Home Biography Metempsyche Blog Bibliophilia Random & Fan Contact

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!

  • Share/Bookmark

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.

  • Share/Bookmark

October 28, 2009

Sssspooky…

When I was in sixth grade, I set out to write a scary story for Halloween.

I just found it on my computer, and it is undeniably terrifying.

…I wrote it in Curlz MT size 16.  There’s nothing scarier than that when you’re over the age of twelve.

The Cave
By Hayley, Age Eleven.

In 1970, a young girl named Cydney Nouvell went into a mysterious cave in the town of Glacier Falls, Nebraska.  Cydney went in to explore.  She never came out to tell what she had found.

Come 1980, one of Cydney’s old friends, Maria Slate, went into the cave to complete Cydney’s exploration.  Cydney’s family waited anxiously to find out whether their beloved Cydney was still alive.  They never found out. Maria also met Cydney’s mysterious fate.  The cave had claimed another victim.

Ten years later in 1990, Cydney’s younger sister, Kate Nouvell, went in the cave to search for her sister, and for Maria Slate.  The people of Glacier Falls never knew if those girls survived.  Kate never left the cave to tell them.

Josselyn Peterson and Pamela Mancusi sat on the banks of Tears Creek in Glacier Falls, Nebraska.  They were 12 years old, and had lived in Glacier Falls all their lives.  They knew the stories of Cydney and Kate Nouvell and Maria Slate by heart. They had memorized part of Maria’s spooky obituary:

“I will find my best
friend if it’s the last
thing I do.”
It was.

‘Yet Josselyn and Pamela weren’t afraid at all.  Or maybe they were, I don’t know.  They were not the sort of people who look like they would frighten easily.  Josselyn was tall and willowy. She had long arms, legs, and fingers.  She was a dancer, and always wore a long sleeved, v-neck, leotard, usually light turquoise or royal blue.  On the occasion that her hair wasn’t in a bun, it was in a long, thick ringleted ponytail from being twisted so tightly all the time.  On that day, Josselyn’s jeans had been rolled up so as not to get wet.  Pamela’s hair was cut short, to the bottoms of her ears. She had silvery, owl-eyed glasses.,  with the right lens scratched from when she dropped them in the mall parking lot.  She had bright black hair and soft blue eyes, as opposed to Josselyn’s elegant dark blonde hair and 20-20 glossy brown eyes.  Pamela was very petite, and not quite slender. She did not have as pretty and fair a face as Josselyn, but she had lovely, long fingernails.  Pamela’s mother was a manicurist, and her nails were always perfectly polished with horizontal rainbows.  Josselyn, however, had the nasty habit of biting her nails. Pamela was an art student and her tee shirt and cut-off jeans were spattered with paint and clay, but she didn’t care.  Pamela and Josselyn talked as the creek washed and bubbled gently over their feet.  They ate their picnic lunch out of the natural wicker basket;, and complemented one another on their cuisine.

“Pamela, how come, when you make the sandwiches, we can stand to eat them, while mine are completely inedible?”

“Probably because I use mayonnaise.  Why are your brownies thick and fudgy while mine are…”

“Like dirt? I don’t know.”

That kind of conversation was what was uttered that day as they ate chicken-and snow pea pitas, Sour Cream and Onion Ruffles potato chips, Josselyn’s fudge brownies, and Cherry Sprites.  When they finished their picnic, they decided to take a hike and see where the creek led.

“If it goes for more then four states, I’m turning back,” Pamela told Josselyn, probably, with Pamela’s risk-taker personality, only half kidding.

Then, she looked up and saw why Josselyn wasn’t answering.  Thunder clouds had taken over the once-blue sky.  Lightning split the sky into dark pieces.  Bone-chilling rain came down in sheets.  In seconds, the girls were drenched.  They started to run, and soon came to a short, stout cave.

“Shelter!” shouted Pamela, running toward it.

“Stop!” cried Josselyn, her eyes wide and her taupe skin white with fear, “It’s Cydney Nouvell’s cave!”

With that, she reached into her back pocket and took out three newspaper arcticles, quite damp.  The oldest showed a smiling pigtailed girl, holding spelunking gear.  The caption read

“The last sighting
of Cydney Nouvell”.

The next, no quite so old, had a smudgy photograph of a determined and slightly frightened looking pudge of a young woman. The caption was the obituary message.  Maria Slate.  The newest, least crumpled, colored arcticle depicted a very frightened (and quite sick) business-like woman.  Kate Nouvell.  All the pictures were taken outside this very cave.

“SO?” asked Pamela, shivering.  She was getting very annoyed.

“I wouldn’t go in there if I were you.  You know what happened to the last three people who did!”

“That doesn’t scare me at all.  Besides, we don’t even know what happened to them.  For all we know, they went to OZ.  At least it doesn’t rain there.  I’m going in!”  Pamela stepped boldly into the cave…. And was surrounded by pitch black.  She heard laughing from deep inside the cave

“Oh Cydney!” said an echoey, hollow voice.

Pamela gave a blood-curdling scream that echoed and re-echoed inside the cave.  Josselyn knew she would never forget the horror of that scream.  She ran into the cave.

“PAMELA! PAMELA, CAN YOU HEAR ME?” Josselyn screamed, sure there would be no answer.

“I’m here, “ called Pamela, with an unnerving calm.  Josselyn almost cried with relief.

“Where are you?” Josselyn questioned.

“In the back of the cave.” Pamela’s voice sounded different, Josselyn realized, hollower and raspier. She began to sprint, thinking that Pamela might be trapped or hurt, which would explain the voice change.  But when she reached the end of the dark cave, she almost fainted at what she saw.  Although the rest of the cave was as black as night, the finish was bathed in an eerie bright light.   The cavern floor held a bottomless, glowing pool.  But that was not the reason Josselyn felt queasy.  In the pool were four girls.  One, pigtailed and smiling. Of the other two, one was younger and frightened, the other, older and cross.  The last girl made Josselyn nearly have a heart attack.  That girl used to be Pamela.  All four were glowing water ghosts, transparent and wet, with glowing eyes.

“Come in Josselyn,” said the former Pamela, as if in a trance, “Come play with us!”  An unearthly, supernatural force pulled Josselyn towards the pool, towards her late friend.  Josselyn turned and ran.  All through the twisting tunnels of the cave, Pamela’s voice echoed, “Come play with us!”

But Josselyn didn’t turn back. If she surrendered to Pamela, Cydney, Maria, and Kate’s ghosts, she too would never leave the cave.  She didn’t stop running until she was out of the cave, down the creek, and in her own house.  Once she stopped, she broke down crying.  Josselyn never told anyone where she’d been that day, nor what she’d seen.  Pamela’s calling voice still haunts her, day and night, dawn to dusk Never go near that cave, or follow Tears Creek.   Pamela will call to you, too.  Stay far away.  Far, far away. That is my advice to you, as the sole survivor of that cave.
By: Josselyn Peterson-Kokoloauski
Copyright 2034

The moral of the story is, keep writing, and you will improve.  Also, stay away from caves.

And apparently I liked Sour Cream & Onion Chips when I was a pre-teen.

I suppose I’ve aged in more than just my writing skills.

  • Share/Bookmark

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.

  • Share/Bookmark

September 25, 2009

Friday Free-For-All: Pointe Shoes

Isadora Duncan said (and I’m paraphrasing),

“When I was in ballet school, my teachers told me to put on points. When I asked him why, he said, ‘Because it is beautiful.’ I said no, it was ugly and unnatural, and I would not put them on…”

Now, I love Isadora Duncan. One of the greatest compliments I have ever gotten was being told that I had “arms like Isadora” (which is also my favorite name for the band I will probably never have). But I completely disagree with her philosophy on pointe shoes.

I got my first pair of pointes when I was twelve. It was the summer before seventh grade, and I had been working towards the ultimate goal of toe shoes for nine years years — and by working, I really mean working. My dance teachers made me relearn to stand and walk before I was even allowed to take the balance and bone density tests — I stood with my weight on the inner edge of my feet, so that the arches rested flat on the ground. I had to practice standing and, more difficult, shifting weight and walking, with my feet readjusted to properly displace my weight on the soles of my feet.

They examined my progress almost every day for the last year before I was finally allowed to get the shoes. It exhausted my calf muscles and, in my indignant opinion, is the reason I have cankles. They’re only little cankles. Much more “-ankle”y than… “c-.”

However, it finally worked, and I stand correctly — which does, as much as I hate my cankles, make my hips and knees feel a lot better than they did when I was very young and had to stand for any real length of time — and was allowed to get pointe shoes.

As per my studio’s requirements, I went to a professional fitter for my shoes. This was a zaftig old Russian-American woman with bleach-blonde, voluminous hair, inch-long curved fingernails, drawn on eyebrows, and the autographs of all of the Joffrey and Milwaukee Ballet dancers whom she had fitted proudly displayed on all of her walls. Before I could be fitted, I had to meet her Requirements:

  • Less than 10% curvature of the spine
  • Less than 21% body fat
  • Pink ballet tights, no runs
  • Sleeveless dark-colored leotard
  • Perfect ballet bun in hair
  • The ability to stand on demi-pointe in first position 1minute+
  • The ability to stand on demi-pointe in second position 1minute+
  • The ability to stand on demi-pointe in fifth position 1minute+
  • The ability to stand on demi-pointe on right and left food, respectively, in retirée 1minute+

Mind you that these Requirements were all “by her observation,” not by actual medical standards.

Basically, you had to Look Like A Dancer.

Once I was deemed acceptable, she examined my feet. She also informed me that I have the biggest big toes she’s ever seen, and even took pictures of my feet for her Foot Book (a little creepy, yeah).

So, I’m a big-big-toed freak. Awesome.

Then, FINALLY, I got to get fitted for my shoes. First I learned to use lambs’ wool to cushion my toes from bearing the full brunt of my weight against the floor (take a 8-10 inch long piece of specialized lambs’ wool. Flatten into an 8″x4″ rectangle. Comb out. Fold in half. Wrap around toes, from cuneiform metatarsals, spreading to cover tips of toes, particularly cushioning first cuneiform and toe tips, like a banana skin).

Then we tried a pair of shoes. Gaynor Minden, high vamp, low arch. Clearly not the right shoes for my foot.

Then a second pair — Sansha, wide box, ultralow vamp, medium arch. Also not right, which was OK with me, because they were matte and I wanted the satin as long as I was allowed to keep it (we had to calomine our shoes into matching matte pink clones for performances).

Then, a third pair: Grishko, with a severely tapered toe on an extra-wide box, extralow vamp, 3/4-height steel roll-through shank, medium-low arch.

I had my first pointe shoes.

I rose onto pointe for the first official time, and Sylvia (the fitter) snapped a polaroid for me. My mom was taking pictures, too, but I love the polaroid best because it somehow feels the most “official.”

Isadora, you were wrong.

They might be unnatural, sure, but pointe shoes are beautiful.

  • Share/Bookmark

September 24, 2009

Music Mondays: I’m a Gleek

Yes, yes, it’s Thursday and not Monday.

But I have to write about Glee today.

I must.

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.

(If I were still a high school drama geek, I would turn that into a riff on “Seasons of Love.” As it stands, you can make up your own.)

These are peppered with text messages from my friends that are nothing but quotes from the most recent episodes of Glee and my own hurried muting of my work computer as I play “Golddigger” and “Push It,” which I would never have listened to in my life had they not been arranged for a choir.

Last night’s episode cemented Glee’s place as a paragon of American television — as the most poignantly honest show about high school that I have ever seen.

Over Labor Day weekend, I went to my parents’ house for a visit. I lived in the same town for eighteen years, and I have three people left there outside my family who I see or talk to on a regular basis. But I swallowed my nervousness, and I made plans to meet up for coffee with my old best friend from high school, who I hadn’t seen in a few years.

She and I were, whether onstage together or alternating behind the scenes, in every school play together. She basically got me a slot in show choir our sophomore year. We shared a locker so messy that we eventually just started keeping all of our belongings in the Green Room. We served together as Vice-President and Treasurer of the Drama Club & Thespian Society.

We ended our high school careers with upwards of 100 International Thespian Troupe points, which, considering the maximum a student could get for any given production was eight points, was a testament to some kind of theatrical insanity.

Or, looking back, this overwhelming desire to do something fantastic, and get out of our high school, get out of our town.

I feel like there’s a reason the drama geeks and show choir gleeks gravitate towards songs like “Skid Row” (‘Please, somebody say I’ll get outta here…’), “Defying Gravity” (‘Kiss me goodbye, I’m defying gravity…’), or even — as Glee reminded me — “Don’t Stop Believin.’”

And I think more than anything I’ve ever seen, last night’s episode of Glee epitomized that raw ache to do better, to be better. Every character in the story arc struck me as so believably high school, which has never happened before watching TV, even on other amazing high school shows like Boy Meets World or Veronica Mars. Most shows about high school seem to find their strength in transcending what they see as the limitations of high school life: asking permission, time limitations, living with your parents.

Glee capitalizes on the trauma of secrecy and indecision, and put a name to it when Finn (who breaks my heart; oh my god) said:

“I don’t want to be a Lima Loser for the rest of my life!”

Everything I ever did in high school, right or wrong, was because I didn’t want to be our town’s variation of a Lima Loser.

But I think the closing musical montage speaks better than I can, at this juncture, about the heart-stopping feeling of joy when you realize that you’re from your own Lima, and still not a loser.

Glee 1×04: \"Single Ladies\" Football Montage

When I saw my friend Jennie over Labor Day weekend, it was easier and more fun than I worried it would be. I worried that I would show up and be the same girl I was when I was Rachel Berry — “I’m better than Tina. But I’m still getting my lipstick flushed down the toilet. And I still don’t have a boyfriend. Everyone has a reason to try except me.” — and that I would leave for home after the weekend with dreams of “La Vie Boheme” in my head again.

But I didn’t.

She and I had both grown up. And I am so looking forward to watching the characters on Glee glow into themselves the same way.

  • Share/Bookmark

August 18, 2009

What I Want to Be When I Grow Up

As a byproduct of both my day job and my career as a YA writer, I talk to a lot of high school students.

My favorites are those who have the knowledge that they aren’t yet grown up, and still have time before they have to be, and use that to continue their exploration down the path of “what I want to be when I grow up.”

When I was very little, I wanted to grow up to be a Muppet.  Not a Muppet puppeteer (Muppeteer?), but actually a Muppet myself.  It looked like a lot of fun, and, let’s face it, Kermit the Frog is really the perfect man.

Frog.

Whatever.

I could sing and dance all day, hang out with Kermit, play with Beeker and Rolf, and visit Big Bird and Snuffleupagus at Bird’s nest.  It would really be the perfect life.  Plus, on occasion, I would get to pirate, to 19th Century Christmas classic (yes, I verbed that), and to visit exotic and stereotypical Asian countries or roadside diners, just to shake things up.

When you’re a kid, adults always tell you that “when you grow up, you can be whatever you want to be.”  I took that very literally, and I wanted to be a Muppet.

Soon thereafter, though, I had my heart callously broken when informed that I could grow up to be whatever I wanted so long as I remained a human, and I regrouped by deciding that I wanted to be a writer.  I put most of my energy for the next two decades or so into achieving that goal, and pining over Kermit the Frog, and am now beginning to find some success.

There is absolutely no feeling like it.

That’s why, on Music Mondays, I almost always post links to small, local groups who are just starting out or juuust embarking on their own journeys towards success — I want to help to fuel them, feed them confidence and word of mouth, and showcase just how amazing the fresh generation of talent can be.

I missed posting a Music Monday yesterday.  Instead, today I have the deliriously honest comics of artist Andrew Lorenzi, with whom I went to high school.

Dont Let Me Down

Don't Let Me Down

I was actually in that art period, although not in AP art.  I took “Art I (2-D)” and sat in the front of the room with my india ink pens, drawing copies of Maybelline ads starring Josie Maran or GQ photos of Lindsay Lohan back when she was beautiful.  Kris, who was one of my good friends once upon a time, and Andrew, who I always thought was clever in English class but whom I did not know well, sat in the back corner, covered in neon pastel dust and toting mirrors.

When I left high school, I made a staunch and solemn vow to leave that version of myself completely behind within a year.  Until recently, negative memories of that town and school overshadowed all of the things that I still secretly remembered fondly and knew to have been positive experiences.  I only really keep in touch with four people from the place where I grew up, outside of my family, even though I lived there for eighteen years and had a lot of friends in my Junior and Senior years of high school.

It’s strange to read Andrew’s comics, in a way, because even without naming his memoir’s characters, I can recognize their faces in his panels.  It enhances what I think is the central lovely tone of his work — a sort of bittersweet honesty.  It’s a sad kind of hopeful.

For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky

For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky

Im Trying, Lord Knows Im Trying

I'm Trying, Lord Knows I'm Trying

Readers of Publisher’s Weekly (whose contributing reviewer Shavonne Johnson recently offered some thoughts in Green’s Focus Group) may recognize the last comic:

Do You Think I Sacrificed Real Life?

Do You Think I Sacrificed Real Life?

Bittersweet, hopeful, childlike and intellectual…

Just like high school.

  • Share/Bookmark

June 4, 2009

Yearning for Autumn

I finally moved home, got mostly unpacked and settled in.  My refrigerator is still empty, but I’ve seen more friends in three days than I’d seen in my last three months in New York.

I can’t find Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone or Deathly Hallows, but all of my James Bond are on their shelf.

My long-awaited TV service only gets six channels, two of which are The Weather Channel and the Home Shopping Network.

But the sky is heavy and woolen like I remember, and the trains come by and remind me that there’s a world outside the window, and the cobblestone street looks the same as it has for a hundred years.  The sky keeps fooling me into thinking that it’s the eve of autumn, but it’s only June 3.

Trickery and lies, weather!  Trickery and lies!

I just keep waiting for the fall to come, but I also tend to be nostalgic this time of year for summers past.  I’ve never liked summer, really.  As a season, it’s ungodly hot and I don’t think the greenery and blue sky is pretty.  But there have been summers that I’ve loved, and I love the idea of summer.

Summer tends to make me idealize the suburbs in a weird way, like cookouts and catching fireflies and county carnivals and puppies and pool parties hidden behind white fences.  Bonfires under the stars.

I know that I don’t actually want any of that, but summer makes me miss it, sometimes.

I apologize for the shortness of my blogs lately… moving has made me flighty and restless and tired.

  • Share/Bookmark

May 29, 2009

Itching to Write

Filed under: Biliophilia!, Creative Writing — Tags: , , , — admin @ 1:44 pm

Last night, a friend said, “My fingers are itching to write.”

Another sent me a part of a new piece she’s playing with, a third wrote a poem, and a fourth said that she had the urge to write and just needed to decide what what to finish.

Tonight, I went to dinner with a girl from my old job who is just starting to write a book.  We talked about Green and about all of the books she’s reviewing for Publisher’s Weekly and books we liked when we were younger.

And as I walked home, I felt it — the itch to write.  I don’t know how it is for anyone else, but for me, it’s like a tingle that spreads down my fingertips and my brain explodes with images and all of a sudden, everything in the world is a little more beautiful.

I wonder, though, if I feel that way today because it’s wet and smoggy and gray-green outside.  It’s cool out and I missed rain this afternoon, apparently, and it feels like fall is coming.  Of course, I remember then that it’s not even June yet, and that’s horribly depressing.  But it feels like fall all the same, and I always write best in autumn.

I have the overwhelming urge today to don my white scarf and walk down the cobblestone streets through the piles of crisp-crunchity autumn leaves, past the ancient thick-trunked trees in the arboretum, past the great beautiful brick Corpus Christi church overrun with cawing black crows, under the fuzzy gray October sky, to Innkeepers, and get a slice of Italian Cream Cake and a glass teacup of oolong, and write.

I’m so excited to move home on Monday.

  • Share/Bookmark

May 16, 2009

Constellations

I think that right now, every aspect of my life could be categorized as “ordered chaos.”

For example, my writing desk: If I want to reach into the printer for my crackers, I absolutely need the crackers to be there, because that is where they belong.  Order.  However, I recognize that most people think that the printer is exactly the wrong place to keep crackers.  So, chaos.

Likewise the commute that, for me, just ended today — two hours of herded crowds and a complete loss of control to the autonomy that is the existence of other people, and it terrifies me.  The kind of chaos that I can’t control and package back up into its Ritz box near the toner cartridge makes me edgy, because I feel so small.

I wonder if that’s a part of why I’m leaving New York.  NYC is the epitome of ordered chaos, and there are singular moments here that are the most sublime images of human perfection because of it — my first day here, even as I dragged a suitcase that weighed as much as I did around behind me in Flatbush, kind of certain that I was about to be stabbed or something, I pulled out my notebook and jotted down:

My cabbie looked like a Bailey School Kids’ book (Genies Don’t Drive Taxicabs?).

I asked for directions and was given answers via gesturing and Urdu.

A Hasidic man helped me to carry my suitcase up the stairs.

A lovely small white puppy sniffed at my flip-flops at a crosswalk.

A row of seven black men sitting on the curb saw me pass and said, “Aw, look at dat cute girl!” (not in a sleazy way, it was endearing, actually.  I am cute.  Like the small puppy.)

I got Syrian take-out for lunch, and organic pistachio ice cream for dessert.

There was a man in a duct-tape hat at the grocery store.
My arrival was well-received, despite my recent paranoia…

And truly miraculously, the strangest thing happened this afternoon: I was sitting in the living room of Melissa- and Joseph’s apartment, reading a book, minding my business, and I looked up and out the window at the cloudcover and bright amber-lit skyline… and from somewhere I couldn’t see, out above my window, some great omniscient nebulous something…
Began to play “Hey Jude.”

I’ve lived more in my writing notebooks than in New York, while here, I think.

I have lived in New York City for seventeen days, and the old adage is true that this place is like nowhere else in the world.  Every minute here has been a rollercoaster that makes me reexamine all of the facets of my personality and weigh what I thought were my strengths against what I thought were my weaknesses, and realize that neither were as concrete as I had thought.

Every day here feels like three days, three acts: morning, afternoon, night.

Mornings I slip onto the Uptown subway with the maids and Estee Lauder girls in their pearl earrings and black lace headbands on our way to the Upper East Side for work, the posters on the train in the morning read in Polish and Chinese: I can read the term for “On 9/11″ in Chinese now.  There are ads on the trains that advertise 9/11 healthcare for those without health insurance.  I deboard the train into a whitewashed world where everyone drinks $7 cups of coffee and slips their uniformed dogwalker a $20 to take purebred Muffy all the way to Central Park.  I’ve had a $7 cup of coffee.  It tastes the same as a $2.95 cup, only the caramel tastes like it’s real.  I’m the only person who enters my office without designer clothes or platinum jewelry.

It’s interesting to be in a real newsroom.  I see: A figurine of the Kung-Fu panda, a phone I don’t know how to use, expensive water, and the cast of Gossip Girl waiting around in the corner to speak to someone.  I hear: Six-figure salary writers debating how to spell “they’re.” Even here.

In the afternoon I haunt Manhattan: the Village, SoHo.  The first time I went to SoHo… I have never felt envy like that.  It was a bright, hot, heavy, all-consuming cloud that bound my lungs and forced ice into my stomach, my eyes welling up with dark pressure in the back of my head, I have never been so jealous of anything or wanted anything so badly as that misty afternoon in half-light in SoHo.  In the Village everyone is young and thin and cool, and it reminds me of Knox in a way, only with less of a need to overdo and prove itself.  And everyone has a keffiyeh and a puppy.

Nighttimes I tend to go to midtown, Herald Square, Times Square… there are no squares in the Squares.  There’s never really nighttime in Times Square; it never gets dark, only gray, and the sidewalks are always wet and shining and steam rises off the street.  We skulk in the gleaming streaks of light beneath four-story faces of Shia or Joe and Nick and Kevin or Rihanna in our Argentinean scarves and Carmen Sandiego trench coats, Shiseido makeup from the counters at Sephora as we creep to the backstage doors to meet Daniel Radcliffe and Ed Westwick.

I try not to look up at the sky too much at night in the Squares, but I can’t help it.  Everyone in New York is bigger than themselves.  Everyone in New York is bigger than me.

I think a large part of why I lived through what I could capture in writing here was that whole part where I was technically homeless for ten weeks when I first arrived.  Honestly, ever since, I have yet to feel settled.  All I do here is travel.  I can navigate the subways on a weekend at 4AM even with repairs, and can tell you to the minute how long it takes to get from Whitehall to the Statue of Liberty on the Staten Island Ferry in the rain.  I’ve walked my feet to leather, which might be too much information, but it’s true: When I left Illinois, I was pampered and suburban, and here, I’m a part of the urban poor.

And it may be horrible, but that’s mostly why I’m leaving.

I miss being able to relax and feel settled.  I’m looking for more order in my chaos.  The town I left ran shipshape, or I guess trainshape, because a train came through every six minutes.  It was dependable and comforting, and life was slow and quiet except the whistles.  That’s where I’m returning.

I lived less in my notebooks there, but I still preserved the order (whereas in NYC, I tried to calm the chaos) –

The old man who drives his turquoise-and-white ‘57 Chevrolet around town every Sunday 3:30 chugged by the courthouse right on schedule; I’m always there to see the car, see the man in his newsboy cap circle the arboretum smugly in that beautiful beautiful car.

Trains pass through even more often on Sundays, flowing down the thirty-eight railroad crossings, the whistles singing to each other in a strange tribal language that I don’t speak.  I like the freighters with wheezing long whistles best.

A murder of crows over the white marble theatre swoop and for a moment in my mind I’m Tippi Hedren with my hair piled high; I should have worn a skirt and heels today instead of cuffed jeans and my little red kid shoes.  A murder of crows…

There is no one out on Sunday afternoons, in the campus square or in town, there is just quiet except for my feet schushing through the piles of fallen leaves more precious than gold.

I love the way late Sunday afternoons sound.

I miss the cobblestones, red and slippery, engraved with the name of a long-dead mason.  I miss the rhythmic lullabye of the trains chugging along the raised tracks, singing together; their whistles long and low or sweet and fluted, a sad melody of times forgotten by most of the country.

I miss the snowdrifts of leaves, mahogany and pumpkin with burnt whiskey edges and a sugar snap beneath my feet.

I miss the frosted-glass streetlights on their wrought iron supports, the way the light is soft and warm and comforting in the cerulean blue twilight when I can just see my breath.

I miss the murders of crows.

At the same time, while sometimes it sucked that I have… had… a two-hour commute to get to work, the blessing was that every night that I came home from work, I got to revel in the New York City skyline twinkling down at me.

The man-made constellations of this starless city are one thing I will sorely miss.

My two favorite buildings are the Chrystler Building, with its ornamentian scaled dome like a silver dragon’s tail, and 40 Wall Street, its coppergreen pyramidal spire just matching the Statue of Liberty.  There are buildings in Brooklyn that I can’t name whose lights I like to see as the ferry turns to go on its semicircular route home — the redlit Watchtower, and its oversize clock.

When I lived in Queens, I loved walking home from the DeKalb Street Station at night, even though I was sort of terrified half the time, because there’s an intersection at Stockholm and Seneca, I think, or Stockholm and Cypress, where — if you stop in the middle of the street, which you can, since no cars pass by after 6PM — looking out towards the city, the cinematic portion of the skyline is perfectly framed by two leafy trees, and it is so beautiful and pictaresque that every time I saw it, I wanted to cry.

Moving from here to there is throwing my life into chaos again, with boxes all over and accounts to close everywhere and trying to keep everything straight in my head.  I’m starting to wonder if I’ll find order anywhere…

  • Share/Bookmark
Older Posts »

Powered by WordPress