top audio books 2008

i will admit it. i’m kinda a slut for audio books most of the year. Here’s why:

  • i read and write much of the time which causes my eyes to be tired, my brain to hurt, and the cats to feel neglected
  • audio books tend to publish classics (which i haven’t read all of) or books doing very well in the literary and popular world (which keeps me up to date on what other people read, i.e. those not in grad school)
  • car trips
  • when one can’t sleep, one can read
  • making x-mas presents or cleaning
  • candle lit baths
  • because i like people who can do voices like Jim Dale in the harry potter novels

Here, then, is my top audio books for 2008:

1. Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri, read by Sarita Choudhury
2. Fight Club and Rant:The Oral Biography of Buster Casey by
Chuck Palahniuk, the former read by Jim Colby, the latter read by large cast (these were both luscious. i felt like i was getting away with something, reading something so fun.)
3. The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards
4. Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
5. When You are Engulfed in Flames
by David Sedaris, read by the author

6. The Road
by
Cormac Mccarthy, read by Tom Stechschulte
7. The
Philip Pullman trilogy His Dark Materials: The Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass, read by the author
8. Twilight
by Stephenie Meyers, read by Ilyana Kadushin (and I’ll add here New Moon, the next book in the series, which I’ve started)

    Honorable mentions includes the Philippa Gregory novels: The Constant Princess, The Boleyn Inheretance, The Virgin’s Lover, and The Queen’s Fool.

    to teach honeybee

    A friend asked me what I thought about Naomi Shihab Nye’s work 19 Varieties of the Gazelle which I was teaching. I’d heard Nye read in D.C.

    “I think she’s a sweet poet,” I said. My friend looked at me, waiting, which made me think: a) sweet is not an intelligent word, b) that perhaps I knew nothing about the poet; c) that one day I would be able to converse with utter intelligence, sophistication, and verve, but today was not the day. I continued, “She read this poem in D.C. about cookie dust.” I then began to try and recount the poem which sounded a little like “this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened,” which likely increased my perception to said friend of my brilliance.

    Alas.

    Well, that was a semester ago and I’ve just finished reading Honeybee which I’m teaching in my comp class in the spring. And, it’s a sweet book, with sweet poems. (Dear future student, please stop reading now, as I’d hate if you knew all my thoughts on the book before we began our class discussion). Granted, Nye writes poems of witness and certainly here in Honeybee one will find her critique of war and the current-soon-to-be-gone administration, but for me my favorite poems are her sweet ones. Honeybee asks the reader to remember the little pollinators and to try and slow down. In “We Are the People” she writes,

    I know people who, the minute they get into their
    homes, tell you where they are going next.

    I am one of them.

    This is nothing to be proud of.

    Of course, Nye reveals her bug knowledge , like “Bees take naps, too.”

    My favorite two poems in Honeybee are “Before I read The Kite Runner” and “Gate A-4,” the latter being the cookie poem I once tried to describe. Read them. You’ll understand the sweetness. Here’s the first.

    UPDATE: I just finished Nye’s You & Yours, which I’m also teaching in another class. In this text, I like her political, powerful, disruptive poems. Go figure.

    garden fantasies when it’s cold…

    …and it is so very cold! Here it is December and I’m going to have to come clean: I’ve been fantasizing about the garden. How is it possible not to? For updates: I had a great crop of strawberries, zucchini (of course), pumpkin (three left, still), butternut squash (thirteen total), peppers, and several of the others did as best as they could, considering the wet early start everyone got which made for shallow roots and thus, thirsty plants the rest of the summer.

    Here’s some of my fantasizes at hand: mini citrus trees, blueberries, melons. In terms of the citrus, I’ve heard they make ones for us midwesterners which I could keep like a houseplant in the winter and haul it outdoors during the summer. But where oh where does one find such a thing?

    a mini-review

    Writer Sima Rabinowitz has a review of Santa Fe LIterary Journal on newpages and mentions my short story:

    Many of this issue’s poems and stories are equally memorable, and I was happy for the opportunity to get to know the work of writers I’d not encountered before, in particular poetry by Anne Valley-Fox Christien Gholson, and Mary McGinnis, and prose by Laura Madeline Wiseman. Wiseman’s…

    You can read the whole thing here.

    i heart dancing girl press

    Yippee! The fabulous and wonderful editor Kristy Bowen accepted my chapbook manuscript My Imaginary for dancing girl press for 2009. October’s the month for me. But check out dpg’s great lineup for the 09 year. I’m in good company. Up for September is Leah Browning, editor of Apple Valley Review (who incidentally accepted a poem of mine which appeared in AVR’s fall 2006 issue). What better news for the holidays?