I think I am going to start with locating Persuasion, which I have not read. Check out at The Life (and lies) of an Inanimate Object who is hosting this lovely little challenge.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Jane Austen Challenge 2010
I think I am going to start with locating Persuasion, which I have not read. Check out at The Life (and lies) of an Inanimate Object who is hosting this lovely little challenge.
Speculative Fiction Challenge 2010
I wasn't sure what it was either at first Here's what the host at Book Chick City says
Genres:
- Science Fiction
- Fantasy Fiction
- Horror Fiction
- Supernatural Fiction
- Superhero Fiction
- Utopian and Dystopian Fiction
- Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
I'm super excited about this challenge. I think half the books I pick up are within this genre so I'm jumping in with both feet. At the Obsessed level (24 books)
Fantasy Reading Challenge 2010
I'm joining in at the addicted level- It requires me to try and read 12 or more fantasy books.
I think I shall start with some of the Madeline L'Engle books that will fulfill the requirement.
Royal Reviews is hosting this great challenge. The description there is "The Fantasy Reading Challenge can include YA Fantasy or Historical Fantasy, Science Fiction Fantasy or any other sub genre of Fantasy. There really are no limits to this challenge as Fantasy is such a wide and varied genre."
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Plans to Read all of Madeline L'Engle's Books
A Swiftly Tilting Plant by Madeline L'Engle
Some of My Favorite Authors
Anne McCaffrey
Isaac Asimov
Shel Silvertein
Rick Riordan
JRR Tolkien
Jean Plaidy
Jane Austen
Charlotte Bronte
L.M. Montgomery
Philippa Gregory
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Delicious Spinach Salad
Monday, December 28, 2009
Mailbox Monday
Thanks again to The Printed Page for hosting Mailbox Monday.
To do list: Buy more vanilla extract, take mailbox picture for mailbox monday posts.
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Rediscovering God in America
I received Rediscovering God in America by Newt Gingrich from Thomas Nelson Publishing to review. The book is simple in its plan. It declared I would take a walking tour of Washington D.C. and learn about how religion has played a role in the forming and sustaining of our nation. It did just that. Each chapter focused on a monument or building and its significance.
While I commend the author for his plan and will add this to my bookshelf for reference, I did not get into the book. Had I used this book as a companion piece to an actual walking tour it might have been fabulous. Should I need to source presidential faith statements, I now have them in one neat book. In fact that was the reason I picked out the book to read. I think “Under God” is important. I can also recommend this book for the wealth of information it contained.. There were many interesting nuggets of facts throughout the book. The origin of the Library of Congress and the various upgrades of the White House were both fascinating sections.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Justo Gonzalez and the Heretics for Armchair Theologians
The Back Story...
A Few months back I wandered into Borders during their buy four get one free sales. I was low on books and so began searching for the perfect collection of four great reads. My most beloved of the collection is a book I have been slowly savoring over these last months. Heretics for Armchair Theologians. The book caught my eye as I was perusing the religion section. Then I saw the authors Justo and Catherine Gonzalez. At that point I begin to believe in the book's potentials.
A few years back in my Graduate school class, Christian history, I read a pair of books, that remains on my top 5 textbook list. It was Justo Gonzalez's books on the History of the Church. The information was presented in such a way that it was enjoyable and attainable. I've recommended them numerous times to people. Nonetheless the nuances of heresy in the early church is tricky to keep clear in the mind, especially when it comes at the rapid pace we had to learn in class. Crushed between all the other course work and pressed to move quickly through the literature, I finished not really being able to state more than what some of the major heretical movements were called.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Another Last minute Gift Idea BBC TV Favorites Holiday #Giveaway
And then I saw they have a whole tab just for books! Oh how I love Jamie Oliver. And has anyone heard of Tea with Jane Austen? It sounds faboulous.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
451 Challenge. Oh what fun!
Blaze level is 7 or more books by November 30, 2010.
Check it out for your self at 451 Challenge.
I think I shall begin with a lovely reread of Black Beauty. I can't remember when I last read it, and I then I shall check out St Lucy's Home for Wolf Raised Girls. That title grabbed my attention. Lord of the Rings is also an excellent book on my reread list. The list also has Kingsolver, Dumas, Austen, and Lewis. I am quite excited.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
20000 Leagues Under the Sea
The other day I was looking for an unread book to begin from my book shelf and picked up 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. I inherited a fish named Jules once. He was a lovely and lively goldfish who seemed to actually respond when I watch him. So I have been intrigued by his namesake ever since. The original manuscript was composed in French. The translation I am reading by Walter James Miller was completed in 1966. I have since discovered a newer translation, but am unwilling to forgo Mr. Miller’s verbose inclination.
Now, I happen to enjoy the sci-fi genre. I have always enjoyed science fiction in books and movies. I might have been the only 7 year old girl in the world with E. T. the Extraterrestrial bed linens. I do however tend to expect action in my science fiction. 20,000 Leagues starts slow and at page 143 has not picked up the pace. If you want action, intensity, and a plot that is quick paced, do not start this book, it will not deliver those three items. However, if you want rich descriptions of the ocean depths, the insides of the Nautilus, and Professor styled assessment of the characters and events of the book , definitely check out this book. Find a good translation and settle in for such gems as, “A wall of Superb rocks, in an imposing mass, rose before us, a heap of gigantic blocks, an enormous steep granite shore, forming dark grottoes, but offering no surfaces up which one could climb.”
I am leaving this description filled verbosity and moving on to other books in my holiday stack. At this point I would give this book a 3 of 5. Worth coming back to when nothing better is on my stack, or when I am in need of word pictures painted. Has anyone finished the book? Does the pace ever change? Is this highly adjectival narrative typical of Jules Verne?
Monday, December 14, 2009
The Librarian Oh how I love this series
Books I Love
2. The Giving Tree
3. A Wrinkle in Time
4. Brave New World
5. Dragon Riders of Pern
6. Lord of the Rings Trilogy
7. Velvet Elvis
8. Animal Dreams
9. Circle of Quiet
10. The Sabbath
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Mailbox Monday
Thanks to The Printed Page for Hosting Mailbox Monday
Friday, December 11, 2009
Miracle in Sumatra
Miracle in Sumatra: The Story of Gutsy Gus by Jeanne McNancy and illustrated by David Cochard is poignant and inspiring. It is the story of Gus, a young Orangutan, who saves his parents from a trapper. The story brings to light both the wretched nature of animal poaching and the damaging action of deforestation in Sumatra.
The book is easily read in one sitting and geared for ages 4-8. Personally I fell in love with the illustrations and appreciated the slight whimsical nature of the font choice. This book would be an excellent addition to a primary classroom. However, it definitely requires additional conversation with the children. Poaching and Deforestation can be very scary issues. Allowing a child to dialogue about their feelings during and after the book is read could alleviate fears, increase comprehension, and inspire action. This last step is the very thing Jeanne McNancy is hoping the book with do.
Jeanne McNancy was raised in New York. She has studied Zoology, Veterinary Technology, and Behavioral Science. Currently she lives in Connecticut with her husband and three children. She has also written The Legend in Honey Hollow.
Details:
Publisher: Ovation Books
Publisher website: http://www.ovationbooks.net/
Book website: http://www.joeypublishing.com/
Category: Children’s picture book
Date of publication: October 2009
ISBN-13: 978-0-9814534-6-0
Price : 16.95 at Borders.com
I was given this book by Phenix and Phenix publicists to review.
Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Monday, December 7, 2009
Mailbox Monday
First, I love the book I picked up at Cosco on Thursday. It's called Guernsy Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Seriously it is one of the cleverest stories I have read in a while. It is set up as a collection of letters written between an authoress Juliet in the mid-nineteen-forties and a collection of fasinating characters. Seriously, I can hardly stop reading it and have poured through it so quickly, I will have to re-read it.
Second, I have recieved a children's book to review called Miracle in Sumatra: The Story of Gutsy Gus. I'm excited about it. I flipped through it a bit and the illustrations are vivid and beautiful. The book is designed to motivate kids to action in saving the planet, especially the Rainforest. Look for my review soon.
Thanks for The Printed Page hosting the Mailbox Monday fun.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
From Wessex to Tolkien
I just finished the White Horse King: The Life of Alfred the Great by Benjamin Merkle. This book thrilled the inner Anglophile in me, as well as added depth to my understanding of J.R.R. Tolkien’s connection to Anglo-Saxon literature. Indeed Alfred as the “Ring-Giver”, the lands divided up into shires, and the meetings called shire-moots all resonated in my head as they might to one well verse in the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Never the less, this book is far different than those works of fiction, as it tells the tale of Alfred the Great. I have been inspired to further read about the Saxons and am excited that at the conclusion of the text, the author included an annotated bibliography.
Alfred the Great was the Wessex King who stood firm against the Danes, fortified his Burghs (towns), and began the increase of his Kingdom through defense against Viking raiders and alliance with the local leaders under duress. Additionally Alfred instilled the need, while providing the means, for Anglo-Saxon literacy. Meanwhile he oversaw the translation of great works of literature into the Anglo-Saxon language and the assembling of Saxon law in one collection of rules.
I review for Thomas Nelson Publishing. When I saw this book on the list I knew I had to check it out. Once I started reading it, I could hardly put it down. It's a good thing I waited until after Thanksgiving, or it would have been challenging to relax leisurely over pie.
Thomas Nelson's Book Description:
"Sometimes the heroes of history are truly worthy of the golden reputations they carry.
King Alfred united Anglo-Saxon England against a Viking invasion, led the English into battle against the Danish hordes, created a renaissance of literature and the arts, reformed the legal system, and set the stage for a revival of Christian worship. But that's not what made him great. Ben Merkle unravels the tale of how a great man came to power during one of the most difficult periods in English history, how he led his nation through them, and how he laid the groundwork for England's coming triumphs on the global stage."