TV: “Somebody Somewhere”

Okay.

So first, this is a show on HBO and thus is pretty mature. The protagonist is a middle-aged obese woman in Kansas who has a gay best friend and a trans acquaintance. The show starts as she's still stuck in her hometown after caring for her sister who died of cancer. She has an alcoholic mom and an aging dad.  I'll be honest: this is not my typical TV fare. However, the show is funny and incredibly touching. There's a whole lot of tenderness and kindness here as the town misfits navigate some tough stuff. Anyhow, IF your parents are cool with you watching more mature TV, give this one a shot. Give it at least 2-3 episodes to really get invested in the characters. Season 2 is just out and it's even better.

Warning: Trailer has mature language.

“Classics” I recommend

British

Charles Dickens

David Copperfield – a semiautobiographical novel set in Victorian England. It’s really good. It starts with David as a young boy and follows him into adulthood. It has twists, turns, tragedy, and romance. It’s funny, has hilarious and memorable characters, and some really touching moments.  It was wildly popular when it was initially published. (Like a TV show, individual chapters were published every month or so. People went crazy for the newest “episode.”)

 From Wikipedia: “The novel has a primary theme of growth and change, but Dickens also satirizes many aspects of Victorian life. These include the plight of prostitutes, the status of women in marriage, class structure, the criminal justice system, the quality of schools, and the employment of children in factories.”

Dickens is a slow, descriptive writer, and the book is long. But once you get invested, it’s hard to put down and is an excellent text to improve your reading skills. 

 

DH Lawrence

Sons and Lovers – DH Lawrence is the guy who wrote “A Rockinghorse Winner,” the short story I likely gave you in class. In this book, Lawrence “traces emotional conflicts through the protagonist, Paul Morel, and his suffocating relationships with a demanding mother and two very different lovers, which exert complex influences on the development of his manhood” (Wikipedia).  I love DH Lawrence's writing style and the way he gets deep into the minds of his characters. 

Lady Chatterly’s Lover –  I haven’t read this one yet, but I know it is one of his most famous novels, and at the time, was the subject of censorship due to “obscenity” (in 1929). According to Wikipedia, “The story concerns a young married woman, the former Constance Reid (Lady Chatterley), whose upper-class Baronet husband, Sir Clifford Chatterley, described as a handsome, well-built man, is paralyzed from the waist down because of a Great War injury. Constance has an affair with the gamekeeper, Oliver Mellors. The class difference between the couple highlights a major motif of the novel. The central theme is Constance's realization that she cannot live with the mind alone. That realization stems from a heightened sexual experience that Constance has felt only with Mellors, suggesting that love requires the elements of both body and mind.”

 

Thomas Hardy

Hardy is really tough, but he’s one of my favorite authors. He uses lots of thick descriptions and can be a struggle to get through. However, his descriptive, dense writing is totally worth it. The plots of his novels are excellent. I read my first Hardy novel in AP Lit and it’s stuck with me ever since. 

Tess of the d'Urbervilles - An absolutely heartbreaking novel about a poor young woman. She is raped (maybe. It’s very ambiguous), gives birth to a child, starts over, almost finds happiness, and then things get absolutely bonkers at the end. My favorite Hardy novel. 

Jude the Obscure- A bright young man is seduced by a woman who pretends to be pregnant with his child. Things get wild from there, and the ending of the book is also absolutely bonkers. 

A Pair of Blue Eyes A girl must decide between two men: one older and successful and one who is ambitious but “below” her station. 

Far From the Madding Crowd - One of his only happy novels. A young woman inherits a farm and instead of marrying, decides to run the estate herself. She must make the choice between three different men. 

 

American:

 

John Steinbeck

John Steinbeck writes some great fiction set in early 20th-century America, often during the Great Depression. Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men, and Cannery Row are some of his most famous novels. You may read Of Mice and Men junior year, but that’s a good introduction to Steinbeck. Grapes of Wrath is excellent, but long. 

 

Earnest Hemingway

Hemingway was a man’s man in every respect of the world. Seriously. Go read his biography on Wikipedia. It’s insane. His writing is sparse, direct, and simple, but there is always a ton of stuff simmering under the surface. He’s best known for stories and books like “Old Man and the Sea,” For Whom the Bell Tolls, A Farewell to Arms, and The Sun Also Rises. I’ve read a number of his short stories, but have yet to finish one of his novels.

 

Scott Fitzgerald

Scott Fitzgerald is known as an early 20th-Century author who was obsessed with wealth, ego, and the “Golden girl” – the girl every other girl wants to be and the girl every guy wants to be with. Start with his short story “The Offshore Pirate.” While he is best known for his novel The Great Gatsby, I like his first novel, This Side of Paradise way more. It’s a semi-autobiographical account of a young, upper-middle-class young man who learns more about himself, love, status, and meaning in the ballrooms and campuses of the rich in America. I always feel like a brilliant, sophisticated, tortured soul after I read his fiction. 

 

E.B. White

E.B. White, largely known for “Charlotte’s Web” and “Stuart Little,” is one of the best American essayists of the 20th century. He published a lot of stuff; find something that interests you. I particularly love his autobiographical story “The Years of Wonder” about being a broke young man, convinced he was an unappreciated genius, who boards a cruise ship bound for Alaska. If you read it carefully, it’s laugh-out-loud funny. 

 

Judith Wharton 

Ethan Frome is a novella about a man in and New England town who is unhappily married to a sick wife. His wife’s younger cousin, full of vibrance of life and passion, comes to stay with them and care for her. He falls for the cousin, and when she is about to be sent away, Ethan considers running away with her. The story ends tragically. This one hits hard. 

 

Other:

 

Chekhov

Largely considered the world’s best short story writer and writer in general. He was a realist writer from Russia. His stories give “a reflection of ourselves in our unadorned ordinariness as well as our unfathomable strangeness” (Lasdun). His stories aren’t dramatic, but they’re full of nuance and moodiness. I would Google famous Chekhov stories and see if you like them!

 

Hermann Hesse

Steppenwolf - This is the first Hermann Hess novel I’ve read, but I’ve liked most of them. Hesse writes a lot about purpose, spirituality, and self-development; according to Wikipedia, many of his novels explore “an individual's search for authenticity, self-knowledge, and spirituality.” In this novel, a middle-aged, middle-class man lives a miserable existence. He is given a pamphlet for a “Magic Theater” and a pamphlet called “The Treatise of the Steppenwolf” which is about “a man who believes himself to be of two natures: one high, the spiritual nature of man; the other is low and animalistic, a ‘wolf of the steppes.’ This man is entangled in an irresolvable struggle, never content with either nature because he cannot see beyond this self-made concept. The pamphlet gives an explanation of the multifaceted and indefinable nature of every man's soul, but Harry is either unable or unwilling to recognize this. It also discusses his suicidal intentions, describing him as one of the ‘suicides’: people who, deep down, knew they would take their own life one day. But to counter that, it hails his potential to be great, to be one of the ‘Immortals’” (Wikipedia).

Other Hesse novels I like:

Siddhartha - You may read this one sophomore year. A young man in India searches for Enlightenment at the same time the Buddha has reached enlightenment, but Siddhartha’s path is much different. This on hits hard. 

Narcissus and Goldmund - Two young men search for meaning and take two totally different paths. That’s kind of a shitty summary that doesn't do it justice. It’s really, really good. 

Beneath the Wheel - A young, intellectually gifted man pursues knowledge but not personal or social development. Also a very good novel and, perhaps, a cautionary tale for young people who place ALL their value on academics. 

 

Poetry:

Poetry is tough to recommend. Everyone likes different types of poetry. I’m a big fan of the Romantic poets (Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, Byron, Shelley), but they’re tough and are probably best read with an explanation from a teacher/video/website to fully understand. If you’re looking for more “Classic” poetry, consider looking at a poetry anthology like the ones published by Norton. You can even just look at the table of contents in such anthologies and often find the poems online for free. 

If you’re looking for more modern, accessible poetry, there’s actually a lot of good stuff out there. In fact, I’m increasingly seeing young people sharing their original poetry on Instagram. If you’re looking for short, simple, hard-hitting, and occasionally spicy poems written from a female perspective, consider the book of poems Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur.

Playlists

Below you'll find some of my favorite music.

"Best of the Best" - My current favorites

"Hipster" - An eclectic mix of stuff. 20 hours long and collected over 15 years.

"Melancholy" - Slower, sadder stuff. Grab some tissues for those tears. 10 hours of sadness

"Simpin" - Love songs

"Heartbreak" - Songs of lost love

"Summer Road Trip" - Upbeat music for your summer adventures

"Late Night Drive" - Moody music for late nights.

"90s Breakup" - Breakup songs from my own youth

 

Johnson’s List of “Books Every Teenager Should Read”

Wuthering Heights by Charlette Bronte

A difficult but powerful novel about two people who fall in love. Their love is so intense that it burns them and everyone else around them to the ground. I think the central question you must answer in this novel is "Can true love be destructive?"

On the Road by Jack Kerouac

Jack Kerouac was a "Beat Generation" writer. He was a part of the generation of young people in the 50s (before the Hippy movement) who hitchhiked around the country, wrote poetry, climbed mountains, danced all night (and partied pretty hard.) Kerouac wrote the book in just a few days and writes in a weird, stream-of-consciousness style. It's about young people thirsting for adventure. Highly recommend.

Walden by Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau lived by himself in the woods for two years and kept a journal. He's from the mid-1800s and wordy, but he offers a lot of reflection and thought-provoking ideas for you to chew on. Also, it's a great text to use for AP Lang essays!

The Gift by Hafiz

This is a book of poetry written by a Sufi mystic poet. (Sufists are Muslim). It's a modern translation of these old poems that are religiously-themed, but is funny, playful, and full of deep ideas and joy. If you are religious, despite your tradition, you would get a lot out of this. The poems are short and simple. Here's one of my favorites:

God
and I have become
like two giant fat people living
in a tiny
boat.

We
keep bumping into
each other
and laughing

Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy

This is a Victorian novel. Hardy is a tough, dense writer, but he's worth it. The story is about a guy having everything going for him. Then he meets a girl who seduces him and gets pregnant. He has to abandon his dreams now that he has a family. It ends incredibly tragically. I read this in AP Lit my senior year, and it hit hard. A great novel to attempt to improve your vocabulary and challenge yourself as a reader.

Marcus Aurelius' Meditations

This is one of the best-selling books in the history of the world. It is Marcus Aurelius, a Roman Emporer's, personal journal. If you are into Stoic philosophy, you'll really like this.

Essays by Wendell Berry

We've read a few of these in class. Wendell Berry is one of my personal heroes. He's also a poet. He's all about simple living, fulfilling work, and living in deep connection with the land and one's community. These are also good essays to use to analyze rhetoric in preparation for AP Lang.

Watchmen by Alan Moore

This graphic novel, while quite mature, is insane. It seems like it's about superheroes, but it's not. It's about the darkness of man and our response to that darkness. I'm not a big graphic novel guy, but this one kept me thinking for days.

The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides

This was the debut novel of Jeffrey Eugenides. His second novel won the Pulitzer. It's a tragic, lyrically novel with amazing sentences and passages that will keep a pen in your hand annotating. Below is the summary from Amazon:

First published in 1993, The Virgin Suicides announced the arrival of a major new American novelist. In a quiet suburb of Detroit, the five Lisbon sisters--beautiful, eccentric, and obsessively watched by the neighborhood boys--commit suicide one by one over the course of a single year. As the boys observe them from afar, transfixed, they piece together the mystery of the family's fatal melancholy, in this hypnotic and unforgettable novel of adolescent love, disquiet, and death. Jeffrey Eugenides evokes the emotions of youth with haunting sensitivity and dark humor and creates a coming-of-age story unlike any of our time. ...The Virgin Suicides is a modern classic, a lyrical and timeless tale of sex and suicide that transforms and mythologizes suburban middle-American life.

More to come...

Johnson’s 2023 Summer Adventure List

Here's list of brief outdoor adventures I would recommend this summer:

Day Hikes:

* = easy

** = moderate

*** = difficult

**** = epic suffer-fest

  1. Baldy*
  2. Mile-Hi *
  3. Blacktail**
  4. Roundtop**
  5. Vista***
  6. Mount Magnificent**
  7. 7-peaks**** (1-6 together on the same day. Start at Baldy and end at Mile-Hi. It’s a brutal day with lots of elevation gain/loss)
  8. Harp Mountain**
  9. Goldstar/POW Peak or Pepper Peak** (Accessed from Eklutna Valley)
  10. Gordon-Lyon* or Rendezvous Peak* (Arctic Valley)
  11. Government Peak** (Matsu)
  12. Lazy Mountain**
  13. Matanuska Peak *** (Matsu. Starts near Lazy Mountain trailhead. Tough hike, but worth it)
  14. Bird Ridge**
  15. Bear Mountain* (Peters Creek)
  16. Mt Eklutna** (Peters Creek. Hike back on the old road 1.5 miles until you see the sign. You can also climb Bear Mountain, take the ridge up the valley, climb Mt. Eklutna, and come back on the Mt. Eklutna trail)
  17. Caine’s Head** (Starts in Seward. You have to hike it at low tide to get to Caine’s Head, and hike back on low tide as well.)
  18. Slaughter Gulch*** (Kenai Peninsula. Epic views)
  19. (There are a ton of good day hikes and short backpacking trips in the front range east of Anchorage, but I simply haven't done many of them, though they are on my list for this summer!)
  20. Bold Peak.**** Semi-technical and the approach is from the East Fork of Eklutna River. Best accessed by ATV on the days they are allowed. 
  21. Upper Winner Creek *** 14 miles round trip. Amazing views at the end. Haven't done this one either but plan to this summer.)

Backpacking trips with inexperienced friends:

  1. Eagle and Symphony Lakes (My #1 suggestion for taking friends new to backpacking.)
  2. Reed Lakes (Hatcher Pass)
  3. Williwaw Lakes (start from Flattop trailhead)
  4. Hike/camp between Baldy and Blacktail. There are some ponds and small creeks up there for water. You can also start at Baldy, camp on the plateau between Baldy and Blacktail, and hike out down Ptarmigan Valley if you don't want to do a there-and-back trip. 
  5. Johnson Pass** (Kenai Peninsula. Haven’t done it yet, but I hear it’s easy)
  6. Crescent Lake** (Kenai Peninsula. Haven’t done it yet)
  7. Caine’s Head** (Starts in Seward. You have to hike it at low tide to get to Caine’s Head and hike back on low tide as well. Haven’t done it yet, but know plenty of people who have. You can also kayak there and back instead.)
  8. Resurrection Pass***: This is a 45ish-mile trail from Hope to Cooper Landing. I would plan 3-4 nights. The trail is fairly easy. Camp near streams/lakes. You can also make it a shorter trip by coming in/out from Devil's Pass. You can also mountain bike the trail, which is way more fun. (The last 10 miles are mostly flat or downhill, but you’d need bikes set up for hauling/camping.) I would only do this one with moderately experienced friends, not beginners, since it’s kinda long.
  9. If you have access to ATVs, go to the end of Eklutna Lake and stop at the East Fork Eklutna River Trailhead. The trail is small and rough, and you have to follow game trails or walk along the riverbank once in a while. There are some incredible waterfalls back there. If you go five miles back to a large mound in the middle of the river valley, the views are life-changing. You could camp a night or two out there, but be back in time for ATVs to still use the trail (Sunday-Wednesday). Otherwise, it’s gonna be a long walk home!

Backpacking trips with experienced family/friends:

I’d definitely do this with someone who has hiked the trail before. It’s a five-mile uphill hike to the pass. The rest of the 20-something miles is downhill or flat, but not easy. The trail is rough and is occasionally difficult to find. There is a river crossing of Eagle River near where it comes out from the glacier. I would pack sandals to make the crossing easier. Link arms with your companions and unbuckle your waist belt on your pack in case you slip. Lots of bears on this trail too. You can do it in a day, 1 night, or two nights. If you do two nights, I would camp in the campsite a mile after the river crossing. (I think it’s called the Gorge or something.) If you do two nights, camp near the pass or Thunder Gorge the first night, and Twin or Heritage Falls the second night. 

This is a ridge in Denali State Park that parallels the highway. I would do this hike when there’s clear weather. The views of Denali and the Alaska Range are stunning when the weather is nice. It’s a thirty-mile trail, and I’d take 3 nights to do it. You start from the Little Coal Creek Trailhead and end at Byers Lake Campground (will need to have a car waiting for you or parked at Byers Lake.) It’s a tough climb to the ridge, and then some fairly mellow of ups and downs along the ridge. Watch for bears. Also, watch for thunderstorms if it’s a nice day because you’re on the tundra and exposed on the ridge pretty much the whole time. Plan to spend one night near Ermine Creek. It’s more or less the halfway point, and there is a trail from there leading to the highway if you need to bail. There are some really cool granite monoliths to explore there. The hike down from the ridge to Byers Lake can get really slick after heavy rains, with steep cliffs nearby. (Also, don't let ground squirrels get into your food and eat your Chili Mac. Ask me how I know.)

  1. Hatcher Pass Hut Hop. (Advanced. Need to be okay with rocky scrambles and glacier travel. But you don’t need ropes or crampons)

Start at the Gold Mint trailhead in Hatcher Pass. On the first day, walk to the Mint Hut. The next day, hike to the Bomber hut. The next day, hike to the Snowbird hut. You walk out from the Snowbird hut to the Reed Lakes trailhead. I would only do this one if you’re with really experienced people, know the locations of the huts, and are comfortable with steep trails and scrambles and walking on glaciers (very few crevasses). I think you need to be a member of the American Alpine Club and/or the Alaska Mountaineering Club to use some of the huts (but no one is going to check.) Also, the huts are first-come, first-served, so you probably need to bring a tent or bivy sack to sleep outside if the hut is full. Reach out to me if you want more info on this one. 

 

Rock Climbing:

Go to the Alaska Rock gym and get certified in top-rope climbing. Climb and boulder there. 

There’s a great book called “The Scar” that has climbs in southcentral, mostly along Turnagain Arm, Hatcher Pass, and along the Glenn Highway north of Chickaloon.(I wouldn't start rock climbing outside until you’ve taken a class, bought all your needed climbing gear, and go with experienced, trusted friends.) 

 

Random Ideas:

  • A walk to the mouth of Peters Creek. There’s a municipal park and a trail. Short walk, but nice being near the ocean and has a nice view of upper Cook Inlet! Stay off the mud flats. (Off of Stolze Rd. in Chugiak)
  • Beach hike/day at Beach Lake. Hike or paddle to the far end of Beach Lake. You’ll see a trail going down to the beach. You can walk a mostly gravel beach if you head left (south). Watch for bears. Don't go on the mud flats.
  • Gold prospecting. Bertha Creek near Turnagain Pass. There's a campground there, and the recreational gold mining area is upstream of the highway.  There’s also a good spot in Petersville, but reach out if you want to do that one. There are lots of private mining claims around.
  • If you’ve never been to Matanuska Lake, there’s a cool island, a dock you can jump off of, and some rope swings from trees (past the island). It’s a cool spot but doesn’t have much of a beach other than on the island, which you can hike to from the parking lot. Take the trail that wraps the lake counterclockwise. Watch out for sketchy Valley dudes. 
  • Float trips:
    • Eagle River: Be very, very careful of sweepers and log jams. Best to do this when the water level is lower. Put in at North Fork and take out at Briggs Bridge. Day trip.
    • Little Susitna: 3-day, 2-night trip at least. A fairly mellow (and at times shallow) river. Do it early in the year when there are few motorized boats on the river, which is quite narrow.
    • Knik (Put in at the Old Glenn bridge and take out at New Glenn bridge. Mellow and slow. Stay in the main channel. Watch for motorboats.) Day trip.
  • Berry picking
    • Red currants and raspberries starting in late July
    • Blueberries starting in mid-August.

 

Legends of the Fall

A sprawling epic that spans the mountains of Montana to the battlefields of World War 1. Three brothers are raised by their father on a ranch in Montana.  The youngest brother brings his fiance home, but all three brothers fall in love with her. It's touching, tragic, and beautiful. (Language, nudity, violence. FYI.)

Garden State

This movie has one of the best trailers and one of the best soundtracks ever. It's about a young man who flies home for his mom's funeral after spending most of his youth numb to the world. I would label it a dark comedy. (It has lots of language, drug use, and brief inappropriate nudity. FYI.)

Comet

This movie is one of my favorite of all time. I thought about this movie for WEEKS after I first watched it. It's clever, it's artsy, it's trippy, and it's heartbreaking. While it never got much publicity, it's in my "Top Ten Favorite Movies" list. (It also has quite a bit of naughty language. FYI.)

Intermediate hikes in Chugiak/Eagle River

These hikes are great starter hikes for people looking to "climb" mountains instead of hiking level trails.

Other websites to explore local hiking options:

Mt. Baldy

Top of Baldy. (Photo Credit Emily Harcum)
Top of Baldy. (Photo Credit Emily Harcum)

This is the most popular hike in the Eagle River area. Take Skyline Dr. to the very end of the road (the road name changes a few times on your way up; just keep going straight on the main road. You will arrive a the end of the road with two gates -- one at the end of the road, and one angling uphill. Park on the south side of the road. The trail is generally broad and easy. However, near the top of the mountain, the trail gets a lot steeper with some loose rock. This is a great, easy "climb" to start with. Because there are always plenty of people on the trail, wildlife or other dangers are minimal.

Harp Mountain

This is a substantial hike with a fairly relentless climb. Drive to the end of Hiland/South Fork Valley by turning onto Hiland Dr. When you see the sign/turn for the South Fork trailhead, keep going straight until the road ends at a culdesac. Park on the uphill side. Watch for "no parking" and "private property" signs. Harp Mountain is the major peak to your east. Take the ridge to your south all the way to the top. The views are incredible! However, be aware that while you can hike this peak in the winter, and many do, Harp Mountain can have avalanche dangers.

Rendezvous Peak and Mt. Gordon-Lyon

These two small peaks are to the right and left, respectfully, as you reach the end of the Arctic Valley trail. Both peaks are easy climbs. For more information on Arctic Valley, check out this post.

Gold Star Peak

I haven't done this one (yet), but I've heard it's a good one! It's in Eklutna valley. Find more info here!

Bear Mountain

Take the Peters Creek exit. Right of the exit onto Ski Rd. Follow until the road comes to a "T." Turn right. Follow the main road all the way up. You'll see a trailhead sign at the end of Malcom drive. Go through the gate and you'll find yourself on a wide, old roadbed. Go another 100 yards or so and you'll see a trail heading up the mountain to your left. Be aware that the first portion of the trail crosses private property. In fact, the owners built a cabin near the trail. Follow the path. The second half of the hike is steeper and will give you a good workout. Once you get to the top, you'll be on a big plateau. If you go west, you can hike to a point overlooking Peters Creek and the Matsu Valley. If you head east, you can access Sawtooth and Eklutna Peaks. I like this trail because it's near my house and is far less traveled than the Baldy trail.

Mile-Hi

Mile-Hi is an unimproved trail that starts on the north side of Eagle River Valley. To get there, take either Steward Dr or Mile Hi Ave. Continue up the steep, switchback roads until you find the trailhead near the end of the road. The trail goes up into a saddle of the ridge. From there, you can do a short hike onto the ridge on your left. If you take a right, the trail follows the ridge to Mt. Tucker and Mount Magnificant. Mt. Tucker is an excellent hike with astounding views. The approach to Mount Magnificent includes a narrow, steep ridge, and is probably not best for newer hikers.

Twin Peaks Trail

View from the trail of Eklutna Lake
View from the trail of Eklutna Lake

This trailhead starts near the Eklutna Lake campground. The trail works its way up the mountain towards Twin Peaks, which you really shouldn't climb without lots of experience. Halfway up the trail is the beginning of Pepper Peak, which is a manageable hike. Once you get above the treeline, the views are phenomenal!

Les Miserables

This one is based on the play/musical Les Miserables (itself an adaptation of a novel originally written by Victor Hugo)and tells the tale of several people during the June Rebellion in France. It's got a lot of famous actors in it like Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway, Eddie Redmayne, Amanda Seyfried, Helena Bonham Carter, and Sacha Baron Cohen.

While I'm not a huge musical guy, this film is amazing. I definitely cried the last time I watched it. Be aware that the entire movie is sung by the actors; however, the lyrics are easy to understand, and it's a visually stunning movie.

I 10/10 recommend. Everyone has to watch it at least once.