What I’ve Been Reading

Recently my reading list has been the following:

The PennDutch Inn mysteries by Tamar Myers — all but the last three are fairly good. The next to last one was meh and the last one was definitely not worth the paper on which it was printed. Seriously… she was tying up loose ends and got a little weird.

The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate by Jacqueline Kelly — recommended by my friend Molly and was worth reading. It deals with an 11 year old girl in Texas at the turn of the 20th century and her discovery of science and the encouragement of this by her grandfather while her mother would rather have her pursue the domestic arts.

The Mighty Queens of Freeville by Amy Dickinson — I’m not done with it yet but it’s definitely a good read. Amy talks about dealing with her divorce when her daughter was young and how she keeps returning to her hometown of Freeville, New York. She’s definitely not having a pity party (which is good — she’s a nationally syndicated advice columnist) and the title refers to the generations of women in her family who have been there and done that and thrived. Amy is also a frequent panelist on Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me and that was how I’d heard about her book.

Recent Reads

As we have no Internet or TV at the Snuggery, I have been taking full advantage of the LA County Library System and catching up on my “to-read” list. So far, I’ve discovered:

[+] The Miss Julia books by Ann B. Ross
[+] Leslie Meier’s books about Lucy Stone and solving crimes in a small town in Maine (light and fluffy)
[+] Louise Penny’s mysteries about Canada (very spooky in tone)
[+] the latest Joanne Fluke books, the latest Joanna Carl books, and the latest in some other series I read

It has been a good thing and it’s keeping me relatively sane.? My only problem: I read really quickly and I’m having to find new series to keep myself occupied.

It’s also a cheap form of entertainment — I’ve saved hundreds of dollars in book purchases as well as storage space that I don’t have at the moment.

Any suggestions for new reads?

Sheer Lunacy

I’ve got Headline News on while I take care of paperwork and attempt to clean the downstairs. They’re going to have Elizabeth Gilbert (author of Eat Pray Love) on to talk about love and marriage and her new book, Committed, where she examines marriage.

OK… this is the woman who wrote in a whining tone about OMG how she didn’t want to be married to her husband and so she had an affair in the first part of Eat Pray Love.? I’m really not thinking she’s the best person to talk about marriage?? Not to mention, she ended her first marriage for purely selfish reasons and people are actually *celebrating* this.

The fact that she’s being lauded for her second book gives me very little hope for my generation.

Life Besides NaNo

As you can see from my sticky post, I’m definitely making progress on NaNo this month. I’m not bounding ahead like I did when I tried it in 2006 but I also haven’t put in any long prayers or hymns… at least not yet.

The little bear is teething and teething hard at that. His canine teeth are coming in which makes it not too much fun for us or him. He also contracted a bug (probably from some moron touching his face before I could slap their hand away) which triggered asthma and bronchial crud. He landed in the ER last Sunday and we’ve been having to give him breathing treatments. He’s doing fine and doesn’t mind his “hookah time” at all.

Other than that, it’s been sleep/work/play with Daniel/sleep lately and squeezing in some NaNo writing time.

Being Killed Off in My NaNoWriMo Piece

Recap: I apparently don’t have enough to do in my life so I’m doing NaNo this year.

When I did this 3 years ago, I offered to kill people off creatively.Â? I did this by creating a fictitious website called DaHorror.Com and had it be something like News of the Weird.Â? This year, I’m making a similar offer but with a twist.

The offer: For a donation to your local food bank/pantry (money or food — I don’t really care which), I will creatively kill you off in my NaNo piece.

The Rules
1.) You need to email me after you make your donation and specify which food bank/pantry got the goods.Â? If you donate food, please make it something that people actually eat as these organizations provide groceries for families.Â? I know people will eat creamed corn if desperate but if mac n’ cheese is on sale for 10/$10, please donate that instead.Â? You also don’t need to tell me how much got donated — this is on the honor system.

2.) Be creative but also be somewhat reasonable.Â? I’m open to stuff like that which could happen in the Lemony Snicket books but not really the slasher horror film genre, if you get my drift.Â? Also, no cannibalism, no being roasted over a spit, or anything like that.Â? (Ahem… PISCO!!!!)

3.) I have final veto power over how you’re killed off.

4.) If you’re someone who I interact with in person on a daily basis (i.e. co-worker/parishioner/community member), you don’t get to read the final product.

Let the killing spree begin!

“The Unlikely Disciple”

While I’ve had a sleepy dude on me, I’ve been able to get some reading done.

While listening to an episode of NPR’s “Religion Podcast” on my iPod, I heard about a book called The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner’s Semester at America’s Holiest University by Kevin Roose. His interview was pretty sweet so I decided to acquire a copy from Amazon.

The premise of the book is that Roose is spending a “study abroad” semester undercover at Liberty University, the evangelical liberal arts college founded by the late Jerry Falwell. While on a writing assignment with his boss, he visited Thomas Road Baptist Church, the church founded by Falwell, and found that he really could not communicate with the evangelical college students he met there. Realizing that this was a problem, he pondered the idea of spending a semester at Liberty as it was a foreign culture to him. He was able to arrange it and spent the spring of 2007 as a transfer student there. He lives in the dorms, takes part in prayer meetings, takes the core curriculum classes, sings in the choir at Thomas Road Baptist Church, and even goes on a short-term missions trip down to Florida over Spring Break to win the souls of the throngs of college students down there. He even does an interview with Falwell for the college paper and it ends up being the last print interview conducted by Falwell before he died in May of 2007.

I honestly could not put the book down and was forced to do it in order to get some sleep, to get the young prince to stop crying, or to eat — it was really that engaging. Granted, I’m a blog fan so I enjoy reading about peoples’ lives but this was definitely different. Kevin talked about his prep for heading to Liberty (his friend Laura doing a crash course on Evangelical Christianity for Dummies for him) as well as how he dealt with fitting in and not being conspicuous. One of the more interesting things was his attempts at not cursing — a book that had him using religious expressions instead of curse words which made him sound like a dork instead of blending in. 🙂

As a convert to Christianity, it was interesting to watch how his perspective on things changed as the semester went on. He doesn’t end up “being saved” but he’s moving toward that direction. He starts praying, he has a newfound respect for the Bible and for the faith, and he does start attending church occasionally. His friend Laura had told him that this semester could change him and I think it was a positive change.

The most interesting thing was his reaction when Jerry Falwell passed away. His interview had actually made him more human and I think having seen that side, Kevin was honestly sad when the news came down. I’m glad that he was there at the time because he talks about the two sides of the death. On one hand, Falwell was a monster to those with whom he disagreed (most specifically the GLBTQ community) and his death was a great thing. On the other hand, he was a person and definitely “not a hypocrite” (according to Kevin) and I think having seen him in person and talked to him, it was a real human being dying instead of this caricature in the media.

This is a book I’d recommend reading if you do want a semi-unbiased view of life in a hyper-evangelical environment. There’s no true way to be unbiased in this situation but Kevin does a really good job of it.

“Eat Pray Love” Sort of Redeems Itself

So I’ve gotten through the rest of the book now and her time in Indonesia (well… Bali) is redemptive. She helps the medicine woman buy a house to live in with her kids, she helps the medicine man preserve his notes, and she actually WAITS before bedding Felipe.

I still think she’s narcissistic and self-centered but… she’s a New York socialite so I can’t expect much less. I’d still give the book two stars on Amazon.Com (maybe 2 1/2 if I was feeling generous).