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O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction

June 6, 2012 by Sue 1 Comment

I have a long-standing goal of reading all the Newbery award winners.  This began when I was young and was renewed when Brian was in elementary school and decided to take up the challenge.  I read along with him then, but as he grew older and moved on to other reading material, I also moved on.  Again.  A few years ago, I decided that I would focus again on this perpetual challenge and try to knock out a few more each year.  To date I’ve read 64 of the 91 books so honored.  So I’m making progress.  Early in 2011 I realized that since my favorite genre (by far) is historical fiction, I should be reading the books given the Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction.  (Because who doesn’t need more reading challenges in their life?)  To be eligible for the award, a book must have been published as a book intended for children or young people, it must be set in the New World (Canada, Central or South America, or the United States), it must be published by a publisher in the United States, and it must be written in English by a citizen of the United States.

Before I decided to read them all, I had only read 5 of the 29, so the rest have been read during 2011-2012.  Herein is the list with my star rating from my goodreads.com reviews.  I read some really excellent books and a couple of duds, but for the most part, the books that have received this award have all been worthy.  I enjoyed stretching myself and getting them all read.  Someday I’ll finish all the Newberys.

2012, Jack Gantos, Dead End in Norvelt, 2 stars
2011, Rita Williams-Garcia, One Crazy Summer, 4 stars
2010, Matt Phelan, The Storm in the Barn, 3 stars
2009, Laurie Halse Anderson, Chains, 5 stars
2008, Christopher Paul Curtis, Elijah of Buxton, 3 stars
2007, Ellen Klages, The Green Glass Sea, 3 stars
2006, Louise Erdrich, The Game of Silence, 4 stars
2005, A LaFaye, Worth, 5 stars
2004, Richard Peck, The River Between Us, 4 stars
2003, Shelley Pearsall, Trouble Don’t Last, 3 stars
2002, Mildred D. Taylor, The Land, 4 stars
2001, Janet Taylor Lisle, The Art of Keeping Cool, 4 stars
2000, Miriam Bat-Ami, Two Suns in the Sky, 2 stars
1999, Harriette Robinet, Forty Acres and Maybe a Mule, 4 stars
1998, Karen Hesse, Out of the Dust, 4 stars
1997, Katherine Paterson, Jip, His Story, 4 stars
1996, Theodore Taylor, The Bomb, 4 stars
1995, Graham Salisbury, Under the Blood Red Sun, 3 stars
1994, Paul Fleischman, Bull Run, 4 stars
1993, Michael Dorris, Morning Girl, 3 stars
1992, Mary Downing Hahn, Stepping on the Cracks, 4 stars
1991, Pieter Van Raven, A Time of Troubles, 4 stars
1990, Carolyn Reeder, Shades of Grey, 4 stars
1989, Lyll Becerra de Jenkins, The Honorable Prison, 5 stars
1988, Patricia Beatty, Charley Skedaddle, 3 stars
1987, Scott O’Dell, Streams to the River, River to the Sea, 3 stars
1986, Patricia MacLachlan, Sarah, Plain and Tall, 4 stars
1985, Avi, The Fighting Ground, 4 stars
1984, Elizabeth George Speare, The Sign of the Beaver, 3 stars

Filed Under: Books, Scott and Sue Family, Sue

Seedling bragging

May 22, 2012 by Sue 1 Comment

I’ve had some questions about my process for growing seedlings, so here’s the scoop.  I germinate them in Jiffy pellets which I put in trays with clear plastic domes.  I place these under basic shop lights and fluorescent lights bought at the big box home improvement stores, on heavy duty wire shelves purchased from similar places.  I have a hanging wire shelf above these, and on the right I have narrow plastic shelves given to me by a neighbor who got a real greenhouse.  (covet, covet)  These shelves are in my downstairs furnace room.

Once the seeds come up and have a leaf or two, I remove the domes and when they have two true leaves (or soon after), I take the pellets and place them in 4″ pots filled with Miracle Gro potting soil and put them back under the lights.  These photos were taken April 7 and they had been going for about 3 weeks.

Once the seedlings get all big and healthy-looking, I start moving them out to what I affectionately call my “theater greenhouse”.  This is the other half of the wire shelving, located in my garage with shop lights and bulbs.  A few years ago I wanted to encase it and couldn’t figure out what to use and Scott cleverly came up with this solution.

When Brian was performing in plays at Lone Peak HS, we were in charge of hanging vinyl signs on the fence across from our house.  We took them down when the show was over and the teacher didn’t want them back, so we accumulated a collection, thinking they may come in handy someday.  I put a long one crossways, and a shorter one over the face.  I close the edges with clothespins and it makes a lovely greenhouse that’s cooler than downstairs but warm at night when it gets really cold.  I can lift the side to water and it’s just really awesome.  This is the half-way house for seedlings on their way outside to face the cruel world.  Once it gets warmer, say the middle of April, I start the tedious process of moving trays out during the day and in during the night.  I usually drag the shelves out and uncover them, but I had so many this year that Scott built me a wooden trolley with rope handles for pulling trays in and out. Where I live it’s still too cold at night in April and early May so the plants get used to the warm sun and cooler days, but I protect them from the frosty nights.  By the end of April I check weather daily and if the nights are in the upper 40’s I start letting some of the annuals stay out.  Perennials don’t mind the cold and have been hardened off and in the ground by this time.

The accepted wisdom in Alpine is that you don’t dare plant before Mother’s Day.  I live by this wisdom and there have been cool springs when I’ve waited longer than that.  These photos were taken May 17, after I’d bravely begun to plant some annuals, hoping for no more frost.  Alpine has been known to regularly get June frosts.  Grrr.

The seedlings this year are my best crop ever.  Best germination rate, best harden-off without killing rate, and largest plants at planting time.  I learned everything I know about seedlings from my mother-in-law, the Master Gardener, and even she was impressed with my output this year.  Brag, brag!

Filed Under: Gardening, Scott and Sue Family, Sue

Flashback time

May 16, 2012 by Sue Leave a Comment

I am attending today’s Utah legislative Interim Committee meetings for the first time in almost a year.  I retired last June as a volunteer child advocate and have been watching from afar.  But today I’m back up in person and using my social media skills on twitter.  It’s been fun to see old friends and hear the discussions on a variety of a topics this morning and I’m looking forward to a fun-filled afternoon.

Getting ready this morning I had some issues that finally made me laugh out loud at the irony of the feeling of deja vu I had.  Yes, I had to quickly repair a shirt to wear, I didn’t have time to eat and had to eat on the way up, there was a massive slow-down on I-15, and it was just like the old days.  I guess some things never change!

Filed Under: Scott and Sue Family, Sue

1940 Census

May 6, 2012 by Sue Leave a Comment

I have been resisting the urge to sign up to do records indexing at Family Search for a long time now because every time I have the urge, I think I should be spending time on my own languishing family history research.  But when the 1940 Census became available and the indexing project began to immediately digitize the census, I decided I should do both.  And my wise friend told me, “Indexing just makes you hungry to do your own research”.  So true.

I embarked on this new indexing adventure this week and did some Illinois census records because most of the personal research I do is in that state.  I have several family lines that all converge on Illinois.  It turns out that indexing is SUPER easy, as advertised, and very intuitive.  Also fun.  The records were released on April 2 and already there are states that are completely done.  You can see a map of the progress at Family Search’s 1940 Census site, along with other information about getting started.

Happy indexing!

Filed Under: Scott and Sue Family, Sue

Wherein we drive to Montana…and back

May 3, 2012 by Sue 1 Comment

Monday, May 1 was the big day for Brian to leave for his summer job at the Playmill Theatre in West Yellowstone, MT.  He packed up his stuff and said it felt like he was leaving for a mission again with all the packing up of suitcases.  We left at 5:30 am to hit the road north and when we got up near Yellowstone, this is what it looked like outside the windshield.  

Yes, it was snowing.  Scott and I did not bring winter coats because we were driving our sedan and space was at a premium so that Brian could get all his stuff in the car.  Hmm.  We got to town with a minimum of skidding and sliding and found it a quaint, little gateway town to Yellowstone National Park.  Most of the establishments aren’t open for the season yet, but we had a lovely lunch at the Red Lotus next door to the theater.  We found the guys’ apartment and got all his stuff carried up.  Here’s Home Sweet Home for the next 4 months.

Up the stairs and in the door is the kitchen and great room, then turn left and the long part facing the camera with the white double doors is the bunkhouse for the single guys in the cast.

The kitchen has 2 refrigerators and an awesome avocado stove.  Everything a guy needs.  We left him to get all moved in and unpacked and wished him good luck on his new experience as a paid actor.  (Love the sound of getting paid for his acting.  Yes!)

Since Scott loves an adventure, he said, “Should we just drive into the park a ways since we’re all the way up here?”  I’m ALWAYS up for adventure, so I said, “Sure!!”  When we went to Zion in February we bought an NPS year pass since we knew we’d be up in Yellowstone and maybe other places this year, so we just drove in and did not pay the $25 fee.  Awesome!

Did I mention it was cold and snowing?  Yeah.  The snowing had become intermittent by then but it was still dang cold when the wind blew, which seemed to be pretty constantly.  We walked the boardwalk in the Lower Geyser Basin and saw a hot spring and bubbling mud pots.  If you look carefully on the right of the picture below you’ll see some mud bubbling up.  I had to take lots of photos of Scott to get one that actually showed it because the cold made the steam pretty impenetrable.We continued along the boardwalk and found some warmth when we were between two fumaroles giving off steam, one on each side of the boardwalk.  It was like a lovely sauna in the freezing air.

That’s me in my sweater trying to pretend my ears and nose aren’t about to fall off from frostbite.  Then we drove and drove to Old Faithful.  Along the way we saw many elk and bison so that was fun, although seeing bison isn’t the thrill it used to be now that I can see them from my front window every day of the year.  Just sayin’.

By the time we got to Old Faithful, the sky had cleared and it was a beautiful day, but the temperature hadn’t gone up.  We sat there shivering waiting for the geyser to erupt and it was just as awesome as we remembered from when we were kids, which is the last time each of us have been to Yellowstone.  Then we headed for home.  It was a long drive back and poor Scott drove all of it except about 30 minutes because that was all I could do.  We got home late but we’re ready for our big trip back to see Brian and the park in July.

Filed Under: Brian, Scott, Scott and Sue Family, Sue

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