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Saturday, October 4, 2014

I get to see my university's theater department in action. 
Email and the other William
I have been receiving emails from Emery for the first time. I believe the first email he sent me was a forwarded message from his choir teacher that I asked him to send me.

Then, I got this one:
Mom jon (named changed for privacy) needs to check his E-mail so tell his mom to make him look at it
-Emery

I must admit I wasn’t’ sure what that email meant. Was jon not checking his email? I sent what I hoped wasn’t too awkward of an email to Jon’s mom.

Apparently, Emery wanted “jon” to check his email so that he could learn about the assignment they had due the next week. Jon wasn’t at school that day. How Emery expected me to know all of this is beyond me.

I remember a colleague of mine saying that recently she felt like her child was expecting her to do things for him. I believe she said she felt like she was becoming his secretary. I think this was one of those moments.

But onto more important things. Emery’s been double cast as William in LSU’s production of Frankenstein. (Which, by the way, is the first play I haven’t had to pay for him to perform in. It’s been a great experience and perhaps the easiest, shortest rehearsal schedule ever. Part of the reason is that the role was double cast that means he doesn’t have to be there for every performance. But for me, it’s been fascinating seeing my colleagues in their environments. I had no idea of the caliber and work that goes into each production—and I have seen quite a few, just never the prep work that goes into it. They design costumes, compose music, choreograph fight scenes, and plan for lighting and special effects. They are scholars in their own right, and this was my first time seeing another department’s work.

If you’re not familiar with the story, the creature accidentally kills Emery’s character in the second act, and it’s quite eerie seeing one’s child killed repeatedly. Every time is devastating. The actor who plays the creature is a professional and they practice the scene before each performance, but there’s something in that moment that makes me sad. Every time.

But, it’s been great working with this cast and the director who are all amazing. And, even if it means seeing Emery die on stage again, I’ll do it as long as Emery wants too.


Emery’s comment: dying on stage is fun! I am glad to be in a professional performance for once! I’m sorry though that mom is sad when I die on stage (who knew!) oh well.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

What we did this summer


I haven’t blogged in forever. It was a crazy summer and then the school year started and well, here we are. And, I want to blog about being on sabbatical, resilience, middle school, and the latest young adult novels I’ve read. But, first things first. Our summer. . .

Four years ago, Emery asked to go around the world. Thinking he would forget about it, I told him we would do that when he turned 10. Well, he never forgot, and we managed to circumnavigate the world in the shortest and cheapest way possible. It was awesome.

Here are the facts:
1.    Three stops (with layovers in Boston, Iceland, Moscow, and Los Angeles) Paris, Venice, and Tokyo.
2.    13 days.
3.    Start and end in New Orleans
Yes, it was expensive. But we saved and I taught summer school to help finance it. And, my husband is a genius. He bought a series of one way tickets and paid in advance for the hotels on discount sites well in advance of our trip. It was so much cheaper than any way I came up with (travel agent, multi-city airline tickets, etc.)

Victor and I are not convinced that Emery appreciated the trip as much as we did or as we hoped. To be honest, every time we flew to a different country we would up sleeping for 14 hours before embarking on a whirlwind trip of must sees, which began with figuring our that city’s public transportation system (I could do an entire blog post on Tokyo’s public transportation system).

I’m not sure how to recount the trip other than a way suggested by my colleague who suggested that a good way to help Emery remember the trip is to have him write captions for some of the pictures we took. Well, colleague, Emery’s captions may not surprise you:
 
This is definitely the best trip a family can take. 
It's a tower. Yay!

Are you sure I won't burn the place down? 


Tips for summer trips
1.    Less is more. Don’t try to see everything. Taking in just two sites a day really is enough.
2.    Tours are your best friend. We took a tour in Paris and in Tokyo and they both were memorable, educational, cheaper than if we had tried touring on our own and efficient. Yes, it’s a little touristy, but the tour of the Opera House in Paris is something I’ll never forget and wouldn’t have done if we didn’t have a tour as part of our package. I like the put together your own itinerary better than the having to stay together with a group for an entire day.
3.     Okay, professor moms (and dads). Say you really want to go to the Guggenheim Museum in Venice and you’re rushing there because it’s Tuesday afternoon and they are closed on Wednesdays, and you are only in Venice for three days and of course the first day you had to see the “big” sites, and then you pass by a little church that is advertising an exhibition of working wooden models that Leonardo da Vinci made. You go into the exhibit because you think you have enough time to make it to the Guggenheim before it closes. Your son is clearly having fun with the models (and honestly you are too) and you stay longer than you thought you would. Don’t be sad and try to convince the museum to let you in for the last ten minutes they are open when you finally get there. Stay longer at the da Vinci exhibit.

Remember, this is a trip for your child(ren), not for you. 

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Summer School Fun


 
Sorry, Emery. Pacman is a playable character.
Just finished my first week of teaching two summer courses. The first one is for a teacher certification program. That course covers planning, management, and evaluation. It’s an odd class to be teaching when students aren’t able to put into practice the material they with which they come into contact. They are out in the field and some will actually teach this summer, but I wonder how much they will remember for the fall when they begin teaching.

My other course is secondary school curriculum. It’s my third time teaching this graduate course for secondary school teachers and I love it. Their conversations and engagement with the course content is complex, multi-layered, and challenging. Their experiences are as diverse as their educational philosophies that discussions sometimes become quite heated—but no fist fights as of yet.

We meet three times a week for approximately three hours each meeting. Here’s how I structure the course (you know I love routine as much as I love a good gimmick):

TED Tuesdays—Watch and discuss TED talks about education.
Work Wednesdays—Work on final group projects.
Theater Thursdays—Watch a film or television show that relates to the week’s readings and focus topic (We watch clips from season 4 of The Wire, Waiting for Superman, Teach: Tony Danza, and Chalk).

Each class session begins with a student-led discussion over the day’s readings, and then we move to the focus of the day. On TED Tuesdays, we watch TED talks about education including those by the creator of Kahn Academy, an innovative approach to schools in England called Studio Schools, and a TEDxMahattan talk by Michelle Rhee.

I then have my students create a lesson based on either a TED talk or an Youtube video using TED-Ed’s software. It’s really user friendly and fun to use. I think I might get Emery to create one on video games . . .


Speaking of Emery, I hope he tells you about the new game he previewed at Best Buy this past week . . . The picture at the top of the blog is a hint.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

The Summer Doldrums


We have now hit what I think of as the summer doldrums. For those of you familiar with your children’s literature, a reference can be found to the doldrums in the Phantom Tollbooth as a place where people are stuck in a routine of lounging around. And, they also refer to, if I remember correctly, calms spots of weather, without winds or storms, on the ocean.

A quick google search confirms that we are in the summer doldrums as this USA Today Money article notes. Only, they are referring to the financial markets. I’m referring, however, to the period of time that exists between the end of school and the beginning of summer camps.

During this time, parents often have to scramble to find temporary child-care options. That might mean visiting grandparents, friends whose parents work at home (or are not teaching), or taking your children to work with you.

For professor-types, the doldrums (at least for those of us who teach in the summer) exist in the days after the semester has ended and the beginning of summer classes. Summer reading, video games, and gardening beckon. Alas, who can justify relaxing when in just two weeks, classes start and there are syllabi to update, course material to read, and papers to be written?

Redmag's blogs for moms has a column on 10 tips for getting kids to read. While I applaud their
I asked Emery what he was going to do this week. In addition to posting more videos to his Youtube Channel, here’s his list:
Monday-fun, violin, movie night
Tuesday-help mom cook
Wednesday- set info for server
Thursday-make minecraft server, clean house

Friday-Friends come over

p.s. Redbook magazine's Momrama blog has a column on 10 tips for getting kids to read. While I applaud their efforts and like the tips about finding what your kids are curious about and find books about those topics, they overlooked a very simple tip--give them good books. I wish they had listed some sources on how to find those books, and it's quite possible that my next post should be on locating good books for your kids. Because no matter how much kids love learning about the planets, they will not bother with a  poorly written book on the topic, and we shouldn't make them read them. 

Saturday, May 17, 2014

why you-tubing is hard with Emery

Youtube's more metallic than ever

a few weeks after my mom did the you tube post i got a you tube channel. took forever to find channel art, made a couple videos(edited out deaths) and typed them in to see how they looked.(Just so you know my videos are on video games so if you or your children want to see them there will be a link). I typed it in and saw there was a bunch of videos on the same game! (donkey kong tropical freeze). it was impossible for someone to find it!. i thought of sending a link to my friends but they never check it. so i watched some ideas on getting your channel known and found out to use social media. checking my channel i saw on history a bunch of nail polish vlogs my mom watches! not knowing what to do i go to dad to see if he can share the channel on his twitter. the next day he said yes. I went to my mom to see if i could do this post. if you haven't figured it out she said yes. going back to the channel i figured out how to delete videos on history. then saw I had 4 subscribers! I thanked the ones with non-hidden channels and told my parents. making this i think of doing a sneak peak of best buy's E3 nintendo if the camera doesn't shake to much. also to make a channel trailer and  series on mario kart 8. i hope you enjoyed this!

here's the link to the channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCt0qDmg1BRTmQnE2CClQg-w

Jackie's comments. Wait a minute. He erased my videos on history? I'm not sure what that means, but he'll tell me. Yep, Emery's been busy this past week--he gets up around 5:30 a.m., figures out what he's going to capture, yells at us (we're still trying to sleep) to stay out of the living room because he's recording, and then he does his thing. All without my help. 

But, I didn't realize that half his plan included researching a marketing strategy. 

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Rejection versus Losing: Which is Better for our Children?


The Bring It moms show off their dance moves. 



As I’m writing this, I’m watching the last episode of this season’s Bring It. The episode before this one, the Dancing Dolls came in second place at a large competition. But the way it was represented it was as if they lost. There is loss and rejection in the show. Sunjai, for example, gets cut (a sort of rejection) almost every week from the elite stand battle team. She must deal with the rejection of not making the cut. And, when the team doesn’t make first place, it’s as if they seem to “lose”. And the team has to discuss how to deal with that “loss”. (I say loss because really is second place that bad?)

Our children experience both loss and rejection in their lives. I never thought about it until one of the parents at an audition Emery was at today commented on the fact that her child had chosen an activity (acting) that has a 90% rejection rate. She might be exaggerating, but it was a profound observation to me. A child might be rejected for a role because he or she is not tall enough or loud enough or cute enough. They don’t get to continue beyond the audition. Whereas a child on a basketball team (or golf or art contest) might submit a work or play in a game where they are not the “winner”. But, they get to play in the game. Which is worse? Which is harder? Is there a difference between rejection and losing?

I don’t know. Personally, winning or losing or rejecting wasn’t something I really noticed when I was a child. I didn’t mind losing the run for student council secretary when I was chosen as drum major. Which leads me to the realization that I need to just back off. Perhaps our children don’t recognize the difference or even the implications in the way we do.

I loved watching the Bring It moms put on costumes and dance for the season finale (they even do a stand battle!). I can’t sing and act like Emery can. It makes me realize that my child is capable of things I was never capable of at his age, and that I was able to do things he is not capable of. But my job is to provide him with the resources that he needs and not push him into things he doesn’t enjoy.  

So, what do you think? Is it easier to deal with rejection or losing? Should we avoid activities that favor one or the other? 

Emery's comment: It's true. I'm cool with it but sometimes they hire someone when they are terrible at the part but look like that character. I'm auditioning for a big part and most likely they will choose the one that looks like more like the character. Oh well.

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Emery wants his own Youtube channel and Boyd’s book It’s complicated.



First, grad students can be wonderful resources for information. They may not recognize it yet, but they really do have the luxury to stay current and immersed in a particular area of interest. And, they are innovative. Rarely do I have the wonderful, crazy, provocative ideas I once did when I was reading Lacan for one course, watching punk rock movies in another, and discussing the future of education in another.
Which is why I am grateful I expressed my woes about Emery wanting his own Youtube channel so he can make his own “Let’s Plays.” This student recommended that I read Danah Boyd’s (2014) It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens, which I had actually already heard about on NPR, but then immediately dismissed as one of those books I didn’t need to read yet (heaven help Emery when I can finally justify how to prepare your child for college books). This student patiently explained to me (my apologies if I paraphrase this conversation inaccurately) that Boyd argues that many parents’ fears about their children going online might not come true—that our children have this “imagined community” with whom they will interact, and really, how many people are going to seek out his channel. So, I went to my library and, would you believe it, found an online version of the book.

The book is divided into several chapters and based on eight years of research. Here are the chapter titles:

-identity why do teens seem strange online?
-privacy why do youth share so publicly?
-addiction what makes teens obsessed with social media?
-danger are sexual predators lurking everywhere?
-bullying is social media amplifying meanness and cruelty?
-inequality can social media resolve social divisions?
-literacy are today’s youth digital natives?
-searching for a public of their own

I tried to figure out which chapter to read first by trying to figure out my objections to Emery’s getting his own channel (Victor’s is easy—he would read the bullying chapter as he is afraid of the cruel comments people might make on the site. He might be speaking from personal experience). To be honest, my fear is all of the work I’m going to have to do—help Emery create the channel, purchase all of the equipment he kindly wrote for me in a list and left by my stack of work stuff, figure out how to use all of that equipment, etc. Unfortunately, there’s no chapter on children whose pursuits make more work for the mom who can’t let her son figure it out for himself. . .

So, I read the chapter on addiction because as someone who only blogs (I opened a Twitter account but haven’t posted or even looked back at it since then), it’s hard for me to understand why Victor has to check his Twitter every few minutes during dinner or a concert or while driving.

Basically, Boyd begins with the notion that maybe addiction (she likens the passage of time that goes by to being in Csikszentmihalyi’s flow) is a little too strong of a word and that the public is blaming social media instead of other social ills. She likens the amount of time spent social networking to the time teens used to spend on the phone (I spent hours on the phone as a teen). She says teens are not addicted to the technology but to each other (p. 80).She then moves to a discussion about how societal changes (parental fear, increased structured activity time for youth, etc.) has led to less down time for kids to spend with each other face to face. Guilty as charged.

Boyd ends the chapter without a recommended list of strategies for parents or even an idea of how much is too much but instead with the words: “Rather, adults must recognize what teens are trying to achieve and work with them to find balance and to help them think about what they are encountering” (p. 99).

I think this is a book Victor won’t read, but Emery will. I think it would be a good way to start some of the discussions we should be having—and maybe something he needs to do before we agree to his request.

I just didn’t think it would happen so soon.

Emery's comment: she knows me. now i'm probably going to read the book. also, heaven help me when mom prepares me for college books. i can help figuring out the equipment and i can self-teach quickly! ... okay, i'll need help with imovie but thats about it! though, part 4 of the book does make me re-think this. 

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Another Nerdy Saturday Night and Summer Camps




Victor and Emery are playing Lord of the Rings Monopoly while watching The Hobbit, part 2.

I think the only thing to top that would be if we were reading another Shakespeare play out loud.

So, have you signed up for your summer camps yet? If not, you’re probably too late to get into the more popular ones. Like the Percy Jackson one held in Austin, TX each year--registration begins in November. 

As you know from a post I did last year, we sign up for camps early each year. We’ve had a lot of success and failures (I’ve lost many dollars on camps Emery left early). We’re only doing two camps this year, both theatre camps, because we’re taking a very exciting trip. More on that later, but just a few additions to my choosing summer camps rules:

1.    Don’t regret missing a camp because you’ve scheduled a big trip. It’s going to be okay if your kid can’t star in the local kids' version of Peter Pan.
2.    By all means, get your kid’s opinion but you have the final word. Research, find out information from others who have attended the camp before and make an informed decision. 
3.    Don’t put a kid in a camp with a friend just so he can be with that friend. It’s not fair for anybody to make sacrifices with money or time, just so they can be together—there are always times outside of camps.
4.    I can’t comment on overnight camps, but if your kid says he doesn’t want to go, don’t make him. Even if it’s the super awesome sounding Stagedoor Manor (I just read Theater Geeks, written by the same guy, Mickey Rapkin, who wrote the book Pitch Perfect was based on which is about a theater camp).
5.    An educational camp is still education, even if it’s a camp that uses science to teach Minecraft. School is school.

Now that camps are signed up for, it’s time to think about the summer project for Emery. Two years ago, it was the Medieval Times, last year Shakespeare, I suppose this year it needs to be something science-related.

I always liked physics. 

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Don’t read this if your kid plays video games and you want him to stop

An updated version of the video game walkthrough--the wiki page.  Thank you contributors. 



A student in my class referred to Seymour Papert’s 1993 book The Children’s Machine: Rethinking School in the Age of the Computer this week. Not familiar with his work, I turned to trusty Amazon to read the first few pages. In doing so, I came across this statement found in the preface:

         "The love affair [he had been discussing how parents sometimes view their children as being addicted to computers and video games] involves more than the desire to do things with computers. It also has an element of possessiveness and, most importantly, of assertion of intellectual identity.”

I could just see Emery using this statement on me someday. He might stop letting me play his Nintendo. But, taken another way, imagine what our children can and do teach us about their technological worlds—see Emery’s “Let’s Plays” post.

My students are always quick to point out the dangers of the computer (cyberbullying, false, misleading information, and they point out that many of their students don’t have access to them).

But this post is really about something else—I played video games before Emery did. Some of my fondest memories were of my family playing Atari games together (my parents had fierce battles playing what I think was called Megalomania). I, like many of my contemporaries, grew up with Nintendo’s Mario and Zelda. And, then I stopped playing for many years.

The next time I picked up a console happened shortly after Emery’s birth. Well, before that Victor and I played some PC games, one of our favorites was an Alice in Wonderland adventure. Victor and I can’t remember if someone gave us one, or if we bought it, but for the next several years, we played game after game (he always watching, and yelling at me what to do—although he did get me through a sticky spot in Zelda: Orcania of Time).

I say this because I’ve gone back to one of my favorite games—Oblivion, and frankly, I don’t want to share it with Emery. Not yet.  

EMERY'S COMMENT: i'm back and i love it. mom has started playing video games again like pikmin 3 and more LEGEND Of ZELDA with help from me. i guess i owed her for when i would ask for help when i was young. She will soon finish the legend of zelda: A Link between Worlds and she will play other games with me more.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Fanfiction and book #15 Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl

The first three volumes of Emery's Pokemon Fanfic

This week my popular culture and pedagogy course is studying identity and fanfiction/ fanfic. Part of our lesson was to (no surprise here) read and watch some fanfic. Here is a link to one of those videos, Buffy vs. Edward—Twilight Remixed. 

I love Buffy and have written on the show several times, even a book chapter called Buffy vs. Bella, but that’s for another post. After watching this clip, I visited fanfiction.net and tried to find some fanfic from the Buffyverse in which Anya lives. I can’t say I found anything satisfactory but the Buffy fanfic was better than the Minecraft fanfic that I read through in the hopes of finding something for Emery.

It seems as if Minecraft has its own fanfic books—Emery asked to get a copy of a one that I hope he’ll review in a later post. Which made me realize he’s been a reader and writer of fanfic for a long time. I think it started after he watched the movie Bolt. He came home and started drawing Captain Underpants-type work with Bolt. (if you didn’t see Bolt, it’s the Disney movie about the hamster). Then, he found out about Pokemon fanfic from flipnotes (flipnotes are animated short films created on a Nintendo DS). I had to then print out and read an epic-length story on a post-apocalyptic Pokemon world, which wasn’t bad.

Which leads me to Rowell’s Fangirl. Freshman Cath and her twin Wren, are college freshmen. Once there, they part ways as each becomes involved with her own group of friends and acquaintances. Cath has an ability for writing and enrolls in a upper level creative writing classroom. She is also a very popular fanfic writer and has thoughsands of readers who follow her sotry of Simon Snow, a Harry Potter like character, who falls in love with his school rival, Baz. Cath soon learns that her creative writing professor has no admiration for fanfic, and Cath becomes unable to find her own voice, her own content for writing. Through in a couple of supportive friends, a hunky guy or two, and a parent who needs help, and you have a pretty good story.

It’s unlike Eleanor & Park in several ways—it’s less dark, less risqué, and much longer. But still a quick read. My graduate student saw the cover and immediately recognized the artwork from Noelle Stevenson (you can check out her tumblr here). 

Now, back to teaching. In both my class and in Fangirl, the idea of whether this type of writing deserves a place is writing is brought up. I tend to take a similar stance to fanfic as I do to writing. If a kid’s motivated to write, then what’s the harm in that?

On a completely unrelated topic, did you child have a week of standardized testing? We did in Louisiana. 

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Tech-free Tuesday Fun during National Poetry Month

Emery making his book spine poem--He even worked in the dictionary!



The several weeks right before the graduate school deadline for exams is always a busy time. In the past week and the one coming up, I have to read 2 dissertations, 1 thesis, and 13 action research projects. And, in addition to that, I’ve been conducting observations in two different classrooms each day. And, of course, that’s in addition to my usual teaching and grading and meetings. I need to plan better for next year.

Both teachers I’m observing are doing poetry units. It is no coincidence that April is National Poetry Month. I’ve never been good as uncovering a poem’s meaning, but I love a good poem. I’m not a poet either, but one of the teachers did something neat with her students that I thought would make a good tech-free Tuesday activity.

It’s called book spine poetry. To get good instructions and examples for kids, check out this site. But it’s rather easy to get. Grab a stack of books and arrange the titles into something that reads like a poem. Here’s the one I did:



Of course, there are limitations. If you don’t have many books or are a digital book reader, you might have to print out a bunch of titles on little slips of paper and arrange them or go to your local library or book store.

Ready to create your own book spine poetry? Consider sending it to Travis Jonker at the School Library Journal. He's posting them. Have fun.  

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Educational Apps

Emery finished the second Suzuki Book today and earn his second trophy for violin. 


One of my favorite parts of being a teacher is learning from my students. This week in my graduate class, we were challenged to spend an hour using some sort of social networking site that we might use in our classroom. Some of the suggestions were

I googled social network for teaching and learning (google actually facilitated my key words for me, I was going to google for social networks and education). One of the first few hits was to a list of top 15 or something of recommended social networking sites (I had to find a current list, the first hit was from 2009) and was tempted to choose Edmodo, which I know a lot of school teachers use in my school district. Instead, I choose Edshelf (www.edshelf.com). 


I spent about twenty minutes just trying to figure out how the site works (I spent just an hour overall on the site and did watch the Youtube tutorial, which I recommend. It’s only 4 minutes). Basically, it’s “A discovery engine of websites, mobile apps, desktop programs, and electronic products for teaching and learning.” What caught my eye were all of the cool app icons. Now, I don’t have a smart phone or an ipad or a tablet, so I’ve never owned an app, but these weren’t really so much apps, I guess, as icons (like Facebook, twitter, etc). So, I clicked on an app called “write about this”. That led to a site with a Youtube video describing and demonstrating this app that allowed children to take pictures of things that they were interested in and write about them. There’s a free version and a $3.98 version. And, I began to wonder if this was simply an online catalog. But it’s not. After some additional exploring, I decided it went beyond that. It’s a resource for those interested in finding apps that are working and engaging. Users can share resources, read and write reviews, and the site does seem to allow for the democratic features of social media—anyone can join and contribute for free.

The only apps I ever for education were a multiplication one (which was a simple flashcard system for the phone and I wasn’t impressed) and a pitch pipe one (for singing). But I’m interested in checking some of these out, including math v. zombies.

I might just have to buy an ipad after all. What educational apps do you use?  

Saturday, March 22, 2014

What was your favorite book as a child?

Victor's Favorite Childhood Book



I’ve mentioned before that I belong to a book club that exclusively reads children’s books. I’ve belonged to that group for eight years and they existed several years before I joined. It’s a serious group, we actually read and discuss the books and our conversations often lead us back into the books to support our answers. I think its success results from a number of factors:
1.     We all love children’s literature.
2.     Each meeting is followed by a meal and we each contribute something to that meal (wine (which we open before we eat, salad, main course, dessert, bread).
3.     We meet every month except during the summers. If you can’t make it, you are still responsible for your part of the meal (although in an emergency we cover for each other).
4.     While we all love children’s literature, we come from different fields—an author, a librarian, classroom teacher, and university faculty.
There’s an entire ritual and routine to the group and when a member leaves it’s usually because of a move. We’ve read a lot of books over the years and how a book gets chosen is for another post. Let’s just say it can become quite complicated and sometimes I get to a point where I have to read a “boy’s” book, fantasy, or non-fiction. I can only take so much contemporary realistic fiction which seems to be a favorite genre of this group.

For the past few months, we’ve decided to read each other’s favorite books from when we were kids. We’ve read Judy Blume’s Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret, E. B. White’s Stuart Little, the Box Car Children, and a Nancy Drew (I think it was The Secret of the Bell). This week we are reading two Newbery winners, Strawberry Girl and King of the Wind.

Next month, it’s my turn to suggest a title. I’m having a hard time deciding between Little House on the Prairie or Island of the Blue Dolphins or Gordon Korman’s This Can’t be Happening at McDonald Hall. Do I want to cry or not?

Which makes me think—do we like to read the same stuff that we read as children? Or are there things that we admire about books. I’ve already pointed out the connection for me between food and books—I will always remember a scene in one of the Little House on the Prairie books where she talks about eating cookies or cake and the lemonade being so sweet but not sweet enough. And, I remember the use of music in books—such as the Sibelius Symphony Number 2 playing from an overturned car. When I pick up a book on my own now, it’s more than likely a memoir, one with rich scenes of food, food preparation, art, or travel. I don’t know where I picked up my habit of reading self-help. It must be because I still desire to be Nancy Drew, that perfect teenager who was absolutely great and confident at anything and everything. Yipes, this is a little too self-analyisish for me.

What does your favorite childhood book say about you? 

Victor's Comment:
My early reading experiences were comic book and the funny pages.  The first “real book” I remember reader was a novel called Star Ka’at. I was 8 or 9 years old and I remember my father giving me a copy because his girlfriend at the time (my parents are divorced) owned cats who were models for the book’s illustrations.  To be honest, I don’t remember much about the book … not the plot … not the characters.  I didn’t even remember the author was the well-known Andre Norton until I just looked up the book on Amazon a few minutes ago.  What I do remember is that the novel set me on a reading path which took me into the genres of science fiction and fantasy.  So … the story?  I guess it was good. Who remembers?  But its influence was profound as it guided my reading for decades.