A Yuletide First!
Dec. 25th, 2013 12:30 pmI think this is the first time someone's ever read a book to write me a Yuletide treat? Which resulted in a hilarious note, and also a great fic for BLACK SHIPS, so EVERYONE IS A WINNER.
Across the River
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Also, THE STORY OF OWEN came up in an article series about people who love dragon books. Basically, it's a list of books I love, except MY BOOK IS ALSO THERE. Link
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Waiting on The Sister, because Tiny has apparently decided to celebrate Christmas by sleeping FOR.EV.ER., and then it's time for more family, food and entertaining Angry Bird with shiny paper.
Across the River
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Also, THE STORY OF OWEN came up in an article series about people who love dragon books. Basically, it's a list of books I love, except MY BOOK IS ALSO THERE. Link
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Waiting on The Sister, because Tiny has apparently decided to celebrate Christmas by sleeping FOR.EV.ER., and then it's time for more family, food and entertaining Angry Bird with shiny paper.
Art Projects
May. 25th, 2013 02:22 pmThe Miami Project and I did art this morning, the photos of which LJ will not let me post, but tumblr did, so have a link.
Yes, it's a scene from my book. No, I am not very good at drawing. Still. Fun times!
BACK TO THE WRITING CAVE!
(By which I mean "sunny table" because everyone else has gone to the airport to welcome the mother and OB-Wan back from Kenya.)
Yes, it's a scene from my book. No, I am not very good at drawing. Still. Fun times!
BACK TO THE WRITING CAVE!
(By which I mean "sunny table" because everyone else has gone to the airport to welcome the mother and OB-Wan back from Kenya.)
I'm working on my NaNo round-up thoughts and thank you post, but in the mean time, have a picture of the gingerbread house I made with the mini-cousins (formerly the "baby-cousins" and redesignated due to the oldest one having turned 16 on the weekend):
( NOT MY GUM DROP...LIGHT FIXTURES! )
S (who also does cakes and is 11) and I did the roof and the boys designed the sides while I did the actual piping. You can see all the places I messed up putting it together, but I think next year I will be panicking less and able to do it better.
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AND ON THAT NOTE: READING TIME!
( NOT MY GUM DROP...LIGHT FIXTURES! )
S (who also does cakes and is 11) and I did the roof and the boys designed the sides while I did the actual piping. You can see all the places I messed up putting it together, but I think next year I will be panicking less and able to do it better.
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AND ON THAT NOTE: READING TIME!
Mourning (but the memories are good)
May. 7th, 2011 07:02 amOnce upon a time, I had a fairy godmother.
I don't remember how, exactly, this was decided. I only knew that I had a mother, and a grandmother, and aunts, and god mothers, and that she was something special and different. To a three-year-old, a fairy godmother was the logical next step, I suppose.
Her name was Dolly McQuaid. She raised nine children by herself (and lost one in infancy) when her husband left. She never divorced him, because she was Catholic. I only ever met her youngest daughters (they were all older than my eldest brother, who is 10 years my senior). They were all musical and lovely.
Mrs. McQuaid was old when I met her. She didn't strain the water out of the Kraft dinner before she mixed in the cheese (I wonder if this was a cost thing; if she kept the water, she didn't have to use butter or milk...). I never doubted that she loved me.
I wasn't the last child she baby-sat. Not even close. The whole time I was in university, she walked all the way across town (at least three miles per way) to look after a little boy whose name I never knew. I would stop and offer her a ride. She would never take it. Even in the rain. The walk kept her young.
She swam in the pool too. Every day during the summer. She'd stake out a corner in the shallow end and just float or do tiny round laps. The kids gave her space. She was practically part of the establishment. I wouldn't be surprised if they stopped charging her for a membership.
I've never seen a person so excited to turn 65 and get their seniors' discount. She's the reason our local paper had to stop offering a dollar every time someone found a mistake. Every time she's seen me since 2004, she's asked if I was my sister, and then asked if I was finished school.
A few years ago, at Christmas, my mother met her in the butcher's shop when they were ordering their turkeys. Mrs. McQuaid was in front of her, and ordered first. When she left, my mother said to the butcher "How big a turkey did Dolly order?", and when the butcher told her 12 pounds (12 pounds for eight kids, their spouses and children, but all she could afford), my mother said "Make it 24, and I'm paying for it."
It became a tradition. We bought her turkey, the butcher thought it was the best thing ever, and she would write us a letter in the paper after New Year's. Two Christmases ago, the butcher shop closed and mum had to arrange for Doug to call her and tell her not to buy a turkey, that it was taken care of. This year, mum and dad were in Australia. I have no idea how they did it, but after Christmas, there was a letter in the paper, thanking "Santa" for the turkey.
In August of 2009, I was lost. I had no job, I was running out of money and I was running out of hope. I was working a two week contract for a grocery store, which basically involved standing around a lot, but it was in Goderich, so I saw a lot of people I hadn't seen in years. One of them was the best teacher I had in high school. She asked me if I was still writing, and I said "kind of", because at the time, I really wasn't. And then I decided that I wanted to.
So right there, in the grocery store, on small pieces of paper that I've kept to remind me of how it started, I wrote the opening scenes of A Turkey for Mrs. Eckert* (*names changed to protect the conspirators). It was a turning point in my life.
And I owe it, mostly, to my fairy godmother.
I don't remember how, exactly, this was decided. I only knew that I had a mother, and a grandmother, and aunts, and god mothers, and that she was something special and different. To a three-year-old, a fairy godmother was the logical next step, I suppose.
Her name was Dolly McQuaid. She raised nine children by herself (and lost one in infancy) when her husband left. She never divorced him, because she was Catholic. I only ever met her youngest daughters (they were all older than my eldest brother, who is 10 years my senior). They were all musical and lovely.
Mrs. McQuaid was old when I met her. She didn't strain the water out of the Kraft dinner before she mixed in the cheese (I wonder if this was a cost thing; if she kept the water, she didn't have to use butter or milk...). I never doubted that she loved me.
I wasn't the last child she baby-sat. Not even close. The whole time I was in university, she walked all the way across town (at least three miles per way) to look after a little boy whose name I never knew. I would stop and offer her a ride. She would never take it. Even in the rain. The walk kept her young.
She swam in the pool too. Every day during the summer. She'd stake out a corner in the shallow end and just float or do tiny round laps. The kids gave her space. She was practically part of the establishment. I wouldn't be surprised if they stopped charging her for a membership.
I've never seen a person so excited to turn 65 and get their seniors' discount. She's the reason our local paper had to stop offering a dollar every time someone found a mistake. Every time she's seen me since 2004, she's asked if I was my sister, and then asked if I was finished school.
A few years ago, at Christmas, my mother met her in the butcher's shop when they were ordering their turkeys. Mrs. McQuaid was in front of her, and ordered first. When she left, my mother said to the butcher "How big a turkey did Dolly order?", and when the butcher told her 12 pounds (12 pounds for eight kids, their spouses and children, but all she could afford), my mother said "Make it 24, and I'm paying for it."
It became a tradition. We bought her turkey, the butcher thought it was the best thing ever, and she would write us a letter in the paper after New Year's. Two Christmases ago, the butcher shop closed and mum had to arrange for Doug to call her and tell her not to buy a turkey, that it was taken care of. This year, mum and dad were in Australia. I have no idea how they did it, but after Christmas, there was a letter in the paper, thanking "Santa" for the turkey.
In August of 2009, I was lost. I had no job, I was running out of money and I was running out of hope. I was working a two week contract for a grocery store, which basically involved standing around a lot, but it was in Goderich, so I saw a lot of people I hadn't seen in years. One of them was the best teacher I had in high school. She asked me if I was still writing, and I said "kind of", because at the time, I really wasn't. And then I decided that I wanted to.
So right there, in the grocery store, on small pieces of paper that I've kept to remind me of how it started, I wrote the opening scenes of A Turkey for Mrs. Eckert* (*names changed to protect the conspirators). It was a turning point in my life.
And I owe it, mostly, to my fairy godmother.
Bear of Very Little Brain
Apr. 23rd, 2011 01:16 pmI get a new computer just after I've forgotten how to set my preferences...
So, f-list, how do I make it so that s file shows up as "Declan.doc" instead of "Declan". I am in Windows 7.
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Unrelated!
Overheard just now as The Miami Project plays with his friend Frog (who is a three-year-old girl)
Frog: No, I don't want you to take the footstool!
TMP: I'll be right back. I just need it for a second.
[shuffling, thumping, normal play noises]
TMP: [Froooooog]! Will you come and hold the stool for me? I have to go pee!
Kate [realizing she is the only adult in earshot]: HOLD ON, [TMP]! I'll be right there!
It could have been very funny, I think, but it may have ended in tears...
So, f-list, how do I make it so that s file shows up as "Declan.doc" instead of "Declan". I am in Windows 7.
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Unrelated!
Overheard just now as The Miami Project plays with his friend Frog (who is a three-year-old girl)
Frog: No, I don't want you to take the footstool!
TMP: I'll be right back. I just need it for a second.
[shuffling, thumping, normal play noises]
TMP: [Froooooog]! Will you come and hold the stool for me? I have to go pee!
Kate [realizing she is the only adult in earshot]: HOLD ON, [TMP]! I'll be right there!
It could have been very funny, I think, but it may have ended in tears...
Family Reunion Cupcakes
Jul. 10th, 2010 09:33 pmTomorrow is the 66th Annual Stark Family Reunion (The More, The Merrier!). Last year, I made chocolate cupcakes which, while delicious, were generally declaimed as a disappointment because the week before I'd made the Do You Want Fries With That? cupcakes, and those raised everyone's expectations.
I haven't blown my own mind making these, but they are pretty darn cute!
( The ants go marching one by one, hurrah! hurrah! )
Fun times! Now I really must finish my book before the suspense kills me.
I haven't blown my own mind making these, but they are pretty darn cute!
( The ants go marching one by one, hurrah! hurrah! )
Fun times! Now I really must finish my book before the suspense kills me.
Family Reunion Cupcakes
Jul. 10th, 2010 09:33 pmTomorrow is the 66th Annual Stark Family Reunion (The More, The Merrier!). Last year, I made chocolate cupcakes which, while delicious, were generally declaimed as a disappointment because the week before I'd made the Do You Want Fries With That? cupcakes, and those raised everyone's expectations.
I haven't blown my own mind making these, but they are pretty darn cute!
( The ants go marching one by one, hurrah! hurrah! )
Fun times! Now I really must finish my book before the suspense kills me.
I haven't blown my own mind making these, but they are pretty darn cute!
( The ants go marching one by one, hurrah! hurrah! )
Fun times! Now I really must finish my book before the suspense kills me.
Family and Cake
Feb. 20th, 2009 07:02 pmThe Miami Project has discovered Hide and Seek. You play like this:
1. Put a blanket on The Miami Project's head and declare loudly "Where's [The Miami Project]?", "I can't find [The Miami Project]!" etc.
2. Continue until YOU, the GROWN UP, get bored.
3. Pull the blanket off and yell "THERE HE IS!".
4. Tacklehuggiggle.
Seriously. As soon as you put the blanket over him, he FREEZES and won't move again until you reach step 3. The Sister's taken to playing it with him on the Go Train, and it usually has the entire car in stitches.
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Okay, so in that Five Things meme, all three people asked me about cake. ( It's kind of a weird story )
( Penguin Cupcakes! )
1. Put a blanket on The Miami Project's head and declare loudly "Where's [The Miami Project]?", "I can't find [The Miami Project]!" etc.
2. Continue until YOU, the GROWN UP, get bored.
3. Pull the blanket off and yell "THERE HE IS!".
4. Tacklehuggiggle.
Seriously. As soon as you put the blanket over him, he FREEZES and won't move again until you reach step 3. The Sister's taken to playing it with him on the Go Train, and it usually has the entire car in stitches.
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Okay, so in that Five Things meme, all three people asked me about cake. ( It's kind of a weird story )
( Penguin Cupcakes! )
Sleepy, Snotty Day
Mar. 12th, 2008 08:59 pmThe Miami Project has some sort of cold. Also, he will probably be getting the chicken pox soon and is therefore missing Easter. And he already missed Christmas.
Anyway, I spent most of the day sitting on the couch playing with him. He's all about the rolling, now, and grabbing for stuff.
I was hoping that Jericho would be up, but it is not.
Oh, and I watched "The Ark of Truth". ( Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before )
Anyway, I spent most of the day sitting on the couch playing with him. He's all about the rolling, now, and grabbing for stuff.
I was hoping that Jericho would be up, but it is not.
Oh, and I watched "The Ark of Truth". ( Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before )
Sleepy, Snotty Day
Mar. 12th, 2008 08:59 pmThe Miami Project has some sort of cold. Also, he will probably be getting the chicken pox soon and is therefore missing Easter. And he already missed Christmas.
Anyway, I spent most of the day sitting on the couch playing with him. He's all about the rolling, now, and grabbing for stuff.
I was hoping that Jericho would be up, but it is not.
Oh, and I watched "The Ark of Truth". ( Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before )
Anyway, I spent most of the day sitting on the couch playing with him. He's all about the rolling, now, and grabbing for stuff.
I was hoping that Jericho would be up, but it is not.
Oh, and I watched "The Ark of Truth". ( Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before )
Preparing to Face the Day
Jan. 31st, 2008 08:07 amThe Sister called me at 8:00 to let me know that she still loves me and talk me into phoning the prof at UF again and come up with a game plan for telling my mother.
Best part of the phone call?
The Sister: "The Miami Project [who is now six months old] is really excited that you're coming this weekend."
In the Background: "Cheers, clapping, distinct impression of a large number of people doing the wave"
The Miami Project: "Shocked burble"
The Sister: "Also, he's sort of figured out how to work the basketball."
It's a little stuffed basketball he has that cheers when you squeeze it.
*steels self for phone call*
Oh, and a stupid question: I can only have one virus program at a time, right? So if I wanted to put Avira AntiVir on my computer, I would have to get rid of NOC32 first?
Best part of the phone call?
The Sister: "The Miami Project [who is now six months old] is really excited that you're coming this weekend."
In the Background: "Cheers, clapping, distinct impression of a large number of people doing the wave"
The Miami Project: "Shocked burble"
The Sister: "Also, he's sort of figured out how to work the basketball."
It's a little stuffed basketball he has that cheers when you squeeze it.
*steels self for phone call*
Oh, and a stupid question: I can only have one virus program at a time, right? So if I wanted to put Avira AntiVir on my computer, I would have to get rid of NOC32 first?