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Tuesday, May 28, 2013
TTT: Even When You've Got the Most Important Job in the World, Sometimes You Dream of Demon-Hunting ...
8:40 AM
Happy Tuesday! If you haven't participated in Top Ten Tuesday before, you really should join in the fun. It's always a good time. Promise! Click on over to our hostesses' blog, The Broke and the Bookish, for the details about this always delightful weekly event.
Today's TTT topic is a freebie and don't we all love those? I debated which subject to choose (Top Ten Books that Scare the Snot Out of Me? Top Ten Books that Make Me Cry Like a Baby? Top Ten Books You Couldn't Pay Me to Read Again?), finally settling on Top Ten Books that Make Me Want to Change My Profession. First, a true confession: I don't actually have a profession. I mean, I do have the most important job in the world, but it's not like I get paid to raise my children (darn it!). And, although motherhood definitely has its drama, suspense, action/adventure and horror, it's not the kind of sexy, book-worthy career that makes readers shout, "Now, that's what I want to be when I grow up." Just so I'm clear, there's nothing I'd rather be right now than a stay-at-home mom, but these books definitely offer some intriguing career possibilities ...
1. The Bloody Jack series by L.A. Meyer—After Captain Jack Sparrow appeared on the big screen in all his strange, but incredibly attractive glory, every female on the planet wanted to be romanced by a pirate. L.A. Meyer's books, though, make me want to be a pirate. I mean, the series' heroine, Jacky Faber, makes swinging through the rigging, sailing the open sea, and sword fighting with bloodthirsty savages look like the adventure of a lifetime. Why she longs to be a proper young lady, I'll never know!
2. The Gallagher Girls series by Ally Carter—I've never had any desire to be a female OO7, but I gotta admit, these middle grade books almost change my mind about becoming a spy. Attending a super exclusive boarding school, going on intense, secret training missions and playing with the newest, coolest tech toys—well, it looks like loads of fun.
3. The Hannah Swensen series by Joanne Fluke—I'm not the greatest baker in the world, but I do love me some warm, gooey cookies. So, being a cookie maker doesn't sound bad at all! I can totally see myself bustling around a warm, bright cookie shop filling display cases with scrumptious goodies, chatting with customers, and baking up a storm in my shiny professional kitchen. I'd give Hannah Swensen a run for her money, that's for sure!
4. The Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling—Okay, I don't know if wizard (or witch, I guess) counts as a profession, so I'm going to choose Hogwarts professor instead. Because, aside from the constant presence of that pesky Voldemort (not to mention bratty Draco Malfoy), it looks like a pretty nice gig!
5. The Mortal Instruments series by Cassandra Clare—I'm a huge wimp, but c'mon, doesn't Clare's crew make demon hunting look pretty darn sexy? I could totally be a kick-butt demon hunter. Okay, I couldn't, but it's a fun daydream.
6. Out of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys—Lots of novels feature bookshop owners and that's a profession I think I'd totally rock at in the real (unlike pirate or spy or demon hunter). One of my favorite parts of this book is the descriptions of how Josie and Patrick size up potential customers, bet on what kind of book they're looking for, then compete with each other to find the perfect tome for that person. It reminds me of playing "Guess the Major" when I worked at the BYU Creamery!
7. The Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters—While lots of people find archaeology endlessly fascinating, I'm really not one of them. Discovering ancient artifacts does sound cool, I agree, but nothing about digging for days and days under a sweltering desert sun sounds all that appealing. Enter Amelia Peabody. She's an average Jane who does the whole Egyptologist thing in style. She makes slipping down the Nile in a houseboat and solving mysteries sound like the perfect profession for an average Jane like me.
8. Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper—After watching my mom slave away as a passionate, but vastly underpaid teacher, I knew that was one thing I did not want to be when I grew up. Even when it made a lot of sense for me to earn a teaching degree along with my B.A. in English, I resisted. And, truthfully, it's probably for the best—I don't think I would have had the patience for it, especially not to be a special education teacher, which is what my mom did before she retired from the profession. Still, when I hear my mom's stories about touching children's lives as well as reading books like Out of My Mind, it makes me realize how important teachers are, especially those who work so diligently and patiently to help those with special needs receive the best education they can get.
9. That Time I Joined the Circus by J.J. Howard—Truth is, I find the whole circus thing a little creepy. Still, Howard made me reconsider (for a second, at least) running off to join up as a trapeze artist or a palm reader. I would have to pass on the pooper scooper job, even though I actually have some experience in that arena (thank you, summer job at the vet's office when I was 16).
10. Misery by Stephen King—Okay, so a story about a fiction writer held captive by a psychotic fan should not make one want to be a novelist. And yet, how cool would it be to know the words you wrote had that much power over someone else? Very cool, indeed.
How about you? Which books make you want to pursue a whole new profession? Or, which make you proud to be working the job you are? I'd love to know.
* Book images are from Barnes & Noble and Fantastic Fiction
Today's TTT topic is a freebie and don't we all love those? I debated which subject to choose (Top Ten Books that Scare the Snot Out of Me? Top Ten Books that Make Me Cry Like a Baby? Top Ten Books You Couldn't Pay Me to Read Again?), finally settling on Top Ten Books that Make Me Want to Change My Profession. First, a true confession: I don't actually have a profession. I mean, I do have the most important job in the world, but it's not like I get paid to raise my children (darn it!). And, although motherhood definitely has its drama, suspense, action/adventure and horror, it's not the kind of sexy, book-worthy career that makes readers shout, "Now, that's what I want to be when I grow up." Just so I'm clear, there's nothing I'd rather be right now than a stay-at-home mom, but these books definitely offer some intriguing career possibilities ...
1. The Bloody Jack series by L.A. Meyer—After Captain Jack Sparrow appeared on the big screen in all his strange, but incredibly attractive glory, every female on the planet wanted to be romanced by a pirate. L.A. Meyer's books, though, make me want to be a pirate. I mean, the series' heroine, Jacky Faber, makes swinging through the rigging, sailing the open sea, and sword fighting with bloodthirsty savages look like the adventure of a lifetime. Why she longs to be a proper young lady, I'll never know!
2. The Gallagher Girls series by Ally Carter—I've never had any desire to be a female OO7, but I gotta admit, these middle grade books almost change my mind about becoming a spy. Attending a super exclusive boarding school, going on intense, secret training missions and playing with the newest, coolest tech toys—well, it looks like loads of fun.
3. The Hannah Swensen series by Joanne Fluke—I'm not the greatest baker in the world, but I do love me some warm, gooey cookies. So, being a cookie maker doesn't sound bad at all! I can totally see myself bustling around a warm, bright cookie shop filling display cases with scrumptious goodies, chatting with customers, and baking up a storm in my shiny professional kitchen. I'd give Hannah Swensen a run for her money, that's for sure!
4. The Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling—Okay, I don't know if wizard (or witch, I guess) counts as a profession, so I'm going to choose Hogwarts professor instead. Because, aside from the constant presence of that pesky Voldemort (not to mention bratty Draco Malfoy), it looks like a pretty nice gig!
5. The Mortal Instruments series by Cassandra Clare—I'm a huge wimp, but c'mon, doesn't Clare's crew make demon hunting look pretty darn sexy? I could totally be a kick-butt demon hunter. Okay, I couldn't, but it's a fun daydream.
6. Out of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys—Lots of novels feature bookshop owners and that's a profession I think I'd totally rock at in the real (unlike pirate or spy or demon hunter). One of my favorite parts of this book is the descriptions of how Josie and Patrick size up potential customers, bet on what kind of book they're looking for, then compete with each other to find the perfect tome for that person. It reminds me of playing "Guess the Major" when I worked at the BYU Creamery!
7. The Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters—While lots of people find archaeology endlessly fascinating, I'm really not one of them. Discovering ancient artifacts does sound cool, I agree, but nothing about digging for days and days under a sweltering desert sun sounds all that appealing. Enter Amelia Peabody. She's an average Jane who does the whole Egyptologist thing in style. She makes slipping down the Nile in a houseboat and solving mysteries sound like the perfect profession for an average Jane like me.
8. Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper—After watching my mom slave away as a passionate, but vastly underpaid teacher, I knew that was one thing I did not want to be when I grew up. Even when it made a lot of sense for me to earn a teaching degree along with my B.A. in English, I resisted. And, truthfully, it's probably for the best—I don't think I would have had the patience for it, especially not to be a special education teacher, which is what my mom did before she retired from the profession. Still, when I hear my mom's stories about touching children's lives as well as reading books like Out of My Mind, it makes me realize how important teachers are, especially those who work so diligently and patiently to help those with special needs receive the best education they can get.
9. That Time I Joined the Circus by J.J. Howard—Truth is, I find the whole circus thing a little creepy. Still, Howard made me reconsider (for a second, at least) running off to join up as a trapeze artist or a palm reader. I would have to pass on the pooper scooper job, even though I actually have some experience in that arena (thank you, summer job at the vet's office when I was 16).
10. Misery by Stephen King—Okay, so a story about a fiction writer held captive by a psychotic fan should not make one want to be a novelist. And yet, how cool would it be to know the words you wrote had that much power over someone else? Very cool, indeed.
How about you? Which books make you want to pursue a whole new profession? Or, which make you proud to be working the job you are? I'd love to know.
* Book images are from Barnes & Noble and Fantastic Fiction
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