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Everything posted by idnib
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Wow. I admit I've only heard the title of the book and wasn't aware of what it was about. If I worked for those publishers who have the crazy covers I would have slapped on an oil painting of people actually having a picnic by the roadside. :o
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Maybe I can take another approach to getting DS to read Twain....
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:grouphug: :grouphug: :grouphug:
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I am still reading House of Leaves (which has become terrifying and can only be read in small doses), Basin and Range (taking 3x as long as I Google map all the locations mentioned so I can actually see these geological formations, must have been a faster read pre-Internet), The Hobbit (to the children), and On the Nature of Things (fascinating and amazingly modern). I finished An Illustrated Life and picked up my held copy of Grain Brain but didn't crack that one yet. Eliana, thank you so much for putting together this post. There are lots of things I need to look into from it. I thought I might suggest looking into Nikki Giovanni as well, if you're not familiar with her work. Today I was in the car with the kids and we were listening to KZSU, Stanford's student station. They were playing MLK speeches over nice music and one passage stuck out for me. I don't recall hearing it before: What a cutie! I did a double-take because we have the same furniture! Same buffet, same chairs, except our table is oval. We have the same table pad and latch to lock the pieces together. Oh, except our buffet has Sharpie marks on the front from a little artistic adventure DS had when he was 3. :001_cool:
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I wouldn't have a problem with reading any of these things to my kids. Now I feel like a bad parent. :p Then again, I grew up watching on the Muppets and watching early episodes of Sesame Street, which I guess is a problem now. It's funny because when the new Muppets came out I was annoyed with some of the innuendo and then I started to remember what I survived. I'm not even sure I can answer the original question re: what books might not meet modern parenting standards as the books already mentioned wouldn't have been on my radar. Maybe Where the Red Fern Grows? He's out at all hours, killing animals, walking long distances without supervision? I don't see it that way, but I'm trying to put myself in the shoes of the parents who worry about Blueberries for Sal.
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I didn't think you were saying that at all, for what it's worth. Yes, tea would be better. The nuances of what I want to explain are too difficult to communicate, or more likely I lack the skills to concisely write what I'm thinking into the small text box. I think you're being too hard on yourself! I enjoyed reading your thoughts and hope you don't delete them. :grouphug:
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Perhaps this makes a difference? If you had lived at the time of Bach and loved his music, and saw the possibility of any more music from him actually conclude in your lifetime, maybe you would have felt the loss, even if only for a few days? By the time you were introduced to him you had access to his entire body of work and are fully aware there will never be anymore. While an artist is living there is always hope of one more play, novel, song, composition, or movie.
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I agree. I think that's a possibility. But when he did write in the earlier part of the book about "people who believe themselves to be white" he only mentioned those with actually lighter skin. At that time he could have expounded upon the ideas being discussed here but he chose not to. Was it for us to decide our own categories, or was it really about the history of skin color? Would it have made the book more confusing, or less acceptable? Did he expect readers such as me, of Asian descent, to slot myself into a category? I would find this difficult, as I lead a nice upper middle class lifestyle but am Muslim. And are poor whites, such as those who live in some parts of Appalachia, more like blacks who live in poor ghettos, or like whites?
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I read this trilogy last year. If you consider Book 1 too strange to continue you should avoid Book 2, which takes place in a completely different location, namely HQ. It's such an oddly written book with confusing occurrences and obfuscated bureaucracy. It's even more confusing than Book 1, I think. Book 3 clears up much of the confusion, but Book 2 is a real hump to get over. I see what you're saying but I need some time to think on it. My initial thoughts are that you may be correct in what you're saying about the current state of affairs, but I don't know if Coates is implying this in his book or not.
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I think ordering the materials is the same as registering. At least I hope it is, as that's all I've done. When I asked the woman whether the exam would come via email or snail mail, she told me snail mail so I think that's all you have to do. Please, someone correct me if I'm wrong!