Tag: #nablopomo2019

  • Book Talk: I Recommend Laura McHugh

    If you haven’t yet discovered Laura McHugh, then hie thee to the bookstore or library and dive right in. Or, like me, you can listen to the audiobooks. I’m not going to quibble about the medium.

    The first of her books that I read was actually her second, Arrowood. The story of a young woman at a turning point in her life, coming to terms with her family’s tragic past, is a gripping slow build. Arden Arrowood’s life was forever changed by the disappearance of her younger twin sisters–but what happened that day?

    A little later, I read her first novel, The Weight of Blood. It centers on another mysterious disappearance and how it has affected the family and community, but the characters and plot are completely different from Arrowood.

    And now I’ve just started her third, The Wolf Wants In, and it hooked me immediately. Sadie Keller is trying to find the truth about her brother’s death, and Henley Pettit wants nothing more than to leave her family and small town behind. What’s going to happen? I can’t wait to find out.

    McHugh centers her novels on themes and issues that could be described as “ripped from the headlines” — abduction, trafficking, addiction — but her approach is so thoughtful and human that the lurid feel of that phrase doesn’t apply to her work at all. She creates complex, imperfect characters who feel very real, and about whom I find myself caring very much. The books are moody and atmospheric, but in ways that feel very organic.

    She also provides a strong sense of place. The settings are an integral part of the stories and characters, and I love that the books take place in different parts of the Midwest; cities, particularly New York and Los Angeles, are so prominent in American pop culture that I always appreciate getting to know a different location.

    The books aren’t part of a series, so you don’t need to read them in any particular order. Just read them. I think you’ll be glad you did.

  • Happy Halloween 2019 – and Hello, November!

    To be honest, we never know what Halloween is going to bring. We’ve seen enough variation to know that the best approach is to let Baguette set the pace. Some years she’s wanted to go to a few houses for trick-or-treating; some years she just wants to walk around the block. Some years she’s worn a costume that could be easily identified as a costume; some years she hasn’t.

    This year, Baguette started talking about Halloween in August. She told us she wanted to be a man. Then she wanted to be a wizard. Then she wanted to be a witch. Then she wanted to be a Christmas tree.

    We told her that all of these were great ideas.

    And then she stopped wanting to talk about Halloween. As we got into October, we would ask her what she wanted to be, and she would say, “No, thank you.” So we came up with the makings of a few costumes, and figured we’d let her pick one, or more, or none.

    Finally, we asked her aide to ask her, and the aide let us know that Baguette wanted to be a cat. The good news? We had anticipated this, and had purchased a cat-ear headband. Mr. Sandwich and I made her a tail. She already had a black shirt and black leggings.

    Then, as I was packing up her costume for her to take to school, I realized that Baguette associates the black shirt and leggings combo with Minnie Mouse, because in the past she’s wanted to wear them under her Minnie Mouse dress. So I put that in, too, along with Minnie ears.

    She was Minnie at the parade. And at home?

    Turns out, this is a year she didn’t really want to go trick-or-treating. And she kind of wanted to go for a walk, but not enough to leave the porch. But she did give another costume a try.

    Girl wearing monarch butterfly wings, shown from behind, with lantern in background

    In the end, she just hung out in her wings on the porch. And that’s fine, because it was the good time she wanted to have.

    But how on earth is it November?