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Labor Day Thoughts

September 6th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

Yesterday late afternoon I started reading Cory Doctorow’s book Little Brother, and literally couldn’t put it down until I finished it (a little after midnight). A very highly recommended read. Be warned: you will be paranoid after reading it, but I think that’s a good thing. Check this amazing art installation after reading, and freak yourself out even more (thanks, i09!). Bird Cam Freaky Beauty

Enjoy the smart snark of stellar blog Got Medieval as he discusses Idleness and Labor.

And finally, think good thoughts about the folks who live scant miles away from the Bonzuko hombu, as they are evacuated by virtue of a wildfire, which has turned the entire Boulder sky a weird yellow smoky hue, and smells of campfire.

Happy Labor Day!    ~Jenn

eerie light and orange sun

Random Movement Pic

August 26th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

first book signing, 2007

Call me medieval Ishmael

August 24th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

But I wonder who Queequeg is: the topless chick? (thanks, i09!)   ~Jenn

Categories: Film, Literature Tags: , ,

My Friend the Author, Part Infinity

July 21st, 2010 BONZUKO No comments
Categories: Literature Tags: ,

Mini-Essay Contest Winner

July 12th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

You may remember last summer when I taught Freshman Comp I held a mini-essay contest, in which the student who won would get her essay published here to this blog as a prize. Well this year the class and the contest happened again. This year’s winner is Sara Armijo–well done!   ~Jenn

Book Review by Sara Armijo

Many avid readers have at some point experienced a dazed feeling after having their nose buried in a book for hours.  Some stories are so thoroughly engaging that emerging back into the “real world” takes time and effort.  The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami (1998) is a novel that can work such magic on the psyche; it can actually feel a bit disturbing. Some book reviewers might tout a book as a must-read, a story for the ages. In contrast, I would like to find the select few among my audience that will accept this challenge for the imagination. I would like to find readers that aren’t afraid of a story that requires mental power, that don’t shy away from having to construct a story from bits and pieces of things that aren’t written, and are energized by lingering questions long after a book has found its way back onto a shelf.

The Wind-up Bird Chronicle has three main interwoven narratives, but one of the most prominent characters is Toru Okada.  A search for his wife’s cat leads to a mind-boggling hunt for his wife and a peculiar exploration of his own nature.  It is a bit of an otherworldly detective story in which Murakami paints vivid pictures of Japan, both in the modern day and during World War II. His writing style is very fluid and simple; so that it is surprising that such complexity is nestled within his words. An example:

I turned toward the cat path again.  What the hell was I doing here?  Not one cat had showed itself the whole time.  Hands still folded on my chest, I closed my eyes for maybe thirty seconds.  I could feel the sweat forming on different parts of my body.  The sun poured into me with a strange heaviness.  Whenever the girl moved her glass, the ice clinked inside it like a cowbell. 

“Go to sleep if you want,” she whispered.  “I’ll wake you if a cat shows up.”

Eyes closed, I nodded in silence (Murakami 19-20).

 The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami is not for those that wish to be spoon-fed a story, nor is it for those that desire a neatly orchestrated ending. Instead, it is for those that agree that there is more to this world than the physical, and that are intrigued by fiction that so poignantly embodies the messiness of life.

Citation: Haruki Murakami. The Wind-up Bird Chronicle. Trans. Jay Rubin. New York: Vintage International.  1998. Print.

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Wheaton/Scalzi Contest

July 1st, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

I mentioned a while back that I entered this contest hosted by geek celebrities Wil Wheaton and John Scalzi. Here’s my entry. Wish me luck!   ~Jenn

The Story Never Ends

The unichimaera knew it was up to her.

Not that the Elders of the Magical Story Realm actually said so aloud—it was just obvious to her. She’d read Lord of the Rings and the rest of them after all, and even though she was only a kitten, she knew if she didn’t find the Boy and help the land, the Shadow would take over. Again. Just like it did eons ago, when Atreyu saved the day.

Problem was, the unichimaera had no idea where to find another Bastian. Last time, it was only a matter of infiltrating the imagination of a solitary creative boy. He had been reading a book—no problem. An easy thing, for the Empress to send echoes into his cranium. Nowadays, though—boys aged early, weren’t by habit solitary, and read screens, not books. At least, that’s what the unichimaera had heard.

So she decided to begin with dreams.

Having entered more than a few human dreams within a week, she began to despair. The Orc of Confusion was using his magic shield to fan the Shadow around, and his axe was at least plus-two-vs.-one-horned-monsters. Barely any sunshine poked through the clouds in the Realm, and its long-dormant volcano slowly spewed hot magma six days out of the week. There wasn’t much time.

She remembered having listened to stories recycled from a sort-of Arthurian story set in space. There was a Boy in that series of stories—one with intelligence and innocence, who solved problems and served with Space Knights at least twice his age. She thought he’d be the perfect candidate, and so she found him in his dreams that night.

“I’m sorry, what did you say you needed me for?”

“To save the Realm, like I said.”

“What, I clap my hands and the fairies come back to life? I read that book.”

“It’s not that simple—you have to come with me before the Shadow takes over, and the last light fades from the Magical Story Realm.”

“Where now?”

“Fantasia.”

“Ah. I’ve read that book too. Also saw the movie.”

“So you’ll come?”

“You realize I’m not exactly a young innocent boy anymore, right?”

“You’re not?”

The Boy sighed, and rubbed his sleepy face. “Where’s the Luck Dragon?”

“Ran out of luck.”

“I see.”

“Hop on my back and we’ll go!”

“I’m still in my pajamas—“

“No time!”

“I’m getting too old for this—“ grumbled the Boy as he clambered onto the unichimaera’s back.

They took off through the air, thinking happy thoughts (that’s how one flies, even when one has wings), and arrived in the nearly pitch-dark Realm just in the nick.

The Orc of Confusion was just wafting the Shadow into the last of the light crevices. He wanted to make the Realm into a dystopia. One sight of the Boy’s pajama top, though, and he screamed and began to run.

“Catch him!” shouted the Boy.

“I’ll try—meow!” and the unichimaera pounced.

“Great work! Now all we need to do is drop the Orc of Confusion into Mount Doom,” said the Boy.

“Really?”

“Haven’t you read Lord of the Rings?”

“Oh sure, it’s just that—“

“Now! The light is disappearing into Nothing!”

Being extra careful of the axe-plus-two, the unichimaera picked up the Orc by his scruff and flew as fast as she could up to the top of the smoking mountain. Just when she didn’t know if she could bear the heat any longer, she let go her claws and the Orc of Confusion dropped, screaming, into the abyss.

The unichimaera and the Boy had breakfast in the Realm’s brightening dawn sky, before he returned to his own world. He had another important mission there, he said—a grand meeting of different types of wizards, it sounded like… he described it as she flew him home. She wished she could attend too, but the Boy told her that real life monsters weren’t allowed. She thought about that as she curled up, exhausted, back home in the Realm. A meeting of wizards…the name of the meeting was just a letter and a number…

“Thank you, Boy,” she whispered as she fell asleep.

Trailers Ahoy!

June 28th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

I do loves me some action-packed trailers. Even added a tag for em. Below is the original and new trailers for the kung-fu goodness of the Wu-Tang Clan. The film is The Golden Phoenix.

http://io9.com/5574760/new-trailer-for-the-golden-phoenix-is-hip-hop-kung-fu-fantasy-craziness

And here is the newest trailer for the latest Harry Potter flick. Here’s the MST3K version of the book. Please understand that it’s a spoiler alert. Read it. And here’s the trailer.   ~Jenn

http://www.mugglenet.com/trailer.php

Categories: Film, Literature Tags: , ,

How to Mark and Memorize

June 26th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

Inspired by One Big Bad Wolf today, I hereby present: how I scanned some particularly complicated Gertrude Stein for performance (back in 2000):

Categories: Literature, Theatre Tags: , ,

New Arts Blog

June 25th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments

Go join the arts conversation at my class’ new blog: World Visual and Performing Arts! There’s a really cool painting there now that you should share your ideas about.   ~Jenn

http://wvpa.blogspot.com

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My friend the author, Part…er, Three?

June 25th, 2010 BONZUKO No comments
Categories: Literature Tags: