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Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Trouble with Tomes

When I decided it would be a good idea in 2014 to read all of the novels I own but have not yet read, I underestimated my bibliophilic buying tendencies as well as my stunning lack of follow-through when it comes to actually reading the books I purchase.

The list clocks in at 70 novels.

This doesn't count the collections of short stories and poetry, the memoirs, the plays, the various nonfiction tomes that have taken up residence on my shelves over the years (nor does it include the pile of books tagged for giveaway, many of which I also have not read). That's more than a book a week! (I can math, too. Cool, right?)

While I am a skilled and confident reader, that number is daunting, particularly considering that according to my Goodreads profile, I only read 23 books in 2013. Granted, this doesn't include books I re-read but rather only books I was reading for the first time. Even so, I'm fairly certain my 2013 reading didn't even come close to 70 books. Some of these are beastly long, too: Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind; Leo Tolstoy's War & Peace and Anna Karenina; Stieg Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire, and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest. Oof.

Is there time enough in a year? Should I split it up over two years? Three? I mean, three years would put me about on par with this year's reading, but is that making it too easy? Besides, I don't know how I'd choose. Plus, it's all so heavy, and I'm sure to get distracted. I didn't plan on reading half of what fell into my lap in 2013, and look what happened! Not that it wasn't heavy. A lot of it was. I mean, I read George R.R. Martin's whole Song of Ice & Fire as released to date in less than two months. (Did I accomplish anything else? Not really, but what's a bookworm to do when she's stuck in an epic series of novels?!)

Okay, so I guess I'll just read and see what happens. If I get through them, great. If not, 2015 is just around the corner. Besides, I'm more than a third of the way through the first book on the list (admittedly the lightest book on the list when it comes to content) so maybe . . . oh, wait. I forgot about Donna Tartt's The Secret History. Unless I trade my NYE movie marathon for a night with a book, I'm unlikely to finish that one before the new year begins. So 70 it will be.

3 . . . 2 . . . 1 . . .

What are you reading this year?

Thursday, December 12, 2013

intellectual conversations with a guy you once had a crush on

This post is part of a writing project called #30daysofessays. For more about the project, click here.

He intimidated me. Easily the best-looking, most crushed-upon guy in town. Plus he was smart. Talked about books and music and social issues. And he listened to me when I talked. *Swoon*

But seriously. We would never be a thing. Acquaintances. Game for a good conversation. Now and then, he'd let me have a free cup of hot tea at the bakery I frequented and where he worked. He was nice, you know. He smiled. Not just at me. A lot.

And I looked forward to encountering him. Mainly for the banter. Sometimes I still had trouble stringing words together. I wanted him to think I was smart. I forgot that I actually was (am) smart. I didn't have to pretend.

I've gotten past the idea that it's better to act like I know what he's talking about rather than just to admit I don't. Have you read this author? No. What's she written? This is happening here and it's amazing. Oh, really? I had no idea. Tell me more.

I'm making things up now, but conversations with him almost always brought intellectual stimulation. I felt selfish talking with him because he was giving me so much, and I didn't think I had anything to give him in return.

We'd known each other a while before we finally sat down to have lunch as actual friends to talk about this essay he was writing. It had been a while since we'd even had much of a conversation beyond hellos. Casual meetings in the street. Waves across a crowded bar or through a shop window.

But we sat for an hour and only briefly talked about his essay. Conversation careened from topic to topic. Highs and lows. You look happy, he said. I am.

Story after story after story. Mundane and exciting and covering so much ground. I wasn't hunting for words, worrying what he'd think of me if I said this or that, hoping he'd like me, over-eager to be the one he's paying attention to. I was those things once, but we were just talking, and I realized I'm not anymore.

Then it was over. Back to work for me, to the essay for him. We smiled and said good-bye. I saw him sitting in the window another day. Once upon a time I'd have ducked in to sit. Any excuse to bask in his eyes. I smiled. Waved. Kept walking.

12/9/2013

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Tucson, AZ, Spring 2008

This post is part of a writing project called #30daysofessays. For more about the project, click here.

She was taking pictures of them as they stumbled from the bus, their belongings in plastic grocery bags. Tying shoelaces. Fastening belts. Herded like so many cattle back to the border. They might have called a handful of different countries home, but dropping them just that side of the dividing line put them out of our hands. America's hands.

We attending a hearing in Tucson. Not for those people. For others like them. People we call "illegal." (Because people can be "illegal"...) One man had crossed the border and been sent back thirty-seven times. Others just once, twice, half a dozen times. Those for whom the court could not provide a translator were released on time served and sent back across the border. Others would serve longer sentences before they, too, were returned to the desert. We learned many of these would attempt again to enter the country. They had nowhere else to go.

At an aid station near Nogales, Mexico, we saw the effects of prolonged exposure in the desert. Burned and calloused feet. Mouths dry with thirst. Skin parched from the dry heat. Water barrels marked by blue flags are scattered along the US-Mexico border, filled regularly by Humane Borders volunteers. Opponents of the organization's work contend that such provision encourages illegal crossings. Research refutes this idea, but research cannot stop the destruction of barrels and the waste of a life-sustaining resource.

They're breaking the law and should be treated like criminals, one side argues. This means robbing them of their humanity. Reducing them to less than livestock. Turning a blind eye to officer behavior that would not be out of place in a concentration camp. Deporting people to a place that is not their home. Naming this justice because it appeases the supposedly law-abiding masses. Because at least it looks like some effort is being made.

But to what end?

A nation built on the backs of immigrants turns its nose up at a new generation of immigrants. Their path may be different, but that doesn't make them unworthy. A person willing to trek thousands of dangerous miles across hot sand just to attempt to gain entrance into the United States seems like a person with the kind of work ethic held in such high esteem here.

That ethic is irrelevant because that person failed to obtain a visa and enter the country legally. Why? Surely, the system is perfectly formed and allows entrance to all people and doesn't put any kind of barriers in place that would limit people's opportunity based on economic status. That's an absurd suggestion. Is it? So he sits in limbo, waiting, expecting to be deported, to end up in that aid camp in Nogales. No better prospect awaits him than to try again and again and again. Until maybe one time he slips through and gets a low-paying, long hours job and hopes against hope he isn't found out.

Forced to march with dozens of other migrants across the border while a wide-eyed college student takes his picture.

12/8/2013

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

#30daysofessays

I was having lunch with a friend last week and telling him about this bizarre day at Rotary the week of the 50th anniversary of JFK's assassination. He asked if I ever thought, during an experience, that if it were happening to David Sedaris, he'd write an essay about it. I really can't say I've ever thought that. Until now.

Of course, I'm not David Sedaris. I can, however, write an essay so I figure I might as well. I've let enough time lapse since college without adequately exercising my creative writing/critical thinking/whatever brain muscles. Hopefully they haven't atrophied too much in the intervening years.

So here's the deal:

I've got this bag of writing prompts. Sort of. They're just tidbits of things I find interesting or want to write about or that strike me on a given day enough to write them down and toss them in the bag.

I'll choose a prompt from the bag each day and write about it. A page or two. Maybe less. However long it takes until I'm finished.

(I'm writing from the library now and there's this clock at the bottom of the screen telling me how much time I have left in my session. Ticking the seconds away. It's making this feel rather like a test.)

Whenever I can get to a computer, I'll upload the essays to the blog and publish them one by one. Essay one will make its debut tomorrow.

The days might not be consecutive. Here at Day 3, I'm doing all right.

If you're reading and think I should write about something specific, let me know. If you like a piece, don't like a piece, feel really middling about a piece, leave it in the comments. I like to know what you think.

You can follow this project on twitter at #30daysofessays or just subscribe here or just check back now and then to see what's new.



Saturday, October 19, 2013

Free Books: Part Two

Okay, here's the deal (in case you missed the first round): I've got all these books and I'm trying to downsize so I'm giving some away. All of the books in this round have been listed on paperbackswap, some for years and some for not so long at all. So now I'm posting this list of them here. If you want one, it's yours. Just let me know which you'd like and how to get it (or them) to you. They're all still listed on my paperbackswap bookshelf so in the event that anything is requested through the site, I'll do my best to make sure this list reflects that change.

Here goes:

Diana's Boys: William & Harry & the Mother They Loved (Christopher Andersen)
The Clan of the Cave Bear (Jean M. Auel)
Five Women Wearing the Same Dress (Alan Ball)
The Diving Bell & the Butterfly (Jean-Dominique Bauby)
A Delirious Summer (Ray Blackston)
Lost in Rooville (Ray Blackston)
The Last Summer (of You & Me) (Ann Brashares)
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (Ann Brashares)
Tune in Anytime (Caroline B. Cooney)
Absolutely Normal Chaos (Sharon Creech)

Love by the Glass: Tasting Notes from a Marriage (Dorothy J. Gaiter & John Brecher)
Troy (Adele Geras)
Ellen Foster (Kaye Gibbons)
Just Ella (Margaret Peterson Haddix)
October Sky (Homer H. Hickam, Jr.)
Indigo (Alice Hoffman)
About a Boy (Nick Hornby)
Mossflower (Brian Jacques)
Redwall (Brian Jacques)

Penelope (Marilyn Kaye)
The Mermaid Chair (Sue Monk Kidd)
Goose Chase (Patrice Kindl)
Hearts in Atlantis (Stephen King)
Winds of Fate (Mercedes Lackey)
Ghost Boy (Iain Lawrence)
Shopgirl (Steve Martin)
The Painted Veil (W. Somerset Maugham)
Battlefield of the Mind (Joyce Meyer)
Her Fearful Symmetry (Audrey Niffenegger)

Jacob Have I Loved (Katherine Paterson)
Scribbler of Dreams (Mary E. Pearson)
Push (Sapphire)
The Lovely Bones (Alice Sebold)
Dress Your Family in Corduroy & Denim (David Sedaris)
Journey Through Heartsongs (Mattie J.T. Stepanek)
The Distance from the Heart of Things (Ashley Warlick)
The Charm School (Susan Wiggs)
More Than Words: Stories of Courage (Susan Wiggs, Sharon Sala, Emilie Richards)
The Lizzie McGuire Movie (junior novelization)

There you have it. Once again, if you want anything, it's yours (unless someone else asked first).

Happy reading!

Micah

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

FREE BOOKS!

Hi friends!

On October 15th, the local library will start accepting donations again. Until then, here are the titles from my library to which I'll be bidding farewell. Some of them I've read; others have been sitting collecting dust (and being packed and unpacked in various moves) since I acquired them.

If you'd like any of these, let me know, and we can work out how to get it/them to you. On October 15th, whatever is left will go to the library. (Yes, I know about PaperbackSwap. If you don't, you should.)

Seriously. Free books!
Watership Down (Richard Adams)
How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents (Julia Alvarez)
Speak (Laurie Halse Anderson)
Weetzie Bat (Francesca Lia Block)
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
The Land that Time Forgot (Edgar Rice Burroughs)

My Antonia (Willa Cather)
The Professor's House (Willa Cather)
The Quilter's Kitchen (Jennifer Chiaverini)
A Pair of Silk Stockings and Other Stories (Kate Chopin)
Gigi and The Cat (Colette)
Seventeenth Summer (Maureen Daly)
The Origin of Species (Charles Darwin)
Nicholas Nickleby (Charles Dickens)
The Old Curiosity Shop (Charles Dickens)
The Pickwick Papers (Charles Dickens)
Sister Carrie (Theodore Dreiser)

Too Great a Lady (Amanda Elyot)
The Sound and the Fury (William Faulkner)
Devil's Food Cake Murder (Joanne Fluke)
Where Angels Fear to Tread (E.M. Forster)
Five Sisters: The Langhornes of Virginia (James Fox)
Mary Called Magdalene (Margaret George)
Herland (Charlotte Perkins Gilman)
Lord of the Flies (William Golding)

On Reflection: An Autobiography (Helen Hayes)
The Old Man and the Sea (Ernest Hemingway)
Mules and Men (Zora Neale Hurston)
The Turn of the Screw and Other Short Novels (Henry James)
13 Little Blue Envelopes (Maureen Johnson)
Bluebird, or the Invention of Happiness (Sheila Kohler)
The Red Queen's Daughter (Jacqueline Kolosov)
You May Not Tie an Alligator to a Fire Hydrant (Jeff Koon & Andy Powell)

Hector and the Search for Happiness (Francois Lelord)
A Swiftly Tilting Planet (Madeleine L'Engle)
Mandie and the Secret Tunnel (Lois Gladys Leppard)
Mandie and the Trunk's Secret (Lois Gladys Leppard)
Mandie and the Hidden Treasure (Lois Gladys Leppard)
Perspectives on the Jack Tales and Other North American Märchen (Carl Lindahl, ed.)
Jack in Two Worlds: Contemporary North American Tales & Their Tellers (William Bernard McCarthy, ed.)
Morgan's Run (Colleen McCullough)
Sula (Toni Morrison)

The Bell Jar (Sylvia Plath)
Where the Red Fern Grows (Wilson Rawls)
The Catcher in the Rye (J.D. Salinger)
Franny and Zooey (J.D. Salinger)
Nine Stories (J.D. Salinger)
The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight (Jennifer E. Smith)
Stargirl (Jerry Spinelli)
Girl in Hyacinth Blue (Susan Vreeland)
Affinity (Sarah Waters)

Some of them may have scribbles in them from surviving various university classes, but they are all in good to good-as-new condition.

Happy reading!

~Micah

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Like Letters

I have a penchant for writing long-winded letters, fraught with emotion, to guys I find attractive. If you've ever been the receiving party of such a letter, I apologize. (There aren't that many of you, and you're probably not reading this anyway, but just in case. . .) You probably didn't deserve it, and I shouldn't have inflicted it upon you, but I'm certain that I meant every word I wrote at the time that I wrote it. Still, that's no excuse for actually giving it to you. I probably should have kept it to myself.

Then, I had a breakthrough of sorts. I wrote a short note and spent a day agonizing over whether or not to give it to someone. In the end, I didn't, partly because I am a little shy sometimes, partly because my gut told me not to, and partly because I was terrified someone else would find it and read it and hello awkward!

The note didn't say anything incriminating. There was a comment on his looks (sort of) and a compliment on a recent project. It shouldn't have been embarrassing to give him the note or even to say those things to his face . . . if I only thought of him as a friend.

There's the trouble, though.

I like him. I probably shouldn't, but I do. A little, anyway. Enough to make me awkward.

If I didn't, I could tell him the things that I wrote in that note, but since I do, anything I say is going to sound like I'm flirting. Which would be okay, I suppose, if I knew he also liked me. But I don't. And anyway, he shouldn't. We're really all wrong for each other. Probably.

So I'm erring on the side of caution when it comes to "Like Letters" these days.

Probably.