I once worked for two years as the children’s librarian at a public library. Every aspect of the job was fun for my nerdy, child-like personality, but the undisputed highlight was when I threw a Harry Potter party for the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II. It was a movie release, sure, but I hadn’t been a librarian when the books came out, and no way was I going to miss this opportunity. Continue reading
Inspirational Quotes Challenge
Coolbeans4 challenged me to share three quotes in three days, but I’m going to follow her example and do all three at once! Three times the inspiration.
1. Thank the person who nominated you.
2. Post a quote for 3 consecutive days (1 quote for each day).
3. Nominate three new bloggers. Continue reading
Three Times Lucky by Sheila Turnage
I loved this book! I would have been content to read about the little backwoods town of Tupelo Landing and all its delightfully odd characters from Mo’s pitch-perfect sixth-grade Southern perspective. But Turnage included hurricanes, murders, crushes, and car crashes on top of an already excellent story. The result is one of the best middle grade books I’ve ever read.
I think I was most impressed by how Turnage stepped into a very stereotyped situation (both the small-town Southern setting and the middle grade characters) and infused them with unique and surprising qualities. Mo could quite easily overpower her best friend Dale–she is bold where he is scared–but Dale turns out to be smarter and braver than expected when it matters. Small town life could have been idolized, and while it’s certainly charming, there is also a genuinely distressing subplot about domestic violence.
I adored this book, and I can’t imagine anyone not feeling the same. Read it!
Meet Miss Moses Lobeau–rising sixth grader, natural born detective, borderline straight-A student, and goddess of free enterprise. Mo washed ashore in Tupelo Landing, North Carolina eleven years ago during one of the meanest hurricanes in history, and she’s been making waves ever since.
Mo’s summer is looking good. She’ll take karate with her best friend, Dale Earnhardt Johnson III (whose daddy believes in naming for the famous), and plot against her sworn enemy, Anna Celeste (aka Attila). She’ll help out at the cafe run by the Colonel and Miss Lana, and continue her lifelong search for her Upstream Mother.
But when the cafe’s crankiest customer turns up dead and a city-slick lawman shows up asking questions, Mo’s summer takes an unexpected turn. With another hurricane bearing down on Tupelo Landing, Mo and Dale set out to save those they loves and solve a mystery of epic proportion.
Release Date: May 2012
StumbleUpon Sunday (13)
StumbleUpon is a great way to lose hours of your life. Luckily, I braved the Internet vortex so you don’t have to. This week I found these especially interesting websites:
- 53 Books You Won’t Be Able to Put Down
I cheered at the names of titles I loved and put several unknowns in my library queue. - Young Girl Who’s Best Friends with African Wildlife
I’m hyperventilating with how much I wish I had her life. - Untranslatable Words Turned into Charming Illustrations
I like those “if only English used this word” lists, but the addition of illustrations makes this so much better! - Photograph
I don’t normally link to a single photograph, but the simple whimsy of this outdoor space is so cute! - Important Things from History Everyone Pictures Incorrectly
The Egyptian pyramids were white, Greek statues were brightly painted, etc–time changes things! - The Quest for Every Beard Type
This is a man after my own heart – I’ve always thought there’s no point in being able to grow facial hair if you don’t experiment with it. - Hope You Had a Better Day Than These Guys
Sometimes all you need to feel better is a collection of pictures and GIFs showing you people who have it so much (hilariously) worse. - The 50 Cutest Things That Ever Happened
This title is no lie. *squee* - 23 People Posted the Wisest Words They’ve Ever Heard
From “The single raindrop never feels responsible for the flood” to “By living, there’s a risk of dying.” - Create Face Online
What a weirdly addictive webpage. My only complaint is that there don’t really seem to be options to create a female face.
WHO is Trafficked, and WHO are the Traffickers?
The glossary information in the back of Abby Sher’s Breaking Free was so good, I cannot summarize it. Here in full is her description of the 3 most common types of girls who are trafficked and the 4 most common types of traffickers.
One of the most important things to understand about sex-trafficking survivors is that none of them wanted to go through this. Sometimes it happened to them because someone promised them food or shelter. Sometimes it’s because they were born into a society where they’re expected to be sexually used and abused. Sometimes it’s as simple or familiar as trusting the wrong boyfriend.
Here are just some of the people who are at high risk for sex trafficking.
Runaways
As many as 2.8 million children run away each year in the United States. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children says that in those first two days of being solo, one out of every three of thsoe children are lured into the sex trade.One out of every three.
Remember: When someone runs away from home, it’s definitely a cry for help. Something at home feels unbearable, and whoever is the first person to promise a better alternative holds all the power, even if what he or she is offering sounds sketchy.
Intergenerational Prostitution
In a lot of places in the world, “tradition” is the excuse used to keep girls and women down. In India, 90% of the girls born to sex workers are expected to be sold into the sex trade, too. It’s their “duty.” In societies like this, the boys are brought up to be pimps and the girls are expected to be their prostitutes. The girls can be as young as nine when they’re first sold, and their moms can be the ones bringing them to greet their first customers.Undocumented Immigrants
Immigrants to the United States are super-easy targets for traffickers. When they’re new to America, they often don’t speak English. Or maybe they don’t have a job, they owe money to whoever helped them get here, and they have no legal protection because they’re not officially a citizen (yet). The most tragic part of this setup is that immigrants are often trafficked by people from their home country who steer them the wrong way or promise them an easy ride, and then make them work off their debt by forcing them into the sex trade.We also have to look carefully at who is doing the trafficking. According to the United Nations, 46% of victims know their recruiters. Here are some of the faces they wear.
Romeo
The Romeo Pimp is cunning and slick. Once he homes in on his target, he acts like her boyfriend and promises her the world. Romeo tells her she’s beautiful and sexy. A lot of times, he buys her expensive presents like cell phones and lingerie that makes her feel really special. Then he tells her she’s beautiful some more, especially when she puts on lingerie and does a little shimmy. He thinks she’s so hot that he wonders if she’ll do a little shimmy for his friend. It’s just a joke, he says. Or a special occasion. But this is only the beginning. Romeo has big ideas for her and how beautiful and sexy she can be.Dutch Loverboy
The loverboy of Holland is a special breed. Since prostitution is legal in the Netherlands if you’re eighteen or older, the loverboy preys on underage girls. He pretends to be an adoring boyfriend, doting on his girl with gifts and promises. Soon enough, he starts taking her down to a red lights district and telling her this is just something fun they can try, or how it might help to make some money. Sometimes the girls he lures are even forced to work in the windows like sex dolls for sale.Sex Tourist
Instead of going to see the pyramids in Egypt or surf the waves of Costa Rica, some people travel to another country to buy sex. They might go somewhere where they know the government ignores sexual abuse, where prostitution is legal, or where there is extreme poverty and police corruption. Brazil, Thailand, and the Caribbean islands are hotspot destinations for this kind of customer. Some sex tourists even blog about how many sex workers they have slept with during their travels, and they acquire a reputation as a sort of travel agent and pimp at the same time.Guerrilla
This is the one who most often makes it into the news. The Guerilla is the guy who lurks in a van or who corners his prey in the public bathroom and uses force to kidnap his victims. A Guerilla will threaten his victim with knives, guns, or the promise that he’s going to kill her whole family if she so much as thinks of calling the police. Then he locks her up in his basement or keeps moving her to different locations so nobody can find her. When the Guerilla is finally captured and his victim is freed, a lot of times there are eerie testimonials from neighbors who say something like I had no idea he had girls in his basement. He was always such a nice, quiet guy.
I encourage anyone interested in learning more about sex trafficking to read Sher’s book Breaking Free, the story of three different girls who were trafficked and came out of the horror with a passion to help other girls escape their fate.
Sam Gamgee the Loyal and Me (Guest Post)
by Mallory Huber
In 2014 as a naive 26 year old, I took on the task of reading The Lord of the Rings for the first time in my life; and my world was rocked. I knew immediately that I had to marathon the movies and that I had to research and that I had to learn Elvish and that I had to figure out the personality types of each character. I imagine that people read The Lord of the Rings, and they spend years of their life thinking about which character they would be if transported into the story. They enter the world in their mind and frolick to and fro throughout Middle Earth as a part of the Fellowship, striking down Balrogs or dropping rings in flaming pits. Surprisingly I’ve actually spent zero time thinking about it. I know exactly who I would be.
Sam Gamgee, my friends. I am Sam Gamgee.
I’m not a crier. I understand some people are and that they can’t make it through Hallmark commercials without balling their eyes out. I tend to keep my tears tucked away for a rainy day. And I was rather proud of myself for making it through my first LOTR marathon without crying. That is until the very last part. (If you haven’t seen the movies, you may just want to stop now because I will be ruining it for you.) The very last scene of The Return of the King is where Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin escort Bilbo to the shores because he has been offered invitation to the Grey Havens to be with the elves. They say their goodbyes as our four hobbits all stand by in sorrow and sadness. Gandalf says, “Here at the last on the shores of the sea comes the end of our friendship. I will not say, ‘Do not weep’ for not all tears are an evil.” (Oh my gosh. Stop. So beautiful.) As he turns to leave, he looks back once more to say, “It is time, Frodo.”
I’ve Been Nominated for the Sunshine Blogger Award!
I just received notice that I’ve been nominated for the Sunshine Blogger Award! How fun.
I was nominated by coolbeans4. Thanks so much for thinking of me!
The rules for this award are as follows:
1) Thank the person who nominated you.
2) Answer the questions from the person who has nominated you.
3) Nominate some other bloggers for this award.
4) Write the same amount of questions for the bloggers you have nominated.
5) Notify the bloggers you have nominated. Continue reading
Girl in Translation by Jean Kwok
Wow. I did not expect to be gutted by this story of a young Chinese girl and her mother. Having moved to New York expecting a better life, they instead find poverty and hopelessness. More than many books, Kwok did a phenomenal job portraying the shame built into poverty and the way it affects all aspects of life. But at the same time, neither Kimberley nor her mother allow their dire situations to stop them from loving each other and ambitiously pursuing a better future. The sad thing is…Kimberley is extremely gifted. Not all immigrants manage to get perfect SAT scores. So while she found a way out of crushing poverty, most do not have the same privilege.
Then there’s the relationship between Kimberley and Matt. While she struggles to survive the foreign world of private schools, Matt is the one who knows her secret life illegally working at a factory in order to pay for a roach-infested, freezing apartment. Their friendship is slow and sweet, and the turns they take had my heart in knots. I appreciated the realistic feel of their choices and emotions, but I never stopped wanting to shake them and say, “Stop living real life! Just be happy together in a fantasy world! Why won’t this book just give me what I want!?”
But life doesn’t give you want you want, even when scholarships fall in your lap. So while Kimberley is blessed with an enormous advantage, she never quite escapes the fact that life is a struggle.
When young Kimberley Chang and her mother emigrate from Hong Kong to America, they speak no English and own nothing but debt. They arrive in New York hopeful for a better life, but find instead a squalid Brooklyn apartment and backbreaking labor in a Chinatown sweatshop. Unable to accept this as her future, Kim decides to use her “talent for school” to earn a place for herself and her mother in their adopted country. Disguising the most difficult truths of her meager existence, Kim embarks on a double life: an exceptional student by day, and a sweatshop worker by evening. In time, Kim learns to translate not just her language but herself, back and forth between two worlds, between hardship and triumph, heartbreak and love, and all that gets lost in translation.
Release Date: April 2010
4 Things I’ve Learned at Woodland Baptist Church
I get to work as church secretary for Woodland while the official secretary is on maternity leave. This is merely the latest in a long line of jobs I’ve had here, and I’ve learned things from each one. For instance, when I taught piano lessons, I learned that sometimes you’ve got to let a kid run around the room for ten seconds when he gets increasingly frustrated with a difficult melody. But for all the things I’ve learned while working at Woodland, I’ve learned far more simply from jumping into the activities and relationships found with this group of people. Below are four valuable life lessons I learned while at Woodland. Continue reading
How to Plan a Roadtrip
My 30-day, 3,800-mile roadtrip is still two months away, but half the fun of a thing is anticipating it. I’ve been color-coding calendars, putting together lists, and compiling suggestions on how to do this right (aka fun and cheap).
Ways to Save Money
- Use the GasBuddy app to find the cheapest gas stations while on the road (suggestion courtesy of The Traveling Praters).
- Stock your car with lots of food and snacks with discounted rates at Sam’s Club.
- Because you have all that cheap food, try to avoid fast food restaurants as often as possible.
- Avoid motels. Stay with friends (or friends of friends) as often as possible.
- Bring your own water bottle and fill up at gas station soda fountains.


