Monday, May 16, 2016

Book Review: The Snow Child


The Snow Child
by Eowyn Ivey

I really enjoyed this book. I would give it a 4.7/5 because it was beautifully written with figurative language. The effect of her language caused me to get into the scene and be in the book as an omniscient character that did not say anything and was not seen by anyone, but was there. Every single part of it was enjoyed. Especially the growth in the Jack and Mable's relationship, that was at the beginning not going anywhere, but because of Faina, it matured. I loved the way that Ivey played around with Faina and when Faina spoke, the way that she did not use quotation marks, allowing us to know and understand that she is not real. 
My favorite character was Mabel. She is such a strong woman because she had a child and lost it. She was a strong wife, because Jack acted like he did not hear her, but she knew that he was just sad and alone. When she met Faina, she was like the protective mother that Faina never had. When Garret and Esther came to help her with the farm, she learned skills in farming to show Jack that he wasn't alone doing all the work. She worried a lot, and that's what showed that she cared about everything. My favorite characteristic from Mabel was that she was a woman that believed. Even though Esther never believed her about Faina or the others, and Jack wouldn't help her make others believe in Faina, she did. She believed and everyone saw Faina with their own eyes. The ending was sad and a little confusing about the disappearance of Faina, but we could see each character mature in their lives and relationship with loved ones.

Recommendation: I recommend everyone to read this book, especially magical realism lovers. You would love it just like I did and would not stop reading if you get caught in the scene to become another character.

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

My Favorite Website for Myths/Legends/Folktales


American Stories

Prompt:
Use any of these legend/myths/folktale stories and modernize it to the 21st century (change the setting, characters, etc. but make sure to keep the theme and/or symbol).

Friday, April 15, 2016

Different Ways to Look at Things

Eleven Ways to Look at a Water Bottle
I
In the left corner of a student's desk,
The only thing that distracts me from inches away,
Is a blue water bottle filled half way.
II
When I go around it,
to make my paper get in contact with the teacher,
It stays still.
Sweating as if it worked out seconds ago.
III
It doesn’t look left or right.
It is not allowed to be touched by anyone.
Only moves when it is in the hands of it’s Master.
IV
It is allowed in school.
Not in all classrooms.
Not at all times.
V
It is always there when you need it.
Even when it feels looked down upon its preferred neighbors.
Soda, Juice, Milk, Smoothie
VI
It’s not the water bottle.
It’s what inside of it that matters.
I don’t care how it looks in the outside.
You lifesaver is what is in the inside.
VII
Water is healthy for the body.
Water allows your dry tongue to become moist in seconds.
Water makes you lose weight.
Water makes your mood better.


IX
In a dry desert,
It’s the only thing that you will need.
In a lifetime,
It’s the only things that you will need.
X
The container is important.
Important to carry what really is important.
XI
Different needs in a human life that need water,
But what is water without something to carry it to its destination?
Water would fall on the ground like rain,
It evaporates up or gets contaminated and-

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Nightmares and Dreamscapes by Stephen King Review

Image result for night and dreamscapesThis was a very interesting novel. I did not finish it all because I was asked to read five stories and write my own using Stephen King's work as an inspiration. Even though I was asked to read it and at the beginning I thought that the book would be good, I did not like his stories. They were very weird and used lots of creepy, malicious and words that can not be described. I hate this genre. Especially when it includes so much fantasy in it. I did not like the book, but that's my opinion. Maybe you read and it might enjoy it, but it was not my favorite and will never be. Sorry Mr. King. It's not you, it's that I don't like those creepy things you write about, but I did like Misery on the bright side.

The stories I read:


Suffer the Little Children
This was the first story that I read and at the beginning it caught my attention because it was interesting and sounded realistic, but then when one of the students of the teacher started transforming, it was becoming very creepy. The teacher in this story is named Miss Sidley and she is an elder age. She scares her students because she is one of the tough ones. She asked one of her students, Robert, to answer the following question. Her students normally are ashamed and/or humiliated by her because she is the scary type of teacher. Robert on the other hand, acted normal and did not seem afraid. This made her angry because he smiled at her constantly, and that was something that none of the kid's did. Robert turns into an alien/weird creature and Miss Sidley finds out that all of her students can do that, so she calls them into a separate room. That day she brings her brother's gun and shoots them.

Popsy
When I read the title of this story, I checked the definition for 'popsy'. Popsy means an attractive young woman. I thought that it would be about people falling in love, but it is not. There is a little boy who says that he is lost in the mall and he cries/looks like he wants to cry because he lost his 'Popsy'. The narrator wants the kid because he would turn him in as a pay for his debt, since the narrator is obsess with playing dice games. He tries to take the kid to were he needs to without allowing anyone to notice him stealing this child. The child describes his 'Popsy' and tells the narrator that his 'Popsy' left to get him some water. 'Popsy' is a vampire and the kid is too, and at last 'Popsy' finds the kid.

The Fifth Quarter
The setting is at a house in Castle Town. The house was filled with awful events that happened in the life of two men who were molested by the house owner's wife.

Home Delivery
The main character is Maddie Pace, a timid and indecisive young woman who lives on a small island named Jenny. Maddie is pregnant and her husband left her as a widow because he died in a boat accident. She sees large amounts of bodies dead. The people living in Jenny and her see this mass killing with their own eyes. They want to attack against the zombies that will rise from the cemetery. Maddie's husband comes back to life as a zombie from the sea and Maddie defeats him.

Rainy Season
A husband and wife rent a house in a small town called Willow on summer being warned to leave by the local citizens. Every seven years a husband and wife will go there from outside and will stay in Willow, not mattering anything, to become sacrifices during the rainy season. When the "rain" starts, the couple learns the nature of the precipitation: an army of grotesque black toads the size of footballs, armed with needle-sharp teeth and able to chew through doors and walls.



Thursday, March 24, 2016

A Poem Made by a Picture

Reading

It takes you to sit without anyone distracting you.
Reading is a new world without anyone around.
You enter a new perspective and look at things from a different view.
The pages stare at you and look how beautiful you are while you read.

It takes you to build up hope.
The protagonist makes you excited.
Even when they struggle, you encourage them to move forward.
You tell them to not do something because you know that they would be in danger if they do.
You enter as a new omnipresent survivor and take care of the character all the way.

It takes you to leave the place that you are to become omnipresent in another person's life.
You don’t want to change the plot, but you want to change the danger.
You fear the antagonist will rule over the protagonist.

It takes courage to read the tough parts.
You need to be strong all throughout.
Even if there isn’t a Prince Charming with a slipper to save the day,
Or a Spider-man to risk his life for a girl.

It takes you to go far way.
A secret place where no one knows you.
A place of green pastures as quiet as the deserts.
The grass gives a massage to your feet, while the little ants crawl up on top of your book and read along.

It takes you time, but you would enjoy it.
You analyze the text closely and when you find the symbol,
“Oh, that’s why this happened?”
You begin to see a different way of life without judging.

It takes you to change your mood and bad habits.
You become as calm as the ocean.
Thoughts come to your mind as a cheetah trying to get his prey.
You mood changes as a thermometer.
You begin to develop new skill and a new way of life as you learn a different lifestyle that you want to be like.

It takes an open mind.
Your mind is loud.
It speaks to you things that you might not want to hear.
It takes of your hat and let’s you understand that there is no shade in a sunshine.

Reading is a practice of life
Have you tried being present in an important person’s life?
Have you tried warning about danger?
Have you tried not judging others?

It takes love to live life the way you read.
With reading you do what you don’t do with life.

Monday, March 21, 2016

An Inspirational Quote #2

First, find out what your hero wants, then just follow him!
– Ray Bradbury

As a writer, I can relate to this quote because it explains that you don't need to do anything or get frustrated about anything. The character is the one that does the actions and the talking. The only thing that the writer has to do is write what it is doing. When you are writing and you start getting frustrated, that means that you are not allowing the characters to do the work. That is because you want to do everything yourself. You shouldn't do that. The characters like to develop by themselves, you just do what they tell you to do. It's just like a human-being when it starts to grow and it learns to do things, like walking. It does not want you to carry it anymore because it already knows how to walk. If you carry it, the baby will start crying and you can’t hear anything with all that crying. When you allow the baby to keep practicing, the baby will walk perfectly and not fall. That is just like a character, once it starts doing its actions and decision and you want to control it, the character stops because you want to take control and that's why you get a writer’s block because you can’t hear anything. When you allow the character to take its position, it will walk fluently through your mind for you to write. You should allow them to make decisions. Your story will turn out great if you listen to them because they know what’s going on.



An Observation Poem

Gate


Gate.
A vast gate,
like a magical kingdom,
with ebony gates.
Divulging your path of entrance and exit.


Twain gate doors.
Two paths.
One way.
Zero labor.


Vehicles authorized as one side of the gate.
You shouldn't wander through the sod,
Nor litter,
Nor leap over the gate.


With unlocked gates,
a path to discover.
Entering the other side,
is like entering a new world,
alone with peace and privacy.

Book Review: The Snow Child

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey I really enjoyed this book. I would give it a 4.7/5 because it was beautifully written with figurative la...