Banned Books Week
In case you didn’t know, this week is the ALA’s annual Banned Books Week.
Here is a list of the 10 most frequently challenged books of 2007.
If you go here, you can see a list of the 100 most frequently challenged books of 1990-2000.
Tell people you know. Stand up for books. Read.
What we talk about when we talk about love.
The Boy and I have never gone about anything in a traditional way. In the five months that we’ve been not-dating, nothing has been what you’d call typical.
The epitome of this non-typical behavior is the way that we talk about things. We never talk about what we’re actually talking about. We never come out and say things if we can create elaborate metaphors or analogies for whatever it is we’re not saying.
In our attempt to keep things simple, we’ve actually made things much more complicated. Nothing is ever what it seems.
Because of all this, it makes sense that what happened Friday night happened the way it happened. (My sentences are clunky today.)
We wandered away from the bar where we’d been drinking with one of his oldest childhood friends. I was angry at him, my feet hurt, I was tired after a really long week. He was slightly intoxicated, but maybe not as much as he was letting on.
The Boy pointed at a nearby bench. “Let’s sit here for a minute.” A minute turned into close to an hour, and during that hour, we talked about a thousand different things, many of them at once. They were all connected but I was having trouble deciphering where each subject ended and another one began. The Boy railed on about my behavior toward another one of his friends. He told me that I need to let go of things, that I hold on too tightly to everything, that life is too short to be so in control, all of the time.
“I’m too scared,” I said tearfully. The whole conversation was surreal enough, but the fact that we were sitting in the middle of downtown Minneapolis at 11:30 at night was doing nothing to ground the situation in reality.
“That’s exactly what I’m talking about,” The Boy said, gesturing emphatically. “You’re too scared? Well, fuck. What a waste.”
I was quiet for a long time. Finally I looked up and met his eyes. “Do you love me, A.?”
“Do you love me?” The Boy asked me without missing a beat.
“I asked you first.”
“I won’t answer until you do,” he said, rather childishly.
“I’m completely head-over-heels in love with you,” I said, sighing with relief. I had done it. It had been building up in me for weeks, and I felt the rush of adrenaline at having finally spoken the words out loud.
“I love you,” The Boy said to me, and then he kissed me, right there in the middle of Nicollet Mall.
Why Pajiba is made of awesome.
Sarah Larson has a great piece at Pajiba about New Moon that pretty much mirrors my sentiments about Meyer’s series as a whole.
It’s hilarious and a good read. Plus, she’s from Minnesota, so you know she’s totally boss.
It’s like this.
There aren’t enough hours in the day. I’m up before six every morning, and I’m out the door by a quarter to seven.
School starts at seven-thirty, and we’re contractually obligated to be in the building by seven-fifteen. I teach (or will, eventually) three hours of World History IB Prep and one hour of World History. I have all ninth-graders.
I leave my classroom by four if I’m lucky. Because lunch is at ten forty-five, I’m starving by the time I walk in the door at four-thirty. Eating dinner at five o’clock makes me feel like I’m eighty years old.
I take a nap around five-thirty . I usually sleep anywhere from thirty minutes to an hour, having weird feverish dreams that involve my students, lesson plans, or the boy (whose apartment I’ve been practically living at for the past few weeks).
I get up, work on lesson plans, unit plans, reflection papers. I try to squeeze in a half-hearted work out.
Because of the nap, I don’t sleep well when it’s time for bed, and I wake up the next morning exhausted, starting the whole cycle over again.
For Memory’s Sake
In case you haven’t been paying attention.
T. was arrested on Monday. She was held for almost two days, and is being charged with a gross misdemeanor–unlawful assembly.
There’s a lot to say about what’s happened, but I don’t have the energy right now.