enamoured: the starry-eyed emoticon: *_* (beautiful when the boy smiles)
[personal profile] enamoured
It's been a while!

I feel slightly better about everything, but at the same time I just want to write paragraphs about tropes and things that I love in fiction, like happy endings that have to be fought for and won, conversations between friends that seem like they could have been something I would have told a friend of my own, and the whole idea of two people who should not under normal circumstances be friends or remotely interested in each other coming together. I love happy endings and bittersweet ones in fiction, but I especially love the kind of happy ending when it's not the definitive end--when you know that it's half ending and half new beginning. I just wish I could get that out when I write.

Anyway!

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My first favorite book was an abridged copy of Little Women. My mom gave it to me when I was six. It was the first chapter book that I read on my own. About a year later I got Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing by Judy Blume from a book club starter pack that my dad ordered from me. I read and reread that book a countless number of times because I thought it was about the best thing ever, and it made me wish that I lived in New York and could have all sorts of crazy adventures, though not necessarily with the weird little brother.

In the same vein, Harriet the Spy became a favorite because of the New York adventures, and I liked that Harriet was a girl who constantly had her head in a notebook. Between those two books and the Baby-Sitters Club, I thought New York was the best place in the universe.

I also really liked the American Girls series. My fifth grade teacher had all of Felicity and Kirsten's books, and at the time they were the only ones I hadn't read (there were only five AGs at the time, and I had all of Addy and Samantha's, and I had checked out all of Molly's at the library). I also liked the Sleepover Friends books, which was kind of BSC-esque in a way. The only difference was that the club consistently stayed at four members and they were in fifth grade. If anyone ever thought that the Baby-Sitters Club stretched reality with thirteen year olds getting part-time jobs, the Sleepover Friends were allowed to ride their bikes to the mall at eleven.

Date: 2011-01-23 11:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chrryblssmninja.livejournal.com
I have the Molly paper doll kit as well as two of her books.

One of my parents' friends let me play with her Kirsten doll whenever we went to her house.

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