Friday, December 30, 2011

Books From VACATION

I need to find a job to just read. I love getting up at 5 and having coffee and reading.  Lottery tickets????
This book made me hysterical with laughter.  I gave it to Louise because it is filled with English humor. -

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾Wednesday June 10th
Pandora and I are in love! It is official! She told Claire Nelson, who told Nigel, who told me. I told Nigel to tell Claire to tell Pandora that I return her love. I am over the moon with joy. I can overlook the fact that Pandora smokes five Benson and Hedges a day and has her own lighter. When you are in love such things cease to matter.The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾ is an unabashed, pimples-and-all glimpse into the troubled life of an
adolescent. Writing candidly about
his parents’ marital troubles, the dog, his life as a tortured poet and ‘misunderstood intellectual’, teenager Adrian Mole’s painfully honest diary makes hilarious and compelling reading.



Great Vacation Book - OUTER BANKS, ANNE RIVER SIDDONS
Elegant Kate, walking a tightrope over an abyss of lies...sensitive, sensible, self-contained Cecie...Ginger, the heiress, sexy, vibrant, richer than sin...and poor, hopeless, brilliant Fig -- they came together as sorority sisters on a Southern campus in the '60s. Four young women bound by rare, blinding, early friendship -- they spend two idyllic spring breaks at Nag's Head, North Carolina, the isolated strip of barrier islands where grand old weatherbeaten houses perch defiantly on the edge of a storm-tossed sea. Now thirty years later, they are coming back. They are coming back to recapture the exquisite magic of those early years...to experience again the love, the enthusiasm, the passion, pain, and cruel-betrayal that shaped the four young girls into women and set them all adrift on the...Outer Banks.



Anne Rivers Siddons

ANNE RIVERS SIDDONS

Growing up in Georgia, the only child of a prestigious lawyer and his wife, Ann Rivers Siddons did all the things expected of a southern belle until college, when an article she wrote in favor of integration taught her the power of the written word. Siddons wrote several books before publishing her horror novel, The House Next Door, which was hailed by Stephen King as an example of “the new American Gothic.” But with Peachtree Road,"the Southern novel for our generation" (Pat Conroy), she was propelled onto the literary fast track and hasn’t looked back. Best sellers Outer Banks, Up Island and Nora Nora,are just a few of her highly regarded works. Siddons still lives in the south with her husband Heyward and summers in Maine.


Sunday, December 11, 2011

AZ Lowertown Art Show

http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.273110536073460.78983.136350709749444&type=3&l=b3b158dab7

I won the Wet Paint Purchase award!  I was so honored that the owner chose my painting.  Sometimes you need validation in our life and I needed it.  I was questioning continuing my membership.  It is really hard to juggle being a Mom, teaching, going to grad school, choir, WOHS leadership, and athletics at Claver. I am tired, but we got to keep it all going on.  Art is funny.  It is really just people's opinions on what they like and don't.  You can have great training and technique, but when it comes to shows and voting, it is all about what they like.  Luck and Karma come into play.  Be a good person and you will be rewarded some day.
Peace to all, Amy
It was great to have someone like your art who doesn't know you.  It means that your art gives pleasure to someone else and that is my big thing. After the show, I felt that I should continue on as an artist and I will. I will juggle my kids, teaching, schooling, and all to make it work.  Buck up or something to that effect would be my Dad's response.  We all know what my Dad would of said... : )

The reception was great and My Sister Kathy and Brother Gary won great door prizes - $25 to Golden's Deli and 2 tickets to the Landmark Theater.  Greg won a bottle of wine.

Good Book alert:
http://theslayerchronicles.com/
I loved that it connects the The Vladimer Todd series within the storyline.

WATCH- ONCE UPON A TIME!!!! GREAT!!

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Lowertown Art Show

azgallery.org
1st Annual Lowertown Art Show
December 2-January 15

The AZ Gallery and Black Dog Cafe are proud to jointly present the First Annual Lowertown Art Show, a juried show designed to showcase the work of Artists who live and work in the lowertown neighborhood and downtown of Saint Paul, MN.

SHOW LOCATIONS: AZ Gallery, 308 Prince Street, #130, St. Paul, MN 55101 & Black Dog Café, 308 Prince Street, #100, St. Paul, MN 55101

December 2, 2011: 5-10 pm Show Opens/First Fridays in Lowertown
December 10, 2011: 7-10 pm Awards Reception – Prizes generously donated by our sponsors
January 15, 2012: Show Closes

 

Friday, November 11, 2011

Heather Brewer Post on Bullying and then Michigan????????

 
I love Vladimer Todd books and Heather has the greatest mind as an author and a young adult mentor.  I wish I could do what she does so well.  She is a mastermind. 

Michigan and Penn State- WHAT is wrong with y'all.  As a mother, teacher and a human being...WHAT is wrong with you????????








Haikus and bullies and changes, oh my!
Look at that, Minions – I hadn’t been blogging regularly and now, you’re getting PUMMELED with my blogginess. Sick of me yet? I hope not. I do know, however, that many of you are sick of not being able to comment on my blog. There is, apparently, a bug that’s in need of fixing, so I’m sicking my web guru on the issue ASAP. Also, I’ll send along a list of awesome changes to the site. The forum is getting totally revamped, and the FAQ (plus several other parts of my site) are getting updated. I feel like I’ve been living under a rock, but now it’s time to do something about this mess. Somebody grab a broom, forcryingoutloud! And by “somebody”, I of course mean ME.
So, there are two reasons that I had to blog today. One is because we have winners to my latest contest! Jacob Coates, who’s thirteen and from Washington, is the grand prize winner of my haiku contest. He won an XBox360, with a skin that looks like the cover of FIRST KILL! And he did it with this fangtastic haiku tribute to Vlad:

tendancy to kill
tries his best to control it
on a strict diet

Looooove it! Plus, our two first place winners (Aubrey Peel – 16, from Florida, and Kayla Rupper – 16, from Utah) each win an autographed copy of FIRST KILL. Out of almost 400 entries, it wasn’t an easy pick, so congrats to the winners! If you have any ideas for future contests, just drop me a line. I’m always curious what the Minion Horde wants to win and how they want to win it.
Now…THIS. As a home-state Michigander, I am outraged, sickened, and disgusted. Spread the word, Minions. Because we can change the future, but we have to rally together in order to do so. Bullying has to STOP.
P.S. I love each and every one of you. *squish*


Now…THIS. As a home-state Michigander, I am outraged, sickened, and disgusted. Spread the word, Minions. Because we can change the future, but we have to rally together in order to do so. Bullying has to STOP.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

KOKO! I love Koko and that would be my dream job



It has been quite the week for 'Harry Potter' fans. Monday was not only the 30th anniversary of the death of Harry's (fictional) parents, but also when author J.K. Rowling revealed that she almost killed Ron Weasley before having a change of heart. That blood-lust almost extended to Rubeus Hagrid as well. Say it ain't so, J.K.!

It's so. In an interview on the Blu-ray release of 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2' with star Daniel Radcliffe, Rowling explains that she liked the idea of Hagrid carrying Harry at the beginning and end of the story, a bookend that kept the gentle giant "safe." Per Rowling, your favorite bearded gameskeeper was a "natural" option to be slain otherwise. Yikes!

On the flip side, Rowling was going to keep Remus Lupin alive, but realized that during a great war, atrocities like new parents getting killed is often reality. As such, Lupin and Nymphadora Tonks were casualties in the Battle of Hogwarts. Hashtag: tears.

[via EW]

[Photo: Warner Bros.]


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Saturday, November 5, 2011

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Harry Potter Patrick

Cutie!!!!!

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Cheryl LeClaire Sommer - Friend and GREAT Pastel Artist

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Paul Metsa

Memoirs are nonfiction stories written to share the knowledge gained from personal experience. Author Paul Metsa said, “Memoirs are constrained by the truth.” They hopefully engage and entertain the reader, but they also might be written for therapeutic and utterly selfish reasons by the author. The deep seeded conviction that their story needs to be told, telling their story will probably not change one and all. They are also written to make money for the author and the publisher. They wouldn't be on the shelf if a publisher didn't think some profit were to be made from the author's life story. When you look at the bins of clearance autobiography and biography books you wonder why some lives were chosen to sell. The appeal of some lives seems limited (that sounds so horrible and scathing, but ask yourself, is it worthy of $25.95 and three days at minimum of someone's life to read?) and clearly so, since no one bothered to buy their books. Memoirs are somewhat of a gamble in their enjoyment factor. I believe readers of memoirs are always comparing their own lives and justifying the importance of the lives in print to their own. They also want to figure out how to achieve that same level of success.
The panel assembled on October 15th to discuss their Minnesota Memoirs at the Rain Taxi Twin Cities Book Festival was varied in their memoir styles. They had works that were either: humorous, sad, touching, inspirational, reflective, or motivational. From excerpts read, some piqued my interest, but others I know I will not pick up. I might not like a writer's style or craft, but I always give kudos for getting it published. I believe the writer had to have some chutzpah and charisma to get it sold. The panel consisted of: Patricia Hampl - The Florists Daughter, Paul Metsa - Blue Guitar Highway, Martin Kihn – Bad Dog:A Love Story, Nancy Paddock - A Song at Twilight: Of Alzheimer's and Love, Theresa Weir – The Orchard, Mary Rondeau Westra – After the Murder of My Son.
The panel answered questions brought to them by moderator Patricia Hampl. The authors had different approaches to the craft of memoir and varied responses to the questions. Patricia fielded a question from the audience that asked, what do you do after your memoir is finished and published? Kihn answered that he has concocted different experiments to aid in the process of creating maybe more memoirs and retellings of certain aspects of his life. I felt that he was a crafty writer that will always know how to sell himself. Nancy Paddock said she would go back to poetry and not write another memoir. She had stated her thoughts on her life and that was enough. I felt that her memoir was poignant and her last hurrah about that relationship. Theresa Weir stated that she had one story to tell and she had told hers for now, but that could change. I felt she was realistic. She is young and life has a lot of stories to give you.
The next question was what is the role of editor? Metsa answered that an editor will take 1500 pages and bring it down to 400. He stated that his sister editing his work was like Mother Teresa of Calcutta editing Hunter S. Thompson. Mary Rondeau Westra responded that you have an obligation to leave your reader at a good place after reading your words and an editor helps you find that place.
Hampl felt that an editor centered her and reigned in her craft. I learned limitations have to be placed on the work in process or egos will surface and the author will ultimately think all is very important and nothing should be edited.
The most important idea I grasped out of the panel's knowledge was the words of wisdom from Paul Metsa's Dad and Kihn. Metsa was worried about how his words would be perceived by his Dad. His Dad responded, “Just tell the truth son.” Kihn said, “You cannot undo the truth, so let it be.” How eloquent and simple are those words? I think writers worry about having the sales and monetary rewards for their stories and that encourages them to embellish. If you write what you know and you speak the truth, no one else will tell the same story. Your story will be the unique and your own.
Paul Metsa the author came to Magers and Quinn bookstore to do a reading from Blue Guitar Highway. Metsa is a local music legend in the Twin Cities and northern Minnesota. An Iron Range boy that made it good in the land of rock and roll. When Paul walks into the reading he looks weathered and worn. He still has his hair, but it looks like it has lost it's natural blondness. His skin looks reddened, he has the crimson tone that years of drinking can do to one's complexion. He has glasses to see and a wide circumference to his torso. Hopefully, he has replaced his bottled demons with food. At least he doesn't have the sickly thinness of rockers that are on the needle or up the nose. He still sports the leather and the smugness of cool still clings to his weathered soul. You can feel the audience's apprehension of failure in the room. He is a writer of lyrics, a poet of songs. Is he a writer of substance that can carry a memoir or was it someone else? Did he have a ghost writer? The audience visibly relaxes when he says his introduction and performs a song. They realize his vocals are still intact. They haven't been damaged as much as his facade. He then begins to read and his charm begins to seethe from his pores and the audience gasps at his humorous attempts to downplay his demeanor. Paul Metsa can write!
He depreciates his life in his reading and that draws his audience in even further. He is a master of making his audience seem worthier than him. He is the boy that grew up poor and didn't realize his potential. He only realized his determination to get the hell out of the Range. His gravelly voice gives credence to his words as a rocker that has seen hard times and won. Paul Metsa is an artist that gives the people what they want. He did that as a singer and lyrical mastermind. He is no fool and knows what people want to hear as a writer. He begins with his words and the audience is entranced. That is what makes a great memoir writer, the reader wants more. His story hurts. We all might of failed in our promise, but his demise was worse, because he had a grasp on that chance of fame and abused and lost it.
His memoir will do well in Minnesota. I am not sure how well he'll do outside the Midwest, but one never knows. The book should interest musicians, rock and roll aficionados, young adults and memoir enthusiasts. His book is a reflection of the choices he made in his life. Memoirs are memories of lives transformed into stories that are personal or public. If you choose to share, make sure you are truthful in the memory and try not to hurt. Tell the truth and it will set you free.

Halloween for Pets

http://animalvideos.yahoo.com/video-detail?vid=27020446&cid=24037714

Lacey the manicured alpaca meets baby kitten

Cutie Hamster

Friday, October 21, 2011

Books for MEA

 The first book i finished on my MEA Holiday was MICE by Gordon Reece

I read it like I read ROOM, by Emma Donoghue.  I have a hard time reading about kids that suffer trouble and skim through books that highlight this. This is a book worth reading, like ROOM, but it is hard to read.   As a mother and a teacher, these things really eat me up.  
There are plot things that I did not like and writing that had heights of excitement, but then went down to mediocre. It was a good premise for a first book.

I read Tangerine on the way home from Duluth and it went by in a heartbeat. GREATNESS!!! And I know, I am late to the bandwagon.  Sometimes with YA there are some topics that hurt your soul and you have to take a break from all of that.  I stayed away from Tangerine because I knew it was great, but I knew it would hurt. It fulfills both prophesies.


This is a deeply moving and heart felt book.  It is in the Chris Crutcher genius mode, that made me want to be a teacher and writer.  Great characters, plot twists and emotional YA thought processes wringing through.  The ending made me want a different resolution to the character's problems, but it was satisfying non the least.  Read it.

Schooled immediately grabbed me with the characters in it's drama.  Cap Anderson is a boy whom I would love all children to be.  Let's go back to that day of innocence. Let's go back to that time of no expectations for our kids.  I do not like what I see of the mounting pressures our kids face as young adults.  Things have gotten so amped up.  Situations that use to happen as sophomores now occur to seventh graders, especially with girls.  Girls need to take a time warp vacation and chill.   

This is a book that will make kids look at the kid that is overlooked all the time.  The kid that is smart, but strange to the norm.  The kid that might irritate, but why is that irritating?  Is the only reason it's irritating is because they are different?  I am not perfect, and when I was young and was picked on, I struck first before being the one struck.  Maybe that is why it hurts so bad to read these YA books.  I was those characters.  The good and the bad.  Maybe we are these characters through all of our lives.  I want to be the good ones and I hope more people do too.







http://www.caribousmom.com/2011/08/22/mice-book-review/

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Mary - God chose well.

Were you scared when God spoke to you?
Did you about faint when he said you were going to be pregnant with his son?
Oh, wow!  I would have freaked!
What were you going to tell everyone?
Were people mean?
It seems like it would have been horrible, but you were so brave.
I always think, what if you had said, no.

Joseph seemed like a nice guy, but he was old and a stranger too.
That must have been weird to have God pick your husband.
You don't know anything and then, WHAM! BAM!
An instant marriage for you, my dear.
You didn't even get to fall in love.
I always think, what if you had said, no.

The biggest thing that would have made me back out
of the whole deal,
is knowing Jesus would have had to die to save everyone.
Really?
Would I give my son up to be slaughtered?
I don't know if I could do that.
I love my sons.
I will protect them, hide them, and die for them.
I know you felt the same way.
You must have had faith stronger then anything I could ever imagine.
I always think, what if you had said, no.

There would be nothing.
No Jesus and his life, death, and resurrection.
We would not be saved.
There would be only darkness and evil.
You were one in a million.
God chose well.
Mary, thanks for not saying, no.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Middle School Ride

Middle School is the purgatory
carnival that you dwell in
before you become a teenager.

Kids jump on it's roller coaster ride,
hoping it will be the coolest trip of the lives.
It can be a nightmare in which the car you're riding in
suddenly flings itself off the rails and hurtles you to
the ground.
Don't buy that ticket too soon.

Girls in middle school say, “I want”.
I want to wear make-up.
I want to go to dances.
I want to date.
I want to be beautiful.
I want him to call.
God, please make him call.

Boys in middle school say, “I don't”.
I don't want to ask a girl out.
I don't want to do homework.
I don't want to clean my room.
I don't want to kiss you good-bye Mom.
I'll just grunt and walk away.

Should they jump on that ride?
There really is no choice, but be leery how fast you travel.
Buckle up and strap yourself in.
Follow the rules and you'll
be safe.
You might even have a great time
over some hills and turns.
Or barf.

Cool Site with Songs and Lyrics

http://www.paulmetsa.com/

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Weren't You My Friend Yesterday?

Weren't you my friend yesterday?
Everyone noticed the look you gave me
Really? What was that about?
Every time you do that, it hurts
Now I hate being here
Take me home please!    
Yelling loudly, just to be cool
Outrageous outfits you wear
Useless gossip you spread around these halls    
My best friend is now on your side
You always bribe people to be your friend    
Forgiveness is hard for me
Rarely do I let things go
Insecure about my life, I guess
Every time you talk about me
No one ever listens to my side
Down the hallway you spread your lies       
You have nothing better to do
Eventually you'll get bored
Set your sights on someone else
Today it's me, tomorrow it's her
Each of us glad you tire quickly
Rarely a day goes by we don't wish you were gone
Dreaming of the day you would be done
Attacking us for being who we are
You need to grow up, please

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

New Poems - exercises from class


The first line of the poem is used as the first letter of each line of the poem:
Mother to Son
Sing the paean of mothers to my son
Incite the strength and sorrow of matriarchal warriors long ago
Nuances that spill clever from your mouth son, mean nothing to me
Gestate the idea that I will triumph your fantasies and you will lose to the ignorance of wisdom

Together we will unite after this battle of misdeeds
Help this boy that fears my love and challenges it
Eloquence awaits him, after he chooses not to succumb to the trash of the city's adjectives

Prejudices of the young against the ripened seem insurmountable
Alienating mother from son once again
Exacting all feelings from seething hate, to serendipitous worship
All is forgiven once the time has passed, the allegiance solidified again
Negotiating our territories until the next crusade

Or is he just a boy that doesn't realize how easy cruel is?
Forget the searing sarcasm that came from my DNA, that would never be tolerated.

Maybe my dad wouldn’t be so cruel, but I disagree.
Or how about my mother run amuck?
The gene that gives us our loquacity
has bred in us a virus, that sometimes seems overreaching,
ever seeking the potential victim.
Random you think? Not really
So ready to strike first, to protect our own.

To all my offspring, be ready.
Origins of my faults are ready on display, I do not choose them for you.

Maybe you can pretend you are the neighbor's child
You are too beautiful to deny our genes and it will be unearthed.

Someday, you’ll realize that you're better then the rest,
only then the good in you will reign, mistakes will be forgotten
Never forget you are my son, my glory on this earth.

Look at what you’ve become!
Look at what you’ve become!
Outgoing young thing, you have no fear
Outrageous slang spews from your lips
Kicking lesser foes to the ground

Admiring boys strut on by, whistle and coo
Tenaciously touching you with their eyes

When did this transformation occur?
Hidden for years by youthful bliss
Awareness of your power slowly begins
To rise and tantalize those around

Young women beg for your attention
Only you choose who rises
Useless drones fall to the wayside
Voices call, but you ignore
Encouraging their worship of you

Bewitching siren whose power
Electrifies and ignites
Come and show the world what you have become
Outlandish and wild one day
Moral and melancholy the next
Enjoy all that you will become

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Creative Writing Course - My present to Kathy because I love her



PHOTOGRAPH - Amy Clark

The image was a mere illusion of what it use to represent. The photo had set on the windowsill for the last twenty years at the cabin. It had born the brunt of the sun’s ultra violet tentacles massaging its surface until it had sucked the ink from each pore. The image was that of the first grandchild, a promise of greatness and potential to be cultivated.

The child was born by emergency C-section. A choice had to be made to save the mother or the child. My Father chose my Mother. I think he was more afraid of losing someone he knew than someone who was only an idea to him. The baby was a dream, a thought that was in the future. His wife was cut open and losing blood fast. He had to make a decision and not waver. He had wavered on every issue in his life so far: college, the army, jobs and getting married. He never had finished anything in his life that had the stamp of respectable mature decision on it. Even the wedding was more about the reception. He liked a big party, a social event where he could tell a good story, smoke cigarettes and have a good stiff drink. The stroking of egos, the laughter and the tears streaming down their faces was their seal of approval of him after a good joke .

So he chose my Mom, but the baby wasn’t about to head out to pasture that quickly. She was a fighter and must of wanted to stay with my Mom. I hope she didn’t overhear the decision, but maybe that made her fight even harder. Imagine hearing that you have entered a world that you didn’t want to enter to begin with, and then be given a death sentence because you were deemed not as important.

They both survived . Both had to stay in the hospital a while longer to get stronger. I think my dad always felt a bit guilty every time he looked at my sister. To be honest, I think everyday he was surprised she was still here.


Inchworms and God
There was no fear blanketing our lives when we were ten. We saw images of a country called Viet Nam on WCCO when we ate dinner on our TV trays from Shell Oil, but that would go away at the turn of a knob. Mr. Gufterson’s son supposedly went to a party and someone had put LSD in his pop, but he was sent away and would never bother us. Macalester College was planning another demonstration, and we could watch unless they brought out the tear gas again or the dogs came with the police. Life was simple then, because if it got uncomfortable, it could be made to go away.

We were all sitting on the curb waiting for the inchworm man to come. That summer millions upon billions of inchworms had infestated the elm trees in the Macalester- Groveland neighborhood. The first truck had gone by warning all kids and pets to go inside, so you wouldn’t get poison on you. It never made us sick. We loved all the clouds of spray the truck would make and we delighted in watching the inchworms drop in masses from the trees. It was like a scene right out of Horror Incorporated. We then played Night of the Living Dead and put the dead inchworms all over us. We loved a good reenactment with the right theatrical props highlighting our talent.

On this particular day of inchworm slaughter, we were in front of our buddies house. Their house was on Stanford and had a better proximity to the street compared to mine that was surrounded by a fence. My buddy’s house also was crazier than ours. They had eight kids, all a year apart and a mother who was nuttier than squirrel with rabies. She alternated between being a long suffering Catholic wife who bore the children dutifully and a mother’s little helper addict who was meaner than a honey badger in pursuit of a cobra. Honey badgers look sweet and cute, but will rip the guts out of anything when hungry or just plain bored. If you never seen one in action, check it out on Youtube and you‘ll be amazed by the sheer savagery. Honey badgers and my buddy’s mom would slice you open if it came down to it. Honey badgers would if they were hungry, my buddy’s mom if you interrupted her soap operas, sat on the wrong coach or ate the last of the Hamburger Helper with potato chips. We never had Hamburger Helper with potato chips at our house, so I got slaughtered with verbal lashings constantly. I loved the new technology breakthroughs they were having in the seventies with food products and preservatives, so I took my beatings gratefully. My mother insisted all those new products such as spaghetti o’s, Trix cereal and Tang were fake foods. Didn’t she know that the astronauts drank Tang everyday and 9 out of 10 essential vitamins and minerals were included with the Trix rabbit? Geez, if she would put down her books and just turn on the TV she would be so much smarter. She was a meat and potatoes eater, a card carrying member of the Guild of Catholic Women Altar and Rosary Society and a book snob. She did not fit into the free and groovy life of 1975.

We were all Catholics in our neighborhood and pretty much knew that God was our savior and he had pretty strict, but decent rules. They all seemed fair enough, so we abided by his rules and skirted around the lying and obeying our elders commandments. We made sure we didn’t kill anyone or covet our neighbor’s wife, but who really in their right mind would want old honey badger herself, my bud’s ma? We worked our beads and went to church and we were all basically just trying to stay out of hell. We were unprepared then, while waiting for the slaughter of the innocent inchworm infestation, when God spoke to us.

The voice boomed from above, “Children stay where you are and look at the ground! Do not look up and question who is speaking to you. This is the Lord who spoke to Moses like in that burning bush with Charleton Heston, all the plagues and that freaky angel of death!“ We all stayed still and looked at the gravel in the gutter in amazement. “Do you really think it’s God or the inchworm man?” said my buddy. “I think it could be God because he tends to come out of nowhere and scare the bejesus out of people.” Above us God started singing Godspell and we sort of hummed along with it. The urge to look up was getting greater and greater. “Let’s take a peek at God” whispered my buddy. “What if we die and we don’t get to watch our Friday night shows. You know this is the night the Brady’s go to Hawaii. I am not missing Greg on a surfboard!” I said with a vengeance. I was totally in love with Greg Brady and maybe Peter. Peter could be kind of weird and his voice was changing, so maybe not that much.

God was done singing Godspell and was on to Nights in White Satin when the police came to a stop in front of us. My buddy put his hands in the air and yelled to the police not to look up. The police looked at us kind of strange and asked what was going on. “We were waiting for the inchworm man to come and God started singing to us and telling us to look at the ground.” my buddy said. “Does God sing to you two dirt heads all the time?” he asked sarcastically. “Well, no. Come to think of it I’ve never really heard his voice. I always thought he sounded like Father Tiffany or Monsignor Steiner, not Peter Frampton.” my buddy said. “Well geniuses, it’s not God. It’s a kid on a roof with a Mr. Microphone, hopped up on goofballs or smokin’ the wacky weed. I suggest you two get on your bikes and go to the park until the street lights come on. Understand?” We jumped on our bikes and pedaled as fast as we could down to Mattocks park and rec.

While we were throwing rocks and talking about what God really would sing if he was on American Bandstand and if he would wear a fringe vest or not, the cop cruiser drove by. My buddy’s oldest brother was in the back swaying back and forth and looking not so distressed by the whole situation. We got back on our bikes and headed back to my house to watch the Brady Bunch. We forgot about my buddy’s brother, drugs, God and the cops. Life was easier with Mike and Carol Brady in Hawaii, so we joined them in front of the console on my living room


Fame

Speak to me vacant prospect.
Where is my muse?
Will it arise like a phoenix
or continue to be the Grail
that eludes and beseeches.

Obscure imp named Fame,
be gone!
He who tugs at my heart and
deceives me with dalliances
and charades of fortune.

I am worn and tired with this amusement of yours.
Your little carnival of my desperation for sale.
Why do you play this game with me?
Leave me alone, if you will not let me win.

I am tired of the glimpses, the illusions of grandeur,
and the eternal fantasies that end in nightmarish rides
through the hell of my ego-centric mind
Abscond from my heart.

I will paint for me and
banish my demons.
Find some other fame monger who will
Pay your price.
I am done.

Early Morning Journey
The early morning dawn holds visions of promise:
Vibrant cobalt skies, hoar frosted dew on the ground,
birds beginning their requiem soliloquies,
and no one awake to stir the pot of despondency.

Inspiration, creativity seething to the mind
brings an introspective, a relevance
to the notions of ingenuity
in solving the mind boggling riddle
that eludes the deduction apparent
by even the basic of apprentices in the game of art.

Monet, Hokusai, Renoir, Picasso, Hopper,
Kadinsky, Van Gough, Michaelangelo
Suffered ragged doubts of depression because
their muse had hopped a bus taking a long
serendipitous journey to visit
the other turpentine linseed oil
saturated fame seekers of ill rebuke
that huddle and amass in small pockets
of decrepit city ghettos and urban communities that
serve as their own Winchester Cathedrals to their
Souls.

I keep walking this morning sojourn with
My faithful Retriever Labrador companion
Who guards me as if I were Guinevere and he, Lancelot.
He knows we are on our daily quest to
solve our continuous conundrum for the day.
We hurry back and hastily apply the layers of acrylic and oil
before the answer slips away and the thief of evening comes
and takes the luminescent light away
to shroud us in our blanket of midnight ebony.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

A Present from Janet

If you just want to watch the movie trailer, you can do so at...
http://www.oneforthemoneyfilm.com/

Enjoy!

Thursday, August 25, 2011

I read this book because it was on the Alex Award winners. Alex awards are given out to adult books that hold teen interest, so they become a pseudo YA book. The story is divided by each sister telling a part and begins with Phillip, their brother's perspective. My interest would come and go, but I wanted to se how it would end. I thought the ending would be tragic, but it ends more like an episode on the Kardshians. Lots of pop culture references in the novel, so I don't know how long the story will hold relevance in this fast changing world.

Monday, August 22, 2011

A Visit From the Goon Squad - a weird,yet compelling tale of people's lives

A Visit from the Goon Squad
That might be exactly the point Egan is aiming for. Goon Squad expertly captures the spirit of our times, where technology increases the number of people's relationships even as it renders them shallower, and "everybody sounds stoned, because they're e-mailing people the whole time they're talking to you."

Jenny Shank

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Eddie - Target Kitty

Eddie is actually quite small and that is why he can lounge so well in a bowl

He loves to eat flowers and is quite destructive to plants
He adores me and calls me his angel!!!
XXOO Eddie



















Sammy's Room






Faerie Houses - My new passion!!!!



Monday, August 1, 2011

Cool Pics from the Cabim


Kitty Mayhem!!!!


What a great event for Joe!  He loved the cats and all their expertise in Rock N' Roll and acrobats!
So innovative! Remember it is cats, not dogs, so you know she is really talented training these cats. Cats do not like to learn anything that they do not want to know. They especially do not like to be told what to do.

Cat costume is the give away for the lady all in charge.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

I WON AT SKINNER'S BINGO!!!!!!

http://www.skinnersmn.com/
919 Randolph Avenue Saint Paul 651-291-0146

Thursday BINGO NightFREE BINGO from 8-10PM. $50 progressive pot Great drink specials and prizes
$2.50 Rails and Domestics 8:00-10:00
About the Owners
Pete_ZaPete and Molly Skinner are life-long Saint Paul residents and have owned Skinner's since July of 2000. Pete has cooked at perhaps twenty different bars and restaurants in Saint Paul and knows his way around the grill. In fact, Pete met Molly while they were both working at the Tower Tap (now Goby's) on Snelling. Pete and Molly had been looking to open their own place for many years when the opportunity to open Skinner's Pub came along, and they continue to work to improve the place and make sure everyone has a great time when they are here.
exterior1
About the Building
This location has been the home to bars and restaurants for many years; previously operating as Novak's, Sonny's, and Paul's Place. It is truly a neighborhood institution. For much of the early part of the twentieth century, the dining room was the home of the Vogelgesang Grocery Store.

General Information
Reservations: not needed
Payment Accepted: Cash, Visa, and MasterCard (ATM available onsite)
Attire: casual
Kids welcome?: absolutely! Check out our kids menu

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus -Sonya Sones

One word - FABULOUS!! Free verse at it's best. A compulsive read that I read in 2 hours(and it is 417 pages). I could totally relate to the heroine of the story and feel her emotions. Laugh, cry, get scared and mad with Holly.
Sonya Sones has been on of my favorites since, What My Mother Doesn't Know. She is a poet of greatness and a force to be reckon with.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Let's Cheer Them On! Go girls and GOOD LUCK!!

This was sent to me from my friend Sandy. I hope one of them wins. I LOVE the State Fair and all the cool traditions.


From my cousin Dean and wife Elizabeth - their two girls are up for Princess Kay of the Milky Way at the Minnesota State Fair - see the link below.
Sandy

 

2010 Princess Kay of the Milky Way sits

for a butter sculptor at the Minnesota State Fair

Johnsons are history-making dairy princesses

By Heather Thorstensen
hthorstensen@agrinews.com

HERON LAKE, Minn. — April and Chelsey Johnson are cheering each other on to be the next state dairy princess.

They are the first sisters in the 58-year history of Princess Kay of the Milky Way program to be finalists at the same time. Ten other county dairy princesses join them in the running. The selection will be made Aug. 24.

The Johnson sisters of Heron Lake are Cottonwood County dairy princesses who grew up sharing milking duties and working on 4-H projects. They competed together on the team that took first place in the state during the 2009 4-H senior dairy project bowl.

If one of them is selected to be Princess Kay, they say they will both be happy that their county, family and the state's dairy farms are represented. The other sister would still get to share in the experience as they help during the year-long reign.

"We're competing for each other rather than against each other," said April.

April, 21, is the eldest of Dean and Elizabeth Johnson's four children. She is the detail-oriented one who started keeping records on her family's dairy cows at age 8 or 9.Chelsey, 19, is the tomboy who liked running through the feed alley, dodging cows to improve her agility and shooting baskets in front of the barn between chores.

For three years, Chelsey has helped her older sister prepare for the May event, where Princess Kay hopefuls are narrowed down to 12 finalists. When they decided to run together this year, they met in Chelsey's room every night once they were on summer break from college to practice media interviews and their speeches.

When April was named a finalist, Chelsey uncharacteristically shed happy tears.

"It's something that I've always seen in the future for her," said Chelsey. "With her passion for dairy and her leadership abilities, I think she would do an excellent job.

For April, being crowned Princess Kay would be an honor, a chance partly to show — though they're few — that there still are dairy farmers in Cottonwood County. There hasn't been a Princess Kay from the county since the 1980s, she said.

April was president of the Windom FFA chapter, Springfield Sparklers 4-H Club and Cottonwood County 4-H Federation. Chelsey also became president for those groups, saying it's because of April's example that she felt comfortable taking them on.

But April says Chelsey is also a guide for her in some ways. It's Chelsey she turns to for support and encouragement.

"I think Chelsey would be an excellent Princess Kay of the Milky Way," said April, "because she's an excellent communicator, really good at writing and delivering speeches in a really creative manner. And also, going into ag communications, I think this role would be something that would really benefit her in any future career path that she would choose."

Chelsey wants to be Princess Kay for a chance of self-improvement and to continue developing her skills as a dairy promoter.

A sophomore at South Dakota State University, she is studying agriculture communications and English education. She plans to be an ag journalist or a writing teacher. She is a historian for SDSU's dairy club, of which April is president.

April is a senior at the university, double majoring in dairy production and agricultural education. Her hope is to work for an AI company, as a 4-H program coordinator or as an agriculture teacher.

April is driving 1,500 miles a week across the Midwest this summer as an Alta Genetics intern, picking out sire's daughters to be photographed for a catalog. Meanwhile, Chelsey has been leading orientations on the SDSU campus and working as a nanny for a local family.

The Johnson family milks approximately 80 cows, mostly Holsteins, and raise their own replacement heifers. They farm about 320 acres of corn, soybeans and alfalfa. Both of April and Chelsey's parents grew up on dairy farms; the family lives now on the farm where their father grew up. Their mother's 10 siblings are all farming in the area.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Very Healthy Food that Only I Seem to Enjoy

Here is a review of the new cafe in St Paul from the Mpls St Paul mag. This is our family's review: Mom - YEAH!!! Great, fresh and tasty. Dad - ick, bland and I am still starving. Son - totally gross and can we please now go get Chipotle?
 
 They have the nutrients listed for each item which I like. My husband and son will never return. I will walk down with my dog Bear and dine solo I believe some day again.
 
 

Thursday, July 14, 2011

A Beautiful and Poignant Visual Tale - Share it


http://www.porcelainunicorn.com/

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Saints Game

A fun night of baseball at Midway Stadium. The Midway kids got to play on the field and take batting, pitching and fielding practice. Then we watched a good game with a 4-4 tie. We then had a quick and fun bus ride home.  A great night with Joe.