Wizarding World Indeed

It’s been a little bit since I posted anything. We can blame that on my kids’ fall break and vacations and house projects and friends and life and no time.

Or we can be honest and say I went here:

  
  
I am not a big fan of amusement parks. But if more amusement parks let me spend hours walking around inside my favorite books, I would be.

You guys, I went inside here:

  

I ate a feast at The Three Broomsticks with my family.

  

I popped into this and dialed the Ministry of Magic.

  
I drank butterbeer.  (It was perfect.)

  
I actually rode the Hogwarts Express. I can’t stop thinking about it.

 

And in the end I brought home a useful pet.

 This is not meant to be a travelogue or a visitors guide. I have no useful tips. 

This is just to say that I went inside the Wizarding World, and I’m having a hard time coming out.

I came home. Home to my life and my home and my overjoyed dog. Home to Indiana in October where the whole world is burnt orange and yellow and bathed in golden sunlight and even when it rains it has a gloomy perfection. 

I have not come back to reality.  Not in my head, at least.

Luckily, my job is make believe and all my kids want me to do this week is make them costumes from their favorite books. (Yes, my life is perfect. No, I don’t deserve it.)

So I’m giving my brain permission to stay lost for a little bit. Reality is overrated anyway.  

I’ll meet you back here in a few days for Halloween, okay? I think I have something to make you shiver.

I’ll write it down as soon as I finish this next daydream…

  

  

Birthday Week

My two oldest have their birthdays this week, so you can just imagine the crazy.  Go ahead.  Imagine it.  It could inspire you to invent a wildly entertaining story. No, so far there haven’t been any actual monkeys involved, but feel free to include them in your telling, if you like.

I’ll be back with my own version soon, but in the mean time, Ellie’s birthday post is up over on our family blog, so go ahead and check it out if you’re in the mood.

Party on, people.  We certainly will.

I came across this book, and it brought a smile to my face. 

   
There’s a lot of win here.  Lots of playing with perspective and asking silly questions and answering serious questions that weren’t meant to be answered.  It’s fun.  You should check it out sometime.

Plus now I’m thinking about impossibilities.  (They are so much more fun to think about than possibilities.)

I’m thinking of my cute little end table tapdancing across my library floor. I’m wondering what it’s favorite song would be.

I’m thinking of my fuzzy blanket having babies.  Fuzzy blanket babies are something I would like to see.

I’m thinking of having a conversation with my husband’s grandfather, whose picture is on my wall.

I’m thinking of donuts appearing out of thin air. (It is probably good this hasn’t happened yet.)

And I’m thinking about all the impossible things that are somehow actually happening as I type these words.

I’m thinking of my three children, those impossible, irrepressable individuals, sitting in three classrooms a half-mile away, thinking vivid, brilliant impossible thoughts.

I’m thinking of my good friend down the street, caring for her four children impossibly well and then going off and taking charge of 26 more for the day, and then coming home and loving on those sweet four again, and somehow, impossibly, still sane and even occasionally laughing.

I’m thinking of my sweet friend walking through unending nausea and exaustion while, impossibly, keeping alive two tiny humans and, yet more impossibly, growing one more inside of her.

I’m thinking of my next door neighbor, who lost her husband two weeks ago to cancer, but who woke up this morning and got out of bed and took her daughters to school and carried on with the impossible job of living.

How could we ever imagine that life is empty?  How could we ever protest that we don’t have any stories to tell? 

We live in an impossible world.  (Did you know it is spinning and we are actually kept from flying off it by a force of nature that no one can see?  Have you ever heard of anything so ridiculous?)

This world is full of impossible life. (Did you know that you can take one tiny nut, put it in the ground and let it rot, and then it will become a tree?  There is absolutely no way that should work.)

You did at least three impossible things before lunch.  I guarantee it. (Or did you think it was nothing when you pushed your foot down on that little bar and then a huge car surged down the road?)

What impossible things will you do before supper? 

Will you even notice?

 
 

Deserted Island

  

I’m on a deserted island
Not really that far from the shore
There’s deep water all around me
But my feet are on rock once more

I’ll have to work hard to survive here
Gather rain and find fish I can eat
Make a sand bed and low driftwood table
With this bit of soft moss as my seat

Perhaps I can chat with that sandcrab
Or trade songs with the wind as it plays
The stars can hear all of my stories
You know they aren’t going away

I could probably swim to the mainland
But I just can’t imagine what for
I’ve got all that I need on my island
Not really that far from the shore
 

Today

This is a really good day.  

Really, really good.

Not only is the sun shining, not only is it September, which means we’re mere days away from the best season of all, not only is it the last birthday that I’m still in my 30s, but today, TODAY, you can finally buy The Poisoned Cure!

If you want the real, beautiful paperback book in your own hands, you can get it here.

  
If you want to read it on your handy little tablet or phone, you can get the ebook here.

While you do that, I’m going to head over to Starbucks and sip my free birthday drink while puzzling through some new problems with Book 5.

Told you this was a good day.

Happy reading, everyone!

Hold

  
I’ve always wanted to try this. Still tinkering a bit, as working with my hands is not my strength, but I have to say this was as fun as I thought it would be.

In Other Words

With all this back-to-school stuff going on around here, with teachers sending home papers urgently stressing the importance of our kids reading every day, with my first-grader slowly moving down the road toward idependent reading, I came across this.

Sometimes (most of the time) I find that others have said what I’m thinking better than I could say it myself.  So for today, I’m just going to bring you Madeleine L’Engle’s words, from her book Walking on Water, which is a wonderful reflection on faith and art.  

We think because we have words, not the other way around.  The more words we have, the better able we are to think conceptually. Yes another reason why Wrinkle was often rejected is that there are many words in it which would never be found in a controlled vocabulary list for the age-group of the ten-to-fourteen-year-old. Tesseract, for instance.  It’s a real world, and one essential for the story.

As a child, when I came across a word I didn’t know, I didn’t stop reading the story to look it up, I just went on reading. And after I had come across the word in several books, I knew what it meant; it had been added to my vocabulary. This still happens. When I started to read Teilhard de Chardin’s The Phenomenon of Man, I was determined to understand it. I read diligently, with a dictionary beside me, stopping to look up the scientific words which were not familiar to me. And I bogged down. So I put aside the dictionary and read as though I were reading a story, and quickly I got drawn into the book, fascinated by his loving theology, and understood it far better, at a deeper level, than if I had stuck with the dictionary.

Is this a contradiction? I don’t think so. We played with my daughter’s vocabulary words during dinner. We kept a dictionary by the table just for fun. But when we read, we read. We were capable of absorbing far more vocabulary when we read straight on than when we stopped to look up every word. Sometimes I will jot down words to be looked up later.  But we learn words in many ways, and much of my vocabulary has been absorbed by my subconscious mind, which then kindly blips it up to my conscious mind when it is needed

True, isn’t it?  

So much learning is there for the taking, if only we won’t take all the fun out of the process.

Just a little something for us to think about as we conscientiously help our kids plow through homework this year.  

Carry on, Mom and Dad. You’re doing good work.

The Poisoned Cure, A Taste

What? Is The Poisoned Cure all I can talk about these days? YES.  Yes, it is. 

This is the book I was dying to write while I wrote all the other books in this series.  True story.

I’m determined not to give too much away, but I do want to give you a few of my favorite lines.  Because I’m excited to let everyone into this private little world I’ve been living in, and I can’t do the whole thing quite, quite yet.  So let’s just open the door a crack.

Adam grinned. “You asked about the stupid way to do it.  Don’t worry. There’s a way that’s only half stupid.”

“Great!” said Eve. “Half stupid is our specialty.”

**********************************

“Humans are the most dangerous creatures I have yet encountered. But unlike my sisters and I, you were made for battle. You were made to defend. So it is that those who are near you have never been in more danger nor have they have been safer.”

**********************************

“How do we get down there?” Alex asked.

“We climb,” Adam said.

“You mean like exactly what that sign says not to do?” Eve asked, pointing at a sign that said: DANGER: ROCK MAY CRUMBLE. CLIMBING PROHIBITED.

“You have a better idea?” Adam retorted.

“Me? No. You know I love ignoring danger signs.”

**********************************

None of that meant that the creatures were real. It was easy to look at a certain arrangment of leaves and bark and imagine a face. It was easy to spend so much time with a made-up world that it started to seem real to you.  He should know.

Still, here he was.

September 8, people.

Just 18 more days and I can show you the whole thing!

I think I can hold out that long without slipping up and just telling you what happens, but no promises.  

At least I have one final proof to keep me occupied.  (Yes, that’s the actual book in my actual hand!)

  
!!!!!!!

Announcements, Announcements, Annou-ouncements

You know you’re singing the song now.  You’re welcome.

This is a special one for those (few, loyal) of you who have been waiting for Book 4 of The Book of Sight series.

We have a release date!!  And a title!!  And we’re ready to tell you what it is.

Ready?

I’m proud to announce that Book 4, The Poisoned Cure, will be released on Sept. 8, 2015!

Yes.  The Poisoned Cure 

You’ll understand when you’ve read it.

And yes, Sept. 8.

Not at all coincidentally one year after the release of The Secret Source.

Not at all coincidentally my birthday.

And if you haven’t read Books 1-3, you still have time!  Click the links over there to the right and get your copy in ebook or paperback.  They are a quick and fun summer read, so the month of August is the perfect time.

Stay tuned for the cover reveal for The Poisoned Cure, coming very, very soon!

(You guys are going to love it.  It’s my favorite one yet.)

Denouement

  

Cinderella married the prince, attended by all her woodland friends and congratulated by the entire kingdom.

And they lived happily ever after.

They really did.  Happiness stuck with them all their days.

But he had to admit it didn’t really look like he thought it would.  

She was wonderful, of course.  Lovely and intelligent and kind and, by some miracle, in love with him and not just with his crown.  Who wouldn’t be happy with a wife like that?

It’s just that happiness, it turned out, was so much work.

They had hopes and dreams, plans for what they wanted to build in their kingdom.  They wanted to see to it that their kingdom was just, that everyone was treated equally and had all their needs provided for.  They wanted to see to it that their kingdome was beautiful, with roads in good repair and green spaces available to all and art of all kinds being created often.  

So they worked tirelessly to learn to know their people, to create fair laws, to set up systems to provide for the poor, to patronize artists, to fund the building of roads and parks.  It was happy work.  They could be together.  They could end each day with a sense of accomplishment.  Their people loved them.

It was also endless work.  No matter how many injustices they righted, there were always more that had been missed.  No matter how many buildings they restored, there were always more that were crumbling.  At times it was hard not to despair.

Of course, even in this sense of forever incompleteness, he had her by his side, so in spite of the nagging sense of failure, his life was still, in its essence, happy.

Then came the children.

Of course, they had children, first of all for love but also to have a new generation to carry their dreams and accomplishments on into the future.  And the children were wonderful.  They were a constant source of joy and pride.  They added new depths to the happiness of life.

It’s just that children, it turned out, were so much work.

They needed care every day, of course, but that was only the beginning.  Their every lovely quality had a corresponding pitfall that must be faced on a daily basis.  The boy, so spirited, so determined, so hardworking, could be stubborn and willful and disdainful of others.  The girl, so creative, so luminous, could be thoughtless and careless of others.  Their emotions, so intense and powerful, were a force to be reckoned with, a force that could be turned to good or to destruction.  

So their parents worked tirelessly to show love, to teach restraint, to model a mature life.  It was happy work.  They could be together.  They could see the slow progress of good in their children’s lives.  Their children loved them and were happy.

It was also exhausting work.  Though some days ended in a sense of accomplishment, many ended with a sense of failure.  A good many days never ended at all, but extended straight through the night.  This did not bring out the best in either the prince or Cinderella.  For every charged moment successfully navigated, there was a corresponding one that left them all in doubt.  And there would be no end to these moments.  They stretched out to the horizon in endless years of dangerous waters.

Of course, even in this sense of high stakes, of walking a tight rope above a pit of alligators, he had her by his side, so in spite of the nagging worries, his life was still, completely, happy.

It’s just that happiness was not the same as bliss.  Happiness emcompassed highs and lows.  Happiness grew up amidst anxiety and discouragement.  Happiness dripped with sweat.

He wouldn’t have traded it for anything.

For this happiness was not just a fairy-tale illusion.  This happiness was real.  This happiness was built to last.

Ever. After.