Archives

Thanksgiving Center of the Blogosphere

Random thoughts of gratitude from the Queen of the Beehive. “I’m thankful for . . . the miracle of water that can boil, freeze, fill human cells, ripple, trickle and crash, steam, make creation bloom, obey God’s voice, make things clean, form vapor, steam and snowflakes, make earth inhabitable, and wave for the moon.”

Barbara Curtis (Mommy Life) is giving thanks for all she never had. “I’m grateful for the stability I never had. Divorce, foster homes, frequent moves and family separations were hard on me as a little girl, but blessed me with resiliency and endurance. They also make me appreciate the family Tripp and I have built and the roots we’ve put down now.”

Ariel at Bittersweet Life says that gratitude requires an Object, a Person to whom we give thanks. “Gratitude requires a personal object—and if thankfulness is to be deep and enduring, it must be pinned to Someone better than a changeful, error-prone human friend, good intentions aside.”

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

“Christian fiction writers, don’t apologize for illuminating beauty and goodness instead of ugliness and depravity. You can write honestly about the horrors of life without as BJ writes, ‘sickening [their] readers or beating them over the head with gratuitous brutality and viciousness and gore-galore. It’s called honest fiction.'” Cindy Swan quoting Christian author B.J.Hoff in a discussion of realistic fiction.

“As I’ve written here before, naughty little words in fiction are usually a sign of lazy, superficial writing. Serious authors know that nine times out of ten there is a deeper, more accurate and more compelling way to get the point across. Still, there is always that one time in ten, so in principle I have no problem with using any word for the right reasons. Church ladies notwithstanding, artistic excellence demands we choose the word that’s perfect for the work at hand. But it’s not art to use naughty little words as a strategy to appeal to a certain kind of reader. It’s propaganda.” Athol Dickson, author of the excellent, propaganda-free, novel, River Rising, at the blog Charis Connection. Read the comments, too, as the discussion there is good.

All Saints Day is a big celebration in Poland.

The Beehive posts a perfect response to Jon Cary, Jone Carry, John Kerry.

“The truth is, I am Ted Haggard, we are all Ted Haggard, and Ted Haggard is all of us. And may God have mercy me, on Ted and on all of us.” JollyBlogger on the latest evangelical scandal.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

“even if you discover all of the secrets of the universe during your research, the floor still needs sweeping.” —Keri Smith at wish jar

“When God wanted to tell us about Himself, He didn’t dictate a book of Systematic Theology (as I would have advised Him if He’d asked me). He gave us a book full of stories, stories about people’s real lives and how He’s dealt with them.” —Lars Walker at Brandywine Books

The Anchoress on the destruction of embryos for the purpose of embryonic stem cell research:

What is it about the Embryo that makes some people so determined to destroy it, to become heated and hateful if you suggest to them that they should not destroy it, that it is a being of identifiably human species and therefore worthy of respect?
I suspect that the embryo is all about promise, about tomorrow, about life and fulfillment – and there is a whole culture out there that does not want to think an embryo is anything more than “a clump of cells.” A tumor is a clump of cells. It might grow out of control, but it will never live, breathe, sing, laugh, pray, cry, create or mourn. An embryo is something more. At its core – beyond the science – an embryo is Mystery. And Mystery is too much like God for some people…or Mystery makes them contemplate, and contemplation leads to thinking about things like God, and prayer and worship.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

What a great contest! I wish I could think of something really clever, but maybe you, my readers, can figure out a campaign slogan for your favorite literary or historical character.

My Boss Is a Jewish Psychiatrist! Vote for Sigmund Freud! He’ll Psychoanalyze Kinky and Grandma!
(For those of you who don’t live in Texas, both Kinky and Grandma are running for governor. And Kinky Friedman’s bumper stickers say: “My Governor is a Jewish Cowboy/ Vote for Kinky”)

Writing and Living on Appliance Group Dynamics. Maybe Anne’s dryer has delusions of grandeur and plans to run for mayor instead of continuing to serve the Writing and Living family. Even I couldn’t think of a campaign slogan for that!

There is a different kind of election going on at The Cybils award site. A couple of bloggers came up with the idea of initiating The First Annual Children’s and YA Bloggers’ Literary Awards, aka The Cybils. We’re giving awards in several categories, and nominations are open now through November 20th. Anyone can nominate any books published in 2006; bloggers and non-bloggers both are welcome. And I get to be on the judging committee for Middle Grade fiction—because I volunteered. So, if you’ve read any children’s or young adult books published this year, go over and nominate your favorites. Then, watch to see who wins.

“Really, it makes me feel rather melancholy for the state of postmodern humanity that people nowadays would tend to assume that anyone singing in a non-performance setting must be practicing for a performance later. I mean, why bother to sing if you aren’t performing?” So muses the Queen of the Beehive in her post on singing just for the fun of it. Is communal singing a lost art?

Author Lars Walker has a conspiracy theory—and a link to some potentially world-changing recordings.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

Nature is an infinite sphere of which the center is everywhere and the circumference nowhere. Blaise Pascal

The Queen of the Beehive waxes eleoquent on the subject of Texas Chili Apologetics. “I believe that chili should be crafted toward the purpose of reminding you that you are fully alive.”

Miss Jennifer has a gift exchange going Well, actually, it’s a gift idea exchange. Do you have any great ideas for Christmas gifts? Share them and link.

Joe McKeever recommends laughter as medicine for whatever’s ailing you. “Make yourself laugh. You can do this. It’s not nearly as hard as it sounds. It feels fake at first–after all, you’re forcing it–but the effect is past in a moment. You start feeling so silly that the very act of laughing makes you laugh. At the end of two minutes, you’re glowing. It’s like you have had a tonic.”

Don’t forget to participate in the Saturday Review of Books tomorrow here at Semicolon. Let us know what you’re reading and how you liked it.

Book-Spotting #21

Julia Golding’s Top Ten Characters in Children’s Historical Fiction (Guardian). I may add some of these books to my list. I’ve only read four of the books she lists: Ivanhoe, Treasure Island, A Little Princess and one or two of the Flambards books by K.M. Peyton. The Shakespeare time travel book by Susan Cooper sounds especially good.

David Montgomery on the 10 Greatest Detective Novels.
A long discussion (see comments) at Petrona of why all the authors on Mr. Mongomery’s list are male, and which female authors should have been included. Obviously, Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, and P.D. James should be on any such list.
My Best 10 Detective Novels (in no particular order):

1. The Mother Hunt by Rex Stout

2. The Murder of Roger Akroyd by Agatha Christie

3. Gaudy Night by Dorothy Sayers

4. The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett

5. The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey

6. The Holy Thief by Ellis Peters

7. The Black Tower by P.D. James

8. The Case of the Fabulous Fake by Erle Stanley Gardner

9. The Long Good-bye by Raymond Chandler

10. A Study in Scarlet by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

You will notice that I have five men and five women authors on my list. Totally unplanned. I also note again that the limitation of such lists made by one person is that I can only consider those books that I’ve actually read. So you may find better books on Mr. Montgomery’s list, but these are MY picks. And Dorothy Sayers is the best of any of the authors on my list or anyone else’s. Because I said so.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

These have kind of stacked up. Here’s the Best of the Best I’ve read in the past few weeks:

The Anchoress prays—for all of us.Prayer is a force and it is real. I came away from Adoration convinced that we will not defeat the enemy (and on the most fundamental level, the enemy – both within and without – is hate) unless we are willing to use the weapon of real and loving prayer – faithfully, humbly, daily…and did I say humbly…we will not win.

Adrian Warnock and Dan Phillips discuss interpreting proverbs, particularly the book of Proverbs in the Bible. “A proverb communicates a truth. It does not characteristically communicate all truth. It is a sage insight; it isn’t a legal contract.”

Lars Walker, the Bloodthirsty Librarian: “Any reasonable person would recognize that rioting and murdering people are a self-contradictory means of proclaiming one’s peacefulness. And the fact that a large part of the Muslim world fails to get the joke (such as it is) pretty much says it all.
But the Islamic world doesn’t care. Because they’re not involved in a struggle of ideas, but a struggle of honor.”

Patry Francis blogs about grocery store treasures, those healthy and delicious foods that you can find in your local supermarket. I think my favorite “grocery store health food” is the fresh tortillas that are made in-store down here in Texas. I’ll bet they don’t do that in New York.

Mr. De Thinkling on Manhood, particularly Christian manhood. What a great essay on the real problems that Christian men face! I want to send a copy to every Christian man I know, but I’ll content myself with posting a link here and telling you all, men and women and boys and girls, to read it.

Mental Multivitamin does Shakespeare . . . again. You don’t want to miss her guide to resources for enjoying and appreciating Shakespeare for the first time or for the forty-fifth time.

Shannon Rocks-in-my-Dryer really liked Jewel by Brett Lott. I really liked it, too. Here are my thoughts on Jewel. But if like Shannon you don’t care for book reviews, you could just go read the book.

Go here to read the Parable of the Soccer Mom and the Human Embryo. The parable was written in response to this statement by politician Chris Bell: “What would Jesus do? He would not let political objections stand in the way of healing the sick. Stem cell research isn’t just a good idea; it’s a moral imperative.”

Writing Contests for Adults and Children

What’s the Story? from SRA/McGraw-Hill is a national writing contest for teachers to win the chance to be published as part of an SRA reading program.
SRA is seeking creative, original, and imaginative stories and poems (fiction and nonfiction) written for students in Grades Pre-K–6—anything you think your own students would enjoy reading.
Story winners will receive a cash prize of $1,000. Poem winners will receive a cash prize of $500. The deadline for entries is December 31, 2006.
I doubt if the term “teacher” includes homeschool teachers, but those who are former public or private school teachers and who enjoy writing should enter.

The Old Schoolhouse, a homeschooling magazine, is sponsoring a short story contest. The deadline is November 1, 2006, and there’s a $7.00 entry fee.

Olive Garden restaurant is asking students in first through twelfth grade: “If you could create a new holiday, what would you name it and how would it be celebrated?” Answers could be worth a trip to New York and a $2,500 savings bond, as part of Olive Garden’s 11th-annual Pasta Tales writing contest.
From Oct. 2 through Dec. 1, Olive Garden will accept essays of 50 to 250 words from students in the U.S. and Canada. Entry forms and complete rules will be available beginning Oct. 2 at local Olive Garden restaurants or by logging on to the Olive Garden website.
The grand prize is a trip to New York, dinner at the Olive Garden in Times Square and a $2,500 savings bond. A winner also will be chosen in each grade category and will receive a $500 savings bond and dinner with their family at their local Olive Garden.

Delacorte Press offers the prize of a book contract for a hardcover and a paperback edition, including an advance and royalties, awarded annually to encourage the writing of a novel of contemporary young adult fiction. Each award consists of $1,500 in cash and a $7,500 advance against royalties.

The Trollope Society has established an annual short story competition. The emphasis is on reading – and writing – for fun.
The worldwide competition is open to students twenty-one and younger. The winner receives a cheque for £1,000 ($1,750 USD) and his or her story is published in the Society’s journal, Trollopiana.

The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, in partnership with Target Stores and in cooperation with affiliate state centers for the book, invites readers in grades 4 through 12 to enter Letters About Literature, a national reading-writing contest. To enter, readers write a personal letter to an author, living or dead, from any genre– fiction or nonfiction, contemporary or classic, explaining how that author’s work changed the student’s way of thinking about the world or themselves. There are three competition levels: Level I for children in grades 4 through 6; Level II for grades 7 and 8, and Level III, grades 9 – 12. Winners receive cash awards at the national and state levels.

I happen to think contests are a wonderful way to motivate students to write—and even adults can use some motivation sometimes. So write that short story or YA novel, and send it in. Be sure and come to tell me if you (or one of your children) win any of these contests.

I’m adding this post to the Works-for-Me Wednesday list. Mosey on over to Rocks in my Dryer to find out how to make coke roast and to look at a list of links to lots of other nifty ideas.

Book-Spotting #20

Krakovianka found a book in a thrift store in Poland, an English book, a book she and I have been wanting to read. I love stories about book finds.

I’m reading Moby Dick this month–via email. I signed up at Daily Lit, a website that sends subscribers a daily portion of a selected work of literature. I don’t usually like to read books on the computer, but since I have to read Moby for the American Literature class I’m teaching at co-op, I think I’ll make an exception. The Great White Whale might be more digestible in small daily portions. Thanks to Beck at Frog and Toad Are Friends for the link and information for Daily Lit.

On Stephen Lawhead’s new book, Hood, a reinterpretation of the Robin Hood story that I hope to read soon:
Robin Hood Was Welsh and Never Went to Nottingham Claims Book

Back to an old favorite, Pride and Prejudice. Tex, at Mere Orthodoxy demonstrates the tangled web that Miss Austen weaves when she invites us to laugh at the foibles of the Bennett family, their friends and aquaintances.

“Miss Austen invites her readers to participate in the very behavior which she is at work to moralize against–vanity and prejudice. . . . The diversion of picking motes of dust out of the eyes of one’s brothers might be quite harmless and forgiveable if it were not for the portrait of love found in the character of God and most forcefully presented in the person of Jesus. If all the world is my toy and a stage on which every character moves simply to delight and entertain my Self, then there is perhaps even a nobleness in using people for one’s own pleasure. However, the Christian notion of love destroys this very cavalier and flippant attitude.”

Ouch! And on that rather uncomfortable, but nevertheless edifying, note, I’ll end this edition of Book-Spotting. May your pleasures be at once educational, enjoyable, and honoring to the God who made us and loves us.

Book-Spotting #19

Steven Riddle on Fiction vs. Nonfiction.

“What I’ve discovered over time is that nonfiction books very rarely present anything like nonfiction. That is, most postmodern nonfiction. When your view of reality is that reality is shaped by the language you use to describe it and by the oppressions, hidden or overt that define it, it would be difficult to present anything in an objective way, because there cannot be any objectivity.
Fiction, on the other hand, shows me the human condition, and because the author lays his cards on the table on way or the other, I can determine whether what is shown is truly reflective of human experience or is shaped by the bias of the author to lead me to an agenda.”

I tend to prefer fiction or nonfiction that’s told like a story, stories from history that I can evaluate in much the same way that I evaluate fiction. In other words, I can say, even if it’s essentially true, I don’t like this story, and I don’t really believe in the truth that is embodied in this nonfiction history. I think the author is trying to “lead me to an agenda.”

Queen Shenaynay’s Desert Island Cookbooks. She lists ten best-of-the-best cookbooks with annotations telling why they’re good and what they’re good for. I’m thinking Christmas gifts for some of my favorite cooks. Nonfiction you can believe in.

Carl V.’s Autumn 2006 RIP Reading Challenge. R.I.P. stands for Readers Imbibing Peril, and you can join in by having a reading goal for the autumn of five books that are “scary, eerie, moody, dripping with atmosphere, gothic, unsettling.” I need to get back to Wilkie Collins’ The Woman in White anyway.

Ms. Seasonal Soundings is sponsoring The Autumn Reading Challenge. I didn’t take the challenge because I have so many books on The List that I just read whichever one I happen to find handy that suits my mood. Like Stefanie at So Many Books, I’m somewhat ambivalent about book lists. On the one hand, I love book lists because I get new ideas about what to read. I like making lists of my favorites, or my favorites in this or that genre. I like keeping a list of books I want to read because otherwise I forget about books that I am truly attracted to. However, I don’t like being told what to read. I read whatever I’m in the mood to read. I sometimes make myself read a “classic” because I know from experience that I may have to work at it at first, but I also may get valuable insight and education from my perseverance.