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February 11, 2010

When Your Failboat Hits the Blogging Iceberg

At this very moment, I am doing A Very Scary Thing.

I am writing a blog entry.

“Why is that scary?” you might ask.  “You write every day!  You Tweet!  You comment on LiveJournal!”

“That’s different,” I might respond.  “That is responding to someone.  I know there’s a person on the other end reading my words, and I know I don’t sound totally stupid.  Or… if I do, it’s only 140 characters of teh dumb.”

I think my phobia of blogging stems from three distinct stimuli:

1.  I really loved Meg Cabot’s blog in high school.

2.  I was a geek in first grade.

3.  Blog entries, other than Book Bloggers Get Blogged, are about myself and not about a friend, acquaintance, or fictional character.

When I was sixteen, I thought Meg Cabot was the coolest, funniest, savviest, most insightful person alive.  I mean, let’s face it, she still is.  All-American Girl and Princess in Love still make me laugh out loud every time I read them, and that really speaks to their lasting humor, considering how often I reread books.

I think what I admired — and still admire, and now envy — most about Meg’s blogging is her way of making her own life read like a hilarious, engaging story.  I have that ability in person, I think… I hope… maybe… but I psych myself out when it comes to blogging.  I get great blog ideas in the shower every day (as a Digital Age baby is wont to do) and I open up Wordpress and look at the blank textbox and freeze up.

November 2006

I am once again setting myself the goal of blogging more like Meg Cabot. Or, actually, more like the Princess Diaries books. Maybe it will help me to develop talent for writing. Or at least give me some material about which to crappily write. Whichever.

Although I’ve gotta say, in general, I find people who blog about “What happened to me today” to be completely ridiculous, because, I hate to tell them, people generally really don’t care about what you did today. Like my roommate, for instance, who updates her Livejournal about four times a day and writes about how she… sat at her desk, writing on LJ.

Four years later, I still think that’s true, and that is the reason for my Blog Stimuli #1: Meg Cabot Is Cool.  When she blogs about her day, she’s able to make me care and laugh and envy and think.  Of course, part of that stems from the fact that her days seem to be pretty fascinating — she gets to wear a tiara, for pete’s sake!  She knows Judy Blume!  She gets TV channels!

I realize that many blogs’ format is to include aspects of daily life along with a hook (and Meg’s hook is simply, “I Am Meg Cabot”), but… I don’t know.  Even blogs that I find fascinating have some sort of hook, a reason why I pay attention — and it’s rarely the actual blog portion.

Foodblogs?

I like the pictures. Food is really pretty, especially macarons, which are the benchmark of a good foodblog.

Sleep Talkin’ Man?

…Does anyone read the little italics after what Man has Sleep-Talked?   I don’t.  I just read the bits about how kittens have TOO MANY WHISKERS, TOO MANY WHISKERS!

The authors whose blogs I enjoy intimidate me for a different reason, however.  They are more closely related to my Blog Phobia Stimuli #2: I Was A Geek In First Grade.

Actually, to be more honest, I was a geek from age one onward.  But first grade is really the impetus of my blogosphereophobia.  (It’s a real word.  It is.  Swear.)

In first grade, my elementary school hired a Music Appreciation teacher who seemed to completely miss the part of her teacher certification in which she should have been informed that first graders are six years old, do not generally have musical training, and listen to things like Mary-Kate & Ashley’s Brother For Sale or I, Grover.  Sometime in October, she gave us the assignment of writing an original Christmas carol.

Because we totally knew how to compose music.

Because we were absolutely not six years old.

So I went home and I worked and I worked and I wrote out some lyrics about ornaments, and I brought my song to school.

Every time I sit down to write a blog entry, I feel like I’m wearing my pink leggings and sitting on the too-big piano bench, being made to try to play the piano and sing an original Christmas carol in front of my pantsuit-clad, spiral-permed music teacher and twenty-two other kids who already tease me every day.

The teacher started laughing halfway through the first verse of my song and told me I was murdering her piano, which really should have been expected as I had never touched one before in my entire life, but the worst part was not the teacher belittling me.  It was the reactions of my classmates.  Three or four kids laughed at me back, but most everyone else just sat on the floor, watching the glowing lights in their Lite-Up shoes.  On the one hand, it’s awesome that probably no one else remembers the moment of my mortification, but on the other, it would have been really nice to have just one kid stand up and say, “Hey!  You never taught us piano, lady!  You can’t laugh at us for not knowing how to play!”

This would never have happened in a first grade Music Appreciation classroom, but it’s the emotion that counts.  My fear of blogging is less about sounding stupid and boring, and more about not sounding like anything at all.

That feeling is what segues into Blogosphereophobia Stimuli #3: I Am Not A Fictional Character.

I love writing about fictional characters.

I would hope that this is somewhat obvious, at this point.

Ever since I discovered that I was allowed to create my own characters, it’s been my passion, but more than that, it’s the discovery of someone else’s life, motivations, and experiences that fascinates me.  It’s why I studied History, Journalism, and Creative Writing in college.  It’s why I enjoyed interviewing popstars for Tommy2.net and why I liked transcribing long, rambling recollections of WWII vets for PBS.  Listening to the conversations around me was my favorite part of being a barista in New York City, and the one part of being a college admission counselor that really suited me was speaking one-on-one with really great, interesting prospective students.

But I already know me!

So, to make my Blogosphereophobia less severe, tell me: Who are you?  What do you like reading blogs about?  How did you stumble across my little blog, and what do you want to know about me?

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November 29, 2009

The Wisdom of Small Children

Earlier this week, at my grandfather’s funeral, the son of my dad’s cousin sat on my great-aunt’s lap and pulled out an Etch-A-Sketch.

“I’m drawling a picture for the girl I’m gonna marry,” he said proudly.  “She has brown hair and a birthday in April, just like me.  Her name is Charlene.  That’s spelled S-H-R-L-L-L-L-L.”

The night before, he’d asked me if I am bigger than a first-grader.

I said yes, and that I’m even bigger than a SEVENTEENTH-GRADER.  He looked amazed, and said that his friend Lauren is just a big first-grader.

Kids, man.

And now: A popular meme.

A first grade teacher collected well known proverbs. She gave each child in her class the first half of a proverb and asked them to come up with the remainder of the proverb. Their insight may surprise you.

Better to be safe than… punch a 5th grader.

Never underestimate the power of… termites.

You can lead a horse to water but… how?

Don’t bite the hand that… looks dirty.

No news is… impossible.

A miss is as good as a… Mr.

You can’t teach an old dog new… math.

If you lie down with dogs, you’ll… stink in the morning.

Love all, trust… me.

The pen is mightier than the… pigs.

An idle mind is… the best way to relax.

Where there’s smoke there’s… pollution.

A penny saved is… not much.

Don’t put off till tomorrow what…you put on to go to bed.

Laugh and the whole world laughs with you, cry and… you have to blow your nose.

None are so blind as… Stevie Wonder.

Children should be seen and not… spanked or grounded.

If at first you don’t succeed… get new batteries.

You get out of something what you… see pictured on the box.

When the blind leadeth the blind… get out of the way.

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October 5, 2009

Music Mondays: The Boat That Rocked Soundtrack

The Boat That Rocked My dad likes to tell the story of when he took me to a garage sale when I was about two and I picked up a discarded pricetag from the ground, held it up in the air, jumped up and down, and yelled, “LOOK!  I GOT A TICKET TO RIDE!”

My love affair with The Beatles began almost at birth.  This is actually sort of odd, since neither of my parents is a huge Beatlemaniac, but I distinctly remember that on one road trip up to Wisconsin to visit my grandparents when I was three, we listened to the Oldies Station and for the seven minutes that “Hey Jude” played, I finally sat still, shut up, and stopped performing an argumentative puppet show with my feet.

My left foot was Carpeachy.  My right foot was Carpoochy.  They didn’t agree on anything except that they liked “Hey Jude.”

The Beatles aren’t included on the soundtrack for The Boat That Rocked, a Richard Curtis film released in Europe a few months ago and due out — abridged, and under the name Pirate Radio – in America on November 13.  However, the soundtrack is as effervescent, raucous, and comforting as The Beatles’ best work.  Or at the very least, like an excellent deejay’s selections on the local Oldies station.

I think that the reason that I love oldies music is that, well, it seems like everyone loves oldies music. I’ve met very few people who don’t know at least a few Beatles songs, an Elvis, maybe some Neil Diamond they can’t name, or some unitelligible Bob Dylan.

Anyone who throws a party asserts their right to “cry if they want to, cry if they want to, cry if they want to,” and more people know Ecclesiastes to the rhythm sung by The Byrds than by any preacher.

“Oldies music” is the only genre I know that’s universally tolerated, and certainly almost universally enjoyed.

But really, there is nothing like watching the rain-slicked highway sliding past, and truly beautiful midwestern farm landscape — which I used to hate, but living here for years now, really out in the middle of the farmland, it’s something I’ve grown to really love.  The richly variegated fields of grass and green soybean shoots…

And I get really overexcited whenever we see cows that are doing anything besides eating (sitting cows are exciting, but cows walking around make me bounce up and down in my seat!).

The drives when the gray clouds are hanging low over the silos are so peaceful — listening to “Hey Jude,” or “Windy,” or “Incense and Peppermints.”

“Sympathy for the Devil.”

“Son of a Preacher Man.”

The songs that everyone knows, and everyone sings along.

When the rain slicks are lit by headlights like streaks of stellar motion and the landscape is twinkling with lights on faraway towers and white-curtained windows in the weathered farmhouses, the music of my parents’ generation doubling as my soundtrack, the rural midwest seems so much more majestic than I ever thought Chicago or New York City to be.

The soundtrack also benefits from undeniable earworms like The Turtles’ “Elenore” (Elenore, gee I think you’re swell… ahhhh-AHHHHH…) and “The Letter” by The Boxtops.  The songs that just make you happy, until you realize they’ve been stuck in your head for three days.

Although I’d like to press that I’m glad to have “All Day and All of the Night” stuck in my head instead of “Single Ladies,” for a change.  It’s about time, honestly.

Taylor Hanson once summed up the popularity of his song “Mmmbop” and other earworms as, “The first music you really fall in love with is more than just music. it is something that clicks in you beyond the song, it’s a message or image that causes you to jump in and not let go.”

I fully agree with that.  For me, at least, the music that I heard in my parents’ cars when I bothered to sit and be quiet, or became enthralled with in goofy action sequences on The Monkees, or heard while waiting to see if someone would dance with me at the fourth grade Sock Hop, has become so ingrained in my being that listening to the soundtrack of The Boat That Rocked is like wrapping myself up in a quilt of my own life history, even though all of its music was made long before I was even born.  It doesn’t matter.  It’s the music that taught me what music feels like.

I think people who can truly live a life in music are telling the world, ‘You can have my love, you can have my smiles. Forget the bad parts, you don’t need them. Just take the music, the goodness, because it’s the very best, and it’s the part I give.”  — George Harrison, 1943 – 2001.

“To all our listeners, this is what I have to say – God bless you all. And as for you bastards in charge, don’t dream it’s over. Years will come, years will go, and politicians will do **** all to make the world a better place. But all over the world, young men and young women will always dream dreams and put those dreams into song. Nothing important dies tonight, just a few ugly guys on a crappy ship. The only sadness tonight is that, in future years, there’ll be so many fantastic songs that it will not be our privilege to play. But, believe you me, they will still be written, they will still be sung and they will be the wonder of the world. … Hit It!” — Philip Seymour Hoffman & Rhys Ifans, The Boat That Rocked/Pirate Radio, 2009

(more…)

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October 1, 2009

Banned Books Week: Throwing Pots

When I was in grades K-12, my mother was always heavily involved in our local school district.  When I was in elementary school, she was the president of our PTA (Parent-Teacher Association), and as I got older, she moved upwards in the ranks until she was the president of the local School Board.

This morning, I called her and thanked her for never banning a book.

All week, I have been reading about the struggles had recently by Laurie Halse Anderson and Lauren Myracle, and thinking about J.K. Rowling and Phillip Pullman and Mark Twain and Judy Blume… and I salute them for telling their stories the way they are meant to be told, the way they needed to be told.

When I was in fourth grade, I came home with a copy of Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing and my mother caught me reading it in my lap at the table while I had my after-school snack, and she asked what I was reading so intently.

“It’s a book by Judy Blume,” I said.  “I really like it, she’s a really good writer.”

Then, my mother and I had a talk about Judy Blume, and how she writes books for all different ages, so while it was OK for me to read the Fudge & Peter Hatcher books in fourth grade, she didn’t want me to read other Judy Blume books yet.  But, she said, when I was in fifth grade, I could read Are You There God?  It’s Me, Margaret and Starring Sally J. Freedman as Herself.

She did not want me to read Deenie or Tiger Eyes or Forever until at least when I was in high school.

And of course, I thought this was unfair, because Judy Blume is a fantastic writer, but I listened, because she explained to me why she didn’t want me reading those books yet, and about how different subjects are appropriate for children at different ages and stages of life.

I thanked her for that this morning, too.  It is immense that she had that discussion with me instead of just forbidding me to read any more Blume books, even though she knew that I might have my curiosity piqued and promptly go attempt to check out Forever from the public library.

In all honesty, had she forbidden it, I would have done exactly that.

But the dialogue educated me so much more, and when I did finally read Forever, I was well-equipped to understand why I’d needed to mature and wait.  When I read Forever, I was seventeen, and in no way was the book “bad” for me, or “harmful.”

And yet Forever is still the 13th Most Frequently Challenged book in America.

I think that the reason that books are banned is that many parents are so afraid of having those discussions with their children, because they fear that the repercussions of introducing that there may be inappropriate ideas in the world is the same as introducing those inappropriate concepts themselves.

I feel like books and concepts and discussions all have to go hand-in-hand to have any meaning whatsoever… reading Forever would not have had the same impact on me had I not talked with my mother about it some eight years before.  At the same time, I think I would have read Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing differently and never had the guts to approach Are You There God?  It’s Me, Margaret without knowing that something else was coming… I was growing and building to something and that there were things out there that really did change when you were a grown-up.

In seventh grade, when our school celebrated ALA Banned Books Week and my class read The Giver, my teacher, Ms. Fitzgibbons, (who was brilliant; one of the best teachers that I ever had) likened growing up to the process of throwing a pot: every person is born freeform, like a lump of clay, and every experience you ever have — every word you read, every discussion you have — is like another hand on the potter’s wheel.  You cannot unlive an experience or unread a word or untalk a talk any more than the clay could become untouched and raw again.  The words we read are like only right hands, and the words we speak and hear only left hands.  Without both, the pot comes out lopsided and can’t be fully functional.

The metaphor is a little convoluted, but the endpoint is clear.

If you only read challenged books on the sly, hidden with your penlight in your closet, then you are missing an essentially important part of the process: Why did the author write those words?  Why did your parents or school or town not want you to read them?

Your pot will be floopy and lopsided and fall over all the time and will never be good at carrying water.

I know.  I was not supposed to be reading the last three books of the Janie Johnson series by Caroline Cooney, but I was so intrigued by the first and I thought Reeve was so dreamy (Reeve!  His name was Reeve!  Clearly, he was a hunk!) that I ignored my mother saying, “No, there are some things that I don’t want you to read.”

And I hid the fact that I read them anyway, and kept them under my mattress.

And I still feel squirmy inside now, in a bad, stomach-full-of-snakes way, when I hear the names “Reeve” or “Janie” because I knew, while reading their sex scene, that I was doing something wrong even though they weren’t.  I wasn’t supposed to be reading that book, and instead of understanding and growing and appreciating the story, I felt…

Floopy.  And lopsided.

Do I think that the Janie Johnson series should be banned because I felt badly after reading it?

Absolutely not.  Emphatically, fist-shakingly assuredly not.

But do I wish I had talked about it with someone older and trusted when it confused me… just like Harry Potter does whenever he is thrown a situation he doesn’t feel he can handle on his own in another frequently-banned series?

Absolutely yes.

Would it have been profoundly awkward to tell my mom that I’d read Whatever Happened to Janie, The Voice on the Radio, and What Janie Found?

Emphatically, first-shakingly, assuredly YES.

But would it have been better to have talked about why the pressure Reeve puts on Janie to have sex made me feel so uncomfortable?

Also yes.

While I feel kind of squicky writing about Reeve and Janie and how awkward I felt and how very much too young I was to have read Caroline B. Cooney’s books when I did (at age eleven), I am still glad that they were available for me to find and read and learn that lesson.

Even though maybe that part of my pottery is kind of dented.

Because if books are banned…

If they aren’t allowed at all…

Then the clay just sits.

And waits.

And dries out to nothing at all, except a pale and crackled slab that cannot even absorb water, much less carry it towards those who need it.

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August 26, 2009

Wordy Wednesday: Bedtime Stories

I grew up as that lucky kid whose parents read her a book or told her a story every night before bed.  When my dad read to me, my favorite stories were Daniel Manus Pinkwater’s The Big Orange Splot or any of the books in the Baby-Sitters’ Little Sister series by Ann M. Martin (he had this Speedracer voice for reading through the reiterated second chapter — anyone who’s ever read a BSC book knows what chapter I mean — and it cracked me up every time).

But when my mom put me to bed, they were always stories that she made up for me.  She had taken Creative Writing at Iowa State under Stephen King, but I never appreciated until recently the way she wrote little tales and told wonderful stories and really cultivated my imagination as a kid.

Maybe sometimes it was a little too much encouragement of imagination, but at least I’m not still questing to be a My Little Pony or anything.

My absolute favorite nights were when she would tell me stories about the Flower Fairies, based heavily on the creations of Cecily Mary Barker… but usually starring “Princess Hayley.”

When I was five, I tried my hand at writing her a story in return.

Page OnePage Two

I’m not entirely sure what I meant by “revlas.”  Then again, I’m not sure what political point I was trying to make with my seventh grade novel, either.

Still… I suppose I’ve been writing magical realism longer than I thought.

What was your favorite bedtime story?  Or first story you remember writing?

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August 14, 2009

Friday Free-For-All: Old-Timey Nostalgia

Ah, yet another entry in which I wax nostalgiac about things made twenty years before I was born.  And yes, it’s supposed to be SATURDAY mornings — not Friday afternoons — that are devoted to cartoon love.  But I have about 4,000 pages of critiqued manuscripts to hole punch and put into binders tonight, and I’ll be watching old movies as I do.

My family has always been a big proponent of taping things off of TV instead of buying them — why spend $15 on a VHS tape when you can spend $0.50 on a blank one and  barely less quality?  Even more, why spend $25 on a DVD when a pack of ten blank DVD+/-Rs is often less than a dollar?  As a result of this cheapskatery, I have access to a lot of great things that most people don’t — episodes of TV shows that are long-gone and will never make it to DVD; movies shown only once on some random channel and that fans search for in vain, but I have; awesome 80s and 90s commercials, back when jingles ruled the road.  I adore our makeshift VHS collection, and, when I went off to college, my dad started transferring most of it over to DVD for me so I could watch my favorite movies and stuff when I was away at school.

One of the first movies he transferred for me was Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf (Hanna-Barbera, 1988.  This is one of the last great Hanna-Barbera films, along with Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School, and together they mark the end of the Golden Age of Cartoons.  Honestly, the only good non-Disney Renaissance cartoon feature films that came out after the Scooby-Duo of 1988 were the Flintstones finale films of 1993 (which I also dearly love and recommend: I Yabba-Dabba Do! and Hollyrock-a-Bye Baby). 

I love this movie.  The later Scooby-Doo cartoon films, like The Witch’s Ghost, Pirates Ahoy!, Zombie Island, even The Boo Brothers… they just don’t compare.  The tone of the original Scooby-Doo television mysteries was more sweet than sinister, and the more modern movies just don’t follow that theme.  Reluctant Werewolf and Ghoul School, though, despite not being mysteries or having the rest of The Gang (these movies center around Scooby, Shaggy, and Scrappy-Doo, who made his debut to the series in 1979), are sweetly spooky and have just enough snark to hold adult interest.  The animation is bright and groovy and actually HAND-DRAWN, not overly clean and clinical like modern cartoons.  They’re just cute.

So I watched my Scooby, and I was going to turn off the DVD when I realized… “You know, I think I remember there being part of maybe Dr. Seuss’ The Sneeches on the end of this tape.  I wonder if it got transferred.”

And OH MY GOSH!

No Sneeches on beaches… but TWO Dr. Seuss feature cartoon shorts!  The Lorax (CBS, 1972) and The Hoober-Bloob Highway (CBS, 1975)!  I had COMPLETELY forgotten about The Hoober-Bloob Highway, which is, as one iMDb user says, “perhaps the strangest Dr. Seuss special.”  I can’t even explain what it’s about other than to say it’s metaphysically about being born, and “that’s the way it is, bub.”  The Lorax, however, is that tearjerker that everyone knows and I was so happy to watch it again, because it always scared me too much to watch it all the way through when I was little (OK, The Once-ler’s arms are so creepy!  Is he wearing shoulder-length gloves or is he just a weird color and texture??).  Great times.

So after the Dr. Seuss extravaganza, I was too psyched by my discovery to NOT keep the DVD going until the end… and I found… An original, silent, Pink Panther cartoon!  The Pink Panther was outsmarting a team of white Friz and blue Friz in the forest (he kept snapping them with blue snapping turtles).  I’m trying to narrow down which short it really is, but it’s hard — the original Pink Panthers seem to have a very small internet following.  I think, though, that what I saw today was either Pinknic, Pink Paradise, or Come On In!  The Water’s Pink.

It.  Was.  Awesome.

Other old-timey movie recommendations for a dreary late-summer weekend…

Polly

This is arguably my favorite movie of all time; definitely in my top five.  It stars — completely coincidentally — the mother and daughter from The Cosby Show, but don’t worry, it has NOTHING to do with Bill Cosby.

Or Jell-O products.

And though the kids are witty and great little actors, they do not say the darnedest things.

This is a musical adaptation of Pollyanna, only it takes place in the segregated South of the 1950’s — a place that definitely could’ve used a good dose of the Glad Attitude.  Rudy Keshia Knight Pulliam stars as Polly, a cheery orphan who is shipped from boppin’ Detroit to Harrington, Georgia, a town owned and operated by her heartsick and stern Aunt Polly (a magnificent Phylicia Rashad).  The music is stunningly sung and arranged, and the two main child actors — Pulliam as Polly and Brandon Quintin Adams as Jimmie Bean — are not only two of the cutest kids I’ve ever seen on film, but can pull their weight perfectly in synch with adult actors like Rashad, Brock Peters, Celeste Holm, and Dorian Harewood.  The songs in this movie musical are songs I’ve loved to sing since I was four years old.  The sequel is good, too, but this movie is better.

The Parent Trap

…Is not a movie starring Lindsay Lohan (“and Lindsay Lohan!”).  The Parent Trap is a movie starring Oscar winner, and my namesake, Hayley Mills in the dual role of Sharon McKendrick and Susan Evers, with gorgeous Maureen O’Hara and Brian Keith as the duelling parents of the estranged twins.  It contains the songbook classic song “Let’s Get Together,” as well as one of the best food fight scenes I have ever seen in any movie.

Escape to Witch Mountain

I wanted a Star Box so badly when I was about six.  I am also so angry about the remake starring The Rock that I can’t even talk about it.

HE IS NOT A CROTCHETY OLD MAN!  AND THE MOVIE IS NOT A THRILLER!

At any rate, I also really wanted my own pink-and-white striped soda fountain in my bedroom and the ability to move things with my mind and communicate telepathically, but I felt that hitchhiking with a grumpy man was an unsafe choice and I was pathologically afraid of dogs and had no interest whatsoever in having to run away from packs of search rottweilers.  Which I’m not sure exist anymore, actually.  Again, the child actors in this movie are amazing for their age (Kim Richards and Ike Eisenmann), which leads me to believe that before the 1990s, children were hired as actors more for their acting ability than their pushy parents or fast-fleeting cuteness… what an idea!

While this movie had scenes that scared the bejeezus out of me, it was one of my favorites and I never tired of watching it.  I still don’t!  The 1995 remake, however, starring Erik von Detton… I can do without.  It’s better than the newest one, though.

I don’t want to talk about it.

The Parent Trap II

The 1980s at their finest.

Hayley Mills is back as both Sharon and Susan, only grown up, and the VICTIMS of their own “parent trap”!  Sharon Ferris, nee McKendrick, is a sad divorcee with a feisty somehow-redheaded sixth-grader, Niki, who does not want to move to New York City from Florida, where the movie takes place.  Niki, in her misfortunes at summer school, meets fellow sixth-grader and “pop warner cheerleader” Mary Grant… who has a “gorgeous” widower for a father.  I guess in the 1980s, GIGANTIC MUSTACHES were considered gorgeous?

The Parent Trap v2.0 kicks off with botched phony love letters and flowers and a very poorly-planned trick date.  When it occurs to Niki that her Aunt Susan might be willing to help out her favorite niece and raise her twinnie from the down-and-out divorced dumps, Niki and Mary fly Susan out to Florida from — yes, still — California to pose as Sharon on dates with Mary’s father.  No, the black wig on Hayley Mills is NOT a major part of the movie.  It’s only in one scene, as is that terrible Cher outfit.  Thank god.

Bedknobs & Broomsticks

When my dad was in grad school Wednesday nights when I was a tiny, tiny little kid, my mom and I would go to Little Caesar’s and get a Meat Lover’s pizza and watch this movie.  I got to pick the movie each week, and I ALWAYS picked Bedknobs & Broomsticks.  A few times, my mom even tried hiding the tape so we’d have to watch something else, but I had a kind of Angela Lansbury Radar and always found it.  It’s one of Disney’s great live action with cartoon overlay masterpieces of the 1960s, and it is beautifully done.  Beautifully.  Disney really should never have stopped making movies like this.

Pete’s Dragon

I’ll be your candle on the water
My love for you will always burn
I know you’re lost and drifting
But the clouds are lifting
Don’t give up you’ll have somewhere to turn

I’ll be your candle on the water
‘Till ev’ry wave is warm and bright
My soul is there beside you
Let this candle guide you
Soon you’ll see a golden stream of light…

Disney should never have stopped making actual quality family films, and should never ever have stopped having original music in their movies.  Seriously.  And the live action with cartoon overlay technique that they used so well?  It was priceless!  Oh, Michael Eisner, what have you done to this world?

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June 9, 2009

Discombobulation

Oy vey, I’ve gotten all discombobulated from moving and my blogging schedule is all out of whack.  I do apologize!

I am loving the weather today — cool and gray and with just a hint of forthcoming rain in the air.  It’s a reading sort of day.  Which, of course, as a writer, I quite like — but as a reader, I adore.

I reread The Great Gatsby this weekend.  It was my old school copy, so there are pages that have been rendered completely illegible from my notes and highlighter ink and two pages that are stuck together because apparently I spilled paint on them in Art 1 (although I don’t remember, probably because I blocked out any memories of trying to paint, just for my own sanity).  Still, in spite of the mess — or maybe because of it: What a beautiful book.

Today I’ve been working on expanding and formatting the list of “Recommended Reads” that will be going up on http://www.hayleyanneperkins.com.

It’s probably way, way too extensive.  There are easily 300 books on this list.

My name is Hayley, and I am an addict of words.

The problem is narrowing down what books would be the most salient — every book on the list offered something so huge to me.  Thinking of any one, and what it did for me when I first read it, or why I continue to read it, just leads to another and another until suddenly, I’m scouring the internet for the author’s name to a book I read once when I was four.

I don’t think that’s a bad thing at all.

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May 25, 2009

Floppy-Eared Picture Books

Filed under: Biliophilia!, Nostalgia & Memories — Tags: , , , — admin @ 1:41 pm

I seem to be thinking about children’s books a lot lately.  I think it’s a sign that my brain is on overload.

Moe the Dog in Tropical Paradise is so under-appreciated.  I mean, I know that most of the things that I write about having loved as a child are very little-known, because apparently even as a grade schooler I fell into the trappings of indie pretension, but I really wish they weren’t.  I had an amazing childhood, creatively and intellectually.  I was probably a little emotionally lacking, but only because I was a superbly precocious brat, and… well, it was encouraged of me.  My friend Colleen can attest to this all too well, given that she used to beat me up every day in fourth grade because I was too big for my britches.  Part of the reason that I write about so many rare books and movies is to try and further their names; make information or at least praise available for other fans who search fruitlessly on Google to find.  Solidarity!

Anyway, Moe the Dog in Tropical Paradise, by Diane Stanley, is amazing.  The illustrations are adorable, and it’s full of images that are just too cute (like a puppy with marshmallows stuck to its nose!  Aww!).  Moe is stuck in the doldrums of winter, with a cold and wet paws, when he passes by a travel agent’s office with brochures of the Bahamas and Caribbean in the window.  Suddenly, he is inspired and asks his friend Arlene to accompany him on vacation to Tropical Paradise.  Sadly, they have no money… but in the end, they make their OWN tropical paradise in Moe’s (Arlene’s?) apartment, complete with sand and volleyball and beach towels and little umbrellas in their drinks.  It’s a moving story of friendship and a REALLY cute idea.  Hehe.

I discovered this book probably a year or so later than the age for which it was meant (as is the case with many books, movies, and TV shows… hmm…).  I bought it along with The Kid Who Ran for President, by Dan Gutman, at the booksale of a children’s group that my sister was in at the time and I had been in years before.  When I got it home, I loved it without end and still have it in my room at my parents’ house, probably hidden under my bed from sometime I had someone over.  Haha.

I even made my own book on tape of it, for my sister, but she has never liked books on tape as much as I.

I used to make myself books on tape all the time.  Any book I even remotely liked, all the way on into high school, I would take my little cassettes and read it aloud.  Sometimes I wonder if I only taught myself to read so that I could have more books on tape.

In kindergarten, my elementary school had two libraries: one with that great(ly horrible) ’70s brownish orange shag carpeting on all surfaces, filled with picture books, in the 1st- and 2nd grade wing; and a newer, sleeker library with metal bookshelves and gray industrial carpeting (the kind too short and matted to even really count as carpeting) in the 3rd- through 5th grade wing.  On our weekly Book Day, we would go to the orange library.

I was a little discouraged by the lack of chapter books there, which I think is a big part of why, even now, I prefer children’s books and books aimed at people aged 5 – 24 instead of fine literature.

Every week, I would go to the orange library and Mrs. Zander, the librarian, or Ms. Wells, her assistant, would ask us all if we needed help finding a book.  Some kids might have, but I never did.  I would go up to the counter and renew the book I had brought with me — back when libraries felt like libraries, when you had to learn to sign your name so that you could sign it on bookslips and they had a rotating date stamp to click down and tell you when the book was due to be returned, the way libraries are supposed to, and almost never do now.

That book that I renewed for… oh… twenty weeks or more?  Sayonara, Mrs. Kackleman.

It doesn’t really have much of a plot, as far as I can remember.  Basically, two kids get to go on a trip to Japan, and thus don’t have to go to their piano lessons with the dreaded Mrs. Kackleman (who I don’t think actually ever appears in the book).

I liked it because the illustrations were so distinctive, and there was a particular page about a steam bath in the forest that I found fascinating.  But my favorite part was the illustration of “green ice cones,” which looked like shiny-shiny bright green trianges of ice with spoons on little yellow dishes.  I loved this idea.  I tried and tried to convince my mom to buy conical ice cube trays (not knowing that they didn’t exist at the time) so that I could put green food coloring in my ice and have “green ice cones.”

I’d like to think still that the term doesn’t refer to melon snow cones, which is probably does, knowing Japanese ice treats.

It’s green conical ice cubes.  You scoop them into your mouth with a spoon and slurp-crunch them.  Period.

If that’s not what I choose to believe, my whole childhood will end up having been a lie… and no one wants that!

“Sayonara, Mrs. Kackleman!”

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May 6, 2009

A Bit of Egg, A Bit of Egg

Filed under: Biliophilia!, Nostalgia & Memories — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 1:29 pm

Bread and Jam for Frances was not my favorite book when I was a kid.  And I’m not entirely sure why it keeps popping into my head today.  It’s probably just because I’ve been eating quite a lot of bread and jam while I’ve been trapped at my apartment with the flu.  I mean, that would be the logical reason.  But just knowing me, that means it’s not the reason at all.

Bread and Jam for Frances, by Russell Hoban, is the story of a little badger named Frances who only likes to eat bread and jam.  There are other books about Frances, and her little sister, Gloria; one of my particular favorites told the story of Frances desperately wanting a blue and white china tea set, but not having the money for it, so instead she gets a red and white china tea set — but only to find out that she did after all have the money, but her arch-frenemy had told her that the blue kind was much more expensive so she could buy the last one at the drug store.  Good story.  However, that is not the story of Bread and Jam for Frances.

My whole life, I have loved very little more than I love books on tape.  One of my all-time favorites, outside of chapter books, was this particular storybook.  Although I have to admit… it wasn’t really because of the story itself.

My dad used to dub the books on tape onto a second cassette for me, so we could keep one in the plastic case just in case something happened to my copy, and I’d still have one to which to listen.  I guess something went a little awry when he was dubbing over B&J for Frances, though, because there’s a part where Frances is eating a NEW lunch at school, not just bread and jam, and the passage actually goes something like:

“Frances took a bite of her tuna salad sandwich.  Then she took a bite of apple, and a few raisins.  She took a sip of milk, and a bit of hard-boiled egg.”

Only MY copy went:

“Frances took a bite of her tuna salad sandwich.  Then she took a bite of apple, and a few raisins.  She took a sip of milk, and a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg a bit of egg.”

I know.  I counted every time.  There were 40 “a bit of egg”’s on my tape.  It drove my parents nuts, but I liked it.  It was special to me, kind of a reminder that my dad had made the tape just for me because he knew it would make me happy.  And it did.  It still does.

Jam on biscuits, jam on toast,
jam is the thing that I like most.
Jam is sticky, jam is sweet,
Jam is tasty, jam’s a treat –
Raspberry, strawberry, gooseberry, I’m very
FOND… OF… JAM!

I think I am actually going to shuffle off to the kitchen now and make some more bread and jam, and maybe even a bit of egg a bit of egg.

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April 28, 2009

I Yelled at Meg Ryan Today

It’s true.  I did.

I didn’t realize that it was Meg Ryan, at first, because her back was to me, but when she turned around, there was this horrible internal moment of… “O hai, America’s Sweetheart.”

Eurgh.

It may have been the seventh time in my life that I have been legitimately embarrassed.  This clearly makes it a Traumatic Moment, because it really takes a lot to embarrass me.  I suffer more from secondhand embarrassment, like thinking in the grocery store, “If I were that screaming child’s parent, I would be so embarrassed,” or, “Oh, god, they’re running that awkward set of prepubescent swimsuit photos of poor Robert Pattinson again in Us Weekly, he must be so embarrassed,” or whatever.  But very rarely am I embarrassed for myself.

THE SEVEN TIMES I HAVE BEEN EMBARRASSED
by Hayley Anne Perkins

  1. In Kindergarten, the other kids learned the alphabet and some phonics from these weird 1970s videos that were a lot like Sesame Street, but were just different enough so as not to breach copyright.  I really liked them, personally, even though I could already read, and had known the alphabet for about four years already.  The letter “K” was represented by “Kissing.”  Two foamboard letter K’s danced around to a romantic kissing song and then kissed at the end.  Everyone else thought it was gross.  I berated them, citing Love and Romance and that Kissing Was Not Gross.Coupled with my refusal to get a cootie shot — BECAUSE COOTIES WERE NOT REAL; THERE WOULD BE A REAL VACCINATION IF THEY WERE  — I was very unpopular fairly quickly.
  2. When I got my name on the board with a check mark (sort of like getting two strikes in a three-strikes-you’re-out! detention system) in second grade.  I got my name on the board, as I recall, for something having to do with my outfit, which is odd, because it was a black-and-white tweed skirt, a turtleneck, and black tights.  I can’t remember exactly what the problem was, but I have a feeling it was the giant safety pin on the skirt being considered a potential weapon, or something.  I felt like Stacy from The Baby-Sitters’ Club until that moment.The check mark was for protesting my name having been put on the board.
  3. The day after Jeff, a classmate of mine from Kindergarten through high school graduation, learned about sex, he spent the entire duration of school find and/or making innuendo that no one else understood out of EVERYTHING EVERYONE SAID.  I was the most vocal student in our third-grade class.To this day, I don’t understand what he was trying to say that I had said with half of the innuendos he made.  I just remember getting incredibly embarrassed and flustered that I didn’t understand how the simple things I was saying — “MATT WON’T STOP POKING ME!” “But he DID do it!” — would suddenly cause him to laugh and leer and tattle on me.  That may have been the most embarrassed I have ever been, and I didn’t even understand fully why.
  4. Passing out on the first day of sixth grade.  In front of everyone.This event will get a post all its own someday, when the trauma subsides.
  5. When, on the first day of high school, I fell down two flights of stairs in a miniskirt and platform sandals.  In front of the senior I was madly in love with and would continue to love into the present.It really wasn’t SO bad, but there was definitely a moment of, “ARE YOU SERIOUS?  AM I SECRETLY THE CLODDISH MAIN CHARACTER OF A DISNEY CHANNEL ORIGINAL MOVIE RIGHT NOW?”
  6. The precipitating event for my relationship with my high school sweetheart was the afternoon that I called him ugly and elbowed him in the groin within the span of about thirty minutes.  I asked him to the Turnabout Dance the next day and he cornered me to ask if it was just an apology.That was more of a sorry/embarrassed.
  7. I yelled at Meg Ryan.
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