Showing posts with label Classics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classics. Show all posts

My Favorite Stories to Read in October!

Thursday, October 8, 2015

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October is one of my favorite months because it gives me an excuse to read scary stories. I decided to make a list of stories that have scared me as well as entertained me in the past. 


Jade Green by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

 Anna Dressed in Blood by Kendare Blake 

The Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson

 The Mediator series by Meg Cabot

 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving 

Past Midnight series by Mara Purnhagen

 The Monkey's Paw by W.W. Jacobs 

The Scary Stories Treasury by Alvin Schwartz 

Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe 

And finally read some of the ghost stories of your local area, your state, or even your country! 


~Laura!

Adaptation Review: The New Adventures of Peter and Wendy (Season One)

Thursday, June 11, 2015

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The New Adventures of Peter and Wendy (Season One)


Starring: Peter Pan and Wendy Darling- Kyle Walters and Paula Rhodes
Michael and John Darling, Lily Bagha- Brennan Murray and Graham Kurtz, Lovlee Carroll

Writers: Kyle Walters and Shawn Deloache

Summary: Everyone has to grow up, right? Well, not if Peter Pan has anything to say about it! Peter, a late-twenties man-child and comic book artist living in the small town of Neverland Ohio, has three life goals: 1) NEVER GROW UP! 2) Have as much fun as humanly possible while doing as little work as possible. 3) Win the heart of his best friend, Wendy Darling. With his friends John, Michael, Lily and his fairy, Tinker Bell, Peter is nailing goals 1 and 2. Goal 3, however, is a bit trickier.
Wendy Darling, an advice blogger and overall go-getter, is tired of the never-changing small town of Neverland Ohio and wants to see the world, to become… an adult. It’s Peter vs. Growing Up in the battle for Wendy! But is growing up really the enemy? Or is it the solution?

My Review:

I love this series more than words can say! As a child I never really liked Peter Pan. I never really understood the appeal of Neverland with the pirates and crocodiles. Also, Peter and Wendy always kind of annoyed me. I thought Peter was kind of creepy and needed to calm down and Wendy needed to realize that Peter did not see girls as anything other than mothers so her crush was pointless. I did understand not wanting to grow up though. The reason this adaptation of Peter Pan finally connects for me is the unique portrayal of the plot and characters and the real life idea of not wanting to embrace the changes that adulthood brings.

I think The New Adventures of Peter and Wendy does a fabulous job capturing Peter and Wendy’s struggle as they grow up. I love the differences between Wendy and John who have tried to grow up (as best they could with Peter around), and Peter and Michael who have done everything they possibly can to avoid it. These differences are portrayed in the way the story is set up. Neverland is not a mystical place second to the right and straight on till morning, but instead it is a small town in Ohio. The New Adventures puts these famous characters in a real life place and asks: What if Peter DID have to grow up? Peter Pan is known around the world as the boy who never grew up, but in this adaptation he did grow up (sort of). Now he is twenty something years old and a comic book artist, but just because he has a job and is technically an adult due to his age, he is still a child at heart. (However, despite Neverland being a real town and a place where it is impossible for a child not to age, there is still magic in Neverland! The band Mermaid Lagoon has actual Mermaids as members, Kensington Darling, ancestor of our Darlings, found the first fairies in America in the Garden of Lights, and of course Peter has a fairy, Tinkerbell.) Peter spends the course of the first season trying to talk Wendy out of wanting to “grow up” which to her means leaving their small hometown and seeing the world, also leaving behind Peter himself who will never leave Neverland.

            This adaptation’s Wendy Darling is close to my heart. She is practical, goal oriented, and kind. She wants to get out and see the world. Right off the bat in the first episode the New Adventures starts tackling issues that are plaguing women today. Wendy gets a letter from a “Dear Darling” viewer asking her how she deals with being old. To which Wendy replies, “I forgot! That being a woman, 27, and single basically equates to being dead. I will start digging my own grave as soon as I finish making this lovely dress of cat hair and tears.” In today’s society that is still not really too keen on the idea of equality of the sexes this hits home. Wendy spends the first season torn between two equally important things: love and a career. Wendy, like most women today, feel as if she cannot have both.

            As for this adaptation’s Michael and John Darling? They are so much more that I ever thought they could be! Michael is on Peter’s side of the growing up debate. He is very much the baby of the season despite being in his early twenties probably. Michael still carries around a stuffed bear backpack and in the modern fashion of the New Adventures seems to spend most of his time trying to get on a reality TV so as to become famous (like so many of our generation it seems). John on the other hand takes after Wendy. He is arguably the most grown up of them all. He has his life completely planned out (literally even has it planned on paper). He likes order and cleanliness, the complete and utter opposite of his brother. And yet the two Darling brothers are the comic relief of the series. It wouldn’t be as good without them, whereas in all the other adaptations I’ve ever seen or read they don’t seem necessary at all. Where’s Tiger Lily fit into all this you ask? Well in New Adventures Lily is a rich fashion heiress and CEO who will do anything to get Peter to herself. But she isn’t all bad. She is the foil of Wendy in that she too is in her late twenties and single, but she is successful due to her family business. She knows exactly what she wants and nothing will stop her. She is determined to have both career and family.

Part of what I adore about The New Adventures of Peter and Wendy is the subtle and sometimes not so subtle hints to the original story. The subtle, that one would only catch if they have read the book, such as Wendy’s opening lines:

“All children grow up and I knew this sooner than most. When I was, like, two years old I was in this garden picking flowers and I plucked one, brought it to my mother and she looked down at it and said ‘Ugh. Why can’t you stay this way forever, darling? It is all downhill once you turn two. The beginning of the end. And that’s why God invented Happy Hour! WAITER! I spilled’ This is when I knew I had to grow up.”

This is almost exactly like the opening paragraph that introduces the readers to Wendy and in a roundabout way to Peter, the boy who never grew up. Later in the same episode our introduction to Peter (outside of the prologue) is when he sneaks in through Wendy’s window, scares her and says, “It’s not my fault I move like a shadow” alluding to his original entrance when he accidentally left his shadow behind and had to go back for it. As for the not so subtle I refer back to the aforementioned prologue in which Peter tells the tale of the founding of Neverland Ohio by J.M. Barrie. If that isn’t a reference I don’t know what is. It is these references big and small that make this adaptation spectacular! Another great thing about the New Adventures is that the show is multimedia with each character having their own twitter and the paper that the characters work at has an actual website (you can watch an introduction video to the paper here (intro video contains spoilers for season one))!

            The New Adventures of Peter and Wendy is truly a wonderful show that I hope continues. I loved this show so much while it was airing its first season that when they put up an Indiegogo asking their fans to fund their second season I didn’t hesitate to contribute (gaining the season one DVD, a signed Darling brothers picture, a signed drawing by Kyle Walters aka Peter Pan, and a “Neverland Ohio” magnet in the process)! I am glad to say that the second season of the show starts tomorrow on EpicRobotTV’s Youtube channel and this season promises to be even better than the first with the introduction of Hook, Smee, and Mr. Darling! You can watch the trailer for season two here (and season one’s trailer here). If you haven’t already watched season one (which you really truly should) you can find the entire playlist here or if you’d prefer you can buy it on DVD (and other merch) here!


Until next time Neverlandians,
~Laura!


Collection: Pride and Prejudice (Part One)

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

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Pride and Prejudice


Seen here are the spines of my 10 copies of P&P.


I collect copies of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Why? Because I love everything about it: the story, the characters, the language, the message, and the sheer number of different covers. Pride and Prejudice is timeless.



Pictured:
  • Dover Publications Inc., 1995.
    • Cover harkens back to famous "Peacock Cover" of 1894 which was illustrated by Hugh Thomson.
    • Personally, I like this colorful version better than Thomson's (but I wouldn't say no to owning his)!
  • Penguin Group, 2005. (Notes by Viven Jones)
    • Published to celebrate the movie starring Keira Knightley and Matthew MacFadyen. 
    • This was the copy I first read. My best friend forced me to go see the movie and I fell in love with it, so I read the book and fell even deeper. 


Pictured:
  • Signet Classic, 1996. (Introduction by Margaret Drabble)
    • This cover features Jane Elizabeth, Countess of Oxford painted in 1797 by John Hoppner. This information did not come the back cover or copyright page as it should have, however. All the back cover says is that it is from the Tate Gallery in London. So I went to their online catalog and searched through hundred of painting until I found her. 
    • I bought this at a thrift store because a) it was a different cover, and b) someone annotated it. Maybe for school, maybe for fun, I'll never know but it excited me. I have yet to read the notes though. 
  • Bantam Dell, 2003. 
    • This cover features Miss Rosamond Croker (detail) by Sir Thomas Lawrence (1827). This information was found on the copyright page along with thanks to the Albright-Knox Gallery for the use of it. The Albright-Knox is in my hometown!
    • I bought this copy to annotate myself. I also found a post-it on the last page that says "-men want beauty, money, status, connections, materialistic objects. -women didn't have career. men were to work and make money."
  • Barnes & Noble Classics, 2003. (Introduction and notes by Carol Howard)
    • This cover features a close up of Berthe Morisot from Edouard Manet's The Balcony (1868).

Pictured:
  • Pocket Books, Inc., 1941. 
    • Cover shows vibrantly colored Elizabeth and Darcy, illustrator not known. The edges of the book are also red like the endpapers. 
    • This is the oldest copy I own at this moment for sure.
  • Books, Inc., Year Unknown 
    • Year Unknown, but not for lack of trying. From the little information I could get about the "Art Type Editions, The World's Popular Classics" series is that there are a lot of books in it and not a single one has a copyright date. I can't find a single bit of information on the publisher or when they printed this series of books. Some say 1900 or during the 40s, when another says 1964. This book's age will remain a mystery for now.
    • My Aunt gave me this book along with a bunch of other books she found of my grandmother's and it is my only hard cover edition of P&P.  
  • Scholastic Book Sources, 1968. (Introduction by EM Halliday)
    • The green and blue seemingly watercolor painting on the cover is not given an illustrator anywhere in the book.I like how calm this cover is. 

Pictured:
  • Pemberly Digital in association with DFTBA Records, 2013. (Forward by Hank Green)
    • This is my favorite copy of P&P because it is the Lizzie Bennet Diaries Edition along with my LBD DVD set which I purchased through the Kickstarter.
    • The artwork on the cover is by Valeria Bogado who was discovered on DeviantArt by Hank after she drew some fanart for The Fault in Our Stars by Hank's brother John. 
    • It has an awesome forward by Hank Green, vlogbrother and co-founder of the series, that is prefaced with a photo of him, and the actresses who play Lizzie, Jane, Lydia and Charlotte in the webseries. It also has a four page spread of the best LBD stills.
  • Evensen Creative, 2014. (Introduction, Annotations, and Artwork by Erika Svanoe)
    • This is the companion edition to Marrying Mr. Darcy: the Pride and Prejudice Card Game. It was made to explain the inspirations behind the game that Erika created. 
    • I have yet to read this edition, but since playing the amazing card game, that I helped fund with it's Kickstarter campaign, I am really excited about it.

This is the first part of what will probably become an ongoing series of posts showcasing my collection. Seen above are ten different editions of Pride and Prejudice, I think with every 5 new editions I collect I will post another blog showcasing those copies. 
~Laura!

My Ideal Bookshelf

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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I got the idea for this post from the book, My Ideal Bookshelf. It asks readers to think about the books that shaped their lives. Each contributor writes a few paragraphs about why the books they chose mean so much to them. The writing is accompanied by amazing drawings of the spines of the books. I cannot do that. I tried and failed so instead I took a photo of them. 

I had to think about this for months. Finally, I decided on these 6 (I count HP as one) because without them I wouldn't be me. I decided to keep my reasons short because it seems more powerful, if that makes sense. 

P&P was the first “classic” I ever read. I love everything about it.

84CCR is everything I want in life.

Before I read 13LBE I never wanted to travel.

Inkheart's main plot is that characters come out of books; it is my imagination in book form. 

TFIOS is the only book that has simultaneously made me laugh and cry hysterically in the same sentence.

Harry Potter is the reason I am the person I am today.
~Laura!

Review: Pride and Prejudice- Jane Austen

Saturday, January 24, 2009

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Hey!~

I had never really wanted to read this book before 2005. But like most things I come to love, it was forced unto me by my best friend. I went to see the 2005 version of it with her and fell in love.


Title: Pride and Prejudice
Author: Jane Austen
Summary: "Vanity, not love, has been my folly."
When Elizabeth Bennet first meets eligible bachelor Fitzwilliam Darcy, she thinks him arrogant and conceited; he is indifferent to her good looks and lively mind. When she later discovers that Darcy has involved himself in the troubled relationship between his friend Bingley and her beloved sister Jane, she is determined to dislike him more than ever. In the sparkling comedy of manners that follows, Jane Austen shows the folly of judging by first impressions and superbly evokes the friendships, gossip and snobberies of provincial middle-class life.


My Review: Okay this is the first 'classic' I ever read. It's really hard to give this a fair review because 1) it's a classic and 2) it's been done so many times. This book was first published in 1813 (give or take) so its written in an oldder version of English. So if you can't read it or don't like to read that type of English this is definitely not the book for you. P&P has so many great characters to fall in love with, Elizabeth who is headstrong, Jane, the shy one or Lydia the annoying one. But my all time favorite is Mr. Darcy, I love him and I have the t-shirt to prove it. I know you're all like " why do you love him?,"  but I really can't figure it out myself. If and when you read this book you're either going to Love it and say it's the best book ever or you're going to absolutely Hate it and throw it across the room. So, there you have it.

As always tell me what you think! Still working on the comment thing so email me (with the blog name as the subject so it won't be deleted as spam).
Don't Forget to enter the contest. Read more about it on the side of this blog.


~Read More,
Talk Less,
Rory!