Saturday, May 29, 2010

To Select Books For A Book Club?

Now is your chance to vote on what books you want to read next year during our brand new Sigma Tau Delta Book Club! Try not to judge the books by their covers...I know I included pictures of all of the books in the survey, but if you're unfamiliar with a book please look up a summary/review online.

http://tcnj.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_6EzsBclCYnB1Gni

Please remember:
1. Include your first and last name.
2. Select only your top 5 book choices! Only 5!
3. Type in which book is your #1 choice.

Feel free to rally for the book of your choice on this blog! Post a reply/comment to this blog post, telling us why we should choose a certain book to read.


This following chart shows the top 10 books so far. Keep that in mind as you're voting on books!

Friday, April 23, 2010

To read for 17 hours straight?


Our last post announced our effort to read The Fellowship of the Ring from cover to cover. As of 12:00 pm this afternoon, we were on chapter four, reading away in the Bliss Hall lounge. Come take a break from the end of semester stresses and enjoy Frodo's and Sam's adventures as the leave the Shire and embark on their journey to the dark lands of Mordor!

Friday, April 16, 2010

To Read The Fellowship of the Ring?

We are getting geared up for this year's marathon reading, and for the first time, allowed student members to "vote" with their spare change (all proceeds to the Trenton Public Libraries!). The year, we are reading the first novel in J.R.R. Tolkein's Lord of the Ring trilogy: The Fellowship of the Ring.

This is a novel I first read on the advice of my youngest brother Phil, who devoured it one summer while he attempted to live the rest of his life. He read it while delivering newspapers (American children used to walk around their neighborhoods delivering afternoon papers). He read it while playing Little League ball -- probably the most important reason his coach put him in left field.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

To Find a New Hero?

About a dozen of us attended Chris Abani's talk tonight at the conference. We laughed, wept, and found ourselves questioning the essentializing labels we toss around: refugee, citizen, writer, literature. Earlier in the day, I attended his question and answer session and had much the same reaction to him. His book, Song for Night, is this year's common reader, and I now regret profoundly that we didn't organize an activity around the novella. So I promise $5 for the marathon reading kitty when we get back home. Let's read this profound story of a child soldier as he reconnects with his essential humanity.

I can't even begin to describe all the wonderful things that Abani said, so I would like members to come back in and revise my posting. But the most marvelous thing that he said this morning was "Writers are the curators of our humanity."

--Felicia Steele

To "Meet me in St. Louis"?

March 18, 2010: The first full day of the annual Sigma Tau Delta Conference here in St. Louis, MO. Everyone arrived safely, and everyone successfully registered for the Conference and checked into the hotel. Our rooms overlook the Mississippi River and the Gateway Arch. TCNJ is the largest delegation here at the Convention,with 21 students, 2 faculty, and 29 scholarly essays to be presented.
The Conference registration site has a bulletin board with 9 "outstanding essays" on the Conference theme of "Storytellers," and I was delighted to discover that one of these outstanding essays was written by our own Nicole Pieri! Congrats, Nicole.

I've attended both the Chapter Sponsors session, and picked up some good ideas -- let's celebrate Banned Book week next September -- and my first paper session -- at which Kristen Casabona read a super Toni Morrison essay on Beloved. In addition to the sessions, students are also planning to take the tram to the top of the Gateway Arch and visit the fabulous St. Louis city zoo and the Budweiser Clydesdales (who live here by the Anheuser Busch brewery).

More later . . . Diane Steinberg

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Not to talk about cake!

In celebration of Tim Burton's take on Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland saga (I keep thinking that the film must adapt Through the Looking Glass instead), Sigma Tau Delta is hosting a "Happy Unbirthday" Thursday, March 4, at 11:30 am, in Bliss Hall lounge. But here's the catch: we can't hang flyers on campus because we're serving cake!

That's right ladies and gentlemen, because we secured a food waiver, so that we could save a little money and know that the cake would arrive in the right place at the right time (rather than using on-campus catering), we're not allowed to advertise the fact that we're having cake. Thus, we can't advertise the event, because our flyers won't be authorized, because we already volunteered that we're having cake.
So, DON'T TALK ABOUT CAKE! We're having an unbirthday party, where we will be serving "uncake," a newly minted confection made with a core of light and fluffy pastry lovingly drenched in sweet, creamy, unfrosting!

Revel in the absurdity, beware the jabberwock, and enjoy tea and uncake!
--Felicia Jean Steele --Photo courtesy of the British Library

Thursday, February 25, 2010

To Sell English Major T-Shirts?

Dear Fellow Lovers of English,

Do you chuckle to yourself when you recognize an allusion made to one of Shakespeare's plays? Do you recite quotes from literature in casual conversation with friends? Were you one of those children who hid under the covers in bed, with a flashlight, scrambling to read as much as you could before falling asleep?

If you answered yes to any of those questions....Good news! Sigma Tau Delta is sponsoring a t-shirt sale to help us raise money for our trip to St. Louis. You can support your local chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, as well as receive a cool English-Major-inspired t-shirt that you can wear around campus! The available t-shirts are "TCNJ English" or "English Majors Do It By The Book." Images of what the t-shirts will look like are posted below. Each t-shirt costs $15, and you can place your order at the following link: