Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Breaking Dawn...a series all grown up

I was finally able to get my hands on a copy of Breaking Dawn by Stephenie Meyer.  Of course I was not disappointed. Breaking Dawn started out with everyone just as they were, Bella was very childlike, ok to just go with the flow (yes I know she tried but she ALWAYS caved).  The book was good, just like all the others, until Bella came intoBreaking_dawn her own.
I will try not to spoil anything for anyone but for me, Bella finally grew up and found her strength.  That was one thing that had bothered me through out the series, Bella seemed so weak to me.  Now it all makes sense.  Meyer waited until now so that Bella could mature in the way that causes many people to mature almost over night. 
With the twist Meyer threw in, I had something I could really relate to.  Bella's strength came from the same place as mine (no I am not a vampire) and it was something I understood.
Meyer intelligently included more adult content to fit with the story line with out being graphic so the book is still safe for younger readers who know about sex but don't need to know everything yet.
In my opinion Breaking Dawn is the best book of the series. Things flowed, and they were wrapped up nicely but there is the potential for Bella and Edward to continue.  Could Meyer be planning a spin off in the future focusing on some of the other characters? 
I hope so.

Buy it here.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

How Gentrification Saved Harlem

By Judith Matloff,
Author of Home Girl -- Building a Dream House on a Lawless Block


Recently homeowners in my corner of Harlem held a soiree in someone's garden. We form a warm group of 130 people who represent the changing neighborhood -- black old-timers with a growing number of whites. Everyone brought a dish or bottle and the talk over the macaroni was cheerful. Did anyone know a good contractor? How did the Little League do this summer? A door prize, a box of Godiva chocolates, was awarded to the longest resident -- Dina Morrison, 93, who has lived with her older sister in the same place for 67 years.  No one mentioned foreclosures.

Foreclosure crisis? What crisis? Not in Harlem.

Harlem is full of the sort of people who are losing their properties all over New York City, namely little old ladies and working-class African-American families. But the nation's black capital has been insulated from the sub-prime meltdown by the very thing usually blamed for destroying communities of color -- gentrification.

While the dreaded G word has priced some residents out of the 'hood, we've seen a paradoxical upside. The house values that have skyrocketed over the past 15 years in Harlem scared off many predatory lenders who targeted other black areas. These $1-million-plus price tags have also given homeowners who are struggling to keep apace with mortgage payments the option of selling out before the bank closes in.

"There tends to be a tight connection between property values and foreclosures," explains Josiah Madar, from the Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy at New York University.

He and other experts understand little about the mechanisms of abusive lending, other than the stark racial component.  Eight of the ten top neighborhoods hit by foreclosures in the city are overwhelmingly non-white. A map representing the worst afflicted areas -- among them Bedford-Stuyvesant, East New York, North Bronx, South Jamaica -- says it all. Each filing is a dot, and the aforementioned areas resemble solid metastasizing cancers, with several hundred foreclosures each.

Yet the area comprising Hamilton Heights, which claims some of Harlem's most prized Victorian brownstones, had just eight foreclosure notices, so few one can discern the individual specks.

It appears that the conmen who besieged other black neighborhoods steered away from Harlem, wagering that anyone who lived in a valuable townhouse would be too financially sophisticated for their tricks. Unlike in the outer boroughs where the racial demographic is similar but house values lower, Harlem residents didn't report a barrage of flyers pushed through mail slots that promised zero interest rates. The scam artists who solicited people to over-borrow just didn't approach Harlem as aggressively. Take a look at the numbers. Only 0.8 percent of all home-purchases mortgages in the Hamilton Heights area in 2006 were sub-prime, versus 34 percent in Bedford-Stuyvesant and 39 percent in East New York. (EDITORS -- These are the latest available figures.) Refinancing loans from risky lenders were likewise lower here.

"It was all a matter of the assumptions of the predators," said Dwayne Jones, lending director of the Parodneck Foundation, a housing advocacy group. "They did not come to Harlem." He credits the large concentration of organizations like his, as well as social networks like our homeowners' association, for raising awareness among less savvy member of the community.

Those Harlemites who did borrow more than they actually owned could take the money and run. That's what our next-door neighbor did. Literally a week before the bank jumped to possess her 1888 row house, she sold the property for a nice packet to a white family and found something cheaper. Granted, it's disruptive to move but she was spared financial ruin.

The added positive effect is that properties like hers do not sit vacant during New York's long foreclosure process. We see a vicious cycle in foreclosure-hit areas, where empty houses sink the cost of those nearby. As anyone who lived through Harlem's dark ghetto days knows, no one wants to live next to a boarded up building that tempts drug dealers to loiter. Moreover, few people want to buy a boarded up building with a leaking roof, which is often the case as banks rarely maintain the properties they seize.

This is not to say that gentrification is great for everyone. Of course it has a bad side. Most Harlemites rent apartments and do not dwell in fancy mansions. The locale is losing its status as the last outpost of affordability in Manhattan. Those suffering are victims not of the white professionals who buy shells and fix them up. No, the destructive forces are the big developers who scoop up rent-stabilized apartment buildings and then try to force out tenants by doing improvements and jacking up the price. Some of these investors borrowed more than the value of their properties, and now risk default. Then what happens to the residents living on the premises?

For the time being, though, homeowners like Dina Morrison are in a good place. There's talk among the homeowners of a jolly Christmas party, just like every year of plenty.


©2008 Judith Matloff


Author Bio
Judith Matloff is the author of Home Girl -- Building a Dream House on a Lawless Block (Random House.)

Monday, September 22, 2008

Everyman

This one will just be short as I am slowly making my way through Philip Roth's Everyman.  So far I am really enjoying it.  Roth managed to create a character who, though his own human failings creates  love, loss, anger, hate and mourning in his wake.  His mistakes are those we all make, yet they are also unique to him for his reasoning.  Everyman
Normally I read quite fast, but Everyman requires so much emotion and causes such self-evaluation that I can only take it in small doses.  Roth has created a character I don't particularly like, but even I can empathize with him.
I encourage everyone to check out Everyman.
The book jacket sums it up the best, "The terrain of this powerful novel--Roth's twenty-seventh book and the fifth to be published in the twenty-first century-- is the human body. Its subject is the common experience that terrifies us all."

Add some news just because I can.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Parent Friendly Kids Books- #2

After a short delay, here I am with more books a parent can potentially tolerate.  Realistically, right now Bunny is still stuck on OverthemoonCounting Kisses by Karen Katz but she has allowed a few more into the mix. We picked up another book by Karen Katz, Over the Moon which was a beautiful story about adoption. Once again amazing illustrations.  It did cause me  to tear up the first time I read it.  Bunny enjoyed it quite a bit as did we. Cimg1275_2 And yes, I am using a cute kid.  Cute kids sell you know. Buy it here.

We got another book by Karen Katz, A Potty for Me. This is part of my plan to slowly brainwash Bunny into using the toilet instead of diapers.  So far it isn't working but she did love the book.Cimg1280_2 Buy it here.

We did check out a few other books but aside from Bunny not really liking them, they were very irritating.  Naughty Nancy by John S. Goodall was a total loss. The colors were dull and fussy, no words to read and situations no toddler would understand and be pulled into.

Then there was When I Grow Up by P.K. Hallinan which was all the things you could grow up to through the alphabet in rhyme. It had everything going for it but it was just too long to hold her attention. Plus, it felt like forever to read.  Neither of us enjoyed it and I actually put it out of site so she would stop trying.

All in all, I know any time it's a Karen Katz book we are both going to enjoy it.  Everything else is just gambling.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Eclipse Breaks my Curse

I often have a really hard time reading series style books.  Usually I will love the first book.  Then I wait like a twittering teen waiting my my first date to arrive until the next book comes out, only to be horrible let down.  So I typically avoid any book that is meant to be a series. Until Twilight.
    Eclipse_4
Stephenie Meyer has broken this curse with the Twilight series.  I loved the first book, I loved the second book and miracle of miracles, I loved her third book, Eclipse.

The plight of the two lovers pulls me in every time.  I know, it is meant for teens but come on, how could I not get sucked in.  It has vampires, werewolves, teen angst, romance and suspense. Plus they look very nice on my book shelf.  Everything I need all rolled up into one decorative package.

Now I just have to get my hands on Breaking Dawn. That is one book I may actually fork over my hard earned money for.
Buy it here.

Monday, January 30, 2006

A Note to my Readers

You may have noticed some poems I posted yesterday.  One talented writer responded to my call for material.  Neta Schutt is a talented poet who has written many poems and been published before in Literary Journals.  I hope you enjoy her work.  Please let us know what you think.  If you would like to see more of her work just let me know.  I will have a review of The First Immortal up soon.  I will also have a review of the Wideacre trilogy by Phillippa Gregory. Thanks to all of you who visit, and also to those of you who send me suggestions.  Keep them coming.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Anger In Her Heart-Neta Schutt

Anger in Her Heart

anger in her heart
hatred in her soul
a bottle in her hand
the liquor of choice
glides smoothly across her tongue
rolling effortlessly down her throat.
her pain is numbed
the scars he left, blurred
cuts of her skin, dried and bloodied
numbed by the bottle
she feels no pain
she has no hurt
with bottle in hand
anger is a myth
hate an empty emotion
the bottle is mine,
my safe place, the liquid within
my cure-all
with bottle in hand
he can't hurt me, you can't hurt me

Neta Schutt

Copyright ©2006 Neta Schutt

send replies to: neta.djlady88@gmail.com

The Moment-Neta Schutt

The Moment

Night falls on a calm bay,
a small booth in a quaint cafe
cool hands warmed by cups of coffee.
A table beneath dimmed lights,
engulfs two souls in a cozy booth,
more coffee
shared across a booth
words of heartfelt emotions,
breathed over the endless night.
A smile,
the glint in his eyes,
links two to one...
one spot.
Right here, right now
never ending, always evolving.
More coffee, one booth,
two souls joined
in this eternal moment

Neta Schutt

Copyright ©2006 Waneta Schutt

The Sands On My Shore-Neta Schutt

The Sands On My Shore

The sands on my shore
of it's own being,
constantly evolving spirits of
eclectic joyful souls.

Tides crash hard against my shore
yet still you sail on.
Your horizon remains
lucid, luminous, an' alluring.

Enjoy it, as I will
Watching you sail through it
from shore lines beyond the distance
beyond the spiraling sands of my shores.

My sand, like you
came crashing into me
yet left me standing here alone.
As you left, I knew but never said.

You'd be back again,
fore the circle of life in which you flow
Remains unbroken, unscathed like
the sands on my shore.

Neta Schutt

Copyright ©2006 Neta Schutt

send replies to: neta.djlady88@gmail.com

Infatuation-Neta Schutt

Infatuation

A moment of silence
Broken by simple words.
Quietly sitting. .
A room dimly lit,
Light flickers by candle
Shadows cast across walls
Incense burns a smoky haze,
Jade lingers amidst it.
Memorized by everything,
Yet nothing at all.
Images float through vivid dreams
Strong hands glide. . .
Anticipation beats fast in hearts.
Glints of passion in eyes.
Bodies interlock, skin meshes smoothly
A night shared,
If only in thought,
Through vines untravelled.
Desire lingers endlessly
Awaiting a turn to adjoin two

Neta Schutt Copyright ©2006 Neta Schutt send replies to: neta.djlady88@gmail.com

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