Monday, March 11, 2013

Problems

I had fun combining Trifecta's prompt, Time, with the bonus prompt from Write on Edge, Hugo's song 99 Problems.  This piece, while fiction, is a subject close to my heart as I grew up in a military family and have several friends currently serving.  One is stationed in Afghanistan right now.  Thankfully he comes home soon.  After reading my take on the two prompts, be sure to check out other answers.


“Problems?  You’re complaining about your so called problems?” he growled at a pair of teenage girls bemoaning their lack of money to go shopping for clothes they did not need after they flagged down a janitor to clean up the mess they made of their meals.

One gave the scruffy looking man a dirty look.  A blind man could see she didn’t care.  He, however, wouldn’t accept that.

“Let me tell you a little about real problems.  I didn’t start out working as a janitor here at the mall.  I don’t enjoy cleaning up after brats so spoiled their biggest issue is money for more stuff they don’t need.

“I graduated.  Then I joined the military.  I got shipped out, separated from my girlfriend and our son.  I watched several friends get torn apart by bombs.  I had to choose between stopping a convoy and putting more friends at risk or hitting a kid standing in the road.  When I got back I couldn’t sleep because of the memories.  Going outside terrified me.  I even assaulted my girlfriend once not realizing who she was because of the memories.  They left for their safety. I was too unpredictable.  I don’t know if I’ll ever see them again.

“I did this for the people who live here.  I did this for my family.  I did this for girls like you so you could go shopping in public without fear.”

I could see his words hit home for them.  They squirmed in their seats, trading guilty looks.

“You’re right.  We should be happier for what we have,” one mumbled into her ice cream.

“Just remember – no matter how bad you have it, there is always someone else who has it worse,” the man finished cleaning and walked away.

Listening to him made me realize it was time for me to change the way I looked at things as well.  I needed to do something more with my life.  I couldn’t take it for granted anymore.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Percy Jackson and the Olympians

So, I'm going to cheat a little.  This review is of the whole Percy Jackson and the Olympians series, not just one book.  It's easier that way - and I catch up some.

This is a series of 5 books by Rick Riordan.  Percy starts out at 12 and the series ends when he turns 16.  Overall I have to say I liked the books.  Keep in mind they are aimed at kids, not adults.  If you go into it looking for an adult level reading experience, you will be disappointed.  But, from a young teenage perspective (which is the intended audience), this is a great series.  It is fast paced, fairly heavy on the action and a fun subject.

I would say my biggest negative critique is that I don't know if the character development across the series was quite enough.  To go from 12 to 16 in the series, it felt a little like Percy didn't grow up much despite getting older.  Maybe that's just me, though.  Like I said, these are intended to be kids books.

In the end, I though the series was a fun read.  That, to me, is the most important since it may help inspire kids to read more.  I would recommend it to most adults looking for a pure, simple, fun set of books to read as well as most kids.