Back in 2006, when I first met Alex, I was a single mom of 2 who never planned on getting married and just living out my life the way it was going. Needless to say, Alex changed all of that, swept me off my feet and has been the best step-father I could have ever asked for to Zack and Libby. These days, he’s just dad to them and that’s how it will always be.
One of our favorite things we like to do as a family is go to the movies. With the holidays coming up, we are excited to share the upcoming movie, Daddy’s Home. For those of you who haven’t seen the trailer yet, Daddy’s Home stars Will Ferrell as the step-father and Mark Wahlberg as the dad. Ferrell’s character strives to be the best step-dad and then things get interuppted when Wahlberg, the freeloading father, enters the picture and the two compete for the kid’s attention and affection.
We’ve seen the commercials all over TV and honestly, the entire thing is hilarious and for our family, we can really relate.
Just from the trailers, I can think of a few instances we have experienced where we have had the battle of the dads as well as the dads acting more like the kids. But then again, one of the things I love about my kids having Alex as their dad is that he is like a big kid and they all have so much fun together.
Alex at Sweet Street with a Lego Soldier
Of course, there have been times when I have had to pull the ‘mom card’ on my husband just like I do my kids, but that’s a whole other story right there. We’ll just leave it at video games vs. house work. I may have married a big kid but he makes us all happy and I’m okay with that! And after watching the trailer for Daddy’s Home, this entire, crazy family can’t wait to see it on Christmas Day!
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Be sure to connect with Daddy’s Home on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to stay on top of all of the movie details. You can also follow #DaddysHome on social media and get involved in the movie chatter.
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I have always been a fan of the tale of Peter Pan. I have loved seeing all of the different remakes of the story over the years and have truly enjoyed each and every one of them. When I first learned that there was going to be another film to share the story, I was excited and now I am happy to share that movie with you!
PAN is the latest in the adventures of Peter and tells the tale of his life in a London orphanage where he is whisked away one night to Neverland. While he is in Neverland, Peter discovers incredible, new adventures while he tries to uncover the secret of his mother.
When I first saw the trailer for this film I got really excited. Check it out for yourself.
Doesn’t that trailer make you want to watch this movie now?
The film stars Hugh Jackman, Garrett Hedlund, Rooney Mara, Amanda Seyfried, and new comer Levi Miller, as Peter.
Looking for an introduction into Japanese classics from the last fifty years? If you’re tired of Murakami’s metaphysical prose and want something a little darker, here are 3 classic tales you might appreciate:
The Woman in the Dunes by Kobo Abe
One of Japan’s foremost masterpieces, this novel won Abe acclaim, bagging the prestigious Yomiuri Prize in 1962. Pop Culture captures the plot of the narrative adequately: a professor arrives somewhere in a remote area filled with sand dunes. He’s there to do research on a particular type of beetle and the villagers offer him a shelter, one that happens to be at the bottom of a sand pit. He uses a rope ladder to descend to the pit. There, he finds a house, and a woman, who spends her days shoveling sand into buckets which the villagers raise out of the dune. The location of the house is significant: one must keep shoveling the sand to keep the pit from being filled. Otherwise, the whole village will drown in the dunes. The next morning, the rope ladder is gone. He’s effectively trapped in the pit.
What happens next is a story of how the man tries any means to escape and when all that fails, how he gradually adapts to his imprisonment. Every day we see him shoveling in dirt, in much the same way we work every day of our lives. It’s a brilliant microcosm of modern society, where days are spent in never-ending toil. When he and woman engages in sex—perhaps in defiance to their circumstances, a way to subvert the monotony and order of their lives in the dune—we can’t tell whether it’s genuine love or basic need.
By the end of the novel, the man finally manages to climb up the ladder. But we see him unable to flee to his freedom. If his spirit has already been crushed, we don’t know for certain. Only that his inability to run and his far away stare seems to suggest his mind is elsewhere, not on escape but on the woman who had been taken out of the dune just moments before, in a panic, in an emergency because of an extra-uterine pregnancy. In the end, The Guardian makes a poignant observation: does he refuse to leave the dune now because he’s found tenderness and belongingness in the pit, in that small universe, compared to the vast world he could explore when he was free? If you haven’t read this one, go to your favorite online bookstore now for a copy. The Nook makes it easy to download eBooks, especially the classics. If you’re ready for a story that leaps off the page, even after fifty years since it was first published, Kobo Abe’s masterpiece will leave you aghast, hopeful, devastated, gripped in the tale’s melancholy and adult edge—but it won’t leave you disappointed.
House of the Sleeping Beauties by Yasunari Kawabata
If you’re not quite ready for a novel yet, this novella may be up your alley. Among one of his finest works, the House of Sleeping Beauties is a fitting addition to Kawabata’s line-up of exquisite works like Palm-of-the-Hand Stories, Snow Country and Beauty and Sadness. The main character, an old man named Eguchi, spends his nights sleeping beside the sleeping beauties. The girls are drugged and regarded as living toys. Eguchi, however, regards them as symbols of beauty and life. Japan Times notes that the main character’s preoccupation with sleeping is way to the old man transition from life to death. Complex, beautiful, and a hauntingly deft prose all make this a novella worth reading. If you want a lyrical exploration into life and desire, there’s no better guide to the terrain than Kawabata.
Seven Japanese Tales by Junichiro Tanizaki
When you don’t have time to bury yourself in a book but still want to experience the joys of foreign literature, short stories are a great compromise. Kirkus Review describes the selection as discrete tales. On such story is the Bridge of Dreams, a favorite mostly because of its subject matter: incest and memory. It revolves around a Tadasu, a young man who loses his mother at 5. Soon after, his father brings in a stepmother. At some point, he grows closer to her when she allows him to suckle at her breast, in the same way he did with his real mother. Years later, his stepmother gives birth, but the child is sent away and the relationship between Tadasu and his stepmother only grows more complicated and the narrative, more dense. While the subject delves into obsessive sexuality, Tanizaki remains in control of the language. There’s nothing prurient in the book and readers would find themselves grappling with amazement at the way the story unfolds. Consistently though, there’s an almost demonic energy in the stories, a creeping disquiet—you’re not quite sure what’s happening but you know it’s something perversely out of this world.
If you want an introduction into Japanese classics on desire, these three books are a great way to immerse yourself in the genre—and the growing world of eBooks makes it easier than ever to find them.
If you are a football fan, you will love to hunt for Joe Journeyman!
Joe Journeyman Volume 1 tells the story of “NFL legend” Joe Journeyman, “the only player to play for all 32 NFL teams.
Featuring hand-drawn, original artwork, Joe Journeyman takes you on a search adventure as Joe and his friends travel from one NFL team to the next. Readers are challenged to find more than 500 things – including characters, historical and city references, and tons of wild and wacky things – as they explore each NFL team’s two-page spread.
Of course, being the diehard Green Bay Packers fans we are, we loved following Joe on his journey through Titletown.
Joe Journeyman Volume 1 takes you to the homes of the New England Patriots, Baltimore Ravens, Green Bay Packers, Washington Redskins, Detroit Lions, Minnesota Vikings, Houston Texans, Cincinnati Bengals, Chicago Bears, New York Jets, Indianapolis Colts, Buffalo Bills, Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, and Pittsburgh Steelers.
Not only is this book fun to look through with the kids, adults enjoy it too. There is so much to hunt for and the pictures are just amazing! I’m already looking into getting a copy of the Green Bay Packers spread to display in our rec room when it is done.
If you are a fan of football or are looking for a gift for someone who is, pick up a copy of Joe Journeyman: Volume One today!
Even though it is October, I am one of those people who starts to get eager about the holidays the minute October 1st hits. I love fall and everything that comes with it, even books for the kids to enjoy together.
Now, I know Thanksgiving is over a month away but I wanted to share this book with you in time for you to pick it up before the holiday because Sharing The Bread(ages 4-8) is the perfect read-aloud book to celebrate the Thanksgiving tradition.
In this beautiful ode to Thanksgiving, set at the turn of the century, a large family works together to make their special meal. Mama prepares the turkey; Daddy tends the fire; Sister kneads the bread dough; and Brother bastes the bird as it roasts. Everyone—from Grandma and Grandpa to the littlest baby—has a special job to do.
I haven’t shared this book with the kids yet as I want to wait until we get closer to Thanksgiving but I have read through it myself and think it is a great book. From beautiful illustrations to a great story, I know this is a book that my kids will truly enjoy when we do read it.
If you are looking for a book to share with your children this Thanksgiving, definitely give Sharing The Bread a try.