Friday, November 02, 2007

- A poem by Jared Newman, Grade 5

"Quirayen! Quirayen!" They call from the trees,
Those wild-eyed hawks, those warrior bees.
And yet still my life is so glum
Here in the mountains with tips colored plum.

Chickadees gossip, and beavers build dams--
While I sit with my pack eating fresh hunted lamb.
I am Quirayen! Hear the Earth cry;
The sound of my name makes men shout "Why?"

Trees quake, when my pack stars to trot,
Hedgehogs curl up, and leaves start to rot.
Mother bears back away when I move up,
I am the king from buffalo to pup!

I am a wolf! Hear my great howl!
Watch my teeth bite, hear my pitiless growl!
My noble derision conquers all predators;
I share all my game-- there's no mine, there's no yours.

A mantle of shade spread fast overhead,
A howl of despair told me it was my time to lead.
I gathered my pack, and gave them a nod,
That strange howl said something, something quite odd.

Voles awoke at the lament from a long hibernation.
It was the wolf, with which I had a confrontation.
His eyes were blood red, and his teeth showed in his foam-covered mouth,
It was a wolf that I had met in my youth.

The grass tinted red with the blood of his foe,
I saw in his eye he showed anything but woe.
The grass on the fields waved in a zephyr.
The grass spoke to me, as if in a letter.

"Quirayen, Quirayen, your realm is in danger,
Be on your best guard and expect something stranger.
Look for the red eyes, and dark silhouette,
Fight him and live on, and never will you fret."

The spirit of Yellowstone spoke its great augury.
I looked on the psychotic wolf, my pack as the jury.
With soul a shield and hostile howl I engaged in vile battle
I stood at bay to his viscous strike, and didn't rattle.

The contention begun with his teeth into muscle;
I struck back with a bolt of Zeus's hustle.
His teeth were stuck there in my jugular.
My pack moved in and struck my foe with blazing thunder.

A blow of such force couldn't be lethal,
My pack finished the fugitive off in a way very regal.
I died three moons later, this my story I recite from my grave,
A story that is never to ever bring shame,

He wanted my position in the wolf clan.
Greed, something that happens to many a man--
He lost that conflict, and I displayed true virtue,
The wolves call me Quirayen, but Qui'martyr too.

"Qui'martyr! Qui'martyr!" They call from the ground,
Those wild-eyed wolves, those warrior hounds.
And with this story I spoke with a moral so bold,
May it always warn animals of the evil I told.


# (5)#
StudentWriter    Posted by
StudentWriter
on 11/2/2007
4:57 PM
 Thursday, November 01, 2007

I'd like to report a crime.

Not a murder or anything. No, no. Nothing like that. But a crime against decency.

Have you read Gone With the Wind? If you haven't, you should. It is only the greatest book ever! No lie. The. Greatest. Book. Ever. It's about a million pages long, but it's got romance and drama and passion. The story of a ... OK, I don't even want to spoil it for you if you haven't read it. You just have to read it. It's that good. Even if you haven't read it, or seen the amazing movie, I'm sure you can quote from it. Ever said, "As God as my witness, I'll never be hungry again"? You have, don't deny it. 

In the 90's someone felt it was necessary to write a sequel, called Scarlett. This was not the greatest book ever. It probably wasn't even the greatest book of the week. Scarlett told what happened to Scarlett O'Hara after everything that happened in the first book.

Meh.

I mean, yeah, I read it because I loved GWTW. But it was completely unnecessary. It wasn't even by the same author, because, well, Margaret Mitchell, GWTW's author, was dead. For almost 50 years. But I digress.

So, after we thought we could all put this Scarlett mess behind us and just enjoy GWTW, they have to go and do it again. According to an article on CNN, Daniel McCaig, a former advertising copywriter turned Virginian sheep herder and supposed Civil War "expert" wrote another sequel (really prequel, actually, really none of those things, I don't know). This time it's from Rhett's point of view, and it's called, obviously, Rhett. Rhett Butler is Scarlett O'Hara's love ... never mind. Read GWTW if you don't know who Rhett Butler is.

I am not happy.

I'm sure it'll be decent. And I'm sure I'll read it. But why? Why? Why take away even more from GWTW?

Well, fiddle-dee-dee!

Are you excited for this book? Do you like reading stories from other characters' points of view?

Or are you like me, and when you heard of this you just thought, "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a ..."


# (3)#
Jessica    Posted by
Jessica
on 11/1/2007
4:21 PM
 Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Since we started the Halloween issue, way back in August (Yep, takes that long to birth a magazine. Weird, huh?) I have researched more about Frankenstein and Mary Shelley than I imagined possible.

Then I found this:

Frankenstein, A Cultural History is a new account of Frankenstein as a cultural concept. During my research I learned an awful lot about Mary Shelley's novel, but neglected to recognize what makes it is such a masterpiece. Of course! Frankenstein is everywhere! The western world is culturally obsessed with this icon. The book’s author, Susan Tyler Hitchcock, says it best:

"[Frankenstein is] in our bookstores, on our film and television screens, from morning cartoons to wee-hours rerun movies. He plays roles in advertising and political debate, he appears at public library story hours and on graduate-level reading lists. He is both a joke and a profound ethical dilemma."

The book examines step by step how Frankenstein has changed and evolved as a figure in our culture. She looks at how Dickens mentions “Frankenstein,” and explores the mid 19th century meaning of the term. At the time, “Frankenstein” was a colloquialism for a misguided idea. How appropriate.

She also moves the comedic aspects of Frankenstein. She mentions Herman Munster, from the classic television show, The Munsters. Clearly, this popular version isn't the scary and tortured creature Mary Shelley intended.

Hitchcock does ultimately return to Mary Shelley's intent. But I am left thinking about the million embodiments of Frankenstein I've encountered in my life. It's Halloween, which is hands down my favorite day of the year, and I wonder how many Frankensteins I will pass tonight. An 8-year-old sugar-crazed one? Perhaps a tall, green, and handsome version? I hope to pass someone who has really tapped into the text, and resembles the saddened, burdened, and abandoned creature that Shelley originally cast out into the literary world, the creature that has transfixed readers for almost two centuries. Whatever Frankenstein I find (and I will find one), I will be satisfied to know that he is evidence of the lasting power literature has over culture.


# #
Audra    Posted by
Audra
on 10/31/2007
3:34 PM
 Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Christopher Paolini's publishing company, Knopf Children's announced today that the third book in his Inheritance series will be released on September 23, 2008. So that gives you a little under 11 months to read Eragon and Eldest if you haven't already done so.

"I plotted out the Inheritance series as a trilogy nine years ago, when I was fifteen." Paolini told the press. "At that time, I never imagined I'd write all three books, much less that they would be published. When I finally delved into Book Three, it soon became obvious that the remainder of the story was far too big to fit in one volume. Having spent so long thinking about the series as a trilogy, it was difficult for me to realize that, in order to be true to my characters and to address all of the plot points and unanswered questions Eragon and Eldest raised, I needed to split the end of the series into two books."

I guess that means we can look forward to four complete novels in this famous Dragon series. What's that called? A quadology?


# (2)#
Bryon    Posted by
Bryon
on 10/30/2007
1:01 PM


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