Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

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Book Review: The Girl Who Would Be King by Kelly Thompson

“Bonnie Braverman and Lola LaFever are related by blood but unknown to each other. Each has a superpower equal but opposite to that in possession by the other. Bonnie represents all that is good while Lola LaFever embodies evil.”My full review of The Girl Who Would Be King by Kelly Thompson is over on Nudge.

 

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Pursuing Knowledge & and Support an Important Community Resource

Although I have physical things by which I can remember by grandmother – her wedding band, lamps her father made that she was so proud of, the dishes in which she served sour cream and onion dip – the greatest legacy she left me is inescapable. My aggressive pursuit of acquiring new skills and knowledge … that’s all her. The slightly obsessive way I fixate on one new craft or skill … that’s part my grandmother and part my mom.

My most recent obsessions pursuits, have been around reading (that one never goes away) and sewing (again). Sewing is something I can putter around with in my spare time. I give myself goals and figure out how to make whatever it is I have in my head (with varying results).

Reading is different. For me it’s as basic a need as drinking water or eating food. I need it to thrive.
I remember in the third grade my teacher called my mom in for a conference saying that basically there was no way I could be reading so many books and comprehending them. She thought I must be skimming them or just flipping through the pages. That stopped when I was able to talk about all of the books I was reading.

I have distinct memories of shutting myself inside my closet at night, turning on the light and reading books from cover to cover so I could read scary stories but be past the scary parts before going to sleep. When I was in junior high I used to lay out a hammock in our backyard and read for so long that time limits were enforced.

I have romantic ideas of one day owning a house with a library that has floor to ceiling books with a ladder on wheels propped up against the wall so I can reach higher shelves. This is despite the fact that I long ago acknowledged the fact that I don’t re-read many books and so stopped buying them and started making heavy use of The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County.

For me libraries are sort of a safe haven. They are filled with books, which I love, and staffed by people who love books, which is perfection. Other people see the library as a safe haven, too, but for other reasons. There they can get help with homework, on their GED, on job applications, with learning English and so much more. A library is more than a place for books and information. It’s a community resource center – as in a place for resources but also the center of the community.

The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County has more than half a million cardholders and it’s one of the ten busiest public libraries in the nation! Their levy is up for renewal this fall and the levy’s passing is important to ensure that the library can continue to be a strong community resource. Taxes won’t increase if this levy passes but it will help maintain the only local funding for the library.

I’ll be supporting the library and hope you will, too.

My grandmother passed away several years ago, but in case I ever need something extra by which to remember her, I can always look to her library card. The prefect representation of her own quest for knowledge.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Upcycling Dress Shirts

I’ve read lately about where donated clothes end up and it didn’t leave me with warm and fuzzies. I still save up clothes for donations to Goodwill, but I’m also a lot more open to other ways to upcycle them. Most recently, I’ve been attacking cotton button down dress shirts. From what I can see, I have three, easy things I can create from them:

  • The back of a men’s dress shirt makes a pretty decent sized cloth napkin. For folks like me who use a cloth napkin with every packed lunch and dinner at home, this is a way that favorite clothing can keep making appearances.
  • The sleeves of shorts make great scrap fabric. I used a bunch recently to create a baby blanket for Mart Girl. The end result is a little amateur but really, I am SO PROUD of the results that I don’t care. Below are some pictures of my pattern, states and both sides of the finished piece.

I salvaged as many buttons as possible for use in future projects and in the end, my only waste was the collar and a few scraps of fabric that were just too small to use for anything.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Hooked on Reading

Growing up I was a highly successful participant in the Book It! program. I don’t remember all of the specifics, but for every certain amount of books I read I received a certificate for a free personal pan pizza at Pizza Hut. I hooked my family up with a lot of pizza. Even though the challenge was just intended to be a personal one, I saw a way to win prizes for something I loved to do anyway and I went for it.

This same things happened with every reading program I joined, including one where I completed the entire summer goal for reading in one month. I’ve known since I was young that I would never win more than a participation award for athletics. But put me in a competitive reading environment and I’m golden.

Last year I had two friends of mine mention their “Goodread Goal.” I’ve been a member of Goodreads since May of 2010 and I had never heard iof a Goodreads Goal. I looked into it and knew I would set one for myself for 2013. I read 53 books in 2012, which I thought was pretty amazing – avergaing one book a week. For 2013 I wanted to push myself so when January 1 rolled around, I set my goal at 55 books for the year.

What happens next is predictably obsessive and unnessarily competitive. All this year I have had the number 55 in my head and I’ve been furiously reading. On August 11, 2013, I completed my 55th book for the year. That means in about 32 weeks –20 weeks ahead of schedule – I finished my goal. I averaged 1.7 books a week. And I feel it necessary to point out that though this stack did include some fluffier titles including one Nicholas Sparks book and many Kathy Recihs novel (the series on which the television show Bones is based), I also read some weightier titles.

Goodreads has suggested that I up my year’s reading goal. I think I’m safer to be content looking at my completed goal and to stop reading competitively.

My top 5 book recommendations from my year so far are:

  1. Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan: Thoroughly enjoyable story with a nerdy plot.
  2. Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter: I just loved this novel. The cover art is beautiful and so is the writing throughout.
  3. Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris: So funny!
  4. Mary and Lou and Rhoda and Ted: And all the Brilliant Minds Who Made The Mary Tyler Moore Show a Classic by Jennifer Keishin Armstrong: Although not a light read, this book gave me great insight in television and made me better appreciate the history of women in television.
  5. Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein: Total tween novel, but I can’t help myself.

Here are the books I read, in reverse chronological order.

  1. The Engagements by J. Courtney Sullivan
  2. The Choice by Nicholas Sparks
  3. Visitation Street by Ivy Pochoda
  4. Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris
  5. A Mercy by Toni Morrison
  6. And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini
  7. Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan
  8. The Fields by Kevin Maher
  9. Purity by Jackson Pearce
  10. Arcadia by Lauren Groff
  11. Driving Sideways by Jess Riley
  12. The Other Typist by Suzanne Rindell
  13. This Side of Jealousy (The Innocents, #2) by Lili Peloquin
  14. Calling Me Home by Jullie Kibler
  15. Conversations with Mom: An Aging Baby Boomer, in Need of an Elder, Writes to Her Dead Mother by Betsy Robinson
  16. Mary and Lou and Rhoda and Ted: And all the Brilliant Minds Who Made The Mary Tyler Moore Show a Classic by Jennifer Keishin Armstrong
  17. Chronology of an Egg by Peter Tieryas Liu
  18. A Place at the Table by Susan Rebecca White
  19. The Girl Who Would Be King by Kelly Thompson
  20. Nine Years Under: Coming of Age in an Inner-City Funeral Home by Sherri Booker
  21. A Different Blue by Amy Harmon
  22. The House Girl by Tara Conklin
  23. The First Rule of Swimming by Courtney Angela Brkic
  24. Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
  25. The End of Sex: How Hookup Culture is Leaving a Generation Unhappy, Sexually Unfulfilled, and Confused About Intimacy by Donna Freitas
  26. Homeward Bound: Why Women are Embracing the New Domesticity by Emily Matchar
  27. All the Roads That Lead from Home by Anne Leigh Parrish
  28. The Dinner by Herman Koch
  29. Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
  30. A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
  31. Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner
  32. Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
  33. Seating Arrangements by Maggie Shipstead
  34. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  35. The Book of Madness and Cures by Regina O’Melveny
  36. The Orphanmaster by Jean Zimmerman
  37. Flash and Bones (Temperance Brennan, #14) by Kathy Reichs
  38. Spider Bones (Temperance Brennan, #13) by Kathy Reichs
  39. Wonder by R.J. Palacio
  40. Defending Jacob by William Landay
  41. 206 Bones (Temperance Brennan, #12) by Kathy Reichs
  42. Devil Bones (Temperance Brennan, #11) by Kathy Reichs
  43. Bones to Ashes (Temperance Brennan, #10) by Kathy Reichs
  44. Break No Bones (Temperance Brennan, #9) by Kathy Reichs
  45. Where Things Come Back by John Corey Whaley
  46. The Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson Walker
  47. Cross Bones (Temperance Brennan, #8) by Kathy Reichs
  48. Monday Mourning (Temperance Brennan, #7) by Kathy Reichs
  49. Bare Bones (Temperance Brennan, #6) by Kathy Reichs
  50. Grave Secrets (Temperance Brennan, #5) by Kathy Reichs
  51. Fatal Voyage (Temperance Brennan, #4) by Kathy Reichs
  52. Deadly Decisions (Temperance Brennan, #3) by Kathy Reichs
  53. Death du Jour (Temperance Brennan, #2) by Kathy Reichs
  54. Déjà Dead (Temperance Brennan, #1) by Kathy Reichs
  55. Women from the Ankle Down: The Story of Shoes and How They Define Us by Ra Bergstein
This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Love

We were at the beach and I woke up first, because that’s what I do when I have the opportunity to sleep in as late as I want … wake up early. I tiptoed out of the room and went into the bathroom and I saw it. It was horrible. I screamed and went to grab Wonder Boy.
He was lying peacefully in bed but I poked at him anyway.
“You have to get up.”
“Why? I’m asleep.”
“There’s a cockroach in the bathroom!”
“Just don’t go back in there. I’ll get it later.”
“You have to go kill it! It’s the size of a small dog!”
So he rolled out of bed and walked off to kill a bug. When he didn’t come in saying he had killed the bug, I tiptoed back towards the bathroom. Wonder Boy was on his hands and knees looking under the sink.
“I lost it. I’ll find it later.”
And he went and crawled back into bed.
I admit to being a baby about most bugs, but this big, giant, glossy black cockroach was just too much. I carefully walked around the kitchen making sure I didn’t come across any more bugs and got myself some coffee. Then I went back to a stool and carefully sat, with no parts of my body touching the ground or anything aside from the one stool, drinking coffee and reading a book.
An hour-and-a-half later Wonder Boy woke up and came into the living room.
“Have you been on that stool the whole time?”
“That bug was huge. I can’t go back there.”
Wonder Boy went back to the bathroom and returned a few minutes later with a cockroach nestled in some paper towels. He walked outside and set it loose.
Just to be safe, I stayed on my stool a while longer. Finally I announced that I was going to brave it and go back to the bathroom so I could do my morning routine – medicine, brush my teeth, wash my face – and Wonder Boy told me I was safe.
“How do you know? Maybe there was more than one.”
“I already checked. I’ve checked twice since I caught the one. No more cockroaches.”
And THAT. That checking twice after he knew it was okay. That is love.
This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

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