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Geek Has No Signature Look

Category : Clothing Design, Elementary, Health and Beauty, Teens, TV, Movies, and Music, Tweens

“People who know me know / That I try not to say too much just with my clothes.” –Hank Green

Ask a random stranger to describe a quintessential geek and, after they ask what quintessential means, they may cheerfully describe a scrawny, bespectacled introvert wearing ill-fitting clothes that might look stylish…on their grandparents. However, if the random stranger happens to be a geek, they may already know the definition of quintessential, and they will probably be wearing a t-shirt and jeans.

I think Hank Green sings it best in hhis upbeat ode, T-Shirt and Jeans:

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Kay Holt has a habit of getting science on everything.

 

Downton Abbey Paper Dolls

Category : Craft Room, Family Room, Printable Fun, TV, Movies, and Music

 

Season two is over and you’re pining for a little Downton Abbey action, right? Worry not, GeekMoms! If you’ve already dished about the latest Downton Abbey episode here on GeekMom and you’ve followed our Downton Abbey pin board, you can get your fix with these Downton Abbey paper dolls. Paper dolls. Take a minute to appreciate the Dowager Countess’s facial expressions. Or the fact that yes, a dead Mr. Pamuk is part of the package.

Image: screenshot of Vulture.com

Kris Bordessa is the voice behind Attainable Sustainable: Reviving the Lost Art of Self-Sufficiency. She's authored several hands-on books for kids, including Team Challenges: Group Activities to Build Cooperation, Communication, and Creativity. She lives in Hawai‘i with her husband, two teens, 5 million Legos, and 5 ‘ukuleles.

Downton Abbey: The Christmas Special

Category : TV, Movies, and Music

Ahhh, now that’s what I want in a season-ender. The right blend of suspense, catharsis, and satisfaction.

Below this photo, there be spoilers…

How much would you love to see them on Dancing With the Stars?

As always, I hardly know where to begin. Let’s start with who was missing: Sybil and Branson. Sounds like things are going well for them in Ireland, and I’m glad Lady Cora made it clear to Lord Grantham that she will not be deprived of the joy of visits with her grandchild. But I missed Branson’s spark and Sybil’s velvety voice. I hope we’ll see more of them in Season 3. Because, yes, I am already counting the days.

Sir Richard just got nastier and nastier—all that grumbling over the servants getting a little down time. (Where down time = preparing a giant feast, cleaning and decorating the whole house, doing everything they always do plus more besides, BUT HEY!, after they’ve hauled all the food to the dining room THEY DON’T HAVE TO WALK AROUND THE TABLE PUTTING IT ON PLATES. Slackers.) And the constant babysitting of Mary, getting rough with her, berating her semi-publicly. It’s true she was cold and brusque with him. It would be hard not to be, with a man who’d informed you that one step out of line and he’d bring public disgrace upon your family.

And that was my one disappointment: in their break-up scene, I kept waiting for Mary to put it to him clearly. How could she love him, or even feel at ease with him, ever, after his threats and bullying? She actually apologized to him, for pete’s sake. He needed to hear it bluntly: he thought he’d purchased her, and although she was willing to go into business with him, essentially, merging their assets—her social position; his fortune—she was not willing to be owned. He tried to bribe her most trusted servants into spying on him. I think she should have spelled this out for him crystal-clear, sort of a grim version of Elizabeth Bennet’s “had you behaved in a more gentlemanly manner” speech to Darcy.

But the development and pace of the Mary-Matthew thread satisfied me immensely. What did you think?

Mary was hilarious in the game of charades—excuse me, “this isn’t charades, this is the game.” Her irritation at the others for failing to decipher her inscrutable gestures. And Dame Maggie was at her blistering best in that scene:

VIOLET: “Sir Richard, life is a game in which the player must appear ridiculous.”

RICHARD: “Not my life.”

CORA: “Sir Richard, your turn!”  

VIOLET: “How soon your your maxim will be tested.”

Having come to appreciate Edith, I was disappointed to see her backburnered once again. Loved her line: “Do you think I’m going to give up on someone who calls me lovely?” Even though the remark, and the relationship, were left hanging in a sorrowful silence, I think we haven’t seen the last of Sir Anthony. (Is he a Sir? I can’t remember.)

Okay, the Bates trial. NUMBER ONE: I’m glad Anna married him, glad she got those visits to prison. NUMBER TWO: Not impressed with Bates’s lawyers, nor with Lord Grantham, who fell apart the moment the questions got probing. Interesting that all the worst evidence against Bates seems to have come from Bates’s own statements: what O’Brien saw and heard, what Bates said to Lord Grantham about his horrible wife, the scratch on his head after his return from London. I was longing for a fiery William Garrow-style cross-examination by the defense. But I suppose we need to save some drama for season three…Well, Anna and Bates are certainly stoic enough to wait it out. I loved their sad, sweet parting.

I’m still wondering about the possibility that O’Brien’s the guilty party. Her eyes were black holes of pain during the whole episode, except the silly planchette board scenes, and she had a couple of cryptic remarks. Perhaps they were red herrings. Logistically, a case against her seems sketchy—did she sneak to London (no easy feat for a lady’s maid) and slip poison into Mrs. Bates’s tea or something? The m.o. actually fits O’Brien’s history; we’ve seen her act similarly before, plotting a somewhat impulsive crime—”the soapslip affair,” to quote a recent search hit in my blog stats. I realize “plotting an impulsive crime” is a self-contradicting phrase, but that’s what she did with the soap. Got all inflamed with rage and came up with a way to hurt Lady Cora that took a tiny bit of planning but was carried out still in that first flush of rage. And then she immediately regretted it, “This is not who you are,” and turned back to pick up the perilous soap, but alas, she was too late.

So I can believe that O’Brien might decide the only way to do penance for the pain she caused by vindictively meddling in Bates’s affairs was to remove the source of the problem. And I can imagine her whisking off to London on her half-day (does she get a half-day?) and pretending to have information for Mrs. Bates. I can picture a conversation between them, O’Brien speaking convincingly of her intense dislike of Bates and Anna, Mrs. Bates nodding with narrowed eyes, and when Mrs. Bates’s back is turned, O’Brien slips some poison into her cup. The arsenic Mr. Bates bought is a coincidence. That’s my theory. I don’t know if I buy it, myself, but I think I find it more plausible than Mrs. Bates actually suiciding….

But I digress.

I’ll leave Thomas to you in the comments (oh, Thomas!), and that very sweet scene between Daisy and her father-in-law. :)

Oh yes, and then there was the distraction-thread of Lady Rosamund’s betrayal. Have at it.

Episode Five recap.
Episode Six recap.

Melissa Wiley writes books for children and teens. She lives in San Diego with her comic-book-writing husband, a half dozen kids between the ages of two and sixteen, and about three thousand books. Melissa blogs about her reading life and her family's "tidal homeschooling" adventures at Here in the Bonny Glen. You can find her on Twitter and Google+.

Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter

Category : Books, TV, Movies, and Music

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Seth Grahame-Smith’s mashup of zombies and classics was a hoot in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

Next, Grahame-Smith wrote Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. Finally, it’s explained that when young Lincoln discovers his mother’s death was caused by a supernatural predator, he begins a lifelong vendetta against vampires and their slave-owning allies. The story is revealed through a newly discovered journal and recounted in a quasi-sonorous style, complete with disturbing sepia toned photographs. However it’s an ugly stretch to explain slavery away as the method plantation owners, er, vampires, use to keep a ready supply of delicious blood even if the implication may be that slavery was monstrous. Nonetheless the book is bloody, witty, and trots off in all sorts of unexpected directions. It certainly honors our 16th president’s remarkable ax-wielding skills.

The movie, if the trailer gives any indication, dramatically departs from the grandiose yet sly tone of the book. It looks identical to today’s action flicks, with lots of explosions and slow mo airborne fighting, like a Blade remake in Civil War era costumes. Whatever happened to dignified vampire hunting?

 

 

Laura Grace Weldon is the author of Free Range Learning: How Homeschooling Changes Everything.  She lives on a small farm with her family and blogs optimistically.

Are Fairy Tales Too Scary?

Category : Babies, Books, Elementary, Featured, Kids' Room, Toddlers, TV, Movies, and Music

Scary Snow White and Her Dwarves (Image: Mandy Horetski)

I’ve been a big fan of books since I was a child partly because my parents would read to me before bedtime. I started this ritual with my daughter when she was very small. She loves her books and is already wanting to learn how to read on her own even though she is only three. She has books that were mine as a child, as well as newer ones. I don’t really consider any of her books very scary at all. But there is a new study that shows that I might be in a parenting minority.

There was a study done that shows that one in five parents have decided to not read their children classic fairy tales because of the scary factor. Since my daughter is prone to nightmares, I do try and monitor what she watches. This is why I haven’t let her watch movies like Star Wars yet because I think they would be, in her words, “too scary scary”.

But fairy tales aren’t really something I ever saw as really scary. She has seen the Disney versions of many of the classic fairy tales as well as having heard them read to her as a bedtime story. None of these stories have kept my nightmare-prone toddler up at night.

At the end of the article, there is a list of top ten fairy tales that parents no longer read to their kids. I have read one story to my daughter that was on the list, Hansel and Gretel, with no issues. One of her favorite books is a variation of the Gingerbread Boy fairy tale, which is also on the list. So I don’t really think fairy tales are too scary for my three-year-old.

You can read more about this story at The Telegraph’s website. Do you think that fairy tales are too scary for your kids?

"Chaos" Mandy Horetski is an avid Browncoat, blogger, and stay-at-home mom who lives in the mountains of NC with her geeky husband and 3 year old princess. You can find her on Twitter as @ChaosMandy as well as on Google +.

Downton Abbey: We Have So Much to Talk About

Category : TV, Movies, and Music

Where to begin? I’m not going to write a full recap this time—if I try, it’ll take me all week because HOKEY SMOKES that was a lot of action packed into one night. Can we dish? Hold on, here’s the obligatory spoiler buffer.

Highclere Castle, aka Downton Abbey. Image via Wikipedia Commons. Never a dull moment in this place!

WELL. Spanish flu. Stolen kisses. Broken hearts. And poor Mr. Bates, accused of murder as we all feared would be the case. Was Anna right to push forward with their marriage? Does that make the case against him look more suspicious? I totally understood her desire—no, her need—to be able to stand beside him as his wife during a possible arrest and trial.

Do you think it was really a suicide, though? I can see Mrs. Bates determining to frame her husband, and the letter to her friend certainly supports that possibility. But boy is it hard to see that strong-willed, grasping woman deciding to end her own life in order to ruin her hated ex-husband’s.

As for our flu victims, I was really worried it was curtains for Carson. I’m amazed (and delighted) that he pulled through. And glad he had a reconciliation of sorts with Mary. The rift between them, when Mary coldly accused him of abandoning her, was painful to behold. I wanted to smack Mary. Surely she should have been able to see that he was acting out of love and loyalty for her—he could not, would not, allow himself ever to be put in the position of having to spy on her or put Sir Richard’s interests above hers. (That, and his revulsion at the thought of working for a dishonorable employer.)

Mary and Matthew. I thought the moment between them, the dancing, the honesty, the kiss, was quite real and, in its way, beautiful—though simultaneously uncomfortable and frustrating, with his fiance lying seriously ill above them, the wedding only days away. Again I wanted to shake them: why didn’t you have this conversation before?

And then…Lavinia. The sudden downturn, the admission that she had some doubts of her own about being in the role of mistress of Downton Abbey. Matthew isn’t remembering that now, in his grief and guilt, but perhaps he will later. It struck me that in all the ups and downs of the Matthew-and-Mary relationship, I’ve viewed Mary as the difficult party, the one who makes bad decisions and says the wrong thing, or doesn’t say the right thing. But this week, watching Matthew stand at the grave with that dark, grim expression, pronouncing his and Mary’s relationship cursed, it hit me that he is just as difficult, in his way. He broods—of course, life has handed him some occasion for brooding! The war, the paralysis, now Lavinia—and makes sweeping, deeply affecting statements. And Mary reacts by shoving her feelings down as far as she can, like a Revolutionary War-era soldier packing the ammunition into his musket. Mary’s trigger is going to go off someday. Sir Richard had better not be standing in her line of fire when it happens.

O’Brien was one of this week’s most interesting under-the-surface dramas. Her pain and guilt over Cora’s miscarriage is profound. Her loyalty to Cora: so moving. But I was yelling at the TV: don’t tell her NOW, for Pete’s sake! The woman can barely breathe! This is not the time for conscience clearing.

I was so worried about Cora. I’m glad she pulled through. I’ll leave Lord Grantham’s actions to you in the comments. I’m too annoyed with him to write about it. At least he came to his senses.

And who else? Sybil and Branson, lots to talk about there. Best moment: When Branson shattered Lord Grantham with that remark about the upper class always assuming they are they only ones with honor. Reminded me of Mr. Darcy reeling from Lizzy’s statement that his behavior had been ungentlemanly.

Thomas! What a wretched comeuppance. He’s a survivor, though.

Ethel, the baby, the odious grandfather, the weak grandmother. What did you think? I think the best thing about that whole arc was watching the softening of Mrs. Hughes.

Edith. Practically invisible this week. Nary a mention of her vanishing Canadian and crushed heart. Just: “Edith can drive!”

Best Dowager Countess line? So many to choose from this week! I think my vote goes to: “I do hope I’m interrupting something.”

Have at it! Looking forward to your opinions, your theories, your questions, your favorite bon mots.

Melissa Wiley writes books for children and teens. She lives in San Diego with her comic-book-writing husband, a half dozen kids between the ages of two and sixteen, and about three thousand books. Melissa blogs about her reading life and her family's "tidal homeschooling" adventures at Here in the Bonny Glen. You can find her on Twitter and Google+.

Real Hoverboards from Back To The Future

Category : Electronics, Movies for Mom, Outdoor Activities, Toys, TV, Movies, and Music

Image: ToyArk.com

One of the coolest things from the Back to the Future movies is Marty McFly’s hoverboard. It is basically a skateboard, but it hovers above the ground without the assistance of wheels. This is what makes it so cool, especially if it is Michael J. Fox is riding it. Until now, riding a hoverboard in real life was just a dream.

But it was announced at Toy Fair this year that Mattel is producing a full size and workable version of the hoverboard featured in the Back to the Future movies. I’m a huge fan of these movies, though I know that I’m clutzy enough that I’d probably hurt myself if I got a hoverboard. But I find it very shiny that I could see some kid going down the street riding on a hoverboard.

You can read more about these real life hoverboards here.

"Chaos" Mandy Horetski is an avid Browncoat, blogger, and stay-at-home mom who lives in the mountains of NC with her geeky husband and 3 year old princess. You can find her on Twitter as @ChaosMandy as well as on Google +.

The Secret World Of Arrietty: Lush, Quiet, And Absolutely Wonderful

Category : Family Room, TV, Movies, and Music

We are huge Miyazaki fans in our house. There are Totoros everywhere, stuffed catbuses and soot sprites litter the floor, and on my desk (where I am typing this right now!) is a tiny replica of Howl’s Moving Castle, another soot sprite, and a postcard of “Le Voyage de Chihiro.” Our daughter’s first movie – both here at home and in a movie theatre is “My Neighbor Totoro.” (Thank heavens we live in a city where you can find random Miyazaki retrospectives playing at local art houses!)

Back in 2007 I was very lucky to be cast in a small role in Howl’s Moving Castle. To even have this tiny, tiny part in a Miyazaki film is one of the greatest honors ever bestowed on me. It’s safe to say that he is considered a master of animated film. On my kitchen wall hangs a flyer advertising the Japanese version of The Secret World Of Arrietty. When we were in Tokyo visiting the Ghibli Museum in 2010, we grabbed a couple to take home. I’ve been looking at it every day since then. So, yes, you could say that this film has been “highly anticipated” here at Chez Rutherford.

I was invited to a screening of the film over at Disney Studios, and I braved rush hour traffic to the VALLEY to see it! I know, right? I’m a hero.

And this film did not disappoint. What a lovely treat. It’s one of the most beautiful, lush and highly textured films I’ve ever seen. I’m always blown away by the rich background mattes in Miyazaki’s work, but the attention to detail in this film is just beyond belief.

The story is based upon the famous children’s book series, “The Borrowers” by Mary Norton. I loved these books. I’ve always been taken with the idea of tiny people just out of sight, living their lives around us – be they Borrowers, Faeries, or Leprechauns. Arrietty is a 14 year old Borrower, and it’s her first time to go “borrowing.” But Borrowers must never be seen by humans, and when an invalid boy named Shawn spots Arrietty, her whole family’s life is thrown into turmoil.

Nature always plays a big role in Studio Ghibli films, but in The Secret World Of Arrietty, nature is the absolute star. Scenes would change, and I would audibly gasp as I took in the loveliness and exquisite attention to detail. It’s the kind of beauty that makes you instinctually place your hand over your heart, lest it fill up with gorgeousness and break. Everything was done with such care – flowers that you could reach up and pluck off the screen, the intricate bits and bobs around the house – both human and Borrower. Each droplet of water sparkled – and as Arrietty’s mother poured her family a cup of tea, or served them soup, you could see the surface tension on the droplets as they pushed out of the tiny kettles and pots. Swoon doesn’t do it justice.

Even the sound design transports you in and out of worlds. You hear the way the world sounds to us humans, and then suddenly you realize that without noticing the transition, you’re listening to the gigantic world as it sounds to a Borrower – the room tone is huge, the clock is suddenly deafening.  Outside, the rain has a heavy sound to it, the crows “caw” just the way they do in Japan (I’m always struck by how they actually say, “caw! caw!” in Japan, as opposed to a screech here in the U.S.) You’ll even swear that you can hear the humidity in the air -but maybe it’s just the honeyed sounds of locusts singing about summer.

Lately, I’ve had the soundtrack to Spirited Away on repeat, and so I was looking forward to more music by Joe Hisaishi. But he’s nowhere to be found on this soundtrack. Producer Toshio Suzuki felt that a french artist named Cecile Corbel was the person to write the theme songs for Arrietty and Shawn. The music is lovely – there is the feel of a Scottish ballad to it, and weaves itself well into the film… And then.. well, the movie ends and suddenly there’s another track. It’s called “Summertime,” and it’s performed by Bridgit Mendler, the voice of Arrietty. It’s jarring and makes no sense in relation to the film. To me it felt like someone at Disney said, “We need a hit single! Something the kids nowadays can relate to!” Thankfully, it’s at the very very end of the credits, because WOW is it out of place – it totally has that “tacked on” feeling.

However, the voice acting is not dissonant or jarring at all. Sometimes celebrity voice casting can take you right out of the story. But Amy Pohler and Will Arnett don’t yank you out of your reverie to remind you, “HI I AM AMY POHLER AND I AM SAYING THIS LINE NOW.” Even the very adorable fact that they are married in real life doesn’t have an adverse affect on enjoying the characters. Arnett has an especially tough gig – Arrietty’s father, Pod, is a man of very little words. But Arnett packs a lot in every one of those, “hmms.”

The film is full of quiet moments between so many characters. In many scenes, characters simply look at each other, and it’s all their in their eyes. Mom and Dad, Arrietty & Shawn, Arrietty and the Cat – Arrietty even has a lovely quiet moment with a roly poly!

Within these quiet moments, nature remains the absolute star of the picture. There’s always breathing space within the story for us to watch a ladybug fly away, glimpse a fish swimming in the water, or ants eat some leftover sugar.

And I carried the hushed tone with me. Since it was an evening screening, the drive home offered me the rare absence of my tiny, adorable chatterbox in the back seat. I planned to use the time to catch up on the people I owed phone calls to. You know, fire up the bluetooth, and have some adult conversations. But instead, I found that I was just brimming with the feeling of the film and wanted to stay in that lush, quiet space. I drove in absolute silence all the way home, my head full of sleepy summers, magic, and plans to get started on building faerie gardens in my backyard.

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Kristen is a television writer and a voiceover actress.   She's currently writing The Nerdist for BBC America as well as her usual gig over at Ninja Warrior on G4. Yes, there is a writer for that show. Who do you think types "Brutal Obstacles" and "Achieve Total Victory" over and over? She's also playing a gossipy bird in the upcoming animated feature film Zambezia, and a bunch of characters in the upcoming MMO Guild Wars 2.  Her toddler, Vivienne Ripley pointed at a picture of Princess Leia (Empire version) and said, "Mommy," so as far as she's concerned, she WINS at MOMMING, if not LIFE. She loves Tokyo, all incarnations of the Legend of Zelda (except Windwaker), the Oz books written by L. Frank Baum, and hates talking about herself in the third person. There's more over at www.kristenrutherford.com, and she's  usually running her yap on twitter as @kristensays.

 

Captain America to the Rescue!

Category : Electronics, Technology, Teens, Toys, TV, Movies, and Music, Tweens

One of my geeky loves is technology accessories. If it will work with my iPod, I will fall in love. One day online I stumbled on a pair of Captain America headphones. The artwork brought me back to the earlier days of the character. As a child Captain America was one of my favorite characters. I even made up a song about him that I would walk around the house singing. I thought the headphones were looked pretty cool and figured “why not?”.

The box arrived and I was super excited to test them out.  One problem…my son saw them first. Since he is really big into boxes, I thought that is what he wanted. I was not so lucky. He wanted my headphones. I don’t like to share my geeky toys, but since I was convinced he wouldn’t like them, I let him try them on. I was wrong again. He loved them so much he declared “I think these will be mine now” and then walked off to play “Where’s my water?” on the iPad. 45 minutes later, I had to beg to get them back.

I have always wanted my son to have a pair of headphones for car trips and other times I didn’t feel like listening to “Wheres my water?” or “Sonic the Hedgehog” .  I have looked at most brands and even bought a few different pairs. He never found them interesting or comfortable enough to wear.  I had given up on the fight and felt doomed to forever hear Car’s 20 million times on road trips. It never occurred to me it would be my headphones he would want.

After I finally had my mitts on them I realized why he liked them so much. They are pretty comfy and the sound isn’t too bad either. They are certainly not Boise quality, but for a pair of stylized headphones, they are pretty nice. Unlike the new child headphones, these do not have the volume control, but since my iPod has that feature built in, I’m not missing it.

Since it is so hard to find my son headphones I am giving this one up and just going to get my own. Its amazing how I thought I was beaten and then out of the blue here comes Captain America to save the day. Now gone are the days of listening to Cars 20 million times while on a road trip. Thank you Captain America. You’re my hero!

If you are in need of a hero to save you on car trips, check out Coloud headphones website for a selection of other styles including Hello Kitty, Sponge Bob Square Pants, Star Wars, and NHL styles.

“In exchange for my time and efforts in  reporting my opinion within this blog, I received a free review sample. Even though I receive this benefit, I always give an opinion that is 100% mine.”

 

Dakster Sullivan is a full time Network Administrator, wife and mother. She currently holds a degree in computer engineering and several IT industry certifications. Her hobbies include playing with her 6 year old son, spending time with her husband, everything technology and proudly serving in the 501st legion.

Review: The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice

Category : Books, Library, TV, Movies, and Music

The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice

Anne Rice is probably best know for The Vampire Chronicles series which drew legions of fans into the realm of vampires and demons and things that go bump in the night. Her vampires do not sparkle, nor pretend to be teenagers. They roam the earth killing where they see fit, sometimes the vilest of humans, other times the most innocent. Their stories are tales of vampires as blood-sucking monsters, but they are also tales of what it means to be human.

Rice’s vampires are creatures of thought and intellect who strive to understand their place in a human world. This is what drew me to her novels, which were the first horror or dark fiction novels I ever willingly read. I read Dracula in high school, but that was only for a grade and I did not enjoy the book at the time. The genre did not appeal to me in the least, until I saw the movie, Interview with the Vampire. Seeing those vampires, those sad, desperate, incredibly powerful creatures, struggling with their own sense of morality in a human world, instantly made me want to read the books.

After reading The Vampire Chronicles, I quickly moved on to Lives of The Mayfair Witches and was rewarded again with stories of the supernatural steeped in the conflict of how creatures so far removed from us in power and ability can still live with us and try to maintain a sense of human morality. They are more than just witches, vampires or demons. They are almost human in their struggles, and painful to watch as their tragedies unfold and embrace humans both willingly and by accident.

When Rice released Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt in 2005 it marked a significant change in her writing. Gone were the Gothic settings and supernatural characters of her prior novels only to be replaced with decidedly religious fare. Rice had renounced her ties to the Catholic church as a teenager, and only as an adult in 1998 did she return to the Church. At about the same time she experienced two nearly fatal medical scares and announced that she would be devoting all her future work to promoting her beliefs in God and Christianity. Although many fans embraced these changes, many longed for the rich supernatural stories of her earlier years.

Religion and morality have always had a prominent place in Rice’s works. Even with her changing views, the importance of religion in her life is clear in her writing. Through the stories, the images, the settings, even the music her characters hear and love, Rice has continually explored her spiritual beliefs through her work. Now, after embracing the Catholic Church she once denounced, Rice has again parted ways with the Church and written a new novel, The Wolf Gift, that returns to the style of her earlier works.

The Wolf Gift takes place in present day California in large part on the estate of a beautiful mansion overlooking the Pacific and nestled among giant redwoods. This house, and how it almost becomes a character in the story, is reminiscent of the mansion see in Lives of the Mayfair Witches. Exploring it and finding his way through a new and completely unfamiliar life is young Reuben, a local newspaper reporter. A visit to the estate turns sour when he and his host are attacked in the the middle of the night and Reuben is bitten and given the wolf gift.

At first unaware that it was anything other than an animal, some creature from within the redwoods, Reuben tries to return to his life only to quickly realize that his life is no longer his own. He must come to understand, and hopefully control the werewolf that hides within him and uncover the mystery that surrounds the mansion.

Rice explores a new supernatural world with the werewolves, but with the familiar themes of her past novels. There are mysteries hidden with the mansion, within its walls and contents, and Reuben must understand them if he hopes to save himself and the woman he loves. All this while struggling to understand the werewolf, to embrace what it is without giving up completely his human self.

For those who long for a return to the “old” Anne Rice, this is novel is for you. It has the moral dilemmas and personal struggles of her early stories combined with the supernatural elements that marked those works. The werewolves are a wonderful new creature in her supernatural world. And, although having a definite conclusion, the story leaves enough questions unanswered and characters undeveloped for the possibility of this single novel becoming the start of a fantastic series.

If you are a fan of Anne Rice’s earlier work and have been longing for more of her wonderfully detailed supernatural stories, then pick up a copy of The Wolf Gift when it hits stores on February 14th and immerse yourself in a delicious new world.

A copy of this book was provided for review.

Nicole is mom to two wonderful little Geek Girls. You can find her writing about her geek obsessions over at TotalFanGirl.com and hear her on The GeekMoms Podcast as well as Sith Heads: Star Wars the Old Republic Podcast and The D6 Generation Podcast.