Saturday, December 31, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: The Name of the Star
Fresh out of my mood for fluff, I dove right back into the action plot! I elected to read another Maureen Johnson book that I acquired a few months ago and absolutely devoured this book. The story was dark, but not quite as dark as Hunger Games, but the violence and threat of danger was similar, which I liked. In the story, someone is recreating the Jack the Ripper murders, but while most of the murders are caught on the network of CCTV cameras in London, the killer is never visible. The main character gets involved with a special unit of the police force, and helps track down the copycat killer... I read most of it on my way out to California, and can't wait to read the next one in the series! Unfortunately, it's not due to come out for some time, so we'll see...
Likelihood I'll reread: 90% (probably when the next book is released?)
Likelihood I'll recommend: 80%
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Total Pages: 3278
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Californialand!
I hope this comes as a shock to people as much as it has been a shock to me - apparently I DO have a life outside of reading books! At the moment, I am blogging from San Diego, California, where Texas has successfully trounced Cal Berkley at the Holiday Bowl. I am exceedingly pleased, as you might imagine. The final score of the game was 21-10. We played pretty well, though there were a few weak points in the game - as is to be expected, really. More on that in a moment!
My trip has been pretty simple - I flew out yesterday, I fly back tomorrow - but it has had some very nice highlights! Last night, I had delicious Mexican food with my APO friends who are also here. And this morning, a family friend, Bill, who lives in San Diego picked me up from my hotel and showed me around the city and fed me breakfast! Delicious pancakes at his house, where I also got to see one of my dog's puppies (Her name is Sangie - I didn't take a picture of her because I was too busy loving on her!)
And then it was off to the stadium! Things were a little bit smaller and better-coordinated than last time I came out for the Rose Bowl two years ago. We didn't have any trouble getting inside the stadium this time - last time we had to get our flag sniffed by dogs and we had to wait outside the stadium for absolutely forever. We opened the flag out in the parking lot to do a sort of practice run for closing it. We only had fifteen (fifteen) field passes for this game, so opening and closing that 500+ pound flag was going to be difficult, and we knew it!
On the field, we were able to do it, although it was a lot harder with thousands of eyes watching! A big bubble of air came in under the flag and prevented me from gathering up the fabric of the flag very efficiently, and it was pretty hard to recover the bubble of flag that seemed to be collapsing on top of me! But all went well.
We were almost immediately upstaged by what is probably the only flag in the entire world bigger than ours! A football-field-sized American flag held by 250+ Marines. Hah - we did ours with only fifteen! (Fifteen...)
Also, paratroopers landed on the field before the game started - SWEET.
Of course, we won the game, but not before several members of our party yelled themselves hoarse!
Tomorrow morning I fly back to Austin. I wish I could hang around San Diego a little longer, but it's been a nice jaunt out to the west coast! My next jaunt is to the east coast in a few weeks! Off to visit my Gramma for her birthday!
And now I am off to bed... I am exhausted!
Breakathon Readathon Review: Lola and the Boy Next Door
I needed a good mental break after finishing Mockingjay due it's super intense plotline, very little humor, and unrelenting action, and I chose to mentally vacation in some good, reliable, Young Adult fluff. Now, it's not that this story has nothing going for it - far from it - it has a clear message, likable, well-developed characters, and an appropriate happy ending. I love Stephanie Perkins' style, and I especially love that characters from her first novel (Anna and the French Kiss, which I read earlier this year in more or less one evening) feature prominently in this one. It was a funny, rewarding story, and a delightfully quick read.
Likelihood I'll reread: 70%
Likelihood Ill recommend: 75%
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Total pages: 2908
Monday, December 26, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: Mockingjay
So... I finally finished Mockingjay just before Christmas. It was a relief to finally come to the end of the third book - it was a roller coaster from the get-go, and the second book left off at a really awful cliffhanger. In what must have been my infinite wisdom (of course) I am glad I left reading these until they were all published. I would have been a wreck if I hadn't had this one at my disposal. Similarly to the first two, I read about forty or fifty pages and then put it down for a while. Some things just need time to settle - and these books, more than most I've read before, need time to settle. They're violent, weighty, dark, and absolutely unrelenting... and I absolutely loved every page. I even shed a tear. I won't say when, you'll see.
Likelihood I'll reread: 100% (Absolutely)
Likelihood I'll recommend: 100% (Already happened many times in the last two days. I want everyone to read them so we can talk about them!)
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Total page count: 2570
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: Seriously, I'm Kidding
This popped up in my reading list in an unexpected manner. I needed a break from The Hunger Games (which isn't to say I don't still love them - I guess I just needed some time to absorb the plot twists) and this book provided exactly what I needed. On a similar vein to reading Tina Fey's autobiography and the Daily Show's book, Ellen's was an excellent read. Along with the other two books, I feel like Ellen's voice was easily able to shine through the text of the book, and I happily devoted a few hours to reading and enjoying. It features a combination of stories from her life (which you take with a grain of salt) to imaginary letters to mall cops about how it really wasn't her fault she broke the vase in Pottery Barn, to imaginary conversations between someone named Suzie and a Psychic ("Do you want some more water?" "Yes, thank you!" "I knew that already.") to practical advice on how to become a billionaire ("1. Make lots of money, 2. Don't spend it"). I loved reading it, and, with its short chapters it'd be easy to pick up again and read a few pages in the future.
Likelihood will reread: 90% (like I said, bits and pieces)
Likelihood will recommend to others: 95% (if they like this sort of book)
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Total page count: 2180
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: Catching Fire
I was right when I set out to list which books I wanted to read during this break to include the sequels to The Hunger Games. Everything I had heard about the books were that they were riveting, addicting, and fast-paced. Somehow, I have continued to underestimate them. I won't make that mistake again. I guess I just get suspicious and mistrustful of the quality of books. This is in no way a stab at modern writers or a statement in support of the Good Old Days or anything (because who am I, at age 22, to know anything about the good old days of anything except perhaps classic Nickelodeon lineups?) Anyway... Catching Fire was surprising to me for many reasons. One, that it didn't seem to go the way I was thinking it would, that I was even more confused by the end of it (imagine if books gave you answers instead of answering the old questions! Crazy, right?) and lastly, that it was even more addicting than the first. Mom and Mike can attest to the fact that, immediately upon finishing it, I leapt up out of my seat and ran to grab the next, and last, book of the trilogy.
Likelihood of rereading: 100% (There is simply too much I must have missed the first time round!)
Likelihood of recommending it to others: 100% (though I would warn that addiction to the series will probably result in some weird dreams.)
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Page total: 1939
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: Earth (The Book)
Likelihood I'll reread: 50% (probably just portions when I am bored)
Likelihood I'll recommend to others: 35% (if the topic is raised)
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Page count: 1549
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: The Last Little Blue Envelope
Likelihood I will reread: 100%
Likelihood I will recommend it to others: 100%
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Page count: 1293
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Page count: 1293
Monday, December 19, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: 13 Little Blue Envelopes
Maureen Johnson is made of magic and win. I’m pretty sure this is
fact.
Given my history of travel, especially solo travel, this
story struck a very personal chord within me. The story is about this girl
named Ginny, who at the beginning of the book learns of her aunt’s death and is
given a bundle of blue envelopes from her. The first letter instructs her to
book a flight to London – to leave behind all forms of communication and follow
the instructions to the letter (hah – see what I did there?). She ends up
travelling all over Europe – to Amsterdam, Greece, Italy, Scotland, France, and
Denmark – makes friends, and completes little tasks along the way (such as
finding her aunt’s old friends, who end up teaching her a variety of lessons.)
Most of you will remember my own personal trip around Europe a few years ago.
My personal experiences in Europe that summer, and from other trips there over
the years, made me really identify with the narrator. It reminded me of how
much I loved to travel, especially alone, and while I followed Ginny’s travels
throughout the book, to many places I have been (the exceptions would be
Amsterdam, Rome, and Greece) I craved those places again. I think Maureen
Johnson was able to paint a very interesting, realistic picture of a young girl
travelling alone and discovering herself, and who her aunt really was, along
the way.
Likelihood I will reread: 100%
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Page count: 541
(I only read 70 pages of this book, to finish it, during the readathon)
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: The Hunger Games
So I sat down to start this book a few days ago when I was all set to start babysitting, but had twenty minutes to kill and a hankering for a coffee from Starbucks. I went to Starbucks (where they have started to recognize me...), got my coffee, sat down in a cozy armchair, and set an alarm. (I have learned to set alarms!) When my alarm went off, alerting me that it was time to leave I was fifteen pages in and scowling. No! I didn't want to go babysit! I wanted to keep reading! Finally, when I had this free afternoon with which to do absolutely nothing (and having previously done some serious 'damage' to the Christmas knits), I put my cozy slippers on and went to town. Well, I easily read 75% of the book in one sitting (with the exception of a break to bake some Christmas cookies) and I have to say that the book was everything it promised to be. It's tough nowadays to pull that off, I think. There is so much overdone in any genre of fiction, and so I was very pleasantly surprised to find this book was both original and a story well-told. I was worried about two things, primarily. One, that the writing style wouldn't be great (because, well, look at how popular Twilight is, despite Meyer's style) and two, that it wouldn't be graphic enough. It's a Young Adult book - and I worried that it would be toned down. (Kind of like how I can't really forgive several of the Harry Potter movies for their PG ratings.) The story of the book is graphic (it's about a competition of 24 people fighting to the death - it kind of has to be!) In any case, both of my fears were never realized, as it is both extremely well-written and doesn't spare us the gory details. To be clear, I don't relish in violence or extremely vivid detail... I just prefer that the author do justice to their story. The last thing I have to say about the book is that the story itself was a lot more self-sufficient than I thought it would be. It left just enough of an inconclusive conclusion at the very end of the book to make me want to start off immediately and go buy the next one (or, let's face it, the next two. I won't be put in this position again!) but it wrapped up the individual story of the book very well. Kudos to Suzanne Collins!
Likelihood I will reread: 100%
Likelihood I will recommend to others: 100% (as I have already done so)
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Page count: 855
Breakathon Readathon Review: An Abundance of Katherines
Likelihood I’ll read it again: 25% (Once seems to have done it well for me, but who knows?)
Likelihood I’ll recommend it to others: 30%
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Page count: 471
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Page count: 471
Friday, December 16, 2011
Breakathon Readathon Review: Bossypants
Likelihood it will be reread: 95%
Likelihood I will try to recommend it to others, so I can talk about it to them: 75%
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Page count: 288
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Page count: 288
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Challenge: Breakathon Readathon
My roommate and I have a bit of a competition going on over the break. We call it: The Breakathon Readathon.
Rules:
During our break from school, we are to read as much as possible. We're quantifying it by page number, so the idea is to just read, and read a lot. I am challenging myself to read as many books that I haven't read before, (with the exception of one or two, because it's been many years since I've read them!) For some added fun, I'll be writing reviews of the books I read, too. I'll give you an updated page count, too.
Interested in what's on my list? They cover a wide array of genres... Here's a list of the books I've pulled from my shelf:
Rules:
- No Harry Potter. Or Twilight, for that matter.
- No rereading things over the break (but you can reread books you have read before.)
- Try to stay away from audiobooks, but they are allowed.
During our break from school, we are to read as much as possible. We're quantifying it by page number, so the idea is to just read, and read a lot. I am challenging myself to read as many books that I haven't read before, (with the exception of one or two, because it's been many years since I've read them!) For some added fun, I'll be writing reviews of the books I read, too. I'll give you an updated page count, too.
Interested in what's on my list? They cover a wide array of genres... Here's a list of the books I've pulled from my shelf:
- 13 Little Blue Envelopes, Maureen Johnson (I have to finish this one - I started it months ago!)
- The Last Little Blue Envelope, Maureen Johnson (Presumably I'll want to read it, as it's the sequel!)
- Name of the Star, Maureen Johnson (Because I got it months ago and it has been EATING AT ME that I haven't been able to read it yet!)
- An Abundance of Katherines, John Green (I've been meaning to read this for ages - I've loved his other books and this is just on my list.)
- Looking for Alaska, John Green (Same as the above reason!)
- The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins (I have heard that this is an AMAZING read.)
- Catching Fire, Suzanne Collins (Presumably, I will have to read this one, because it's the sequel to Hunger Games)
- Mockingjay, Suzanne Collins (The last book in the Hunger Games trilogy... same reason as above)
- Lover Eternal, J.R. Ward (Because I read the first one and borrowed this from Ally months ago and should probably return it. Also, throwing in a romance novel seems like a good idea for a change of pace.)
- Lola and the Boy Next Door, Stephanie Perkins (I loved her first book, Anna and the French Kiss, so I picked this one up a few months ago and have been meaning to start)
- The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien (Because the movie is coming out next year, because I haven't read it since I was 14... because I just want to read it again, okay?)
- All Wound Up, Stephanie Pearl-McPhee (The latest in the Yarn Harlot's collection of knitting-related books, so naturally it's on my list.)
- Bossypants, Tina Fey (Over Thanksgiving break, I watched all five seasons of 30 Rock, and since then I have been a teensy bit obsessed with Tina Fey...)
- Earth (The Book), Jon Stewart (Sort of linked to my obsession with Tina Fey, in that it's a book written by a comedian and looks hilarious!)
So that's the list right now, and by no means will I be sticking to the order! It will in all likelihood change! Any suggestions for books I should read?
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Penultimate Day of Classes Blog
(Too bad I didn't write this blog yesterday, otherwise I would have gotten to use one of my favorite obscure words: Antepenultimate. The third to last in a series.)
I have some photographs to share - as is my way, is it not?
I've been trundling along the end of the semester - through the biannual Finals Cold (I always seem to get sick. Stress colds, I suppose.) This semester isn't so awful as previous ones - things are nice and spread out. I guess I'm just ready to be done with these classes.
Tomorrow, 12/2: Exam.
Monday, 12/5: Paper (15-20 pages)
Monday, 12/13: 3 Essays (2000 words, 750 words, 750 words)
On my way to work the other day, I saw a camel.
It's part of a "living nativity" thing that this church at Bee Caves and MoPac do every year. Every year I forget about it, and so inevitably I drive through through the light thinking, "Was that a camel?!" I pointed it out to Emma after I'd picked her up, and she said, "I LOVE camels!"
She's a bright girl. She also saw the moon the other day and said, "The MOON. Isn't it BEAUTIFUL, Stefanie? Stefanie, the moon came out to say hello to you!"
Every time I tell her it's bath time, she looks at me very seriously and sais, "This is Emma's last bath. No more baths."
And the other day, I was eating a snack with her and she looked directly at me, pointed her finger, and said (through a mouthful of banana), "Stefanie, chew."
Miss Emma also knows how to operate an iPad. She can unlock it, find her favorite TV shows, and start and stop episodes. All by herself. I watched her go through like six different Dora the Explorer episodes before she decided on which one she wanted. I knew Apple products were intuitive, but I guess I underestimate the toddler population! (She loves to play with the volume. I love to snuggle with her and read a book while she watches Dora.)
She's such a big girl. Look at her a year ago!
Miss Emma will be THREE soon. Don't talk to me about it.
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I went to see my asthma doctor the other day. Ever the sample-giver, he gave me a sample of my favorite kind of inhaler. The usual number of doses in an inhaler is 206, but this one is MINI. It only has 65. AND IT'S MINI.
Really, it just supports my theory that everything is more awesome in its miniature form: muffins, sharpies, squashes (my roommate gave me a mini acorn squash the other day!) And now, inhalers.
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I have some thank you notes to send out for my birthday presents. Mom gave me these stickers last weekend (since her last name no longer begins with a P) and I thought it would be ULTRA CLASSY to put them on.
I have some photographs to share - as is my way, is it not?
I've been trundling along the end of the semester - through the biannual Finals Cold (I always seem to get sick. Stress colds, I suppose.) This semester isn't so awful as previous ones - things are nice and spread out. I guess I'm just ready to be done with these classes.
Tomorrow, 12/2: Exam.
Monday, 12/5: Paper (15-20 pages)
Monday, 12/13: 3 Essays (2000 words, 750 words, 750 words)
On my way to work the other day, I saw a camel.
Yep, that's a camel. |
It's part of a "living nativity" thing that this church at Bee Caves and MoPac do every year. Every year I forget about it, and so inevitably I drive through through the light thinking, "Was that a camel?!" I pointed it out to Emma after I'd picked her up, and she said, "I LOVE camels!"
She's a bright girl. She also saw the moon the other day and said, "The MOON. Isn't it BEAUTIFUL, Stefanie? Stefanie, the moon came out to say hello to you!"
How could anyone NOT like gratuitous pictures of Emma? |
Also, Emma can recognize some letters now. My hart practically bursts every time I show her the letter E and she proudly says, "That's E. E for Emma!" And to show how SUPER smart she is, she also recognizes S. "S for Stefanie!"
My new current favorite picture of her. Emma LOVES to swing. |
And the other day, I was eating a snack with her and she looked directly at me, pointed her finger, and said (through a mouthful of banana), "Stefanie, chew."
Miss Emma also knows how to operate an iPad. She can unlock it, find her favorite TV shows, and start and stop episodes. All by herself. I watched her go through like six different Dora the Explorer episodes before she decided on which one she wanted. I knew Apple products were intuitive, but I guess I underestimate the toddler population! (She loves to play with the volume. I love to snuggle with her and read a book while she watches Dora.)
She's such a big girl. Look at her a year ago!
Miss Emma still can't eat yogurt without being messy. Not much changes, except now she has more hair. (And she can speak better this year. And she has more teeth. And she...) |
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I went to see my asthma doctor the other day. Ever the sample-giver, he gave me a sample of my favorite kind of inhaler. The usual number of doses in an inhaler is 206, but this one is MINI. It only has 65. AND IT'S MINI.
Really, it just supports my theory that everything is more awesome in its miniature form: muffins, sharpies, squashes (my roommate gave me a mini acorn squash the other day!) And now, inhalers.
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I have some thank you notes to send out for my birthday presents. Mom gave me these stickers last weekend (since her last name no longer begins with a P) and I thought it would be ULTRA CLASSY to put them on.
Don't they just SCREAM classy? |
We also determined that I must be an adult if I send thank you cards with absolutely no prompting from her.
Well, crap...
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Also, tomorrow's my last day of classes. Where did the semester go?
Friday, November 18, 2011
Class Rings, (gratuitous pictures of) Emma, and the Best Class Ever
This week has been a happy interruption to the endless cycle of school work and real work in my life... I got some time off of work, I finally felt ready to begin writing my paper (which I am sure I will write about soon - it's kind of all I can talk about these days!), and I got my class ring!
My mom and dad came to the ceremony on Wednesday evening, which was, predictably, mostly calling out names and posing for photographs.
I'm up there somewhere! See me? |
The eyes of Texas are upon you, all the live long day... |
We sang The Eyes of Texas, which has become my favorite song over the last few years here at UT.
And after the ceremony, I posed with my new ring.
It's silly, but I keep looking at it. It's a visual representation of what I have done at UT. Even though I'll leave in a few months with little more than a slip of paper and what's in my brain (the latter is the most important, of course) it feels really good to have something shiny to show off.
Isn't it beautiful? You can hold it if you ask me nicely!
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In other news, LOOK AT EMMA.
Next year, I won't be looking after her regularly because her mom will be on maternity leave. Of course, I will miss my Emma... but I'm getting my dose of her adorableness while I can!
AT STARBUCKS!! |
YESSSSSSSSSSS!
Thank you for my coffee, professor! Best class ever! |
(We have a rather small class, and only seven or eight of us showed up that day anyway. Thank you, Professor!)
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I lied. That last one wasn't exactly the last lastly.
I'd like to say thank you to my mother for giving birth to me 22 years ago.
Obviously not a picture of my birth. I'll spare you the gory details, and instead present you with the messy details of my first birthday. |
And yes, I know I'm not actually 22 until 11:55pm.
"It's not my birthday without you reminding me of that!" I told her on facebook.
"It's hard for me to forget, you know," she replied.
(Touche.)
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
A Knitterly Post
Last week was really stressful for me - I had my last short story for my creative writing class due, I had a test in my history class (and the first exam we had I didn't do as well as I had hoped I would, so I tried to study a lot more for this one) and I have been feeling a lot of pressure from my various and sundry occupations of babysitting and teaching that I felt like I might break by the end of the week.
I'm going to try and knit the letter into hers as intarsia, instead of sewing it on as a double stitch after the fact. I figure that K is a lot easier to chart than S was. S was awful. S defeated me.
The other project I've been working on for a while is the Sunday Market Shawl, which I knit with some Malabrigo that I've had just laying around for a while.
It was a super easy knit, and I am definitely going to knit another one sometime! It's not so much a shawl (though it stretches out wider to be a kind of wrap) as a scarf, and I know I will be warm and toasty all winter (if winter ever comes!) with it!
Leslie: "Stefanie! Stefanie! Wake up!"
Well, everything that I was fearing ended up passing like no big deal. I knew that I would be able to tackle everything I needed to (and less important things would fade to the background), but it was sure a big relief when I came out intact. I spent the weekend relaxing, cheering on UT on Saturday night (WHAT A GAME. 43-0 win!), and knitting.
I have been knitting so much stockinette and garter stitch lately (for you non-knitters - all just flat, plain, boring ole knitting, no fun things like cables or lace), that I literally exploded into a fingerless mitten pattern with all the cables I could want on Sunday afternoon. I knitted all afternoon, and even the finicky cables couldn't stop me from adoring the whole process.
I've only knit the first one, and it was delightful - and I can't wait to knit the second one and wear them! Texas is giving us its version fall right now, where it's kind of moderately chilly in the morning and moderately warm in the afternoon. It feels a lot like Oxford did over the summer. Maybe someday I'll be able to wear a sweater in the morning AND the afternoon!
About a week ago, I also started a long-promised present for my stepsister Katie. Remember my Wealsey sweater? Well, she wants one too! Here is the beginning of that!
I'm going to try and knit the letter into hers as intarsia, instead of sewing it on as a double stitch after the fact. I figure that K is a lot easier to chart than S was. S was awful. S defeated me.
Emma's little sister's blanket is progressing, though I've taken a break from it for a while. I have edges and weaving in ends still to do. But I am super proud of it. :)
The other project I've been working on for a while is the Sunday Market Shawl, which I knit with some Malabrigo that I've had just laying around for a while.
It was a super easy knit, and I am definitely going to knit another one sometime! It's not so much a shawl (though it stretches out wider to be a kind of wrap) as a scarf, and I know I will be warm and toasty all winter (if winter ever comes!) with it!
I finally visited Gauge, the other yarn store in Austin, and that's where I bought the yarn for my mittens, and this baby. Because I simply couldn't help myself.
(Dizzylettuce, Peacock Bronze)
Oh baby - you're going to be 420 yards of something BEAUTIFUL.
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Now, it is off to class I go! My roommate woke me up this morning with a conversation that went something like this:
Leslie: "Stefanie! Stefanie! Wake up!"
Me: "What?"
Leslie: "I have a pumpkin spiced latte and I don't know what to do with it!"
I have the best roommate EVER. She brings me coffee. :D
Monday, October 24, 2011
What's new, Scooby Doo?
What have I been up to, you may ask?
This blanket is ALMOST finished. Emma is going to have a little sister soon, and so I'm knitting her a baby blanket. :)
This is a sweet little bird called a Chubby Chirp. I did a speech on knitting in my speech class and so I spent some time knitting little toys and things to bring into class with me.
A little bunny lovie I knit for the purposes of my speech. I'll probably give this one to Emma's little sister, too, as it's knit from the same yarn as the borders of the blanket.
This is an earring from a pair that I knit, also for the purposes of my speech! It's lovely, and I can't wait to experiment with other designs! It's wire and beads. :)
4) Working
There's Maureen on the panel! If you don't already, you should follow her on Twitter. (Should you have a twitter. (She's @maureenjohnson)
And since it's fall now, that means TONS of apple butter in my apartment! DELICIOUS. Cottage cheese and apple butter is the most delicious breakfast of all! And my roommate Leslie likes to put it on her scrambled eggs.
Also, fall is FOOTBALL SEASON. Here's me wit Hookem on the field before the most recent game!
1) Studying
Lots of reading and lots of tests in the world of Stefanie at the moment. Such is the life of Stefanie The Student. (But only for another semester! I GRADUATE IN MAY.)
(...I hope this is as earthshaking to you as it is to me. Because, like my mother always tells me, I was born just yesterday.)
2) Working
These days, I'm babysitting at a church, for Emma, and for another family, AND teaching piano... it's a lot of driving, and a lot of children, but it's super fun! Here! Have a gratuitous picture of Emma!
3) Knitting
I have a variety of projects that I've knitted recently. Some of them are for Real People and/or Real Purposes, and some of them just for me. Here, have a look at a few of them!
This blanket is ALMOST finished. Emma is going to have a little sister soon, and so I'm knitting her a baby blanket. :)
This is a sweet little bird called a Chubby Chirp. I did a speech on knitting in my speech class and so I spent some time knitting little toys and things to bring into class with me.
A little bunny lovie I knit for the purposes of my speech. I'll probably give this one to Emma's little sister, too, as it's knit from the same yarn as the borders of the blanket.
This is an earring from a pair that I knit, also for the purposes of my speech! It's lovely, and I can't wait to experiment with other designs! It's wire and beads. :)
4) Working
Did I mention I work all the time? Ask my roommate - I'm never home during the week. To make up for the mention of the sad thing, have some more gratuitous pictures of Emma!
5) Reading (which is more or less a subcategory of studying... sometimes.)
I'm writing a paper on Tolkien's languages, so I'm reading a lot of Tolkien right now. Luckily, I got to choose such an awesome topic, I get to mix some work with pleasure! This has led to an outbreak of writing in Elvish on my whiteboard...
And I've just started reading The Yarn Harlot's latest, All Wound Up, because I went to see her speak at Book People yesterday. She signed it and everything!
I also got to meet Maureen Johnson, who was at the Austin Teen Book Festival a few weeks ago, and I had her "revenge sign" my copy of Paper Towns (written by John Green, an author friend of hers, and who also signed that book). I posted the photo on Tumblr (a blog website), which prompted a spat of popularity when John Green reblogged my post (adding "Stop signing my books, Maureen!") and suddenly I was immensely popular. (Okay, okay, it was my photo that was popular!) I don't know that that kind of thing will ever happen again, so I reveled in the temporary internet popularity.
There's Maureen on the panel! If you don't already, you should follow her on Twitter. (Should you have a twitter. (She's @maureenjohnson)
Some other things I've been enjoying recently are my new toys! I recently got a new computer (a MacBook Pro) and a shiny new phone (the iPhone 4S). They are both absolutely DELIGHTFUL.
And since it's fall now, that means TONS of apple butter in my apartment! DELICIOUS. Cottage cheese and apple butter is the most delicious breakfast of all! And my roommate Leslie likes to put it on her scrambled eggs.
Also, fall is FOOTBALL SEASON. Here's me wit Hookem on the field before the most recent game!
I know that I should update le blog more often. Perhaps I will? Sometimes it's hard to remember to when I have so many other things to do!
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