According to Publisher’s Weekly, Warner Bros is making a movie out of Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are, set to be directed by Spike Jonze and adapted for the screen by Jonze and Dave Eggers. It will be live action with lots of CGI. I think my head just exploded.
Author Archives: Sarah
December Reading
Do you believe in "smelltones"?
Paranoia becomes reality: stinky rings for your phone.
My eyes! They burn!
Yet again I am judging Reflections contest entries. To all young writers: read more good writing. Practice. Try to have something to say. Have someone read your writing, comment on it, and then write another draft.
I wasn’t going to post any exerpts this year, but this one just cries out:
“The thought of my father leaving me, his only daughter, for another woman made me feel noxious.”
Oooh, me too!
2005 Top Reads
Here’s my top reads for half of the year, since I’ve been posting monthly lists. Your mileage may vary considerably.
Best Teen Reads:
Invisible, Hautman
He’s just an ordinary dweeb with a popular guy pal. Only not so much.
Good Brother, Bad Brother, Giblin
Riveting true story of the parallel lives of Edwin Booth and John Wilkes Booth.
Diary of Pelly D, Adlington
A novel of a diary found after the “disappearance” of a whole class of people. Based (very well) on the author’s research on war diaries.
World’s Worst, Frauenfelder
The best worst book I’ve read.
I Am the Messenger, Zusak (actually, I would put this in the adult list, but I originally read it due to recommendations by people who work with teens)
What does it take to be a hero?
Best Grown-Up Reads:
Van Helsing’s Night Off, Mahler
Mostly wordless comics, entirely funny. I hope more of his work gets published in the US.
Poo Bomb, Vogel
Based on the blog, but in a good way.
Working Fire, Unger
This book not just good because firefighters are cool.
Men Who Stare at Goats, Ronson
It’s another nice combination of funny and educational, in a creepy way.
Fray, Whedon
I only just this year got around to reading it, and again I know that Joss is God.
Two Wheels North, Gibb
A small press book that deserves wide acclaim. Excellent true adventure.
Late entry: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Foer
Adieu, Adieu
I’m going out of town for a while, so here’s some crappy old links (with no glittering commentary) that have piled up in my to post list, just to tide you over. Oooh, I’m so nice.
Chicago Historical Society
A salt of the earth test, the writings of Sir Thomas Browne
Science Groove
Charles Darwin continues to have a posse
Best of Best of
List of lists for the year-end roundups, keep an eye on this one as it grows.
November Reading
Because I don't have a window here
I’m working from an office without a window today, and I thought that others might enjoy this list of Bellevue Traffic Cams (with links to other local cameras) that can give you an idea if the snow is sticking or not.
Really big secret
Perhaps more mysterious than huge glyphs marking the underground repository of nuclear-war-proof rantings of a third rate science fiction writer is that anyone thought that whining to the television station would stop the story. Also, why the effort to keep giant space-visible markings a secret?
Update: more glyph stuff is available here.