Sunday, August 4, 2013

Get an Eyeful of that Eiffel!

Did you know that when you build an Eiffel Tower out of steel, you start at the bottom and work your way to the top?

But when you build an Eiffel Tower out of a book, you start at the top...


...and work...


...your way...


...to the bottom.


Ta da!


(I can fold tall things now, too!)

Friday, August 2, 2013

Running out of exclamation points and font sizes!!!!!!!!

Had to make a quick trip to Walmart today to get a copy of All You magazine.


I wanted to see the Back-to-School special issue:


I opened it up and whoa, what is that??
One of my books is featured in an ad on page 3!!!!!!



It's a Kellogg's ad to promote a special relationship they have with Scholastic books. Buy Kellogg's cereal, get free books. Great deal!

But wait, there's another of my books on page 5!!!


And hey, another on page 7, too!!


Whoo-hoo! Whoo-hoo!!!!!

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Daisy, Daisy, All In a Book Vase True

Today has been a stormy one at our house. At 4 p.m. is was as dark as 8 p.m., but here's something to brighten a day.

Daisies!


And even better? Daisies in a bright gold book vase!



I made these daisies as a commission for a birthday present.


Here are what daisies look like when you take a picture with a Olloclip Fisheye lens.


These daisies are another product of the Paper Blooms book. I can't tell you how much I'm enjoying that book.


As much as I'm enjoying these daisies.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Book Review: The Handmaid's Tale

Title: The Handmaid's Tale
Author: Margaret Atwood
Format: Audiobook
Reading Dates: May 27, 2013 - June 12, 2013
Rating: ****1/2

In a recent season of the TV show Survivor, contestants stood in shoulder-deep water in the Pacific Ocean. Above their heads was a railing, and as the tide slowly came in they went from chatting amiably with each other to sputtering pitifully, their noses pressed as far through the railing as nature would allow, trying to grab that last bit of air that they could. As I read The Handmaid's Tale, that same deep sense of claustrophobia crept over me. That sudden panic when you realize that everything was just fine a little bit ago, but how in the hell did I get here and will I ever be able to get out?

The unnamed handmaid in this case lives in a dystopian future where religious fundamentalists have taken over the United States. Infertility is the norm, so the powers that be enforce a strict interpretation of the Old Testament and conscript young women who may have a chance at being fertile into becoming the handmaids of powerful leaders. Their sole purpose is to bring a baby into the world, and their life is limited to only that.

The fact that I felt like I was choking from lack of air most of the time I read this book is testament to Margaret Atwood's fine writing and Clare Dane's masterful narration. This one has been tagged by editors as an Audible Essential, and I agree. Really good book, highly recommended.

Book Review: The Great Dissent

Title: The Great Dissent
Author: Thomas Healy
Format: Book
Reading Dates: June 23, 2013 - July 4, 2013
Rating: *****

I opened this book, read the first few pages, closed it and then went to get a pencil. This, I knew, was going to be one of those books where I wanted to do a lot of underlining and note-taking.

The Great Dissent follows the path that Oliver Wendell Holmes took from 1918 to 1919 as he wrestled with the issue of the kinds of speech the government protects and the kinds that it can prosecute. Author Thomas Healy does a masterful job of taking someone with a novice understanding of the points of view involved (like me!) and explaining the nuances of the differences. Through careful analysis of legal opinions and letters to and from colleagues, Healy exposes the arguments that Holmes considered as his beliefs transformed from the Constitution being society's protector to the individual's protector.

The story weaves its way through the many free speech cases that reached the Supreme Court as a result of the Espionage and Sedition Acts enacted during the course of the First World War, and as much a part of the story as Holmes' journey is the story of his friends and colleagues who revered their old friend, but who had different opinions on free speech and wanted to sway Holmes to their way of thinking as he worked his way through the docket. 

One often believes that the way things are is the way things have always been and I always find it fascinating when I run up against evidence where that's not the case. So it was with this book as Healy chronicled the interpretation of the First Amendment over the years and the cases that determined the generally understood meaning of the Amendment at that time. Good history all around! 

I also enjoyed the serious, yet congenial back and forth that Holmes and his friends employed as they presented their arguments to each other. They all seemed to genuinely like each other while often having diametrically opposed opinions. It made me once again bemoan the present state of disagreement where two sides tend not to engage each other at all, but engage with their like-minded compatriots in calling the other side names. And Holmes' willingness to listen to opposing opinions and alter his on point of view when he felt it needed to be altered was also admirable. 

The Great Dissent is a fine, engaging book on a dense subject that still is accessible to the layman. Highly recommended!

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Book Review: The Secrets of Mary Bowser


Title: The Secrets of Mary Bowser
Author: Lois Leveen
Format: Kindle
Reading Dates: May 8, 2013 - Jun 23, 2013
Rating: ***1/2


The Secrets of Mary Bowser imagines the life of a former slave, freed and educated in the North, who returns to Richmond right before the Civil War as a spy for the Union. I ran across the book as a Kindle Daily Deal, and I had to admit that the premise intrigued me especially since it was based on the life of  a real woman.

The first and second parts of the book chronicle Mary's life as a slave and as a freewoman gaining an education in Philadelphia. I found both a bit slow, but was fascinated by the description of the life of free blacks in the north and their interaction with white society.

The story really picked up when Mary moves back to Richmond to spy for the north. Leveen's account includes richly drawn characters living through a treacherous time for all. I found Leveen's arguments among the characters most enlightening as each struggled to define what it meant to be pro-Union and anti-slavery in a place where being both could be fatal.

Good book. Recommended.




Friday, June 21, 2013

I've Got Sunflowers on a Cloudy Day

I've already written about how great this book is.


Now look what I can make!


Did you know the sunflower is the state flower of Kansas? I learned that when I went to first and second grade in Kansas.


I'm a baseball mom. I like to eat sunflower seeds. These seeds look almost real.


Dictionary sunflower deliciousness.