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16 and 17

10/8/2012

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16. Catch 22, by Joseph Heller
In this book, basically everything is crazy and uses crazy logic (aka none at all) and the story itself is crazy. From the dead man in Yossarian's tent to the apples Orr puts in his cheeks to Catch-22 itself, absolutely nothing at all makes sense, which is kind of the point. Mostly the book was pretty hilarious. Reading the conversations and the constant circular logic and various kinds of irony was pretty entertaining. Once I figured out that the book wasn't supposed to make sense or follow any kind of chronological storytelling order, I enjoyed myself a lot more. Then I got to the end, and things got bad again. All the characters who were even vaguely redeemable died off or disappeared in one way or another, leaving behind sad people and generally finishing people's story lines with no sort of happy ending. In the meantime, all the completely awful, self-centered, idiotic, annoying characters were thriving, untouchable through their skewed logic and concentrated power. Things got a little better at the very end, but overall, I'm sorry Jill, but I did not really like the book. It's not that it wasn't written well or anything, but it takes a lot for me to like the kind of story where author kills off all the people I like :(

17. Wizards, edited by Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois
This book was actually a compilation of fantasy short stories that I read most of awhile ago but didn't get around to finishing. So, it didn't take too much to get the last hundred or so chapters out of the way. Most of the reason that I wanted to read this book was that Eoin Colfer had a short story in it. It was pretty funny :) Mostly, though, I felt like the stories were lacking. They're fantasy, so they have a lot of background to introduce most of the time, and I feel like most of them would have been better off expanded into full novels.With so little room, most of the stories could only focus on one thing, like background OR characterization OR moral, or something like that. The last one, Stonefather, for instance, had a really well developed world and plot. People in that world had the potential to become magic, possibly having control over water, or some kind of animal, or another element, like stone (hence the title). During the story, the main character discovers he has very powerful stone magic and uses it to end a longstanding feud between water and stone users (I'm too lazy to look up exactly what they were called...). This was one of the longer short stories, so it was better developed than most, but it still ended a bit abruptly and there wasn't much basis for the denouement- I feel like there was much basis for it, it was just thrown in there as a way to round it out.
I feel like a lot of it is mostly me, though. I like having the details given to me so that I know exactly what to expect and exactly what's going on. At the very least I want to finish out the story with the big plot points and mysteries having been revealed. A lot of the stories left the reader to fill in the gaps and ponder over the meaning, though, and I, unlike people like Anna Beth, am irritated by such ridiculousness.
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Halfway there!!!

9/18/2012

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15. Shadowmancer, by G.P. Taylor
This book was about a priest, Obadiah Demurral, who goes bad and seeks to become God himself. He steals this artifact from Africa, called a Keruvim, that allows him to control the elements. The Keruvim is part of a pair, though, so in order to take over the world he has to have the other. This isn't a problem, though, since having the first naturally draws the second to him. All Demurral has to do is bide his time until the second Keruvim comes. Meanwhile, an African boy named Raphah shows up on shore looking to take back the Keruvim. He enlists the help of young Thomas and Kate to help him retrieve the Keruvim from Demurral and pretty much prevent the world from being taken over by the devil.
This story was pretty different from anything I've read. It was pretty heavily Biblical (even quoting the Bible at times), which was cool, although I didn't completely get all the parallels the author was trying to make. It may just be that I always want things to have direct correlations and explicit explanations. Like, at one point Thomas has a dream where Jesus comes to him and shows him that He's real and tells him that He'll be with him in the struggle to come. But it never explicitly says that it was Jesus, He's just referred to as a King. Which irritates me. Also, Raphah calls God Riathamus, so I spent half the book trying to be sure whether Riathamus was just a different word for the same God, or if the author actually had two different gods in his story. I guess I just like to know for certain that how I percieve what's going on is consistent to what's actually going on, and it bugs me when the author refuses to tell me.
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Numeros 11-14

9/11/2012

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11. Seekers: Great Bear Lake, by Erin Hunter
This is the sequel to the Seekers book I wrote about last week. Basically, the journey continues, with Lusa travelling with Toklo and Ujurak. Eventually they get to Great Bear Lake, where white bears, brown bears, and black bears all gather (at different places) on the longest day of the year, either to thank the sun or to tell it to go away. The white bear, Kallik, also arrives, and she finally finds her brother, Taqqiq, whom she's been looking for since the beginning of the last book. They meet up and help to avert a potential crisis when a big dumb bunch of white bear boys try to invade the black bear territory.
So far, I'm enjoying the series. Obviously I can't read any more of it right now, but I think I'll try to get some more books next year (it's on my list!). Now the travelling group includes members of all three kinds of bears discussed so far in the series, so I'm interested to (eventually) see where the story goes.
12. The Phantom of the Opera, by Gaston Leroux
This is the original book that the musical and movie were based off of. It has the same basic plot, though the sequencing and some of the characterization is different. Like, the chandelier falls pretty early on, as opposed to being a part of the Phantom's climactic kidnapping of Christine from the stage. Christine is pretty much the same, but Raoul is a lot easier to empathize with, because we see his perspective a lot. Also, the Phantom (who has an actual name!) is much more gruesome and insensitive, though he still redeems himself at the end. For the first time, I think I actually like both the novel and movie versions. There are significant differences, like I said before, but they were both really enjoyable. I know that's not really a summary of the book, but you guys should already know the basic layout of the story, and I don't want to ruin all the differences, in case you ever want to read it for yourself (which I would recommend :).
13. I Am America (and So Can You!), by Stephen Colbert
This is nonfiction book that Colbert wrote to give his opinions on everything. He's a comedian, so everything he said was done jokingly. I don't really know much about Stephen Colbert, like, his actual views on anything. The book was entertaining and funny, but he pretty much spent so much time being ironic and goofy that I couldn't really tell what his actual opinions were on anything.
14. The Naked Roommate: And 107 Other Issues You Might Run Into In College, by Harlan Cohen
I started this book and I Am America a few weeks ago (I think during the week when I didn't actually finish any books), but after I finished Phantom, I finally got around to finishing them! Since they're both nonfiction, it was a little difficult just to sit down and read them straight (maybe I should have spaced it out a bit more, but oh well). But this was still a good read. Since I'm now a junior, a lot of the tips were things that don't apply so much any more. Others were on drugs and alcohol and things that I don't really get involved in, so they weren't especially applicable either, though they did reinforce my preexisting stances on just staying away. The book's formatted so every tip has a story from an actual student followed by the author's advice on the subject. There are also statistics and relevant websites, in addition to other quotes from college students. The students come from a lot of different colleges, even WKU, though I was dismayed to see that the only representative of our school was talking about how easy it is to access free condoms :/ Overall, it was a funny and helpful book.  And now I'm almost halfway through my list! Hopefully next week I'll be over the hump. Yay!
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Book Challenge Update: 9 and 10

9/4/2012

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9. Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, by Jamie Ford
This story tells about the life of a Chinese man, Henry, who lived in America during World War 2. It goes back and forth between flashing back to his childhood in the early '40s and then returning to the present day, in 1986. As a child, he is the only Chinese student at a prestigious white school. His father is making every effort to aid China in the war. He absolutely hates the Japanese, so when a young Japanese girl named Keiko starts to attend his school, he is not sure what to do. The two gradually become friends, despite Henry knowing that he is directly going against his father by "fraternizing with the enemy." Yet it cannot last. Keiko and all the other Japanese in the area are soon rounded up for internment. Henry goes and visits her a couple of times, and he tries to send her letters, but as the war continues, the letters gradually stop. In 1986, Henry is still dealing with the death of his wife, Ethel, from cancer. When he learns that an old hotel in what used to be Japantown has many possessions left there by Japanese before the internment, he is determined to go and see if he can find anything that used to be Keiko's.
That wasn't the best summary. Sorry :/ Anyway, this book started out pretty slow for me- I wasn't really sure what the point of the whole thing was supposed to be, so I wasn't very motivated to read it. Once I got farther in, though, and I started to see Henry and Keiko getting closer, I got really curious about what happened with them, since I could clearly see from the 1986 part of the story that Henry and Keiko had not ended up together. I've never read very much about the Japanese internment during World War II, either, so reading about that was really new to me. Overall, I thought it was a really good book, even if it took me awhile to see it.
10. Seekers: The Quest Begins, by Erin Hunter
This is the start of a new series by the author of the Warriors story arc. The Seekers series tells the story of three bears, a white (polar) bear , a brown(grizzly)  bear, and a black bear, as they journey far from their homes to find this place they've heard of where they don't have to worry about not having enough food or being in danger from other animals. In this first book, we meet Kallik, a white bear cub. Spring is coming, so she and her mom and brother have to leave the ice and go live on the land until the ice comes back. As they make the treacherous journey, however, Kallik's mother, Nisa, is attacked by killer whales, and Kallik and her brother, Taqqiq, become separated. Kallik makes it to the land on her own, and now she has to look for her brother, holding out the hope that he made it to land alright as well. Meanwhile, brown bear cub Toklo is traveling with his mother Oka and brother Tobi. They are journeying to the river, where they will be able to catch Salmon, but Tobi is sickly and weak. He dies before they reach the river, leaving Oka miserable with grief. Her first litter all died when they were young, and all she has left is Toklo. The way she sees it, though, Toklo is going to die, too, and she can't stand to see her last cub go, so she sends him off on his own. Oka gets captured and taken to a zoo, where she meets black bear cub Lusa. She tells Lusa how she regrets losing Toklo, and how she doesn't think Toklo knows that she loved him just as much as she did Tobi. Lusa promises to escape from the zoo and find Toklo to give him the message, and at the end of the book, she has done just that. Toklo has already teamed up with another brown bear cub, Uzurak, who has the strange ability (that he can't really control) to morph into other animals.
So, the sequel to this is on my list too, and I've already started on it. The series looks pretty good so far, though it's hinting at some greater purpose to this journey all the bears are on, and I'm not really sure what that's supposed to be. So far it just looks like the sad story of a bunch of orphaned bear cubs trying to survive on their own. I think they're all supposed to join together by the end of the next book, so that should be interesting. This is probably a series I'll want to read more of. You know, 20 books or so down the road.
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I'm on fire!

8/21/2012

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If you’ve read my blog for this week, then you’ll know that I have several books to tell you about today, as a direct result of my strong will and determination as I seek to complete this challenge. Or complete lack of a life, whichever you prefer. Regardless of the reason, here are my brief ramblings about books 3-8, to prove my efforts:

3. Leven Thumps and the Gateway to Foo, by Obert Skye
This is one of the books that’s probably been sitting in my pile the longest. Looking at the title and the cover, I just got the impression that it was going to be really dumb and not the kind of thing I’d want to read, so I didn’t. After finishing it, though, I feel like I definitely should have listened to that old cliché- don’t judge a book by its cover. It was definitely kind of silly and and whimsical, but not at all in a bad way. The story is about a boy named Leven, who grows up with his awful mother's half sister (she refuses to acknowledge herself as his aunt) and her drunken idiot of a husband. They live in the town of Burnt Culvert, which was completely destroyed by an awful lightning fire not long before Leven was born, and is in the process of rebuilding. What no one on earth knows, however, is that this lightning fire was not natural. The evil Sabine, who lives in the dream world of Foo, sent his shadows to burn the town down. Sabine, whose dialogue always has "I" and "me" italicized for some reason, wants to unite Foo with the real world so he can rule both. All he has to do is find the portal that Leven's grandfather created between the two worlds, and anyone in Foo can travel freely to and from earth. As Leven soon discovers, only he can stop Sabine. He has to get to the portal and destroy it, as only someone with the same blood as the creator of the portal can do so. With the help of Winter, a nit who can turn anything into ice(people in the real world who end up in Foo develop powers); Clover, a creature called a sycophant who has been assigned to Leven; and Geth, a Lithen who depends completely on Fate to control his life, Leven must fight Sabine and destroy the portal or risk the destruction of both worlds.

4. The Truth about Forever, by Sarah Dessen
This book was the first non-fantasy book I've read so far. I like fantasy books (I'd say it accounts for about 2/3 of my stack), but it was nice to get something a little different this time. The main character, Macy, hasn't been the same since her dad died a year and a half ago. She was going to meet him for a run, and when she arrived, she found him lying on the ground, having a heart attack. She tries to act like she has it all together and everything's fine so she can be strong for her mom, but inside she struggles with feelings of guilt- if she could just have gotten there a little sooner, maybe she could have saved him. In her attempts to prove that her life is perfect and nothing is amiss, she has been dating Jason, the "perfect guy"- record GPA, super genius, a mile long list of extracurriculars, has everything figured out- and when Macy's with him, she feels like she could be perfect like him too. But when he "puts their relationship on hold" for the summer while he's off at Brain Camp, Macy feels like her world is falling apart again. At least, until she meets the members of Wish Catering. In a complete juxtaposition of everything Macy's been striving for since her dad's death, these people have nothing figured out. When she starts working with them, she finds herself in the middle of complete chaos at every job- whether it's forgetting some vital component of an entree or spilling redwine all over the carpet, something is always going wrong. Yet they always manage to turn everything around, and Macy soon finds that the insanity surrounding her is becoming her favorite part of the summer. The people, too, are showing her a new perspective of life, and she feels like she's finally learning to cope with losing her father. Her mom, however, is not so happy with the changes she sees in her daughter. Instead of staying home all night and studying vocabulary of the SAT, Macy's now going to parties and being around people, and her mom sees this as a break in her dedication to her grades. Macy has to show her mom that the changes she's seeing are good, or risk falling right back into her "perfect" world of fake smiles, where nothing is really ok at all.

5. Incantation, by Alice Hoffman
Incantation is another realistic fiction book, but this one's set in 1500s Spain, where people are separated by their religion- Muslims are pushed off to their own quarters, and the few Jews who refuse to convert to Christianity are forced into their own gated part of town, sewing red circles on their clothes to indicate what they are. Estrella and her family live happily with the other Christians. Her best friend Catalina  lives just next door, and Estrella spends as much time as possible with her. Soon, however, things in their town of Encaleflora begin to turn nasty. It starts with the burning of Jewish books and escalates quickly into outright punishment for those who do not share the accepted beliefs of the church. Anyone suspected of practicing Judaism while pretending to be a Christian is turned in and sentenced to death. Estrella sees a bulletin in town detailing signs that would indicate someone is secretly a Jew, and she can't help but note that it points directly at her and her family. Soon she discovers that her family has been keeping the truth from her- they aren't really Christians at all, but secret Jews hiding their true identities. From there, things can only gets worse. As Catalina shows her true colors of jealousy and greed, Estrella is forced to watch as first her grandfather, then her mother and brother are killed for their secret identities. With no other choice, Estrella and her grandmother must flee Spain in search of a place where they can live without the fear of persecution for their beliefs.
I was kind of surprised to find a book like this. Most of the time when you think about persecution of Jews, you go straight to the Holocaust, but this book shows that human ignorance and persecution goes back long before that. It actually seemed to me like a cross between the Holocaust and the Salem Witch Trials- it was  kind of unsettling to read about the "trials" held against the accused and see the parallels. Once you were accused of being a secret Jew, or a Marrano (pig), there was no getting out of it. Whether you admitted to the great list of offenses you were charged with (witchcraft, magic, medicine, murder) or not, you were already doomed. Even their methods were eerily similar, stoning and burning at the stake being chief among them. This is another book I held off reading, though this one was mostly because I didn't want to read about sadness and persecution. It's certainly not a happy book for the most part, but I think things like this are still worthwhile to read, giving names and faces and lives to those who have been wrongly punished in one of history's many bouts of fear and ignorance.

6. Vampire Academy, by Richelle Mead
And with this, I dove straight back into the Fantasy genre, where things are a little lighter. This is the first book in a series about the secret vampire world. In this secret world, there are different kinds of vampires, though. First, we have the Moroi, the living vampires who can harness magic of the elements (earth, air, water, fire), and who drink blood without killing. In complete contrast, there are also the undead vampires, called the Strigoi. These vampires were once Moroi who intentionally killed while drinking. Because of this, they are cut off from magic and life, but at the same time they gain immortality and super speed, strength, and senses. The Strigoi are strenghtened by drinking Moroi blood especially, so the Moroi are in constant danger of attacks. To fend off the Strigoi, we have dhampirs. These are half-breeds, half human and half Moroi. They have no magic, but they are hardier and stronger than the Moroi. They are also, however, almost evolutionary dead ends. Dhampir alone cannot create more dhampir, though a Moroi and a dhampir will have dhampire children. Because of this, the dhampir spend their school lives training to become guardians for the Moroi, protecting them from Strigoi attacks. This series specifically follows Rose Hathaway, a special dhampir. She and her Moroi best friend, Vasilisa Dragomir (Lissa), have a special bond that hasn't been seen in hundreds of years- Rose can sense Lissa's feelings and occassionally even slips completely into her head, sensing everything that is going on with Lissa. This makes her an ideal future guardian for her friend, but first Rose has to get through school, where her free spirit and lax view on the rules gets her in trouble quite a lot. Most dhampir specialize in one element during their school years, but Lissa has not. Instead, she finds that she has rarer powers, such as healing, which make her in possession of a rare element- Spirit. There are those who would take advantage of her power, and Lissa is captured by her uncle, Victor Dashkov. He has a degenerative disease, and he needs Lissa to heal him. Rose, through the bond, senses what is happening and is able to lead the authorities to where Victor is hiding to save Lissa.

7. Frostbite, by Richelle Mead
This is the sequel to Vampire Academy. While trying to keep Lissa safe, Rose is also having problems of her own. She has fallen in love with her 24-year-old instructor, Dimitri Belikov, and found out that he feels the same way. There are a million things to keep them apart, though, like the fact that he's her teacher, and seven years older than her. They are also both dhampir, and set to guard Lissa after she graduates. Dimitri makes it clear that his feelings for her would interfere with his ability to put Lissa first, so their love is doomed to go nowhere. Meanwhile, in the vampire world, a Strigoi attack happens very close to the school. It indicates large numbers of Strigoi, even working with humans to get to their prey. Because of this, the students are sent off to a ski resort in Idaho for the Christmas vacation in hopes of keeping them safe. Soon enough, however, another, worse attack comes close to where they are now. Rose makes the mistake of revealing knowledge of where the Strigoi might be hiding, given her by Dimitri, to her friend, who takes off with two others to attack the Strigoi on their own. This forces Rose to go after them before they get themselves killed, but they soon find themselves trapped anyway. Rose is able to come up with an escape plan, but she is still caught by the Strigoi in getting her friends out safely. Her friend Mason comes back to try and save her, but he is quickly and brutally killed. Fueled by her shock at his sudden death, Rose is able to kill both of her Strigoi attackers before the guardians from her school find them and take them home.

8. Shadow Kiss, by Richelle Mead
This book, third in the series, talks more about Rose and Lissa's bond. They now know that the bond was created when Lissa used her healing to save Rose. They were in a car accident, and Rose technically died, but Lissa brought her back from the dead, bonding the two together, and making Rose "Shadow Kissed." She is quickly learning that this bond is more than just being connected to Lissa's mind, however. She is also connected to the Shadow World of the dead, and she thinks she's crazy when she starts seeing Mason's ghost on campus. She is scared at first, and unable to figure out what he wants, but by the end of the book he warns her just in time of a Strigoi attack on the school. The guardians are able to minimize casualties, but several Moroi and dhampirs were still killed, and some were taken by the Moroi. Using Mason's ghost as a guide once again, Rose is able to locate the Strigoi's hideout and convice the guardians to go on a rescue mission to retrieve the kidnapped members of the school. In the process, however, Dimitri is taken by the Strigoi. Rose fears he is dead as she awaits news from the group sent to retrieve bodies for burial, but she soon finds the truth is even worse than she feared. Some Strigoi are created voluntarily, when a Moroi purposely kills the person he or she is drinking blood from. A human or dhampir, however, can be forcibly turned if the Strigoi drinks and then has the victim drink from the Strigoi. Rose soon finds that Dimitri has been turned Strigoi, and embarks on a quest to find and kill him, knowing he wouldn't have wanted to live as something so evil and unnatural.
So, this is all the books I have of the series, though there are 3 more. I got on Wikipedia and read plot summaries of what happens in the last books, and I don't think I'm going to read anymore. They're enjoyable to read, and the concept is cool, but the books were also irritating. Like, I'm annoyed that Young Adult fiction seems inseparable from drugs and sex. Surely I'm not the only one who did none of that in high school? Yet the way these books talk, everyone does it, and it's perfectly ok. It also acts like it's completely acceptable for a high schooler to date her teacher, which is also disgusting. At the same time, though, a couple things in the book really amused me. The school they go to is set in Montana, and several times it mentioned how the students went to Missoula to shop. That tiny bit of nerdfighteria made me exceedingly happy :) Also, at one point Rose ends up talking to a girl who explains how her name is Jillian, but she goes by Jill. I kind of want you to read these books just for that, Jill :P Anyway, that's not especially important to the plot, so I'll stop now.

Ok, so maybe those weren't brief descriptions; there's just so much to say about stuff! But you're probably used to my wordiness by now, considering my usual blogs. Sorry anyway. I'll try to be shorter next time, but no guarantees :P
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First two books!

8/14/2012

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So, this week I've finished my first two books for the 30-book challenge! As proof of that, here's a brief summary-ish thing. I'm not very good at these, so sorry in advance.

1 Everworld, by K.A. Applegate
This was technically the first two books of the Everworld series. Basically, the main character, David, is new in town, and he starts dating this girl Senna. Then one morning, he and a few other students from school end up over at the park. They see Senna sitting on a rock, then suddenly a whole rips open in space and a giant wolf comes through and grabs Senna. The others, David, April, Jalil, and another guy whose name I can't remember, start running after her as the wolf retreats back through the hole in space, and they somehow end up going through the portal with them and find themselves in Everworld, a place all the gods- Norse, Egyption, Aztec, etc.- created to be their own world, so that all these different people groups live there and serve their gods and pillage each other and stuff. Obviously, it's much different from the present-day. Senna is nowhere to be found, so these four high schoolers have to try to find her and figure out how to get home. But there's another twist. While they're trying to survive and not get killed in battle/sacrificed to the Aztec god of the sun (Huitzilopoctli or something?)/caught by Loki, they are also living their lives back in the regular world. Another version of them goes about their everyday lives, and when they fall asleep in Everworld they return to the regular world. So that's strange. But they can't figure out how return permanantly, so every time they wake up they're back on a viking ship or hiding out in the woods or wherever they happened to be in Everworld. So that's that in a nutshell. It was an interesting book, but I don't think I'm going to read any more of the series. It was extremely confusing before the author explained a little more about what was going on, and two books in I still don't completely understand what's up. But that's not really a problem- I have plenty of other books to be reading, anyway :P

2. Endymion Spring, by Matthew Skelton
Endymion Spring switches back and forth between two different times/places/characters throughout the story. You start off in Mainz (Germany? Austria?) in 1453 or so, from the perspective of Endymion Spring, the young mute apprentice of Johann Gutenberg, who's in the process of inventing the printing press. The two are approached by Johann Fust, who you can see from the beginning is up to no good. He offers to back Gutenberg's plan and give him the gold to get his project going and start work on the Gutenberg Bible if he is will just allow him to use his printing press when he wants to. Fust brings with him an ominous-looking chest. Inside? Paper. But not just any kind of paper. This is special. It contains within it the secrets of the universe, if only Fust could unlock them. And that's why he's really there. He thinks Endymion is the key to seeing inside this magical paper. Endymion, young and intrigued, foolishly falls right into Fust's trap, but quickly realizes his mistake and sets out to hide the paper from Fust and prevent him from using this knowledge for evil. Meanwhile, in present-day Oxford, young Blake Winters stumbles upon a book, called Endymion Spring, in one of the libraries. Though it appears blank at first, the pages reveal riddles and writings that only Blake can see. It quickly becomes apparent that there is something special about this book, and that Blake is not the only one who knows about it. Can he unlock its mysteries while still keeping it safe from the Person in Shadow? This book started off kind of slowly for me, and I'm pretty sure it's meant to be read by, like, Middle Schoolers. But it got a lot more interesting later on, though there were still some minor details and plotpoints that I don't feel were explained properly.

So, yeah! Those are the books I've read so far. Be looking out for the next thing I finish! I haven't decided what to read next yet... But I'll figure it out! See ya!
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My Hello From Video

8/14/2012

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I don't know why I thought 2 in the morning was a great time to edit a video, but here ya go...

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30 Books: 5 Months. Can she do it?

8/8/2012

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Hiya guys! So, if you’ve read my blog from yesterday, then you’ll know that Jill has challenged me to read everything in my to-read pile (thankfully excluding my giant books of everything) by the end of the year. So, to keep anyone interested up to date on my progress, and to provide Jill with actual proof of where I am (I figure she’s not just going to take my word for it if on New Year’s Eve I’m like, “Oh, your challenge? Yeah, I totally finished that like a month ago…”), I’ve decided to post the list of all the books I have to read here in the Etc. section. They’re all just normal as of right now, but as I finish each book I’m going to bold it, and the plan is to post a little summary/review of the book, either here or on my actual blog. Probably here, though- my blogs run long enough as it is :P
Just a note, there are about 7 books on the list that I’ve starred. Those are books that I’ve actually started, but I never really got around to finishing (I, Claudius, for example, was supposed to be read for Not without My Book Club! Senior year, but it was just so boring…). Those are probably the ones I’m most worried about being able to read- I hate not finishing a book I’m reading, so the fact that there are this many sitting in my pile just shows how
challenging it’s going to be to get through them. So here’s my list; feel free to let me know if there are any you really like/express your sympathy at what I’ve gotten myself into :)

1.     Everworld, K.A. Applegate
2.     Catch 22, Joseph Heller
3.     Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Jamie Ford
4.     Vampire Academy, Richelle Mead
5.     Frostbite, Richelle Mead
6.     Shadow Kiss, Richelle Mead

7.     Shadowmancer, G.P. Taylor
8.    The Phantom of the Opera, Gaston Leroux
9.    The Wizard Heir, Cinda Williams Chima
10.  The Truth about Forever, Sarah Dessen
11.  Leven Thumps and the Gateway to Foo, Obert Skye

12.  Endymion Spring, Matthew Skelton
13.  Incantation, Alice Hoffman
14.  Wuthering Heights*, Emily Bonte
15.  The Naked Roommate*, Harlan Cohen

16.  I, Claudius*, Robert Graves
17.  The Science of Harry Potter*, Roger Highfield

18.  A Patriot’s History of the United States*, Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen
19.  Wizards*, Edited by Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois

20.  I Am America (and So Can You!)*, Stephen Colbert
21.  Artemis Fowl: The Last Guardian, Eoin Colfer
22.  Pendragon 5: Black Water, D.J. MacHale
23.  Pendragon 6: The Rivers of Zadaa, D.J. MacHale
24.  Pendragon 7: The Quillan Games, D.J. MacHale

25.  Pendragon 8: The Pilgrims of Rayne, D.J. MacHale
26.  Inkdeath, Cornelia Funke
27.  Seekers: The Quest Begins, Erin Hunter

28.  Seekers: Great Bear Lake, Erin Hunter
29.  Peter and the Sword of Mercy, Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson
30.  Inheritance, Christopher Paolini
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So, remember a couple of months ago...

8/8/2012

0 Comments

 
When I went to camp? It was such a great week, and I was really excited to tell you guys all about it, but then I didn’t have time to write very much in my blog. So I was all like, k guys, I’ll post some extra stuff in the Etc. section- be watching out for that!

And then I didn’t.

I kept meaning to, but unlike weekly blogging, the Etc. section has no set deadline, so I kept thinking, Oh, I’m busy right now, I’ll just do it tomorrow. It’ll be fine. And so here we are, two months of tomorrows later. But I’m finally going to tell you some camp stories! Not that you’re interested anymore. But hey, this is just an extra. You don’t have to read it if you don’t want to.
  
So, one thing I really wanted to tell you all about was my group’s cheer. All the campers were divided into teams based on their grades, and these were the people they went to Recreation and Bible Study with. At first we thought that all the chaperones were just going to be on one big team, but it turned out that there were enough college students for us to have our own team- Sonic Boom. Our team was pretty great :) Most of the staffers are either college students or recent graduates, so our team leader was about the same age as most of us. So Bible Study and the other activities we did were pretty informal and open. We also had more time for just open discussion, since we didn’t have to do a lot of the same silly little activities as the actual campers. So, one thing that all the teams did was come up with a cheer to show everyone during Rec Rally. As the college team, we weren’t really required to make a cheer, but of course we wanted to anyway- who wouldn’t? We spent about half the week bouncing ideas around and trying to figure out what would be the most epic thing to do. Since our team was called Sonic Boom (by the time you hear us, we’re already gone), one person had the idea that we just walk in front of everyone, stand there quietly for a minute, then walk off and shout, “Boom!” But we figured that, seeing as our primary audience would be middle and high schoolers, most of them wouldn’t really get it.
Instead, we finally decided to do our cheer based on that car commercial where this family’s sitting in the car, all doing the different parts of Crazy Train (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZkoJxQrlm0). It was pretty awesome. We went out all serious and got lined up in rows like in choir, and our team leader stood in front of us like he was going to conduct us. He even gave us a starting note, and then we started on our Sonic Boom rendition of Crazy Train, and it was so much fun! And of course we won the spirit monkey. Campers were coming up to me all day saying how cool our cheer was. It was pretty great :)

Another cool thing we did at camp was trust falls. Before I went to Fuge, I thought a trust fall was just where you fall back and someone standing behind you catches you. But no. Apparently there’s a whole trust sequence of exercises that gradually get scarier and, therefore, more epic. Like, my idea of a trust fall was the first thing we did, but there
was also this trust circle type thing, where one person stands in the center of a circle of people. Then they fall over into one of the people in the circle and the group just kind of passes the center person around and around the circle. It was pretty interesting. Another thing we did was have everyone get in two lines facing each other and hold their arms out in front of them, alternating arms between the lines. I don’t know if I described that very well, but basically
it’s like a giant zipper. A person runs, full speed, toward the middle of these rows, and everyone has to move their arms out of the way and then put them back, so the person runs through without running into anyone. Then, of course, came THE trust fall. Each of us got to take a turn standing on this 3 or 4 foot tall plank of wood, while the rest of the group lined up behind the person in that zipper-type formation, except that everyone’s arms were to stay put this time. When the person was ready, they fell backwards off the plank, and landed safely on everyone’s arms. It was scary just having to trust that everyone would catch you and not let you fall to the ground and have to go to the hospital. It was also kind of scary knowing that that person’s safety was literally in our hands. I was one of the last people to take my turn, but even though I’d seen most of the rest of my team fall safely into our arms, I was still nervous about it. I remember falling backwards and (internally) freaking out for that split second between falling and being caught, but then I was safe and fine, and everyone lowered me gently to the ground. It was a really cool experience, and I’m so glad I didn’t chicken out.

So, obviously a lot of other things happened at camp, but those were the two big things I wanted to talk about. If you stuck around to read this extremely belated update, then thanks! I hope I didn’t bore you too much :) And that’s… it. I’m actually planning to post another extra in the Etc. section, hopefully sometime today, so if you happen to read this before that’s up, then be sure to check back! Talk to you guys later!

Love,



Sara

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Sanaa's Fall 2012 Schedule

7/22/2012

7 Comments

 
I'm with Amber on this one! Anyway, this will give you all a bit of an idea of what I'll be up to this semester. Be jealous of my late mornings! Muahahaha!

Monday
11:00-12:00 Portuguese for Spanish Speakers
12:00-1:00 Infectious Diseases: Past, Present, and Future
2:00-4:00 Bodily Injuries: Violence, Fear and Representation in Latin America
4:00-5:30 Literature, Journalism, and Society in Mexico

Tuesday
10:00-11:30 Latin American Populism and Neo-Populism

Wednesday
11:00-12:00 Portuguese for Spanish Speakers 
2:30-4:00 Anthropology and Public Health
4:00-5:30 Literature, Journalism, and Society in Mexico 

Thursday
10:00-11:30 Latin American Populism and Neo-Populism 
5:30-7:00 Foxtrot and Waltzes

Friday
11:00-12:00 Portuguese for Spanish Speakers 
12:00-1:00 Infectious Diseases: Past, Present, and Future 
2:30-4:00 Anthropology and Public Health 

18 credits will definitely make for a busy semester!
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