The Bees: Should You Read or Listen?

For quite some time now I’ve been trying to come up with a “regular feature” for my blog.  Something unique that I can offer the community.  On my ride into work, inspiration hit.  I listen to a ton of books.  My 0:45-1:30 commute gives me ample time to listen to books.  However, I really like listening to books that I have read already.   That way when the person in front of me slams on the brakes and I have to make evasive maneuvers I don’t miss any of the plot.  I can pick up right where I left off.  Bingo!  I can do reviews of reading versus listening to a book.  That way if you aren’t like me and automatically do both, you can gain from my dual book experience.  Without further ado:

Should you read or listen to The Bees, by Laline Paull?

The Afthead Summary:

The Bees is a remarkable novel told from the perspective of a honey bee.  Flora 717 isn’t just any honey bee, she a bee from the lowest class worker in her hive.  Flora shares the life of her hive from child rearing, to drone care, to foraging, to fighting enemies and through her life we learn of the political and social struggles of hive living.

Read:

I read the novel first and the book moved quickly and was one of my favorites of the year.  I loved Paull’s description of the hive and the places Flora visited.  Her perspective of life as a bee was so unique that it sucked me in, and I couldn’t stop reading.  I learned about the novel from NPR’s list of best books from 2014, which has contained some of the best books I’ve read this year.

Listen:

The listen on this wasn’t quite the experience of the read.  I’m a dedicated Audible user and I downloaded the book to my iPod to enjoy while I drive.  Sometimes the story is enhanced on the second telling, but for this one, I think the power of the story was in it’s uniqueness.  That was lost the second telling.  Also, the magic and the flow for me weren’t as apparent with the audio version.  I liked flying fast while Flora was on the wing and slowing down when she was tired.  The reader didn’t bring the same pacing to the story that I had internally.  Also, I’m a fast reader, and tend to miss details when I read.  In this case I think that helped.  At times I got tired of all the details, because in an audiobook I listen to them all.

Recommendation:

Read


Let me know what you think about this feature.  If it’s popular I’ll make it a normal Monday post.  Also, does anyone know about using images of book covers in my blog?  I took this picture, but since it has Paull’s cover, is that kosher?

Finish Something – Meeting St Mittens

The mittens are done.  I’m super annoyed at myself, because I didn’t record when I started the mittens, but I’ve been at these things a l-o–n—g time.  I bought the yarn when my local yarn shop was in it’s old location.  Years ago.  I finished the first mitten when my daughter was a toddler, or was it preschool?  At least three years ago.  These dazzling fair isle, two-color sock yarn mittens made my hands cramp, made me learn the magic loop, and tested my knitting fortitude.  But wow.  They are pretty and warm and I’ll be wearing them all winter now.  (Let’s do a happy dance.  They were done before October!  I didn’t miss a single mitten worthy day.)

These mittens!  I took them on a road trip and while climbing in and out of the car to tend to my needs or my daughter’s needs I sat on the size two bamboo needle and shattered it.  Picking bamboo shards out of your butt is even more aggravating when it means you can’t work on your project the rest of the trip.

These mittens!  Halfway through the first mitten my cat Neko (who died years ago) threw up all over the warm colored yarn.  I mean she threw up all over it.  I had to unravel cat throw up yarn, wash it while it was still attached to my mitten, dry it and wind it into a ball.  Both mittens got knit from the throw up yarn.


For the knitting readers, here are the specs:

Yarn: Berroco Sox Metallic two skeins – one warm color, one cool – I lost the colors long ago but they look so much like the ones in the pattern book, I’m assuming it’s #1366 Mangosteen and #1372 Durian.  Also, I have more than enough yarn left to knit another mitten or two if I <gasp> lose one.

Pattern: Meeting St. Mittens from Berroco Sock Star #279 (COPYRIGHT 2009.  THERE’S A CLUE TO HOW LONG THESE MITTENS HAVE BEEN TAKING UP MY NEEDLES!)

Ravelry page for my mittens.

In case you can’t tell, I’ve been totally into color right now, but all the fair isle wild color projects are off my needles.  I finished my scarf and my mittens.  Now, to finally wrap up that elusive sweater before it gets cold.  And my daughter wants a boring blue hat, but at least she picked an exciting pattern and I have scrumptious yarn to work with.  Ah, fall is coming.  I can feel it in my fingers and my project plans.

Must stop thinking about the Harry Potter sock yarn I have, and how I could mix characters to make these again.

Blogging Awards – Sunshine

Hello readers.  I shall take some time off from my normally scheduled programming to say thank you to Lula Harp for nominating me for the Sunshine Blogger Award.  Like many of these awards, there is a built in blog post built in with the nomination where I get to talk about myself.  So, without further ado here are my responses to Ms. Harp’s questions:

  1. What are 6 things you couldn’t live without?
    • In no particular order: air, food, Diet Dr Pepper, books, outside and my daughter.
  2. What time of day do you do your best writing/work?
    • I really only get to write in the morning (which is horrible) or at night (which is better.)  I think I might write well during the day, but that’s normally when I’m writing e-mails, proposals, performance reviews, and other worky writing things.  Worky writing is not my best or my favorite.
  3. Biscuit or scone?
    • Both, but if I was forced to choose I would pick biscuit, especially because lots of times scones have gross things like cranberries, blueberries and currants in them.  I told my husband recently that if I suddenly had infinite time available I would learn how to make the perfect biscuit.  I have heard rumors that it involves grating the cold butter.  My husband thinks I have lame goals.
  4. Favorite season?
    • Fall, or perhaps spring.  I love fall because I love the weather, the crispness of the air, and the clothes.  I love spring because I love the winter ending and the tiny new plants poking up out of the ground.
  5. What are your thoughts on social media?
    • I’m addicted to Facebook and knowing how my 30ish friends are doing.  That said, all my Facebook friends are also flesh and blood friends, so it’s like an extra expansion of my friendships.  I don’t really get having 500 friends.  I get having 500 connections on LinkedIn, because careers are made via connections.   I loved Twitter when I had 40 minutes on the bus each day, but now that the bus riding is over I can’t make time for it.  I do like the instant connection to anyone, and how it made Neil Gaiman my BFF.  All this said, I know that I need to start figuring out how to better use social media to promote my work, which makes me feel like an old fuddy duddy.
  6. Favorite way to end the day?
    • Sleeping.  I love sleeping.
  7. Best trip?
    • I think the trip my husband and I took to Boston and Maine last year.  We had just come over a really rough stretch and we got to spend 8 days just being grown ups together.  Eating, hiking, walking, kayaking, exploring and just having fun.  As much as I can’t live without my daughter, it was amazing to remember why I choose to live my life with this guy who normally I value for his ability to take out the trash and do dishes.
  8. Would you eat at a restaurant that was really dirty if the food was amazing?
    • So long as the really dirty didn’t involve cockroaches I could see.
  9. How important is it to you to learn something new?
    • Not super important.  I like to learn new things organically.  I would never sit here and think, “Today, I am going to learn French.”  I would learn French if I was going to France, or Montreal.
  10. Have you ever flipped a coin to make an important decision?
    • Nope.  I’m a total spreadsheet decision maker.

Also, I went to the grandmother of my nominator Blabberwockying to check her out.  I love her questions, especially this one:

Do you feel you are at peace with yourself?

  • Absolutely not.  I have moments where I can glimpse peace with myself and it seems so magical.

Finally I went to the great-grandmother of my nominator, to try to see if I could give this award to just anyone.  (It appears I can.)  Then I used her badge for the award, because I like it.  Thanks to A Dark World Inside.

So my nominees are:

Clare from Around Zuzu’s Barn.  Clare’s stories are pure sunshine to me, and I love hearing about her cats (both real and fictional) and her adventures.

Kathy from K E Garland.  Kathy has a wicked wit and a sharp eye for the injustices and idiosyncrasies of life.

On the Lamb Design who is a knitter and a runner like me, which means I love her stuff.  She also was the first person ever who read a fiction piece I wrote and tie it to one of her real life experiences.  She compared my short story, The Fisherman, to this post of a dinner she had in Copenhagen.  Every time I read that post I get chills: it’s total magic.

Alexand Knits for tickling my eyeballs with beautiful knit items.

Now for my questions, if you all are interested in playing along:

  1. Where do you feel at home?
  2. When are you most truly yourself?
  3. What do you love doing, but don’t have enough time for?
  4. What is your biggest time suck?
  5. Who makes you a better person?
  6. If you had to pick four words for a family crest, what would they be?
  7. What do you collect?
  8. Name one word you despise and why do you dislike it?

Thanks again to Lula Harp for the nomination!

I’m Reading it

Okay, I decided to give in and read my novel.  My daughter left with my mom for her sleepover.  I went for a run, ate my takeout Thai food and decided that I was in a decent enough mindset to give the book a try.  Here’s a blow by blow update:

8:22 – One hour in and I’m on page 40.  It doesn’t suck. It’s actually far from sucking.  There are a couple of plot features I’d completely forgotten about that I think I can tie to later in the story.  I got teary eyed once.  I laughed once.  Good signs!  The kittens like my book too.  They like chewing on the spiral binding.  I’m going to eat a Halloween Oreo, or two, and get back to it.


9:28 – It’s still good, and I’m on page 75.  Two scenes I thought I would cut actually flow well.  Not ideal since I need to cut quite a bit, but there is still plenty of book to go.  One of my favorite scenes feels way too short.  It was drawn out and dramatic in my head, but was over in an instant when I read it.  Another teary scene, another laughing scene and a surprise dinosaur-with-short arms joke.  I’m feeling pretty good!

11:11 – Page 102, and I’m getting sleepy.  Over halfway through and only 90 pages left.  I’ve had a couple of, “that person would never say that” moments, and “this sentence make no sense” thoughts, but overall I’m still happy with it.  The plot moves quickly, which I like.  Unfortunately I went past another major section I thought I would be able to delete and it works.  I’m hoping at the end I’ll be able to see the sections that may flow but don’t add anything.   So far, I’m glad I’m reading it and thinking I need to make time for a second draft.

My Soul is Tired

Eighteen days ago my world turned upside down.  I figured it would be no big deal to bring tiny kittens into my house and foster them.  I’d feed them, clean their litter box, give them fresh water and continue on with my life as normal.  No big deal.

Wrong.

Three dead kittens later, eye drops, antibiotics, steam showers, and subcutaneous fluids have eaten up every spare moment I have and several spare moments that I don’t have.  What the heck was I thinking?  The care of these kittens has not just drained my energy, it has drained my soul, and this is a problem.

It’s a problem because tomorrow is the day.  It’s the day I have planned for eight weeks.  The day to break open my novel and read it for the first time.  I should be excited and jittery, but I’m exhausted.  My wonder has gone the way of dead kittens, and that is not a happy place.

Do I seize the time I’ve carved for myself and read?  Do I wait for the next free moment, even if it means waiting until November?

Fostering was supposed to be fun and a great life experience.  Who knew these tiny cats were so fragile?  I haven’t felt this raw since the pediatrician uttered the words “failure to thrive” over my tiny daughter’s body.  I was not a good mother to a newborn human.  I am not a good mother to cat newborns either.  They consume every ounce of me, these tiny new beings.  I give more than I have and then I give more.

Tomorrow.  Do I read?  Do I not?  This too is supposed to be fun.  The anticipation of the first read.  The triumph or the tragedy when the last page is turned.

What to do….

I Really Want Kittens

I have always wanted kittens.  A litter of tiny kittens I could watch grow from birth through kitten-hood.  I want to see the tiny babies born, licked clean by their momma, and then nursed.  I want to see their ears open, their eyes open, and watch them take wobbly first steps.  I want to have kittens chewing on my fingers, crawling up my leg and sitting on my shoulder.

I am a responsible pet owner.  I spay and neuter my cats just like I’m supposed to.  I think letting your cats have kittens is irresponsible, but I really want kittens.

My daughter wants kittens.  We sit together and watch the Animal Planet show Too Cute, and we marvel over the tiny furry babies.  We coo as they take first steps.  We laugh when the fluffy ones get their first bath and become wet and sad looking.  She asks me, “Mom, why can’t our cats have kittens?”  I tell her that our cats had surgery and they can’t have kittens, but I want kittens too.

Our last cat we adopted from the shelter was a foster cat.  A seed was planted.  A lovely woman I met at the shelter had my kitten at her house, and had cared for the tiny kitten until she’d grown “big enough.”

I found the program.  I signed up.  I went to training.  I was interviewed.  I went to more training.  My house was inspected.  Finally I got the e-mail that I was an approved foster parent.  If I could get to the shelter within the hour I could bring home kittens.

My daughter and I had discussed the perfect number of kittens.  Three: one for each human in our house.  We wanted them to be fluffy.  We wanted a momma and her kittens.  No, we just wanted kittens.  We wanted them to like our other cat.  We wanted them to love us.  We discussed how we’d have to give them back when they were 8 weeks old and 2 pounds.  That would be hard, but we could do it.  We dreamed about our kittens together.

We did not discuss the other side of fostering, but I learned.  Kittens die.  Kittens get horrible diseases.  During my interview I heard about an entire dead litter.  Kitten after kitten inexplicably dying.  It had only happened once, my interviewee assured me.  Pan Luke she said, but I didn’t know what that meant.  I heard about ringworm that infected your entire house and sounded like lice on steroids.  That had only happened once my interviewee assured me.  There were terrible things that could happen, but I really wanted kittens.

We came home with three tiny fluffs.  They were four weeks old and black head to toe.  They were exactly what we dreamed.  Two tiny boys and one big girl.  We laughed at the mistake we made at the beginning assuming that the aggressive big one was male and the small one we named Tiny was a girl.

Tiny had a purr inversely proportional to his size.  Holding him would start a motor in his chest that could be heard across the room.  His sister Adventure would purr, but not as big.  His brother Blackie had a quiet rumble that you could feel but not hear.  They all had personalities and we fell hard and fast.

Something wasn’t right with Tiny.  He ate less each day while his brother and sister got bigger.  He’d climb onto you and sit and purr but wouldn’t drink and wouldn’t play.  Five days after we got him I took him in.  I knew something was wrong.  They tested him and said the horrible words: panleuk, not Pan Luke.  He was going to die.

He sat on my shoulder while they filled out paperwork.  Someone mentioned the other cats in the litter.  Tiny just sat while I said I’d take any litter mates that weren’t sick.  The kittens had to be quarantined for two weeks.  They might as well all be together at my house.  They brought the two litter mates in.  One more time I heard panleuk.  There were five kittens in the litter and two died.  I brought three home, but not the same three I brought from home.

I watched my daughter when I told her, “Tiny died.”  She crumpled in a way I’ve never seen before.  This grief was bigger than any she’d ever felt.  I watched her and for the first time saw her feel sadness the way I feel sadness.  She tried to stand tall, but all she wanted to do was curl up and sob.  We are too proud to show that grief, but we feel it, and you can see it as our head drops and shoulders slump.

It took us four days to name the new cat.  Finally he became Sneaker because of his ability to escape.  As if the name had attracted the attention of unknown spirits the next morning he was lethargic and had lost weight.  I took my daughter to school and we both worried silently.

At home alone I went to the kittens.  I held all three and sobbed.  Alone the tears fell and the cries become audible.  How could I have done this to my family?  How could I have done this to myself?  I wanted kittens.  I didn’t want dead kittens.  What kind of person does this to herself and her family?  All three kittens purred in my arms as I wiped my tears and snot from their soft fur.  Then I e-mailed the shelter and made an appointment.

“It’s negative.” she said looking at the test.  He was sick, but he wasn’t dying.  Or if he is dying it’s of something else.  I’m instructed to give him a huge shot of fluid under his skin twice a day.  Gleefully I box up the same three kittens and take home the needles and fluid.

He spent the day next to my heart in my jacket.  It wasn’t fair for me to keep my distance because I was hurt by his brother.  I wanted kittens.  His warmth and motor kept me company through spreadsheets and graphs and conference calls.

“You are such a good person.”

“I am moved by your dedication.”

“You are an amazing person and foster parent!”

“Thank you.” I reply, but inside I know I just really want kittens.

Periodic Publishing Posts – Self Publishing?

I’m 6 weeks into an 8 week hiatus from my novel, Hallelujah, and have been working through a list of to-do items prepping me to get my book published.  The last couple of weeks have completely flummoxed me.  I went into this wanting to publish traditionally.  I wanted to have Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins or Penguin Random House on the spine.  (Uh, Penguin and Random House merged?  I had no idea.)  A couple of conversations with some friends of friends has made me wonder what my next step really is.

Conversation #1 – Founder of a self-publishing firm

A dear friend of mine suggested I spend my Sunday morning walking with Polly Letofsky.  Thankfully that’s an organized event anyone can join every Sunday, so it wasn’t a weird idea.  My friend knew that Polly had written a book about her experience walking around the world and she thought Polly might have some ideas about how to get my book published.  What she didn’t know was that Polly had moved on to starting a self-publishing project management and consulting firm, My Word! Publishing.

Polly had all kinds of information about what she does and how her company works.  She encouraged me to self-publish.  She threw around a lot of words I didn’t understand about publishing and the process and encouraged me to contact her for a free evaluation.  Basically her company puts together a publishing team for you: editors, marketing people, writing coaches, and whatever else you need.  Polly told me my first step was to start my own company, which I would later use to publish my book.  This was all fascinating and overwhelming.  Here’s what I took out of my conversation with her:

  1. If you want to make money on your book, you make much less per book with a traditional publication (like $1/book) versus self publishing ($12/book).
  2. An average book sells 2,500 copies.  An average self published book sells 250.
  3. You need to understand your own goals for publishing.

The first two bullets are a math problem.  Jojo sells 2500 copies of her first book and makes $1/book.  Anna sells 250 copies of her book for $12/book.  Who made the most money publishing her book?  If you play the averages, self-publishing wins, but by only $500.  However, this is where bullet number 3 comes in.

Once I had time to think I realized that my goal is not to make lots of money.  My goal is to get lots of people to read my book.  In my dreamy dream world I want to publish a book that people want to read, which is measured by them buying lots of books.

In my limited knowledge of how all this works, I didn’t even consider self-publishing because I do not believe that I could write a book lots of people want to read by myself.  People are not interested in a book with grammar errors, writing issues, and juvenile construction.  I know I need a whole team of people around me to publish a quality book and that meant traditional publishing.  Polly opened my eyes to the fact that the consolidation of the publishing houses means that there are lots of publishing people out there waiting to support self-publishers.  Once I read my book and determine if I want to go forward with it I’ll meet with her and see how her process works.  More on that here when the meeting happens

Conversation #2 – A self-published author

Jamie Ferguson is a friend of a friend and she published With Perfect Clarity in 2013.  I read her book and we’ve had a couple of e-mail conversations back and forth.  Hopefully we can meet in person and chat about her process in detail, but what I found out from her was that she also self-published through her company, Blackbird Publishing.

When I found all this out I did a double take.  This idea of starting your own company to publish a book seemed crazy when Polly mentioned it to me, and here I already had a data point telling me that was what people really did.  Jamie had editors tell her that the book was good, but would be hard to publish traditionally and an agent who was interested, but wanted her to make big changes, so she self published.

Both these conversations were interesting, and at least opened my eyes to what self-publishing means.  I’m not as against that direction as I was, but I’m a little overwhelmed by the thought that I have to write a book and then find a team, and then pay the team to edit, market and publish my book.  (If the averages work out I have $500 I could use to pay all those people and end up cost neutral.)  The flip side is to continue to try the traditional route.  I’m torn, but I don’t know enough yet.  My next steps are to learn more by meeting with Polly and Jamie.

I’ve got two weeks left until the big read, and I’m pretty comfortable where everything stands on my list.  I’ve got some work to do on a CV, and I have two more personal connections to exercise.  (I may wait on both of those until after the first reading, because they are connections I don’t want to use unless I’m really going to publish this thing.)  The only other item on my list is an elevator pitch, and that’s got to wait until I read, because I’m starting to forget the details of my book.  That was the whole idea of this little break.

I’m getting excited and nervous for two weeks from now.

Favorite Lines (The Anniversary Edition) – The Sparrow

In honor of my wedding anniversary I share with you my favorite passage about marriage from one of my favorite books, The Sparrow by Maria Doria Russell.  In my mind it is the most honest and true writing I have ever encountered about commitment and the realities of two people staying together.  I have been known to send it to friends when their marriages are in crisis.  (Because nothing gives comfort like a really long book passage.)  Anne Edwards is the narrator in this passage.  She’s married to George Edwards and is talking with their younger friend Jimmy Quinn.  Bear with me, because I think it’s worth the really long read.

“…we all make vows, Jimmy. And there is something very beautiful and touching and noble about wanting good impulses to be permanent and true forever,” she said. “Most of us stand up and vow to love, honor and cherish someone. And we truly mean it, at the time. But two or twelve or twenty years down the road, the lawyers are negotiating the property settlement.”

“You and George didn’t go back on your promises.”

She laughed. “Lemme tell ya something, sweetface. I have been married at least four times, to four different men.” She watched him chew that over for a moment before continuing, “They’ve all been named George Edwards but, believe me, the man who is waiting for me down the hall is a whole lot different animal from the boy I married, back before there was dirt. Oh, there are continuities. He has always been fun and he has never been able to budget his time properly and – well, the rest is none of your business.”

“But people change,” he said quietly.

“Precisely. People change. Cultures change. Empires rise and fall. Shit. Geology changes! Every ten years or so, George and I have faced the fact that we have changed and we’ve had to decide if it makes sense to create a new marriage between these two new people.” She flopped back against her chair. “Which is why vows are such a tricky business. Because nothing stays the same forever.” ― Mary Doria Russell, The Sparrow

In my world, and I only have depth of vision into my own life, this is how marriage really works.  You make a vow and you spend the rest of your life together doing the best you can by that commitment given the people you become.  With me and Mr. Afthead there have been really hard times when we clung to each other, and other times when we pushed away.  There have been unexpected joyful times and well planned celebrations that fell flat.  There are times when our marriage works without a hitch.  There are other times when it is a deadly slog that we just have to get through.  Throughout it all we decide if the marriage makes sense with who we are in a given moment and in the foreseeable future.  So far, we’ve come out of that evaluation together every time.  It isn’t Romeo and Juliet, but it’s worked for us.

I hope I haven’t embarrassed you all with the deep romance that runs through the Afthead household.  Now off to go cook dinner for my snookems.  Also, there’s a card here somewhere I need to sign.

Love from the Aftheads!

Fireman Boot Fetish

I love the random day when firemen appear in the street holding their big boots going from car door to car door collecting money.  When I was little, I didn’t care what they were collecting money for.  I only cared that they were standing in the middle of the street, so dangerous, and I could crank down my window to put money into their boots.  No, “Keep you hands in the window” yell from mom on that day.  Now as an adult I don’t know what the attraction is:  the philanthropy, the novelty, the Muscular Dystrophy Association or the firemen.  Whatever it is, I am giddy when I see the firetruck by the side of the road, lights flashing and firemen with boots.  I pull out my purse and start rummaging for whatever cash or change I have.  $20? $5? $1? I roll down my window and hang out the money.  (I wonder how many accidents happen in the MDA fireman campaign.)

This year I dropped money in the boot four times.  As I was collecting my fourth sticker — if you have a kid you get a sticker for your donation — I had an epiphany.  Maybe they just don’t do this in Denver, Colorado.  Maybe there are firemen all over the country with their boots out collecting money.  Maybe, gasp, maybe this happens at a set time every year and I just am not aware enough to notice.

A little bit of web sleuthing led to a little bit of information.  The MDA Fill the Boot effort has been going on for 60 years, and always happens in the summer.  This is how I remember it, always in the summer.  However, I can’t find any information that tells me if this happens the same time every year for a given locale.  For now the mystery is alive.  At some point next year, in the summer, I can expect to see boots held out in the middle of the road and I can hope that I’ll have money to put in them.  If not, I’ll head to the ATM machine and circle back around.  That little ploy wasn’t utilized this year, but it has in the past and it will be again.

Were the boots out in your neck of the woods this weekend???