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Music Monday -- 2008

As part of my ongoing celebration for my 30th birthday, I am highlighting some popular songs from throughout my years.  Songs were picked based off of a list of Grammy award winners and Billboard Top 100.  Then, I chose my favorites to highlight.  

Year: 2008

Book: Hatter M Volume 1

Music Selections:

  1. Coldplay "Viva La Vida" -- The boys and I sang this song all summer.  It's still on my iPod shuffle.
  2. Estelle and Kanye West "American Boy" -- There's something about this song that makes me want to get up and dance.  Every time!
  3. Kings of Leon "Sex on Fire" -- The song has such atmosphere. And this music video is just hot. I dare you to watch.
  4. John Mayer "Gravity" -- He might be an ass in his personal life, but John Mayer's music gets me every time.  I especially love this one.
tags: Coldplay, Estelle, John Mayer, Kanye West, Kings of Leon, My Years
categories: Music
Monday 02.13.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

Day Zero Project Update: Week 18-21

Instead of daily posts, I thought it would be a lot easier for me and you if I did weekly update posts.  These will track my progress each week.  I will highlight what I’ve done, what I want to do, and any interesting tidbits.  Sometimes I’ll add pictures and/or links.  Hopefully these posts will keep me accountable to me list…

What I Did

6. See all of IMDB’s Top 250 movies  (11/250)

  • Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels

12. Watch all the James Bond movies (11/24)

  • Diamonds are Forever
  • Live and Let Die
  • The Man with the Golden Gun
  • The Spy Who Loved Me
  • Moonraker

15. See 101 new movies (18/101)

  • Gen-Y Cops
  • Cowboys and Aliens
  • 50/50
  • What's Your Number

19. Blog 1001 times -- 43 for this week (219/1001)

22. Keep a journal for this project — Obviously an ongoing goal. I got a beautiful black soft cover journal to use.  I am determined to journal at least a bit each day.

32. Read my height in books — This week’s height:  in   (35.5/68 in.)

What I Plan to Do Next Week

  • Read Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
  • More Inspirational Quotes
  • New Bands
  • Finish James Bond Movies
  • 200 Squat Challenge
  • Some more scrapbooking

Monthly Goal

January’s task was to watch all of the James Bond movies.  Obviously we didn't finish in January, so this one is continuing into February along with starting the 200 Squat Challenge.

Overall Progress

7 / 101

tags: 101 in 1001
categories: Day Zero Project
Monday 02.13.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

The Sunday Salon #1

The Sunday Salon.com

Listening To: Giant iPod shuffle, but especially Gotye "Somebody That I Used to Know."  I really need to get that album.

Book finished: A Gentleman Always Remembers by Candace Camp, An Affair Without End by Candace Camp, The Stupidest Angel by Christopher Moore

Reading: Sunshine by Robin McKinley

Making Lists: Grocery lists (an every week occurence), Stampin' Up wishlists (I want the entire catalog!)

Around the house: Trying to clean my crafting mess....  See it's just exploded everywhere.  Part of the issue is that I don't have a dedicated area for crafting.  Everything gets thrown into bins in the theater and if I want to craft, I have to drag everything upstairs and use half of the dining room table.  We need a new system.

From the kitchen: Freezer meals!  I finally did it!  I bought a few books off Amazon, bought tons of meat, and made a ton of food (enough to fill most of the freezer).  The hope is to ease the burden of cooking when I get home from work.  Now I just have to defrost something in the morning and reheat at night...  Loving this idea!  So far, I made breakfast burritos (2 minutes in the microwave to eat), Honey Soy Pork Chops, Italian Beef for sandwiches, and Salsa Shredded Beef for tacos.

On the Web: Blog stalking.... Reading past posts of some of the blogs I follow now.  I love getting to know other bloggers.  I really need to do better with starting a conversation instead of just stalking.

Crafting: Stampin' Up club this week.  We made some pretty Valentine's/spring cards.  I wonder who will get these?  And I made more bookmarks and some upcoming Birthday cards.

Work Observations: People are slobs!  I had kp duty this week.  Yup, we have kitchen duty rotations.  I am disgusted at people leaving food, crumbs, dirty dishes around the break room.  This isn't your house and I'm not your mom!  So annoying!

Watching: Continuing with Stargate SG-1 Season 1.  J has me hooked!  Good thing he has the entire series on dvd and Stargate Atlantis on dvd.  Rented Cowboys versus Aliens.  Not amazing, but not as bad as everyone said.  More James Bond movies for my Day Zero Project.  We're over halfway through now!

Wondering: Why do the majority of people in Omaha feel the need to go 5-10 miles under the speed limit?  It baffles my mind.

From Nature: Snow on the ground and cold temperatures.  I think it's finally winter.  After the 50 degree temps in January. the cold actually feels like we're back to normal.  I could do without the just-because-there-is-snow-on-the-ground-I-must-drive-like-an-idiot people.

Shopping Scores: A friend took me to her favorite thrift store in town.  They were having a huge Super Bowl sale with pieces up to 50% off.  I found this amazing brown leather jacket for $25, a cute riding style jacket for $11, and a crazy blouse for $11.  The store is an interesting mix of trendy pieces and old lady clothes.  They even have high end handbags (my weakness!).  I will definitely have to check it out again.

I also bought a few Heartsy (Groupon for Etsy) deals.  I'll show them off when the pieces arrive...  Some of them might even end up in my big birthday month giveaway (coming March 1st!).

Project: J and I decided to do a spring break road trip with the boys.  We're going to pick them up in Indiana and then travel to Dayton, OH (Air Force Museum), Hershey, PA (Chocolate World, of course), Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh before returning to Indiana.  So, I'm trip planning this week.  I'm a bit OCD when it comes to trip planning.  I love making itineraries and booking hotel rooms.  So far, I've booked us at the Red Caboose Motel near Hershey.  We get to stay in real cabooses!!  Alex is going to love that!  I'm exploring bed and breakfasts in the Philadelphia area...  More plans cemented soon!

tags: Sunday Rambles
categories: Weekly Wrap-up
Sunday 02.12.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 1
 

The Stupidest Angel by Christopher Moore

Title: The Stupidest Angel

Author: Christopher Moore

Publisher:  William Morrow 2005

Genre: Zombie

Pages: 320

Rating:  5  / 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Zombie; Support Your Local Library; A to Z - M

How I Got It: Library loan

'Twas the night (okay, more like the week) before Christmas, and all through the tiny community of Pine Cove, California, people are busy buying, wrapping, packing, and generally getting into the holiday spirit.

But not everybody is feeling the joy. Little Joshua Barker is in desperate need of a holiday miracle. No, he's not on his deathbed; no, his dog hasn't run away from home. But Josh is sure that he saw Santa take a shovel to the head, and now the seven-year-old has only one prayer: Please, Santa, come back from the dead.

But hold on! There's an angel waiting in the wings. (Wings, get it?) It's none other than the Archangel Raziel come to Earth seeking a small child with a wish that needs granting. Unfortunately, our angel's not sporting the brightest halo in the bunch, and before you can say "Kris Kringle," he's botched his sacred mission and sent the residents of Pine Cove headlong into Christmas chaos, culminating in the most hilarious and horrifying holiday party the town has ever seen.

Okay, this is my kind of Christmas novel (albeit one read in February).  We have murder, mayhem, homicidal Santas, angels on miracle missions, sword-wielding schizophrenics, stoners, rats, dogs, sex, and bats.  I think I covered it all.  And it's all topped off with Moore snarky writing.  I love it!  His vampire trilogy started to wear on me after while.  This one definitely does not.  I loved it from start to finish.  The characters are incredibly fun.  I especially liked the Tucker Case and his bat, Roberto.  The story is fast-paced and yet filled with character development.  The horror is there wrapped up in a glowing angel and talking zombies.  And the writing is superb.  Supposedly the characters appear in other books.  Now I must go to the library and pick those up as wel..

Pine Cove

  • #1 Practical Demonkeeping
  • #2 The Lust Lizard of Melancholy Cove
  • #3 The Stupidest Angel
tags: 5 stars, Christopher Moore, comedy, zombies
categories: Book Reviews
Saturday 02.11.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 1
 

An Affair without End by Candace Camp

Title: An Affair without End  (Willowmere #3)

Author: Candace Camp

Publisher: Pocket Star 2011

Genre: Historical Romance

Pages: 416

Rating:  4 / 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Romance; Mount TBR

When Oliver, Earl of Stewkesbury, asks the dashing Lady Vivian Carlyle to ensure that his American cousins meet the cream of London society, he doesn’t anticipate the danger she will pose to his own self-control. Thrown into intimate contact with the lovely lady, Oliver finds he cannot stop thinking of Vivian—of her wit, of her smile . . . of her lips. And when Vivian, who has sworn never to subject herself to the bonds of matrimony, boldly suggests that she and Oliver become lovers instead, her scandalous proposal is temptation indeed! But with an alarming series of jewel thefts rocking London, the ever-outrageous Vivian insists on trying to discover the perpetrator despite Oliver’s admonitions. And when a bold lady steps into danger, it is a gentleman’s duty to protect her at all costs. What neither Oliver nor Vivian can anticipate, however, is that the ultimate cost may be both their hearts. . .

Fluffiety fluff romances.... Oh how I love thee!!  You are a distraction from the drudgery of life.  You lift me up when I'm feeling blue. You give me an escape.  You cleanse  my palette in between deeper more complex books.  I love you.

The end of the Willowmere trilogy did not disappoint.  We finally get around to Vivian and Oliver's story.  I knew it was coming (these books aren't hard to predict).  I was glad when we finally got  a women who was feisty, independent, and definitely knew what she wanted.  It was great fun to see her shake up the stodgy Lord Stewkesbury.  Fun fun!  This author is going on my list of fun reads and the books are going into my upcoming birthday month giveaway (coming March 1st).

Willowmere

  • #1 A Lady Never Tells
  • #2 A Gentleman Always Remembers
  • #3 An Affair Without End
tags: 4 stars, Candace Camp, historical fiction, romance
categories: Book Reviews
Saturday 02.11.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 2
 

Quote Wednesday - Chocolat

"Happiness. Simple as a glass of chocolate or tortuous as the heart. Bitter. Sweet. Alive."  Joanne Harris Chocolat

I loved the movie, but always wanted to read the book.  Thankfully I now own it and it's sitting in a box for later this year.  I ran across this quote the other day and thought it was just so appropriate for life lately...  Happiness is so many different things.  All with different feelings and inspirations.  Plus, I love chocolate.

categories: Quote Wednesday
Wednesday 02.08.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

A Gentleman Always Remembers by Candace Camp

Title: A Gentleman Always Remembers (Willowmere #2)

Author: Candace Camp

Publisher: Pocket Star 2010

Genre: Historical Romance

Pages: 356

Rating:  4 / 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Romance; Read Your Name - G;  Mount TBR

New York Times bestselling author Candace Camp’s delectable Willowmere series continues with the story of the accomplished and pretty widow who takes on the American Bascombe sisters for their London debut—only to discover that, when it comes to love, she is the one who is unprepared.  Married young to a charming but improvident army officer, Eve Hawthorne was widowed with little left except for a few extravagant trifles. Desperate to avoid her domineering stepmother, she accepts employment as chaperone to the Earl of Stewkesbury’s American cousins. Who better than a levelheaded widow to remind these young girls that they no longer live on a frontier? But when she flirts with a handsome stranger who turns out to be the earl’s brother Fitz, Eve worries she’s given the wrong impression. Trying to prove herself responsible—with Fitz challenging her at every turn—is hard enough, but a blackmailer with an interest in Eve’s prior marriage proves far more troubling. With the earl away, Eve can turn only to Fitz for help. But dare she confide in him, when getting too close to this confirmed bachelor might risk her heart to his alluring ways?

Another wonderfully fluffy romance...  I am really coming to like these in between my heavier and gorier books.  Overall I liked this one better than the first in the series.  Eve was a much more likable character.  Plus we got some new characters (French ballonist!) and more of Camellia and Lily.  I didn't quite speed through this one, but it definitely held my attention while reading.  I have the conclusion of the trilogy and I'm pretty sure I'll be reading that next.

Willowmere

  • #1  A Lady Never Tells
  • #2  A Gentleman Always Remembers
  • #3  An Affair Without End
tags: 4 stars, Candace Camp, historical fiction, romance
categories: Book Reviews
Tuesday 02.07.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 3
 

Music Monday -- 1991

As part of my ongoing celebration for my 30th birthday, I am highlighting some popular songs from throughout my years.  Songs were picked based off of a list of Grammy award winners and Billboard Top 100.  Then, I chose my favorites to highlight.  

Year: 1991

Book: Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein

Music Selections:

  1. Amy Grant "Baby Baby" -- I'll admit it, my very first concert was Amy Grant and I was ecstatic.  I remember that I got tickets for my birthday (probably 1993ish).  I was super excited when she sang this song.  It takes me back...
  2. C+C Music Factory "Gonna Make You Sweat" -- I was 9 in 1991.  This song was cool to a typical 9-year-old.
  3. Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch "Good Vibrations" -- I remember hearing this one the radio and singing along.  I get much more fun out of this song now.  Mark Walberg as a half dressed rapper.  Love it!
tags: Amy Grant, C+C Music Factory, Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch, My Years
categories: Music
Monday 02.06.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

Zombie Blondes by Brian James

Title: Zombie Blondes

Author: Brian James

Publisher: Square Fish 2009

Genre: Zombie

Pages: 256

Rating:   3 / 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Zombie; A to Z - Z; Mount TBR

How I Got It: I own it!

From the moment Hannah Sanders arrived in town, she felt there was something wrong. A lot of houses were for sale, and the town seemed infected by an unearthly quiet. And then, on Hannah’s first day of classes, she ran into a group of cheerleaders—the most popular girls in school. The odd thing was that they were nearly identical in appearance: blonde, beautiful, and deathly pale. But Hannah wants desperately to fit in—regardless of what her friend Lukas is telling her: If she doesn’t watch her back, she’s going to be blonde and popular and dead—just like all the other zombies in this town. . . .

I'm describing this one as a Stepford Wives meets Heathers.  I enjoyed it, it had some great little parts here and there, but mostly I just wanted to smack Hannah.  If she didn't want to believe Lukas that the blondes were zombies, fine, but did she have to be so desperate for popularity.  Parts of the book just seemed fake.  And then having the book written in first person was a bit much.  I just had trouble sympathizing with Hannah until the last 15 pages.  I guess okay, but this book was definitely aimed at a younger audience than me.  It just fell a bit flat for me.

tags: 3 stars, Brian James, zombies
categories: Book Reviews
Saturday 02.04.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 2
 

Night of the Necromancer by Kyle West and Jelani Sims

Title: Zombie Blondes

Author: Kyle West and Jelani Sims

Publisher: CreateSpace 2011

Genre: Zombie

Pages: 400

Rating:   4 / 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Zombie; Read Your Name - N; Mount TBR; Random Reads - February

How I Got It: I own it!

Just hours ago, you were a student trying to survive college. Now, as zombies attempt to knock down your apartment door and eat you alive, you must ask yourself if you will survive the night. And, in order to get through this nightmare, you have to make all the right decisions. Will you save your overbearing girlfriend, who just broke up with you hours before the zombies arrived? Will you trust the survivors you meet along the way? Will you retreat to the forest in an attempt to escape the undead hordes, or will you face your fear head- on and fight your way through the city? If you are quick on your feet, you just might see another day. One wrong decision, and you’ll end up as a zombie food, or worse, a member of the undead.

Another choose your own adventure type book.  Fun, but fairly preditictable.  I think I watch way too many zombie movies and read too many zombie books to be completely taken by surprise by this book.  That being said, it really is entertaining.  I read most of this on my lunch break today.  Somehow zombie gore doesn't spoil my appetite (probably says something about me).  I enjoyed the "twists and turns."  The characters acted just like characters in zombie movies do.  The book had all the classic archetypes and they stayed true to their personailities.  The story was fun and engaging.  Recommend for fans for CYOA books or zombie books. 

tags: 4 stars, Jelani Sims, Kyle West, zombies
categories: Book Reviews
Friday 02.03.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 1
 

American Vampire by Jennifer Armintrout

Title: American Vampire

Author: Jennifer Armintrout

Publisher: Mira 2011

Genre: Vampires

Pages: 336

Rating:  4/ 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Vampires; A to Z -- A; Mount TBR

How I Got It: I own it!

Buried in the Heartland is a town that no one enters or leaves. Graf McDonald somehow becomes its first visitor in more than five years…and he was only looking for a good party. Unfortunately, Penance, Ohio, is not that place. And after having been isolated for so long, they do not like strangers at all.

Jessa's the only one to even remotely trust him, and she's desperate for the kind of protection that only a vampire like Graf can provide. Supplies are low, the locals are ornery for a sacrifice and there's a monster more powerful than Graf lurking in the woods. New men are hard to come by in this lonesome town, and this handsome stranger might be Jessa's only hope for salvation.

Every once in a while I enjoy a good book of romance fluff.  It's a great change of pace from deeper, more complex books.  I am now going to add a variation to the romance fluff--the paranormal fluff. This book was a fun, fast-paced, slightly scary, paranormal fluff book.  And that's okay.  It's not anything I would rave about and force others to read, but it was an entertaining book. 

Graf was great as a more traditional (*not sparkly*) vampire.  He was tough in all the right places.  It took him a really long time to stop looking at Jessa as food, although he never thought of the others as anything else.  He was a vampire...  and I really adored him.  Jessa was much harder to like, but that was kind of the point.  She wasn't an angel.  She wasn't a damsel.  She was just a young woman with a past.  I appreciated that Armintrout didn't have her fall in love with Graf on the spot.  Those stories to be a bit boring.  This took some time. 

The story was fun, a bit scary, and definitely high-paced.  I saw most of the twists and turns coming, but that didn't make them any less fun.  It was a quick, but satisfying read.  I'm adding Armintrout to my list of authors to check out.

tags: 4 stars, Jennifer Armintrout, vampires
categories: Book Reviews
Friday 02.03.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 1
 

Fables: Super Team

Title: Fables Vol. 16: Super Team

Author: Bill Willingham

Publisher: Vertigo 2011

Genre: Graphic Novel; Fantasy

Pages: 160

Rating: 5/5 stars

Reading Challenges: Fables Series; A to Z -- S; Support Your Local Library

Now why oh why in this mixed-up world would we saddle an important series that has never had anything to do with Super Heroes with a title like “Super Team”? And why has that snotty little Pinocchio suddenly got it into his head that he needs to design tight-fitting costumes for a carefully selected team of Fables? In fact, why was the little brat caught looking over his own comic-book collection, mumbling things like, “We can call him Werewolf Man, and he can be The Golden Knight, and she can be called The Green Witch?”

Another great, although somewhat anticlimactic, volume.  Bigby continues to be one of my favorite characters in the entire series.  Ozma is growing on me.  I really enjoyed Mister Dark and suspect Nurse Spratt will become a major player soon.  The North Wind is the constant blowhard.  Blufkin's adventures were fantastical enough.  I think that's what keeps me reading: The character.  I love all the different and interesting characters Willingham has created.  They liven up the somewhat tired fairy tale stories.  I can't wait to see what happens to the scattered Fables next.  And there was quite a few cliffhangers at the conclusion of Volume 16!  So exciting...

Fables:

  1. Legends in Exile
  2. Animal Farm
  3. Storybook Love
  4. March of the Wooden Soldiers
  5. The Mean Seasons
  6. Homelands
  7. Arabian Nights (and Days)
  8. Wolves
  9. Sons of Empire
  10. The Good Prince
  11. War and Pieces
  12. The Dark Ages
  13. The Great Fables Crossover
  14. Witches
  15. Rose Red
  16. Super Team
  17. Inherit the Wind
  18. Cubs in Toyland
tags: 5 stars, Bill Willingham, fairy tales, fantasy, graphic novel
categories: Book Reviews
Thursday 02.02.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 4
 

Random Reads Feburary

From I'm Loving Books:

Basically I have too many books on my to-read list that have been getting more and more buried every day. So I thought it would be fun to use random.org to pick a random book on my Goodreads to-read list and I would read that book NOW.

The only exceptions are if it’s a book that’s in the middle of a series you’re reading and you haven’t gotten to that book yet then you can pass and pick another random book. Or, if it’s a book you look at and realize it’s something you’re no longer interested in then you can DELETE it from your to-read list and pick another. You can also obviously skip it if it’s a coming soon book that hasn’t been released yet. I actually keep my coming soon books on a separate exclusive shelf so that’s not an issue for me here.

Want to join in on Random Reads?

It’s easy…

  1. If you’re on Goodreads enable sorting to your to-read shelf (you should see numbers next to each book now).
  2. Go to Random.org and type in the Min as 1 and the Max as how many ever books are on your to-read shelf.
  3. Scroll down to the book matching the number Random.org picks.
  4. Link up to your Random Reads post (below).
  5. Read and be merry. 

So, I've decided to join this fun meme.  I thought this would be a great way to par down my TBR shelf and read some books I might not pick up right away.  I used the Goodreads sorter and Random.org to find my Random Read.

This month's winner:

#61 Night of the Necromancer

A part of my Zombie Reading Challenge, I won this last year but never got around to reading it.  I was planning on reading this soon...  guess Random Reads wanted me to get to it sooner rather than later.

tags: Random Reads
categories: Books
Thursday 02.02.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

The Place That Bordered Death (Part 2)

I've decided to publish a my false start for NaNoWriMo...  This is a complete first draft.  I just want to get it out there on record. Chapter 4

All three women had often wondered about their names and the connections (or disconnection) to themselves.  Families held a place of honor and power among the village, so it came as no surprise that Hestia found names very important.  What was weird was Lucy's fascination.  The girl who never felt a connection to the village or her family, wanted her name to mean something.  And Kalliope acknowledged the importance of her name and yet tried to deny her given name.

Hestia came from a long line of strong Greek names.  Her mother was named Galene which meant "calm seas."  It was said that on the day of Galene's birth, the wind stopped blowing and the seas looked at still as glass.  This was after a week long rain with almost gale force winds which lashed at the fishing boats and the villa.  Galene's birth was seen as a good omen as it came with the return to the calm.  Her mother, Athena, took her name from the famous goddess.  She ran the family with military precision.  Everyone was taken care of and loved, but from a distance.  And so Hestia beleived even at an early age that her name would determine who she would become.  Hestia, the goddess of the hearth and fire, became the center piece of the family.  She prided herself at nourishing the family's hearts and bodies.  They gathered around her for warmth and comfort.  Her sister was named Amaltheia which means "to soothe."  She took on the task of advice giver.  Together they made quite a pair in their youth.  Hestia continued to be the center of the family into her later years and finally into her bed.  The villa was still the epicenter of family and even village life.  Any who appeared on the doorstep were given a bowl of food and a listening ear for their troubles.  No one was turned.  And so Hestia was broken when her only daughter turned her back on the family.

Kalliope or the muse of epic poetry was given that specific name when she was a week old.  The story goes that she was silent at her birth and silent for the next six days.  But on the seventh day she made such beautiful sounds taht everyone thought she would grow up to have a beautiful enchanting voice.  In a way, she did, but not in the way everyone thought.  Kalliope could use her words to convince anyone of anything.  She was a smooth talker.  That was how she convinced the boy to take her with him to America.  Once, across the seas, Kalliope vowed to sever all connections to her family and village.  And so she changed her name to Kallie.  Never again would she answer to Kalliope.  It was too Greek, too old, too small.  Plus, she desparately wanted to fit in with the other young women in America.

When Kallie gave birth to a daughter, she wanted to give her a name that menat something, but not something Greek.  She looked through book after book for a name.  Finally when the baby was a month old, she stumbled upon a Peanuts cartoon and found the perfect name: Lucy.  Lucy, the English form of Latin Lucia which means "light" was perfect.  It was not a Greek name.  It was completely Anglicized, just how Kallie wanted to seem.

Lucy grew up having an English name, living an English life, wishing for something more.  She wanted an exotic name, some like Katerina or Marianna.  Lucy was so plain.  It said nothing about who she was.  Light... what was that supposed to mean?  Was she bright?  Did she bring goodness?  Nope.  She was just plain Lucy.  Every time she visited her grandmother, Hestia would lament that Lucy lacked a proper name.  Lucy wanted that proper name.  She wanted a proper place, even among the dirt and salt of the village.

Names.  Important to some, thrown away by others.  The women of the village prided themselves on their names.  Now to work on those lost souls...

categories: Writings
Thursday 02.02.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs

Title: Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children

Author: Ransom Riggs

Publisher: Quirk Books 2011

Genre: Fantasy

Pages: 352

Rating:  5/ 5 stars

Reading Challenges: Fantasy; A to Z - R; Mount TBR

How I Got It: I own it!

A mysterious island. An abandoned orphanage. A strange collection of very curious photographs.It all waits to be discovered in Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, an unforgettable novel that mixes fiction and photography in a thrilling reading experience. As our story opens, a horrific family tragedy sets sixteen-year-old Jacob journeying to a remote island off the coast of Wales, where he discovers the crumbling ruins of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. As Jacob explores its abandoned bedrooms and hallways, it becomes clear that the children were more than just peculiar. They may have been dangerous. They may have been quarantined on a deserted island for good reason. And somehow—impossible though it seems—they may still be alive.A spine-tingling fantasy illustrated with haunting vintage photography, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children will delight adults, teens, and anyone who relishes an adventure in the shadows.

This is such a beautifully written story.  I enjoyed every minute of it.  The mystery, the fantasy, the horror, the beauty... everything was fully realized.  I felt like I was Jacob, discovering his hidden past and uncertain future.  The characters are all wonderful.  Each child at Miss Peregrine's is peculiar in their own, but somehow they're still very real people.  They're much more real than the inhabitants of the village.  I loved each and every one of them, but I hold a special place in my heart for Millard and Fiona.  The way the book ends, I feel like there's going to be a sequel.  Even if Riggs doesn't write a sequel, this book stands beautifully on its own.  Recommend, recommend, recommend!

Miss Peregrine:

  • #1 Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
  • #2 Hollow City
  • #3 Library of Souls
tags: 5 stars, fantasy, Ransom Riggs
categories: Book Reviews
Wednesday 02.01.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
Comments: 1
 

Quote Wednesday - Practical Magic

"My darling girl, when are you going to realize that being normal is not necessarily a virtue? It rather denotes a lack of courage." Alice Hoffman Practical Magic

I love this quote.  To me, weirdness is something to be treasured.  Why would anyone want to be the same?  Boring!  You should find your weirdness and expand upon it.  Cultivate it.  Plant it in the ground and water it.  Share it with others.  Be odd, weird, unique.  And don't let anyone put you down for it.  The weirdness is what makes you, you.

categories: Quote Wednesday
Wednesday 02.01.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

January 2012 Wrap-Up

Books Read and Reviewed (25 books)

  1. Jack of Fables: The End
  2. Fables: Witches
  3. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling
  4. The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks by Max Brooks
  5. The Dark and Hollow Places by Carrie Ryan
  6. Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein
  7. The Boys: The Big Ride
  8. Brains: A Zombie Memoir by Robin Becker
  9. Fables: Rose Red
  10. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  11. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  12. Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
  13. Hatter M Volume 1
  14. Hatter M Volume 2
  15. Hatter M Volume 3
  16. The Magicians by Lev Grossman
  17. A Lady Never Tells by Candace Camp
  18. Autumn: Purification by David Moody
  19. Autumn: Disintegration by David Moody
  20. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  21. A Midsummer Night's Dream by Shakespeare
  22. A Midsummer Night's Dream: Manga Edition
  23. Lost in Austen by Emma Campbell Webster
  24. Harry Potter Film Wizardry by Brian Sibley
  25. The Joy of Scrapbooking by Lisa Bearnson

1,000,000 Page Goal

Monthly Total: 7005  pages Pages Remaining: 937,749 pages

Current Read

Miss Peregrine's School for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs -- Won in a giveaway before Christmas.  Really been wanting to get to this one!

Books Won (3)

  • Moonlight and Oranges by Elise Stephens from Laura Ashlee at Owl Tell You About It
  • Triangles by Ellen Hopkins from Cindy at Oodles of Books
  • The Long Weekend by Saviat Kalhan from Michelle at The True Book Addict (A Winter's Respite Readathon)

Books I Gave Up On (0)

Challenges Completed (2)

Two readathons, A Winter's Respite from The True Book Addict and Bout of Books 3.0.  I thought I did well on both of those readathons.  I think I might be getting better and focusing my reading time.

Comments

What an awesome start to the reading year!  I am so excited about my progress so far.  Check out those reading challenge progress bars; I've made headways into many of those.  Plus, I read some really great books this month, specifically The Hunger Games trilogy.  Hope I can keep the momentum up next month.

Next Month's TBR

  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
  • MacBeth by Shakespeare
  • The Magician King by Lev Grossman
  • A Gentleman Always Remembers by Candace Camp
  • Allison Hewitt is Trapped by Madeleine Roux
  • The Mammoth Book of Regency Romance
  • The Kingdom of Ohio by Matthew Flaming
  • Palace Circle by Rebecca Dean
  • American Vampire by Jennifer Armintrout
  • The Year of Living Biblically by A.J. Jacobs
  • The Stupidest Angel by Christopher Moore
  • Rise Again by Ben Tripp
  • First Days by Rhiannon Frater
  • Miss Peregrine's School for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs
  • Night of the Necromancer by Kyle West
  • Sunshine by Robin McKinley
  • Zombie Blondes by Brian James
  • An Affair Without End by Candace Camp

categories: Monthly Wrap-Up
Wednesday 02.01.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 

The Place That Bordered Death (Part 1)

I've decided to publish a my false start for NaNoWriMo...  This is a complete first draft.  I just want to get it out there on record. Chapter 1

The blue green waters of the Mediterranean always reminded Lucy of a stained glass window. The brilliant colors. The way she could see through to the ruins below. It was like being in church admiring the windows. Unfortunately, she didn't feel any connection to the place. Never mind that she was 100% Greek, she looked and felt something other. The light brown hair and blue eyes semmed to contradict the earthy people. Even her name didn't fit the place. When has anyone ever met a Greek named Lucy. She was an anomaly in this beautiful rich place.

In fact, Lucy started to wonder why she was here in the first place...  Sure, it was her ancestral home.  Of course, her grandmother had lived her entire life in this very village. Her mother was born here, but then left for the promise of a life beyond the water and rocks.  Lucy had vacationed here many a summer, basking in the sun, watching the fish nibble her toes, imagining mermaids in the ruins, As a child she had loved the sense of the unknown just outside the villa.  But now, at 25 she was confused.  Shouldn't she feel some connection to this place.  The dirt ran through her veins.  And yet, nothing.  She was a Greek, one of the oldest cultures still around, and yet she didn't feel Greek.  She didn't feel like anything. After spending hours sitting on the cliff, Lucy finally resigned herself that nothing was coming.  She rose and slowly walked back to the villa, ready to face the relatives.

The terra cotta walls were aged and crumbing, yet they stood guarding the little courtyard beyond.  Her grandmother always had red flowers all along the top of the wall.  With her sick, they were gone.  The wall looked naked witout the color.  Once Lucy opened the courtyard gate, she was assaulted with the usual sounds and smells of the villa.  Random snippets of conversation, much too loud for the occasion, but that was usual among the village residents.  The smell of roasting goat and some type of honeyed dessert wafted through the open windows.  The sounds and smells never seemed to change.  Her summer vacations were full of sounds and smells.  Lucy never seemed to be able to recall events just sensory experiences.  Maybe that was why there was no connection.  No real emotions were attached to the experiences.

Lucy hestitated before proceeding across the courtyard the thin door at the far end.  Did she really want to go in?  Did she really want to face the future?  Did she have the strength to face one particular person?  Lucy answered her own questions: no, no, and most definitely no.  Yet she had to.  Sooner or later.  And someone would be sent to find her sooner rather than later.  Better to confront her fears now while the sun still shone and the birds still circled overhead.  Lucy crossed the courtyard and pushed open the door.

Chapter 2

Kalliope hated this place.  The colors, the sounds, the smells, the dirt that seemed to get into everything.  But most of all, she hated the people.  Growing up she felt trapped in this little village.  Destined to marry the butcher's son or the apothecary's son or someone's son, someone she had know all her life and despised.  Kalliope dreamed of tall buildings, crowds of people, exotic names and foods.  Instead, she was stuck in this tiny village forced to run errands for her grandparents, do the washing, attend the tiny church on Holy Days.  Until one day, she met a boy.  A boy from the city had come to tour the villages of the coutnry.  A boy with the same dreams as Kalliope.  She fell instantly in love.  Not with the boy but iwth the idea of the boy.  On the last night of his vacation, Kalliope packed a small bag and sneaked out of the villa through the courtyard and out to the road and the waiting truck.  She ran all the way to America with the boy. Once there he abandoned her and the infant for bigger dreams.  Kalliope had achieved her dream of getting out, but the reality wasn't quite what she had had planned.  At least it was away from the wretcvhed existance in the village.  But now she was back.  Damn her mother for getting cancer.  Why couldn't she have kept a secret until she died?  Or at least forgotten about Kalliope.  Such was not the case in her family.  She had to come back and so she did.  Grudgingly, she came.

Something even more horrorific than the village lay within the walls of the villa.  Kalliope  had to face her daughter, Lucy.  That fact could not be forgotten.  Resignedly Kalliope waited in the living room among loud relatives and heavy scents.  She waited until Lucy finally decided to cross the courtyard and open the door.

Chapter 3

Hestia  wasn't so much as a domineering matriarch as a spirit guide.  At least she liked to think so.  She loved having the feeling of being in control, directing people to and fro on their life paths.  Unfortunately, the people she guided never quite felt like her presence and direction were good things.  They resisited the push.  But Hestia  never admited to being wrong or pushy to anyone.  And there lay her fatal flaw, the flaw that drove away a daughter and kept a a granddaughter at a distance.

Now both were coming home to the villa.  In reality, they had been guilt-tripped into making the journey.  Hestia refused to see it that way.  Her girls were coming home to reconnect to their Greek roots.  They were going to come and stay, and stay, and maybe marry one of the butcher's sons or the apothecary's grandsons.  Whoever was fine as long as he was Greek.

Hestia laid in the bed in the little bedroom right at the end of the house.  Her bedroom had been picked because the sunlight streamed in at all hours of the day and the sea breeze could be felt day and night.  Nevermind that sometimes it was bit warm and sometimes a bit cold.  Those were to be expected when in full exposure to the elements.  The point was to be closer to God and his creation.  In Hestia's mind, Greece and especially this little village was the height of God's perfect creation.  She couldn't see why anyone would want to leave it.  To turn your back on perfection, now that was just crazy talk.

categories: Writings
Wednesday 02.01.12
Posted by Tobe Buffenbarger
 
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