Saturday, September 01, 2007

Two years ago today, WORD was born.


When you break it down into weeks (104), it seems like a lot. Or maybe it doesn't. It's hard to say, really. I'm not going to attempt to add up the days because 365 X 2 is no walk in the park... wait... it's 730. I think. Whatever. Not important.

What is important is that you enjoy your time here. If you're just starting your school year and you have just received your first issue of READ magazine, how did we do? Did you read Bad Blood? It's a story about Jarrod, a kid who swindles an old lady out of a car. Well, it's about much more than that, but it's all in the context.

Or maybe you've just read through your first issue of Writing magazine? How was it? How did you like the article called Help! I Hate Writing! Did it help? We'd love to know.

Here on WORD, everyone is welcome. This blog is an extension of both READ and Writing magazines. Feel free to stop by any time and leave us a comment under any post. You can browse through the archives to the right and see what we've been up to the last 104 weeks. You can even email us your own writing! Send your poems, short stories, and essays to word@weeklyreader.com. We post a lot of student writing on this board and sometimes, we even publish your writing in our magazines!

So welcome back to school. Stop by our bloggy often. We update it several times a week with author news, interviews, book reviews, and much much more! Let us know if we can help you out in any and all things literary.

Oh yeah, and WORD also has a myspace page at www.myspace.com/wordblog. You, too, could be WORD's friend!

See you soon.

Word.


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 9/1/2007
3:45 PM
 Friday, August 31, 2007

It's Labor Day weekend, and for many of us, that marks the unofficial end of summer and the beginning of the school year. I know that many of you began your school year last week, or even two or three weeks ago, depending on where you live in the country. Different regions start at different times for reasons of climate and local custom. But here in the Northeast, Labor Day traditionally tolls the end of summer vacation.

 

You might be surprised to know that adults continue to think this way long after they leave school behind. Those of us who work all summer long still can't seem to get used to it. It seems unnatural. Our biorhythms were set during our childhood years and decades of adulthood can't change it.

 

Summer is for being outdoors, for nonrequired reading, for living off the clock, for experiencing life in ways that the classroom (or the office) don't allow. It's for play and exploration and daydreaming and night sky gazing. Summer is for water--the salty seashore, the crisp mountain lake, the backyard pool, the lawn sprinkler, or even the city fire hydrant if that's what you've got.

 

Is this what summer's really about, or am I being selective and nostalgic? I know; some of you had to spend summer in school. You had to tackle required summer reading. Maybe you spent long, empty days playing video games and doing nothing much.

 

Tell us about your summer and what it means to you. Is it a special season that society should value and preserve as time apart from the usual? Or is it just the hottest time of year and nothing more?


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Debbie    Posted by
Debbie
on 8/31/2007
6:07 PM
 Thursday, August 30, 2007

The following entry was written by Audra Pace. Audra is our new Associate Editor here at READ and Writing magazines. Hopefully soon we will have a silly caricature and bio for her. For now, just her words will have to do...

Happy birthday, Mary Shelley!

 

Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein, turns 210 today.  Even though she's not around to celebrate, we can at least celebrate her groundbreaking body of work.


Most everyone knows the story of Dr. Frankenstein, the mad scientist who attempts to create life but instead realizes he has royally messed with nature. The novel has often been viewed as a comment on the scientists of the Industrial Revolution, who perhaps bit off more than they could chew technologically.

 

Mary was a writer during the Romantic era, and eventually married a Romantic poet, Percy Shelley. (How Romantic!) She grew up with Romanticism--her academic father was close friends with Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth. It is rumored that she once hid under a couch in her parlor to hear Coleridge read his famous "Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Can you blame her? Who hasn't stayed up past their bedtime to get their fill of Romantic poetry?

 

Frankenstein was originally published anonymously to protect the story (and Mary) from the nasty criticism that her gender would inevitably earn her. Mary was the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft, the 18th century proto-feminist who authored "The Vindication of the Rights of Woman." So, I guess we can see where Ms. Shelley got her gumption. It has taken all the way until half way through the 20th century for Mary to be credited as influential a member of the Romantic era as her colleagues (Wordsworth, Byron, her own husband, et al). So thanks for hanging in there Mary; we at READ know who wears the literary pants in your clan. And, once again, Happy Birthday!


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 8/30/2007
8:47 PM
 Wednesday, August 29, 2007

I never thought I'd see the day, but MTV is going intellectual on us! Apparently, MtvU (the MTV station for colleges) has picked its first poet laureate.

John Ashbery, 80, will now have his work used as promotional material for the MTV station. This is a really cool honor, but it's certainly not the first for Ashbery. He's won almost every award associated with poetry. He's even won a Pulitzer!

His poems are often filled with humor, which seems perfect for the MTV crowd.

Lines from Ashbery's poems will be used to hopefully get more people interested in poetry.

Well, all of us here at WORD know how cool poetry is. Yay to MTV for realizing it as well.


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Jessica    Posted by
Jessica
on 8/29/2007
4:23 PM
 Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Last week I was on vacation in Maine (it's this whole other state up north). The water was frigid but the weather was warm. The beach was sandy and the books were... gritty. For some reason, I decided to read two very upsetting novels. Don't get me wrong, they were both entertaining and engaging, but they were also not exactly what you would call "beach books".

A Thousand Splendid Suns
-Khaled Hosseini

I saw Mr. Hosseini speak last year at The National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. Back then, he was talking about his first novel, The Kite Runner. What a book that was! Now, in A Thousand Splendid Suns, Hosseini explores the female perspective of growing up in war-torn Afghanistan.

The day to day suffering of two women, Mariam and Laila, is written with just the right amount of sympathy that the reader feels pity, anger, and sorrow all at once. At the hands of uncaring fathers and violent husbands, Mariam and Laila have this in common: they have suffered greatly in their lives.

Together these two women from different generations bond together to find some solace in a world where women must hide their faces in the presence of men, where rockets fall from the sky and obliterate life, and where few people question the iron fists of dictators and terrorists that rule by spreading death and fear.

So no, it is not what I would call a "happy-time, fun, summer book". But it certainly is an extraordinary read.

Watch a video of Hosseini talking about A Thousand Splendid Suns.

Read an excerpt of A Thousand Splendid Suns.


In Cold Blood
-Truman Capote

Phillip Seymour Hoffman won an Oscar for his portrayal of Truman Capote in the 2005 film, Capote. Before I ever saw that movie, I knew about In Cold BloodThe book has been sitting in my bookshelf for years. I knew what it was about: a murder case from 1959 where a family of four was brutally attacked and killed in their home in the middle of the night. That's about all I knew. But it was enough to turn me away. Why would I want to read something like that? Why would anyone?

Because it is true.

The title alone is enough to chill your bones. If you can get past that to page 1, there's no turning back. Capote brings you immediately into the peaceful town of Holcomb, Kansas and introduces the Clutter family. The father, Herbert is well-respected and owns a prosperous farm. His wife, Bonnie, though prone to bouts of depression was a loving mother to her four children, Eveanna, Beverly, Kenyon, and Nancy. Eveanna and Beverly had moved out in 1959. Kenyon and Nancy were not so lucky.

The book explores every detail of the horrible crime. Capote went to Holcomb after the murders and spoke to just about everyone in town, from the chief of police to the regular Joe at the coffee shop. It was the author's intent to paint a picture of the All-American family in the All-American town and show how they were viciously wiped from existence by two, unfeeling killers running from their own unfortunate pasts.

If you're looking for a book with resolution, this is not it. In Cold Blood is a case study, certainly not a "happily ever after". When you're done with it, you'll definitely want to double check the locks on your doors before going to bed, and you'll feel compelled to hold your loved ones even tighter.

So no, it is not what I would call a "happy-time, fun, summer book". But it certainly is an extraordinary read.


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Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 8/28/2007
1:44 PM


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