raising creative kids

This post on Maternal Spark on the subject of raising creative kids got me thinking. Honestly, creativity is not something you need to push onto a kid. It’s inborn. The trick is to get out of the way of their creativity. Read them lots of books; lay in a good supply of props (blocks and legos, dress-up clothes, play kitchen materials, etc.); and give them plenty of unstructured time and their own space. Oh, and unplug the TV and remove all batteries from electronic toys. Sheer boredom, if nothing else, will give them the impetus to use their imaginations.

Here’s an example from my own family: Shortly after Christmas, I found my older two piling blocks on chairs and placing Miss M’s stuffed puppies in front of them. They informed me that they were Grinches and in the process of stealing Christmas. Amused, I said something to the effect of “Carry on” and let them be.

Have you got any amusing kiddie anecdotes to share? Either about yourself as a kid, or your own kids, or the kids of siblings/friends/neighbors/random strangers?

help! my to-read pile needs biggering

Well, not really, but I’m looking for books outside my usual categories. I need recommendations for:

1. Steampunk

2. Novels set in Japan that are not Memoirs of a Geisha (already read that). I like historical fiction; Japanese-influenced fantasy would be cool (like Tales of the Otori, also read); in a pinch, a good non-fiction Japan-related book will do. My only other firm constraint is a book less than 400 pages long. After A Suitable Boy, I want something on the much shorter side. Very much shorter.

Thank’ee, one and all.

A virtual cookie for the first one who gets the literary allusion in the title. My husband is not allowed to play (sorry, dear).

recovery and revision

I have been shamefully neglecting this blog. My apologies. What with sickness running rampant through my home, the revision of Season of Rains turning my brain to mush, and my heroic attempts to finish the gargantuan A Suitable Boy in a timely manner, blogging has taken a backseat (or sent to hide in the trunk). I’ll be back later this week with revision woes aplenty, a reading roundup and an offering from Sir I. Maybe even some links.

How are you?