Category Archives: Reading

My Mrs. Weasley Clock.

My own "Weasley Clock" with my family at their various locations.

My own “Weasley Clock” with my family at their various locations.

Today I feel the passage of time.  We have just under three more weeks in our first beloved house before we move to our new one.  This place has many, many memories: so many Halloween parties, holiday dinners, movie marathons, and other get-togethers here.  Our daughters were both brought home from the hospital here.  We lost one sweet family kitty here, gained a family of three new ones, and our dogs have staked out the perimeter of the yard for their own personal border patrol.

But it’s good to remember that a home is not a house.  A home is where your family is, where your heart is.  It will be oh-so-good to be with my husband again full time; he’s been living at the new place and away from us during the work week for several months now.

This is a photo of our awesome grandfather clock that I decorated for our Harry Potter Halloween party a couple of years ago.   Yes, this clock is going with us to our new home.

~Thanks!

A cry of defiance, and not of fear.

From NPR Special Series: Explosion at Boston Marathon, 4/15/13, http://media.npr.org

For Boston:

So through the night rode Paul Revere;
And so through the night went his cry of alarm
To every Middlesex village and farm,—
A cry of defiance, and not of fear,
A voice in the darkness, a knock at the door,
And a word that shall echo for evermore!
For, borne on the night-wind of the Past,
Through all our history, to the last,
In the hour of darkness and peril and need,
The people will waken and listen to hear
The hurrying hoof-beats of that steed,
And the midnight message of Paul Revere.

~From “Paul Revere’s Ride,” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

It’s Spring. I think my book is New Adult.

Last year about this time I had a new novel on my hands that in its gestation had swung between being adult to young adult back and forth a few times.  At this point I had heard about the New Adult genre, but it was being panned from a variety of sources.  From what I could tell, not many agents were repping it, and publishers weren’t quite sure what to do with it.  Bookstores didn’t quite have a shelf for it.

Fast forward to the present, and all that has changed.  There are more and more agents repping New Adult, and more and more publishers actually requesting it.  I woke up this sunny spring morning thinking that revising that novel, which can’t find a home in either Young Adult (because it has some themes that just don’t play well in YA) or Adult (because its protagonist is simply too young), would benefit from another revision – a revision that will make it firmly New Adult.

(Photo from Think Big Entrepreneur: http://thinkbigkansascity.blogspot.com/2011/07/evolution-of-entrepreneur.html) Where does New Adult fit on age-based literature?

If you’re not familiar with New Adult, there is still all manner of conflicting opinions on it.  Some readers claim that it’s just YA laced with porn, but I’m one of the growing reading and writing population that that sort of stereotyping is ludicrous.  I like what NA Alley says about it in this piece:  “What is New Adult?”

Like young adult lit, adults can read new adult if they want to.  In fact, good New Adult has all kinds of cross-over appeal, despite its target readership.  Bookstores might not even need to worry about where to shelve it, since quite a bit of New Adult is selling to an e-readership.

I’d love it if you’d weigh in on what you think and feel about New Adult literature.  Do you worry that it might be picked up by too young a readership?  Are NA topics/themes too sexy/controversial?  Do you think people are over thinking the whole thing, and typing a book as NA doesn’t have anything to do with sex anyway?  What’s your take?

Thanks!

A Review of His Majesty’s Hope, by Susan Elia MacNeal

His Majesty’s Hope, by Susan Elia MacNeal, available May 14, 2013

Why do we read historic fiction, especially from troubled eras?  Why do we subject ourselves to a fragile examination of our darkest hours?  I really think that reading novels, associating with characters and with their stories, builds empathy and understanding in ways that reading about death statistics or accounts of battles simply cannot.  This is one reason why I love Susan Elia MacNeal’s His Majesty’s Hope – Book 3 in the Maggie Hope series.  Ms. MacNeal drew me into the heads and hearts of her characters.  I felt the panicky sweat trickling down my back as I adventured with Maggie into Nazi Germany.  I shared the sickening in my stomach when a new character, Elise Hess – a German nurse – realized what was really happening to her young disabled patients when they were bused off for “special treatments.”  I actually bit my fingernails when the enemy pilot and the displaced Jewish doctor were packed away into a high-ranking Nazi’s attic, to hide under the Germans’ own noses.

But in His Majesty’s Hope, MacNeal takes her readers a step past the obvious  horrors of World War II.  In addition to the horrific plight of the Jews, and Hitler’s cleansing of anyone he doesn’t deem hale and hearty and Aryan, we see that England and the US are far from guiltless in the geo-political machinations of this war.

MacNeal’s writing takes on the morés of that era as well as our own, especially in regards to the consideration and treatment of homosexuals.  She doesn’t shy away from showing humanity at its most flawed.  There is love and desperation all through this story, and I adored every moment of it, even as I sat on the edge of my seat, worried for the characters who had become real to me.  I remain incredibly impressed at the level of scholarship that Ms. MacNeal puts into her work in writing her historical novels, and learned quite a few things in reading her notes and resources at the end.

I didn’t sleep well on the night after I finished His Majesty’s Hope.  The things that this war does to the characters, on a psychological level, were sometimes painful to experience, even vicariously.  This is what a good book does, though.  It makes you think.  It makes you feel.  In the case of this historical novel, it brings home the kind of ill-will that can supplant the spirit when people have to do things they would never do were they not at war.  It makes you realize that hatred and action against other people – regardless of which side you fall down on – takes away a measure of your own soul.  Thank goodness for the witty banter, the way Ms. MacNeal immersed me into the music, dance and fashion of the era, and the dry wit and humor that I have come to love in Maggie and her cohort.  Throughout the novel, there is always the quintessential element that redeems her characters and, by extension us – her readers:  the element of hope.

Thanks!

Perhaps it’s not scientific, but it is damning: Slush-Pile Hell

Writers Rejoice.

Or, Writers Despair.

It’s this kind of subjectivity that makes us want to crawl back in bed, cover our heads, and not stick one extremity back out again to consider typing another word.

Or…does it give us hope?  You decide.  Read this article, about a guy who submits a New Yorker story to The New Yorker – and gets rejected.

The New Yorker Rejects Itself

~Thanks!

What makes me squee.

I’ve noticed that the word “squee” is all the rage on Twitter now.  (Or perhaps I’m already behind, and it’s no longer the rage, and I’m terribly out of vogue to even talk about squee . . . regardless . . . )

Definition of SQUEE:  The cry of the overexcited fan girl.  (My addition:  Fan “girl” can also be a fan “boy,” but is still called a fan girl because the people who came up with the term “fan girl” are sexist.)

So what makes Rebecca Of Tomorrow squee, you ask?  Well, I like to group my squeedom into four separate squeeheadings.

#1:  New books coming out by authors I love

From the Charlaine Harris official website:  http://www.charlaineharris.com/

From the Charlaine Harris official website: http://www.charlaineharris.com/

For example, the FINAL Sookie Stackhouse installment by the fabulous Charlaine Harris:  Dead Ever After (May 7,2013).  In this instance, my squee is a bit bittersweet because this beautiful and amazing series is ending, however.

#2:  Movies coming out with actors I love OR in a series I love (or both)

From the official Star Trek Into Darkness website: http://www.startrekmovie.com/

From the official Star Trek Into Darkness website: http://www.startrekmovie.com/

For example:  Star Trek Into Darkness, releases May 17, 2013.  Not going to lie, I’m a huge, no-holds-barred Star Trek fan.  I’m a fan of the original series and all of its progeny, and all of the movies, and most of the books.  Plus, BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH is in this one, and there appears to be a whole lot of people jumping off of really high places — so what’s not to squee about?

#3:  New television episodes coming out with actors I love OR in a series I love (or again, both)

For example:  Thank goodness BBC is finally getting around to filming Sherlock: Season 3!  I mean, COME ON!  You simply cannot leave Sherlock dead.  You. Just. Can’t.  (Chill: I didn’t spoil it for those of you who haven’t watched Season 2.  Anyone who knows anything about Sherlock Holmes knows he “dies” at Reichenbach….and comes back.)

Oh, and lookie there!  That’s BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH again.  (Yes, I kinda squee every time I see a picture of him.)

#4:  Awesome things that happen to me

For example:  My writer friend, the exquisitely talented Kiersi Burkhart, wrote and mailed me my very own personalized typewriter story, called “Rebecca and the Girl Scout Cookies.”  I squeed when I got it out of the mail on Saturday, and my family thought I had gone a bit loopy.  But it was even better than ACTUAL Girl Scout Cookies – just sayin’.

So, on this Monday-after-daylight-savings-time-makes-you-really-sad-about-losing-an-hour-of-sleep-over-the-weekend, look for the things in life that will make YOU squee.

Thanks!

Your rat-pelt eyebrows look lovely, my dear.

Here’s an interesting scoop of trivial information for you.

Ester Boardman - 1780 - who wore mouse-skin eyebrows.  From: Grace Elliot - blog, http://graceelliot-author.blogspot.com/2012/06/mouse-skin-eyebrows-short-history-of.html

Ester Boardman – 1780 – who wore mouse-skin eyebrows. From: Grace Elliot – blog, http://graceelliot-author.blogspot.com/2012/06/mouse-skin-eyebrows-short-history-of.html

Did you know that in Elizabethan through Georgian times, women unknowingly poisoned themselves for years by applying a beauty product to their faces called ceruse – a mixture of white lead and vinegar?  This toxic substance made the face elegantly pale and perfect-looking, while concealing pock marks and acid pitting beneath.  (Think Queen Elizabeth I’s white face and eventual blood poisoning.)  In addition to making the lady ill, frequently mortally so, it usually had the unfortunate side of effect of causing her to lose her eyebrows.  In order to solve the eyebrow problem, ladies would skin rats and glue scraps of fresh rat pelt as artificial eyebrows – the thicker the better, because thick eyebrows connoted youth.   This solved the problem of what to do with all the rats they would catch in their traps overnight.

I learned this piece of fascinating information from Sarah Downing’s fascinating book Beauty and Cosmetics 1550-1950. 

On little things, as sages write,
Depends our human joy or sorrow,
If we don’t catch a mouse tonight,
Alas! No eyebrows for tomorrow.  (Matthew Prior, 1718)

Why am I blogging about this today?  Well, it’s Valentine’s Day: a day when countless men and women do what they can to enhance their own natural comeliness – whether by dressing provocatively, applying makeup, getting a new hairdo, or spritzing on a little too much perfume or Axe body spray.

And apparently, it’s fashion week in NYC.  For those of us who frankly cannot understand haute couture, much of what can be seen there is about as weird, possibly weirder, as Elizabethan rat eyebrows.

Just sayin’.

~Thanks!

Book Love.

Okay, so we’re packing up our house to sell and move.  I took 12 – TWELVE – boxes full of books to donate to our local library – good quality kids and adult fiction.  Our local library will shelf those donations that are appropriate for the lending area, and sell the rest for fundraising efforts.  It’s nice to know that others will love them as much as we have.  These twelve books barely scratched the surface of our book holdings, but we can’t part with the rest.  Plus, I have new books coming that I ordered online.

Thankfully, our new house has several built in bookshelves.

Is there anything better than the feeling of opening a new book?

I think the only thing better will be opening a new book in a nice book-reading spot in our new house.

Once I get a picture of said spot, I’ll share it with you; so stay posted!

~Thanks!

Because we all want to be Neil Gaiman when we grow up.

I’m pretty sure you all knew this, but in case you didn’t, let me just tell you.  Neil Gaiman is amazing, and many of us want to be him when we grow up.  What’s he up to now, you ask?  Well, here.  Read/Watch this.  It’s amazing.  I love that he’s doing a project of this scale.  Cannot wait to read what comes out of it.  GO NEIL!

Click right here on this link to see Neil Gaiman’s current “featuring you” project.

Neil Gaiman’s Twitter avatar.
(https://twitter.com/neilhimself)

Ideas Wanted!

Hey Blogosphere!  I posted this on Facebook yesterday and got a great response.  Feel free to add your own ideas in the comment section.  I LOVE ideas!
~Thanks!
Ok, FB friends. I need your input in a story I’m writing. I need a fictional name for a store/shop that means “retaliation.” I was thinking “Tit For Tat” but that has all kinds of naughty middle school boy smirkiness attacked to it. So other options might be “Quid Pro Quo,” “Pay Backs,” “Turning Tables,” “Serves You Right,” and “Measure For Measure.” What’s YOUR preference, and/or what other names could you come up with? HELP!
  • Cement Shoes.
  • Would you shop in a store called Cement Shoes? Maybe….
  • What service does the store provide?
  • Karma Kafe
  • “Re-prize-all Used Toy Store”. Where all toys are a prize to be re used.
  • I didn’t read your post correctly. I thought you said it was a toy store.
  • never-the-less, I like reprisal
  • outwardly it sells one-of-a-kind items, but it’s really a Twilight-Zone kinda store that dishes out what people deserve – for good or bad.
  • IforNI, Something Karma
  • Karma Kitch
  • Does the winner get royalties?
  • or an honorable mention on the acknowledgment page????
  • Retailiation. No?
  • Okay, if it gives out good as well as bad… The Winnowing Fork.
  • you might check anagram web sites to for some of these words. Or mythological sites.
  • Dang it! I was just typing “Retailiation.” Great minds and all that.
  • Too funny! Great minds, indeed.
  • If it’s an ice cream shop… “A Dish Best Served Cold.”
  • The Sauce and Gander. Although that sounds like a pub.
  • Teak Jar Music. Anagram of justice and karma
  • Themis Retail Tea. Or Old Bailey’s Retail Tea.
  • I4NI
  • Comuppins
  • U Hadit Comin
  • Reciprocity. Strangely I just took a Stanford course at work this week called “managing without authority” and reciprocity is one tool to use!
  • You Asked for It.
  • You guys ALL rock. I’ll let you know what I go with soon. And the Moirae are going to play a big part in this store.
  • And thanks so much for the Chicago earworm. “He had it comin’….He had it comin’….”
  • That was sort of the idea.
  • OMG, I could waste SO MUCH time on the anagram site. It’s interesting that an anagram of “retaliation” is “A Entrail Trio” because my Moirae will be doing some entrail divination…..
  • Ack, get it out of my ears!!!
  • I like his suggestion. It works for the one-of-a-kind-items shop as well as for the actual purpose of the shop. You Asked For It seems like the perfect name. And, btw, I LOVE the Cell Block Tango.
  • If it is a fabric store it could be Reap what You Sewed
  • Keep ‘em comin’…you’re on a roll, sir.
  • “Eye for an Eye” or “Serve the Same Sauce”
  • Ooh,  I’ve never heard of the “serve the same sauce” expression before.
  • Or it could just be “The Same Sauce”….
  • Thai Restaurant.
    Pai Bach Sab Ich
  • That took me a moment. Geesh!
  • Tee hee
  • It’s a bit of a stretch but you could do Zeke’s 25/17. Referencing Ezekiel 25:17 better known from the Sam Jackson’s speech from pulp fiction
  • Lemme go look it up….
  • Oh, wow. That’s heavy. But I really like the Bible verse idea. There’s a religious element in the story and the store, actually.
  • I’m also thinking of R&P….which stands for “rewards and punishments” but could be an innocent-sounding name of a store on any main street in America.
  • Not Your Girl Next Door…….
  • Oh a dessert shop. Karmeringue
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