Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Window Shopping: Rudolph's Crazy Dream + Cute Animatronic Animals

I went Christmas shopping downtown last week and was tickled by the window displays of my favorite store. My hometown has a population of about 154,000, and--don't judge--I think it's safe to say that this store always has the most impressive window displays in town. (Mostly because they have them; most stores are either in the mall and don't have outdoor window space or just display wares.)

The white rectangle at the bottom right reads "Rudolph's Crazy Dream," and in case the glare and reflections in the glass make it difficult to tell, yes, that is an inflatable Rudolph in a sleigh pulled by inflatable smiling Santas.
The bear's tongue goes in and out because he is licking stamps to stick on letters to Santa. His tongue moves quickly, and I wasn't able to capture a photo of it sticking out.
These bunnies shake their heads at a naughty list to the left of the stamp-licking bear. I'm not sure why the raccoon is using a cell phone.
Happy Holidays,

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The Music-Picking Post

I've been asked how I find the bands I feature on Musical Mondays. My answer begins with a brief history of the importance of music in my life.

I started playing piano young.

 Well, not this young. I was in first grade when I started taking lessons. I'm not sure how old I am in this picture--maybe one or two? The woman helping me "play" is my Aunt Charleen.

I took up this weird little harp thing next. (At age three.)

Not really. But I did start singing in a city-wide girls' choir and playing violin in my elementary school's orchestra in fourth grade. I started playing the trumpet in fifth grade, and in high school I played in marching band, symphonic band, and jazz band.

Yes, I said marching band. Someone snapped this horrible picture of me while we were warming up for a competition on a very windy day in October 2007. I was a senior in high school. (We weren't in our uniforms yet, and I'm not showing those to you today.)

I'm not in as many ensembles as I used to be--I currently only play in my university's jazz ensemble--but music still plays a big role in my life. And while I like playing it, I like the feeling of creative togetherness with other musicians more. I love being in perfect sync with other players--thinking in the same tempo, articulating notes the same way, increasing and decreasing in volume together--and I like to find that in the music I listen to.

So first, I look for good music, meaning an interesting use of voices and/or instruments. Delightful surprises like changes in tempo and dynamics don't hurt either. My piano teacher is Chinese, and when I mastered piano-basics she said, "Girl, you gotta the notes, now you need to play the music." She told me that over and over again (and she still calls me "Girl" when we run into each other at places like the grocery store), and it's true. Notes and lyrics aren't the same as music.

Second, I look for creative and clean lyrics. I'm a Christian, and I take Philippians 4:8--"Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things." (NIV)--to heart. I'm not completely against swear words that make creative sense, but I would prefer not to have certain words and rated-R situations set to music in my head all day. Similarly, many of the songs featured on Musical Monday come from Christian bands, but many do not. Good music comes from many different kinds of people, and I appreciate artists with a realistic yet--even if ever so slightly--optimistic mindset.

And now for the practical part about locating good music:

I recently discovered Pandora--free Internet radio--and it is a great site for discovering artists that sound similar to artists one already likes. Also, many musical artists, like Joy Williams, are on Myspace. She's an artist I like, and her Myspace page will illustrate these next few tips. I go to artists' Myspace pages to get acquainted with music before buying it; the listening is free. And if you do find a band you like, chances are the band lists their influences on their Myspace page. Joy Williams does, and her list contains artists I looked up and ended up liking. Some artists also Myspace-friend other artists, and it's worth clicking on the artists an artist you like has friended. (For example, Joy Williams is friends with Brooke Waggoner, Katie Herzig, and Butterfly Boucher--all artists I ended up liking and featuring on Musical Monday. Also, these artists had lists of artists they liked, which led me to even more good music.)

In addition to that, some artists are involved in more than one project, like Joy Williams, who is in a duo called The Civil Wars when she's not singing alone.

And since this is a book blog, I would be remiss if I didn't mention that authors sometimes post playlists to their books. If you like an author's book, you might like the music they use for inspiration, too. Finally, if you have friends who like the same movies/books/ice cream flavors as you do, chances are you'll like some of each other's music, too. Try having an iPod party, by which I mean listen to music that each of you like and swap band names, not musical files. I've found new music this way.

Questions? Comments? How do you find new music?
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Monday, December 27, 2010

A Very Zombie Holiday

Tips--some of them mildly disturbing--for surviving a zombie apocalypse during the holiday season.


Via bookshelves of doom.
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Musical Monday (59): "My Legionnaire"

Every Monday I post whatever song I can't get out of my head or just can't get enough of because Mondays can often be less than marvelous, and music is happy--even when it's sad. If you'd like to join the party, make your own Musical Monday post and leave a comment!

This week's song is "My Legionnaire" by Brooke Waggoner. Picking a song for this week was difficult; I flip-flopped between a lot of songs but chose this one for its lyrical and musical drama. It's an epic song--a sort of late Christmas present, if you will. It starts slow, but do not let that fool you.

Enjoy!


My Legionnaire from Brooke Waggoner on Vimeo.

On Bookduck this week: the music-picking post is finally coming, along with another book review, some bloggy stuff like awards, and--either this week or next week--my first ever giveaway! There's an exclamation point there because that last item on the list is very exciting.
Wishing you a Merry Monday,
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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Book Review: Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

Release Date: December 2, 2010
Publisher: Dutton
Age Group: Young Adult
Pages: 384

Source: Bought.

Summary:
Anna was looking forward to her senior year in Atlanta, where she has a great job, a loyal best friend, and a crush on the verge of becoming more. So she's less than thrilled about being shipped off to boarding school in Paris—until she meets Étienne St. Clair. Smart, charming, beautiful, Étienne has it all . . . including a serious girlfriend.

But in the City of Light, wishes have a way of coming true. Will a year of romantic near-misses end with their long-awaited French kiss? Stephanie Perkins keeps the romantic tension crackling and the attraction high in a debut guaranteed to make toes tingle and hearts melt. (From stephanieperkins.com)
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Anna Oliphant is sent to Paris for her senior year of high school by her father, a Nicholas Sparks-ish author who writes "novels set in Small Town Georgia about folks with Good American Values who Fall in Love and then contract Life-Threatening Diseases and Die." Luckily, she makes friends quickly, and even luckier for both Anna and the reader, one of them--Étienne St. Clair--is a Very Hot Boy.*

I can't say enough about this book. A tangle of relationships--friendship, love-gone-wrong, misleading flirtation, friends crushing on friends--compose the plot, and author Stephanie Perkins adroitly juggles her characters' many different dreams, agendas, and feelings. And despite the boarding-school-in-Paris setting (which I loved), the interactions between the characters stem from realistic situations. A person doesn't have to be in Paris to break and repair friendships or fall in love with someone who's already taken.

Anna tells her roller coaster of a tale in funny, clever first-person narration. I would've read this book in one sitting if I'd had the time. The ending is unique, mature, and gorgeous. Anna and the French Kiss left me light and wide-eyed, stuck in warm knits in Paris with the scent of baguettes and a sense of boundless possibility. Anna is a dream of a book--so, so satisfying, yet realistic. And as much as I like him, Étienne St. Clair isn't perfect. He makes mistakes, and there's no idealism here. There are also some faintly stereotypical high school moments and some over-the-top emotions, but over all Anna and the French Kiss left me in post-good book depression because I couldn't find anything to immediately replace the experience of Anna. I wanted to keep wandering Paris with Anna, Étienne, and their friends. I recommend Anna and the French Kiss to anyone who likes contemporary fiction and/or romance, armchair travel, humor, and good writing. I've already started reading Anna a second time.
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*This diminutive text is accidental; Blogger is doing some odd things with font size and will not let me fix it.Blog Signature

Monday, December 20, 2010

Musical Monday (58): "Love Came Down at Christmas" + "Sleigh Ride"

Every Monday I post whatever song I can't get out of my head or just can't get enough of because Mondays can often be less than marvelous, and music is happy--even when it's sad. If you'd like to join the party, make your own Musical Monday post and leave a comment!

This week's songs are "Love Came Down at Christmas" by Jars of Clay and "Sleigh Ride" by Relient K. I was too busy to pick a song last week, and since this is the last Monday before Christmas, I am posting two songs to make up for lost Christmas music listening time.

I posted both of these songs last year, and I am posting them again because I like them. "Love Came Down at Christmas" is based on a poem by Christina Rossetti, a Victorian poet. Rossetti is perhaps most well-known for her poem "Goblin Market," but she also wrote many devotional poems. I did some research on her this semester, and I believe her brother William Michael Rossetti calls her a "Puritan" among Victorian Anglo-Catholics (meaning a branch of the nineteenth century Anglican church that emphasized tradition and rituals) in his "Memoir" attached to The Poetical Works of Christina Georgina Rossetti. But I don't have the book in front of me. Rossetti's biography aside, the lyrics of this song articulate the meaning of Christmas beautifully, and Jars of Clay sets them to a catchy tune.

As for the second song, "Sleigh Ride" is one of my  favorite Christmas songs. Also, I believe I've mentioned that Relient K is one of my favorite bands. Thus, I really like this song.

Merry (early) Christmas! What are your favorite Christmas songs?


Wishing you a Merry Monday,
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Saturday, December 18, 2010

More exciting news of pie + picture book controversy + last-minute Christmas present DIY

First, two things about PIE, both via Cakespy:

1. Candy cane cream pie recipe at The Inky Kitchen. It looks beautiful and sounds delicious, but if I made it I'd probably take a shortcut and buy a premade oreo crust. I'd also probably use more cream cheese, and less heavy cream. But I guess it wouldn't be a cream pie anymore if I did that...

2. Lo and behold, a small pie shop chain called High 5 Pie exists, and is opening another location in Seattle. This is rather far away from my neck of the woods, but I remain optimistic about the spread of pie shops.

Second, have you heard about this book yet?

Image from The Gloucester Times
I heard about it at work this week. The basic plot includes a monkey and a donkey. The monkey has a book, and the donkey asks what it is. He wants to know if you can scroll up and down, access Wi-Fi or tweet with it. The monkey says, "No" each time, and at the end of the book the monkey says, "it's a book, jackass."  Take a look at the book trailer:


I think it's a cute and clever concept, but I can understand why some adults in Massachusetts are against allowing a literacy group to donate copies of It's a Book to first graders. Charity is a thornier issue than library access to the book--in the case of a library, it is a parent's right to bar their child from checking out It's a Book and/or make sure their child does not hear it during storytime. But not allowing a group of well-meaning people to donate it in schools? Hmm. That's a tougher one.

What do you think?

(Further info on It's a Book can be found here and here at NPR, where it is recommended and discussed in relation to the e-reader explosion, respectively.)

Third, I was having difficulties completing my mother's Christmas present until I saw this rice pillow project at Wise Craft. I wanted to surprise her with something small, because I asked her point-blank what she wanted for Christmas, and . . . well, she won't be too surprised, since that's what I got for her. (And I wasn't very secretive about it.)

Image from Wise Craft
My mom used to have a cherry-pit pillow that she heated in the microwave, and this is a similar thing. It also looks super easy and nicely cheap--since I have a bin of suitable fabric scraps, I only need to run to the grocery store to buy rice to make this.

I started wrapping Christmas presents tonight. I love making them look all pretty and seeing how cleverly I can disguise gifts with boxes, tissue paper, and wrapping paper. Enthusiasm doesn't make me good with wrapping paper, though. I still wrap presents as clumsily as I did when I was in elementary school. I like to think it makes my gifts look more endearing. (Endearing sounds better than sloppy.)

Here's a video from Jackson Pearce on how to wrap a gift correctly. I might pay closer attention to it next year.


Merry (Early) Christmas,
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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Breaking news about baked goods

I read a newspaper this morning just because I had the time to. And I learned something very, very important. You may be thinking that I'm referring to an article about the kerfuffle in Congress over tax cut legislation, but I am not.

The newspaper I read featured an article by Sylvia Rector--"Experts predict surprising trends for foodies"-- reprinted from the Detroit Free Press, and it contains important information about two important foods: cupcakes and pie.

According to Rector, pies are poised to overtake cupcakes in popularity in 2011:

Cupcakes will take a backseat as pies -- glorious pies! -- begin showing up in every size, form and format, from savory to sweet and from deep-dish to individual deep-fried ones.

While I love cupcakes with their sweet tastes and cute decorations, I am equally enamored of pie, and just as I can go to a cupcakery and find nothing but cupcakes, I would love to see a pie shop open in my hometown.

Especially if it looks like the Pie Hole from Pushing Daisies.

But I am flexible and will overlook architecture and interior design as long as there are pies.

...but I do miss that TV show.

Thinking about pie instead of studying French,
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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The end of the tunnel.

Soooo . . . my papers and paintings are done, and my finals are all over except for my French one on Friday . . . AND I DO NOT KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH MYSELF.

But I am oh so happy anyway. And I think I want to make these Christmas cookies next week.

Off to remember what freetime feels like,
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Monday, December 6, 2010

Musical Monday (57): "Peppermint Winter"

There wasn't going to be any music today because:
1. I need to paint 5 paintings by next Tuesday.
2. I have a literary research paper due in my Brit Lit seminar on social protest in Victorian literature on Friday.
3. I need to edit and get my portfolio together for Advanced Composition (due next Tuesday).
4. I have two presentation to give this week, one on my research for Brit Lit and one (as part of a group, thank goodness) on Japanese art since 1300 for Art History.
5. Picking songs takes precious, precious time. (This, friends, is why I'm rather absent from Bookduck and blog-reading in the fall...)

But I can't help sharing this one because:
1. It's Christmas music time!
2. The song sort of picked itself.
3. This week's song, "Peppermint Winter" by Owl City, is cute and fun, and homework is not. My next-door neighbor is a big Owl City fan, and when I walked by her door last Monday, she asked if I'd heard "Peppermint Winter" yet. I hadn't, so she invited me in. We listened to the song by the glow of her blue Christmas lights and ended up having a mini Christmas music dance party in the hallway.

Enjoy! (And maybe even dance?)

[Click HERE to listen to the song on Owl City's webiste. It should show in the player near the top. The youtube versions were iffy, so there's no video this week.]
Happy Monday,
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