Day Twelve: 12 Days of Christmas PETS

Scanned DocumentAnd now we come to our final entry in 12 Days of Christmas PETS. Artist Jenny Sparks worked on this piece during her Christmas break. It features her adorable bunny, Peaches.

 

Jenny's bunny

 

Jenny Rachel Sparks is in her fifth and final year of the Brown/RISD Dual Degree Program, where she studies Sculpture and Geology.

 

Peaches is Jenny’s lovable 8.5 year old bunny who enjoys destroying anything in her reach.

 

 

 

http://jennyrachelsparks.com/category/portfolio

 

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Thank you to every one who contributed to this special Christmas series. It has been fun to meet your furry companions.  Happy 2015! Cheers, Rita

 


12 Days of Christmas PETS : Bonus — Kelly’s Kitty

Scanned DocumentHow cute is this pic? Kelly Kreamer Dowling sent in this pic of Bandit snoozing under Rudolph's watchful eyes.
 
Kelly's Kitty

Kelly say:


It’s important to note that at the top of the season Bandit (our 6 month old kitten) took a strong and immediate dislike to poor Rudolph. He pursued and beat him mercilessly all holiday. Now, in the dark of the night, Rudy rises for vengance!!!

Kelly is an actor, director, writer, designer, etc. A Jane of all trades, with a love of all aspects of theatre and a focus on classical works. She is the founder of the COW Theatre Company and a long time member of the Baltimore Shakespeare Factory.

You can learn more about Kelly at https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kelly-K-Dowling/771321589545380


Day Eleven: 12 Days of Christmas Pets

Scanned DocumentMeet Josh, a boarder collie rescue  who lives with his human Angie, and her two cats Roo and Tux in Winchester, Virginia.

 

Josh Xmas

 

Josh started life on a farm where he was fully neglected. Having developed a obsession for chasing cars, he was hit by one and sustained cracked teeth and a broken pelvis. He received no veterinary care. Josh was dropped off at a rural shelter which, due to lack of funds, wasn’t able to treat his injuries. His troubles included heart worm, which is fatal if not treated. Fortunately a border collie rescue was willing to take him out of the shelter, treat him, and find him a home.

Angie found him listed on Petfinder as a “special needs dog”. She fell in love and adopted him.

Despite being so poorly treated by humans as a puppy, Josh is a gentle, sweet dog and reaches out in a loving way by touching you with a paw. He’s now about 14 years old, he has some arthritis and his eyesight and hearing are in decline.

He loves to sit with you while you read or watch movies. He also loves sleeping in his warm, fuzzy bed and eating treats (even ones with vegetables.)

His very presence is a blessing to all in the house.

 

Joshie


Year of READING Dangerously #13 Captain Underpants (Series)

Thank you Lynn Reynolds for tackling the Captain Underpants series. (#13 on the ALA’s banned book list).

Captain Underpants and the Attack of the Talki...

Captain Underpants and the Attack of the Talking Toilets (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I remember and LOVE Captain Underpants! My son (known to readers of my own blog as Dr. Sheldon Cooper) adored the early Captain Underpants books when he was little. The Captain is the alter ego of a school principal in a series of comic books created by a couple of unruly students at the school. Then the Captain accidentally becomes real – I forget how – and hijinks ensue. The books are definitely guilty of a fair amount of “toilet humor,” as evidenced by titles like Captain Underpants and the Perilous Plot of Professor Poopypants. To be honest, though, most of the “toilet humor” is of a much better quality than the average Seth Rogen film. It’s all very slapsticky but not at all mean-spirited.

I think my little Dr. Cooper loved them because the boys in the stories were clearly boys with “issues” like himself. In fact, the author of the books, Dav Pilkey, was diagnosed as a child with ADHD and Dyslexia, so he was one of Dr. Cooper’s early figures on his Wall of Fame, a wall we have that’s filled with photos of successful people who have ADHD/ADD, Asperger’s and learning disabilities.

Pilkey’s teachers didn’t know what to do with him and found him too disruptive in the classroom, so they put a desk out in the hallway and just left him there for long periods of time. And that’s when he started drawing and writing stories. In addition to Captain Underpants, he has several other series. Some of my son’s favorite books when he was very little were the Dragon books, about a dragon who doesn’t quite “get” a lot of things going on around him socially but who always comes out on top.

The Captain Underpants books have been subject to censorship for as long as I can remember. Before I had a hyperactive son who needed entertaining, I was sure that books with titles like “Captain Underpants and the Attack of the Talking Toilets” were clear signs of the collapse of civilization as we know it. Then I had Dr. Cooper and I had to learn to adjust all of my thinking about the differences between what boy children and girl children find entertaining and what constitutes a good book (answer: any book a kid wants to read as long as it doesn’t involve violence and mistreatment of others).

I assume the Captain Underpants books are frequently censored because of the mild “potty humor” – at least officially. Unofficially, I suspect many people want the books to go away because they are really quite subversive and might encourage kids to disrespect authority figures and behave in disruptive ways. But I’ve always kind of liked people who question authority, and I think learning not to be a submissive cog in the corporate machine starts pretty early in life. And maybe it starts with reading books like this.

Please check out Lynn’s Blog, www.lynnreynolds.com, to learn more about this wonderful writer and mother.


A Year of READING Dangerously — update

I redid the master list (here in three parts) so everyone could see what was read, what was being read, and what was available at the (local Hereford) library.  Check the list and see if you can help us out on our collective read. I really do not want to read Captain Underpants… so if some one could take that on I’d be very grateful.

The first Captain Underpants book.

The first Captain Underpants book. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

How to play along… read a book on the list (it counts if you have recently read the book). Send me a note at: reetsgee@gmail.com telling me a little something about the book, why you chose it, what you liked or didn’t like. Then look at the matrix at the bottom of the blog post and see why the book might have been banned. If  you have a jpeg photo of the book send it along. I’ll happily link to your blog or other web page if you give me the address.

 

What if there is a book that has already been read that you REALLY want to do? Please feel free to write it up. I’d be interested in seeing your take.

What if I want to keep my review anonymous? No worries, I’ll keep your name off the review. Just let me know.

Banned books block title list

Banned books block title list

Banned books block title list

Books in black on the list are not in the local library and not on my shelf. So if you have them and are willing to loan them please let me know. That would also be most helpful.

 

This is the matrix I use in trying to determine why a book has been challenged or banned.

This is the matrix I use in trying to determine why a book has been challenged or banned.


Day Ten: 12 Days of Christmas PETS

Scanned DocumentToday’s entry for 12 Days of Christmas PETS come from animal lover and friend, Jenny B.

Meet Missy, the Yorkie.

Missy

Missy oversees the Christmas decorating efforts of Jenny and her family.

 

Jenny is in her third semester at the Community College of Baltimore County where she is an Acting major. She loves to read and is musician (both voice and flute — just not at the same time.) Besides her own pets, Jenny has a dog walking and pet sitting service for her neighbors (a service she’s been doing for several years.)  Jenny at a Pennsylvania pet store and can be found either behind the counter or taking care of the furries, the feathereds or the scaled ones.

 

12 year old Missy likes to sleep and to play with her toys and chew on her bones. She came to live with Jenny’s family 5 years ago because her other family couldn’t keep her.

Jenny and Nan, the cat, on National Hug Your Cat Day.

Jenny and Nan, the cat, on National Hug Your Cat Day.

Here’s a pic of Jenny with another of her pets, Nan, a ten year old boy cat. He’s part Siamese and part American Short Hair and has one blue eye and one green eye. Both of Jenny’s eyes are brown… for the record.

 


Day Nine: 12 Days of Christmas PETS

Scanned Document

Meow! Today’s pet is Amy the cat.

 

Nancy's cat Amy

Amy lives with Nancy Magnuson, College Librarian at Goucher College, and her husband Jay Harrell (also Ruthie, Shere, and Pawl). Goucher is the home of North America’s best collection by and about Jane Austen. Nancy recommends celebrating the New Year with a contribution to the library’s “Emma in America” campaign! http://www.razoo.com/story/Goucherlibraryemma


A Year of READING Dangerously : 23. The Giver

Maggie comes in with another review, this time it’s 23. The Giver, by Lois Lowry.

Giver

We both loved this book and have read it several times. It is a the opening novel of Lowry’s wonderful distopian quartet that also includes Gathering Blue, Messenger, and Son. (For the record Gathering Blue is my favorite.)

Here’s the Amazon review of the book:

In a world with no poverty, no crime, no sickness and no unemployment, and where every family is happy, 12-year-old Jonas is chosen to be the community’s Receiver of Memories. Under the tutelage of the Elders and an old man known as the Giver, he discovers the disturbing truth about his utopian world and struggles against the weight of its hypocrisy. With echoes of Brave New World, in this 1994 Newbery Medal winner, Lowry examines the idea that people might freely choose to give up their humanity in order to create a more stable society. Gradually Jonas learns just how costly this ordered and pain-free society can be, and boldly decides he cannot pay the price. [– Amazon]

We weren’t sure why the book would wind up on the banned list so we looked it up on line.  Marshall University posted a list of banned books and cited when and why they were challenged. Here’s the scoop on The Giver‘s “offenses”:

2008 Appalled by the descriptions of adolescent pill-popping, suicide, and lethal injections given to babies and the elderly, two parents demanded that the Mt. Diablo School District headquartered in Concord (CA) eliminate the controversial but award-winning book from the school reading lists and libraries.

2007 Challenged, but retained at the Seaman (KS) Unified School District 345 Elementary School library.

2006 Challenged, but retained at the Seaman (KS) Unified School District 345 Elementary School library.

2005 Challenged as a suggested reading for 8th grade students in Blue Springs (MO). Parents called the book “lewd” and “twisted” and pleaded for it to be tossed out of the district. Two committees have reviewed the book.

2001 Banned for being sexually explicit, occult themes, and violence.

[Marshall Univeristy]

 

“Maybe,” Maggie added, “although it isn’t on our banned books matrix, the book was banned because the kid is rebellious.” That does seem to be another theme. She added “It also gives a possible future that people might be uncomfortable with.”

Maggie recommends this book for readers 8 and up (with repeated readings often.)


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A Year of READING Dangerously: #8 His Dark Materials

Thanks to Maggie for another review. This time she tackles #8: His Dark Materials (Series) by Philip Pullman

HisDarkMaterialsUS

Of the book she says:

It was inventive and has strong female characters. Particularly in the Subtle Knife the author has you consider the viewpoint of the outsider in our world (a recurring theme in a lot of these books.) [– Maggie]

Reasons why it might be banned: Violence, Occultism, Religious Viewpoint, and (possibly) Political Viewpoint

His Dark Materials

She recommends the books for readers 11 and above.


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