Saturday, March 21, 2015

Northern Ireland Day Two: Queen's University and Crumlin Road Gaol

Day two was the beginning of our scholarly journey in Northern Ireland. We started the day bright and early as we headed to Queen's University Belfast to speak with Dean Tony Gallagher. The campus is beautiful and reminded me of Hogwarts. I would love to go to school there.









Dean Gallagher's presentation gave us some new information about the education system to think about. It was a great start to the research part of the trip.

After finding a place for lunch and eating there, we walked from our hotel to Crumlin Road Gaol. This is where prisoners from the Troubles and other criminals were jailed. The gaol opened in 1845 and closed in 1996 because it was too expensive to maintain. 17 men were executed there and we got to go into the execution cell where they have a noose hanging from the ceiling. I admit that it was pretty scary. It took me a while to fall asleep that night.

The old court house across from the gaol

We were served tea and scones!!!
Where prisoners were brought upon arrival
Rooms where prisoners were kept before being led to the court house

Tunnel to the court house
First of the many creepy statues in the gaol.



The padded cell. Creepy.
The education room.
The bathroom.
The outside of the gaol.
After that we took a bus back to city centre. My friend and I went to Primark and New Look for a look around. I did not get any clothing, but I did buy a cute sign to hang up in my room. It says: "good friends are like diamonds . . . precious and rare."

We then went to Fratelli's near the hotel. It is a cute Italian restaurant and I had pasta with shrimp. I posted a photo of it on Instagram. Here it is:


You can follow me on Instagram @thekschiap. Soon I will post about my third day in Northern Ireland when we went to Stormont, where the Northern Irish government is housed. 

Until then,

Kara

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Northern Ireland Day One: Arrival and Belfast Black Cab Tour

Well it has been a long time since I have written here. Second semester of college has been just as busy as the first one. I have also joined a service fraternity here on campus called Alpha Phi Omega (APO). All the pledge requirements have been taking up a lot of my time. But I will try to write more often!

Last week was our spring break and I was fortunate enough to go to Northern Ireland as part of a research class. We are researching how schools in Northern Ireland teach the Irish Civil Rights Movement and the Troubles. The trip was amazing and I learned so much from it.

On this blog I will be writing more about the experiences, food and touristy stuff, but our class has a blog that will probably be more about the research aspect of the trip. Without further ado here is Northern Ireland day one!!

On Saturday March 7, our group left campus at 2:00 p.m. to start our long journey to Belfast, Northern Ireland. Our flight to London Heathrow Airport left Dulles at 6:30 p.m. and we arrived before 7:00 a.m. GMT Sunday. I watched two movies (The Imitation Game and Paddington) that I will talk about in a future post.

After a short layover we boarded our flight to Belfast City Airport. Needless to say by the time we got to our hotel at noon on Sunday, we were all pretty tired. We crashed for two hours before our Belfast Black Cab tour.

This tour takes you through Belfast showing you the famous murals, Milltown Cemetery, and places where people were killed during the Troubles. Here are some photos from the tour.


Some of the curbs are painted to show allegiance. 




This stands for Ulster Freedom Fighters, a loyalist (protestant) paramilitary organization

Peace wall
The next few photos from Milltown Cemetery, which is a Catholic cemetery. While walking through the cemetery, our tour guy would casually point to graves and say "I knew him." It was definitely a sobering start to the week.









Grave of Bobby Sands, hunger striker who died in 1981.
We then passed tons and tons of murals on the sides of buildings and along the peace walls.






After the tour we went to the Home Restaurant near city centre. Most of us went for the two course prix-fixe plan. I got the traditional roast for my main and then sticky toffee pudding for dessert. A pretty traditional meal for my first day in Belfast. 





See you soon!

Kara


Tuesday, January 6, 2015

My Favorite Books of 2014!

I was inspired by booksandquill's YouTube video "My Top 10 Books of 2014," to write this post on my favorite books of 2014. As you would of known from my post about my 2015 resolutions, I read 25 books in 2014 and here are my favorite ones.


First is This Star Won't Go Back by Esther Grace Earl. Esther died when she was 16 years old from thyroid cancer. This book is a collection of her writings, and things that her friends and family have written about her. I heard about this book from John Green because he knew Esther and wrote the introduction to this book. I read it in about a day and nearly cried at the end of it. In my Goodreads review I talked about how Esther is an inspiration and how I encourage everyone should read it.


The second book is William Shakespeare's Macbeth. I read this for my AP Literature class and it quickly became one of my favorite Shakespeare plays. My other favorite Shakespeare play comes later in the list. I would love to see Macbeth on the stage, whether it be a classic adaptation or a modern adaptation. I also want to read more Shakespeare plays in 2015, I think Much Ado About Nothing is first on the list.


I first "read" this book in audiobook form. Neverwhere is by Neil Gaiman and it tells the story of Richard Mayhew who is thrust into the world of "London Below." After listening to the BBC radio play (starring James McAvoy, Natalie Dormer, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Anthony Head), I read the actual book. The radio play Neverwhere leaves some bits out from the book, but it is all in all a great adaptation.


Like Macbeth, I read Hamlet for my AP Literature class. Whilst reading the play, I also watched the BBC production of Hamlet starring Sir Patrick Stewart and David Tennant. Watching the play really helped my understanding of Hamlet. The soliloquies in Hamlet are beautifully written, especially Hamlet's "to be, or not to be" soliloquy.


The fifth book is Of Mice and Men. I read this novel after seeing the play on Broadway in July (you can read about it here) with James Franco and Chris O'Dowd. I loved the book as well as the play. When watching the play I did not know what was going to happen at the end, but when reading the book it was kind of nice to already know about the ending. I have read The Pearl by Steinbeck, but now I want to read his other novels.




This past semester of college I took a class about Jane Austen and how her six novels fit into their time periods regarding fashion, how they travelled, feminism, relationships between the sexes and between the classes, and the military. Two of my favorite books from this year were written by Austen: Persuasion and Mansfield Park. I like Persuasion because it is not about the heroine's "first love" and her "happily ever after." Anne Elliot lost her love and is past her prime age for marrying. It is like what would happen after the ending of Emma or Pride and Prejudice. It is also an insight on the year of peace (1814) during the Napoleonic wars. Mansfield Park is also a favorite because it is much more dramatic than Austen's other five novels. There are sexual innuendos, extramarital affairs, talk of slavery, and a look into the lower classes of the early nineteenth century. For homework we watched the Patricia Rozema film adaptation of Mansfield Park, which combined the novel's heroine (Fanny Price) with Austen herself. This made for an interesting between the film and the original novel. I love all of Austen's novels, but these two are the most interesting to me.




Fangirl and Eleanor & Park are both written by Rainbow Rowell, and they are both absolutely fabulous. They both sucked me into their worlds and they were almost impossible to put down. I read Fangirl first after buying it in Kramerbooks in D.C., and I read it in a day. I related so much to the main character, Cath Avery, and her struggles as a freshman at college and because of her love for fantasy novels. I saw Eleanor & Park in a bookstore in Newburyport (the same day Mom and I went to Ceia) and I knew that I needed to read it. Even though I was unpacking boxes, I still read the novel in two days. I cannot even describe how I needed to know what happened to Eleanor and Park. Rowell is a fantastic YA novelist and I now need to read Attachments, Landline, and her new book coming out in October called Carry On.


Last but not least is Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain. While unpacking books from the den, I put aside all of the Anthony Bourdain books that we own. I love Bourdain's shows like No Reservations and Parts Unknown. This was his first nonfiction book and it is his stories of the restaurant industry. It is a gritty look into what happens in restaurant kitchens and the people in them. I found it really interesting and I think I will be bringing back some of Bourdain's other books to D.C.

What were your favorite books that you read in 2014? Any books that you want to read in the new year? As always, thanks for reading!

Love,
Kara

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Yummy Brunch in Newburyport

When I first arrived in Massachusetts three weeks ago Mom and I went to one of our favorite restaurants in Newburyport, Ceia Kitchen + Bar. We went for brunch, which is my favorite meal because I can sleep in late and still eat breakfast foods! It is also perfect on a chilly, December day.

We started off with an apple muffin halved and toasted, with honey butter and a cranberry compote. The muffin was moist and delicious, and perfect with the honey butter. We ate the cranberry compote on its own, and while not as good as Mom's cranberry sauce, it was still delicious.



Looks like the Jolly Roger is casually flying over Newburyport!
For our main dishes Mom chose the Braised Lamb "Croque Madame," and I got the Steak and Eggs with grilled carrots and potatoes. Both were really good and my steak was perfectly cooked.



We ended up going back to Ceia on Christmas Eve for lunch with Dad and Emma. I got the lobster Benedict, which was pretty good. I did think, however, that there was not enough lobster on it. Overall Ceia is one of my favorite restaurants that we have found in Massachusetts so far. I look forward to trying new restaurants in the coming years. Thanks for reading!

Love,
Kara