like mother, like daughter
Jul. 28th, 2007 04:20 pmYou never know what you might get asked to do next. Having successfully indexed a friend's book, a task that had me sweating blood for a few weeks, I found myself asked by her five-year-old if I would index her book.
This was flattering, but a little daunting in its own way. Five-year-old's book is a 20-page story featuring a frequently changing kaleidoscope of characters. There is nothing resembling an overall plot, but there are a few recurring themes.
I am kind of busy these days, but it's not fair to ask a five-year-old to wait very long. So I enforced a couple hours of break time from my other jobs to look over this opus carefully and figure out how to index it. It was exciting to read: something new on almost every page.
You can get some idea of her interests and the kind of book she wrote by looking at the result. Some of these are the specific words in the book, but others are more the author's themes.
airplane, pink, 1
Barbie, 1-5, 16-20; dances, 3; doll, 4; draws, 3; fights, 17-18; and racecars, 3, 19; things she loves, 3-5
Barbie's dad, 19-20
birds, 5
boats, 17
Brittany, 8-10; dances, 8, 10; sings, 9
castles, 6-7
caterpillars, 1, 9
cats, 6-7, 14-15
clouds, 5
dancing, 3, 8, 10
Derrick, 7
doll, 4
evilness, 3
fighting, 11, 17-18
flowers, 5
friends, 2, 4, 10, 11-12, 14-15
gardens and parks, 5, 7, 16
Genevee, 7
green song, 9
Hannah, makes racecars, 13; paints, 11-12
Hello Kitty, 14-15
houses and home, 2, 15, 16-17
jump-n-jammin, 14
kitty. See cat
Lisa, paints, 11-12
machines, 16
Mello Kitty, 14-15
painting, 11-13
park. See gardens and parks
Piston Cup, 20
queens, 6-7
racecars, 3, 13, 19-20
rain, 4-5
Randoulph, King, 6-7
Sally, 3, 16. See also Barbie
Sienna, 2
soldiers, 17-18
songs and singing, 6, 8-9
trash collection, 17
This was flattering, but a little daunting in its own way. Five-year-old's book is a 20-page story featuring a frequently changing kaleidoscope of characters. There is nothing resembling an overall plot, but there are a few recurring themes.
I am kind of busy these days, but it's not fair to ask a five-year-old to wait very long. So I enforced a couple hours of break time from my other jobs to look over this opus carefully and figure out how to index it. It was exciting to read: something new on almost every page.
You can get some idea of her interests and the kind of book she wrote by looking at the result. Some of these are the specific words in the book, but others are more the author's themes.
airplane, pink, 1
Barbie, 1-5, 16-20; dances, 3; doll, 4; draws, 3; fights, 17-18; and racecars, 3, 19; things she loves, 3-5
Barbie's dad, 19-20
birds, 5
boats, 17
Brittany, 8-10; dances, 8, 10; sings, 9
castles, 6-7
caterpillars, 1, 9
cats, 6-7, 14-15
clouds, 5
dancing, 3, 8, 10
Derrick, 7
doll, 4
evilness, 3
fighting, 11, 17-18
flowers, 5
friends, 2, 4, 10, 11-12, 14-15
gardens and parks, 5, 7, 16
Genevee, 7
green song, 9
Hannah, makes racecars, 13; paints, 11-12
Hello Kitty, 14-15
houses and home, 2, 15, 16-17
jump-n-jammin, 14
kitty. See cat
Lisa, paints, 11-12
machines, 16
Mello Kitty, 14-15
painting, 11-13
park. See gardens and parks
Piston Cup, 20
queens, 6-7
racecars, 3, 13, 19-20
rain, 4-5
Randoulph, King, 6-7
Sally, 3, 16. See also Barbie
Sienna, 2
soldiers, 17-18
songs and singing, 6, 8-9
trash collection, 17
Now I want to read her book
Date: 2007-07-28 11:51 pm (UTC)I'd be interested to see how you'd index (...thinks for a minute of something non-taxing for you) some well-known SF short stories.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-29 12:03 am (UTC)If I were going to index a story, it'd be "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman", because I want to make an entry for the most intriguing one-bit walk-on character in all SF, Raoul Mitgong.
But Harlan would have to ask me real nice, and I don't want him to ask me anything.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-29 03:23 am (UTC)But what I really want is to see a short story composed entirely as an index.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-29 05:12 am (UTC)"short story composed entirely as an index" - my spider-sense is tingling. Something vaguely akin to that has been done, I'm sure, though I may be thinking of Joanna Russ's "Useful Phrases for the Tourist", a short story made up entirely of a list of ... you guessed it.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-29 04:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-30 02:44 am (UTC)