Now, I can hold a note for a long time...actually I can hold a note forever. But eventually that's just noise. It's the change we're listening for. The note coming after, and the one after that. That's what makes it music.

Host ,'Why We Fight'


Natter 48 Contiguous States of Denial  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Jesse - Jan 01, 2007 5:54:45 pm PST #9223 of 10007
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Only if the sweet was the only thing turning you off from it. Otherwise, I wouldn't bother.

Well, now I need to know, is the thing.


Kathy A - Jan 01, 2007 5:56:32 pm PST #9224 of 10007
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

When I was 11 I was devouring Marguerite Henry books.

I am Laga. But, that is when I read my first grown-up book, too (Roots), so I was in a weird place, bookwise.


Jesse - Jan 01, 2007 5:58:42 pm PST #9225 of 10007
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I'm pretty sure 11 is when I started in with the Agatha Christie.


sarameg - Jan 01, 2007 5:58:44 pm PST #9226 of 10007

She's the girl who lives across the complex ( I can see her balcony, she mine) from me. I think I called her T here. The one whose play I practiced lines with and then saw this summer, if you were around then. Really, she's Mister Kitty's doter...

My mother will be delighted to give book recs, and probably unload copies she has in whatever direction. As you might have figured out. (Your conversations were so fun. All I knew was you were speaking the same language.) ERIC CARLE! Um...


Kat - Jan 01, 2007 6:00:44 pm PST #9227 of 10007
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I love Eric Carle. Allyson gave me a sticker with a dragon from him.

But I think I need to start with board books and foam books. Chewables.


Laga - Jan 01, 2007 6:04:05 pm PST #9228 of 10007
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

I think that summer (of my 11th year) I started Watership Down. And read it twice over again because I didn't want it to end.


sarameg - Jan 01, 2007 6:05:25 pm PST #9229 of 10007

Eric Carle does those. Really! Hungry Catepiller is a classic board book, as is Pat the Bunny. Which isn't Carle, but still! I still recall the smell (baby powder) of that book fondly.

OK, finding out the Amber Alert I saw on the road was the result of the death of the mother, even if the kids were recovered ok, is really depressing. I'd hoped it was just a fucktard custody dispute. So much worse.

I should be to bed now.


Ginger - Jan 01, 2007 6:08:33 pm PST #9230 of 10007
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

She might like Harriet the Spy. At that age, I loved Caddie Woodlawn, Roller Skates, the Little House books, the Black Stallion books, the Trixie Belden books, and books by Louisa May Alcott, Elizabeth Enright, Edward Eager, Eleanor Cameron, E. Nesbit and Marguerite Henry. A little later, I became obsessive about Rosemary Sutcliff. It's hard for me to know if the modern child can related to any of these.


Kat - Jan 01, 2007 6:14:04 pm PST #9231 of 10007
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

It's hard for me to know if the modern child can related to any of these.

Oh Ginger, I feel your pain!

When I began teaching this age, I kept thinking, "Why don't you like the books I liked!" But then I began reading contemporary junior fic and realized it's totally different. sometimes edgy, sometimes funny, issue-laden and so good. The world's a totally different place now.

For my super strong readers, they'll still gravitate to children's classics, but for most readers, especially kids who live in urban settings and are struggling readers, children's classics are way hard. They have difficulty creating a mental picture of the world necessary to understand those books and to decode as they read.

It just takes a while to build up to those.


§ ita § - Jan 01, 2007 6:20:52 pm PST #9232 of 10007
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I should order pizza, right? I mean, there's no supperish food in the house--I can duplicate breakfast or lunch, but that messes with tomorrow's lazy food-providing.