Sunday, January 30, 2011

The Chosen One Recap

I learn something new at every book group discussion.

Often it's something . . . unexpected.

At our discussion of The Chosen One I learned that most of us have fascinating ties to historical and modern-day polygamy.

I learned Ringo's brutally honest opinion of our local charter schools. (I'd repeat it here, but I don't remember the exact words.)

I learned that we never run out of things to talk about and laugh about. (That's not unexpected.)

Ringo's Catalina Corn Chip Salad


1 bottle Catalina dressing
2 tomatoes, cut into chunks
1 onion, cut into chunks
1 green bell pepper, cut into chunks
1 cup cubed cheese
1 bag Fritos

Mix all ingredients together.

?'s Poppy Seed Pasta Salad


Cook 1 package pasta (3-colored Rotelle works well) and drain.

Add:
fresh broccoli, broken into small pieces
cauliflower, broken into small pieces
celery, chopped
green onion, sliced
frozen peas (run under hot water and douse with cold water)
fresh mushrooms, sliced
avocado, sliced
bacon, crumbled, or bacon bits
grated Swiss cheese

Dressing:
3/4 cup sugar
1 Tbsp. dry mustard
1/2 tsp. salt
1/3 cup cider vinegar
1 Tbsp. onion powder
1 cup salad oil
1 1/2 Tbsp. poppy seeds

Combine first five ingredients in blender. Slowly add oil into blender until mixture is thick and smooth. Stir in poppy seeds. Store, covered, in refrigerator. Add dressing to salad before serving.

Prof's Pudding Cake, the Easiest Dessert Ever

1 small package instant pudding mixed 2 cups of milk until lumps are gone.
1 chocolate cake mix stirred into pudding. Mix will be thick and lumpy, but that's okay.
Spoon into 9 x 13 baking pan. Smooth mixture evenly. Cover top with nuts and chocolate chips.
Bake at 350 degrees for 1/2 hour and then begin checking the top with your finger to see if cake springs back or if it burns you to the knuckle in hot gooey cake batter. Remove from oven at springy stage. Serve warm with ice cream or cool and cut up like brownies.

Moab's Citrus Lemon Poppy Seed Cake


1 lemon cake mix
3 eggs
1/2 cup oil
1 1/3 cup orange juice
1 tsp. orange peel
1 tsp. lemon peel
1-2 Tbsp. poppy seeds

Mix together for two minutes. Bake in Bundt cake pan for 40-45 minutes at 350 degrees. Cool. Remove from pan.

Glaze:
2 cups powdered sugar
3-4 Tbsp. orange juice
1/2 tsp. orange peel
1/2 tsp. lemon peel

Legacy's "Jack Daniel" Dip

1 pkg. Jimmy Dean sausage, regular flavor
1 can Campbell's Nacho Cheese soup
1 can Campbell's mushroom soup
1 can chopped olives
1 pkg. Velveeta Mexican mild cheese

Brown sausage. Add soups and olives. Cut cheese into cubes and add. Heat until melted. Serve with chips.

Sereia's Veggie Pizza

2 cans Pillsbury crescent dough
1 pkg. (8 oz.) chive and onion cream cheese, softened
assorted veggies sliced, i.e. mushrooms, olives, matchstick carrots, green onions, cucumbers, etc.

Roll crescent dough flat onto a greased cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees until golden brown, about 10-15 minutes. Cool. Spread evenly with cream cheese. Top with veggies. Chill. Cut into squares. Serve.

Belle's Chocolate Macadamia Nuts


Go to Hawaii.
Pick up a box at the airport.
Enjoy.

Apple's Famous Broccoli Salad



2 lbs. fresh broccoli, cut in pieces
1/2 lbs. bacon, cooked and crumbled
2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
1/2 medium red onion, sliced
1 cup frozen peas, thawed

Dressing:
1 cup mayonnaise
2 Tbsp. cider vinegar
1/2 cup sugar

One last note:

There are two new nicknames: Prof for CH--referencing her college teaching days and Sailor for PJW and her summerly jaunts down the river and at Lake Powell.

Leif Enger on Heaven

Having lunch with Leif Enger and hearing him speak was so much fun

Wish all of you could've been there.

Leif's friends gave him two pieces of advice when hearing he was coming to Utah.
1. Don't forget your camera. Utah is beautiful.
2. Bring instant coffee.

My co-worker asked him about the chapter in Peace Like a River that describes death. Her daughter had lost a son and that chapter was comforting to her. Leif said that he knew that Reuben, with his worsening asthma, would have to die. In preparation for that scene,
he began reading C.S. Lewis. 




Normally, he is the type of writer who writes a lot--and throws a lot away. He rewrites and rewrites and rewrites. It was different with the scene about heaven. It was as if  he was given a gift and not a word of that scene was altered.


One reviewer wrote:

"He does one chapter on heaven that makes me think he’s been there…and makes me long for the place even more."
Rowland Croucher

Leif Enger is a deeply spiritual man and it was an honor to meet him.

One last note:
Leif Enger's third book, which he is finishing up, is about a young man who finds out he has an "illegimate grandfather."

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Happiness

Want to be happier? Researcher says that people who join a group where they attend at least monthly raise their happiness as much as doubling their paycheck.

At least it says so in this book:
by this man:


We are a very happy group!

Friday, January 28, 2011

Caldecott and Newbery Winners

There are certain things I look forward to every January:

Putting the Christmas decorations away
 (I love Christmas, but I enjoy cleaning up afterwards, too.)



Snow
(especially if it stays off the streets)


Time to read
(January isn't usually as busy as the holiday months.)


Caldecott and Newbery Award announcements


The Caldecott Winners were a surprise--to me and to many others--not because they weren't good stories, but because we questioned whether the artwork was "the most distinguished" of any others published in 2010. If you are interested in learning about the winners, check out my post on the library's blog by clicking { here }.

Friday, January 21, 2011

The Long Walk

Remember this book about seven prisoners who escaped a labor camp in Siberia and traveled thousands of dangerous miles through Mongolia, the Gobi Desert and Tibet before arriving in India?


We read it in 2001.
Whether or not you believe this "true" story actually happened, it is well worth the read.

A movie based on this book was released today.


You can read the Deseret News review { here }.

And watch the trailer:



Double click on the image if you want to see it in full screen.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Leif Enger Coming to Provo Library

Leif Enger, the author of Peace Like a River is coming to Provo Library to speak on Saturday, January 22 at 1 p.m. for their annual Family Literacy Symposium. The tickets are free and are going to be available this coming Monday for Provo Library cardholders. (I am going to borrow my mom's card.) It's open to the general public on Monday, January 17th. For more information on tickets, go [here].
You can also have attend a luncheon with Enger for a fee. More information [here].

Provo Library puts on great events and the classes they are offering after Enger's keynote are sure to be worthwhile. For a listing, click [here].

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Carol Lynch Williams

Our first book of 2011

The Chosen One
Thirteen-year-old Kyra has grown up in an isolated community without questioning the fact that her father has three wives and she has twenty brothers and sisters. That is, without questioning it much—if you don’t count her visits to the Ironton County Mobile Library on Wheels to read forbidden books, or her secret meetings with Joshua, the boy she hopes to choose for herself instead of having a man chosen for her. But when the Prophet decrees that Kyra must marry her sixty-year-old uncle—who already has six wives—she must make a desperate choice in the face of violence and her own fears of losing her family forever.

Carol Lynch Williams

Carol, the mother of six daughters and a son, grew up in Florida, but now lives in Utah Valley. She has a MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults and organizes a writing conference at BYU every summer. She was the winner of the 2009 PEN/Phyllis Naylor Working Writer Fellowship. 

The Chosen One was named one of 2010 ALA's "Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers" and "Best Books for Young Adult Readers"; it won the Whitney and the Association of Mormon Letters awards for the best young adult fiction of the year, and has been featured on the Texas Library Association’s Lone Star Reading List, the New England Children’s Booksellers’ Association Top 10 List, the Summer 2009 Indiebound Kids' Next List, the Amelia Bloomer Reading List, and the Texas Tayshas High School Reading List.

Her latest novel is Glimpse


In one moment

it is over.

In one moment

it is gone.

The morning grows

thin, grey

and our lives-

how they were-

have vanished.

Our lives have

changed

when I walk in

on Lizzie

my sister

holding a shotgun.

Twelve year old girl Hope's life is turned upside down when her older sister Lizzie becomes an elective mute and is institutionalized after trying to kill herself. Ever since their dad died Hope and Lizzie have relied on each other from a young age. Their mother is a reluctant and unreliable parent at best, who turns tricks to support the family. Throughout the course of this lyrical and heartbreaking narrative readers and Hope discover that the mother is prostituting Lizzie and it’s up to Hope to bring the truth to light to save her sister.

Interview with Carol:

Q: Where did you first get the idea to write The Chosen One?

A: Many years ago I heard of a young woman who ran from her polygamist community. She was dragged home, beaten and yet she ran again. I knew at that moment—at least a decade ago—that I would write this novel.

One of my goals in writing the book was to show the difference between polygamist groups and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of which I am a member. Some people still think that most men in Utah have more than one wife. Polygamists are not Latter-day Saints. I wanted to show that in my book.

Q: Around the time you were starting to write the book, your daughter brought home a young man whose polygamous father was in jail. In what ways did this boy’s continued presence in your
life affect the direction of the book?

A: When Chris came into our lives I was, indeed, just beginning the novel. I asked him a few
questions, but Chris’ life was, in many ways, very different from Kyra’s. He didn’t live on a compound (though his family did live out in the desert away from people), he was allowed to choose how he believed when he got older, and while life proved to be pretty tough for him, he didn’t have to fight quite as hard for “freedom” as Kyra does.

Q: How did you go about researching polygamous cults? Did any of the strong, yet violent scenes,
uch as the punishment of baby Mariah, Kyra’s beating, and Kyra’s and Patrick’s run from the “God Squad” come from any real-life stories?

A: I did a huge amount of research before and during the writing. There are many different kinds of
polygamist groups around the world. So while this book is grounded in fact, it is still fiction. Patrick’s
story is made up, but another writer who was doing research for a book about polygamy told me about disciplining children by dunking them in ice water. I've also heard of crying babies being squirted in the face with water until they learn to not cry at all. As indicated by the news report about the young girl who was beaten when she ran from her polygamist community, the beatings do take place.

As far as research: I looked up everything I could online. This was a few years back, before the Warren Jeffs arrest. And it was kind of weird, because when I knew I was ready to start writing, it suddenly seemed that TV was full of stories of polygamists. I watched several nationwide news programs, read many newspaper articles, and read both positive and negative accounts of polygamy.

Discussion Questions

1. In some ways, a polygamist family is very different from most American families, yet in other ways,
very similar. How is Kyra’s family different from your family? How are they the same? Were you surprised by these similarities?

2. Discuss the differences and similarities between a religion and a cult. What specific events in the book identify The Chosen as a cult?

3. What is the role of power—and the lack of power—among The Chosen? How do these differ for men? Women? Children? Teens? How are the adults in Kyra’s life victims, and how are they aggressors?

4. There are stories of escapes and attempted escapes from both before and after the current “Prophet” comes to power. Indeed, one of Kyra’s mothers indicates that she attempted to run away. Others, like Kyra’s own parents, never seem to seriously consider leaving. Why do you think people would choose to stay in this community?

5. When Joshua says, “The girls are for all th older men,” what are the practical implications? Why are boys allowed—or forced—to leave? Why are the girls who attempt to escape chased down and brought back?

6. When Kyra, her sisters, and mothers travel to town, they are subjected to curious and rude stares and whispers. Have you ever felt the way Kyra feels during this trip? How does this trip affect Kyra’s view of herself, her family, and The Chosen?

7. Patrick, the librarian, knows he takes a risk in bringing books to Kyra. Do you think he fully understands those risks? Do you think he realizes his life might be in danger when he
decides to help Kyra escape from the Compound in the mobile library?

8. How does Patrick provide both the practical means and some of the emotional strength Kyra needs in order to make her escape? In what ways does Kyra’s family enable her to make her final escape? How does the knowledge that her family will be punished for her leaving both hinder and help her escape?

9. What do you think of Kyra’s decision to leave? While she obviously finds herself in an extreme
situation, does her dilemma remind you of any difficult or complex choice you have had to make? How did you ultimately decide?

10. What do you think life will be like for Kyra outside The Chosen—both in the beginning and
years later? Do you think she finds Joshua? Does she go to college? Does she ever see her family again? What sort of future do you imagine for her?