Category Archives: Diversions

The stuff that didn’t fit elsewhere.

Some 10-year-olds and their moms discuss “Serafina and the Black Cloak”

Last month we had some friends over to discuss our burgeoning book club. The girls agreed on a name for the club — the Witty Kitties — and the moms tossed around a few ideas for our inaugural book. We decided on Robert Beatty’s “Serafina and the Black Cloak,” because the author is local and the girls have all visited the Biltmore Estate, where the novel takes place.

Here’s the dust-jacket synopsis:

Serafina has never had a reason to disobey her pa and venture beyond the grounds of Biltmore Estate. There’s plenty to explore in Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt’s vast and oppulent home, but she must take care to never be seen. "Serafina and the Black Cloak"None of the rich folk upstairs know that Serafina exists; she and her pa, the estate’s maintenance man, have lived in the basement for as long as Serafina can remember. She has learned to prowl through the darkened corridors at night, to sneak and hide, using the mansion’s hidden doors and secret passageways.

But when children at the estate start disappearing, only Serafina knows the clues to follow. A terrifying man in a black cloak stalks Biltmore’s corridors at night. Following her own harrowing escape, Serafina risks everything by joining forces with Braeden Vanderbilt, the young nephew of Biltmore’s owners. Braeden and Serafina must uncover the Man in the Black Cloak’s true identity before all of the children vanish one by one.Serafina’s hunt leads her into the very forest that she has been taught to fear, where she discovers a forgotten legacy of magic. In order to save the children of Biltmore, Serafina must not only face her darkest enemy, but delve into the strange mystery of her own identity.

The “mother” contingent of our mother-daughter book club had given the girls a list of questions from the author’s “Serafina” discussion guide to consider while they read the book. The girls all diligently recorded their thoughts in their book club notebooks, which they brought with them to our meeting this week.

I was impressed with the consideration each of the girls put into the questions and with their insights about the story. They went pretty deep into some of the questions, particularly the one about whether or not it would be right to use the Black Cloak. I can’t really share their ideas about that without getting into major spoiler territory, but I can tell you the majority of them thought it would be a bad idea. My child said it might be justifiable if you really wanted a cupcake and had no other way to get one. I hope she was being facetious.

Regarding the less-revealing questions on their list, they found Serafina to be clever, brave and caring, and they agreed that the overall themes of the book were loyalty, family, trust and the internal struggle we all face between the darkness and the light. They all thought the Big Twist about the young heroine was “so, so cool,” and they can’t wait to learn more about her in the next installment of the series.

Poppy didn’t love the scary parts of “Serafina,” but she liked the book despite that. The other three girls in attendance loved it without reserve. Overall, the girls rated it 9 out of 10 kitty paws.

The book club girls award this title 9 kitty paws.

You can read the first chapter of “Serafina and the Black Cloak” at Robert-Beatty.com.

Some 10-year-olds and their moms discuss “Serafina and the Black Cloak”

Last month we had some friends over to discuss our burgeoning book club. The girls agreed on a name for the club — the Witty Kitties — and the moms tossed around a few ideas for our inaugural book. We decided on Robert Beatty’s “Serafina and the Black Cloak,” because the author is local and the girls have all visited the Biltmore Estate, where the novel takes place.

Here’s the dust-jacket synopsis:

Serafina has never had a reason to disobey her pa and venture beyond the grounds of Biltmore Estate. There’s plenty to explore in Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt’s vast and oppulent home, but she must take care to never be seen. "Serafina and the Black Cloak"None of the rich folk upstairs know that Serafina exists; she and her pa, the estate’s maintenance man, have lived in the basement for as long as Serafina can remember. She has learned to prowl through the darkened corridors at night, to sneak and hide, using the mansion’s hidden doors and secret passageways.

But when children at the estate start disappearing, only Serafina knows the clues to follow. A terrifying man in a black cloak stalks Biltmore’s corridors at night. Following her own harrowing escape, Serafina risks everything by joining forces with Braeden Vanderbilt, the young nephew of Biltmore’s owners. Braeden and Serafina must uncover the Man in the Black Cloak’s true identity before all of the children vanish one by one.Serafina’s hunt leads her into the very forest that she has been taught to fear, where she discovers a forgotten legacy of magic. In order to save the children of Biltmore, Serafina must not only face her darkest enemy, but delve into the strange mystery of her own identity.

The “mother” contingent of our mother-daughter book club had given the girls a list of questions from the author’s “Serafina” discussion guide to consider while they read the book. The girls all diligently recorded their thoughts in their book club notebooks, which they brought with them to our meeting this week.

I was impressed with the consideration each of the girls put into the questions and with their insights about the story. They went pretty deep into some of the questions, particularly the one about whether or not it would be right to use the Black Cloak. I can’t really share their ideas about that without getting into major spoiler territory, but I can tell you the majority of them thought it would be a bad idea. My child said it might be justifiable if you really wanted a cupcake and had no other way to get one. I hope she was being facetious.

Regarding the less-revealing questions on their list, they found Serafina to be clever, brave and caring, and they agreed that the overall themes of the book were loyalty, family, trust and the internal struggle we all face between the darkness and the light. They all thought the Big Twist about the young heroine was “so, so cool,” and they can’t wait to learn more about her in the next installment of the series.

Poppy didn’t love the scary parts of “Serafina,” but she liked the book despite that. The other three girls in attendance loved it without reserve. Overall, the girls rated it 9 out of 10 kitty paws.

The book club girls award this title 9 kitty paws.

You can read the first chapter of “Serafina and the Black Cloak” at Robert-Beatty.com.

The stockings are hung, the eggnog is flowing and Space Ghost is on the tree

Rockford and the kids spent a lot of the weekend getting the house ready for the holidays, and as a result it’s begun to look a lot like Christmas at our house.

There’s a little telephone shelf on our living room wall from way back when people actually had home phones. Poppy took charge of decorating it this year. I love that she gave the Griswolds’ car a place of honor.

santa

Instead of driving out to the Christmas tree farm this year, we decided to get our tree from the grocery store. It’s a good-looking tree, and it cost half as much. We may be grocery-tree people now. We also have small, tabletop trees in each kid’s bedroom. Pete’s is a white tree, and he uses most of Rockford’s “Star Wars” ornaments to decorate it. Poppy’s is a sparkly pink Barbie tree that’s pre-decorated.

trees

Here are a few of our favorite ornaments. Rockford’s grandmother gave me a couple of White House ornaments over the years, and I love them. I’m hoping to get the 2015 one for Christmas this year (a hint I’ve already strongly dropped to Rockford). I’m not sure how long Rockford’s had his Hoosiers champion ornament, but it’s one of his favorites. And of course there’s Space Ghost. Christmas just wouldn’t be Christmas without the good cheer that Space Ghost brings to the tree.

ornaments

Rockford and Pete decorated the mantle this year. They took a more minimalist approach than I usually do. They did a great job.

mantle

The ornament display trees on the mantle are new to this year’s holiday decorating. I give Poppy and Pete an ornament every year so they’ll have a nice collection of them when they move out and have their own places and their own trees. This is the first year we’ve put any of them out. Poppy chose to display her first ornament, which I bought at Bluestem in Columbia MO in 2005, and her two cat ornaments. I bought the Marsha T. Cat portrait in 2011, and my friend Melissa made the felt portrait of JJ T. Cat for me in 2013. Pete’s picks were his first ornament, the personalized block I commissioned from Robin Plemmons in 2010 and the Flapjack’s Pancake Cabin ornament I gave him last year.

kidornaments

Rockford has been slowly amassing a collection of outdoor lights over the years, and his decorating out there has expanded from the bushes in front of the house to the flower-bed-island-thing in the middle of the yard. I’m thinking of making some of the giant ornament balls we saw in my brother’s neighborhood at Thanksgiving to hang in one of the trees out front. I also saw a how-to for some ginormous light balls that stay on the ground when I was searching for the ones for the trees. There may be some DIY in our future.

NaBloPoMo November 2015