The Life Choices Write Tag

I decided that I wanted to do the Life Choices Write Tag, where we talk about one of our works in progress.  I have several WIPs at the moment, all in various stages.  I originally was going to do this tag with the NaNoWriMo book that I’m planning, but I think I’ll just answer those questions to myself, for now, because I don’t even have all the main characters named yet!  I have a pretty good idea of where that story is going, but I’m still planning it.  Instead, I’ll be talking about Hero, which is a Legend fanfic… my first draft is at least 2/3 done, but I know exactly where the end of the story is headed.

RULES

  • Thank the person who tagged you but also link back to the original post(I want to see all your lovely answers, people!)

I found this tag over at Drizzle and Hurricane books.

  • Provide a short description of your WIP/story!

Hero is a continuation of the Legend trilogy written by Marie Lu.  It is not canon with Life After Legend or Life After Legend 2 (oops, did I just give something away that I wasn’t supposed to ;-)?  It’s going to be one of the Wildcard pre-order gifts.  Penguin Teen talked about it in a video they put out on Friday).

Anyway, Day, now going by Daniel again, returns back to the Republic with his brother Eden.  He runs into June on his first day there, and ends up going to her 27th birthday party.  Daniel of course is interested in her right away, but there’s one small problem… she has a 10 year old boy.  The party pretty much ends when the boy, John, unwittingly announces that his dad is Day.  Everybody has to get over that little snag, but after they all get to know each other, John is kidnapped.  They have to rescue him, but after they find him, they also find someone else that needs their help…

  • This is pretty focused on main characters but don’t hesitate to use several characters for the answers if you want to! (We want to get to know as many of your characters as possible)

Just for clarification… I’m using the questions in the original form, but I never consider Day, June, Tess, Pascao, or any of the original Legend characters to be “my” characters.  I’m just borrowing them.  John (the boy), Rosie, and some of the other assorted characters in the story are mine, because I made them.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Where does your main character (MC) live? Were they born there or did they move to that place?

This story has three Point of View (POV) characters, plus Rosie, a girl that John runs into after he is kidnapped.  Daniel, June, and John were all born in Los Angeles, CA, while Rosie was born in Salina, Kansas (in the Colonies).  Daniel lives in Antarctica for the first chapter, but for the rest of the story he lives in Los Angeles, where June and John live for the entire story.  Rosie lives in Salina, Kansas, until she moves to Los Angeles.

Does your MC have a dream career? What (if anything) stops them from pursuing it?

Daniel and June are both military people.  They are pursuing their dream careers.  John and Rosie are too young to think about their dream careers… and up until now, Rosie has been too busy trying to survive to even think about a career.

Did any of your characters ever go against their parents/family’s wishes? How did that change their relationship?

Daniel and June’s parents are dead, so there’s nothing happening there.  Rosie did run away from home… but her father was a child molester that had killed her mother, so I really don’t blame her.  She no longer has or desires a relationship with her father.  She doesn’t even know if he’s alive or is in jail or anything like that.

If faced with their greatest fear – would your MC try to overcome it or run the other way?

I think they all have to try to overcome their fears out of necessity.  Their biggest instinct is survival, and, in Daniel and June’s case, the survival of their son.

Did any character have to cut a person out of their life? Why?

Rosie had to cut her father out of her life.  He was so toxic that it’s better to live on the streets than to live with him.

What is your main character’s biggest regret?

In hindsight, June probably regrets not contacting Daniel sooner.  There wasn’t much they could do to prevent the kidnapping, however; it wasn’t a random kidnapping.

Which character is most likely going to help a stranger, even if they got nothing out of it in return?

Daniel.

If your character got good/bad news, who would be the person they first tell?

At the beginning of our story, Daniel would tell his brother, Eden.  June would probably tell Tess, and John would probably tell his best friend, Tanis.  Rosie really has nobody at the beginning of the story, but later on, she’d probably tell John.

BONUS: Make an aesthetic for your MCs life if there had been no obstacles (money, geographical, etc.) and they had everything they wanted. (It is up to you if you want to explain it or not!)

I’m skipping this one.

I TAG THEE
If you want to do this, there is no obligation!

I’m not going to tag anybody, but if you want to do this one, then go ahead.  🙂

Favorite Bookish Websites and Blogs: Top Ten Tuesday

It’s Top Ten Tuesday again, and today’s topic is “Favorite Book Blogs/Bookish Web Sites”.  For today, I’d like to take a journey back in time… back to some of my favorite bookish web sites to the present, with a few blogs.  While I can’t really say that I’ve developed a list of absolute favorite bookish blogs yet, I’ll randomly include some that I’ve seen and tend to visit regularly.  As always, Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl.

Amazon logoIf I didn’t include Amazon.com, then I’d be leaving out one of my favorite bookish web sites.  They have some amazing Kindle deals… like the other day, I got One Thousand Perfect Notes for just $.99!  I still haven’t had the chance to read it yet, but I cannot pass up sales like that.  I love to pre-order books from my favorite authors and see them sitting in my mailbox on release day.

Archive of Our Own (AO3):  Several years ago, I had just finished the Divergent Series.  I read most of the three books in three days, and I went to bed devastated… but even that night, I refused to believe the ending.  The next morning, I started looking for alternative endings to Allegiant, and I stumbled upon AO3… and fanfiction in general.  Never mind that I had actually written two fanfic novellas in high school without realizing it.  But AO3 started me on a journey that has taken me on the path to where I am today.  At the moment, I keep two AO3 tabs open on my browser almost all of the time.

My local library:  While I’m sure that the Pikes Peak Library district is not of much interest to people outside of the Colorado Springs area, I would be dishonest if I made a list of my favorite bookish web sites without including it.  I’m here almost every day.  I currently have about a dozen books on hold, and check to see the progress of these holds regularly.  Plus, there’s so much that goes on at the library.

While theoretically, I could place Goodreads right after Amazon.com on my bookish journey back into time (I’ve been a member since April of 2013), I’m placing it here because I didn’t take advantage of its amazing goodness as much as I should have until earlier this year.  I had just finished reading The Fates Divide and was looking for another fun book to read, and I ran across their Listopia list of YA Novels of 2018.  You mean there’s 960 YA novels coming out in this year alone?  And they already know that Marie Lu is coming out with another book next year?  I was blown away.  So… I started clicking around, finding some of the popular books to read… but some of them are the third or sixth in a series, so I have to start with the first one (of course)… and I’m finding all of these new books to read… and I still haven’t recovered yet.  Like Amazon and AO3, I almost always have a Goodreads tab open now.

Now we’re almost to the present day, where I can talk about a few really nice blogs that I’ve found.  I found NetGalley shortly after I was blown away by how awesome Goodreads actually is.  You mean that I can actually read some books before they’re released to the public?  I don’t even have to pay for them?  It was around that time that I decided to once again start posting regularly to this blog and focus on book reviews.  After all, if my book blog is doing well enough, I’ll be able to read some of these really cool books early!

In the process, I’ve discovered that this book blog might also be able to help me as an author.  I’ve been a writer for nearly my entire life.  I went to the Young Author’s conference in my local area in both 3rd and 5th grade.  I won NaNoWriMo in 2014 with my fanfic, Dauntless.  But all of this reading and being around book bloggers and authors has inspired me.  Yes, my planned NaNoWriMo novel for this fall is technically a fanfic of a fanfic, but it’s really exciting me, and unlike Dauntless, which is basically an alternate history of Insurgent where Tris chose Abnegation instead of Dauntless, this is morphing into a brand new story.

All of the above web sites are leading me into dreams that I haven’t thought much about since high school (or perhaps before that, even).

Which leads me to the last five bookish web sites for Top Ten Tuesday.  These are some awesome blogs I’ve been reading.  There are so many more, but I can only pick a few… so please realize that I might love your web site as well, and not have room for it here.  These aren’t even a top five, they’re just some that I’m thinking about at the moment.

We Live and Breathe Books (WLABB) always has some great posts.  Plus, Sam (who I think tends to write most of the posts over there) has some pretty good taste in books.  I tend to see her Top Ten Tuesday posts almost every week, and I sometimes will run into some of her other posts at other times throughout the week.

I think I see AJ from Read All the Things all over the place.  She has excellent taste in books and is constantly updating her site with new content.  If you haven’t taken a look at her blog, you should.

It Starts at Midnight is another blog that I see all over the place.  Maybe it’s because I read a lot of the Top Ten Tuesday posts and she usually writes them, maybe it’s because I don’t get home from work until around midnight, so her blog opens up right about the time I get home (okay, probably not the last one).  At any rate, this is another blog that gets updated regularly that you might want to take a look at.

That Artsy Reader Girl LogoI’m always over at That Artsy Reader Girl‘s site.  She hosts Top Ten Tuesday, and it’s a great way to find other people’s blogs.  I usually keep this tab open all week long, because I’m always taking a look at what other people are posting and her TTT linkup is a great way to find other people’s blogs.

Candid Cover logoI visit The Candid Cover‘s web site regularly as well.  This summer, she’s been sponsoring a Summer TBR Wipe-Out; it’s pretty fun to link up with all of these other amazing readers to talk about the books that we’ve been reading over the past few weeks.  She also sponsors contests, various reviews, and keeps her web site regularly updated.

So, that’s a stroll through a little of my bookish history through the use of web sites!  Stay tuned for the next episode of Top Ten Tuesday, where I talk about books to get out of your reading slump (even though I’m not sure if I’ve ever had a reading slump… but I have some ideas anyway).

George Whitefield: Evangelist for God and Empire Paints a Realistic Portrait

I recently was given a copy of George Whitefield: Evangelist for God and Empire, written by Peter Y. Choi.  Like a lot of people who know a lot about the history of the American colonies or of religious history, I knew who George Whitefield (pronounce WIT-field) was.  Whitefield is often portrayed as a preacher who played a huge part in the Great Awakening.  He’s often painted as a saint.  This book seems to paint a more balanced portrait of the preacher.

George Whitefield:  Evangelist for God and Empire tells of the life of Whitefield, not just as a preacher, but as someone who also was a flawed individual, like all of us.  Yes, he preached to the masses during the Great Awakening, but he also owned slaves, had questionable practices with regards to his orphanage, tried to found a college, and involved himself in politics during the War of 1812.

Even though I knew some things about Whitefield before reading this book, there was a lot more to this book that I didn’t know.  Although a lot of things in this book (looking from a 21st century perspective) were not good, like pushing for slavery in Georgia, it was good to learn about these other aspects of his life as well.

The book was a fairly scholarly book, so it wasn’t one that I could read straight through.  It wasn’t a book that I couldn’t put down, and I did read a few other books while I was working on this one, but the information in this book was interesting.  The book is worth reading if you want to learn more about this preacher.

I realize that there have been several non-YA book reviews over the last week and a half, and unfortunately, that’s just how it worked out… I really couldn’t move the dates of my reviews because I wanted the ARCs to get out in a timely manner, and I also wanted to keep my upcoming Throne of Glass and Red Queen reviews together.  On Thursday, we will resume our normal YA reviews with Strange the Dreamer.

Wrap Up Post to the Summer TBR Wipeout

Summer 2018 TBR Wipeout Challenge

It’s hard to believe, but today is the final day to the Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge, hosted by The Candid Cover.  Although summer isn’t completely over, the TBR Wipeout is, and it makes me a little sad.  This is the first challenge that I’ve done as a book blogger, and so it will probably be a little special to me, and it’s sad to see it end.  I’m sure that there will be plenty of new challenges to come.

So without further adieu, I’d like to give my final report:

Since My Last Update:

Since my last update to the Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge, I’ve read five books:

Glass Sword and Crown of Midnight were on my TBR when this challenge began.  The George Whitefield book was an ARC from Netgalley, and the other two books were ARCs that I won through various sweepstakes (my first two physical ARCs!).

Overall Challenge:

Overall, I read 15 books for the Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge.  My reading pace has slowed since I had to go back to work, but since my goal was 10 books, I can say that I reached the goal and that’s a good thing.

I plan on writing reviews for all of the books that I read for this challenge and haven’t been posted yet.  I plan for the weekend of September 13th to be Sarah J. Maas weekend, where I post my reviews for the first three of her books, and the weekend of September 27th will be Victoria Aveyard weekend, where I post the first three books of The Red Queen series.  Yes, I realize that I haven’t read the third book in either series, but since I’m first on the waiting list for both books, I doubt that that will be a problem.

Thanks for reading my updates, thank you to The Candid Cover for hosting this challenge, and I hope that you’ll keep visiting my blog to see my future reviews and hopefully new challenges in the future!

Alternate Universes for Books (Top Ten Tuesday)

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday Topic is technically “Books You’d Mash Together”, but I did a slightly different take today.  Since I couldn’t really think of many ways I’d mash books together (although My New Best Friend technically mashes Divergent and Legend together, I guess), I thought that I’d think of alternative universes for different books instead.

Top Ten Tuesday is hosted, as always, by That Artsy Reader Girl.  Follow the rabbit hole down over there and see what other people have to say about this topic as well!

Here’s this week’s list (in no particular order):

Warcross coverWarcross in Wonderland:  If you’ve read Warcross, then you know that it’s a video game that people play with virtual reality glasses.  The possibilities for Warcross worlds are endless.  Why not have Emika fall down the rabbit hole into Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland universe?

Flame in the Mist CoverFlame in the Mists of the Middle East:  Mariko is a fairly badass character.  What would happen if she appeared in a story set in the Middle East, and she was captured by ISIS?  She could escape, then meet up with a rebel group and fight against the terrorist organization.

Legend coverA Legend in Medieval Times:  Maybe this one is cheating, because in April I woke up from a dream and ended up writing the short story Happy Birthday, which basically features some of the Legend characters on June’s 17th birthday, in Medieval times.  I made June a dutchess, Day her Captain of the Guard (previously he had been a brigand and then saved Prince Anden’s life and started working for her), and Natasha Jameson was her Lady in Waiting.  It’s not the greatest story because I put it together in an afternoon, but I do think it makes a cool alternate universe.  I’m probably going to do a fanfic of this fanfic for NaNoWriMo this year (although it’s going to be really different… it’s going to have elves and a different plot and I’m altering the characters quite a bit).

Young Elites coverThe Young Elites in Modern Times:  This is another story that I’m cheating on, because this is basically what my work in progress Gamers is all about.  In this story, Adelina and Magiano would meet in a World of Warcraft guild, then they run away from their abusive parents and end up finding other Elites like them who have already formed The Dagger Society.  Of course, Magiano wouldn’t really be a petty thief stealing candy bars from Walmart; he’d be an expert hacker who stole some of the Bitcoin that the US government had seized from people.

Strange the Dreamer CoverStrange the Dreamer in Space:  I could definitely see this book written in an alternate universe, where instead of having humans and gods, there are aliens instead.

Throne of Glass coverThrone of Glass and Ice:  The cover of Throne of Glass already has kind of an icy feel to it.  I don’t know if the story would change a lot in this one, but it would make the world a little bit different looking.

An Ember in the Ashes CoverAn Ember in the Ashes of the American Revolution:  Elias could be a revolutionary general and Laia could be helping him out.  I haven’t thought this one out much, but it might have some potential.

Caraval coverCaraval in Vegas:  Caraval already has a dangerous, risky kind of feel to it; I could imagine a kind of scenario where the story could take place in Las Vegas.

City of Bones CoverCity of Bones in Old London:  With its werewolves and vampires, I could completely see this story set in some sort of Victorian England setting.  Not the setting of queens and royalty, but the Oliver Twist, workhouses for the poor type of Victorian England.

Kiss Quotient coverThe Kiss Quotient of the Schoolmarm:  I don’t know exactly how this one would work out, as school teachers aren’t paid very much, but we could put Stella in a role as a school teacher in the 1800s in the wild west (maybe she’s an heiress or something).  She could hire Michael because she just can’t figure out how to find the right guy.

So there’s ten alternate universes for books that could have been… or could be, if you write fanfiction.  Are there any books you could imagine an alternate setting for?

My Mother, Barack Obama, and the USA

My Mother Barack Obama coverAbout a month ago, I received an advanced review copy of Kevin Powell’s My Mother, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and the Last Stand of the Angry White Man.  It’s a long title for a book that’s only 281 pages long.  I think I won it in a contest.

For a book like this, it’s probably important to know a little bit about my political thoughts, because it might shape my perception of this book.  I’m a conservative libertarian.  While I think that Donald Trump’s policies have been a mixed bag, as a person, I think that he is an adulterous, racist, sexist, compulsively-lying braggart; I don’t like him as a person at all, and didn’t vote for him (I voted for Darrell Castle).

I didn’t know how I would feel about this book when I entered the contest to win it; however, I believe in listening to the opinions of others.  How are you going to learn if you live in a bubble and only read books by people that agree with you?  Nevertheless, I did find this to be an enjoyable book, even though I don’t agree with him on several issues.

This book is a collection of essays written by Kevin Powell over a period of several years.  It covers a variety of topics, including racism, sexism, music, and sports.  Evidently, Mr. Powell is a former cast member of The Real World, as well as a staff member of Vibe magazine.  I didn’t know that when I started the book, but I guess some people may recognize him from those sources.

I found this book an interesting view into another person’s thoughts.  I’ve never been the victim of sexual harassment before, but his mother has, and he speaks about her experiences, and about the experiences that he had, growing up and thinking that sexual harassment and domination was a normal thing.  His thoughts on racism from the perspective of a black man growing up in the ghetto was also interesting (my husband is also black and grew up in a poor neighborhood with a single mother as well, but his experiences were quite different).  His essays on music brought back memories.

I rated this book more highly on Goodreads than I did Harbor Me, which I reviewed last week.  They both cover similar topics, but I think that My Mother, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and the Last Stand of the Angry White Man did a better job covering the subjects than Harbor Me did.  Of course, this is a collection of essays, while Woodson’s Book is a fictional Middle Grade book, but I think that this book just seemed to work better.

Powell’s unique perspective did cause me to see things from a different perspective.  Although I don’t agree with him on everything, I can understand how he feels about the political situation that the United States finds itself in today.  I felt for his mother, who was abandoned by her baby’s daddy years ago, and never really found love in her life.  As I read about his mom and how he one day discovered how old she had gotten, I had to call my mom (I talked to my parents for over an hour this evening).

More than anything, I could imagine the cycle of despair that his family had grown up in, and I imagine how things like that continue to this day.  There are families where the kids grow up without a parent, and they are told that they are worth less for one reason or another.  I see how people might take someone’s ignorant or malicious comments personally.  I don’t know how we end this cycle, because children growing up under these difficult circumstances can sometimes grow up to become angry adults whose children have the same kind of childhood, but I do know that we can do our best to treat everybody with respect, and do our part to try not to contribute to the hate in the world.

At any rate, Powell’s book was good.  If you’re looking for a book that could potentially challenge your opinions, you might want to take a look at it.

This book is scheduled to be released on September 4th, but you can pre-order it now.

August Monthly Deals on Amazon.com!

I have recently discovered how wonderful Amazon.com’s sales can be.  While I’ve known for a while that Amazon has plenty of free books, I’ve often found them to be either books in the public domain or ones that were just “meh” to me.  However, if you look at the right time, you can find books on sale that might already be on your TBR for $1.99 or $2.99.  Here are the books that are on sale in August that I’m most interested in (or have already read):

Renegades CoverMarissa Meyer’s Renegades is on sale this month for $2.99!  I haven’t read it yet, but it’s been on a lot of people’s favorite book lists.  Maybe it will be one of your favorites!

Three Dark Crowns coverThree Dark Crowns by Kendare Blake is on sale this month for $1.99!  It sounds like an interesting story and I’ve thought about getting it.  Now would be a good time to do so.

I’m not a huge fan of superheroes, so I’ll probably pass on this one myself, but Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo is on sale for $1.99 this month.  It’s part of the DC Icons series.

Batman coverAlthough I’m not a fan of superheroes, I do like everything that Marie Lu publishes, and I did like her Batman: Nightwalker.  It’s on sale for $1.99 this month!

Those are the books that seemed most interesting to me that are on sale at Amazon.com this month.  This link will lead you to a list of the rest of the great August 2018 deals, if you’re interested in seeing more!

Harbor Me is Preachy but Potentially Useful

Harbor Me coverI recently read Harbor Me by Jacqueline Woodson.  It is a middle grade book that I received through Penguin’s First to Read program.  So far, I’ve had pretty good luck with this program, getting chosen for two books already.  Anyway, Harbor Me is a middle grade book where a bunch of kids talk about contemporary issues that kids face today.  While I thought that it was good, it came across as a little preachy.

The kids in Harbor Me are six kids of different races that go to a mostly-minority school in the Bronx.  The narrator is an eleven-year-old mixed race girl whose father is in prison (during the story you discover why).  These six kids are placed in a “special” classroom, and have a caring teacher that they like.  At the beginning of the story, their teacher starts putting them in the ARTT room every Friday for them to talk.  ARTT stands for “A Room to Talk”.

I did enjoy reading about their stories.  Esteban’s father was taken by immigration; Tiago is Puerto Rican and is upset when people tell him to not speak Spanish with his mother.  Another kid was told that he couldn’t play with toy guns any more because his parents were afraid that he’d be shot.  All of the kids have things they have to deal with.

This book addresses a lot of situations that kids might be going through these days.  A middle-grade reader might find this useful if they are going through difficult times as well.  This book is good in that it addresses these topics and might make kids feel a little less alone; it also may help kids feel compassion for other children that they may know that could be going through these things.  A little compassion is always a good thing.

The kids behaved like you would expect 11 year olds to behave.  Since there are six characters in this story and it’s fairly short, it really didn’t get the time to allow the reader to get to know them incredibly well.

That, I think, may be where this story falls a little short.  The book mainly focuses on the issues that these kids are having with the hot-button political issues of our day.  11 year olds might be also having trouble with peer pressure, girls, school work, etc., but these kids are all dealing with race issues and the like; in reality, kids are dealing with everything all at once.  This book feels a little preachy in that almost the entire story is politics-driven

Perhaps it is the setting that these kids are in, but I think that it paints these issues too stereotypically.  My kids are mixed-race.  When the boy came to school one day and talked about how his parents no longer allow him to play with Nerf or water guns because they’re afraid of their child getting accidentally shot by the police, I think of my own boy, who likes to go to the neighbor’s house down the street and have water-gun fights.  Never once in my life have I ever thought to tell him to not play those games because of his brown skin.  Maybe it’s different for us because we live in a nice neighborhood where people aren’t afraid to leave their garage doors open all day, and not the Bronx.  I felt that perhaps people might come away with the wrong impression though, thinking that all parents of brown children are afraid of their kids getting shot by the police if they play with guns.  That is simply not the case.

Overall, while I think that this is a book that definitely points out problematic issues of our day, I think that it focuses a little bit too much on that.  This book would have been better if it would have been a little longer and made these characters more real than just kids with stereotypical problems.

Harbor Me is scheduled to be released on August 28th, but you can pre-order it now.

Update Post #2 to Candid Cover’s TBR Wipeout Challenge!

Summer 2018 TBR Wipeout ChallengeSo today is the day I’m supposed to give another update to The Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge, hosted by The Candid Cover.  The last couple of weeks have been pretty busy, so I only got four more books read.  That’s okay though, because I did get some writing done, and I did get one of the books on my TBR shelf read.  Yay!

So over the last two weeks since my last update, I read these books:

  • Summer Days and Summer Nights – Various authors
  • 1,000 Years, 1,000 People – several authors
  • Red Queen – Victoria Aveyard
  • Harbor Me – Jaqueline Woodson

Only Red Queen was on my TBR plans to read at the beginning of this challenge.  I signed up to check this one out of the library in May, and finally got the chance to read it last week.

I reviewed two of the books last week, plan on publishing the review for Harbor Me tomorrow, and plan on reviewing Red Queen on September 20th (I generally review a new release book early in the week and an older book later in the week, so the older books are backed up a bit).

For the next two weeks, I’m 2nd on the waiting list for Ever the Brave and Crown of Midnight, so I may end up getting to read those.  I have an ARC for My Mother, Barack Obama, and the Last Stand of the Angry White Man that I plan on reviewing next Monday, and I’m working on reading George Whitefield: Evangelist for God and Empire; I hope to review that two Monday’s from now.  I also was chosen for Give the Dark My Love by Penguin’s First to Read program, so I’ll probably read that soon as well.

See you in two weeks!  I can’t believe this challenge is almost over!

Books with Sensory Reading Memories

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday theme (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) is Books with Sensory Reading Memories.  I don’t know about anybody else, but I tend to forget where I am most of the time that I’m reading.  There are a few books that I can tell you where I was when I was reading them.  So here they go:

Divergent coverDivergent:  I was working at a hotel when I read Divergent.  I would read it at lunch.  After I got through the first 50 pages or so, I was hooked.  I was answering the phones that day, so between phone calls I would do paperwork or whatever on the computer and muse about Four and Tris.  When I got home that evening, I finished Divergent, then started on Insurgent.  I had the next day off work, so I spent the next day reading the rest of Insurgent and Allegiant… then went to bed crying at 4 AM after finishing Allegiant.  I got into fanfiction the day after that, because I just could not accept the ending.

Divergente: This is the Spanish translation of Divergent, but it has different memories for me.  This was the very first book that I read in Spanish (I’ve since read 11 books in Spanish, not including rereads).  I was still working at the hotel, and I would read it at lunch, highlighting all of the words that I didn’t know (on my 11th book, I highlighted a lot fewer words).  When I read in Spanish (this also happens to me with German, and a little bit with Russian) I get into “Spanish mode”.  I start processing the words in Spanish without translation.

While I was in the lunch room reading Divergente, one of the lunchroom workers started wiping off my table.  Without thinking, I said “gracias.”  Not the most elegant use of Spanish, I would say, but my mind was so into the Spanish-language book that I automatically responded in Spanish.  The worker was hispanic, at least.  Not that that would have mattered, since everybody knows what that means.

Dragons of Autumn Twilight coverDragons of Autumn Twilight: This is the first book that my boyfriend ever gave to me.  We had just met a few months before that, and I took it to my parent’s house over Christmas vacation when I was in college.  I remember sitting in my old bed reading this book.  I stayed up late, because I couldn’t put it down.  The weather was cold outside, but I turned up the heater in my old room and it was warm inside.  I’ve read a ton of books from this series, and it all started with this one.  And I kept the boy that gave me the book too.  😉  We got married two years later.  Our kids are named after characters from these books.

Legend coverLegend: This book marks a transition in my life.  I took this book on my second trip to Colorado Springs.  My first trip here was a whirlwind trip to see if we might like it here, on my second trip, my husband had already taken a job here, and I was taking the kids so we could find a place to live.  I finished the book on this house-hunting trip, so I spent a lot of time in the hotel reading this (I couldn’t put it down).  When I got home I had to track down the other two books.  If you read this blog for very long then you’ll discover that I love this series.

One of the notable things that happened on this trip was my boy left Kitty at the ticketing counter.  The stuffed animal that he had been carrying everywhere with him since he was two years old.  We were going through security when I realized it was missing.  We had to leave the security line and track it down.  Fortunately, we made the plane on time, but just barely.

Legend (Spanish) coverLegend in Spanish also brings back memories.  I was visiting my family in 2015 for Christmas vacation, and I left my physical copies of Legend at home, yet I really wanted to read this book (I bought a copy of the set for my niece for Christmas because she liked Divergent, and so I guess that’s where that came from).  So I downloaded the book in Spanish, because I didn’t see the point in buying a book that I already had.  I read it on December 31st.

I’ve never read a book in Spanish this quickly.  It was cold outside, and we were driving through the snow to visit my brother-in-law, but it was so snowy that we had to turn around, because the car wasn’t going to be able to make it.  We had to visit them a few days later.

Little House on the Prairie CoverLittle House on the Prairie: I read these books a very long time ago, but I still remember reading it.  Well, I’ve reread these multiple times.  I remember sitting in front of my window at my parent’s house as a kid, reading it on a cold or rainy day.  Sometimes I would read this in bed in my old bedroom with the pink walls.  I had this blue boxed set with all the books in it.  They were such good books.

I also read this to my daughter, so I have memories of sitting with her on the couch with these books.  We spent a lot of time reading these books together when she was little.  I remember reading The Long Winter with her, thinking how hard it must have been.  It felt different than when I read it as a kid.

My Side of the Mountain CoverMy Side of the Mountain: This was a book that my husband read to us as a family.  We would sit on our black couch at our old house (a few years before we moved to Colorado Springs) and he would read it to me and our kids.  It’s a pretty good book.

I remember thinking about how strange it would be to run off into the mountains and just live there, by yourself, fending for yourself like that.  I guess there are other books in this series, but we never got around to reading them together.  Maybe I should reread this series some day and review it on my blog.

Arguing With Idiots: This book has slightly different memories attached to it.  I remember reading it when my daughter was at soccer practice.  My boy was about two, and I remember after my daughter was done with soccer practice, I put the book away and we were going to my car.  My boy ran out into the street as we were going to get into the car.  No bueno.  He was fine, but not running out into the street is a lesson that everybody needs to learn.

It might have actually been one of Glenn Beck’s other books (he has several like this), but I distinctly remember reading one of these books while my daughter was at soccer practice and later watching my little boy wander out in the street on our way home.

Island of the Blue Dolphins CoverIsland of the Blue Dolphins: This is another book that my dh read to me and the kids while we were sitting around our black couch when we used to live in Arizona.  The first part of the story is so tragic… the main character had a little brother and something happened to him.  My boy was still really little at the time, and I just remember thinking about what if something like that had happened to him.  I couldn’t help but cry about that little boy, especially since this was based on a true story.  I later learned that this lady had trouble learning to communicate once she was rescued, so I’m not sure if that part was true or not.

Flame in the Mist CoverFlame in the Mist: This book I have more recent memories with, because I read it this year.  It didn’t take me very long to read, because I couldn’t put it down unless I was forced to, but I remember reading it at work, looking at my clock, and having to go back to work, leaving it right at the part where Marika was in the hot springs with Ōkami, and he didn’t know that she was a girl yet.  I had to leave it right there, and I kept thinking about the book while I was helping people at the self-checkout.

So if you’re ever wondering what Walmart workers are thinking about while they’re helping you… they could be thinking about the most wonderful book that they’re in the middle of.  Or they could be writing their next short story or novel.  At least that’s what I do when it’s not very busy.  When it gets busy I have to concentrate on customers, but there’s a lot of time when it’s very rote, and I just think of books (either the ones I’m reading or the ones I’m writing).

So there’s ten books that I have memories associated with outside of the actual book itself.  What books do you have memories associated with?