 Friday, January 26, 2007
Last week ... or maybe it was two weeks ago ...
If it was that long ago, what took you so long to tell us about it?
Yeah. Sorry. My bad. Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah... about 60 weeks ago, I was getting coffee with the editor of Writing magazine. I have a tendency to talk her ear off in almost every situation and this day (about 537 weeks ago) was no different. I was telling her how much I was enjoying a book I was reading. The book in question was A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving. We had both seen the author read from this exact novel at an event in New York City a while back (you can read about that night here) and she had bought me the book for my birthday.
ANYWAY...
As we're talking and preparing our coffee, a woman next to us overhears the conversation and jumps in.
"I love that book," she says. "I've always had a thing for John Irving." (I assume she meant John Irving's writing, but then again, what do I know? Maybe she's in love with the guy?)
So OK. Now we're talking to some stranger about literature. Awesome! I love it when this happens!
"You should really read the book though," she says. "The book is so much better than the movie."
Huh?
At this point, I surmised that her eavesdropping faculties had malfunctioned. She had heard us wrong. I was talking about the book, A Prayer for Owen Meany, not the movie it was adapted into, Simon Birch. How she made this mistake, I have no idea because I must have said "Owen Meany" at least 3 or 4 times before she spoke up.
Side note - As if this rant isn't confusing enough to follow, try making sense of this: Why would Hollywood disregard a perfectly good character name like "Owen Meany" and change it to "Simon Birch"? What could those west coast fat cats possibly have to gain from committing such a travesty? Show me the marketing research that says "Simon Birch" is a more suitable name for a tiny dude with a high-pitch squeal of a voice than "Owen Meany" and I will show you faulty research. Come on. It's not even a contest.
Side note's Side note - OK, I have an answer to the madness. I just checked IMDB.com, and according to them, "Author John Irving doubted his novel, A Prayer for Owen Meaney, could ever be turned into a film, and sold the screen rights on the condition it not be released under the same name as his book." Well alrighty then! This, I can live with!
Now back to the game...
So here's my problem with this woman that got coffee with us and, consequently, with pretty much everybody in America: if we happen to overhear someone talking about a book, we automatically assume, they are talking about a movie. I don't blame the woman for her oversight. I've probably been guilty of this, too. And I'm not a complete snob. There are plenty of films out there that, I'm sure, are much better than the books they come from. I just can't think of any right now.
Argh. I think I had a point originally, and I think it was a good one. But it is obvious now that I have completely lost it and am even coming off as some kind of angry literary purist jerk. I suppose that's what I get for waiting 900 bizillion weeks to write about it.
Wow. Sorry.
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Starting over...
I like A Prayer for Owen Meany. It is a book that I have enjoyed reading. Owen is a fascinating character. And the story is warm.
The End
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 Wednesday, January 24, 2007
According to a well-worn proverb, a picture is worth a thousand words. In the January 2007 issue of Writing, we published a photograph this photograph in our "I,000 Words" column and asked you: What memory from your own life does this photograph prompt? What places or persons does it remind you of? Write a narrative essay that begins with the words "I remember ..."
Here is one of our favorite submissions. It comes to us from Rachel Ourand, a junior at Huntingtown High School in Huntingtown, MD. When she looked at this image, she was reminded of a photograph on the fourth page of her family album—a picture of a rusty, blue car with the seat pushed up to reveal a melted lunch box on the floor.
I remember it was the first day back from spring break. Aunt Kathy decided to take me and Mandy out to breakfast at Denny’s for the “special occasion” as she liked to call it. I was in a blue dress and Mandy in jeans and a t-shirt. She was going to middle school which is so much superior to my second-grade self. It was OK with me though. I loved Mandy and thought it made her that much cooler. I had a middle schooler to look out for me. What a cousin she was! So I got up and put my pink backpack on the kitchen table. I started the check list. “Pencil?” My aunt asked. “Check.” I answered. “Book?” She always had to make sure everything is in place. “Check.” “Paper?” “Check.” “Folder?” “Check” “OK, I think that’s it. Go put your shoes on. And where is Mandy? Mandy!” She screamed. “Wait! My lunch!” I ran to the fridge. “Oh, yes. How could we ever forget Rachel’s lunch?!” My aunt laughed. It was a very special lunch. I had especially made it the night before. I had a ham and cheese sandwich on “white bread” (at that age I didn’t really know the difference between whole wheat bread and regular bread I just liked to argue that “white bread” was the good kind), a Hi-C juice box, an apple, and lastly a fruit-roll-up. Last time we had fruit-roll-ups my brother, Mike, and Mandy had eaten them all before I got any and fruit-roll-ups were my favorite! So I made sure that the next time we bought them I got one—the first one to be exact. Anyway I set my lunch in my back pack in front of all my books because I didn’t want it to get squished. Mandy came in ready to go and I put on my shoes and tied them. Not too bad may I say for a six year old, double knots and all; I did it on my own. We went outside and walked to the old rusty blue car. I got in the back and set my back pack beside me so as not to hurt my lunch. Then Mandy got in the passenger side and handed me her books. Man! Those things were heavy! I put them on the seat and set my book bag on top of them. “OK, everyone have everything?” my aunt asked. “Yes, Mom. Now, let’s go!” Mandy said. “Rachel, do you have . . .” “Yes, Aunt Kathy. I have underwear.” Man, forget to put on underwear once in your life and they never let it go. I mean it was kindergarten and they had rushed me out of the house even though I kept trying to tell them I didn’t have any on under my dress.
Aunt Kathy started the car and off we went. It was a bright and sunny morning and I keep looking out through the car window for people but I never found any. Next thing I knew the car broke down, not even two minutes from the Denny’s. All we had to do is turn the corner and it was on our left. I could see the end of the road and the turn! The car had enough power for my aunt to pull into someone’s drive way. It was the last house in the neighborhood. My aunt told us to stay in the car and she would go and knock on the door to use the phone and call my uncle. I looked out the windows at the neighborhood and everything was quiet. It was like one of those picture perfect neighborhoods with the ball in the lush green mowed lawns and all the cars neatly parked in their driveways. The only thing missing was the people. The floor of the car started to get warm and I could feel the heat through my shoes. “Mandy?” I asked. “Hmm,” she replied. “Mandy, is the floor hot to you? Because I can feel it and it’s hot.” “Yeah, it is getting warm.” At this point we both were looking at the floor of the car trying to figure out why it was so hot. “Get out the car! Get out the car!” My aunt screamed at us. I looked up and there was smoke coming out from the hood.

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Hi there!
We have one more "Forever in Blue--The Fourth Summer of the Sisterhood" book by Anne Brashares to giveaway. This one isn't signed, but it's brand new and could be yours!
The first person to write to word@weeklyreader.com wins it. Follow these directions exactly and the book is yours:
1) In the subject line, write Pants Book Giveaway. Write it exactly like that. Any misspellings or wrong caps will be ignored.
2) In the body of the email, tell us a story. Make it a good one.
That's it! Come and get it!
Word.

1/31/07 - Editor's note - This book has been given away. But by all means, feel free to tell us a story anyway. And keep looking back here for many more giveaways throughout 2007!
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- Essay by Lauren Walton, Grade 8
Monopoly. Who doesn't love the game? But have you ever thought about the game pieces? Or asked yourself, "Now why do I always choose that old top hat?" Probably not. But I did.
I was in the middle of an intense game of Monopoly. I could either use my remaining $200 to buy the B&O Railroad, giving me a close to finished set (I would need only one more, the Pennsylvania Railroad). Or I could save my money and use it in the future for property. As I sat there, weighing my decision, I looked at all of the odd game pieces I could have chosen from. I could have been a speedy car or a powerful ship. Or perhaps a fashionable purse. But no, I chose a dorky and childish little rocking horse, the old fashioned kind children in the '40s played with. Why had I made such a selection? One can only hope I was choosing at random, for if I truly wanted that piece, it would display a certain speck of insanity. Yes, I am insane! I didn't choose at random, I was the first to get my piece! I had chosen that rocking horse! But why?
Perhaps it was because I longed for my childhood again, where I was allowed to cheat in the game of Monopoly. But that wouldn't make much sense, for when I was little I always chose the iron and set up a random business of my own where the other players (my family of course) could pay me to iron their pink, blue, green, and yellow Monopoly cash. So it couldn't be a desire for memories to be woken up and remembered.
Well, I have always loved horses. Maybe I chose the silly rocking horse so I could pretend I was riding all over the ritzy areas of Boardwalk and Park Place, with the wind whipping at my face, and a sense of freedom flowing through my veins. What am I talking about? I hate horses! Well, not hate, as my mother always says, "Hate is a strong word." But ever since that mangy buckskin sent me flying into the cow patties piled up out in the pasture after bucking me straight and hard, I guess I've never cared for them much. The stench took days to scrub off. No, that can't be it.
Maybe, just maybe, it was to connect on a deeper level with my redneck past. After all, I was born in Arkansas. But wait! I don't really care for rednecks at all! I have grown up in Chicago my whole life, and the only time I've even stepped on a farm in my life was when I was seven! I'll never forget the smell.
After much contemplation, I think I finally discovered my motive for selecting the rocking horse! It wasn't because I wanted to connect with my redneck heritage, or that I love horses, or that I longed for my childhood. It was because it is the one piece that I personally took to biting as a baby, and no one has ever trusted me with any other piece since. Oh, the tragedies in life!
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 Friday, January 19, 2007
Happy Birthday, Mr. Poe!
We hope you enjoyed our Poe extravaganza issue of READ this month. I know we certainly enjoyed putting it together for you. The best part, for me, was getting to interview the man. He had a lot to say and it was really quite an honor to get to speak to him. It's not that often that we get an audience with such a famous dead author. Yes, dead. Mr. Poe is dead. Long live Mr. Poe!
It has been 157 years and 3 months since Edgar Allan Poe has walked the face of the earth. But who's counting, right? Well, even though it's been so long, here's one guy (or gal?) who certainly hasn't forgotten the master of macabre.
A toast! To Mr. Edgar Allan Poe! A man of whom I never did know In life, although I did pretend To meet the man to meet READ's ends
Such is the stuff of silly. I never was a good poet. Wait a minute... POEt? Surely this can't be coincidental! When Edgar (Don't Call Me "Allen") Poe wasn't busy writing the most gruesome and terrifying of stories, he bided his creative time by penning such masterpieces as The Raven, and Annabel Lee (both of which you can read in the current issue of READ). Although Mr. Poe was (and is, and always will be) revered as a great and classic poet, he once was noted as saying, "Most of those who hold high places in our poetical literature are absolute nincompoops." Oh Poe. Oh dear, sweet Edgar Allan Poe.
One of my favorite POEms, is a short little diddy. It goes like so...
In visions of the dark night I have dreamed of joy departed- But a waking dream of life and light Hath left me broken-hearted.
Ah! what is not a dream by day To him whose eyes are cast On things around him with a ray Turned back upon the past?
That holy dream- that holy dream, While all the world were chiding, Hath cheered me as a lovely beam A lonely spirit guiding.
What though that light, thro' storm and night, So trembled from afar- What could there be more purely bright In Truth's day-star?
Ahh. Sigh. Now I have lost my train of thought. That can happen upon reading such a work of art. What would you name this poem? I would name it "A Dream". It's simple. It conveys all. It works. Oh wait. That's what it's called. Gee golly Poe was a smart one! All right then, since I don't want to steal his idea, I guess I'll say that I would call this poem, "Stanley." No no no.
What else? What else? Well, there's TONS of Poe information in our READ issue. Have I mentioned our READ issue yet? It's all about Poe.
"Who?" "Poe." "Who?" "Edgar Allan Poe." "Oh. Poe. Why didn't you say so?" "D'oh!"
Oh hey! OK, so I'm obviously running out of ideas here. That's OK. I've got one more for ya. Although the interview with Mr. Poe in READ magazine is mostly complete and uncut, due to lack of space, there was one question and, subsequently, one answer that was omitted. Hey, lucky you for stopping by here at WORD today! You get the backstage pass! I leave you now with this all too important dialogue:
Me: Soooo, Mr. Poe, tell me, what's death like? Poe: Trust me brother, keep on livin'.
...And then he jumped on his Harley, nailed a killer sweet jump, and rode off into the sunset...
 Oh Poe. You so crazy!!
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