Tagged: harry potter

April 24th, 2008

Confessions of an Obsessive Bibliophile & Compulsive Reader

I am a bibliophile. I’m not sure how I contracted the book-hoarding bug, but I’ve had it ever since I bought and read my first “chapter book” in second grade. That’s when I started buying every book I could get my hands on; I pilfered through my dad’s spare change at the end of every week, so I would have enough money for the next book order or book fair.

I am also a compulsive reader. I cannot not read. And I know that I owe many of my “smarts” to all the reading I’ve done over the years. I read absolutely everything (cereal boxes, signs, newspapers, magazines, pamphlets, books) and retain much of what I read, including stuff from those essays on the ACT! What’s that all about?! Often I’ll find myself in a conversation, and some random fact will pop out of my mouth, and I’ll think to myself, “Where did that come from? I know I read it somewhere, but where?” However I got to be this way, I don’t really care. I love that I am a reader!

My fetishes have evolved since elementary school, and here’s a look at them over the years:

Be still my heart!Sarah’s Card Catalog. At some point in school, I learned about the magic of card catalogs, and because my own library of books was growing, I created my own filing system. Every book had a unique number and an index card with its bibliographic information. I encouraged my family and friends to borrow books from Sarah’s Library. (Isn’t amazing that at even such a young age my love for office supplies and need to organize presented themselves?)

Jenny—The Other Bibliophile. In fourth grade, I met my best friend Jenny. She’s a bibliophile, too, and she had her own library, a sign that we are kindred spirits (bonus points if you know what book I’m referencing). We often borrowed books from one another, and we formed a book club at one point. We still recommend books to one another today, and I think she has me beat in the sheer number of books read ever.

First Bookshelves. When my parents built their current house—my childhood home—, they let me choose my bedroom because I was the oldest kid; I could have the bedroom with three windows or I could have the bedroom with two windows and a window seat. The window seat didn’t come until I was in junior high, but it was lovely once it was installed. Flanking both sides of the bench under my window were floor to ceiling shelves and storage, and I filled them with books, which were of course reorganized biannually.

Isn\'t it wonderful?Future Bookshelves. I still dream in bookshelves. I’ve visited the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina a handful of times, and the library in that house makes me yearn for one of my own. It has two levels, rolling ladders, a spiral staircase, and a passageway behind the chimney. And remember the scene in Beauty and the Beast when Beast gives Belle his library? Remember all those books? Oh, be still my heart! And please don’t let me look at a Levenger catalog; the temptation to lust is just too great. One day, Chris and I will be independently wealthy, and we can have a room just for our books. It will be marvelous.

Literature Classes. For my writing degrees, I had to take a few literature classes to round out my studies, and I loved all of them. My first was a survey of American literature before 1965, my second was a study of Toni Morrison and William Faulkner, and my last was a study of Edith Wharton. The Wharton summer class was one of my favorite classes of all time because I read excellent books all summer! If you have not read the House of Mirth, I beg you to do so immediately!

Barnes & Noble. I do not know how I grew up in a town without Barnes & Noble, but from here on out, I will live within BN driving distance. I don’t always have a lot of money to spend on books (thankfully, my family knows that BN gift cards are always gladly accepted), but when Chris and I are on a date or out putzing around, we almost always end up here. There’s just something about browsing all those titles that I love—maybe it’s the possibility that my next favorite book is waiting in one of those aisles.

Harry Potter. I cannot write a post about reading without mentioning Harry Potter. I love those books because they are wonderful, because they got my husband reading, and because I can connect with so many others because of those books. They tormented me night and day as I waited for book seven to come out last summer! In my book (pun intended), they’re up there with Anne of Green Gables, Little House on the Prairie, and Indian in the Cupboard.

Currently Reading. I got so many books for Christmas: Oscar Wilde, Ernest Hemingway, Charles Dickens, Mary Shelley, Jane Austen! My hubby is uber smart, and I dropped lots of hints that I wanted some classics on my bookshelves. I don’t know how I made it through my childhood without reading Mark Twain, so to make up for lost time, I read Tom Sawyer, The Prince and the Pauper, Huckleberry Finn, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, and Pudd’nhead Wilson last fall, and now I’m working my way through my collection of Charles Dickens (I just started Oliver Twist). And I have so many more to read! That’s what I love about reading—it never ends!

I’m not sure how one becomes a bibliophile or a reader (there is a difference, but I happen to be both), and I’m certainly not sure how I became obsessive and compulsive regarding either, but I am so glad those characteristics define parts of me. I am absolutely certain that had I not been a reader, I never would have become a writer. What about you? Are you a reader? Any recommendations for me?

April 15th, 2008

FreeRice.com Feeds the World While You Improve Your Vocabulary

I spend a lot of time online, and believe it or not, sometimes I run out of things to do. In these rare moments, I usually turn to online Set, a mind-bending card game. (Want more info, check out Linden’s post.) But thanks to the NBC Nightly News, I found something new to do: feed the world and improve my vocabulary. FreeRice.com donates 20 grains of rice for every vocabulary word you get correct. So far, they’ve donated over 26 billion grains of rice, and they donated over 178,000,000 grains yesterday.

How can FreeRice.com help you? Well, as a former English teacher, I can tell you that it’s important to have a useful vocabulary when writing in college and when writing on the job. If you’re a student, you’ll do better on your ACT, SAT, GRE, LSAT, and GMAT, and you’ll probably get better grades. And let’s face it, next to listening to NPR and playing Set, I can think of no better way to feel and look smart (and to make others think you’re smart).

This was my last word: lupine, which means wolfish. Harry Potter fans out there should see the connection and smile. And I didn’t know that five minutes ago! I’m smarter already!

February 16th, 2008

Sermons Make Perfect Long Run Companion: My Thoughts on Running & Music

Over at the Runner’s Lounge this week, the Take-It-and-Run Thursday subject is music and podcasts. I’m posting a few days late, but Thursday was busy at work and it was Valentine’s Day. Oh yeah, and I have the head cold from Hades, so thinking is sketchy.

I haven’t run with music for very long. I started this fall when my gal pal Heather lent me her iPod to listen to Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban on my long runs. It was just after Linden moved to Germany and I was adjusting to doing my long runs alone.

Chris got me an iPod Shuffle for Christmas, and I started running with it after the New Year. I have random music that pops up for my shorter runs, but I’ve found that I don’t prefer music on my long runs. I actually like listening to the spoken word better.

Harry Potter did it for me last fall, and on my most recent long runs, sermons from Mark Driscoll, pastor at Mars Hill Church (Seattle) have kept me moving. Listening to someone else talk is almost like having a friend running alongside me, and I even find myself making comments back to the speaker as I run. Driscoll’s sermons are each an hour-plus, so they’re perfect for running a long time. And Driscoll’s has a unique mix of dry humor, sarcasm, facts, and Scripture to keep his sermons both Spirit-filled and entertaining.

I’m still listening to music on my shorter runs, and I’ve already found a handful of favorites for speedwork, but I haven’t finalized a list of those songs quite yet (but let’s just say there’s a number of Bon Jovi songs I can’t get enough of). In the coming months, I’ll put together a few playlists for my specific runs. Stay tuned!

December 19th, 2007

Could Helena Bonham Carter Be My New Favorite Actress?

I watched Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein last night, and I must say that Helena Bonham Carter is quickly becoming one of my new favorite actresses. She’s been in a whole slough of movies, and I’ve barely watched a fraction of them, but the few I’ve seen I love:

I’ll have a full Sweeney Todd/HBC report next week. More later…

December 19th, 2007

Welcome Techsophist & Safari Bob to the Blogroll of Buddies

I added two new bloggers to my Blogroll of Buddies tonight. It occurred to me a while back that if you come to A Fool of Myself and aren’t me, then my three blogrolls mean pretty much nothing to you. So henceforth (I have a Master of Arts in Writing. I can use that word.) when I add bloggers to those blogrolls, I’ll introduce those bloggers to you. That said, tonight I introduce to you Techsophist and Skeptic Safari.

I know both of these bloggers personally: Techsophist was my Modern Rhetorical Theory professor and one of my thesis readers. She writes mostly about digital rhetorics, and she’s a Harry Potter fan, so no complaints here.

Safari Bob, as he’s known around these parts, is a fellow troublemaker from the Missouri State English Department TA office. He’s skeptical about pretty much everything and is a PhD student at Texas Tech. He also goes by the alias Pablo. Consider yourself warned.

More later…

December 18th, 2007

Top Ten Slacking-Off Activities for Recent Graduates

As a recent graduate, I’m looking for ways to explore my new freedom this holiday season. Here’s a list of my favorite slacking-off activities:

  1. Stay up until 4 AM and sleep until noon.
  2. Make out with your significant other.
  3. Post a fake resume on Monster.com.
  4. Play Tetris until your thumbs are numb.
  5. Put together a 1,500 piece Christmas puzzle.
  6. Watch all five Harry Potter movies in one weekend.
  7. Reread all seven Harry Potter books in one week.
  8. Update your Facebook status every hour.
  9. Torment your cat by practicing your hog-tying skills.
  10. Record all your slacking-off activities and make a YouTube video.
October 17th, 2007

Shout Outs to My Peeps—Thanks for the Support This Week!

Sunday was my longest run before the half marathon: 12.5 miles. Less than three weeks to the big day!

  • Shout out to Heather Myer—thanks for letting me borrow the Shuffle and Harry Potter; he made the miles fly by!
  • Shout out to The Shock—thanks for the gift certificate for the massage; I’ll be cashing that puppy in on the 5th!
  • Shout out to the hubby—the sponsorship of the new sports bras is super appreciated; you’ll be greatly rewarded.
  • Shout out to Linden—congrats on your half marathon; it was awesome to talk to you on the phone Sunday morning.

Heather and I ran a speedy 5-miler (58:06) this morning, and we’re meeting again tomorrow. My shins have hardly hurt this week (I think the Advil over the weekend really helped), and I bought (courtesy the mother-in-law) my first pair of straight-leg pants on Friday. Yikes! I never thought I could pull that look off, but I’m darn cute in my new jeans!

July 27th, 2006

Books I’ve Recently Read

  • 90 Minutes in Heaven – Don Piper
  • Same Kind of Different as Me – Ron Hall and Denver Moore
  • Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows – J.K. Rowling
  • Emma – Jane Austen
  • Harry Potter & the Half-Blood Prince – J.K. Rowling
  • The Unusually Useful Web Book – June Cohen
  • Radical Reformission – Mark Driscoll
  • The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
  • Summer – Edith Wharton
  • Custom of the Country – Edith Wharton
  • Glimpses of the Moon – Edith Wharton
  • Ethan Frome – Edith Wharton
  • The House of Mirth – Edith Wharton
  • Memoirs of a Geisha – Arthur Golden
  • Sarah – Marek Halter
  • Blue Like Jazz – Donald Miller
  • Fresh Faith – Jim Cymbala
  • Harry Potter & the Order of the Phoenix – J.K. Rowling
  • The Sound & the Fury – William Faulkner
  • Every Woman’s Battle – Shannon Ethridge
  • Sheet Music – Dr. Kevin Leman
 

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