Postcards from Florida and Indiana

This postcard is from Sara, she of the regular comments. Sara was visiting her mother in Florida and sent me this card while they were driving to St. Augustine.  She further told me that they were driving on the A1A “which I first heard of from Mr. Vanilla Ice!”  Good to know.  And I don’t catch the reference. (Sara and I, though we have shared friendship since high school, did not share music preferences during high school.)

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This postcard of stacks and stacks of books is form Claire in Elkhart Indiana and tells me, among other things, that she is 76 years old and has 10 children, one of who is adopted and just turned 20!

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(I’m beginning to reap my Postcrossing due diligence during winter break.  I’m hoping I can keep it up.)

PKO Senior Dissertation

This autumn and winter, I’ve been helping a senior in high school with her high school dissertation, which is what her school calls the culminating senior project. I was one of three committee members and my job was editing.  I had great fun looking over PKO’s research paper and her journal entries.

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PKO’s focus was on animals.  Her paper was about Animal Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation.  She also volunteered at the Oregon Humane Society with dogs, teaching them commands to make them more adoptable.  During that time she kept a journal, which included information about the different dogs she volunteered with as well as instructions for teaching commands to dogs.

Her teacher said it was one of the top three senior dissertations she had seen.

Well done PKO!

Three sentence movie reviews: Water for Elephants

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I’m not much of a fan of the mistreatment of animals, even simulated mistreatment.  So I didn’t like this movie at all and I don’t think the last five minutes of Happy Ending Voiceover did anything to help me recover from what came before.  This was a crappy love story and I do not approve.

Cost: free from library
Where watched: at home while painting toenails silver.

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/2011/water_for_elephants.html

The last Breakfast

For five years, our friends Laurie and Burt have been hosting Breakfast once per month in their home.  They live less than a mile away, so Matt and I have attended regularly.  Free food!  We’re good at that.

Today is, alas, the last Breakfast.  I brought a Gingerbread Man friend along, so you will see him in these photos.

This is Burt and Laurie’s house, which I love.  Partially because Burt and Laurie live there, but partially because it’s a very old house (for Portland), has a really awesome fireplace that came around the Horn, and also because you can see how the house grew as time went on.

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Laurie and Burt always have a variety of beverages, including coffee, hot chocolate, orange juice and water.  Because this was the last Breakfast, there was also champagne to make mimosas.

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Laurie poses with the food.  There are always scrambled eggs, feta cheese, potatoes, vegetarian sausage, bacon and fruit.  Plus either pancakes or waffles and some small sugary bready thing like mini cinnamon rolls.  It’s a great spread. Laurie’s nephew and his mother also are enjoying breakfast.

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Burt is the pancake/waffle man.  His pancake/waffle job keeps him in the kitchen, but he pops in and out while things are cooking.

IMG_4881It’s been fun to have five years of breakfasts.  I will miss the second Saturday food and conversation.  Thanks Burt and Laurie!

2016 Mock Printz

It’s time for another Mock Printz!IMG_4930

The Mock Printz, for those who do not recall, is the annual workshop I attend where we read 9-10 young adult books, discuss them and choose the best book written for teens, based entirely on its literary merit.  Above are the books we read this year.  I read all but the Tightrope Walkers.

Here we are getting our usual history of the Printz award.IMG_4929

One of the fun parts about the workshop is that some groups get to go to the conference rooms upstairs.  I love it when I’m in one of those groups. And I was this year!  We had the gorgeous view.
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My discussion group consisted of two actual teenagers, three librarians and myself.  We had many spirited discussions, then voted in our small group.

After our small group discussion, we reassembled and reported out. You can see my group, Violetta, made a lot of the same choices as other groups did.IMG_4932
After the small groups reported out, we had a large group discussion.  Cases were made for (and against) books.  We voted one last time in our large groups.IMG_4928

And our winner was Steve Sheinkin’s Most Dangerous, followed by a tie for second. Bone Gap and Challenger Deep shared the honors.

IMG_4936The winners were announced two days later at the American Library Association’s Midwinter Conference.  How did our voting stack up to the winners of the real 2016 Printz Award?

The 2016 winner:
Bone Gap,
by Laura Ruby
(You might remember that as our large-group, tied-for-second winner.)

2016 Honor Books:
The Ghosts of Heaven,
by Marcus Sedgwick,
and
Out of Darkness,
by Ashley Hope Perez.
(You might remember these books from the Hollywood Mock Printz post.)

Three sentence movie reviews: Bring it On


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Probably the best cheerleader movie ever, despite the fact that Kristen Dunst, is the most awkward looking cheerleader ever.*  And why hasn’t Eliza Dushku broken out from her Joss Whedon work, she’s so incredibly alluring?  Overall, a very good piece of confection.

Cost: $2.75 from Videorama
Where watched: at home during the snow day.  This double feature (with Clueless) was brought to you by the interview with Nicole Bilderback on the “I Was There Too” podcast.

*I remember this from the first time I watched this.  I think it has something to do with her incredibly long arms.

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/2000/bring_it_on.html

I was very interested in the posters from other countries. Germany features the cheerleading uniforms, but it’s called Girls United.

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Whereas France has no uniforms and calls it American Girls.  I hope Tom Petty fans in France weren’t confused.

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Three sentence movie reviews: Clueless

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Twenty years later and this movie still hits all the right notes.  Sure, Paul Rudd hasn’t really settled into his beloved screen persona, but this is the movie that caused him to imprint on all women of a certain age, so we’ll let it slide.*  We all talk on our cell phones now as much as Cher and Dionne did then, but thank goodness the nose jobs aren’t as prominent.

Cost: $2.75 from Videorama
Where watched: at home during the snow day.  This double feature (with Bring it On) was brought to you by the interview with Nicole Bilderback on the “I Was There Too” podcast.

*Also, the age difference between Cher and Josh and the fact that they were once step-siblings is just the slightest big creepy.  But we’ll overlook it because of the imprinting.

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/1995/clueless.html

Snow Day!

The surprise snow, brought a not-so-suprise snow day.  (We don’t do snow in Portland, and we certainly don’t do ice on top of snow.)

Ice and snow on the front porch.

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My street was looking okay, but the side streets were icier.

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Melting ice and snow in on my doormat.

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We started the next day with a 2-hour delay, which was converted to a second snow day by 7:30am.  Two snow days!  What a gift!

Three sentence movie reviews: I Love Trouble

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To be fair to this movie, I was kind of board and would have preferred to read but didn’t have any books of interest. However, the movie was way too long and not at all the movie I thought it would be.* Also, the 26 year age difference made the supposed romance yucky and weird.**

Cost: free from Hoopla, the library’s streaming service
Where watched: in bed, on my new tablet. I sneezed once, and the screen flipped.  That was more exciting than this film.

*If IMDB trivia is to be believed I wasn’t the only one who noticed: “It’s gone from a Hepburn-Tracy Woman of the Year (1942) to The Pelican Brief (1993) in a very short time span,” one competing studio marketing person noted before it was released.
**There’s one scene where a really hot 20-something in a meatmarket-type bar picks Nick Nolte (then 53) as the only guy in the bar she would go home with, which I found laughable.
(Aside: Many of Julie Robert’s outfits reminded me of my high school friend Leath’s clothing style, so that was fun.)

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/1994/i_love_trouble.html

Three sentence movie reviews: The Edge of Love

Edge Of Love 1 Sheet CMYK

This is a classic example of how a movie doesn’t come together, despite many things that should result in a good movie.  Acting was fine, story was okay, costumes were great.  But it just all felt so blah.

Cost: free from library
Where watched: at home, while the freezing rain started.

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/2009/edge_of_love_ver2.html