katefishernyc
katefishernyc
I'm not, like, a regular tutor. I'm a cool tutor.
21 posts
Professional Teenologist | NYC
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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When I was 17, a friend gave me a copy of Norwegian Wood for my birthday, and I proceeded to read the entirety of Murakami’s oeuvre to the point where I was unable to easily distinguish some of his works from others due to how many tropes and themes and motifs he reuses.
I’m woefully behind on current Murakami—I’m fairly certain the last work of his I read was Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage (2013), although I own Men Without Women (2014) and an advance copy of Killing Commendatore (2017).
That said...I’m still a Murakami fangirl at heart, and this is awesome.
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Because how happy can anyone really be, all the time? How could there be time for that? Mostly we're just trying to get through the day.
Fredrik Backman, Anxious People (2020)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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My super-speedy book review—Is this a thing? It has to be a thing; I can’t be the first person who thought to use Tik Tok for this—for Interior Chinatown by Charles Yu (2020).
Favorite quotations:
“No one in Chinatown able to separate the past from the present, always seeing in him (and in each other, in yourselves), all of his former incarnations, the characters he’d played in your minds long after the parts had ended.”
“Nothing like an empty stomach to remind you what you are.”
“Some people think it isn’t the worst thing in the world to die. Because if you never die—if you play the same role too long—you start to get confused. Forget who you really are.”
“A toast: to not being other people anymore.” 
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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As soon as I posted my original response, I was, like, well, wait. Am I saying that Ron/Hermione don’t have PTSD? 
If I had room for a middle column, Jane & Rochester would have gone there 😉
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It’s, like, really hard to find literary couples who end up both happy AND together. Go watch some Nora Ephron or Nancy Meyers instead maybe.
(Also, very proud of two runners up for the Not So Much column: Oedipus & Jocasta and Captain Ahab & Moby Dick.)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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OK, this is 100% a fair question. Jane Eyre can be considered an early work of feminist literature if you tilt your head and squint your eyes, but if you look at it within the context of 21st century mores, for much of the novel, she’s portrayed as inferior to Rochester and yes, reader, she marries him, but I’m of the mind that this particular ending is more an adherence to the literary trope of the marriage plot than anything else.
Also, they only get married once, like, a whole mess of bad things happen. So, yes, perhaps happier than others included in the Not So Much column, but happily ever after sans any major bodily harm or other traumatic hullaballoo? No. 
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It’s, like, really hard to find literary couples who end up both happy AND together. Go watch some Nora Ephron or Nancy Meyers instead maybe.
(Also, very proud of two runners up for the Not So Much column: Oedipus & Jocasta and Captain Ahab & Moby Dick.)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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It’s, like, really hard to find literary couples who end up both happy AND together. Go watch some Nora Ephron or Nancy Meyers instead maybe.
(Also, very proud of two runners up for the Not So Much column: Oedipus & Jocasta and Captain Ahab & Moby Dick.)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Part 2 of my Hamilton parody about CollegeBoard getting rid of SAT subject tests and the SAT essay. 
Part 1 here.
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Part 1 of my Hamilton parody about CollegeBoard getting rid of SAT subject tests and the SAT essay.
Part 2 here.
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Basic trig intro. Weirdly proud of those SOH CAH TOA bubbles.
In a right triangle, we use sine, cosine, and tangent to relate the ratios of a triangle’s sides to its angles. 
SOH means that sine equals the length of the side opposite from the angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse.
CAH means that cosine equals the length of the side adjacent to the angle divided by the length of the hypotenuse.
TOA mean that tangent equals the length of the side opposite from the angle divided by the length of the side adjacent to the angle.
Hint: We use these ratios for a right triangle’s acute angles only (the two non-right angles; remember: an acute angle is less than 90 degrees). 
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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I had so much fun doing micro-reviews of my favorite reads from 2020, that I decided to do a monthly round up. Here’s what I read this January and my quick thoughts on each. Stay tuned for February’s list next month.
January 2021 Reading Round-Up
Interior Chinatown by Charles Yu (2020)
genre-bending
important commentary about Asian identity in the U.S.
what is real vs. performative
weird, but I liked it.
Uncanny Valley by Anna Wiener (2020)
well written and interesting
memoir that reads like a novel
sometimes self indulgent (but, ok: memoir)
Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell (2020)
loved the multiple timelines
gorgeous writing
Shakespeare is never mentioned by name → cool
caution warning: bubonic plague
Topics of Conversation by Miranda Popkey (2020) 
probably not everyone’s cup of tea, but I liked it
every chapter is a different conversation in the narrator’s life
I like unlikable narrators, so
The Incendiaries by R.O. Kwon (2018)
has been on my bookshelf a long time
cults, fire, college
a debut novel
some great writing
didn’t really “get” parts from cult leader’s POV 
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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The SAT and ACT can feel scary, or at times, even like bullies á la Regina George. Take it one step at a time. Practice. Focus on both your strengths and the areas where you can improve. And don’t be afraid to ask for help if you need it. (And, yes, this GIF/meme was 100% inspired by a conversation with one of my students.)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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“She generally gave herself very good advice (though she very seldom followed it).” - Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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I was talking to a friend earlier and said I wasn’t sure why snow days still exist when many schools are now equipped to teach remotely. She replied, “If there’s more than four inches of snow on the ground, children should be playing in it.” Stay safe, stay warm, stay cozy, and don’t forget to stop and smell the snow.
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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...for when a memory is retold, its particulars, inevitably, are brightened or muted depending on the arc of the story of which it is a part...
Miranda Popkey, Topics of Conversation (2020)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Collaborative note-taking using GoodNotes to help a seventh grade student study for a science quiz on elements, compounds, and molecules.
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicentre, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns.
Maggie O’Farrell, Hamnet (2020)
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katefishernyc · 5 years ago
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We were too old to use innocence as an excuse. Hubris, maybe. Indifference, preoccupation. Idealism. A certain complacency endemic to people for whom things had, in recent years, turned out okay.
Anna Wiener, Uncanny Valley (2020)
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