Ugh! I'm back.

Google, Blogger, and I have a love/hate triangle going on right now. This is the second or third time I’ve been locked out of my peacefulreader blog. I pay for a domain name and somehow about a year ago Google decided that all paying domains would be part of G-Suite and it’s been nothing but trouble for me. In other words it’s not hitting my sweet spot.

Tonight, while I do have homework and a good book to read, I felt the need to solve the problem. I’m tired but it suddenly dawned on me that somehow it was not “reading” my G-Suite admin account.  I tried a few more times to log in with no luck.  One of our school techie’s advice is about turning the computers off, really off. So I logged everyone off my laptop, which should NOT be a family computer but is, and shut the whole thing down. While I was logging off it seems that Groovy Girl had herself logged in on a second Google page with Netflix up as well.  So even though I was logging myself in as myself and then also as an administrator it was not really logging me in.  The thread of her was being pulled from another page.

Once I turned the whole system back on and logged myself back in it didn’t even ask for the admin information it just let me back in.  Whew. I feel so much better, less out of touch. Speaking of being in tough, I’ve spent the last two nights watching movie with Anton.

Gold with Matthew McConaughey and Will Smith in Collateral Beauty were two very thoughtful and exciting films. We’ve been having a conversation in our house about gaming, movies, and books – different kinds of entertainment. I’m not a fan of gaming-it leaves me flat-although the one time of the year that I enjoy having a controller in my hand is at Christmas when Kaylee, Tristan, Greg, and I compete in heated games of Jeopardy. Most people that love gaming find the idea of this silly but we have so much fun. 

A movie or a book can help you see a bigger picture, give you empathy, make you laugh, or think, or dream. Same with a book. Video games are only going through repetitive motions.  And even streaming shows can now get to an addictive phase I still think the lure of gaming for hours on end can be harmful. Those that are avid video gamers can probably argue this with me.  I’ll take a book or movie for entertainment any time.

I have a whole ‘nother post I was working on about The Handmaid’s Tale before the shut out occurred. I’ll get back to that in a day or two. We have dance recital this Saturday-that’s an all-day event.  And I’m working on grading library assignments and assessments in between teaching classes and adding in new books.  I was able to spend the last of my budget money on a trip to our local Barnes and Noble last night.  It was incredible-especially as kids pawed through the 2 boxes today looking at treasures.  Seven of the books now have sticky notes denoting who gets what first.  The joy of book lovers!

We Can't All Be Rattlesnakes

2009
121 pages

     This is the cutest little book told from a gopher snake’s point-of-view.  I never would have picked it up myself (big dislike for snakes) but Patrick Jennings is coming to town and I thought Groovy Girl and I should read a few of his titles.  He obviously has a thing for animals as many of his other books are animal-related, like Guinea Dog.  
     We Can’t All Be Rattlesnakes begins:

I had shed a skin the day of my capture.  As always, the sloughing left me famished, so I curled up under a shady patch of creosote and eagerly awaited the first rodent to cross my path.  Gopher was at the top of my list, though I was so hungry that I’d gladly have settled for even a nasty, gristly shrew. 
A rodent did not cross my path first that morning, however.  A lower life form did: a human. (1)

     And so it goes that the human, Gunnar, captures the gopher snake, taking him out of his natural environment and thrusting him in a cage, right next to other prisoners/animals; a tarantula, a desert tortoise, and an alligator lizard.  Gunnar is a despicable boy, who loves his video games more than the animals he captures.  Oh sure, for awhile he dotes on Crusher, the name he bestows on his new pet snake, but he is not a loving caretaker.  He reminded me of the mean boy, Sid, in Toy Story-remember him!  Gunnar is more dim-witted but he is not the character we are meant to love.  I really wanted the mom to tell him “NO more animals” but she never does.  Only for the point of funny fiction I let it go!
    This book does such a marvelous job of thinking like a snake, in complex detail and Groovy Girl and I  enjoyed how Crusher deciphers the human world.  The other fantastic detail of this story is the communication that occurs between  Gunnar’s “zoo”- thoughts are transferred to each other so what Crusher thinks is transmitted to the others in cages near him…other animals that he might eat if he weren’t trapped in the glass box.  It’s funny to hear the animals sarcastically “teach” Crusher how it’s gonna be in captivity and hear how Crusher tries to work his relationship with Gunnar.   Relationships form between the animals, you could call it friendship, even with a mouse dropped into Crusher’s cage meant for dinner.  The thrill of eating a mouse in captivity doesn’t seem fair and the mouse and Crusher share the cage much to the great disappointment of Gunnar. 
     I plan to book talk this with my 3rd-5th grade students-my guess is it will be a hit with boys first.  It’s a quick read-we finished within a week, reading a few of the 13 chapters a night. I think this would make a perfect read-aloud to show students what “voice” is; to put themselves in to another being would be a great writing assignment.   I’m anxious to now meet the author who writes such quirky stories for kids-he must be funny.  His website is funny.  He must be funny.

Patrick Jennings website
Kidsreads talks about it.
Click on the title and find it at an Indie store near you-We Can’t All Be Rattlesnakes