2011 Resolutions

For the past three years, I haven’t really made any resolutions other than to lose weight, and I always break those kinds of resolutions anyway.  2010 being no different.  I’ve been thinking of what resolutions, or “challenges” as I like to call them, I want to make for the new year and here they are.

  1. I’m definitely going to get back into the gym this year.  It’s the only way I’m going to lose weight and get in shape is if I’m paying to do it.  I’m not setting a weight loss goal though at this time because I probably will wait till after January to join.  I’ll let all the other people who put the gym on their resolution list get out of the way first before I start!
  2. It wouldn’t be a new year without a new reading challenge.  2010′s goal was 30 books.  I passed it with 42 books read.  I’m shooting for 50 next year, but will be happy with at least reaching 40 again.  Of course, I’ll be keeping track of them by reviewing the books here on my blog and keeping a Listmania list over at Amazon.  Here’s my 2010 list if you are interested. Amazon only lets you list 40 items per list, so I deleted two books that I didn’t even finish reading because they were horrible.  My 2011 list will also include books I read for LLBR and from my Kindle.  I never included LLBR books before unless they were books I chose on my own. I’ll be starting my list with A Christmas Carol which I read over the holiday.
  3. Blog more!  I always say I’m going to do this but the gaps between posts grow and grow thanks to all the other activities I’m involved in.  Hopefully, I’ll cure that with my next two challenges:
  4. I’m starting a new blog in 2011.  The St. Louis Bookstore Review.  I probably won’t do it all in one year, but I’m going to visit every bookstore in the city (chain, indie, textbook, religious, etc.) and review them. This is a new project I’m very excited about so I hope you’ll follow along and share the blog with others.
  5. Pie challenge!  After my killer pumpkin pie back at Thanksgiving, I’ve decided to do a pie challenge next year.  I’m going to bake a new pie each month and blog about it.  I’ll share the recipe, take photos, and report back.  I’ll experiment with homemade, premade, and frozen crusts.  Fillings, holidays, baking, and more. And of course…taste tests!
  6. Couponing!  Definitely going to keep this up since I did such a good job of it this year.  But in 2011, I’m shooting for $1500.  That’s only $500 more than my previous goal, and only $300 more than where I ended 2010 at in savings. I’m also keeping track of the coupons again, but in 2011 I’m doing it in a spreadsheet rather than by hand like I did in 2010.
  7. As part of #6, I’m going to try to cut down my spending on groceries in general. More about that in my next post where I examine my spending habits for 2010.

And that’s about it.  Like I said, I’m not really resolving to do anything, just challenging myself to do things better.  We should be resolving to do that every day, right?  So…let the fun begin!

Getting Scrooged

I read Dickens’ A Christmas Carol over the holiday.  It was free to download on Kindle. Sadly, I don’t believe I’ve ever read it before.  I remember Great Expectations from high school (also free on Kindle), but honestly don’t ever remember reading A Christmas Carol.  It’s another one of those classics I blame my teachers for cheating me on back when I should have been reading it, but a small town high school curriculum spent too much time on Shakespeare instead.

All of us know the story.  It’s Christmas tradition, right?  If you tried, you could probably tell a decent version of it out loud to the children at your Christmas party and do a pretty good job at it. First published in 1843, it’s been a part of our American lives for a long time. Like I said before, it’s tradition.  Most of us know it from the big screen. If not the 1951 black and white version (also available colorized), you definitely saw the 1984 version with George C. Scott. The Muppets did it. Even Bill Murray spoofed it in 1988, a good spoof which is a classic in itself from the 80s.

Community theatre groups have also embraced it and made it tradition on the stage.  I was almost in a musical version myself back in high school, but it got canceled for some reason.  I was cast in dual roles, one that I don’t remember, but I was also going to be the Ghost of Christmas Future and I remember the director obsessing over how I should point. When I lived in Memphis, I went to see the annual production of it at Theatre Memphis. My point is, and I do have one, is how many of us can honestly say we first learned the timeless tale from the book itself.  I know I didn’t.

It’s like a really good memory that we embellish year after year for whatever reason, until sooner or later we forget how it actually happened. We’re so numb to it.  We’ve received more pleasure telling it our way, so why rediscover how it actually began, how it actually went, or what the truth is.

That’s exactly why I wanted to read it. It’s there.  Scrooge. Marley. Tiny Tim. The ghosts. All there. As I read, my brain played it out just like seeing it on the big screen, even some of the dialogue (including “God bless us, everyone!”) was right there on the page. So, what does this tell us?  Throughout history, we haven’t changed it much.  We’ve at least stayed true to it, not counting the Bill Murray version of course. I tried – very hard – not to picture versions of the characters I knew from the movies.

Honestly, it’s not very good writing in most places.  Dickens loves to list things in order to describe them, like opening the thesaurus searching for a better word and deciding to just use them all.  Case in point, when the Ghost of Christmas Present arrives he is sitting on a throne made from food.  Dickens names almost every food there is.  I’m paraphrasing here but it was a throne of ham, sausage, turkey, chicken, grapes, apples, bananas, oranges, pies, custards, puddings, bread, muffins, cakes, Reeses Peanut Butter Cups, M&Ms, Yoplait Yogurt, Froot Loops, Candy Bars…. and this isn’t the only place he does it.  The children were happy, glad, gleeful, joyful, cheerful… bleggh! Some of the lists take up half a page or more!

It was kind of like reading Shakespeare for the first time, be it Romeo and Juliet or Hamlet or whatever you read in high school, and your getting it.  You are comprehending it okay, enough to know what it’s about.  But your really having to dig through the muck to find the parts that make sense.  But overall, in the end, it does make sense. You found yourself scheming through it or focusing your attention elsewhere during parts, at least until you got to something you could understand.  I didn’t scheme through any of Christmas Carol – I read every damn word of it – but believe me, there were parts where I found myself slowly drifting off and thinking about something else.

In the end, I felt no different than when I did before I read it.  A sense of accomplishment?  Perhaps.  Now I can at least say I’ve read it.  I know the truth, although everything I knew before wasn’t much different.  I want to question what makes this a classic, but I already know the answer.

Time.

So…I don’t have much more to say about it.  God bless us everyone!

2010 Coupon Savings! Another New Years Resolution Complete!!

Another New Year’s Resolution that I accomplished this year was my coupon clipping and saving.  My goal for the year was to clip and save at least $1,000.

Here’s a breakdown of how I did overall:

Shop N Save is the grocery store closest to my house and the one I frequent the most often.  I saved a total of $452.90 from coupons there this year, including their $10 off $50 that they run on Thursdays from time to time in which sometimes I went three times in one day.

I saved a total of $46.01 at other grocery stores including Schnucks, Dierbergs, and Save a Lot.

I saved $23.58 at Target and only $6.50 at Wal~Mart. There is a Wal~Mart across the street from my Shop N Save, but it’s not a Super Center and is an old trashy store that I usually skip because they’ve minimalized their selection of name brands this year.

Petco came in at just $6.00.  I buy most of my pet food and supplies at Shop N Save anyway, so I definitely saved more for the pets but at other places.  There is a Petco within walking distance of my house, but again, it’s a bit run down and the parking lot is hard to get in and out of.  I’ve also done price comparisons there many times and found the grocery store or even Wal~Mart to be much much cheaper.

I saved $28.15 at Dollar General…a place I definitely like to shop because they carry lots of brand names, but again, it requires a special trip to go there and other places are closer to my home.

I saved $3.00 in gas thanks to Shop N Save’s new gas station that opened this year. Everytime you spend over $100 in groceries you get a 9 cents off per gallon coupon. However, they recently changed their policy and require you to pay first and then go back in to get a refund for the coupon.  That’s two trips in if you are paying cash.  So last night, I had to go in and pay, go back out and pump, then go back in for a .31 cent refund on $10 worth of gas.  It’s not really worth it.

I saved $20.00 at Kohls…probably on clothes or other items.

I saved $34.56 from fast food coupons…mostly McDonald’s, Taco Bell, and Off the Grill.

$103.14 was saved from “other” categories and places including hair cuts, oil changes, Hallmark, Bath & Body Works, and a local plant nursery that I had coupons for this year.

And the winner for the year was $487.81 saved at Walgreens thanks to coupons and register rewards, the most out of any place I shopped, and the main reason I probably haven’t had to buy any toothpaste or shower gel in about three months. In January alone this year, I saved a total of $130.02 at Walgreens from coupons and register rewards.

My total saved for the year from coupons alone is $1211.65.  That’s $211.65 over my goal of 1K for the year!  I’m very pleased with that and I’ve actually learned a few things by keeping track of my coupon savings and where I saved:

I’m still brand loyal to items like Folgers, Cottonelle, Downy, Crest, Clorox, Kraft, Lipton, Iams, and more but have given up loyalty to some other items because a coupon for them isn’t always the cheaper route to go.  For instance, I often clipped coupons for Domino Sugar, but could never find it under $2.00 even after the coupon at places like the grocery store and Walgreens.  I currently buy a bag of sugar at Save a Lot for just $1.39.  Sugar is sugar, right?

I’ve also branched out and started buying generics of coffee creamer, bread,  and canned goods because they are cheaper.  I used to be brand loyal to Tide, but it’s so freaking expensive even with a coupon.  Switching to Arm and Hammer after a recent Buy One Get One Free offer at Walgreens swayed me away from Tide all together. So, while I refused to give up brand loyalty before, I find myself doing it more and more – coupon in hand or not.

Shop around.  It sucks having to go to more than one place to save a buck – and probably waste gas doing it.  Plus, I already spend a lot of time each week just clipping the coupons.  BUT, checking all the weekly ads definitely helped.  I never used Walgreens for anything more than bath products before, but found myself buying coffee and canned goods there a lot this year because of great sales in combination with coupons or the chance to earn register rewards. For example, on a recent trip to Walgreens, I bought 12 bags of candy that were on sale and saved another $7.00 in coupons.  I earned a total of $12.00 in register rewards back, which made my candy average about $1 per bag in the end.  I went right back into the store to use the register rewards plus more coupons and saved even more on other items.

And lastly, don’t be afraid to buy ahead…meaning…stock up on something when it’s at a rock bottom price like Buy One Get One Free and coupons on top of that.  That’s how I stocked up on bath gel and tootpaste and haven’t had to buy either in about four months.

Based on the amount of money I average per year on groceries (which is a lot), I’m probably just going to shoot for $1500 as my goal for next year.  That’s only $300 more than I saved this year so I think that’s doable.

 

2011 Reading Goal Surpassed…

At 42 books, I passed my 2010 New Year’s Resolution by 12 books.

Amazon will only let you post 40 books on your Listmania Lists though.  :-(

Here’s my 2010 List.  I deleted two books that I didn’t finish all the way and that I hated anyway.

I’m definitely going to keep going, even with only one week left to 2010, but I’ll be posting any future reads started or finished this year to my 2011 list.

Losing Graceland

Ben Fish, fresh from college with an anthropology degree and yearning to go live in Amsterdam for a while to sort life out, answers an ad in a paper to be the driver for an old man who might or might not be Elvis, willing to pay Ben $10K to drive him from New York to Memphis. The old man, as he is usually referred to in the book, has learned that his estranged granddaughter has gone missing and he wants to go find her.

The book begins with just the right amount of humor to keep you interested, and eager to find out if the old man is the “real” Elvis or not. As the odd couple leave New York, they meet a colorful cast of characters along the way from oracles in Kentucky to karaoke loving bikers. They are eventually joined by a young hooker named Ginger, whom the old man and Ben saved from her pimp using the money that Ben was supposed to earn for being the driver. From there, the road drip drives the characters and the reader even more insane. Ben is just a lost college frat boy and never really learns any life lessons from the journey. The old man is painted as a pill popping delusional with a bad back.

The book draws to a mediocre climax, which lets both its characters and readers down, especially since the book barely breaks 200 pages. Just like the minor characters met along the way, we want to believe this is the real Elvis, but whether he is or not, he (and Ben) disappoint us tremendously. Micah Nathan basically set his characters loose without a road map. Even when the old man enters an Elvis impersonation contest to try to win some desperately needed money, the result is just another disappointment. When the two finally reach Memphis, the reader is cheated of the “Graceland” scenes which as the title suggests, were probably lost to the editor’s trash can.

The narrative switches between both Ben and the old man’s point of view, often without warning and causing you to become just as lost and numb as the old man himself who seems to be comatose as he babbles on about the way it used to be and sings bizarre lyrics that entrance everyone in the story – but not the reader. In fact, a bad Elvis impersonator in Memphis would probably be more entertaining. Like Elvis’s career, the book got off to a good start, but it was all downhill from there.

Free Stuff on Kindle? I’ll Take It!

That’s right!  I said FREE.  And who doesn’t love free stuff!

Last night I found the Kindle Top 100 of freebies, and quickly proceeded to download an array of books I’ve always wanted to read, or thought I should read, but never invested the time or money before.  They’re mine now!

The Phantom of the Opera ~  Yep, I’ve seen it on the stage and in film, but never read the book.  Sadly, I even own a paperback copy.

Uncle Tom’s Cabin ~  I recall my horrible 8th grade history teacher (Chuck Powers) talk about it, but I usually wasn’t paying attention to him.  And it never was required reading.

A Christmas Carol ~  So, shoot me.  Yeah, yeah, we’ve seen the movies.  We know the story.  I was even “almost” in a stage version of it once.  (Got canceled.)  But sadly, I’ve never read the actual story.

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow ~  I loved the Disney cartoon version.  And can still sit through Burton/Depp’s version again and again each Halloween.  But it’s yet another classic I sadly admit I’ve never actually read.

So, that’s enough to get me started, right?

There are 9 books in my current short stack of actual paperback books to get me going as the New Year approaches.  And it looks like the Kindle stack is piling up too.  At least that stack takes up a lot less space!

I hope I look this good when I'm this age.

Getting High(smith)

A young, alluring Patricia

One of the first books I added to my to-read wishlist on my new Kindle was the new biography of Patricia Highsmith: The Talented Miss Highsmith – The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith by Joan Schenkar.

Though you might not have read her, Highsmith was responsible for the literary legend and antihero Tom Ripley, played by Matt Damon in the infamous movie The Talented Mr. Ripley. Highsmith herself was often described as being just as odd and sometimes introverted as Tom. She kept extremely detailed diaries throughout her life where she penned plot ideas and thoughts on her many female lovers.

I picked up Ripley years ago after the movie came out, but as a friend once told me, a book tells you when it’s time to read it, and it just wasn’t the right time to read Ripley I guess because I put it back down.  The movie was still too fresh in my mind and I couldn’t stop thinking about the chemistry between Damon and Law that made the movie so magnificent.

So magnificent, in fact, that I took the time to find out that the movie was based on a book and I at least wanted to read it.  I was even more shocked to find out it was written by a woman.  I’m not a sexist by all means.  Seek out gay male erotica on Amazon and you’ll learn well over half of it is written by women. But Ripley, though erotic at times when you knew what Tom was thinking, is more of a thriller and more about Tom being driven closer and closer to madness – much like his creator in real life.

Check out the cover of the book where we see Highsmith probably in her middle aged years.  She is still as beautiful, mysterious, and alluring as the earlier photograph. But she was indeed a bitch, a drunk, and supposedly antisemetic. She was a writer, after all, so that’s to be expected.  Isn’t it?

Writers all have a tad bit of snobbery to them, don’t they?  Mad. Selfish. Drunk. Obsessive.  Those aren’t always bad qualities when you sit down to write.  Think of any great writer whose come and gone; look them up on Wikipedia and see what it says about them, or better yet, what others had to say.

Truman Capote, another hero of mine, boozed it up and popped pills like crazy.  And think about how many authors killed themselves?  Plath immediately comes to mind, putting her head in the oven while the kids were boarded up in the next room.  Toole went to see O’Connor’s house before he offed himself.  Have you read Flannery?  My, my, I’m surprised she didn’t add her name to the list of dead writers who stopped their own hearts from beating.  Morbid stuff! But unfortunately she died just shy of 40 from lupus.

But why did the others do it?  Was it the voices of all those characters talking in their head?

I don't care what she's looking at. I want to know what she's thinking.

Perhaps.  It can drive you mad.

I’ve often called myself a literary medium, expelling the voices in my own head through my fingers and a keyboard.  No worries, friends and family who read this, I have no plans of taking myself anywhere off the planet anytime soon.  I still have too many stories to tell.

Highsmith did not end her life. She lived till 74 when she died of leukemia.  By the way, the paperback edition of Schenkar’s book (due out in February) has a much better cover.  Click on the picture of the current cover to see it.  It reminds me of an old Hollywood movie.  Highsmith would probably hate it for that reason. Highsmith was bitter in general, and rightfully so, she never captured an American audience while she was alive.  But Europeans loved her.  She spent quite a bit of time over there and even died in Switzerland.

I’ve heard from people before that I shouldn’t label my work as “gay.”  That’s hard not to do in my first two books when a gay love affair is the center of attention.  My latest book, not so much.  Sure, there’s a gay character in it but there’s enough other stuff going on to keep heteros from getting too worried that my writing might make them question their sexuality.  I primarily only use one label – fiction.  When someone asks what I write, I say fiction and I leave it at that.  I, as a person, have been given labels all my life.  It’s not shocking that readers would label my writing as well.  I touched it.  I created it.  So, it must be tainted with my cooties as well.

Stealing Wishes is currently #2 in the Gay Fiction community on Amazon. Sure, I might have encouraged that a bit but it was because I knew who I wanted my target audience to be and so I went after them.  And it’s worked.  I may not be selling paperbacks, but the book continues to do well on Kindle for me.  People are still reading me – I don’t know if they are gay or not – but they are reading me.  They are reading me!  And if I knew that those readers were gay, why wouldn’t I go market to them when I have a new book coming out?

Readers are cruel, just as cruel as writers.  I don’t think I’d slit my wrists over a bad review, but I’ve shed a few tears.  So what!

I hope I look this good when I'm this age.

Highsmith didn’t care.  I certainly don’t think reviews made her bitter, but they probably helped. So, be kind to your authors – while they are still alive. Read them. Love them.  Tell them you love them.  True, Highsmith probably would have cringed had a crazed reader run up and hugged her, then she probably would have called them a fool, or maybe she’d been polite and signed her cocktail napkin for them.  Who knows?

We love our crazies, don’t we?  Ask me who I wanna be when I grow up…

Schenkar’s book has not gotten all positive reviews.  Most say you should read Andrew Wilson’s book Beautiful Shadow instead, which actually uses the younger photo of Highsmith as its cover.  So, what do these cover photos say about a person?  Point of view, yes.  Experience, perhaps.  They are both magnificent, but I like the older photo the best.  Cigarette in hand.  A look on her face that says, “Just hurry up and take the damn photo, will ya?”  Bulky sweater.  Butch bobbed hair.  Wrinkles and crevices brought on by mad writing and good Scotch.

I’m reading a book now that reminded me of that infamous line about how easy writing is…you just sit down at the typewriter and open a vein. Walter Wellesley.

E. L. Doctorow said writing is a socially accepted form of schizophrenia.

Plath said,” And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise.  The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.”

Highsmith said, “I can’t write if someone else is in the house, not even the cleaning woman.”

So now we know….writing is maddening and lonely.  It makes us drink.  It makes us think.  We pour our soul out on the blank page in hopes that someone is reading, someone is listening.  We bare our soul, despite the prejudices.
We open a vein.
But we don’t label ourselves.  You, you reader you, you did that.

Miss Emily, if only it were that simple…

I’m still easily entertained by and anxious to see what photo will pop up next every time I turn off my Kindle.  The photos have yet to start repeating themselves.

Earlier this week, it was Miss Emily.

Ahhh, Emily, if only I could bring you back that easily with the flip of a switch.  I’d take you to get your hair done and then we’d go shopping for a new dress; that collar has got to go!

And then I’d pack a picnic basket and take you to Forest Park.  We’d sit out under the trees by the water in front of the art museum and you could read sweet morbid poetry to me.

Then, I’d break your heart when you asked me to kiss you and you’d probably go lock yourself up in your room all over again.

Simple Nachos

When I was a teen, give me a block of Velveeta and a can of Rotel, and I was all set for a Saturday night.

These days, my nachos and I have grown up a bit.  J and I enjoy this dish at least once a month, and it’s so simple.  Besides browning lean hamburger and added a McCormicks Taco Seasoning mix and a can of S&W Chili Beans to the beef, the rest is toppings we spoon right out of the jars.  Cheese Dip, Bean Dip, Hot Peppers (for me), Black Olives (sometimes), Salsa, and Sour Cream…that’s it.

We’ve also fallen in love with McCormicks Guacamole mix.  Also simple.  2 Avocados and some lime juice, sometimes a bit of onion for taste.  That’s it. We made Mrs. Wage’s Guacamole and McCormicks this weekend, and McCormicks is definitely the best.

The pic speaks for itself!  It was yummy!

Serve with a wine cooler, homemade margarita, or even a glass of sweet Moscato wine and your adult Saturday party just got a bit better!