Tag Archives: books

Comics for Girls: Summer Reading!

Spring! Sweet Jesus it’s finally fucking spring. We planted our seeds on the second decently warm afternoon in May in a 40mph gale but who cares: we planted seeds (sunflower, zinnia, sweetpea and echinacea). The dandelions are getting all leggy and knock-kneed and I’m realizing too late that I should have signed up for swim lessons. My brain is off to the races in sunshine mania and although I’ve started four or five books in the last month, I’ve finished zero. This is where graphic novels come in.

I’ve done the obvious action/adventure thing (V for Vendetta, Watchmen, Transmetropolitan — all excellent); the macabre (Walking Dead, which I hated); but my favorite graphic genre is memoir.

Stitches by David Small

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

I just finished Marbles by Ellen Forney, which was so good I will probably reread it very soon, and relevant to my life in about 100000000000 ways right now.

Via some wikipedia surfing, I discovered Filthy Figments, erotic comics by women, which I look forward to perusing when not at my place of employment. Bitch has a few neato sexy comics going as well.

What is it about spring and graphic novels for me? I think I just crave more stimulation, something quicker, something more immediately engaging. I can zip through a graphic novel and have it linger for days. I start imagining drawings that could capture my own narratives. (Too bad my drawing is still cartoonish and amateur… but whatever!)

Robin has been very excited for me to read a picture book. Last night she squealed in glee when I pulled out Marbles and said it was her favorite book. We spent quite awhile discussing the drawings and speculating about the story. I kind of loved that. It got me wondering if there are any good comics for young girls that would be remotely age appropriate. Robin has also been into watching (age appropriate) anime shows, so maybe this is a good time to introduce her to a good series. I found this list on Amazon. I also found this one, which includes a comic about a girl named Robyn! Anyone else have suggestions? Zita the Space Girl looks pretty great. Where are the awesome feminist comics for young girls, world?

Here’s the thing I hate about graphic novels and/or comics: access. Our library is small and has a limited graphic novel/comics section, mostly focused on teen readers. That’s okayish for me, although I couldn’t find any of the above books in our catalog (but maybe I can finally read 100 Bullets?). But if there’s a series we are very excited to try, we’ll have to either borrow it (dicey) or buy it (pricey). Drag.

Nonetheless, I like the idea of lying around in a shaded bedroom on a summer afternoon reading comics with my girls.

Want to help us write a “how to leave academia” resource?

Based on the responses to my previous entry, and some others as well, Currer Bell, JCJet and I are going to try and create a website and e-book resource for those leaving academia.

We envision the website as a hub where people can get basic info and resources, and lots of reassurance. We hope the e-book will focus more on the contemplative/emotional aspects of leaving. “A book to read in the tub,” as one commenter said.

If you’re interested in helping out or contributing, let one of us know. You can comment here or email me at lauren.nervosa@gmail.com. If you do graphic design, can help us make a website not look sucky, have a specific topic or insight you’d like to share for other quittas, or are thinking you’d like to contribute a more thoughtful and polished essay to an e-book, please be in touch. Thanks!

Lamentations of a Teacher: What Advising May NOT Offer

A couple weeks ago, I waxed rather rhapsodic about how some of the things I love about teaching can be fulfilled through an administrative position. It got some hits and even a link from one of the Chronicle blogs, which is nice. And all of those things are still true.

But.

In the last week and a half, I’ve been thinking more and more about the teaching. I’ve been, for lack of a better word, longing for the classroom. I miss it deeply. Last week, I dreamed that I went into a room full of my old students and walked around hugging them and talking to them. A few nights ago, I my eyes sprung open at 3 am and I had this singular, piercing thought: I have to be a high school teacher.

What's your superpower? Venspired.com (@ktvee) via Compfight

I’ve been thinking about why this is the case and wanted to write up the flip side of “Advising Magic,” about what advising lacks when it comes to fulfilling my inner pedagogue. I’m writing this from my own perspective: remember, I work in a specific place (each advising center has its quirks), and I have had a lifelong love for teaching. Depending on your background or goals, these may not apply to you. But if you’re a teaching junkie, read on… Continue reading

Book Review: Expecting by Lula Belle

[Jen and Lauren love doing book reviews. If you've written something you think would be a good fit for our readers, please contact us! See the ABOUT page for more info!]

Expecting tells the story of Sheila, a 14-year-old girl living in the American Midwest who becomes pregnant as a result of acquaintance rape at a party. Sheila is a smart and talented girl with dreams of becoming a classical pianist, but her ultraconservative, religious mother refuses to sign the consent form that would allow her to get an abortion. Consent is required because Sheila lives in an alternative universe in which McCain-Palin took the White House in 2008, McCain kicked the bucket, and Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachmann now run our fair country. Sheila writes of the election:

“It is strange how, back in November of 2008, I remember feeling oddly pleased (in spite of myself and my lefty liberalism) at the fact that Sarah Palin, in all her Advanced Maternal Age baby-making, pre-menopausal, fertile femaleness, had just become the Vice President-elect of the United States of America. I was quietly proud of Vice President Palin in her moment of victory, and not because I agree with her politics, but in more of a hos-before-bros sort of way if you will.”

As you can see, the book is written in journal form, from Sheila’s point of view, and is very funny. Sheila is preternaturally intelligent and aware of the world and adults around her, and at times I wished she’d been cast as a 16 year old or some age that more befitted her maturity and insight. Yet her insistence on dressing as Lady Gaga and painting “BORN THIS WAY” on her exposed belly at Halloween speaks to her point in life as a girl straddling the fence between innocence and adulthood. At times, Sheila’s booksmarts are a bit incredulous, but overall, she’s so likeable that you can forgive her and read her as a sort of Sorkinian teen. She reminded me of the smart and sarcastic characters in John Green’s YA novels: she may not always come across as realistic, but she’s a sort of fantasy of what an awesome 14yo would be like, and that can be satisfying.

What I especially appreciated about Belle’s book is that her characters are complex and nothing is ever black or white. For example, although Belle is clearly critical of the anti-abortion policies that force Sheila into premature motherhood, she also has Palin pass the Fair Pay Act and institute childcare support for working Moms. While I didn’t always understand why this alternative history construct was necessary to tell what is otherwise a great family story, it is an amusing and interesting exploration of what might have been, and not at all a tale of our doom at the hands of the Republicans.

Likewise, Sheila’s ultraconservative mother, called “Map” (that’s Pam in reverse, a nickname Sheila and her sister use to drive their mother crazy), could have been written as an ogre, as a fool, as a witch. But she is a complex and nuanced character, and part of Sheila’s journey comes from understanding how her Mom came to be the person she did. I definitely remember becoming aware of my parents as actual human beings at that age, and Sheila’s alternation between a childlike need for her mother’s love and approval, and aggravation and indignance at her hypocrisy and control, feel totally accurate. Map refuses to allow Sheila an abortion, but she holds her daughter’s hand and cheers her on through labor. Sheila is surrounded by women with rich inner lives, and through these relationships, she charts these uncertain waters with something close to grace and humor. At Thanksgiving, she has this to say while sitting at the table with her family, just after her mother has left the room in anger:

 ”I look at James, at Susan, at my Dad and at my two grandmothers and see them looking back at me. I throw my head back and fall into a gutshaking, baby-bouncing, heartfilling laugh. Then they all laugh along with me, enjoying the great release. Grandma Johnson and Grandma Martin are laughing so hard they’re crying.

All at once, I feel surrounded by love and the feeling that, for the first time in a long time, everything is going to be all right. If I’m lucky enough to live for a long time like they have, I understand now that the moments in life I regret – being raped and pregnant at fourteen, etcetera – will eventually feel less and less like fresh wounds and become more like the tattoos of experience.”

At times, suspending disbelief was hard for me while reading Expecting, but I think I would have very much enjoyed this as a teen and considered Sheila something of a hero (plus you should know that I’m an unnecessarily critical reader: I get annoyed with Jerry Spinelli and John Green at times, so other people may be able to embrace this world much  more readily than I). It would be a fun book club read. Read a longer excerpt and more at Lula Belle’s website.

Square One: Lessons from a Monumental Techfail

Here’s what you don’t do.

You don’t google instructions for turning a PDF into something editable. You don’t think, My first freelance editing client will think I’m such a badass!! and do this while eating post-coital Doritos and watching Classic Albums: Cream’s Disraeli Gears on Netflix (not the best ep, fwiw).

You don’t follow those instructions so closely that you ask a program you’ve never used before – the ominously named Automator – to perform a “workflow” that will convert a PDF to an editable RTF and dump it on your desktop. You especially don’t follow these vague missives so closely that you neglect to use your noodle and narrow the scope of drives and folders that this program will mine for PDFs from THE ENTIRE COMPUTER to a reasonable, single folder, perhaps titled “My first paying editing gig that I do not want to fuck up.”

You do not click “run workflow” and then do a slow-mo Nnnnnnnoooooooooo as you realize your mistake but by then, it will not be too late. This program will not attempt to birth 60,000 RTFs with titles like _CompressionSys14% and _writedata-l-5$ onto your desktop. Your computer won’t seize.

What you do is, you back everything up. And I did do that: I use Sugarsync for automatic, instant backup/syncing and really like it, except I didn’t notice that I hit my uploading limit and some of the subfolders of my main folders didn’t make it, and that means I lost some writing and work that was very precious to me. Work that was going to send Mama Nervosa readers into spasms of ecstatic hilarity this summer as I unveiled a humorous memoir project based on failed relationships past and present. Oh, it was going to be so good, you guys. My writing workshop – the one where Jen and I met – loved this work.

There’s a slim chance a hard copy is floating around somewhere in my office files. I have a tiny ray of hope. If I can find that one hard copy, then I will gird my loins to recreate the remaining funny stuff I wrote post-workshop, and I will sit for five hours with the wayback machine again to find and C&P my public Diaryland diary (this is before they were called blogs, y’all) from 1999-2000, and then I will share it all with you.

But I don’t know if it will be as fresh and funny. I’m scared. I’m scared that work is gone forever. (I didn’t even mention the brilliant first few pages of my novel, a novel I had sorta set aside, but those pages! They were so good.)

I picked a terrible weekend to do something incredibly stupid to my beloved laptop. Not only do I have my first paid editing gig and an overdue book review to write (sorry, Lula Belle), but we chose to take the plunge and move Mama Nervosa to a self-hosted wordpress thingydoodle. People keep swearing It’s so great to have the freedom! The freedom! But I’m sitting here going, OK, how do I get those neat share buttons back? How do we find all our followers and herd them towards the new site, new feed, etc? We had such awesome momentum when we hit the transfer button, but those stats and followers – 15k views, 50 followers – have vanished into thin air and between that and being minus some seriously important and high quality work, I feel like we are back to square one.

Anyone else remember this AWESOME PBS show?? I loved it!

I guess my whole life is square one in these first weeks post-grad school. And while things are moving and happening – I feel cautiously optimistic at my chances of getting an interview for a job I applied to two weeks ago (the listing closed yesterday, cross fingers), and I’m getting leads on writing/editing jobs – I also feel adrift. I’m still receiving updates from a University I no longer attend and thinking, Gee, my parking sticker expired and I will never renew it. Gee, I won’t be around for this new ID card transition thing. Most of my days are spent at home with two intense and bored children: we’re all hurting as we feel our universe shrink down around us. We can’t freewheel all over Eastern Iowa because we are trying to adjust to a much smaller budget. I’m grumpy; they’re grumpy.

Robin, incensed at the injustice of ponytail asymmetry.

My husband and I have had some glittering and wonderful conversations about grad school quitting (more on that to come), but our chat is increasingly dominated by domestic concerns (we oughta get on fixing that bathtub drain, we oughta make plans to paint the garage) because that’s my world right now. Is this it? I ask as if I’m an interviewee in Feminine Mystique.

Other shifts are occurring on the home front. My 2.5 year old decided to spontaneously potty train, and has been doing great (except for poops. sigh.). I love life without diapers but we have been using them at night and I just realized that we are completely out and I guess we’ll just wing it and see how it goes? Oh, to be free of Pull-Ups!

The girls finally met local friends – two sets of siblings just around the corner. They live just far enough away that the kids can’t hop over there on their own, so they keep begging us to go over there after dinner, and it’s kind of awkward inviting ourselves over all the time. We neither want to impose, nor do we want to assume that their parents want to keep an eye on our kids. More on this later.

Robin started preschool yesterday. She loved it so purely and instantly that I am terrified there won’t be an opening in the fall (it’s a small, in-home program). So in about a month I will have to decide if we pursue other options or forget about it (I don’t know if Robin will stand for a year without school – she really, really loves the challenge and change in routine). These are the things I can do without.

Just standing here in my new crocs writing at my old, back-from-the-dead laptop counting down the minutes until my husband gets home (another grownup!) makes me feel so tired. But. The girls are playing together, independently, upstairs. I read a few fantastic books (see below) this weekend. And it’s JUST the beginning: the sky’s the limit, right? I’m just in yet another holding pattern, yet another liminal and vague space that’s opened up because I quit school and changed everything. But so far those spaces have yielded almost nothing but positives, so I have to trust that things are going to play out just fine. Even if it does mean rewriting a few essays.

Excerpt from Pigs Are People, Too (and a Tribute to A Superhero Mama Writer)

Last week, Jen wrote about her first moves towards prioritizing writing in the middle of the frenetic life of a mother of young children and part-time teacher. She introduced our mutual friend, Shell, as an inspiration and a fellow mama-ex-academic-writer-kick-ass-person working very hard to get her own writing project off the ground.

Shell is raising money through IndieGoGo to finish and self-publish a memoir and manifesta for fat women. Shell writes, “Fat women are everywhere. And we are hungry for honest stories about what it’s like to be fat, for the truth about the conflicted feelings we have for our bodies, for funny empowering tales about body-image, and for the all-too-rare point of view that fat phobia—not just obesity–is an epidemic worth fighting… We need some experiences out there that share the truth of living fat, not the sob story of how we got there, or the success story of how we got out, but what we experienced from those around us while we were/are in it; the reality of living as a fat woman in America.”

Jen and I think this is a project worth funding. Let me tell you some things about Shell:

  • She works in a full-time administration position and also teaches nights.
  • She’s been a single mother, teen mother, welfare mother, working mother — and she is an amazing, feminist parent raising incredible young people.
  • She finished a PhD and, while not a grad school quitta, is a total quitta empathizer.
  • She taught in the same program for at-risk college students as me, and she worked miracles with young people who everyone believes can’t make it in college. No kid could resist Shell’s honesty and hilarity. I’ll never forget her story about teaching an article about homophobia in sports to a room full of football players. AWESOME. She is HARDCORE.
  • She was my doula! She pressed on my lower back while I labored with Holly, and fed me spaghetti after the birth. Check it out.

Shell & I with Holly, who is minutes old.

Basically, Shell is an extraordinary person who deserves the satisfaction of publication! She’s raising 2k to upgrade her computer and pay for some dang summer camp so she can have some time (remember, she works two jobs) to write. Please consider supporting her campaign. Read an excerpt from a work-in-progress chapter about being fat and vegan (gasp! at the same time!). Continue reading

Google Diaries: We know you quit grad school.

When Lauren and I initially created Mama Nervosa, we imagined a space where we could write about the whole, weird range of experiences that make up our lives and identities: watching tv, mothering, unsuccessful crafting, writing, teaching, and figuring out who we are and what we do beyond grad school.

It turns out that this question of figuring out life beyond grad school resonates with a large number of people, many of whom find us by searching some variation of the phrase “I quit grad school now what” on google. I quit grad school. I want to quit grad school. Should I quit grad school? I want my husband to quit grad school. How do I tell my wife I quit grad school? My personal favorite: quit grad school no job 2012. It’s a tiny diary entry, a moment of grief and hope and desperation poured out into the google search box.

We’ve both written about leaving grad school, but while Lauren is saying her goodbyes this week, I said mine a long time ago. Eight years ago, in fact, a number which completely shocked me when I did the math this morning. So what have I done since I sent that fateful email? Continue reading

“Then M. in his plane was just on his way:” RIP Maurice Sendak

Like every Sendak story, “Where the Wild Things Are” explores his preoccupations, chief among which are the vicissitudes of his own childhood, and the temerity and fragility of children in general. His narrative is almost always about a child in danger whose best defense is imagination.

Read more

I love reading Maurice Sendak books with my girls. The transgression, the danger, the nudity. Continue reading

Off Balance

Since giving birth to Dorothy 5 years ago, I have done every possible combination of staying at home and working. I worked full time for the first year of her life, lost my job unexpectedly and stayed home for the next 7 months, then went back to work part time as an adjunct prof, teaching 2 or 3 classes during fall and winter semesters and staying at home during the summers. I had 6 weeks of paid maternity leave after D was born, I was unemployed when Lucy was born, and we planned Margeaux’s birth for summer so that I wouldn’t have to take fall or winter semester off. I have had very little structural support in the way of maternity leave or formal child care; we rely on friends, family, and a couple trusted baby sitters to care for the girls when T and I are working.

I don’t think I’m giving away any secrets when I say that adjunct teaching doesn’t pay particularly well. I value the opportunity to teach regardless of the pay because I love to be in the classroom, writing on the board, talking about books and ideas that transformed me; because I love the moment when a student realizes something about herself and her place in the world for the first time; because teaching gives me a reason to keep reading new books and a community to talk about those books with; because my colleagues are smart and funny and thoughtful and kind; because my students are often all those things too. Continue reading

Field of Dreams: A Tulsa (and Iowa) Memoir Part 2

This is part 2 of a series of posts about moving around as a kid and spending a lot of time living in Oklahoma. Check out part 1 here.

Of my immediate family, only my sister still lives in Oklahoma: my parents finally made their escape just two years after I moved away, and now live in Kansas City. Whenever I think about how much I love living in Iowa, I recall a passage from the novel Shoeless Joe by WP Kinsella. Shoeless Joe inspired the film Field of Dreams, and was written by a grad student at the University of Iowa, where I’ve been teaching and attending for eight years.

“It was near noon on a gentle Sunday when I walked out to that garden. The soil was soft and my shoes disappeared as I plodded until I was near the center. There I knelt, the soil cool on my knees. I looked up at the low gray sky; the rain had stopped and the only sound was the surrounding trees dripping fragrantly. Suddenly I plunged my hands wrist-deep in the snuffy-black earth. The air was pure. All around me the clean smell of earth and water. Keeping my hands buried I stirred the earth with my fingers and I knew I loved Iowa as much as a man could love a piece of earth.”

I bought Shoeless Joe in early 1994: I know this because the dated sticker from the used bookstore is still on the cover, a 1982, pre-Field of Dreams mass-market paperback edition. I bought it because I’d loved the movie and considered myself a Midwestern ex-pat. I wanted to connect to the place I considered my true home and my ultimate destiny. I was fourteen years old and I’d been living in Tulsa for two years. I read that passage and thought, I want to go to there. Continue reading