Wednesday, May 4, 2016

This is the Creative Writing Final...

Please answer these questions in a New Post on your blog.  Number each of your answers and answer in complete sentences/paragraphs that reference the question so we can easily see which one you’re answering.  This should be a rather lengthy post to earn the entire  100 points.  Include 2 images.


  1. List/discuss several of the different pieces of writing you’ve done this quarter, including posts, comments, creative pieces, journals, in-class writings, and things you’ve written on your own.
  2. Name/discuss a couple of pieces you’ve read this quarter, including other classmates’ work and/or reading you’ve done in or out of class.
  3. Write about setting up your blog and what you have gotten from that experience.  How did you come up with the name for your blog?  Who do you think read it or who would you want to read it?  Will you continue to use it on your own in the future?  What kinds of things will you post?
  4. Write about journaling.  What kinds of things are in your journal?  Who would you want to read it?  Will you continue to journal?  What will you write about? 
  5. Type an entry directly from your journal that you consider notable.  It could be a paragraph or a page or so.  You don’t have to explain it, but you could.
  6. Type or copy/paste a passage or section directly from one of your pieces of writing that you consider notable or your favorite that you’ve written.  It could be a section or a page or so.
  7. What creative writing do you plan to do in the future, if any?  What do you get out of writing creatively?  How does this differ from the other writing you do, in school and in life?
  8. Some final words of encouragement, appreciation, inspiration, etc. for your fellow writers you’ve worked with this quarter...
  9. COPY and PASTE your answer to #8 as a COMMENT on as many of your classmates' final blog posts as you can.  


If you've done everything else, it would be great if you could cruise through your classmates' blogs today and leave some friendly comments on their other posts.

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

One last letter to our Chinese friends

Write a letter to your Chinese pen pal today and post a copy of it to your blog as a New Post.  This can be a "goodbye" or a "let's keep in touch."

Address the following:

  • what's going on here at the end of the school year--fun activities, Prom, finals, graduation, etc.--and what you've been up to, how you're feeling
  • explain that the semester/our class is almost over and that you'll be graduating or moving on to other classes
  • share where you're headed (summer plans, college plans, travel plans, etc.)
  • either say you will try to keep in touch or explain that you won't be writing anymore
  • wish him or her well (have a great summer, keep writing, etc.)

Monday, April 25, 2016

The beginning of the end (or the end of the beginning)


As we near our last days together as a class, here are some things to keep in mind:

Please have all blog posts completed by the end of class on Friday for points.  Look at your grade check to see what you're missing.  The only remaining assignments are a farewell to our Chinese project blog post we will do tomorrow (25 points), your Altered Book (250 points), and the final (80 points).

Your Altered Book is due at the end of class on Tuesday, 3 May and will be returned to you with your final grade for the class on Wednesday.  If you happen to finish your book before then, please turn it in so I can get a head start on grading.  I'll give you a Scoring Guide to use as a checklist on Wednesday or Thursday.  We aren't going to have time for the 100 Things About Me list so you can mark through that on the assignment sheet.



You may turn in up to 10 full pages in your journal for 50 points extra credit through Tuesday of next week.  This is optional.  

I am also collecting supplies needed by The Kitchen, Inc., an organization that provides help and services to our local homeless population.  You may bring up to 5 of these items for 10 points each to make up for something you might be missing, to boost your grade, or better yet, just to help...

  • laundry detergent
  • diapers (sizes 3, 4, 5)
  • baby wipes 
  • Lysol
  • PineSol
  • bleach

If you need to take the final, it will be a longer reflection post on your blog addressing several things about your work this semester.  I'll post the questions to the class blog next week and you may complete it in class or on your own by the end of the day Thursday, 5 May.  If you have an A, you don't need to worry about it! 

Let's plan to order lunch from Chipotle on our last day together next week (Wednesday, 4 May).  Bring $5-10 on Tuesday and we will put an order together.  You might check out their menu online to see what you'd like. 

I'll be out of class on Thursday, Friday, and Monday!  I'm so sorry.  : /  If you need me, just email me, and I will get back to you as soon as I can: hfraser@spsmail.org.



Thanks for being such an awesome, creative, happy group!  We will miss you, seniors!

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Photos of the Millennium (so far)

With the advance of cell phones, caputring all aspects of history and everyday life is easier and more accessible than ever.  Think about what your great-grandkids will say about all the images your generation is leaving behind--or will many of the images that tell your story/history vanish into cyberspace somewhere eventually instead of being in a photo album for those grandkids to flip through?

This little dog happened to be strolling down a street just after the Pope had passed by--his little smile and upturned chin make it seem like he believes all the applause and fuss is for him!  Adorable.

Choose one of the photos from the 2000s and write a piece (poem or prose, fiction or nonfiction...your choice) of at least 250 words inspired by the photo. This might be a personal memory you have connected to this event or your thoughts about this moment in history...you decide what you'd like to say. 

Here's an example of something I wrote referencing an image from the aftermath of 9-11 that has always stayed with me.  


If the CrackTwo link is blocked on the school computers for whatever reason, you could visit another website with "iconic" or important photos from this decade or the last and choose one from there, or you might be able to Google an individual picture if you remember one or have a certain one in mind.  Include the photo you chose and your writing in a New Post on your own blog by the end of class on Monday.  

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

This is... Photo Poem

I like this image...it's a print available at one of my favorite websites called Etsy, where you can buy all sorts of vintage and handmade goods. So much creativity and inspiration there...have a look some time.

I'd like you to do a New Post on your own blog with some writing about one of your own photos inspired by Katy Barber's "Photograph 1969." I'll leave it up to you to decide whether you'd like to arrange your words as a poem or a short piece of prose. I'll be looking for a vivid description of what we can actually see in the photo, maybe using the "This is..." pattern Barber used, followed by that "twist" we discussed in class, where you intimate or imply what else is "in" the photo...an understanding, an observation, a hint at something that came later, a bigger idea at play...something more. Please include the photo in your post and please post this by the end of class Thursday. 

If you don't have a photo of your own or find that too personal, find a striking or interesting photo that speaks to you on the internet or in a magazine or use one we looked at in class and write about it in this same way instead.  

Photograph 1969 by Katy Barber

This is my mother
lifting her hair long
like a low whistle
off her neck
These are her fingers
caught in the tangles
of brown and gold caught in
silver earrings
This is my father
reaching through the lens
to touch the edge
of a new family
to touch her opening belly
under her full dress

This is existing
before I exist

This is me growing up
against their lives
him watching for a sharp
breath from her looking out
onto the border of birth
this is bumping us into three

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Flea Market Photos






In a New Post on your blog, please share some new writing of at least 300 words inspired by the antique flea market photos we looked at in class on Tuesday (or another one if you'd rather find your own).  This could be a fictional short story, a long poem, a set of dialogue, a journal or diary entry in the voice of one of the people pictured, or something else...Include a picture of the picture or another image that fits. Please have this posted by the end of class Thursday.




Monday, April 11, 2016

Such a great visit!

You all were so wonderful on Friday and made such a great impression on our Chinese visitors that they're already talking about how much they'd like to come back to Kickapoo to see you again! Thanks for being such great ambassadors for your school and for me!

Please take a few minutes today to reflect on our visit Friday in a New Post on your blog.  Answer the following questions:
  • Who did you meet?
  • What did you learn about him or her?
  • What did you share about yourself?
  • What did you share about our school?
  • What were your visitors' reactions/questions about our school?
  • What did you get out of the experience?
  • What would you do/ask/share/say if we had more time?
If you'd like to earn double points on this assignment, work your response into an email and send it to your Chinese pen pals.  Either copy and paste the email to your post or show it to me.  Include pictures in your post if you have any!

FYI:  Your journal is due this Thursday at the end of class for a mid-4th quarter check.  You need 20 new, full pages.

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Photo Hunt + Captions + Hashtags




In a New Post on your blog, please add all 15 of the photos you took Tuesday during our Photo Hunt. Add a caption of at least 25 words to go with each photo, and include a clever #hashtag with each caption.  You can decide whether to label or otherwise indicate which photo on the list each was supposed to be.

At the end of your post, include a quote that suggests something about paying attention or writers noticing everything or the power of photographs.


Thursday, March 31, 2016

Keeping it Real


In a New Post share your thoughtful answers to 4-5 of the Dan In Real Life questions.  Shoot for about 500 words.  Include an image.


Please be sure you're caught up on all blog posts so far this quarter so we can move on to a new topic next week...a pinyin poetry project and a visit from MSU Chinese students!

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Culture Swap: What Would You Do?


Write a letter of 300-400 words to your Chinese pen pals commenting on some aspect of the What Would You Do? and Wife Swap clips we watched in class.  Share connections you can make to your own life, how you think these clips accurately portray us, what they might leave out, your own experiences in situations like these, etc.  Think about what you'd like the Chinese to know about us as Americans and/or you as an individual.  What are we proud of when it comes to our way of life?  What would we like to do better or see in our future?  

Ask some good questions about what the Chinese students thought of the clips, what those shows might look like if they were filmed in China, something else you'd like to know...

Share your letter in a New Post on your blog, please, and send your letter to your pen pals.  You can send the same letter to both of your pen pals.

Kevin sent me a copy of his lesson he used with the Wife Swap episode.  Here's some of what he said about how he introduced the show and some of the issues/concepts they're working on...


Hey! I've attached my lesson for Wife Swap for what it's worth. Maybe your students would be interested to look at what (I make) the students do in class. We covered fifteen phrasal verbs for this show because phrasal verbs are insanely difficult for non-native speakers, and we use them all the time. Take is used, for example, in dozens of phrasal verbs in the show, and even the single phrasal verb "take off" has several meanings. So these are really important for them. 

I used the second slide to elicit the name of the show and introduce a game. They then look at the last fifteen slides and have to look at the two pictures and come up with the phrasal verbs that correspond to the pictures and write the verb phrase on the blanks on the worksheet. After the phrasal verbs are all elicited, we work on meaning and pronunciation. This is tricky, too, because for a phrase like "count on," most Americans drop the /t/ in count, so it winds up sounding like cow-non; using the /t/ sounds unnatural and throws off sentence rhythm. 

When we watched the show, we focused on phrasal verbs in the first ten minutes of the show and then sentence stress in questions in the last ten minutes. I also paused quite a bit to talk about gender roles/politics. One of the husbands is a self-proclaimed redneck and he says things to his "new" wife like "I'm thirsty." My students don't understand the implicit meaning (go get me a beer).

Finally we watch the show and they answer the discussion questions. The circle with four lines at the bottom is for a freer speaking activity. I asked them to put their name in the circle, and write four facts about themselves or interests using only one or two words like "Chinese" or "pizza" or "dog." Then they mingle and ask each other questions, ideally mimicking the stress patterns we just covered.

This is long-winded.. Sorry! Your students are awesome, and my students are loving this. Thank you and be in touch soon!

Kevin

"Reely" Good Quotes

Dumb and Dumber

Create a New Post featuring 4-5 of your favorite MOVIE QUOTES.  These could be funny, sad, smart...whatever stands out to you.  You can type these or use an image featuring the quote.  Make sure you indicate the film the quote is from, and the character if you'd like.

When a Man Loves a Woman






"Reel" Life

Do a  New Post answering the following questions (in at least 400 words) about your preferences in movies.
  • Tell us about your favorite movie and why you like it.
  • Tell us about the kinds of movies you don't care for usually.
  • Tell us about how often and where you usually watch movies.
  • Tell us about what you need for movie viewing (environment, food, company, etc.)
  • Tell us about what this survey says about you.
  • If my life story was made into a movie...(who would play you, what would be 3-4 main plot points/events, happy or sad ending, etc.)
Include images in this post also. Thanks!

When you're finished, leave a quick comment on the movie post and/or movie quotes post of at least 5 of your classmates.

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Inspired by Hopper

Nighthawks
Hours of Darkness


Freight Car at Truro

Soir Bleu


Choose one of the 4 paintings (above) by American artist Edward Hopper we studied in class this week (his painting "Nighthawks" is referenced in the insurance commercial we watched) and write a piece of at least 300 words inspired by it.  You might do a short fiction piece or a personal narrative or maybe even a long narrative poem.  You can refer to your lists of sensory details and other thoughts in your journal entry completed in class for ideas.  Please create a New Post on your blog  by the end of class today with your writing and include the painting, too.  Thanks!

Windows


In a New Post on your blog, please share the Window Poem you created in class on Tuesday.  Add an image.  Thanks!

Monday, March 21, 2016

Replies to China

We need to take a quick break from our study of ART as inspiration for writing at the start of this week to respond to the letters and writing our Chinese friends sent us.  You should have received letters back from 2 of Kevin's students and also an object-inspired piece (or some other writing?) from them.  Please do the following today:

1:  Reply to the letters the way you would any other email or correspondence.  Answer the questions you were asked, ask questions of your own (about something the student has said or mentioned or maybe something else you're wondering about in terms of school, culture, family, interests, China, etc.), update them on what you've been up to since last writing.  You want to keep the conversation going so give the students something to respond to and maybe even ask that they write back when they can.




2:  Respond to the writing piece the students sent you in a positive, helpful way.  See Kevin's thoughts below on the kind of feedback that might help.  You don't need to "FIX" the paper, even if the student asked you to. What I would suggest is this:

  • a greeting thanking the person for sharing and naming something you enjoyed about the piece
  • 3-5 questions that could aid in revision/expansion of the piece
  • close by naming something else you thought really worked and a statement of encouragement

If you're comfortable with it, I'd love for you to copy/paste the letters with your replies on a New Post on your own blog and copy/paste the students' writing pieces with your feedback to separate New Post on your blog.  

Please reply to both letters and both pieces by the end of class today and either post your work on your own blog or show me that you have done.  If you can't finish in class, please do so on your own.  If you have time, check in on your classmates' blogs and see what thei Chinese students sent them.  Thanks so much!

A message from Kevin I got today:

Hello Hayley and class:

My students are loving this project and working hard--hope their writing shows it at least a little! I believe the last round of emails ought to come in in the next day or two. It'd be awesome if your students could ask my students questions that might indicate areas of confusing, vague, or incorrect language in their writing. Also my students would be thrilled to field any questions your students might have about China, college life, etc.

I know at least a few of my students directly asked yours to "correct" and "fix" their English, and I know that probably puts your students in a really awkward spot. So if my students are using gibberish 
maybe asking questions is a less direct approach. I talked to my students about error correction and tried to convey the idea that correction isn't the nature of the exchange. 

I was also thinking it might be really fun for all parties if students exchanged ideas about TV shows. This week we're going to watch three segments from What Would You Do? and my students will be fascinated but also flummoxed. They aren't aware about common American attitudes towards gay adoption, racism, etc., and the shows do a great job bringing those attitudes to light. Anyway, is it possible to exchange ideas if both our classes watch the same episodes? I found them on YouTube when I was home and included the titles in the attached document. Are you allowed to access that site while at school?

Please let me know what you think, and honestly, if your students respond to my students by asking questions or sharing thoughts about my students' ideas, that'd be great. Thanks!

Kevin  

Friday, March 18, 2016

Poems for Pieces by Artist Profiled


In a New Post on your blog please choose 2 pieces by the artist you profiled Thursday and write a narrative poem of at least 10 lines for each. 

A narrative poem is one that tells a story.  It doesn't need to rhyme.  You could tell a made-up story inspired by the painting, you could tell a story from your own life the piece makes you think of, you could make up a story about the subjects in the painting...You could connect your two 10-line poems or let them stand on their own. Try to include vivid, sensory details and rich, interesting word choices.  You might even try to include a poetic device (like alliteration, simile, repetition, etc.) if you're comfortable doing so.  Please include an image of the piece of art you are writing about in your post.  Give the post a creative title.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Artist Profile

Grumpy Cat works in oils

Please profile the artist you chose to study in a New Post on your blog.  Please all include the information from your brochure, but instead of listing it, write the information more like a life story in paragraphs.  Include an image and/or self-portrait of the artist as well as 2-3 images of the artist's most famous works.  Title Your Post Artist Profile: ______ (name of artist).  Thanks!

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Art/Therapy

I hope you enjoyed the process of coloring the printed mandala designs in class today. Mandalas are important to a variety of cultures, faiths and schools of thought...

You can create some interesting mandalas at this site.  If you click on the asterisks, there is more information about the different elements.

Leave a brief but thoughtful COMMENT (100-200 words) on this post answering one or more of these questions:
  • How or why do you think art could be used as therapy?
  • Can you think of other pieces of or types of art that are connected to certain faiths, disciplines or movements?
  • What role does art play in your own life?
  • If you could be any kind of artist, what would you be?  Why?
  • What do your doodles say about your personality?  Check this site or others for reference.
  • Why do you think Adult Coloring Books are so popular right now?  This article has some ideas.
Read everyone else's comments, too, and reply back if you'd like!

Art Walk


In a New Post on your blog, post some writing connected to the art print you chose to study during our discussion in the cafeteria yesterday.  Try for at least 250 words. Include your haiku at the end.

Tell us the story from your own life it made you think of, write a critique or vivid description, write a long poem or several shorter ones inspired by the image...whatever you want to come up with. 

Include an image, too.  If you can't get a photo of the actual print on your post, just choose another one online that has the same feeling or look.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

First 2 pieces to send to our Chinese Friends...

This assignment will allow us to exchange our creative projects with students in a writing class like ours in China.  You will send your Object-Inspired piece and include with it a Letter of Introduction, a brief self-portrait in words and pictures.  This will provide your Chinese reader with a glimpse of who you are and an understanding of why and how you wrote about the object you did.  Remember, you are giving your Chinese reader a glimpse of yourself as an American high school student, and you are also modeling your writing. 

For the Letter of Introduction:
  • Your letter will include a brief personal introduction and should be around a page of writing single-spaced.  
  • You could begin your letter with "Dear Reader" or simply, "Hello!"
  • You can include information about your family, friends, hobbies, events in your life that shaped who you are, your hopes and dreams, your goals for the future, what a typical day is like for you…whatever makes you who you are.  
  • Write in a way that is comfortable and creative but also keep in mind that you might need to make certain accomodations for your readers to understand.
  • You should also include a picture (or several) to give your reader a glimpse of you and your life.  Add a caption under your pictures, too, please, explaining who/what/where/etc. is pictured.

For the Object-Inspired Piece:

  • Your heading for your significant object piece should include your full name, your email address, the name of our class (KHS Creative Writing), and the date. 
  • Your piece should have a creative title and be double-spaced.
  • Your piece should be polished and proofread for errors.  
  • You should also include an image of your object.
  • Please add a brief Author's Note at the beginning or end of your piece explaining the assignment, the object you chose, where you found it, whether your piece is fiction or not, how you got the idea, etc.  Put the note in italics.

          
Please save your Letter and your Object-Inspired piece in ONE GoogleDoc file and share it with me (hfraser@sps.org) no later than the end of class on Friday, 4 March. 


I will send our work to Kevin on Friday so that he may share it with his students at Qingdao when they begin classes next week while we are on Spring Break.  You will be receiving response letters via email from Kevin's students, who will carefully read, ask questions, make connections, and write about what surprises them and what they’d like to know more about.  They will also use your writing as a model to compose their own pieces and send them back to you.  We’ll see where it goes from there! 


Intro to our Chinese Writing Exchange

Our creative writing class has been invited to exchange writing with a writing class in China at Qingdao University.  It is a great opportunity to expand our audience as writers as well as learn about another culture.

The class we'll be exchanging with is a freshman class taught by an MSU exchange teacher, Kevin James. His mother is a good friend of mine and teaches at Parkview.  Her students will be exchanging writing with Kevin's students, too.  Kevin has written a letter to us (see below) explaining some of the cultural differences as well as some guidelines to follow.  He and his students are grateful for this opportunity, and as he explains in his letter, this is a very challenging exercise for his students. Please read the letter and share any questions or comments you may have either in the comment box here or aloud in class.

The first two writing pieces we are going to send will be 1: a letter introducing yourself, and 2: a polished version of your Object-Inspired piece you created at the beginning of the semester.  Please see the next post for more detailed instructions.  Because your writing will serve as a model for Chinese students to follow, we will want to send our best efforts.  We are also under some time constraints, so meeting deadlines will be imperative on this project.  This should be fun!

Xie xie!


Dear Mrs. Fraser’s class,

I’m writing to thank you in advance for sharing your writing and corresponding with my students at Qingdao University. Every semester these students beg for the chance to encounter more authentic English in the classroom, and by reading your work and sharing our writing with your class via e-mail, my students truly value this project as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

Here’s a Cliff's Notes, abridged take on the students’ backgrounds: they are all freshman, twenty-seven girls and three boys, majoring in English, and around half of them openly bemoan the fact that they have to study English. They spent their senior year of high school preparing for and taking a college entrance exam--the dreaded, horrible beast that is the gaokao (gow-cow). This is a nine hour exam taken over the course of two days which determines if they can go to college, where they can go to college, and what they can study in college. Oh, and they only get one shot to take and pass it, and if they don’t like the results, they can retake their senior year. (No thanks!) So based on their results, some of them only had the option to study English at Qingdao University; for those who had other options, their parents likely decided studying English at Qingdao University was best for their son or daughter. Bottom line is these students, like all students in China, don’t have much (if any) say in what they study and where they study it, and now they’re stuck in my English class. I think you’ll find, however, that despite the stressful demands of the education system, they’re hungry for the opportunity to express themselves in a creative way with native English speakers of the same age.

You should know that when they read your work, they’ll pour over each word and really mine the text for meaning. Please be aware of the fact that when they share their writing with you, they’ll be incredibly sensitive to what you think of their English ability. It takes an eternity for them to translate what they want to say, and sometimes those translations are bizarre, sometimes nonsensical, but often times hilarious. Take pronouns, for example. I’ve been referred to as “she” more times than I care to count because in spoken Chinese he, she, and it are all pronounced the same as ta. It’s an understandable goof and one that happens frequently.

Most of the translation issues are related to appropriacy, though. For instance, several of my students say “I like playing balls” instead of “I like playing sports” because it’s a direct translation from Chinese. It sounds ridiculous and it’s hilarious, but we know what they mean. So heads up!

The last tidbit on the exchange project relates to internet accessibility in China. Because of the Great Firewall, the Qingdao students can’t access many websites, including Google, Facebook, Youtube, and other American essentials. We also can’t access your class blog, hence the e-mail component of the exchange. So please be aware of the limitations on our end.

On a similar note, please know that there are limitations related to the content of what my students can publish on the internet, including e-mail content. Should your correspondence take a political or religious course, please redirect it. Topics related to, for example, the political sovereignty of the South China Sea, Taiwan, Tibet, and/or Hong Kong are not appropriate because my students could get into big-time hot water for weighing in.

In closing, I know my students are thrilled to get going with the correspondence and learn about you all through your writing. Sorry for the length. Enjoy the writing. Thanks again for your hard work!

All my best,

Kevin


P.S. They chose their own English names, some of which are silly. Like the issues with Chinglish, please try to look past it. Please e-mail if you have questions: kevinjames@missouristate.edu

Friday, February 26, 2016

Scholarship Opportunities

I'll be entering student work (probably some of yours, if that's okay!) in an area writing competition called LAD Fair in a couple of weeks, and I wanted to let you all know about a couple of scholarships being offered in case any of you SENIORS would like to apply.  I'll link to the applications and more info on each below.  The deadline for these is Friday, 18 March, when they will be hand delivered to Willard High School with the rest of Kickapoo's LAD Fair entries. I'd be happy to help you put something together for these.  

Nick Harkins Scholarship Rules + Application

This one is for students with an interest in diversity and inclusion and requires a writing submission on those topics.

Naturalist Scholarship Rules + Application

This one is for students with an interest in ecology and the environment and requires writing submissions centered on those topics.



Famous First and Last Lines: Make them yours




In a New Post on your blog, type up the original writing of about 400 words or more  inspired by the pink famous first line and the purple famous last line you glued into your journal.  This could be one continuous piece or two separate pieces.  Include an image and an interesting title to your post. Put the lines you used in bold.


Thursday, February 25, 2016

Famous First and Last Lines

In a New Post on your blog, present the following information  for each of the lines you chose.  Title this post Famous First and Last Lines.  You could link to relevant informational sites.  

Be sure to include the following for EACH:

  • the line word for word
  • the author, his or her birth/death years, and a bit of info about him or her
  • the year it was published
  • a 40-50 word summary of the novel in your own words
  • 40-50 words on why you personally would or wouldn't like to read this book
  • at least one image for each

Here's an example:
    Famous First Line:

    "You better not never tell nobody but God."

    This line opens the novel The Color Purple, published in 1982 by author Alice Walker, who was born in Georgia on 9 February 1944. Through letters written back and forth to one another, the novel traces the story of two poor, African-American sisters who are separated, one married off to an older, misogynistic neighbor and the other called to serve as a missionary in Africa. The main character Celie also writes letters to God because she has no one else to share her shameful secrets and her deepest feelings with. 

    I first read The Color Purple in a college class at Drury, a class taught by one of my favorite professors who I have long admired and tried to emulate as a teacher myself. I had read the work of Maya Angelou and found myself drawn to the stories of African-American women, and this story captivated me. I have since read the book 6 or 7 more times, and every single time I find something to shake my head at, mumble a "yup!" to, laugh about, cry about...Such a powerful work to me--I will read it many times more, I know. I wrote about a passage that reminded me of the turmoil in Ferguson, Missouri, back in 2014.

    Famous Last Line:

    "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."

    F.Scott Fitzgerald ended his most famous novel The Great Gatsby with these words, considered by some to be the best closing lines of any novel ever. The novel came out back in 1925 but still shows up on collections of all-time classics and high school reading lists. Narrator Nick Carraway offers insight into the vapid society of West Egg, New York, in the 1920s, as well as the mostly empty marriage between Tom and Daisy Buchanan. The action centers on languid afternoons and extravagant parties at the mansion of Gatsby, an enigmatic millionaire.

    I read The Great Gatsby in English class my junior year in high school. I re-read it again la couple of summers ago and enjoyed it very much. I liked the film starring Leonardo DiCaprio (so cute! totally one of my girlhood crushes) as Gatsby released a couple of years ago. The director, Baz Luhrman, also did one of my all-time favorite movies, Moulin Rouge, so I knew I'd really like what he did with Gatsby.




    The lines were pulled from this list of Best Opening Lines and this list of Best Last Lines.  You could browse them for other writing ideas or inspiration.



    Be ready to post some new writing of your own tomorrow using the first and last lines as a starter.  We will use Monday as a catch up day for all post related to BOOKS/TEXT then move on to putting together a couple of pieces to send to my friend's Chinese students for our writing exchange.  I'll collect journals on Thursday, 3 March--you need 20 NEW, unstamped full pages.