Thursday, December 28, 2017

Scythe by Neal Shusterman

I have to admit, I've been lusting after this book since I saw the cover art a year ago. Books shouldn't be about good cover design but sometimes the right cover art does half the work of promoting. What can I say, sometimes I can be a little shallow. My usual modus operandi is to wait for a used copy to come along, but when it won a Printz Award Honor, I knew my wait was going to be a long one. Eventually, I caved and bought a new copy when I saw it on sale.

To be clear, I'm a fan of people buying new books. Really, I am. That's how authors make their livings, however new books are often priced in such a way that it simply isn't feasible to buy my reading load new, which is a shame. Assume that I read 120 books. If each book costs a minimum of $10 on average new (most are much more), than I'm looking at a minimum of $1,200 a year. That's a lot of money. Now granted, I'm in the top few percentiles for books read in a year, but it still makes me wonder at the cost of the books themselves especially in the case of digital media which is not resalable. I wonder if the cost of new books were less, would people read (or at least buy) more of them? It's not a question I have an answer for, but I do think digital copies should cost less than they do.

Anyway, I digress.

Scythe is about a far future where humanity has solved most of it's social ills. No poverty or starvation. There is no war because there are no national governments and everything is controlled and maintained by an AI. There is very little crime and no sickness or, in fact, naturally caused death. The biggest problem humanity has is stagnation, and they are stagnating.

This world still has problems, of course. In order to stem the explosion of population and fight against some of the stagnation, there are a group of people called scythes who deal out death to the otherwise immortal. While they are terrifying figures, they are also highly regarded. In some ways it feels reminiscent of the medieval orders of knights. All high ideals and susceptible to corruption.

Two youths, Citra and Rowan, are chosen to be apprentice Scythes and quickly get wrapped up in events bigger than themselves.

This was a quick read appropriate for High School. There are a lot of philosophical ideas hidden in here about the nature of mortality and its influence on human creativity. Also, big themes on the nature of power to corrupt.

Monday, December 25, 2017

Books for the Break

So, since these breaks are some of my most solid times for reading, let's do a list. ( I love lists) Specifically, I have a lot of other people's books at the moment and I really should get them back. I also have gotten in the way of several of my students by accidentally holding books hostage.

  1. Fledgling by Octavia E. Butler (Dad)
  2. Bad Unicorn by Platte F. Clark (Sasha)
  3. Gym Candy by Carl Deuker (Library)
  4. Paper Towns by John Green (Library)
  5. The Power of Six by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  6. The Rise of Nine by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  7. The Fall of Five by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  8. The Revenge of Seven by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  9. The Fate of Ten by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  10. United as One by Pittacus Lore (Student Waiting)
  11. Sold by Patricia McCormick (Jessica)
  12. I'll Give you the Sun by Jandy Nelson (Library)
  13. Protector of the Small: First Test by Tamora Pierce (Jessica)
  14. Protector of the Small: Page by Tamora Pierce  (Jessica)
  15. Protector of the Small: Squire by Tamora Pierce (Jessica)
  16. Protector of the Small: Lady Knight by Tamora Pierce (Jessica)
  17. Trickster's Choice by Tamora Pierce (Jessica)
  18. Tricksters Queen by Tamora Pierce (Jessica)
  19. "Reading Don't Fix No Chevys" by Michael Smith & Jeffry Wilhelm (Professional Library)
  20.  "You Gotta Be the Book" by Jeffrey D. Wilhelm (Professional Library)
  21. Every Thing, Every Thing by Nicola Yoon (Bella)
These are the books that I really should get through for one reason or another, but even if I read a book a day, I'll still be working on them into January.

Sunday, December 24, 2017

A Reflection

As we close into the end of the year, I can  safely say that I failed every single one of my 2017 goals save one. I did read over 100 YA novels. (yay me!) Overall though, I will probably finish up somewhere around 123 books (give or take a couple), almost all of them YA, only one nonfiction and about five or so books of poetry....specifically novels in verse. Sometime around August the blog started to seriously lapse, and I had a hard time starting back up, though I did try several times. Any other sort of writing went right off the table almost from the word go. So yeah, that adds up to a hard fail on stated goals.

In the past, when something like this has happened I've restarted the blog and wiped the slate clean. I have been seriously considering doing that again, but in the end I think I will hold on to the tainted past and forge ahead. We are, after all, ultimately defined by our pasts and I don't want to be the kind of person who shies away from looking at where I've been.

So here I am.

Some years, I think, we change more than in others. We do more growing and more reflecting. I feel like this has been one of those years for me. (Which is probably why I failed so many of my stated goals lol) I've really grown into the sense of myself as a mother even though there are still times I find it overwhelming and alien. I've also really started to feel like a teacher in the core of my being. The transition to department head has been a bit fraught more in the sense of identity than anything else. It was rather alarming to discover how little it actually felt like a change. It's like I grew up sometime when I wasn't looking and had to get to know the adult me.

I think my mother would say I was always the adult me, even when I was a kid.

So, looking forward. I'm in the process of formulating goals for 2018. My priorities have shifted, no doubt, but I suspect they will still have many similarities to previous years. I believe I am going to create an offshoot of this blog that is mostly crosspostings of the book reviews/reflections that I can post directly to my classroom pages for the use of my students.  I don't know how that will evolve, but I don't intend to post anything there that hasn't been posted here.

Thus ends "The State of the Lydia" for 2017