NOTE: Far, far short of my yearly goal of 12,000 pages. But
note I read “Doleful Creatures” no fewer than THREE times this year. That’s MY
novel, which, God willing, will be published next year.
Adventures of Captain Bonneville, U. S. A., in the Rocky
Mountains and the Far West, The; by Washington Irving. 364 pages.
And Another Thing, by Eoin Colfer. 273 pages.
And No Birds Sang, by Farley Mowat. 250 pages.
Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco, by Bryan
Burrough and John Helyar. 528 pages.
Behind the Scenes of the Nixon Interviews, by David Frost.
346 pages.
Boys in the Boat, The; by Daniel James Brown. 416 pages.
Case of the Nervous Newsboy, The; by E.W. Hildick. 106
pages.
Charlie Wilson's War, by George Crile. 550 pages.
Class: A Guide through the American Status System, by Paul
Fussell. 202 pages.
Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir by One of the
Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII, by Chester Nez with Judith Avila. 310
pages.
Complete Cul de Sac Volume One, The; by Richard Thompson.
314 pages.
Complete Cul de Sac Volume Two, The; by Richard Thompson.
314 pages.
Doleful Creatures, by Brian Davidson (beta read 3), 374
pages.
Doleful Creatures, by Brian Davidson (beta read 2) 342 pages.
Doleful Creatures, by Brian Davidson (beta read) 251 pages.
Everything You Need to Know Before You're Hijacked, by Dan
McKinnon. 139 pages.
Feardom, by Connor Boyack. 160 pages.
Graveyard Book, The; by Neil Gaiman. 311 pages.
Great War and Modern Memory, The; by Paul Fussell. 363
pages.
It's the Ernest P. Worrell Book of Knawledge, by Ernest P.
Worrell. 97 pages.
Journey to the East, The; by Hermann Hesse. 118 pages.
Kim, by Rudyard Kipling. 284 pages.
Last Christmas Gift, The, by Nathan Shumate. 86 pages.
Long Haul, The; by Jeff Kinney. 217 pages.
My Man Jeeves, by P.G. Wodehouse. 128 pages.
Old School, Diary of A Wimpy Kid, by Jeff Kinney. 217 pages.
Right Ho, Jeeves, by P.G. Wodehouse. 186 pages.
See Here, Private Hargrove, by Marion Hargrove. 217 pages.
Servant Leadership: A Journey Into the Nature of Legitimate
Power and Greatness. by Robert K. Greenleaf. 370 pages.
Southern Idaho Ghost Towns, by Wayne Spratling. 135 pages.
Starbird, by Robert Schultz (beta read). 580 pages.
When Did Ignorance Become A Point of View? by Scott Adams.
128 pages.
"The Peanuts Movie" could have gone one of two ways: Faithful to the core of Charles M. Schulz' comic strip, itself rooted in the 1950s, or retro-modernized, true to the soich for more money. I'm pleased to say it is the former.
Charlie Brown is still wishy-washy, clumsy, self-defeating and insecure as always. But as was the underpinning of Schulz' comic from the start, he never gives up, despite the setbacks he faces every day.
Nobody works harder at failure than Charlie Brown. And no one has more integrity than he does -- a trait that shines through in this wonderful film, which we just saw today.
Charlie finds fame as the one student to achieve a 100% on a standardized test at school -- the closest the modern world penetrates Schulz' comic strip brought to life -- but soon discovers the test he signed wasn't his. And he confesses right away. And that's after he gives up his part in the talent show at school to help his sister avoid humiliation.
It's all noticed by the Little Red-Haired Girl, who comments on his loyal, honest and persistent personality that shines through the patina of failure others and himself paint all over his round little head.
Good nods to the past animation history of the film too, from bringing Bill Melendez in to voice Snoopy and Woodstock, to the Mendelson/Melendez Moving Company that brings the Little Red-Haired Girl into the neighborhood.
And the interludes with Snoopy daydreaming throughout the story are delightful in their execution and subtlety, particularlyl as the crazy dog's adventures mix in with real life (seeing him sneaking across Peppermint Patty's Christmas lights while he imagines himself sneaking across a bridge is pure Schulz magic.
I think that's what makes the show work: Though Schulz passed away fifteen years ago, it's clear those involved with the show wanted him to be there. And he was.
Please God, whose name we all know, can we have more of this?
I’m
sure there were many prayers said on this bus. But coupled with
prayers: action. People doing the right thing. Answering prayers because
the god they worship helps make them decent human beings.
Please, God, make us men and women of faith and action. That is what this world needs.
Let this kind of action replace the
action where Christians pray for mosques to close and celebrate when
they chase Muslims out of their neighborhoods.
Let this kind of action replace the action where hijackers of the Koran believe killing the innocent is the will of Allah.
Let this kind of action replace the action where Christians kill people at Planned Parenthood clinics to protest abortion.
Let
this kind of action replace the action where nations turn their backs
on men, women, and children fleeing economic hardship, terrorism, and
death.
Let Christians not forget the lessons the Savior taught in Luke (6:27-38):
But I say unto you which hear, Love your enemies, do good to them which hate you,
Bless them that curse you, and pray for them which despitefully use you.
And
unto him that smiteth thee on the one cheek offer also the other; and
him that taketh away thy cloak forbid not to take thy coat also.
Give to every man that asketh of thee; and of him that taketh away thy goods ask them not again.
And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.
For if ye love them which love you, what thank have ye? for sinners also love those that love them.
And if ye do good to them which do good to you, what thank have ye? for sinners also do even the same.
And
if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank have ye? for
sinners also lend to sinners, to receive as much again.
But
love ye your enemies, and do good, and lend, hoping for nothing again;
and your reward shall be great, and ye shall be the children of the
Highest: for he is kind unto the unthankful and to the evil.
Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is merciful.
Judge not, and ye shall not be judged: condemn not, and ye shall not be condemned: forgive, and ye shall be forgiven:
Give,
and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and shaken
together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom. For with the
same measure that ye mete withal it shall be measured to you again.
Jesus
urges us to act, not to be acted upon. He urges us to love our enemies,
to do good, hoping not for reciprocity – but for nothing. It is good
that those we love act reciprocally. But if enough of us act in this
manner, knowing perhaps
our enemies will not, how much better would that world be?
Publishers seem to be asking for a synopsis of your book as you submit. So here goes.
Before the world was made, He Who
Notes the Sparrow’s Fall and the one known as The Lady fought for the minds and
souls of the animal kingdom. The crux of their argument: Would animal-kind be
happier in a world where men and their inherent evils were not present? She
said yes, while he said no, claiming one living in a world without the other
would not develop as deep an empathy for others as they would living together.
Both went their separate ways. He Who Notes the
Sparrow’s Fall built his world and populated it with animals and man and
watches as they live, more or less, in harmony – though there is trouble. And
misery and death amid the joy and laughter. She took her followers and built a
different world, lost to the other and forgotten.
Jarrod the Magpie is himself lost between two
worlds. One, a world of love and friendship created by his beloved Rebekah,
long since dead with the beavers who had been their friends. Jarrod and the
badger Aloysius survived the cataclysm that claimed the beavers and their
mates, and Jarrod takes the blame for the deaths and is practically outcast
among the animals who live in the wood near the ramshackle Purdy Farm.
Aloysius, bitter at the loss of his Landi, makes sure the other animals never
forget Jarrod has blood on his wingtips. Only the murder of crows who live in
the wood are friendly to the magpie, who wanders the fringes half mad with
guilt.
There are odd stirrings in the wood. Animals claim
to hear an odd sound – a sound some call the trumpet of elephants – coming from
the wood. And The Lady can be seen, disguised as a woman in white, wandering
the woods, speaking gently but always probing for something she appears to have
lost. As the mythology of the world expands, Jarrod speaks with the Man in the
Rock, an ancient, wise being living in a box canyon not far from where the
beavers died, as Jarrod tries to sort his world out.
The Lady enlists the help of a colony of marmots to
dig for her, as she senses what she has lost may be buried in the ground
beneath Purdy Wood. As they dig, a creeping cold beings to fill their tunnels,
as well as the burrows of the moles and warrens of the rabbits. More and more,
they hear the strange sound, the call of the elephants, and fear spreads in the
wood. Sensing the coming storm, the crows, led by Chylus
and Magda, work to rehabilitate Jarrod the Magpie, whose misery and refusal to
live in the present due to his guilty past seems to be augmenting the fear and
the power of The Lady. They enlist the help of a group of hawks, longtime
friends with Jarrod’s Rebekah, to help him feel new hope. The hawks remind him
of the one beaver Jarrod sheltered and saved from The Lady, who guided men to
destroy their dams and trap them out of her hatred for the world He Who Minds
the Sparrow’s Fall created. The hawks show him a revitalized beaver colony,
again happily building dams and filling ponds. They greet him not as a
murderer, but as the one who helped ensure their colony in the upper reaches of
the box canyon was not destroyed completely, though at great personal price to
him.
With renewed hope – and despite Aloysius’ disbelief
in the tale Jarrod and the crows bring from the canyon – Jarrod begins efforts
to spy on the marmots and on The Lady, to determine what she seeks and what the
strange elephant cries in the wood could be. They plant gardens to conceal
their own tunnels as they dig parallel to the tunnels dug by the marmots.
Nevertheless, fear of The Lady grows in the wood,
with many succumbing to her spells and many ending up dead. Aloysius is deep
within her influence, but as he sees Jarrod regain hope, bits of his memory,
aided by recollections of his beloved Landi, help him free himself from The
Lady’s smoky tendrils of doubt. He goes on to free others – notably and old
friend whom, he discovers, has already freed himself. He journeys to the canyon
of the beavers as he himself seeks to escape his current bitterness, and to
recruit the beavers to help in the coming battle with The Lady.
The Lady meets them at the beaver ponds and
threatens, once again, to destroy Jarrod’s friends and future – but Jarrod
defies her and with the help of the Man in the Rock temporarily defeats her. He
and Aloysius reconcile and together persuade the beavers to move south to help
in the final battle. Jarrod flies one last time to meet with the hawks, who
appear to know of The Lady but remain uninfluenced by her. He speaks with the
leader of the hawks, hoping to learn more about The Lady in hopes of finding a
way to defeat her. The magpie and the hawks turn to the Man in the Rock,
revealed as a guardian assigned by He Who Minds the Sparrow’s Fall to keep
watch over The Lady’s kingdom in case it were ever discovered. He shows the
birds, in riddles, how to defeat The Lady.
The marmots, meanwhile, have begun filling in their
tunnels, alarmed at the seeping cold they discover as the dig deeper. Mindful
of the rumors that Jarrod’s past isn’t what it appears, Father Marmot, leader
of the marmots, decides to cut off his return, as his natural leadership
threatens his own. He leads a harvest of the gardens the animals have planted
in an effort to demonstrate his leadership to them, hopefully usurping at last
any tenuous hold Jarrod or the crows might have had over their loyalties.
But The Lady has discovered what she had lost after
a swarm of bats escaped from a marmot tunnel. She gathers her starling servants
to keep the animals at bay as she seeks her treasure – the entrance to the
world she created for animals, free of mankind. As the opposing forces gather,
a sinkhole collapses in the wood, revealing the entrance to a cave. Both sides
rush to the hole as the beavers build dams, hoping to flood the wood and keep
whatever might be in the hole from escaping into their world. Jarrod, Aloysius,
and the crows enter the hold and discover, in a bleak, dark cave at the bottom
of it, the animals The Lady entranced and enslaved before the worlds began –
including the elephants who have been calling for help to escape their prison.
The birds being to lead the animals to the surface – only to be confronted by
The Lady.
But they’re not alone. He Who Minds the Sparrow’s
Fall has sent his sparrows. They fill the wood with their songs of bravery and
warmth, even amid the cold and cowardice. The animals in the cave, long The
Lady’s slaves, reject at last her promise of safety in a world without men, and
in the final battle simply walk past her, into the flooding wood above. Water
from behind the beavers’ dam, multiplied by He Who Notes the Sparrow’s Fall,
floods The Lady’s caverns and seals her world from ever capturing minds and
souls again.
I still have a few beta readers out there, plugging away –
but I can announce with some pleasure that Doleful Creatures may finally be
ready for either self-publishing or fishing around to agents.
In other words, the easy part is done.
I’ve read the book three times this year, each time finding
things that needed to be fixed or explained or relocated or what have you. And
this time around – Round 10 – I believe I’m close to a marketable product. That
feels like the best news I’ve had in years. (Another good feeling: As I dozed
on the bus this morning, a thought came to me on a little bit of the plot that
I might not have buttoned up. A read of that portion of the book once I got to
work satisfied me it’s tied up nicely.)
Now which route do I go? Do I go through the sufferings of
finding someone interested in the book or do I go through the sufferings of
publishing the book on my own, only to have it sit there, unread?
There are, of course, other considerations: A cover, for
one. I’ve now got to get serious about that. And if I go self-publishing, do I
do the ebook and physical copy? I’m old school – I have to admit holding a
physical copy of my book in my hands would do wonders for the ol’ ego. But
going the other way would mean a more extensive editing process. Marketing
prowess I don’t possess.
Or maybe it’s all just a pipe dream? Maybe the book isn’t
any good.
Then: What’s next? I admit I have another project in the
hopper – The Hermit of Iapetus – which still calls to me. I’m about 90% sure
that’s next on the list. Though there are other things percolating and brewing.
On the docket for 2016: Participation in NaNoWriMo. This is
where Doleful Creatures came from. I’ve skipped it for two years now, editing
the book. I need to keep new things coming, for obvious reasons.
Back when I was a kid, there was a show on TV called “RealPeople.”
The show did what the title implies: It spoke to real people
and told their stories – one I recall was of a Texas lady who would stop what
she was doing, no matter what, and stand with her hand on her heart whenever
she heard the national anthem (apparently something quite common where she
lived). They also did a story on a hotel that washed people’s pocket change,
carrying on a tradition introduced at the hotel in the 1800s.
(Note, I’m not saying it’s a GOOD show, it was just a show.)
But you could count on seeing real people in it. Not actors.
Not the bigwigs. But the real people involved in whatever story they were
pursuing.
That’s what we need to do with our writing. Put real people
in it.
And it can be done. Heck, if Buzzfeed can do it, so can the
rest of us.
(A note to my students: Don’t think I’m asking you to do
exactly what Buzzfeed does with the story I’m about to share with you. They had
unlimited time and rather a good pile of resources to work with. They conducted
over 100 interviews. I don’t expect that of you. But, as we learned with our
personality profile papers, interviewing two or three people isn’t all that
taxing. And it brings our papers to life.)
Witness, then a story Buzzfeed published Dec. 2 on The H-2
Guest Worker Program, which brought in 150,000 legal foreign workers to fill
jobs “Americans won’t take.” Even though the program is not supposed to provide
jobs for foreign workers at the expense of American citizens, Buzzfeed found it
regularly does so. But let’s hear it from them:
[C]ompanies across the
country in a variety of industries have made it all but impossible for U.S.
workers to learn about job openings that they are supposed to be given first
crack at. When workers do find out, they are discouraged from applying. And if,
against all odds, Americans actually get hired, they often are treated worse
and paid less than foreign workers doing the same job, in order to drive the
Americans to quit. Sometimes, as the government alleged happened at Hamilton
Growers, employers comply with regulations by hiring Americans only to fire
them en masse and hand over the work to foreign workers with H-2 visas.
What’s more, companies
often do this with the complicity of government officials, records show. State
and federal authorities have allowed companies to violate the spirit — and
often the letter — of the law with bogus recruitment efforts that are clearly
designed to keep Americans off the payroll. And when regulators are alerted to
potential problems, the response is often ineffectual.
Mad yet? Maybe.
But if I quizzed you on this in a week, how much would you
remember? More importantly, what kinds of questions would you have?
Here’s the biggie: Do Americans really want these jobs? We
hear a lot of rhetoric about letting foreign workers in because they do jobs
“Americans don’t want.’ Buzzfeed decided to ask that question as they
researched their topic (the H-2 program not working as designed) and their
solution (making the H-2 program work so that American citizens aren’t passed
up for jobs that, yes, they do want).
The story gets into a lot of detail on how the program
works, what companies have done to skirt the law – often with the help of
government agencies – but where it really works is when those writing the story
talk to the people the program and policies have affected.
About a third of this 22-page article is handed over to
these “real people,” telling their stories, ranging from residents of Moultrie,
Georgia – mostly black – who can’t get work harvesting crops in local fields
because they’re either ignored in the hiring process or fired en masse in favor
of foreign workers, to the story of a woman with long experience caring for
horses being unable to find work in Kentucky – the “horse capital of the world”
because those doing the hiring would rather hire foreign workers.
Let’s look at the latter story, and what it – and others –
add to the tale Buzzfeed tells.
When Nicole Burt
applied for work as a stable attendant in Kentucky, she was sure her experience
and skills were unimpeachable. As a teenager in Vermont she showed, trained,
and groomed horses, and no sooner did she graduate high school than she moved
to the Bluegrass State in order to be in what she dubbed “the horse capital of
the world.”
In early 2011, she
applied to a dozen or so stables, she said, but none called her back. One of
them was Three Chimneys Farm, a stately home for legendary thoroughbreds
including the 1977 Triple Crown winner, Seattle Slew.
Three Chimneys, based
in the town of Versailles, had told federal authorities it was “facing a
distinct labor crisis and cannot locate or retain American workers” and that
“all U.S. workers who express an interest in the employment opportunity will be
interviewed for employment.” But when Burt called to check on her application,
she was told no jobs were available.
“Basically we never
hire US workers who are applying,” the farm’s director of human resources,
LaTerri Williams, told the Department of Labor in a signed statement. “I don’t
conduct interviews or take their applications. Basically I just tell them we
have no openings.”
Asked by regulators
why it didn’t give Burt a chance, as federal law required, the company stated
that the single mother of three was better off unemployed than taking the
$9.71-an-hour job. “Given the length of the commute, the cost of daycare, the
loss of her eligibility for food stamps, it would cost Ms. Burt more to work
for Three Chimneys than if she did not work at all,” the company said.
“I kept
hearing the employers say that they couldn’t find anybody. And I just want to
smack them, because we’re right here,” said Burt. “I felt betrayed. I just felt
like America had let Americans down.”
Now how mad are you?
More importantly, what questions have been answered? Here’s
one American who does want one of these “undesirable” jobs, but can’t seem to
get one. (And if you think Buzzfeed is being too jingoistic in their research
and reporting, it’s important to know this is a follow-up to a story they did
on the conditions foreign workers face when they come to the United States to
take these jobs.)
Adding a human face – or several human faces – to any story (and
yes, research papers can be stories, stories that inform and educate) enables
us to connect with our readers emotionally and logically. Does that sound
manipulative? Maybe in a little way it is when we think about emotion. But
manipulation isn’t the right way to think about it. A better way to think about
it is helping your reader make connections to your research.
In April 2013, Thomas S. Monson, president of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, gave a wonderful sermon on the topic of
obedience. He quoted many scriptures to the congregation, urging them with the
word of God to truly see the value and blessings that come from obedience to
God’s laws. Here’s a bit of what he said:
There is no need for you or for me, in this enlightened age
when the fulness of the gospel has been restored, to sail uncharted seas or to
travel unmarked roads in search of truth. A loving Heavenly Father has plotted
our course and provided an unfailing guide—even obedience. A knowledge of truth
and the answers to our greatest questions come to us as we are obedient to the
commandments of God.
We learn obedience throughout our lives. Beginning when we
are very young, those responsible for our care set forth guidelines and rules
to ensure our safety. Life would be simpler for all of us if we would obey such
rules completely. Many of us, however, learn through experience the wisdom of
being obedient.
There are rules and laws to help ensure our physical safety.
Likewise, the Lord has provided guidelines and commandments to help ensure our
spiritual safety so that we might successfully navigate this often-treacherous
mortal existence and return eventually to our Heavenly Father.
Centuries ago, to a generation steeped in the tradition of
animal sacrifice, Samuel boldly declared, “To obey is better than sacrifice,
and to hearken than the fat of rams.”
Those of you familiar with the sermon are screaming right
now: “You left out the best part!”
I did indeed. Here it is (start the video at 3:33):
Here President Monson expands on the learning “though
experience the wisdom of being obedient.” He could have quoted more scripture
at us. Instead, he tells us a story. He populated his sermon with real people –
himself and his friend Danny.
And this is the part we remember. This is the part of his
sermon – his research to us on the blessings of obedience – that sticks with
us. If we remember anything else out of this sermon six months, a year down the
line, we’re lucky. But remember this we do. Because it’s real.
I hope you can see my point, and I hope in the future you
look at adding more real people to your writing. That jump roping champion
could be in a research paper on physical fitness. The story of Danny and Tommy
livened an otherwise pedestrian sermon on obedience. There are stories you can
tell as well.
Indy and Harry
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History of Joseph Smith, by His Mother, by Lucy Mack Smith. 354 pages.
History of Pirates, A: Blood and Thunder on the High Seas, by Nigel Cawthorne. 240 pages.
Peanuts by the Decade, the 1970s; by Charles Schulz. 490 pages
Star Bird Calypso's Run, by Robert Schultz. 267 pages.
There's Treasure Everywhere, by Bill Watterson. 173 pages.
Read in 2024
92 Stories, by James Thurber. 522 pages.
A Rat's Tale, by Tor Seidler. 187 pages.
Blue Lotus, The, by Herge. 62 pages.
Book Thief, The; by Markus Zusack. 571 pages.
Born Standing Up, by Steve Martin. 209 pages.
Captain Bonneville's County, by Edith Haroldsen Lovell. 286 pages.
Case of the Condemned Cat, The; by E. W. Hildick. 138 pages.
Catch You Later, Traitor, by Avi. 296 pages.
Diary of A Wimpy Kid: Big Shot, by Jeff Kinney. 217 pages.
Edward R. Murrow and the Birth of Broadcast Journalism, by Bob Edwards. 174 pages.
Exploring Idaho's Past, by Jennie Rawlins. 166 pages.
Forgotten 500, The; by Gregory A. Freeman. 313 pages.
I Must Say: My Life as A Humble Comedy Legend, by Martin Short and David Kamp; 321 pages.
Joachim a des Ennuis, by J.J. Sempe and Rene Goscinny, 192 pages.
Le petit Nicolas et des Copains, by J.J. Sempe and Rene Goscinny, 192 pages.
Moon Shot: The Inside Story of America's Race to the Moon, by Alan Shepard and Deke Slayton; 383 pages.
Number Go Up, by Zeke Faux. 280 pages.
Peanuts by the Decade: The 1960s, by Charles Schulz. 530 pages.
Red Rackham's Treasure, by Herge. 62 pages.
Secret of the Unicorn, The; by Herge. 62 pages.
Sonderberg Case, The; by Elie Wiesel. 178 pages.
Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk, by David Sedaris. 159 pages.
Stranger, The; by Albert Camus. 155 pages.
Tintin in Tibet, by Herge. 62 pages.
Truckers, by Terry Pratchett. 271 pages.
Vacances du petit Nicolas, Les; by J.J. Sempe and Rene Goscinny, 192 pages.
World According to Mister Rogers, The; by Fred Rogers. 197 pages.
Ze Page Total: 6,381.
The Best Part
Catch You Later, Traitor, by Avi
“Pete,” said Mr. Ordson, “we live in a time of great mistrust. This is not always a bad thing. People should question things. However, in my experience, too much suspicion undermines reason.”
I shook my head, only to remember he couldn’t see me.
“There’s a big difference,” he went on, “between suspicion and paranoia.”
“What’s . . . paranoia?”
“An unreasonable beliefe that you are being persecuted. For example,” Mr. Ordson went on,” I’m willing to guess you’ve even considered me to be the informer. After all, you told me you were going to follow your father. Perhaps I told the FBI.”
Startled, I stared at him. His blank eyes showed nothing. Neither did his expression. It was as if he had his mask on again.
“Have you considered that?” he pushed.
“No,” I said. But his question made me realize how much I’d shared with him. Trusted him. How he’d become my only friend. And he was the only one I hoad told I was going to follow my dad. Maybe he did tell the FBI.
He said, “I hope you get my point.”
Silcence settled around us. Loki looked around, puzzled.
Mr. Ordson must have sensed what I was thinking because he said, “Now, Pete, you don’t really have any qualms about me, do you?”
Yes, perlious times then. Who to trust? And perlious times now, with paranoia running even deeper than during the Red Scare . . .