Category Archives: Books

Forty-One Months Old!

Arthur came over to stay with us the week after Thanksgiving his parents attended an awards dinner, and Liam dashed around the house with him showing him things. My favourite was, “These are my baby fish! They love me!” And I happened to be in the kitchen at the time so I peeked in… and saw Liam standing on his crafts table with the aquarium cover flipped up and his hands in the water, saying, “I will pet them!” That was scotched in a hurry.

Liam, 31 October 2008Have I ever mentioned that he sleeps with BunBun over his head? He does. Still. It’s odd. And he loves homemade alphabet soup. I’ve probably mentioned that before as well. In an effort to slow the mass consumerism that the paper inserts from the Thomas train packages are inducing, we have explained to him over and over that we can’t just go out and buy toys if he decides he wants them. There is a finite amount of money, and the toy budget is not huge. If he decides he wants something, he must save up his money and buy it himself. Now he pores over these papers and says, “I am going to save my money and buy [insert train here]. Then I will save up my money and buy [insert next train here].”

Words being used this month that are newish include transporter (as in a vehicle that moves things, not a Star Trek particle disassembler/reassembler), ricochet, and delightful. He got a little MegaBloks car in his Halloween gift bag from preschool and HRH said, “Hey, cool, it’s an ambulance!” “No, Dada,” the boy said patiently, “it’s an emergency vehicle.” Shows what we know. The other day he suggested something and added, “because that would be delightful.” One day after being with the caregiver he said, “I want a sister.” “A baby sister? Like Tallis or Ainsley?” I said. “No, a big sister!” he said. “Like Grace!” (Er. That might be difficult.)

Liam, 31 October 2008The Incredibles has again become his current favourite movie (thank goodness, as we were getting very sick of Thomas and the Great Discovery) because HRH made himself an Incredibles shirt to wear for Halloween. So Liam demanded that we bring out the too-small Incredibles shirt I made him for last year’s Dash costume, which we will allow him to wear as a sleepshirt only, and now he and HRH wear their shirts together and pretend they are superheroes. Which is just fine.

Starting about a week and a half ago we began curling up in our big bed to read a chapter of the Winnie the Pooh books every night. We finished the first book in a week (okay, I snuck an extra chapter in some nights because I like the snuggling). He loves to pore over the map of the Hundred Acre Wood and trace paths between everyone’s houses. I’m not sure what we’ll do when the second book is finished. I think we’ll try A Bear Called Paddington, and maybe once that’s done we can try The Wind In The Willows again. I’m so thrilled that he’s finally old enough to sit still for chapter books. He’s getting better and better at making up stories. He needs to work on climax and denouement, though. At the moment what happens is the story clips along and then suddenly stops. We know this because he will say, “Blah blah blah, the end. Was that a good story?”

The other day he turned to me and said, “Mama, I think I need my cello.” This was the first time he’d asked of his own accord and not been watching something that he wanted to play along with, or had agreed to a suggestion made by me. As a result he wasn’t super bouncy, which was a good thing. I got the viola out for him and he carried the case into the living room, set himself up, held the bow in approximately the right place and said “I’m going to sing.” “You’re giving us a concert?” I said. “Yes! A concert!” he said, and started singing the Rainbow Connection. He finished and lifted the bow (the way I do, I assume) and looked up at us, and we clapped. Then I was directed to go get my cello so we could do it together and give a concert for HRH. And we did it again the next day. It was terrific. I’d love to have a regular music time every week.

Liam and HRH share oatmeal, 2 November 2008The other evening we were at a gas station that had a Tim Horton’s in it. HRH was putting gas in the car when Liam said, “Mama, roll down my window; I have to say something to Dada.” So I reached back and rolled the window down. HRH leaned over and looked in. “Hi, pal,” he said. “What can I do for you?” Liam leaned toward him very seriously and said clearly, as if he were ordering at a drive-through window, “I would like a medium iced cappuccino, please. And one for Mama, too.” I began laughing hysterically. HRH shot me a Look. “I didn’t put him up to this, I swear,” I gasped. It could have been worse. He could have ordered a double-double.

Other Liam posts this past month:

practising for Hallowe’en: “I say ‘trick or treat!” and they give me… good luck.”
Sparky upholds voters’ rights
the parent-teacher interview: “My son has minions!”
memo to the weather gods: please do not indulge the small child

What I Read This October

Kushiel’s Mercy by Jacqueline Carey
How To Ditch Your Fairy by Justine Larbalestier
The Sisters Grimm 1: The Fairy-Tale Detectives by Michael Buckley
Inkdeath by Cornelia Funke
Mortal Love by Elizabeth Hand (reread)
The Comfort of a Muddy Saturday by Alexander McCall Smith
Cassandra and Jane by Jill Pitkeathley
Cupcake by Rachel Cohn
Exploring the Northern Tradition by Galina Krasskova
Ravens of Avalon by Diana Paxson
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan (reread)

Slow month.

Gah! Done!

It took way, way, way too long to finish up today. I started working at 7:40 AM and spent most of the morning on the iBook in the living room. Once I moved in here to handle polishing the review things fell apart. I don’t like this not-able-to-work-in-my-office trend. It’s bad. I suspect if I’d stayed in the living room I’d have focused better.

Anyway, it’s four, and I’m exhausted so I’m not even going to contemplate working on Orchestrated. I need to fall over with a book. Nixie has been at me to be elsewhere too, placing herself like a little black statue on my desk between my keyboard tray and the monitor, purring at me; every once in a while she’s reached out a tiny black paw with the claws ever so slightly extended, patting my hands or my sweater sleeves, coaxing me to stroke her.

Mailboy joy today included two of the Scrabble tile pendants I bought last week (super fast shipping!), which are even lovelier in person (I will buy brown velvet ribbon on which to string them when I am racing all over creation tomorrow), and the new issue of Strings. Let’s hope this one is better than the last one. I will read that, and finish Justine Larbalestier’s How to Ditch Your Fairy.

Orchestra tonight. And I have no idea what to do for dinner.

Review: Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride

Author: Helen Halstead
Title: Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride: A Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice

Publisher: Ulysses Press
Media type: Trade paperback, 320 pages
Release date: March 23, 2007
Reading period: September 2008
ISBN-10: 1569755884
ISBN-13: 978-1569755884
Category: Adult historical literature

[NOTE: This book has been previously self-published and then published by Random House Australia as A Private Performance.]

Everyone knows that when a book ends, it ends. Especially a classic novel such as Pride & Prejudice.

Well, there are slews of authors and readers who crave reading more about Darcy and Elizabeth, and go on to write or read various imaginings of What Happens Next. I’ve read some tolerable published sequels, put others down after a few chapters due to boredom or disgust, and have deliberately avoided yet others. And then there is Helen Halstead’s Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride: A Sequel to Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice.

To sum it up and give away the review in a single phrase: This is the best Austen sequel or spin-off that I have ever read.

Normally I’m happy to let classic stories lie as the author intended and steer clear of sequels and spin-off, but I am occasionally curious about how other people imagine what might have occurred after the final pages of a novel. Helen Halstead captures all the original characters very well, creates necessary new ones in keeping with Austen’s own characters, echoes Austen’s writing style easily and fluidly (unlike some other sequels I have attempted to read, which seem to think that convoluted phrasing equals a Regency writing style), and perhaps most importantly doesn’t throw in a lot of sex or duels or out-of-wedlock characters bent on revenge. The plot is sympathetic in style and ideology to Austen’s original, and for that I heartily applaud her.

The premise of the novel is simple. Once married to a less-than-socially-acceptable woman, Darcy must then integrate her into his social set. Elizabeth melts some hearts with her wit, simple beauty, and intelligence; others reject her, and she in turn laughs and chooses to dismiss them instead of obsessing about it. Throughout this trial by fire, Darcy and Elizabeth reiterate their character traits as firmly established by Austen in Pride & Prejudice, which causes miscommunication and marital friction until the experience stimulates personal growth and new understanding. Halstead handles it all very capably without resorting to lurid or histrionic invention, remaining true to Austen’s originals. Reading her ‘what-next?’ is a pleasure, and one I am happy to recommend to other readers. I read it in a single sitting; I hope others enjoy it as much as I did.

Many thanks to Mini Book Expo and Karma Bennett at Ulysses Press, through whom I acquired the review copy of this book.

(Yes, Mum, you get to read it next.)

Publisher web site: http://www.ulyssespress.com/
Author web site: HelenHalstead.com

A Good Thing

It’s a good sign when I listen to an album and want to play my cello. Am already trying to figure out if I could play the bass riff and the mid-song guitar solo from ‘Vengeance Is Mine’.

I am amused by the fact that it has taken a new Alice Cooper album to shake me out of my melancholy. (Although having a sneak peek at Brendan’s upcoming book has helped, too.)

A good Friday to you, world. Let’s see what we can do today.

Mailbox Joy!

I just received a shipment of books from Amazon that I ordered only yesterday afternoon. I am particularly impressed by this because I chose the free shipping option, which is supposed to add two to three days to the arrival time (not that it does in my experience) and usually takes at least a day and a bit to get here. So I am excited because I wasn’t expecting to get them until Fridayish. A less than twenty-four hour turnaround time? Full of win.

So I have a copy of Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book (which isn’t listed on Indigo yet because they seem to think it isn’t available for another two weeks) and Daniel Levitin’s The World in Six Songs, and this is absolutely perfect because I’d done all my to-do list by ten o’clock and ended up puttering around the kitchen slicing tomatoes to oven-dry, tidying up, setting the dishwasher to go, and finally sitting down to write, which I wasn’t quite ready to do. I have a copy of Cory Doctrow’s Little Brother which was next on my pile to things to read but I’m just not in the mood for it. I am, however, exactly in the mood to read The Graveyard Book. And I also finally have my very own copy of Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist, a book I wish I’d written.

So I can take a break from writing (I did my five hundred, good start) and curl up with a cup of tea and a book. I’ll go back to the iBook at one o’clock and do another five hundred words. (Which is my way of tricking my mind into being okay with it all, because five hundred is easy, and then I just keep going and suddenly there are thousands of words. Transparent, perhaps, but that how it works.)

What I Read This September

Shakespeare’s Spy by Gary Blackwood
Shakespeare’s Scribe by Gary Blackwood
Shakespeare Stealer by Gary Blackwood
Keeping Faith by Jodi Picoult
Beautiful City of the Dead by Leander Watts
Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride by Helen Halstead
Anathem by Neal Stephenson
Victory of Eagles by Naomi Novik
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver
Dingo by Charles de Lint
Peeps by Scott Westerfeld
The Last Days by Scott Westerfeld
The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan
Sorcery and the Single Girl by Mindy Klasky

Let’s see, what did I say about them over the month…

I finished Anathem last night, a brilliant philosophical story that reminded me a lot of the discussions we used to have after classes at the Liberal Arts College. And on Saturday I read the entirety of Mr. Darcy Presents His Bride, a book I obtained for review through MiniBookExpo. Best Austen sequel I’ve ever read.

Finished Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle last night. Would have been life-changing had I not just read Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma.

I might be the only person I know of, or at least within three degrees of separation, who geeked out in absolute excitement over receiving my secondhand copy of the out-of-print Women Musicians of Venice: Musical Foundations, 1525-1855. Gods bless Jane Baldauf-Berdes for writing exactly the book that I needed, fifteen years before I knew that I did. I devoured Scott Westerfeld’s Peeps and Last Days in an afternoon and evening, and will cheerfully lend them out to anyone looking for a decent and believable vampire story for teens. Ceri lent me her copy of Charles de Lint’s Dingo, which I also read in an hour and a half. I also finished Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma this weekend, and it was excellent. I looked for The Botany of Desire in the bookstore Sunday morning but of course it wasn’t in stock; if I’d wanted In Defense of Food I could have had one of twenty-three hardcover copies, but I wanted Botany. I don’t try to be difficult, really.