Bonnie Rozanski’s Upcoming Novel ‘The Mindtraveler’

mindtravelerIn the tragic ending of The Mindtraveler, physicist heroine Dr. Margaret Braverman wins the Nobel Prize.

No, wait, I’m doing this in the wrong order.

Bonnie Rozanski’s The Mindtraveler tells the story of aging physics professor Margaret Braverman, disgraced 25 years ago when her secret experiments with time-travel led to an embarrassing electrocution. At sixty, she lectures in physics, lives alone, and half-heartedly attends faculty meetings, while indulging in the odd daydream about what might have happened if her great experiment had succeeded.

Margaret is pretty blunt about losing her love, about years spent alone, and her academic failures, at first, like the acceptance of age or the clear-eyed rationality of a career researcher. But it only takes an offhand comment from her grad student assistant to encourage her to give that great experiment one more go.

Back in her 35-year-old body, Margaret is re-experiencing her life and seeing the small events that set her on her current path. Margaret’s curiosity is always her strongest motivator, and she remains a blunt and not terribly emotional narrator. It’s hard not to sympathize with her here, re-experiencing a love affair that has ended quite badly in her own past, re-experiencing an embarrassing professional failure, and seeing her friends in the physics department back when they were young, healthy and hopeful. But if she can make a tiny change in the past, maybe she won’t end up sidelined and alone.

Blending wild time-travel with daily details of academic life gave this story the feel of magical realism. Margaret accepts the physics behind her great experiment, as well as the amazing opportunity she has with time travel, which makes it easy for reader to accept both.

The romance between Margaret and Frank is layered and believable. In one scene, 60-year-old Margaret hears and understands what 35-year-old Margaret is told by Frank, and didn’t fully understand at the time. But the story isn’t a romance — Margaret’s friendships with her colleagues in the physics department are very important, and she puts asides her own worries to try to help these bright, young men at 35 to avoid the problems she’s seen them encounter at 60. In one case, returning to 35 with the wisdom of 60 gives her new insights into her friend’s character, and not for the better.

She’s also a rare female heroine with deep professional ambitions, motivated by endless curiosity and a desire for glory. Academic backstabbing and departmental infighting are frighteningly realistic, although the sleazy department chair is just a little too shameless and predatory.

With multiple timestreams, crossing and affecting each other, and different versions of Margaret’s self, The Mindtraveler has so many opportunities to devolve into confusion or technobabble. Instead, Margaret’s no-nonsense narration keeps the story clear. Almost too clear for those of us rooting for happy ending, because she’s shown us her weakness for impulsive and selfish decisions many times, leading to an ending that is both heartbreaking and strangely inevitable.

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Summer Sky Nails from Beauty Without Cruelty

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Beauty Without Cruelty’s ‘Summer Sky’ Swatch.

I received this Summer Sky nail polish from BWC’s line of lovely, bold nail colors.  Beauty Without Cruelty is a line of cosmetics created without animal testing and without using any animal products, I think I’m supposed to write about ethical fashion choices, but first let’s talk about what a freaking amazing color this is. It’s just a shade bluer than that mint nail color that everyone’s wearing this summer. (Yes, I have that minty one too…)  Summer Sky is completely opaque, too, which means only one coat is needed, which means less drying  time for me to smudge up my wet nails.

When I got this polish, I was a little worried that all-natural makeup might go the way of gluten-free cupcakes. You know, you see it in the glass case at the coffee shop, and it looks like  a delicious cupcake, but it tastes like… something entirely different. Because flour is an integral part of a cupcake!  This Summer Sky nail polish was smooth and durable. It was no different from my drugstore discount nail polishes or my fancy French manicure polish. (French mani is for days when I need to look like a responsible adult. Those days are stupid.)

My Birds & Arrows bag and my BWC polish.

My BWC polish matches my Birds & Arrows bag!

Beauty Without Cruelty has chosen to make cute and bold cosmetics in a thoughtful and ethical way. I became interested in ethical fashion companies like Beauty Without Cruelty when I talked with Mor from Redress Raleigh for thalo. Mor reminded me that we can make small choices in our everyday purchasing to support ethical companies and distributors.  I like the idea that no animals were harmed in creating this polish, either for animal testing or for animal products, and I like that an all-natural polish is still smooth, opaque, and cute.

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Beauty Without Cruelty’s “Summer Sky”, Instagram-style

 

Products in this post were provided from Beauty Without Cruelty. Thank you! Opinions and nails are my own.

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Nail Polish Rainbow

Found this while tidying up.

Found this while tidying up, and really liked my summer nail polish rainbow.

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Grass Mud Horse

Image from HanTrainer, which was NOT the language CD I'm listening to in the car.

Image from HanTrainer, which was NOT the language CD I’m listening to in the car.

I picked up a basic Chinese language CD from the library, and started listening to it in the car on the way home. The CD promised to cover basic phrases and words, and I expected to brush up on my Mandarin with some simple, slow conversations. My Chinese is good for buying a train ticket or asking for a menu, but fairly rusty, so I could do with some practice.

In practice, though, it’s pretty hard to follow. A phrase is given in English, and then repeated in Chinese, but the sentences are rarely broken up into components, so even if I can repeat the phrase, I have no idea how to modify it to apply to other situations. Where I can make out individual words, it’s oddly formal sentence constructions, instructing listeners to repeat the Chinese for Please may I ask you for directions to baggage claim? when a good zai nar? would work just as well.

Some of the phrases (May I see the wine list? or Is the gratuity included?) seem amusingly useless for my life as a foreign teacher. Tipping isn’t part of Chinese life, and the closest I ever got to a wine list was insisting that bai jiu, although it could be directly translated to white wine, had more in common with nail polish remover than chardonnay. Possibly each language CD is built to a phrasebook formula, though.

So far, I’m mostly practicing my Chinese by responding to the politely formal sentence prompts with my toneless street Chinese.

piu jiu

A particularly useful fortune.

 

 

 

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Manga Classics: Pride and Prejudice

Manga Classics: Pride & Prejudice is graphic version of P&P, plus with gorgeous hairstyles, spastic Mrs. Bennett, and — most importantly — Darcy’s shirt just can’t stay on.  The sisters of Longborne are beautiful in the typical fantasy-manga style of ringlets, roses, and tiered skirts, in direct contrast poor, plain Charlotte, and the hilariously exaggerated Mr. Collins. Mrs. Bennett is sometimes a typical matron, but then gets overexcited thinking about weddings or Jane’s beauty or money or lovely Jane marrying Bingley’s money, and becomes comically exaggerated, sometimes even superdeformed, which is pretty much her character if you think about it.

The major change from the novel made Sir Lucas a ridiculous character. In the novel, Sir Lucas is slightly new money, having earned his wealth in trade and purchased his title, rather than honorably inheriting money and title. In the manga, though, his tackiness knows no bounds, and he’s almost a male Mrs. Bennet in his nosiness. It’s not as subtle as the novel, but I’m not sure how well snarky references to the Bennett sisters having an uncle in trade and having a neighbor who purchased his title would translate visually. At any rate, a ridiculous Sir Lucas  makes Charlotte’s marriage to Mr. Collins more believable: After many years with her father, her new husband won’t be much strain.

Giddy and self-centered Lydia translated perfectly. She was constantly self-absorbed, except when she was absorbed in handsome officers in smart uniforms.

shirtless darcy

Mr. Darcy, composing a heartfelt letter with his shirt open. Because why not?

Although I enjoyed the art and liked the concept of a graphic novel P&P, it took me a depressingly long time to adjust to the “backwards” manga layout.  Fortunately, I’m pretty familiar with the story (understatement) and the dialogue makes it clear when you’re reading panels in the wrong order.

I’m always interested in a reinvention of  P&P, but I particularly enjoyed the  ball at Netherfield for the contrast between the elaborate formal-wear and hairstyles of the doe-eyed Bennett sisters and the gauche  comments from superdeformed Mrs. Bennett.

I have a lot of feelings about Pride And Prejudice spinoffs:

More Janeites:

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Rewards, Money, and Rare Items in Pixonic’s Robinson

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How To Make Money in Pixonic’s Robinson

You’ll need a lot of coins to complete missions, since they’ll all require you to buy animals, crops, buildings and so forth. Later on, you’ll want money to buy island decor to attract butterflies for that goal. Here are some good ways to make money:

  • Purchase a Monkey for 2640 coins, feed it twice, and then sell the full grown Monkey for 4400 coins.
  • Buy Peanuts at 570 coins, harvest two days later for 880 coins.
  • Buy Pineapples at 720 coins, harvest three days later for 1200 coins.

These will all take some time, so it’s best to keep cycling through these to make sure you always have cash on hand. It’s also a good idea to spend any available cash on Pineapples and Peanuts, so it’s earning you more coins and not just sitting there.

Rare Items in Robinson

These items are essential for progress, but often give players trouble. Here’s a guide to finding difficult and rare items!

An Axe

Getting an axe can be quite confusing and difficult. To get an axe, you need to build one in your workshop. To get a workshop, you need boards, that you get from chopping down trees with your axe.

You’ll need a Workpiece, which is found randomly in a Hut, and 5 Whetstones for an Axe Butt. Whetstones can be found, at a low rate, when clearing rocks.

You’ll also need an Axe Handle, which can be found in the Treehouse or when clearing grass.

Put the Axe Handle and Axe Butt together in your Workshop.

Fire

Fire is required for Lens, a Pickaxe, and many other useful things. You can get this as the reward from the Sheep collection. This is a pretty economical way to keep yourself in a supply of Fire, just buy a few sheep and feed them, and stock up on Fire whenever you complete this collection.

Lens

You’ll need an improved treehouse to craft this item for the mission. Then, you’ll need sand and fire. You can get sand from digging or from the Monkey Collection. Fire comes from matches, or from the Sheep Collection. I think it’s more economical to buy and raise Sheep than to look for matches.

Pounder

You’ll need this to make the medicine for Little Raccoon. In theory this can be found in clearing flowers. I have never found one this way. You can get this by spending totems, or asking friends.

Smoky Leaves

In theory, these are found by clearing bushes. I’m at level 12, er, 19 and haven’t found one yet, and a quick Google of this game turns up lots of other players who haven’t found any, either. Looks like another way that Robinson will force you to buy totems or add friends to keep playing, since you can’t access very much without tribe members, and you can’t get tribe members without smoky leaves and matches

Water Bottles

These are required for the mission “Packing For The Road”. Unfortunately, the only way to get these is to ask friends or pay totems. You’ll need to pay 15 totems for the required 15 water bottles to complete this quest chain.

Collections and Rewards in Robinson

Whenever you take actions in Robinson, like harvesting crops, clearing land, feeding animals, and so forth, there’s a random chance you’ll get an related item. Once you have all five items, you’ll have a collection! Each collection gives a different reward. Here’s a list of possible collections and their rewards, so you can plan your crops and livestock according to the rewards you want.

  • Apricot Collection :: 2 Sheep
  • Banana Collection :: 150 EXP
  • Bungalow Collection :: Coconut Tree
  • Bushes Collection :: 3 Eggplant
  • Butterfly Collection :: 1 Totem
  • Cabbage Collection :: 1 Energy
  • Cane Collection :: 2 Energy
  • Carrot Collection :: 1 Sheep
  • Cauldron Collection :: Coconut Tree
  • Cheetah Collection :: 25 Food
  • Coconut Collection :: 2 Stone Fences
  • Corn Collection :: 1 Matches
  • Crocodile Collection :: 100 Coins
  • Dry Vegetable Bed Collection :: 50 coins
  • Eggplant Collection :: 1000 coins
  • Elephant Collection :: Coconut Tree
  • Festive Table Collection :: 2 Monkeys
  • Fish Collection :: 4 Watermelon
  • Flowers Collection :: 100 EXP
  • Giraffe Collection :: 1 Totem
  • Goat Collection :: 5 Food
  • Grapes Collection :: 1 Hen
  • Grass Collection :: 5 Food
  • Greenhouse Collection :: 1 Grass
  • Healing Collection :: 3 Energy
  • Hen Collection :: 2 Energy
  • Hippo Collection :: Papaya Tree
  • Hut Collection :: 3 Pineapple
  • Jack The Parrot Collection :: Lemon Tree
  • Kiwi Collection :: 100 Coins
  • Lab Collection :: 50 EXP
  • Lemon Collection :: 1 Pig
  • Mango Collection :: 1 Ostrich
  • Melon Collection :: 1 Energy
  • Monkey Collection :: 1 Clean Sand
  • Ostrich Collection :: Apricot Tree
  • Palm Tree Collection :: 4 Melon
  • Papaya Collection :: 2 Stone Alleys
  • Peach Collection :: 2 Grapes
  • Peanuts Collection :: Banana Tree
  • Pig Collection :: 35 EXP
  • Pineapple Collection :: 3 Energy
  • Potato Collection :: 10 Wood
  • Pumpkin Collection :: 5 Food
  • Python Collection :: 1 Hen
  • Sea Waste Collection :: 5 Energy
  • Sheep Collection :: 2 Fire
  • Tiger Collection :: 25 EXP
  • Treasure Collection :: 100 EXP
  • Treehouse Collection :: 25 EXP
  • Turtle Collection :: 4 Pineapple
  • Vulture Collection :: 2 Energy
  • Watermelon Collection :: Peach Tree
  • Wheat Collection :: 1 Goat
  • Wild Hog Collection :: Banana Tree
  • Wood Collection :: 1 Zebra
  • Workshop Collection :: 2 Ostrich
  • Zebra Collection :: Kiwi Tree

Good luck! I hope this guide helps you get the most out of your Robinson island!

 

 

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Raina Telgemeier’s ‘Sisters’

sisters

I know I’m supposed to say that I’m familiar with Raina Telgemeier’s work because she’s won basically every award for YA fiction and/or comics ever, but actually I stumbled across her amazing graphic novel versions of The Baby-Sitters Club. Claudia Kishi’s outfits are on point, man. Would recommend the graphic version to anyone with a soft spot for the series, so, basically any girls in our thirties, then.

Sisters continues the autobiographical story from Smile, this time revisiting Raina’s relationship with her sister. The story hinges on a family vacation, driving cross-country to visit relatives, with flashbacks to other family memories.  I loved how some moments were so terribly dated (But familiar! I remember Walkman batteries as a precious commodity, too!) and some were universal (Some of my students are hitting the terrible stage of being no longer adorable little children but not quite independent teenagers, either).

My favorite part involves a certain pet snake escaping into a car. Like Raina, I also have a younger sister who wanted every animal ever as her pet, but my parents drew the line at fish, newts, hamsters, gerbils, a turtle, a rabbit, and a dog, so I had to wait for college to live with a pet snake.  Unlike Raina’s sister’s snake, my roommate Kristine’s snake never made an escape attempt… or at least, if it did, Kristine successfully hid it from me… (Note to self: Do not investigate this too closely.)

Sisters is a quiet story about sharing space with the people who share your genes, and about how the people who make you the craziest can also keep you sane.

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Target Audience

Did you know that teaching full-time is time consuming? I’m pretty sure I came to that realization last summer, too, actually.  The actual teaching load is a lot easier this summer, because I’m much more comfortable with the curriculum, with the students’ age groups, and with Fusion in general. But now I’m lead teacher, which means I have to care when other people have problems in their classrooms. Geez. And I’m supposed to help them. So that’s stressful, you know, with the concern for others and trying to be helpful and taking on leadership responsibilities and blah blah blah.

Anyway, this summer’s work takes up time and energy, which means less for my blog. I always look forward to a new book or a new game at the weekend, but if a backlog of review copies starts to build up, it becomes stressful and too much like Work and Responsibility and we can’t have that, can we? So I’d decided not to pursue any other reviews until after summer classes, or until I’d cleared my NetGalley queue, whichever comes first.

But this morning I got this:

pride and prejudice manga

‘Pride and Prejudice’ as manga!?!?!

A Jane Austen manga?!?!?  How often am I going to get something so perfect for me? I can’t possibly turn that down! Of course I will review it! Right now!

Then, I got home and had an offer for Six of One, about a modern-day Tudor fan meeting the  six wives of Henry VIII at a magical bachelorette. How often am I going to get a book about drunken Tudor ladies? Sounds like it was written expressly for me! So of course I want it!

I guess I can find enough time to read about Mr. Darcy or the Tudors.

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Feminist Magical Realism, in Cambridge, Plus Books

The-House-at-the-End-of-Hope-StreetMenna Van Praag’s The House at the End of Hope Street is magical realism set in Cambridge, which pretty much explains exactly why I wanted to read it.

A young Cambridge grad student, Alba, stumbles upon a house she’s never really noticed before. The house host, Peggy, isn’t at all surprised to see her, since the house at the end of Hope Street draws in women, and gives them ninety-nine days to sort out their problems.

Alba naturally decides to stay, which is exactly what we should all do if a magic house offers us ninety-nine days to fix our lives. The house is constantly giving the residents what they need, whether that’s producing ingredients to cook tasty meals, good books to read, a delicious chocolate cake for breakfast, or a closet full of exactly the sort of dresses a resident might want to wear. I mean, I’d go live there tomorrow, and I’m not even having the Worst Time Of My Entire Life.

Past residents of the house hang around in chatty photos. I can’t say I knew the name of every previous resident, but you don’t actually have to recognize them all in order to enjoy the halls filled with women who’ve found Hope Street at the lowest point in their lives, and gone on to literary, artistic, and historical success. Agatha Christie, Dorothy Parker, Virginia Woolf, and Sylvia Plath comment from their picture frames. Also, there’s a ghost visiting Alba. It’s the feminist history dorm at Hogwarts, is what I’m saying.

When I receive ARCs, I usually try to read and review the book reasonably close to launch date. But in this case, I read the book a few times before writing any reactions. There was just so much going on that my first read was as fast as possible, turning pages quickly to see what would happen with the ghost, Alba’s jerk professor, Peggy’s elderly boyfriend, and everything else. In that order.

My second time through, I had more time to spend with other residents of Hope Street, both human and magical. Carmen and Greer are trying to sort out their own problems in their own 99 days, plus the collection of photos keeps up a running commentary. And the secondary characters, found around the bars, bookshops, and libraries of Cambridge (Cambridge is a pretty great city for drinking and reading, which may be part of why I like it so much)., all had their own goals and quirks.

An ensemble novel is bound to be a couple thin moments, of course. Two residents find themselves involved with the same man, and when it all comes out, the women basically scowl, then shrug and move on to better men.  Also, Alba’s family is Gothic-horror bad, right down to bribery and secretly destroying letters before they reach their destination, and that seems a bit mustache-twirling Evil Villain in a world of delicately nuanced characters.

Alba’s storyline is so deeply connected to literature, and on my second read, I noticed more ties between the books read and the characters’ situations. Although I love Jane Austen, Middlemarch, Howard’s End, and most of Alba’s reading list, A Room With a View features pretty heavily, and that one never made much impression on me. Might be time for a reread.

Feminist magical realism, set in one of my favorite cities, with books. Even better than I’d expected!

I received an eARC of this novel from the publisher, which has never stopped me from snarking about a bad book. As always, all opinions are my own.

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Rollers of the Realm

rollers-of-the-realm-castle-gates-01
I had the chance to check out Phantom CompassRollers of The Realm at this year’s SXSW , where it was a finalist for the SXSW Gamer’s Voice award. Rollers of the Realm is a pinball-RPG hybrid, which sounds a bit like an experimental game jam prompt or a drunken IndieCade conversation, but the result is polished and playable.

In Rollers of the Realm, players manage a traditional adventuring party of typical RPG characters like a healer, a rogue, a melee fighter, and so forth. Each of these is a pinball, and Phantom Compass manages to inject a surprising amount of character into the pinballs. The fighter is a big grayish pinball, who brings a lot of force and a lot of damage, but he’s too big to get through certain areas, and requires the little rogue to slip into those spaces. There’s also a healer, used to revive party member pinballs or damaged pinball-flippers, and other adventurers with special attacks and bonuses for the pinball battles. There are ten playable RPG characters/pinball styles in all, although I didn’t see all of them at SXSW.

Like any good RPG, the adventuring party in Rollers of the Realm will gain XP, gold, loot, and special abilities after successful combats. Phantom Compass promises over thirty campaign levels, including chances to gain gold and score, creating 6 to 8 hours of gameplay.

Phantom Compass’ previous releases include Dionysian Dream , an educational murder mystery based on the Bacchae, and a free iPad game, based on the kids’ TV series Guardians Evolution. But Rollers of the Realm has gained the most attention, winning a Best In Play award at GDC Play, and being nominated for an IndieCade award, as well as winning SXSW honors.

Phantom Compass’ Rollers of the Realm is expected to launch this fall.

More Rollers:

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