Navigation
This is Dani Smith

 

I am Dani Smith, sometimes known around the web as Eglentyne. I am a writer in Texas. I like my beer and my chocolate bitter and my pens pointy.

This blog is one of my hobbies. I also knit, sew, run, parent, cook, eat, read, and procrastinate. I have too many hobbies and don’t sleep enough. Around here I talk about whatever is on my mind, mostly reading and writing, but if you hang out long enough, some knitting is bound to show up.

Thank you for respecting my intellectual property and for promoting the free-flow of information and ideas. If you’re not respecting intellectual property, then you’re stealing. Don’t be a stealer. Steelers are ok sometimes (not all of them), but don’t be a thief.

Advertisement
Tag It
10 Things (27) 100 Push Ups (1) A Book A Week (81) Albuquerque Botanical Gardens (1) Alien Invasion (6) Anderson Cooper (1) Aspirations and Fear (11) Bobby Pins (1) Books (20) Bracket (1) Civic Duty (26) Cobwebs (1) Contests (3) Craft (3) Cuz You Did It (4) D&D (1) Danielewski (1) David Nicholls (1) Dolly (5) Domesticity (13) Doodle (1) Dr Horrible (1) Eglentyne (6) Electric Company (1) Etudes (14) Friday Night Lights (2) Frog (1) From the kitchen (or was it outer space?) (14) Generosity (2) Germinology (19) Ghilie's Poppet (1) Giant Vegetables (1) Gifty (14) Haka (1) Halloween (7) Hank Stuever (1) Hearts (5) Hot Air Balloons (1) I really am doing nothing (8) IIt Looks Like I'm Doing Nothing... (1) Ike (12) Inspiration (62) Internet Boyfriend (1) It Looks Like I'm Doing Nothing... (102) Julia Child (2) Kids (10) Kilt Hose (3) Knitting (7) Knitting Olympics (9) Laura Esquivel (1) Lazy Hazy Day (4) Libba Bray (1) Libraries (2) Locks (1) Los Lonely Boys (1) Lovefest (50) Madness (1) Magician's Elephant (1) Making Do (18) Millennium Trilogy (1) Morrissey (1) Murakami (4) Music (9) NaNoWriMo (30) Nathan Fillion (1) National Bureau of Random Exclamations (44) New Mexico (20) Nonsense (1) Overthinking (25) Pirates (1) Politics (20) Random Creation (6) Read Something (94) Removations (1) Richard Castle (1) Running (21) Sandia Peak (2) ScriptFrenzy (9) Season of the Nutritional Abyss (5) Sesame Street (2) Sewing (15) Sex Ed (4) Shaun Tan (1) Shiny (2) Shoes (1) Shteyngart (1) Something Knitty (59) Sonars (103) Struck Matches (4) Sweet Wampum of Inspirado (4) Tale of Despereaux (1) Tech (7) Texas (8) Thanksgiving (4) The Strain (1) Therapy (15) There's Calm In Your Eyes (18) Thermodynamics of Creativity (5) Three-Minute Fiction (1) Throwing Plates Angry (3) TMI (1) Tour de Chimp (2) tTherapy (1) Twitter (1) Why I would not be a happy drug addict (12) Why You Should Not Set Fire to Your Children (58) Writing (89) Yard bounty (7) You Can Know Who Did It (13) You Say It's Your Birthday (16) Zentangle (2)
Socially Mediated
Advertisement
Eglentyne on Twitter

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter
    Currently Reading
    Advertisement
    Recently Read
    « Alone, Together | Main | Flashback: a Memory of Matches »
    Thursday
    Sep082011

    A Book A Week: Gregor the Overlander by Suzanne Collins

    Gregor the Overlander (Book 1 of the Underland Chronicles) by Suzanne Collins, Scholastic 2003

    I read this one out loud to the Sonars. Gregor is an eleven-year old New Yorker. His mom is at work. His sister Lizzie is at camp—which is where he’d rather be. Gregor’s dad has been missing for two years, seven months, and thirteen days. Gregor is at home, helping take care of his not-entirely-lucid grandma and his two-year-old sister Boots. Boots tags along while Gregor does laundry in the basement of their apartment building.

    That’s where everything starts to go down. Underground. 

    In an innocent game of catch, Boots falls into an open air vent. When Gregor tries to catch her, they fall through a tunnel and discover a lost colony of humans and a world filled with human-sized bats, spiders, and rats. The struggle to get home turns into a matter of survival and the fulfillment of an old prophecy as the rats declare war on the underlander humans.

    This is an entertaining story and Gregor is a smart, impressive kid trying to do the right thing. Even when it’s hard. I wondered how Sonar X11 would hold up under such incredible and dire circumstances with a toddler on his hip?  

    There’s no magic, but there is breathtaking adventure and some fighting violence. All three Sonars liked it, sometimes sitting on the edge of their seats through the conflict. When we get our hands on them, we’ll definitely continue the series. 

    Reader Comments (1)

    This book has one of my favorite lines in recent memory. A typical farewell for the underlanders is "Fly you high, Gregor, fly you high." Love it.

    September 8, 2011 | Registered CommenterEglentyne

    PostPost a New Comment

    Enter your information below to add a new comment.

    My response is on my own website »
    Author Email (optional):
    Author URL (optional):
    Post:
     
    Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>