramel, peanut butter, cola, almond, or cherry.  On this lake, marzipan frogs sat on fruit leather lily pads, catching licorice flies.  On a green buttercream field nearby, white chocolate unicorns with horns of saltwater taffy lounged by spun-sugar lambs.  Small houses of sugar wafers or graham cracker stood in a neat row on the grape fruit leather street, while tiny gummy rabbits, squirrels, and chipmunks skittered across the buttercream lawns, while a few children ice skated on a rink of pineapple gelatin.  Then, a spectacular sight- the candy castle, pink frosted sugar cookie, with melted sugar windows and marshmallow crenellation.  The whole village glistened as if dusted by sugar but then, Clara thought, it is dusted by sugar in the candy kingdom.

Then, a tall, lean palace guard with a handlebar mustache and orange hair, who was accompanied by a short, stout guard with a goatee and yellow hair, saw the prince coming, and, fumbling and bumbling, pulled out his gold cornet and blasted three quick, staccato notes: C, E, G!  Then, in the bat of an eye, all the subjects of Garshmalderer (the formal name for the candy kingdom) were lining the chocolate shaving sidewalk up to the caramel drawbridge on licorice strings over the Seltzer River.  They bowed in a perfect wave as they walked by, Clara floating on the arm of her royal prince.  Once inside the castle, the prince was taken up stairs to his room, which had been kept clean for him in high hopes of his return.

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December 8, 2009

Book Bloggers Get Blogged: The First Daughter

Filed under: Book Bloggers Get Blogged — Tags: , , — admin @ 5:02 pm

Book Bloggers Get Blogged!

In talking to Chelsea (The Page Flipper) and Heather (Book Woman), I thought it would be a fun to turn the tables and do a series on my blog of interviews with YA book bloggers — let them be the stars! So now every Tuesday, another Book Blogger will be featured.

If you’re interested, please e-mail me.

Danielle S., The First Daughter/There’s A Book

1.  Describe yourself without using any qualifiers relating to reading, blogging, or writing… who are you outside of your literary life?

I’m a mom to two wonderful kiddos whom I’ve nicknamed The Turkeybird and Littlebug, and have now been married for 5 years. We recently moved from Virginia to California after my husband graduated law school and started work with a law firm here. It’s been a whirlwind, but I’m glad to be settled finally. I also have a love of music; most of my life has been spent studying and performing the flute (around 25 years of it). Besides those things I have a passion for teaching and helping others in whatever way I can.

2.  You’re trapped in a dystopian society like that in Fahrenheit 451, where all books, periodicals, scriptures, texts, or other forms of written communication have been banned… but in this society, every person can hoard away one piece of writing to keep for herself.  What is the one written piece that you choose to keep, and why?

If I had to chose, I would say my own personal journal. So many things and thoughts can be contained in a journal and I have found throughout my life that it is the one thing I always refer back to. In good times and bad I can turn to it for guidance or merely to see how far I’ve come so that I can have the encouragement I need to carry on.

3.  Congratulations!  You’ve been given the position as Personal Assistant to any author of your choice (all time periods and genres allowed)… who is it, and what’s the biggest problem you have to overcome working with them?

Probably Cassandra Clare. She’s an amazing writer and extremely snarky, which I think is great! But my biggest problem would be holding my own, because I truly think she can dish it out so well.

4.  When it comes to reading and reviewing, which aspect of a book is the most important to you?  The plot?  The characters?  The setting?  Something else entirely?

Absolutely, without a doubt, THE PLOT! I usually have a hard time not picking up on what is going to happen in a story (or even a TV show or movie) and it drives me crazy. So, when I can pick up a book and get to the end without thinking, “oh yeah, this again…” it’s truly the best thing ever and I will generally read the book over and over.

5.  If book blogging weren’t an option, how would your reading habits be affected?  Would you be as motivated to read if you couldn’t widely impart your thoughts on books to other readers?

Yes, in fact if I was blogging I’d probably read more, if I’m being honest. But I have a desire to help others who have been in my same predicament and so the time spent blogging is very rewarding.

6.  You’re giving a dinner party for three contemporary (living) YA authors and three dead classical authors.  Who are they, and who do you seat next to whom?  Why?

Contemporary: Stephanie Meyer, Holly Black and Cassandra Clare

Classical: Jane Austen, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ayn Rand (Not sure if these all qualify, but I like them, so there!)

Besides keeping Meyer and Austen apart because they would never shut up, I really don’t mind who sits by whom, although Fitzgerald and Clare could have some very interesting conversation to listen in on I think. Most I picked these authors because they’re all ones I love. There work inspires me and is enjoyable to read.

7.  What’s your favorite punctuation mark?  Why?

Recently, the good ole ? This comes because my son is just getting into that stage where he asks questions like “where does the water come from???” And so on…I think it’s great, that is if I can tolerate it.

8.  What literary device could you happily never see used again?  (Simile, metaphor, spoonerism, hyperbole, etc.)

Don’t really have one I feel is overly used, so keep them all!

9.  What is your favorite local bookstore?  What’s a bookstore that you’ll never set foot in again?  And do you have a ‘dream bookstore’ that you’d either love to visit… or would love to design and own one day?

Unfortunately the local bookstore I loved went out of business last year. It was in the town we are living in currently and was where we purchased one of my sons first books. The amazing thing about it was that on the walls it had original art work from all the children’s illustrators in the store. I loved it! It also wasn’t super cluttered with rows of never-ending books that you couldn’t get through with small children in tow, so it was perfect for me at the time. This would probably also fit into my ‘dream bookstore’ as well, I just think that there should be some kind of incorporation of authors/illustrators to keep the public in touch with where they’re getting their “entertainment”, it makes it more personal. It did for me at least. Don’t really have a bookstore I wouldn’t go into.

10.  Have you been to any Teen Read Week events or other Writers’ Conferences?  What was your favorite meet-and-greet or interview experience?

No conferences yet, but I am planning on attending BEA in May 2010. My favorite “interview” has been with the illustrator for the site, Jenny Mattheson, she has been amazing and is wonderful at what she does.

11.  In your opinion, what is a YA novel?  How is it different from a children’s novel, and how is it different from an adult novel?  What makes someone a YA reader — because it’s clearly more than a matter of their being “a young adult.”

I think more of it has to do with a state of mind and not so much an age number. A children’s novel is most definitely aimed at children – you can feel the whimsical nature attached to it. And an “adult” novel seems to me, in my personal experience, a little more technical or analytical. Most of us may not want to admit it, but our “highschool” or college years were some of our most fun times. Our emotions and feeling were tied to everything we did. This is what makes a YA novel to me. It’s about the emotional experience the feeling of adventure in whatever aspect it takes on. This doesn’t make it juvenile in my opinion, but embraces our truest nature, the feeling part of us.

12.  What’s your guilty pleasure reading snack?  And what’s your guilty pleasure to read while snacking on it?

Definitely Lindt White Chocolate Truffles, but I can’t eat too many, it’s just not good for me. My guilty pleasure to read…anything written by Charlaine Harris or Stephenie Meyer. What can I say?

13.  “Don’t judge a book by its movie!”  As a connoisseur of all types of books, which genre do you think translates the best from page to screen?  What’s your favorite book-to-movie adaptation?  Conversely, what’s a book that you hope never to see filmed?

I think I’d be a little prejudiced by saying I think YA books translate best, but that’s probably because I don’t like a lot of “adult” books and the ones I have read that became movies stink. Even though it was a while ago I still think the first Harry Potter movie, The Sorcerer’s Stone was the best book to movie translation. I’m not really looking forward to The Host by Stephanie Meyer being made into a movie, because I think it could be very bad.

14.  What are your plans for the future?  Do you see yourself working in the literary community?

I plan on continuing forward with There’s A Book in hopes that I can expand on some of the features I have planned, like “When I Was Young”. As far as working in the literary community, I’d love the opportunity, but primarily to help encourage reading in youth. I think the industry has come a long way in a few short years and I want to do my part to continue it’s growth.

15.  Describe your perfect reading location… are you in a coffee shop sipping cappuccino or curled up at home near the window?  Reading on a Kindle in the Big City or taking in the smell of a dusty hardcover?

Anywhere quiet, without children, if I’m reading for myself and I’d have to have a hardcover – I’m way more into the feel of the book in my hands. But if I’m doing what I do everyday, it would be sitting down on the overstuffed “beanbag” chair in my sons room with him curled up next to me reading out of a stack of books he picked out while he continues to say, “more more mom!”

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December 5, 2009

A Quick Meditation on the Holidays

I have this memory of December years and years ago, the first night I was allowed to walk home from M’s house after dark alone: it was snowing just a little, the snowflakes small as the eye of a needle and swirling around the few streetlights on their stone poles, causing the patches of air around the lamplights to shimmer like water.

I could see my small warm white breath chugging in front of me; I was bundled in my first black peacoat and matching black beret with pink woolen gloves and black prairie boots — no cat-eye glasses yet, but the first vestiges of me having the confidence to wear what I like (though I’d never wear prairie boots now). The snow came to just below the tops of those black prairie boots, below the treads was a thin layer of ice where people had been kind enough to shovel their walks — but most people were not — and I kicked the sides of the snowdrifts, spraying icy crystals in cold arcs from my toes.

It was the first night that I had felt, in a very long time, like M was my friend and the first night that I’d ever felt like I was going to grow up, and that was OK. I hated change, I hated the idea of growing up, but that night, it seemed like perhaps — just perhaps — I would be happier grown up than as a middle school girl.

I now consider that to be the single most obvious epiphany anyone has ever had.

But I stood on the corner of her street and mine and I looked to my left, at the sight I’d begged to walk home in the dark to see: the house that always won the neighborhood award for Best Christmas Decorations, lit from foundation to rooftop in tiny sparkling gumdrops of red, amber, blue, emerald, and silver-white, each light magnified in its glimmer by the swirling snow.   Over my other shoulder, though, was the view into the front windows of the neighborhood’s haunted house — it didn’t look scary that night, through the eyelet lace curtains the family living there at the time had hung, buttery golden light pouring out onto the expanse of snow in their front lawn.

It was beautiful.

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December 1, 2009

Book Bloggers Get Blogged: The Penultimate Page

Filed under: Book Bloggers Get Blogged — Tags: , , , — admin @ 6:21 pm

Book Bloggers Get Blogged!

In talking to Chelsea (The Page Flipper) and Heather (Book Woman), I thought it would be a fun to turn the tables and do a series on my blog of interviews with YA book bloggers — let them be the stars! So now every Tuesday, another Book Blogger will be featured.

If you’re interested, please e-mail me.

Emilee, 16. The Penultimate Page

1.  Describe yourself without using any qualifiers relating to reading, blogging, or writing… who are you outside of your literary life?

Hmmm, that’s actually really hard. Let’s see. I’m big on cooking and baking. I love baking anything decadent like cupcakes, tortes, pies, etc. I don’t like to keep these around the house, so I mostly bake for parties or give them away. I start with an easy recipe and then change it up and make it my own. On the other hand, I LOVE cooking healthy food. I’m allergic to practically everything (meat, dairy, soy) so it’s hard to find things I can eat, therefore I end up making almost everything I eat from scratch. I’m not sure if it’s sad that the only things my life revolves around are baking/cooking and “those words I can’t use” but I love it!

2.  You’re trapped in a dystopian society like that in Fahrenheit 451, where all books, periodicals, scriptures, texts, or other forms of written communication have been banned… but in this society, every person can hoard away one piece of writing to keep for herself.  What is the one written piece that you choose to keep, and why?

Oh God. Of books that are officially out, I would mash up all of the Wicked Lovely books by Melissa Marr into one volume and keep those. But then again, there’s all of Sarah Dessen’s books… Ack! Why do you do this to me Hayley?! I’m going to go with the Wicked Lovely series because when someone asks me what my favorite books are, I immediately say Wicked Lovely.

3.  Congratulations!  You’ve been given the position as Personal Assistant to any author of your choice (all time periods and genres allowed)… who is it, and what’s the biggest problem you have to overcome working with them?

Melissa Marr. Definitely. It is my dream to even be able to sit down and talk with her, let alone be her assistant. I think the biggest problem I would have would be not perusing her notes or just wanting to pick her brain all day. Folklore is one of my greatest interests, and to me, she is master.

4.  When it comes to reading and reviewing, which aspect of a book is the most important to you?  The plot?  The characters?  The setting?  Something else entirely?

Though plot, characters and setting are all important, I think writing style is crucial. The story can be the most innovative idea, the characters might be the most personable, and the setting can be vivid, but if the writing style is in the pits, I can’t read the book. I’m not saying I only enjoy on style of writing, every author has their own style (thank God!) but sometimes, I just can’t get into the story if the style is off for me. I will always look at every element with a critical eye, though. I will give you the good and the bad because someone else might like the style and I don’t want them to ignore the book because all I touched on was the style and not the fabulous plot, characters, and setting.

5.  If book blogging weren’t an option, how would your reading habits be affected?  Would you be as motivated to read if you couldn’t widely impart your thoughts on books to other readers?

Most definitely. Blogging is a hobby, reading is life. I was reading the same amount of books pre-blog. My blog really just allows me to share that love, as well as find other fantastic books I hadn’t yet heard of. Reading and enjoying the book is at the top of my list. Everyone, I believe, thinks about the book as they read, I just make notes and then mash them all together for my blog. If I have nothing to say about a book, I don’t review it. Simple as that.

6.  You’re giving a dinner party for three contemporary (living) YA authors and three dead classical authors.  Who are they, and who do you seat next to whom?  Why?

Oh my, let’s see. Melissa Marr (obviously), Kiersten White (Paranormalcy, 2010), Anastasia Hopcus (Shadow Hills, 2010), Jakob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm, and Jane Austen. I’m not sure who I would sit next to who. I would probably not assign seats. This would be a cocktail party where we could all mill around and I could soak up everybody’s awesomeness.

7.  What’s your favorite punctuation mark?  Why?

Do people actually have favorite punctuation marks? This is new to me! I think, probably, the comma. Can you tell? I often have a thought, which turns into a sentence, then as I am typing said sentence, I get another thought that I want to interject, hence my love of commas.

8.  What literary device could you happily never see used again?  (Simile, metaphor, spoonerism, hyperbole, etc.)

I think it depends on the piece of work. Honestly, the overused simile gets me the most. I understand that she was “as quiet as a mouse” and as “courageous as a lion.” Aren’t there any other quiet or courageous animals?

9.  What is your favorite local bookstore?  What’s a bookstore that you’ll never set foot in again?  And do you have a ‘dream bookstore’ that you’d either love to visit… or would love to design and own one day?

I LOVE Half Price Books near where I live now. I’m directly between two different branches, so I have a lot of choices. I have yet to go to Blue Willow Books, the indie I have heard a lot about near here. Luckily, it’s closer to where I’m moving next month, so I’ll be able to check it out and attend the awesome signings they have. However, I am moving walking distance, literally one minute, away from a brand new Barnes and Noble, so I see myself spending a lot of time there. On the other hand, I have a strict book budget, so Amazon is my best friend.

10.  Have you been to any Teen Read Week events or other Writers’ Conferences?  What was your favorite meet-and-greet or interview experience?

I haven’t been to either of those, but this past October I attended the first annual Austin Teen Book Festival in Austin, Texas. The one word I can use to describe the event it: FABULOUS! I got to meet and hang out with Lauren and Korianne, two awesome bloggers, and Anastasia Hopcus, author of Shadow Hills which comes out in July 2010. Also, I got to meet and listen to tons of authors that were there also, like, Carrie Jones, Libba Bray, Justine Larbalestier, and more! It was a fantastic experience and I can’t wait for my next festival, which is BEA in May 2010!

11.  In your opinion, what is a YA novel?  How is it different from a children’s novel, and how is it different from an adult novel?  What makes someone a YA reader — because it’s clearly more than a matter of their being “a young adult.”

I think, technically, a book is classified as YA based on the ages of the characters. A YA reader? That’s different. It’s definitely not based on age, that’s for sure. I LOVE the story telling in YA books and I think that’s what makes me a YA reader, the love of the story.

12.  What’s your guilty pleasure reading snack?  And what’s your guilty pleasure to read while snacking on it?

Hot chocolate, definitely. I don’t normally eat when reading, because I’m afraid I will ruin my books. Normally I just drink green tea, that’s the health nut in me. My guilty pleasure reading is the Sookie Stackhouse series. Pure fluff for me, but I am addicted. (I own every single one!)

13.  “Don’t judge a book by its movie!”  As a connoisseur of all types of books, which genre do you think translates the best from page to screen?  What’s your favorite book-to-movie adaptation?  Conversely, what’s a book that you hope never to see filmed?

I think contemporary books translate best. This is probably because there usually aren’t a whole lot of special effects or complicated settings. Less to muck up, still a lot to go wrong, but less than with a fantasy/paranormal. My favorite adaptation is probably the Narnia movies. I know this goes against my contemporary over fantasy, but I love them. Still, no where near as good as the books, but fabulous nonetheless. I can’t wait for Dawn Treader in December 2010! As far as a book I hope to never see filmed, Wicked Lovely was at the top of that list, but since it is being adapted, I will just have to disconnect the book and movie and look at them separately. Honestly, I don’t want any book turned into a movie because it ruins the story for me as far as the picture I have in my head, but if I just look at them separately, I’ll think I’d be okay with anything.

14.  What are your plans for the future?  Do you see yourself working in the literary community?

Oh, definitely. I’m working on my first novel, or at least, I hope it comes out as a novel. I’m really proud of what I have so far, but it’s still a work in progress. My dream is to open my own indie bookstore. I want it to have a cupcake bakery and bookstore downstairs and then upstairs I want it to have a sort of “writer’s haven.” A huge room full of overstuffed chairs and fireplaces where people can come to write or read away from distractions and WiFi.

15.  Describe your perfect reading location… are you in a coffee shop sipping cappuccino or curled up at home near the window?  Reading on a Kindle in the Big City or taking in the smell of a dusty hardcover?

Usually, I read in bed, but I imagine myself in an overstuffed chair in front of the fire, hence my answer to the last question. I have never tried an e-reader, but I think I would always take a physical book over an e-book.

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