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Must-Read: Wintergirls

Wintergirls Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Having done research for a PSA campaign project in college on the subject of eating disorders, I’ve seen countless first-person accounts and the kinds of websites main character Lia visits throughout the book. It kills a little of you inside to know that young women are suffering this way.

So much about this condition is politely ignored. Yet, so many men and women have struggled with this, to differing degrees.

I applaud Ms. Anderson for diving deep to convey a truth that exists in more people than you’d guess. As I’m sure she’d agree, eating disorders should be discussed openly – before a young girl decides that this is “control” worth having. Wintergirls could be the catalyst for this discussion, in schools across the country.

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Choose Your Own Adventure: The Mendigans

Normally I wouldn’t tell my readers to wait a minute… but wait a minute!

This is part of a Choose Your Own Adventure story, among blogs. The story begins with Barry Northern’s blog. That’s where you’ll meet 14-year-old Michael, the main character. Barry’s segment of the story presents two options at the end. Choose one, follow the link, and you’re on an adventure!

If you came from Mari Blaser’s entry, you chose “Go to the mall”:

Mendigans at the Mall? (Ohmigod!!)

“Gabberty-flizzz… I mean, hello.” On his way in, the alien officer inched as far from the checkout desk as possible. He cleared the magazine racks with a creak and shushhh. “What’s playin’ on the radio?”

Michael and Latoya exchanged a cautious glance. Mr. Brown handed Michael a small, tattered card. It read:

Don’t look at the tentacles. IGNORE them, and the alien ignores you.

But Latoya was already moving toward the door. “No radio here, sir. That music’s for… suckers.” Looking down at his tentacle-prints, her eyes moved toward the source: his gelatinny, slimerous, sucker-encrusted—

Michael jumped forward, breaking the line of Latoya’s tentacle-view.

“They don’t have the latest BadSad here. Let’s go, babycakes.”

The officer’s unibrow furrowed before turning back to Mr. Brown. His voice trailed off as they shuffled out. “Say, do you have any Kanye We— Oh! Got it. ‘Touch the Sky’ is my SONG!”

Reaching a safer distance, Latoya chuckled. “Babycakes? Really?”

Michael sighed. “It worked, right? Saved us from a world of hurt. From now on, ignore all tentacles.”

The spanking-new mall complex had just opened across the street, complete with a ribbon-cutting concert. Michael’s band Nixie Knox slogged through Debbie Gibson and Tiffany tunes for the occasion. He played his sweet black bass, and the drummer was a… Mendigan? That can’t be right. But it was. Or was it?

Latoya looked down at her hands. “Michael, am I a Mendigan?” Her face was blank – she wasn’t kidding. They had to hurry – the mind tricks were getting stronger.

The closest entrance was Tesh’s “Variety” Store. (The owners felt “department” turned people off.) Latoya reached the doors first, throwing them open. She was tough for a girl her size – any size, really.

Michael broke into a sprint, with a jut of his head. “Down there, in red.”

The five-story atrium in the center, filled with serene daylight, made the other end of the mall seem miles away. Fluegelhorn muzak accompanied the sound of their desperate feet, running the straightaways and stomping around burbling fountains. When they finally reached the music store’s red, glossy doors, bubble-lettered signs greeted them: “Welcome to Media Depot!!”

Michael pointed to the hot pink signage. “You take Country down here. I’ll go upstairs to Pop.”

Latoya bustled to the S’s, and shuffled through. Clack clack clack. She hit it – a mother lode of Swift. The store even had rare recordings from her first contract – the one she dropped to pursue her own music.

“Michael, I found her!”

As soon as Latoya shouted, a slithery Mendigan descended upon her. Two more alien forms fell in lock-slither behind it.

“Who’ve you found, dear?” All the aliens blinked at once, waiting for an answer. Latoya seemed dumbstruck, focusing all her attention on those twelve eyes.

Michael thumped down the stairs. “We’re looking for humans. Aren’t you?” The Mendigans turned in one smooth motion. Standing in the stairwell’s shadow, Michael had long, undulating extensions where his arms should’ve been.

“Ah, your change has begun. Don’t be afraid, young one. You’ll be just fiiiiine.”

Latoya balked. She had to get away, and fast. On a raised, central platform sat an enclosed DJ booth. The door was wide open, so Latoya ran for it. Mendigan Michael followed. She was small and fast, but size trumps those. She had no chance.

“Latoya, it’s me – promise!” he huffed, gaining on her. She slipped into the booth, locking the door between them.

He banged on the door. “I’m okay, I’m okay!” Sure enough, Michael held two prank snakes. And his ears were human, even if they stuck out a little. More aliens gathered around the booth. Latoya let Michael in. As they slammed the door, a Mendigan’s suckery tentacle pried inside the doorframe.

“Got this,” said Michael. He shut the door, but not without a mess. The Mendigan howled and scurried away, one tentacle lighter.

Hands fumbling, Latoya played Taylor’s rare early track backwards over the loudspeakers. “Afewijnkd vlijlk sfkjkjs…” Nothing.

Next, she tried Taylor’s self-titled debut.

“Listen now,” a clear voice lilted. “My family has studied the Mendigans’ plan for generations. I had to stay true to my songwriting, so I could tell you what the oracle told me.”

Michael’s mouth fell open, and Latoya gasped.

As they listened, Taylor directed them to play “Love Story” backwards to attract the Mendigan network. “I’m still working on the next step. Please keep listening. I have millions of fans, but the world needs you now.”

More Mendigans crowded the booth, tentacles thrashing and frenzied.

Latoya played Taylor’s next album. The first backwards track said, “Here it is, tested and foolproof.” Michael and Latoya stared, unblinking, at the speakers. “Play ‘Stay Beautiful’ backwards to burst their slimedrums.” A heavy sigh interrupted the message. “The oracle said criss-crossed lasers change the Mendigans back to their original human forms. As much as I tried, I couldn’t secure this weapon. I’m sorry I’ve let you down.”

Michael and Latoya scoured the room, as if they’d find a battery of laser guns tucked in a cubbyhole. Latoya spotted a stack of inventory listings, with a scanner gun. She drew in a breath.

“Michael, the scanners!”

He beamed, and popped his knuckles. “That’s what I call retail therapy.”

Latoya twisted the dial on “Love Story.”

“Let’s do this.”

Thanks for reading my part of Choose Your Own Adventure: The Mendigans.
Let me know what you thought below!

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And… I’m spent.

Here’s my entry in Livia Blackburne’s Alternate Version Blogfest. Livia had tweeted about it nearly a month ago, but until yesterday I was coy about signing up. I knew trying a different writing style would be a worthwhile writing exercise, but I had a case of write-fright. Operative word: “had.”

Check it out!

First off, the original passage. It’s a short flashback from my work-in-progress, a YA eco-dystopian social sci-fi:

After a rehearsal months ago, when Ben and me were the last stragglers, Mr. Campo’s deft fingers fluttered in romantic sweeps up and down the keys. The tuner had just visited that day, like hundreds of times before. Her handiwork didn’t need testing. The song wasn’t one we were working on. Campo didn’t smile or wink while he played, but his exaggerated movements and uncharacteristic sound gave his goofing around away. Like someone with no life, he was poking fun at my crush. I couldn’t flee the room fast enough, feeling an intense blush rise to my face like one of those mercury thermometers.

Now, I’ll try a bit of an older style. Lit lovers, can you tell me which author I’m attempting to channel?:

I was struck by two keys, among a sounding board rung at times by the most fiery of passions; two keys which, though ceremoniously un-Thelonious-Monk-like (were they so, they would have been followed by an awkward pause in which the listener is meant to reflect on his  interpretation of their musicality), they had a tinkling almost innate in their lightest pressing, triggering an entirely disproportionate reverberation in my foggy, hormone-addled head. The notes, whether the shift from one to the other, or the other to one, stopped time; with the g-force of a screeching halt before ratcheting back and gunning it in reverse to some moment formerly trapped in some deep cerebellar hiding-place. But no; how could it have been buried so far from previous reach? The moment, suddenly present and playing out in my mind’s eye, occurred only a few months ago.

The sound called forth another Tuesday afternoon entirely, when my choir director Mr. Campo worked his hands along the keys (as he often has occasion: at the ends of rehearsals, in a cutesy ditty hearkening to a “that’s the end of the show” wrap-up, or hands spanning octave-wide chords in vibrato: fabricated melodrama for laughter’s sake). No, this was the sound of mocking; of lilting fingers bringing to life the romantic interlude of which I daydream daily, the one pairing me with Ben (the boy who stands to my right, who laughs and smiles in all the best ways, at all the best times, like someone with whom I could sit and enjoy a cup of lime-flower tea when we’re 80). Throughout such an ignoble display of disrespect for young love, or at least infatuation, Campo’s hair waved around on his bobbing head with a not unnoticeable extra length; a common occurrence for the man. Like a tiny animal only hopping around on his cue, its waving added an absurdist dimension to the ridicule, only insult to injury since I normally enjoy the humor in such things. Albeit, there was some tiny comfort in imagining that while he was mocking me, his own hair was mocking himself. Still, what right does this man have (though he may know me well enough to read my every nonverbal cue, whether obvious or less so) to make such a comment with such facility as the sweeping, ironically weeping runs up and down those scales as if it were mere sport?

Ahhhh. That was oddly refreshing, probably because I’m quite think-y myself. (Maybe I’d like to be a brain scientist like Livia.)

Can you venture a guess at the author? Hint: using a flashback lent itself to a well-known excerpt of his.

Please drop your best guess in a comment below!
Hey, Chicago: First correct guess wins a free ticket to James Kennedy’s Dome of Doom (Order of Odd-Fish art show and battle-dance tournament at Chicago’s Collaboraction – Saturday night, April 17)!

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How I feel about Alternate Version Blogfest

I’ll be participating in Livia Blackburne’s Alternate Version Blogfest tomorrow. Yes, tomorrow! My teeth are chattering.

The gist is, I’ll take one passage from my work-in-progress and rewrite it in a different style/genre/author’s voice.

Livia is putting me through the ringer with this…. oh, wait. I’m the one who signed up. GAH! Silly me.

The scene I rewrite will likely be contemporary/universal subject matter even though Thirty Decibels (my WIP) is eco-dystopia/social sci-fi. (I could change my mind completely, though…)

Help me, readers: What style(s) should I take on for my alternate versions?

Please leave a suggestion below… Please?