Saturday, October 27, 2018

More Poetry

yesterday, i was the moon by Noor Unnahar

Honestly, I bought this book of poetry because of the poet's first name. I have a brilliant former student who is also a gifted writer and poet, and these poems, to a certain degree, reminded me of her.

As it turns out, I am a big fan of this non-traditional poetry. The kind that ignores capitalization and punctuation rules, that has an easy to understand surface meaning, so even if you suck at deeper meanings of poems, you can get something from them. Every book of poetry that I have read in the past year, save one, fit this criteria.

Thursday, October 25, 2018

One of my Favorite Topics

Witches! The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem by Rosalyn Schanzer

This is a National Geographic book, so it is well done. It's not terribly long, only 135 pages, but it doesn't bore like some books about the witch trials. I am pretty well versed on the topic, if I do say so myself, and even I learned a thing or two from this book. This is well researched, and accessible to darn near everyone.

This has pictures, well, drawings, really, that reflect some of the images in other books about Salem I have read. This one also gives a mini bio about the major players of the witch trials, as well as the outcome for the major players who survived. The accounts of the trials themselves are accurate but not so weighted down with language that you don't want to read this. I feel fairly confident that I will be adding this to my witchy collection.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Just Like the Movie

Mean Girls by Micol Ostow

When I say this is just like the movie, this is just like the movie. Verbatim.

That said, I loved it. It was fun to me to get to read a movie that I love so much. I enjoyed being able to see the thoughts of the characters behind what we see on the screen.

If nothing else, when I put this on the shelves in my classroom, I will be able to get someone to read who normally wouldn't.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Better Than the Second, But Not as Good as the First

Someday by David Levithan

I can't believe it took me three weeks to read a book that should've taken three days, tops. I just haven't really wanted to read. I think it has to do with all the stress of having to do more with less at work, including having more students than everyone on my team and more behavioral issues too. I am hoping this will change soon, so my desire to read will come back with it.

Anyway, this is the third installment of the series that started with Everyday a few years ago. This one is told by A, Rhiannon, Nathan, and X. Of course, A and Rhiannon were who narrated the first two books, but Nathan was one of the people that A inhabited, the one who thought he was possessed by the devil. X is someone new entirely, and he is someone like A, who inhabits different bodies. There are a few chapters narrated by others, but the book is primarily the four I mentioned.

This is a few months after the events in Everyday. A is in Colorado, doing his own thing. Rhiannon and Nathan are in Maryland, having become friends, and wishing they could contact A. Part of the reason they want to contact A is because they miss him, but the other part is because X has been contacting Nathan, trying to find A.

One thing I liked about this is that the reader gets to see that there are more people like A, even if they aren't as awesome as A. As much as I like this series though, I hope this is the last one. I'd rather see Levithan work on more books about Dash and Lily.

Monday, October 1, 2018

Afghani Life After the Taliban

The Bookseller of Kabul by Asne Seierstad

This is a work of nonfiction, written by a Norwegian author. They spent four months staying in Afghanistan with an Afghani family after the Taliban fell. What I got from this book is that even though they live in the 21st century, Afghan people are still living in the dark ages, essentially.

I guess being a woman in the western world, reading about what these women deal with--not being able to go in public, find jobs, find a husband, everything really--just pissed me off. It aggravated me that women were dependent on men for everything. The book starts out with a guy wanting a second wife because his first wife was too old.

Sultan, the head of the family in this book, is just an asshole. When the carpenter is caught stealing, Sultan does whatever necessary to make sure that the carpenter is punished. The thing is, the carpenter gave back what was stolen and endured beatings and humiliation, but Sultan made things worse than they had to be. He didn't even treat his children--his sons-- well.

All that said, this was a well-written book. If the subject matter hadn't been so bleak and disturbing, this would have been a more riveting read. This should not have taken the two weeks it took for me to read.