Saturday, February 28, 2009

FLYGIRL, by Sherri L. Smith

FLYGIRL
by Sherri L. Smith

(Putnam)

You wanna see just how dyed in the wool racism is? Slip into the skin of someone trying to pass as white. After a lifetime of submitting to the rules of Jim Crow, simple things like stepping to the front of a line or dancing with a white man become as gut-wrenching as test flying a B-29 for Ida Mae. Forging a pilot's license to get into the army's WASP program is one thing, but denying her heritage and her family to follow her dream turns out to have plenty more complications than keeping her hair from kinking and remembering not to sit in the back of the bus. And that's without even getting into what it's like being a woman in the armed forces in the 1940's.

The plot cruises at a comfortable altitude with a vivid setting that never blocks your view of the characters. Climb aboard.

(Incidentally, I don't know why all the sudden I'm starting to really get it about segregation and Jim Crow, but between Flygirl and Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry I sure am.)

Friday, February 27, 2009

Poetry Friday

The night editor's poem

A child is lost near a lake
in the woods outside the city;
a man has been found dead
in a hotel and our reporter knows only
that the detectives have sent out
for sandwiches and coffee which
they're now consuming
in the same room with the corpse and a woman
who may be a suspect,
if there has been a murder, although right now
it looks more like suicide,
in which case our photographer
should get out of there as fast as he can
because nobody remembered to arrange for a picture
of the new officers of the Knights of Pythias.
There is flooding
in the Upper St. John River Valley and a cabbie
has been stabbed in Fredericton, and Trudeau
looks like a shoo-in unless
there's a deal which would mean
we'd have to pull the lead editorial and kill
that display of cuts
on page five, and we should do something
on page one about Vietnam, although all there is
so far is the usual round-up
that nobody reads and,

Bulletin,
Martin Luther King has been shot
in Memphis, the extent
of his injuries has not yet
been determined.

I send the kid
for a one column, head and shoulders,
cut, and ask if there've been any deaths
from the floods, because if there haven't been
I can shove that story downpage
and do a two column upper left
display on King unless,

Bulletin,
his injuries
are critica
l

and I push everything down
four inches and send the kid
for a one and one-half columns,
head and shoulders, not much more than three
inches deep,
and there's a call from the hotel
our reporter sounding disappointed
because, sure enough, it was suicide
and that means only three inches
of type on the back page, and
by the time Mac got to the Pythian Castle
they'd gone home but maybe we have a file cut
of the grand chancellor
we can use on provincial; there's a hell of a good
shot of the mother
of the lost child taken when they told her
they'd found the body, one that will stand up
in three columns with everything but her face
cropped out, something good enough
to send out on the wire and,

Bulletin,
Martin Luther King
is dead,

and it's too late
for a wirephoto which means
dig out that shot of him being hit
by a stone in Chicago, I think it was,
and have the engraver mask it so
nothing shows except
his body falling, and we'll set the story
in 12-point boldface, 18 ems, under
an all-cap 72-point Headline Gothic
head and splash it across
the top half of page one,
and it's not until later,
hours later,
eating ham and eggs
at an all-night diner,
shrugging my shoulders
to work some of the ache
out of them,
that I pick up the paper
again and understand
that Martin Luther King
is dead, and that I care.


~Alden Nowland

******************
Currently reading:
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Imperfections
by Lynda Durrant

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Still revising. Read this instead

Those of you who aren't already keeping up with the Editorial Anonymous series, Definitions for the Perplexed, should get your little backsides over there pronto and educate yourselves. If this reader/bookseller/author has learned a thing or two about the nitty-gritty of publishing, so can you.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

One for the Romanov fans

This is THE best Romanov movie ever, and even though I finagled myself a copy many moons ago, I'm freaking out because it's suddenly become available on DVD in the regular western world:


(Romanovs: The Imperial Family)

With English subtitles, even! (Although I watched this puppy in Russian and loved it for at least a year before I got my hands on a coveted fansubbed copy. That's how good it is.) Find it. Rent it. Watch it.

Confession: Romanovy is the best, but HBO's Rasputin: Dark Servant of Destiny is still my favorite.

[Added at 1:24pm -- Holy cripe, it's out of stock already...]

Monday, February 23, 2009

By popular demand*

My get-up for the local pre-Oscar night costume party:


*In my world, three or four requests qualifies as "popular demand."

Sunday, February 22, 2009

State of the TBR pile

Finished:

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Peace, Locomotion, by Jacqueline Woodson

Next:

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Flygirl, by Sherri L. Smith

(Wimpy, I know. This is what happens when the WIP gets uppity.)

Saturday, February 21, 2009

So close, and yet...

Oh, bittersweetness. Today’s work puts ye olde Revise-O-Meter precisely at the coveted 85% mark. Bring on the confetti, and never mind the fact that those extra four chapters I'm adding have actually knocked me back down to effing 78.06%. Fmuh. 


Actually, it’s probably a little less bleak than that -- I bet the jottings I’ve pasted into those renegade chapters are worth 25 points apiece. So let’s call it 80.01% instead. Yeah, that’s better.

*sigh*

Friday, February 20, 2009

Poetry Friday

The Stubborn Poem

I felt the poem dance
in my head,
It gave me cause
to scratch,
It gave me cause
to wriggle,
So I looked for my
head latch.

I tried so hard to
let it out,
So I dug deep in
my eyes,
I wrinkled up my
funny nose,
And tried my mouth
for size.

But the poem was
so stubborn,
It stayed right in
my head,
So I shook it very
fiercely,
And ended up
bright red!

~Joy Weare

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

4 x 12 = ack

It seems the WIP and I are having a difference of opinion. I would very much like it to hold steady at 44 chapters. (You may recall that back in April I acquiesced to similar demands and upped it from 40 to 44.) The WIP, however, is now lobbying for 48. FORTY-EIGHT, folks. And I'm afraid the WIP knows what it's talking about. Again.


Although the thought of cramming another full quartet of chapters in at the homestretch makes me perfectly queasy, I'm plotting to pull a sneaky slice-and-dice trick: break chapters 40-43 into eight mini-chapters, shuffle them around a little, and add a few pinches of bulk here and there. Gives both the WIP and me a little room to breathe and stretch our legs without committing to another 8,000-10,000 words. (Perish the thought.) Maybe then the end won't feel quite so much like a stack of cinder blocks. And maybe I'll start getting somewhere again instead of sitting here gnashing and flailing. It's getting so I behave like one of Sendak's Wild Things every time I open my faithful MacBook. At any rate, it's worth a shot.

This may require some primitive tools -- things like paper, scissors, and an expanse of living room floor. Also, St. Clair Highballs, and plenty of 'em.

Aside: for the love of Pete, isn't there a synonym for "chapter"?

********************************
Currently watching (yes, watching):
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Harvey

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Miep Gies: 100

Before I burrow into the Cave of Revision, may I draw your attention to the fact that Miep Gies, the last surviving member of the team that aided the Frank family in hiding, celebrates her 100th birthday today?



Mrs. Gies found Anne Frank's diary after the Secret Annex was raided by the Gestapo in August of 1944, and kept it -- unread -- until news of Anne's death was confirmed. 

To see Miep Gies speak about her experiences with the Franks, pick yourself up a copy of Anne Frank Remembered, which is THE best Anne Frank documentary out there. The lady knows how to tell a story.

(Plus, she's NICE. She sent me that signed photo and a real live non-form letter when I wrote to her a couple years ago. I'm still not quite over that.)

*********************
Currently reading:
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Peace, Locomotion
by Jacqueline Woodson

State of the TBR pile

Finished:
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The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had, by Kristin Levine

Got about 100 pages through Eon, but I'm setting it aside. I'll go crazy if I read a book that large in 15-pages-a-day increments. It's going to have to be shorty-short books or non-fiction until I get this revision squared away. Because have you seen how dreadfully close to 85% that Revise-O-Meter is getting? Eep. 

So don't count on me for regular blogging for the next little while -- gotta clear the decks to tackle these last half dozen chapters. (Because you know, don't you, that I'm not actually going to come to a screeching halt when I do hit that magical 85% mark...)

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Where I'll be tonight

(Volunteering at Meadow Brook Hall's Valentine's Day Dinner tour.)

Friday, February 13, 2009

Poetry Friday

Feeling a little silly on this Friday the 13th. How about a 13 rap, courtesy of Sesame Street?

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Time for a mini-rant

You know what I'm getting a little tired of? Characters in literary fiction that wax poetic about their love of words and books and writing. We all know how that happens, right? Authors love books. Golly gee. My own writing's not immune to the phenomenon, either, sorry to say.

I'm in need of an antidote. Anybody know a good book about a kid who's really into, say, chemisty? (Besides Catalyst, that is. God bless you, Laurie Anderson.)

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Spring? Pffft. Who needs spring?

There is snow on the ground, but I don't care. It's February in Michigan and it's 56 degrees outside and I'M SITTING IN THE WENDY HOUSE.

But I do have a down comforter and a sweater that used to comprise the better part of a sheep in here with me, just in case.

I'll either get some work done, or just sit here sniffing the fresh lumber/snickerdoodle candle smell. Either is ok with me.

BECAUSE I AM FURNITURE, by Thalia Chaltas

BECAUSE I AM FURNITURE
by Thalia Chaltas

(Viking Press)

Anke’s father is abusive. But not to her. He attacks her brother and sister, but she is ignored, forced to be an invisible witness in a house of horrors. Believing she isn't worthy of even the worst kind of attention, Anke is on the brink of disappearing altogether...

This is the first time in a long time (maybe the first time ever) that the formatting in a verse novel felt completely intuitive to me. The line breaks, the indents, all made sense, even to a prose girl like me.

Here comes possibly the vaguest positive review ever: this is a really good book. You should read it. Killer turns of phrase, intense subject matter, all in a format you can gulp down in a single sitting.

(Available in April)

Monday, February 9, 2009

Who would you be?

Costumes I'm contemplating for the neighbors' pre-Oscar night party:


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Holly Golightly

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Baby Jane Hudson

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Rainman



*********************
Currently reading:
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Eon: Dragoneye Reborn
by Alison Goodman

Sunday, February 8, 2009

State of the TBR pile

Finished:
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The Walls of Cartagena, by Julia Durango
All the Broken Pieces, by Ann E. Burg
A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeline L'Engle (audio)

Next week, finish this:
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The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had, by Kristin Levine

...and then try this:
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Eon: Dragoneye Reborn, by Alison Goodman

(Which is probably a dumb idea, given the page count and the fractured nature of both my reading time and my attention span lately. Wish me luck.)

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Anti-crastination

Earlier this week I took what I consider a drastic step in the fight against procrastination:


I REMOVED the shortcuts for my Safari web browser and iPhoto from my desktop, fully expecting to be amazed and appalled by how much time I could save if my biggest temptations were more than one click away. I was so confident of impending progress, I actually wrote a smug draft of this blog post nearly a week ago.

I was WRONG.

Dammit all.

Image purloined from Academic Productivity.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Poetry Friday

We are the night ocean filled

with glints of light. We are the space
between the fish and the moon,
while we sit here together.

~Rumi

**************
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The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had
by Kristin Levine

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Pre-crastination?

Late one WIP afternoon last week, I got antsy. My mouse started idly drifting toward desktop shortcuts that have nothing to do with writing. Before long, my mind was following suit every 90 seconds or so.


The dilemma:
Although I couldn’t really afford to quit for the day, I had an inkling that if I quit while I was ahead, I wouldn’t end up completely negating the afternoon's fragile sense of progress when I succumbed to the usual, inevitable temptations. There I sat, torn between what felt like laziness (quit under the guise of giving the chapter a chance to "settle"), and masochism (clench my teeth and forge miserably ahead).

The solution:
Closed the laptop and walked away. No more points for the Revise-O-Meter, but no Web-induced time-suck, either.

The verdict:
Stopping to catch up on my reading felt infinitely better than stealth-bopping between the WIP and the internet --  a practice I hereby dub pre-crastination.


******************
Currently reading:
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All the Broken Pieces
by Ann E. Burg

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

WINTERGIRLS, by Laurie Halse Anderson

WINTERGIRLS
by Laurie Halse Anderson

(Viking)

Among some of my friends, I'm known (mostly) affectionately as "the skinny bitch." But really, I'm the lucky bitch. Among other reasons, I am the size that I am through no effort of my own. Which is why I cringe whenever any of the teenagers I chat with online say they wish they look like me. We joke about it, but I'd secretly like to shake them, these perfectly normal girls who aren't capital-P perfect because they wear jeans that begin with a number instead of a zero. Maybe now I'll just tell them to shut up and read Wintergirls instead.

So maybe I've already got you thinking this is a book all about Why Eating Disorders Are Bad. Actually, because it's Laurie Anderson, this is a book about how eating disorders feel, and lemme tell you, it leaves "bad" in the dust. I'm not sure anyone knows better than Laurie how to crawl into the mind of a broken kid and illuminate the tangled mess inside; in Lia's case, disturbing, disorienting, desperate, and utterly compelling. In fact, it's so good that I've overcome my natural ARC-hoarding tendancies and passed it along to one of the best high school English teachers I know. Wintergirls is not a book you just tell people to read -- you'll shove it at them and demand their reaction.

Aside #1: If you want to get double your money's worth, brush up on your Greek mythology. Then you'll know why it's totally creepy that I happened to be drinking pomegranate juice while I read Wintergirls. (Even if you don't, I promise the book will still kick butt.)

Aside #2: This is the first book I've seen use strikeout text. The effect is super, but I wonder how the audio edition will cope with that?

Aside #3: When I think of Laurie Halse Anderson sitting across from me at a Chinese buffet in October where I ate only wonton broth and sushi, I can't help wondering if she silently added me to her watchlist. Seriously -- I bet I weighed less then than Lia does at the beginning of this book.

(Available in March)

Monday, February 2, 2009

Everybody's doing it...

...and goodness knows I can't pass up a chance to be irreverent:



Get yours here. (Like you haven't already.)

Sunday, February 1, 2009

State of the TBR pile

Finished: 
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Distant Waters, by Suzanne Weyn
Because I Am Furniture, by Thalia Chaltas

It's been a loooong time since I've presented the TBR pile as an actual pile: