Friday, April 9, 2010

More Photos


Here are a few additional (to Britney's) pictures I took before my camera died...



Britney made the most delicious spread. And as alway I am keeping my fingers crossed that the recipes will be posted!!


Mmmmmmmmm.  I adore chocolate and caramel!


Here we had some skewered rabbits and some not so great brownies.

As a little April Fool's Day joke Britney loaded these puppies with salt.  I loved Shaunas reaction the best.  She simply yelled out "Whoha!! Sweet AND salty"  Ha! Ha! I still laugh when I think about it.


Here are the good one teaspoon of salt brownies.


Kristie & Stephanie


Robyn & Bethany


Kara & Christie

Somehow I didn't end up with pictures of the ladies on the couch (me, Shauna & Shannon) I'll do better next time!

And now for a few of my very favorite photos of the night.

What would cause Brenda to make this face...


And then Britney to make this one...


Could it be this little present Brenda left Bert?


Hmmmm

The world may never know.

(Actually Britney was trying not to laugh while she watched everyone eat her salty brownies & the picture of Brenda is what she looked like when she discovered what that little devil was up to.)

I had a great time and can't wait for next time!!!

The Help
At Robyn's




A night of hunger and a few games

It was a great night. 
 Kristie lead a great review of the book (thanks Kristie!) 
I love the tie in to the story from Greek Mythology -- very cool.

Thanks to Heidi and her never-ending cleverness,
we even had a little game to get things really rolling.

Here's the set up...

No one is quite sure of what is about to take place.

Aw.....simple pleasantries before the blood bath.

Let the games begin.
Maybe Heidi has a few better pictures, but it happened so fast that this is the only one of the actual action.

If you remember Brenda swooped low and fast and gathered an armful of supplies, while Kara took the risk of being picked off and went in for the remainder of the goods.


Brenda looks a little too happy (and comfortable) to be sporting that knife.
[I think it is safe to say that I wouldn't want to be in the arena with her.] :)



Christie was quite proud of her acquisition of the bow.


  
Little did we know she had every intention of using it right away.



 [By the way,....this has to be one of my favorite pictures of all time!!!!!]

Thanks for coming. We had a great time. 

P.S. I'm sorry about the salty brownies -- mostly.


Friday, April 2, 2010

Score!


The girls were ecstatic to find this treasure awaiting them this morning. They couldn't believe I got this from book club, and kept wanting to know who shot the farthest and got the most points. "Did Kara even shoot it?" (Maybe because you're pregnant, they didn't think you should be acting like a warrior).

Carly to Macy: You be the girl. The girl Indians stay home and cook and clean the boys' clothes. I get to go out and go hunting. I can be the boy because back then, the boys had long hair. They didn't have scissors back then to cut their hair, and they thought it looked nicer.

They bring me drinks from the lake and cobs of corn as I type.

Carly: Mom, you can't be the Mom because back then, they didn't have computers.

I'm being called for a feast, so I'll sign off now. Thanks for the yummy food, great discussion, and fun time, as always!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Hunger Games Night

The time has come.....

Hunger Games

Food

Chat

This Thursday @ my house.

7 p.m.

Come hungry!

*Please give me a heads up on here if you are planning on coming so I can plan well.
Thanks!

Monday, March 22, 2010

I've got Heidi's copy of 'The Hunger Games'. I'm finished so if anyone needs a copy to read, let me know. I really enjoyed the story so I'm looking forward to next meeting.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Richard Peck, A Long Way From Retiring



Here's me as a seventh grader with Richard Peck at a young writers' workshop at Starved Rock State Park in Illinois. I remember being SO excited to meet a real author.

I slipped the old photo into my book, Ghosts I Have Been, as a surprise for him when he opened it to sign it again, 20 years later. He knew what young writers' workshop I was talking about and said, "Yeah, I can still remember the lodge I stayed in." Pretty good for all the places he's been and for being 76 years old. I was just as excited to talk with a real author the second time around, and introduce him to my daughter.

I found his speech just as entertaining as his books, funny and full of wisdom.

"Your library card is your ticket out of town, and it was mine." I'm from a small town in IL like him, and moved to the "big city" in 8th grade. "Anyone who thinks a small town is friendly lives in a big city."

He addressed the change he's observed in public education. "When I was a student, parents feared the call from the school. Now, the school fears the call from the parents. You can teach children or fear their parents, but you can't do both."

As an English teacher of high school school seniors, he learned that "You have to be dead to be read." As a junior high teacher, he got lots of ideas from his students, and is led by his readers as to what he writes.

"3/4 Dead," inspired by a true story and coming out this fall, will be quite different from the 39 books he's written so far. He said he didn't want to deal with this story, but couldn't get the girl's voice out of his head who was on the other line with her friend when she died behind the wheel on her cell phone, along with their 2 other girlfriends in the car.

I once heard an educator say that reading books for older children provides what dramatic play does for younger ones in learning empathy, defining roles, and figuring out the world. I found it very interesting that he said the elders in his books are the young readers' introductions to the bewildering world of adults.

Although he's past a typical retirement age, Richard Peck doesn't plan on trimming his travel itinerary or unplugging his electric typewriter anytime soon. "I can't afford to stay home very long. I'm getting older every minute." Next week, he's off to London, where he visits about four times a year from his NY hometown.

Some of his advice for writers: "The story is always about the reader, never about the writer...Beatrix Potter never was a rabbit. J.K. Rawlings never attended Hogwarts."

"Always write your dialogue standing up. It improves the pace."

When I asked Robyn what she'd say as a report about his speech to her 3rd grade class, she quoted him as saying, "Only readers have futures."

March Book Club!





Last night book club was held at the library.  We read two books this month, A Long Way to Chicago and A Year Down Yonder. Then last night we were lucky enough to hear from the Newbery Award-winning author Richard Peck.  


We joined about 300 others to listen to him talk about why he is a writer and where some of his characters came from.  He was much funnier than I anticipated and he didn't shy away from being pretty critical about the state of public education.  Here are a few of my favorite quotes and one from Kristie.  Add your favorites in the comments section -- Christie I am sure you have several too.


"Most of who we are is determined in the five fleeting years of life before we ever see schools,"  


"Schools don't build foundations, schools build upon foundations. And when schools fail, families fail first."


"Story was the first school"


"Families should read together because fiction is family"


"I am never the boy in the book, because our readers aren't looking for us authors in our pages," he said. "They're looking for themselves."


"You always learn the most from the experiences you would have avoided if you could"


From Krsitie:

"I read because one life isn't enough, and in the page of a book I can be anybody;
I read because the words that build the story become mine, to build my life;
I read not for happy endings but for new beginnings; I'm just beginning myself, and I wouldn't mind a map;
I read because I have friends who don't, and young though they are, they're beginning to run out of material;
I read because every journey begins at the library, and it's time for me to start packing;
I read because one of these days I'm going to get out of this town, and I'm going to go everywhere and meet everybody, and I want to be ready."

I forgot my camera but Shannon took some photos with her phone & I'll post then soon.

After the library a few of us headed over to Shauna's house for some REALLY good food **recipes please!!**  and even better conversation (complete with beauty tips and labor & delivery stories).  I for one had a great time.  
See you next month!

Monday, March 1, 2010

Let's go see us some Richard Peck!

Just in case anyone hasn't been getting the emails, we're going to see Richard Peck tomorrow night at the Provo Library. We'll meet in the line outside the ballroom doors at 5:30. We have enough tickets for all who are able and willing to come.

Afterwards, we are going over to Shauna's house for some treats and appetizers or whatever else you might want to bring to share. Elsa has a fever of 103.5, so I didn't think anyone wanted to come to my house and get exposed, and Shauna was kind enough to agree to have people over there.

Thank you, Shauna! And, we'll see you all tomorrow night.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Book Club At Shannon's...



It will come as no surprise that we had another marvelous time at book club.  Brenda reviewed The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie and Shannon provided quite the spread.

Most of us agreed that although some of the situations Flavia found herself in were a little unbelievable we really liked her and how precocious she was.


The Black Penny stamps from the book


Chicken Pesto Pizza with artichoke hearts.  I for one really want the recipe!



This blueberry pie is soooo good.  It even had a special "sweetness" at the bottom of the pie!


Here is the beloved rocker that Rebecca claimed as her throne.


Bethany, Shauna, Christie & Shephanie (holding her adhesives from the free-for-all)


Krisite, Shannon, Brenda & Britney


Heidi, Kara & Her Majesty Rebecca (Don't touch the chair!)


Thanks Shannon for hosting everything was perfect!!
See you next month.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Tribe Has Spoken...

March (1st Tue.)
A year Down Yonder & A Long Way From Chicago by Richard Peck
Lecture at the Library followed by mingling at Kara's house

April 
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Hosted by Britney
Reviewed by Kristie

May 
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
Hosted by Robyn
Reviewed by Rebecca

June
Ida B. ... by Katherine Hannigan and When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead
Hosted by Rebecca
Reviewed by Brenda & Christie

July
No Book Club - read by the pool

August
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Hosted by Stephanie
Reviewed by Shauna

September
Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
Hosted by Bethany
Reviewed by Heidi

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

A Couple of Last Minute Book Idea's...

These books don't seem as uplifting as most of the others you all have submitted-the title of the second book is a bit offensive but I'm hoping we can get past that...

Fugitive Pieces
by Anne Michaels


It's about a little boy who survives World War II-how he's rescued and how he grows up and gets past the tragedy of what he's been through. Where this book could seem like sad subject matter in contains possible and unlikely kindnesses of people one toward another.


ANOTHER BULL---- NIGHT IN SUCK CITY
by Nick Flynn

Flynn's memoir is about growing up in a tumultuous household after his alcoholic father abandoned the family. His dad became homeless, and though they were estranged, their paths did cross, in part because Flynn was working at a homeless shelter his father would occasionally duck into. The book seems rough and raw and real. Beautiful scenes of a boy coming of age and later, his falling in love after a divorce. Anne Michaels writing is supposed to be poetic and the story magical in an unikely way.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

My 3 Submissions

1. The Wednesday Letters This sounds really interesting. Has anyone read it?

2. When You Reach Me OK, you know that I don't re-read books. That's why I give them away. As soon as I was done with this one, I re-read it, backwards. It's an easy, fun read, and yet really makes you think at the same time. I read it in a mother/daughter book club with Robyn, and we had a great time discussing it. I would actually lay awake at night thinking about it! It could be a good one for Aug. when kids go back to school and everything starts getting way hectic after summer break is over. Oh, and it just got the Newberry Award.

Both of these are available as book club sets at the library, so I could be in charge of checking them out, and nobody would have to buy them!

3. The Gift of an Ordinary Day I read an excerpt from this in a magazine, and it has changed my mindset ever since.