Saturday, March 25, 2017

Wrinkling

What I read:
The three Mrs. take Meg, Calvin, and Charles Wallace to another planet called Uriel.  Once they arrive, Meg believes that they have traveled through another dimension.  The three Mrs. explain that they have wrinkled in time.  This is explained by using the drawing of the ant below.  In the book, there is the concept that if an ant walks on a string from one end to the other, it might take 10 seconds.  But if a person folds the string into two parts, the ant can now walk across in less than one second.  This is the 5th Dimension in the book.





We also find out about a mysterious black shadow that is fighting against the stars and planets, especially when stars die.  It turns out that Meg's father is being held behind the black shadow, which is described as pure evil.  Meg and Charles Wallace find out that they will have to fight the Black Thing to save their father and return home with him.



In the last chapter I read the children meet an upbeat woman called The Happy Medium.  She can show them the earth and what's happening there, but she doesn't want to look at something so melancholy.  The children wrinkle in time again and end up on a planet where Meg and Charles Wallace's father is supposed to be held.  There they have to separate from the three Mrs.  Each Mrs. gives each child a gift so that they can be successful in rescuing Mr. Murry.  They leave the three Mrs. and go into a really weird town where all everything is synchronized and no one seems like a real person.   


What I thought about:
The way that evil is being represented in this book is amazing.  Making dark things look evil and bad is always interesting to me.  It must be hard for authors to describe with words what evil would look like if we could see it, and I think that Madeleine L'Engle did an outstanding job of describing what evil is in this book.



The concept of having a 5th Dimension (tessering or wrinkling through time) is also really fascinating.  L'Engle describes this concept of science fiction with pictures, like the one of the ant shown above.  I think that this is extremely well done in the book because it's such a complicated theme but it's so easy to understand.  It's hard to describe this in words, but with the pictures it's all clear.  I love this idea of wrinkling through time in the 5th Dimension and wish that this were possible.



What I conclude:
At this point I'm about half way through the book.  I always liked science fiction and I'm not surprised that I'm really enjoying this book.  Probably talking about the dimensions is not my favorite science fiction theme, but this book is well written all the same.

At first I thought that the three Mrs. were witches because they seemed so magical.  But in these chapters that I read, we find out that Mrs. Whatsit was actually a star who gave up her star life to fight the Black Thing and saved much of the Milky Way galaxy by doing so.  This to me seems much cooler than being a witch.  Being a former star seems much more magical and strange.  I like the idea that now she can take a human form, but that's still a star.



Sunday, March 19, 2017

The Three Mrs.

What I read:
For this new blog post, I've started reading A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle.  I've heard that it's a classic science fiction novel.

Meg, the main character, is a 13-year old girl that lives with her mom and her three brothers.  Two of her brothers are twins and their names are Sandy and Dennys. They are 10 years old.  They also have a youngest brother called Charles Wallace who is strange yet very smart.  He is only five years old.  They have a father, but he is missing at the start of the book.  Other people think that the father is dead, but Meg and her mother don't believe it.

At the beginning of the story, Meg, her mother, and Charles Wallace meet and old woman called Mrs. Whatsit.  When Mrs. Whatsit arrives at their house, she talks about a "tesseract" that is in existence, which makes Meg's mother have a strong reaction.

Soon Meg and Charles Wallace leave the house and meet Mrs. Who in a cabin that is supposed to be haunted.  Mrs. Who speaks different languages, one of which is Latin.  At this point, they have already picked up another companion, which is a slightly older boy named Calvin.  Meg, Charles Wallace, and Calvin meet one last "Mrs. W" who is Mrs. Which.  She seems to have the ability to appear out of thin air.  All three of the Mrs. Ws are strange in one way or another.

What I thought about:
I certainly wonder what a "tesseract" is.  It mentions in the book that Meg's father was working on something about a tesseract when he disappeared.  I think that this tesseract is going to be an important part of the story.


Everybody in the story thinks that Meg and her family are crazy and weird because they don't believe that the father is dead.  This got me thinking about how hard it is to deal with something when no one else believes you.  It would be hard enough to deal with the disappearance of a loved one, but even worse to deal with people around you treating you like you are insane.

What I conclude:
This book sounds really interesting already.  Normally I'm a fan of science fiction movies, but not novels.  I'm excited to have the chance to read one of my favorite genres for this assignment.  I've also been curious about this book for a long time.  I can't wait to get to the end of this book to find out what happens.