Who's writing...

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North Salt Lake, Utah, United States
I'm a woman with degrees in creative writing and cultural anthropology, experience in retail sales, merchant processing, teaching English as a foreign language, and archaeology, who teaches writing and computer classes at a local college, and works for a herpetology society. I also like to read, cook, knit, watch movies, make baskets, take photographs, craft, travel, and blog. I currently live in Utah with my husband, T, and our two dogs. Oh, and I'm a Cancer, which explains the crab thing.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

2/3 of a Trilogy

A few weeks back I finally picked up the first book in The Hunger Games series.  People had been raving about it, and I expected it to be a good book, but I was surprised at how quickly it drew me in.  It's a short book, which is too bad, considering how quickly I inhaled it, and that is my one main complaint about the series so far.  I realize that it is intended as young adult fiction, but J.K. Rowling has proven that a 400-page book isn't daunting to teenagers if the story is good enough.

The first book did a great job of introducing the main character, Katniss, a young woman who is both fiercely independent, and fiercely protective of those who she claims as her own.  In a dystopic future, she becomes the breadwinner of her family, learning to hunt, gather, trade and sell to supplement her family's meager income, which is still better than many of the families around her.  She has a rebellious streak, which causes problems when she is chosen to take part in the annual Hunger Games, a festival designed to celebrate the triumph of the Capital over the Districts after a rebellion 74 years in the past, while simultaneously impressing upon those districts just how much power the Capitol holds.  In a battle where teenagers are forced to fight to the death, she manages to maintain her moral integrity and survives (otherwise we'd have no books 2 and 3, right?).

I finished the book thinking that it was a cross between Ender's Game and Twilight, but in a good way.  Ender's Game is one of my favorite books, and Ender is a similar character to Katniss -- a child forced into vicious surroundings, whose intelligence and basic human decency allows him to defy the game and write his own rules.  The Twilight aspect comes from just a few similarities between Katniss and Bella -- most obviously, the fact that she is torn between two men who both love her desperately.  I can easily see why comparisons were made between the two franchises when the Hunger Games movie came out.  However, unlike Bella, Katniss is fully aware of her own talents and abilities, she is engaged with and in control of her destiny at all times, and she has a strong sense of self-esteem.  When she takes action, it is to protect both herself and her loved ones, unlike Bella, who sees absolutely no value in herself and is always itching to become the sacraficial lamb.  Katniss's biggest flaw is perhaps her inability to let her guard down enough to recognize and accept the love of the people who surround her. 

I also wish that the first book didn't end as a cliffhanger.  Call me old fashioned, but even if you are planning a series, I expect you, as the author, to give me a complete story in each book.  Again, J.K. Rowling managed to pull it off 7 times.  I expected the second book to pick up exactly where the first left off, but fortunately there was a gap -- I say fortunately, because that gap was somewhat artfully filled in to start the next book.
And the second book, Catching Fire, was just as absorbing as the first.  But it was also too short.  Katniss has to deal with life back in the village as the Capitol begins to crack down, and she continues to battle with her conflicting feelings about the two men she has been involved with.  However, in this book, I definitely saw the parallels between her character and the goddess Diana/Artemis -- a beautiful virgin who is at home in the woods, who is freakishly good with a bow, and who resists romantic entanglements.  She finds herself a pawn in the Capitol's game while the other districts begin to rise up in rebellion, but as always she struggles to protect those she can, and to maintain her integrity in the face of forced brutality.

My main problem with this book was that so much of the action was simply glossed over, particularly the explanation at the end that sets us up for book 3 in the series.  These are slim novels, and taking the time to actually walk through the pentultimate conversation as it unfolded would have been much more satisfying than the "here's what he said," two-sentence summary of that conversation.  The same can be said for some of the action of the book itself -- near the beginning of the novel, when Katniss heads out for a 12-district tour, we only experience one or two stops, and the rest is explained away in a few short paragraphs.  I thought it was being sped past to get to a juicier main act, but sections of that part of the story seemed rushed as well.  And, again, it ends on a cliffhanger, but I have come to accept that from this series.

All that said, I am definitely looking forward to getting my hands on book 3 of the series.  I hope that the pace doesn't continue to increase, because if it does, I'm afraid I'll be done with the final book in a matter of hours.  I'm just hoping that the author was so excited to get into the meat of the final story, she rushed a little in part 2.  I hope there's more to savor in the final act.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Garden!

We put in a garden this weekend!  Our house came with a pair of lovely raised planting beds, but they didn't have much soil in them.  I wanted to start by planting just one of them.  This weekend, we pulled all the weeds that have been growing wild in there, went and got a truckload of compost, filled in the half-full bed, got a bunch of plants and soaker hose, used some pavers we got last year for a different project and didn't use, and put a garden together.  And then we put a little fence around it to keep the dogs out.  The best part was watching T, who has worked in construction for most of his life, measuring out the locations of the pavers to make sure they were perfectly evenly spaced, and then pulling out a little level to make sure they were flat, too.  We put a row of tomatoes across the back, which includes 4 different varieties, including an heirloom named Mr. Stripey.  We also put in 4 broccoli plants, 3 red cabbages, 2 cucumber vines, a zucchini, a Hubbard squash, and a honedew melon.  Considering this is our first garden, I hope everything grows well!

While we were getting all the veggies, we also got some flowers to put in our front planting bed.  Last weekend we replaced the horrible, thorny reddish bushes that came with the house, and put in 2 boxwoods in front, and a flowering bush on the side.  Now we also have some color out there, with a row of flowers in front of the bushes, and we picked up a three-pack of daylilies at Costco today to put along the side.  I know daylilies do well around here, and they're a nice, tall punch of color.

The veggies and the tools

Diezel insisted on helping all day
The plants in the ground, with soaker hose

Fencing to keep Cara out

Our front planter

Daylilies on the side

Pansies

Daylilies

Asters




Saturday, May 12, 2012

One Tough Mama

A good friend of mine from Arcata, CA, Nicole, was recently diagnosed with breast cancer.  I met her when I first moved to Arcata in 2000 -- not only did our partners work and kayak together, so we spent a lot of time camping and socializing, but we were also members of a very tight-knit book club, the Brainy Book Babes.  When I moved back to Arcata after grad school, I managed to rent a room in a house that was just a few blocks from hers, and we would frequently take her sweet dog Vista (aka Poochie) for long walks around the neighborhood and through the redwoods of the community forest.  I went to her rehearsal dinner and her wedding, attended her first baby shower, stayed at her house for visits after I had moved out of the area, and the last time I made it back to the coast, I was lucky enough to attend her daughter's 1st birthday.  As the physical distance between us grew, social media allowed us to stay in touch, and I got to watch from afar as her daughter grew up, her son came into the world, and she and her husband started their own organic ice cream shop, which has been a smashing success.

Nicole has always been an inspiration to me.  It is rare to find someone who moves through life with such kindness, determination, and grace.  She is smart, athletic, thoughtful, kind, brave, creative, loving, mindful and energetic.  She is the kind of person who always looks for ways that she can help others, but who doesn't forget to take care of herself as well.  She has a beautiful family, and with them has created a wonderful home, and they have reached out to actively become part of an amazing local community.

So it's no surprise that Nicole is once again inspiring me with her response to her cancer diagnosis.  She had a very successful mastectomy a little over a month ago, and is now preparing to begin radiation and chemo treatments to eliminate the last of the cancer cells.  While she lives in Arcata, her medical team and treatment will be over 300 miles away in Marin.  And how has she decided to get there?  She will be turning the journey into a 6-day cycling trip!  And not only is she doing this for herself, but she is turning the ride into a cancer awareness ride, and a fundraiser for her treatment center, the Center for Integrative Wellness and Health, and the Humboldt County Breast Health Project.  She has begun chronicling the journey and is accepting donations on her blog, kickingmycancer.com.  Her family will be her SAG (support-and-gear) wagon, coming along for the journey in a rented RV.  And her story is so inspirational, she has gained sponsorship for her ride from several local businesses in Arcata, and her story was picked up by the Larkespur-Corte Madera Patch.  Another mutual friend blogged about Nicole's amazing ride, so I thought I should do my part to spread the word, too.  So if you would like to support an amazing woman and friend, please go to her blog page and donate, or just read her story and spread the word!

Monday, May 7, 2012

Mighty Morphing Power Mutt


I spent a significant portion of Saturday afternoon in my back yard, pulling out burr plants.  We have two areas that grow weeds at the back edge of the yard -- in one of our empty raised flower beds, and in the gravel RV parking strip along the very back of our lot.  I don't remember having any burrs back there last year, but I filled a medium-sized wastebasket with them this year.  I have decided the reason for this is our dog, Cara, is a virtually-perfect burr delivery system.

When I first got Cara in the summer of 2006, there was almost no hint that she would become a burr magnet.  She was sleek and black, with a very short coat all over.  The only long hair on her was a hint of fluffiness behind her lab-like ears.

The first day I had her at home
On a hike, about a week later
Once she got her winter coat that year, though, things started to change.  By spring, the new hair hadn't shed out -- suddenly, she had fuzzy paws that were perfect for picking up sock burrs.  I would spend hours picking them off her feet and out from between her toes.

Burr nightmare
During 2007 and 2008, the changes were continuing to progress.  Now she had more fuzz behind the ears, feathers growing from her front legs, and a hint of eyebrows coming in.
Feathery legs, and a blurred-out wagging tail

The beginning of the eyebrows
By this point, she was getting so many burrs in her feet and leg hair, and even behind her ears, that I started trimming them to make our lives easier.
neat and trimmed
By the time we moved to Utah in 2009, the hair was out of control.  The eyebrows, foot and leg hair kept getting longer and longer, plus she started growing long hair on the inside of her thighs and armpits, and on her belly.  And more and more of the hair that was growing in was either white, or literally striped black and white.

Snow everywhere
Armpit hair
There aren't as many burrs in our area here, so all of her hair has been allowed to grow untrimmed for the last few years.  And, as you can see, it has just kept on going -- she has longer toe, leg, and armpit hair, her eyebrows have gotten longer and turned into a larger fan around her eyes, she has long wisps growing off of her everywhere, and she's even grown a pretty good goatee.  The eyebrows, in fact, have become her defining feature -- everyone comments on them.  We call them her "crazy old man eyebrows."  We think it's possible that she's slowly morphing into a schnauzer, or possibly a sheepdog.
Furball
Full eye fan and goatee
I pulled out a picture the other day that a friend had taken of Cara, just a few months after I'd gotten her.  I showed it to T, and he looked at it for a sec and then said, "Cute pup."  He didn't even recognize her.  And would you?
The short-haired puppy