Dewey’s Read-A-Thon: Back-in-the-Day Children’s Book Mini-Challenge

Good morning, readers!

Glad you’ve stopped by. Take a minute. Blink a little. Got those eye drops ready? (I DO.) Good. Now, relax that brain a little, we’re going back in time…

Read-A-Thon has taught me a few things. Namely, 2am is NOT always the best time to pick up a historical epic covering a couple millennia, in itty bitty type. It is a good time to pull some beloved children’s books off the shelf. Helps break up the monotony of plain old adult language. They’ve helped me get through some of the longer hours. Can you say 18pt font, anyone?

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Green Gables, June 2009

I’m an Anne of Green Gables girl. Nothing can beat that imaginative redhead and her crazy adventures. The Boxcar Children, the Ramona books, and Hank the Cowdog were all childhood favorites of mine as well. As for more current titles, I’m a little rusty. It’s been a long time since I perused the children’s and young adult sections of my local bookstore (hello, Children’s Lit course in college that had a 500 book reading requirement).

What were some of your favorite children’s books when you were younger? Do you have any new favorites now that you’re an adult? Have you included any children’s or YA titles in your Read-A-Thon stack this year? Leave a comment and share!

11:00AM Central Time
Random number drawn — 122

Our winner is…

Kate at Read This Book!

I’ll be contacting you for your information, Kate. Congratulations and thanks to everyone for participating!

Enjoy your reading!

This is a mini-challenge for Dewey’s Read-A-Thon. This challenge will be open for entries (comments) for 3 hours. You must be signed up for Read-A-Thon to be eligible. After time is up, comments will close and a winner will be chosen using Random Integer Generator. The prize for this mini-challenge is a grab bag of Christmas/holiday themed titles by Louisa May Alcott, Mary Higgins Clark, and most likely some other folks as I’m fairly certain I’m going to throw in some other fun stuff for you! U.S. residents only, please.

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Read-A-Thon Picks

Quick notes on why I chose my books.

Homeplace by Beth Massie – I picked this up a while back because it’s listed as new Southern Gothic and I eat that stuff up. The short synopsis makes it sound creepy, so I doubt I’ll be reading any of this in the middle of the night.

Beach Music by Pat Conroy – A speech I was witness to by Pat Conroy was a true awakening for me as a writer. He’s got a touch of magic to him. This has just been on the list for a long time.

Sarum by Edward Rutherfurd – Because it’s time that I finished this behemoth. I trudged through some less interesting bits and finally got back into some action. And the arrival of Christianity on the British Isles. So you know it’s getting interesting.

Love That Dog by Sharon Creech – For the moments when everything else is too heavy. A story in poems.

What My Mother Doesn’t Know by Sonya Sones – Another book of prose poems. YA selection that I’ve read before about a young girl and her life at age 12. There’s some deep stuff in this one.

Dearly Devoted Dexter by Jeff Lindsay – The second book in the Dexter series. The first one was decent, but I’m bound and determined to get through this series. I enjoy the TV show and I like to keep up with the differences.

Black Heart, Ivory Bones – An anthology of fairy tales, fictionalized for grown-ups. No idea what I’m getting into here.

Behind You by Jacqueline Woodson – I read the book that came before this when I was in 10th grade, I think. This one has been sitting on my shelf since not long after that.

Life of Pi by Yann Martel – I may be the last human alive who hasn’t ready this. Trying to get into it for a second time.

My Antonia by Willa Cather – Cather is one of my favorite authors. She captures something that I hope my own work will, someday. My Antonia is one of my favorite books to usher in winter.

Salt by Isabel Zuber – The premise sounds very interesting. I’m probably most excited about reading this one. I’ll let you know how it goes.

The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel – A guy I knew in college insisted that I read her work. Never have. Changing that.

Terrains of the Heart and Other Essays on Home by Willie Morris – When I was 7-years-old, I would rent a movie from The Movie House (as our rental place was called back in the day) called “Pirates of the Yazoo.” It was a WonderWorks feature that would sometimes show up on OETA (our PBS affiliate). I loved this movie. Years later I watched My Dog, Skip and noticed a lot of similarities. Because they are the same. It’s the same story, with a few tweaks here and there. Anyway, I’ve always had a soft spot in my heart for Mr. Morris. I think if he were alive I would invite him over for a glass of tea and we would talk about just how much we love our grandmas, and front porches, and the way things used to be. Only he’d remember the way things used to be a lot better than me because by the time I was born Madonna was already on the scene and the world was never the same.

Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater – Re-reading this so everything will be fresh on my mind when I reward myself with Linger for FINISHING THIS READ-A-THON!

The Vigilante’s Bride by Yvonne Harris – A book I picked up for review because it sounded interesting. Love me a good western.

Birthing from Within – Because I’m a little bit of a hippie and I like to be well-informed before I jump in to something ;)

A few last minute additions will be made this evening.

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Getting ready for Read-A-Thon

The books are stacked. The cabinet is full of snacks. I’ve got things ready for my mini-challenge (one of the first ones, so drop by early in the morning on Saturday to join in). And for the first time, I’m going to attempt a full 24 hours. In the past I think I’ve aimed for maybe 12 and usually end up around that much or a little over. The thing is, I have church the next morning so I end up going to bed instead of staying up overnight.

So I’m doing things a little differently. I will be starting sometime on Friday evening (hour TBD), reading through the night and into the morning, possibly grabbing a nap around 10am CST, and continuing on with the Read-A-Thon into the evening. Then, of course, I’ll be tuning in on Sunday morning to cheer on the people who have been awake for more than 24 hours at this point.

Since I’ve never done the full amount of time before, I really have no idea what those last few hours are going to be like. Possibly like the time my dad decided we were going to drive straight through from Oklahoma to Las Vegas in one day and I was so afraid that I was going to die in a fiery crash in the middle of the Nevada desert that I wouldn’t go to sleep. This fear did have some basis — I was the last person in the vehicle who was awake other than the driver and it was 2am. There’s usually some reason behind my seemingly insane decisions.

Anyway, here are my books!

my Read-A-Thon stack

I’ll go into more detail about why I chose them and explain why there are so many of them later!

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The Memory Cannot Be (R)erased

I was born with a mutated SgP gene that leaves me with a heightened sense in this area and just a touch of compulsive behavior.

What’s SgP, you ask? Spelling and grammar police, of course.

Also, that is all a lie and genetic mutation is no joking matter. I apologize.

But seriously, ever since I was a little kid it was like I thought I was placed on this earth to fix all the problems. That’s probably why I had moments where I disliked Jack Shepherd’s character on LOST so. stinking. much. You tend to dislike in others what you see as your own faults. Which means I’m probably a green-eyed megalomaniac, but I digress.

My compulsion to “fix” first manifested itself in the realm of spelling, grammar, and correct pronunciation. Oh, and song lyrics. I won’t say who, but I know someone who thinks Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes’ “Love Lift Us Up Where We Belong” is a hymn and changes the lyrics to accommodate that. They also thought it would be cute to order “potato wedgies” for me at KFC when I was 12. Then I had to explain what a wedgie was. And this may have been one of my grandparents. That’s all I’m saying.

Now, in first grade there weren’t a ton of things I knew how to spell (I had my fair share of the basics down, like most of my peers), but I did know how to talk. (Okay, except when it came to the word “volleyball.” I’m fairly certain that I thought it was called “bally-ball” until I was in 5th grade. And that ended in embarrassment.) There was always chatter at our lunch table.

“Yay, we’re having busketti today!”
“It’s SPUH-getti, y’all guys.”
“Could you please pass me a nackin?”
“Yes, I will hand you a NAP-kin.”

It’s a wonder I had any friends.

After a while though, it really starts to get to a young obsessive-compulsive and eventually, I came unglued. Over the word “eraser.”

“This reraser doesn’t work on pen.”
“[Kindergarten best friend's name hidden to protect the innocent], it’s EEEEE-RASER. Not ‘reraser’. There is no ‘r’ at the beginning.”
[She crossed her arms, stuck her nose in the air, and let out a little "Hmph!"]
“You are just saying that because your name starts with a ‘E’.”

*blink*
*blink*

And I think, perhaps, I’ve just uncovered the moment that I gave up all hope for my generation.

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Free-for-all Q&A

I’ve changed the comment settings and for the next day or so I will be allowing anonymous comments. I thought I would do this as I prepare to embark on a storytelling series that may prove to be a doozy. If there’s anything you’ve ever wondered about me and my husband’s courtship, how we met, or any other details from the early days of our relationship (which I pretty much left out compeltely around here), now is the time to ask them! (And you’ll be helping me a bunch, too.) It doesn’t have to be about that. This Q&A is open for any topic, within reason.

So — the phone lines are open! Ask away!

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