Books

October 08, 2007

The Anne-Girl

I know I've drilled the whole "I love fall" theme into the ground, but allow me one more post.  I swear I'll try to make it my last (emphasis on try). 

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Every fall since I was preggers with Grayson, I have read the Anne of Green Gables series by L.M. Montgomery.  It's not that those books have anything in particular to do with fall, I think it's more the feeling they evoke when I read them.  They sort of calm me down after the summer, and help me settle into the rhythm of cool quiet evenings and indoor pursuits.  Truth be told, they make me wish with all my heart to have lived on Prince Edward Island in Victorian times.  I'm an old-fashioned kind of girl anyway, and I can just see myself strolling along the "white way of delight" or sewing alongside Marilla in the cozy kitchen at Green Gables.  (Yes, I'm flying my dork flag high today, but this is me. Like it or lump it).

Jeff knows what Anne means to me, as well.  I'll never forget our first "Anne-fest."  It was in the days of small apartments and no children.  Jeff surprised me one evening by pulling our mattress and piles of pillows and blankets in front of the tv, where we watched all four videos of the Anne movies together.  That's no small feat, either, considering the whole event lasts about six hours, and I cry like a baby every thirty minutes. 

I've only skimmed the surface here, but you can see there are reasons upon reasons why I love Anne.  If you are a reader, I encourage you to pick up a copy at the library and visit Avonlea with me these next couple of weeks (I have to read the whole series, you know).  At the least, go rent the movies.  I promise you won't be sorry!

*Photo lifted from the PEI tourism society.

April 27, 2007

Whimsies

  Because I have all boys in my house, it's not often I get to pass something on to one of my kids.  All those cute little baby dresses my mom made me & saved for me to pass on?  Useless at this point.  The dolls I collected? Packed in storage.  My Little Pony and Carebears, Mapletown figures?  Trash (too well used to be collectible). Even my beloved Cabbage Patch Kids and my first dolly whose care I took very seriously as a child... you get the idea. 

So when Grayson began to take an interest in the books I passed on from my favorite children's author, you can just bet I was thrilled.  I loved this guy's work, and would read anything with his name on it from kindergarten through first grade.  Grayson's favorites right now are the Whimsies storybooks.

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So now that we have these books in common, you know what I had to do, right?  Craft something from them!  So Grayson and I spent time this morning making Whimsies out of Sculpey.  I shaped the figures as well as I could (we made them as small as we imagined they would be in real life).  And Grayson mad the facial features.  Meet Bluebell, Sprout, and Blossom (L to R):

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Please don't laugh, they're awfully sensitive little things.  As you can tell by their expression, they are very surprised to see you. 

Well! Wherever one finds a Whimsy, one will also find their villain, Switch Witch:

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She's not really so villainous, you know.  Her crimes are limited to giving Whimsy kids magical charms that make them break a rule.  But somehow or other, my son, my poor-pitiful-way-too-imaginitive-son, got scared while playing with her this afternoon.  In broad daylight, with me in the house, he got so far into his imaginary world that he thought he saw her outside our front door, and he KNOWS he heard her laugh.  (I'll admit her laugh can be a little over the top).  So when I dropped the kids off at GaGa and Dado's house this afternoon he was adamant that he was leaving Switch Witch at home.  So the Whimsies would be "safed" and she couldn't find the way to them.  Bless his pea-pickin' little heart.  What a gift he has in that imagination, and sometimes what a curse.  I know, because he got it from me.  If I try hard I can still hear the witch that used to laugh outside my window, and see the blue icy carebear guy that used to come creeping into my room.  Yep, I've been there.  I know how it feels to be deathly afraid of something adults think is ridiculous.  It's as real to him as I am.  So, Switch Witch may have to modify her scary voice and laughter in storybook-land, and the sculpey one may be getting a one way ticket to the city dump. 

Tomorrow we will be making a village for them inside one of Jeff's enormous shoeboxes.  Maybe if we include a jail for the witch it will help Grayson feel safe.

April 18, 2007

Need your opinion on this one

Okay, this is going to be a weird post I guess.  Our laptop was recently ressurected from the computer graveyard, and when it was I found this story/poem I had forgotten about.  I also forgot I wrote it with two endings.  The thought at the time was that I would choose which one I like, illustrate it, and give it to Grayson as a gift.  Unfortunately I am chronically indecisive.  So I am going to post both versions here, and I would love for you to leave me a comment voting for your favorite.  Help a poor girl make up her mind!  Here goes...

#1 

Once upon a time there was a little boy named Grayson.  He loved to play pirates and did it quite well using his imagination.  He could dream daring swordfights and treasure galore; swashbuckling his way to his hideout on shore.

One day as he played a big ship pulled portside and the captain said “Aaargh!” as he rocked with the tide.  “Join us me hearty.  Great things you will see if you’ll lay down your toys and go sailing with me.”

Well, who could say no?  Who wouldn’t go?  Grayson threw down his sword with a big “Yo-ho-ho!”  He climbed aboard ship and joined with the crew swabbing the decks like all good pirates do.

Two or three days into sailing the sea they came up on an island with one lonely tree.  One lonely tree with a sand hill below which was marked with an X painted red and yellow.      

“Land ahoy, Cap’n.  And treasure to boot!  X marks the spot where we’ll find our loot.”  A real buried treasure was his to take home.  Was it rubies or diamonds or silver or gold?

Those pirates and Grayson, they dug and they shoveled.  They sweated and toiled and they strained and they struggled.  Then with a clank they hit something solid… then they shoveled some more and that’s when they saw it…

A rounded brown chest with two thick rope handles, a solid brass lock from which two keys dangled.  They got the thing open, and to their surprise, nothing inside was a valuable prize.

There was a picture of Grayson with his mom and his dad, and one tiny pocketknife passed down from Grandad.  There was an autographed picture from his favorite sports team and the teddy he sleeps with when he has a bad dream.

All of these things made him think of his home with his mom waiting for him with the front porch light on.  “I’m through here,” said Grayson.  “I want to go back.”  He laid down his sword and took off his hat.

He wiped off his mustache and rolled down his pants and he climbed from the ship and never looked back.  He walked right off that island and what do you think?  He did not swim, nor did he sink.

He just walked right straight home to his momma and dad and told them of all the adventures he had.  They did not seem surprised; they did not seem afraid.  They acted like it was a normal old day.

#2

Once upon a time there was a little boy named Grayson.  He loved to play pirates and did it quite well using his imagination.  He could dream daring swordfights and treasure galore, swashbuckling his way to his hideout on shore.

One day as he played a big ship pulled portside, and the captain said "Aargh!" as he rocked with the tide.  "Join us me hearty!  Great things you will see if you pick up your sword and go sailing with me."

Well, who could say no?  Who wouldn't go?  Grayson grabbed up his sword with a big "Yo-ho-ho."  He climbed aboard ship and joined with the crew, swabbing the deck like all good pirates do.

Over all seven seas their pirate ship rolled, 'til they spotted an island and called out "Land Ho!"  Now, on this island was rumored to be a most marvelous treasure, the biggest you've seen!

Into the lifeboats the pirate crew tumbled carrying a map quite faded and rumpled.  "To the shore!" cried the captain and peered through his glass.  "We will find it, me hearties, our treasure at last."

They rowed up on shore and they trudged across sand, over dunes and through valleys then over again.  They were hot.  They were tired.  They needed a rest, but they kept on going.  They gave it their best.

"Look there!" cried Grayson, "this is the place!  The X is as plain as the nose on your face!"  They whooped, and they hollered and danced a new jig; then got down to business and started to dig.

"We've got it!" gasped Grayson, and have it they did.  They heaved up the trunk and opened the lid.  At the sight of such riches their eyes all grew round, and some of them fainted and fell to the ground.

There were diamonds and rubies and jewels of all sizes, but what should they do with their sparkly prizes?  They could buy heaps of candy or give to the poor.  They could own every toy and every toy store.

They huddled together and talked it all out, and came up with a plan they were happy about.  They closed up the treasure and filled the hole in, so tomorrow they could have this adventure again!

They sailed back over oceans to Grayson's home port, and he waved to them all as he closed his back door.  He put down his sword and his black pirate hat, then he got settled in for his afternoon nap.

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