Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Book # 19: How to Live a Holy Life

by Metropolitan Gregory of St. Petersburg

Highly recommend this book!  The practical advise in this book is vital to living a spiritually healthy life.  He tells it like it is, and gives guidance for every aspect of life.  If offers up a challenge to all of us on what we can attain in life, and how to go about becoming more Christ like.  It is very readable and easily understood.  It would make a good book to read in a Mom's Group, Young Adult group, or any other group discussion setting.  I'm not sure how easily attainable this book is, so here is the link where I found it:

http://www.orthodoxincense.com/

Book 15-18: The Thursday Next Series

by Jasper Fforde

This was a reread of the first four books in the series: The Eyre Affair, Lost in a Good Book, The Well of Lost Plots, and Something Rotten.  I had to read these again to prepare to read the fifth book in the series.  I'm glad I did because they are so creative and imaginative.  I forgot how much they are just out there.  Sort of Science Fiction, with a little bit of drama and romance, and a ton of literary allusions.  I would love to have a list of all the books referenced in this series, and then use that as a guide to what to read next.  My favorites of the four books are The Eyre Affair because frankly Thursday enters the book Jane Eyre--just awesome!!  And I loved the twist at the end of Something Rotten, so that one is one of my top too.  I really just have to say that if you love to read and have read a lot of classics and modern literature that you would love this series.  You get to meet so many characters from books that you've read and loved.  Highly recommend this series! 

Book # 14: The Magic Tree House books 1-4

by Mary Pope Osborne

My daughter and I made it through all the kindergarten books in the Junie B. Jones series, so we started in on the Magic Tree House series.  They are good.  A tad minimal and repetitive, but entertaining for my 4.5 year old.  I miss the occaional laugh that Junie B. Jones invoked, but we will continue to read this series as well. 

Friday, April 6, 2012

Book # 13: Mommy Prayers

by Tracy Mayor

Little short devotion style prayers for every sort of situation a mom will find herself in.  An easy read and good for a smile or laugh here or there.  It was a book lent to me by a fellow mommy, and would be a fun book to pass around to my mommy friends.  Nothing you will add to your top ten list, but is very honest about those hard mommy moments.

Book # 12: The Christian vs. The University

Fighting the battle of ideas on the college campus
by Garrison McKeen Cattell

Highly recommend this book to any high school graduate, even those not heading to college.  It discusses all subjects that a high school graduate will encounter in the world from drinking to abortion to feminism.  It handles them bluntly and honestly.  Written in a letter format it is easy to read and easy to understand.  I think this may become my graduation present in the future! 

Monday, March 26, 2012

Book # 11: Love, Stargirl

by Jerry Spinelli

I loved the book Stargirl!!  LOVED it!!  I consider it in my top ten books I've ever read.  It's that good!  When I taught, I used it as a read aloud with my class, and then had them do a Act of Kindness like she did all the time.  This one is a sequel.  It's good, but not as life changing.  It was nice to be back in Stargirl's world, but this time it is Stargirl who gets a lesson more than the rest of us.  It was a quick read and enjoyable.

Book # 9: The Hunger Games

by Suzanne Collins

I know I read this previously, but I couldn't resist pulling it back out before seeing the movie.  Still as good.  Still as hard to put down.  Still as frustrating that it ends where it does without tying up the ends.  Now I'm waiting on the next two to ship to my house (I borrowed them last time)...  waiting is so hard.  :)

Monday, March 12, 2012

Book # 8: Sisterhood Everlasting

by Ann Brashares

This is the 6th book in the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series.  I think I missed book 5, but it didn't matter as this one took up the story 10 years later.  I had enjoyed the first books in a quick-read-teen-book kind of way.  They were not going to make my top ten book list, but they were entertaining.  I couldn't resist this one as the girls were now about my age, and I was curious to see what had happened to them.  The biggest surprise was that they were all still childish.  At 28-29 year old, I expected more.  Perhaps that's my own 29 year old self talking with three kids in tow.  But even so, they all really struggled to make normal adult decisions, with perhaps Tibby as the exception.  To be honest, if this is how our generation acts at 29, then I'm kind of ashamed to be part of it. 

It was an emotional read, and one I finished rapidly, but this time I didn't feel as much a part of their life because of the divide between where they were at 29 and where I am at 29.  I just couldn't relate.  While I was willing to give them the benefit of the doubt about their immature 18 year old selves, I was not willing to do that anymore.  The whole time I repeatedly thought, "Just grow up.  Act your age."  By the end, they do, but the tragedy that had to happen to cause them all to grow up was so extreme.  I'm left wondering if that tragedy never happened, then how long would these girls have clung to their childish ways?

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Book # 7: Madame Bovary

by Gustave Flaubert

This is one of those honors English books that is an obligation to read more than an enjoyment.  It involves a  disgruntled housewife who wasn't satisfied with what she had in life, and this led to her ultimate demise.  These stories can annoy me at times because it's all about communication with her husband about expectations, and so many people just don't do that.  I was fully expecting the story to end with the main character banging her head against the wall upset that she didn't see what she had until it was too late.  So I will say that the end surprised me, but I'm not sure that her lack of repentence made the book any more enjoyable. 

Book # 6: Junie B. Jones books 9-12

I'm reading these with my daughter.  We read a chapter a day before she does her quiet time.  They are short, so I'm counting four of them as one book.  I'm enjoying them as they make me laugh and bring up some good talking points with her. 

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Book # 5: Heaven is For Real

by Todd Burpo

Incredible book!  It's about a four year old boy who "almost" died of an undiagnosed burst appendix.  He was in heaven for "3 minutes", but the things he saw were amazing.  I can't do the story justice as there are so many details, but seriously, this is one of those life changing books.  I am an Orthodox Christian, so it's not like I haven't discussed heaven before and what all that means, but something about having a four year old matter of factly discuss it, is truly amazing.  On another level, the whole hospitalization and roller coaster ride his parents went on is so relatable with what we have gone through with our son's diagnosis of infantile spasms that this book had me tearing up at times.  Just wow.  That's all I can say to having read this. 

Friday, February 3, 2012

Book # 4: Meditations in an Emergency

by Frank O'Hara

My husband and I are hooked on the TV show Mad Men ever since we discovered it on Netflix instants.  We finished all the seasons on there, and have been going through withdrawal ever since.  Thus this book.  Don Draper sees someone else reading it and is promptly informed that he "wouldn't like it".  So of course he reads it.  It reminds him of one of his ex-mistresses, and he mails her a copy.  I was intrigued because to be honest it's one of the only books mentioned in the show.  I wondered why it was so pivatol for the time period.  So I got it for my husband as a Christmas gift.  Well I will be honest I still have no clue why they mentioned it.  The poems are cryptic.  I am a good past Honors English student--I promise-- I know you are never supposed to say I don't know.  You should make up some reason using as many big words as possible.  But I've grown since high school, I'm big enough to admit that a ton of these poems sounded to me like the mom on Peanuts--waaa waaaa waaa.  Definitely would love to read a companion piece to this that would give me cliff notes into O'Hara's life and thinking.  But here's one that I did sort of "get" and loved:



For Grace, After a Party

You do not always know what I am feeling.
Last night in the warm spring air while I was
blazing my tirade against someone who doesn't
interest
me, it was love for you that set me
afire,
and isn't it odd? for in rooms full of
strangers my most tender feelings
writhe and
bear the fruit of screaming. Put out your hand,
isn't there
an ashtray, suddenly, there? beside
the bed? And someone ou love enters the room
and says wouldn't
you like the eggs a little
different today?
And when they arrive they are
just plain scrambled eggs and the warm weather
is holding.



Now you explain it to me.  :)

Monday, January 30, 2012

Book # 3: We Saw, We Came, We Converted

by Fr. Joseph Huneycutt

Based on his podcasts on Ancient Faith Radio, this book is a hoot.  He just has a way of making a point that makes me giggle.  Very fun for a fast read or a daily devotional type book.  And might I say that his podcasts are great fun to listen to as well.  :)

Book # 2: Water for Elephants

by Sara Gruen

I read this for a book group.  I was curious about it since it was made into a movie.  I will say that it did not live up to my expectations.  I loved the circus parts, and forming a good understanding of what the circus was like in the past.  The love story though just didn't thrill me.  It seemed forced or maybe too romance novelish.  But let me also say that I did NOT like the book, The Notebook, for the same reasons.  So it might just be me.  I like a lot of substance, and I tend toward classics and books that border on too much desciption.  I would have enjoyed reading a book filled with the circus stories and legends just as much, if not more because it would have been true.  Spoiler alert:  The end of the book was one of its redeeming qualities with the protagonist rejoining the circus to live out the rest of his life. 

Book # 1: Junie B. Jones, books 5-8

I'm counting these as one because let's face it they are short.  :) But hilarious!  I'm reading a chapter a day to my daughter before her rest time (my sanity time), and she loves them.  Junie has some short comings as does everyone, but these make amazing talking points with my daughter.  Junie is rash, extremely excitable, and sometimes a tad mean, but I feel like this helps me address these issues with my daughter.  We talk about how something Junie does is silly and how she could have done something better.  Plus kind of like Amelia Bedelia we've learned about plays on words, such as "The cutest little monkey" describing her brother, and "trying to get your goat".  Overall, very fun to read. 

I know, I know!

I've been absent!  And I'm sorry.  Christmas stress as usual.  Plus a majorly long cold/sinus infection.  But I'm back.  And I have been reading, so be prepared for a ton of posts in a row.

I know last year I started out with a resolution to read the entire Bible, which didn't happen.  :) I got pretty far, but just couldn't get through all of it.  I might revisit that later this year as it's still a goal of mine. 

I guess my resolution this year could be to read in general.  I have a friend who started a group called 52 in 52, as in 52 books in 52 weeks of the year.  So you could say my goal is to read 52 books this year, but that seems ambitious for a mom of 3 little ones.... just a little, right?