17 y/o Monkey | |
Book Title | Date Finished |
Halo: The Fall of Reach | 24, August 2010 |
Betrayed | 25, August 2010 |
Halo: First Strike | 26, August 2010 |
Halo: The Flood | 27, August 2010 |
Chosen | 28, August 2010 |
Untamed | 29, August 2010 |
Cirque Du Freak: A Living Nightmare | 29, August 2010 |
Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant | 29, August 2010 |
Cirque Du Freak: Vampire Mountain | 1 September 2010 |
Cirque Du Freak: Trials of Death | 2, September 2010 |
Cirque Du Freak: Tunnels of Blood | 3, September 2010 |
Halo: Ghosts of Onyx | 5, September 2010 |
Halo: The Cole Protocol | 12, September 2010 |
Autumn | |
Book Title | Date Finished |
The Good Earth | 7, September 2010 |
The Mating | 27, August 2010 |
Pawn of Prophecy | 2, Sept. 2010 |
Vampire Tanning | 27, August 2010 |
The Touch of Isis | 27, August 2010 |
The Butterfly Effect | 29, August 2010 |
The Keeping | |
Queen of Sorcery | 2, September 2010 |
Magicians Gambit | |
The Heavens Proclaim His Glory | 8, September 2010 |
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
2010 Bookworm Race Score
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
2010 Bookworm Race
Recently I challenged my middle son (17) to a bookworm race. Before the end of 2010, we will race our way to the most books read; for each book we read, a dollar will be placed in a special fund for the person who reads the most to win on New Years Day 2011.
So I begin the challenge with The Good Earth, and he with Halo: The Fall of Reach.
Of course rules were hammered into place - no comic books, children books, minimum of 150 pages, and we have to keep track of the books, authors, ISBN and date finished.
So in signing off, he says: Blue is a color!
A Trip Down Memory Lane
Many years ago, I wandered into my grandma's study, as I sat there on a stool that had seen better days, was covered in paint splatters and the object of dinner time fights between cousins; she asked me what I was doing (I guess my sighing irritated her), I explained that I was bored, nothing to do, nothing to read, woe is me and all that teenage girl stuff. Seemingly at random, she reached into her bookcase and pulled out a book, handed it to me and shooed me out of her room.
Much to my dismay, I realized that she had handed me some oldy moldy book (or so I thought at the time).
In the desperation of boredom, I opened the first of many Pearl S. Buck books, and I was transported to China.
I have often taken this quick trip, sometimes through the challenges of Wang Lung and O-Lan, other times through other masterpieces by Ms. Buck.
The Good Earth won numerous awards for it’s author, Pearl Buck. It won the Pulitzer Prize for one. Mrs. Buck also went on to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. This book, published in 1931, is the first in a trilogy. The other two are Sons (1932) and A House Divided (1935).
The Good Earth is a simple story of one mans love for the land. Ms. Buck interweaves
into this story another which tells of love and respect, ambition and hard-work, hunger and strife.
Last night I again picked up The Good Earth, and am falling in love all over.
Enjoy your adventures in reading!
Autumn
Monday, August 23, 2010
Polygamist Wife
The story itself is wonderfully told and you feel Melissa's exhaustion and malnutrition; however, I also found myself wanting to shake some sense into her. This passage haunted me all night: "My family slept on the floor and we used paper bags or boxes for drawers. Hazel had a bed, dresser and drawer space for her family. Sleeping on the floor, the children had difficulty in staying covered and would get cold in the night. I devised a way to keep them covered by placing a blanket on the floor, then placing a second blanket on it, followed by a sheet. I folded them over then tore off the part of the sheet that was larger than the blankets. I took the bundles outside and pounded nail holes around the edges,then took them inside and crocheted all thicknesses together on three sides by using the excess material from the torn sheets for thread and the nail holes as a way of inserting my crochet hook through all thicknesses. The result was sleeping bags for everyone, and no one became uncovered or complained of being cold again. We slept on the floor in this fashion for several years." p.82 from the July, 1977 Pocket Book printing.
Another paragraph starts: "Frank decided that since Christmas was a pagan holiday, our family would not celebrate it." (p. 56) To this paragraph my Grandma wrote (in the margins) We believe, also, Xmas a pagan holiday but we couldn't do that to our children!
Grandma was a very vocal person, and nothing would set her off faster than hearing of a woman not standing up for herself, women blindly following men, and religion. Her amazing memory and attention to details can be found in any of her books as she wrote in the margins of all. She quotes Mormon and Christian scriptures, pagan beliefs, gives quick snapshots of her memories and references other portions of the book. Reading any book which originally was owned by this wonderful lady involves a cup of coffee, a Dictionary, Bible, Book of Mormon, and pen and paper for note taking.
In another place, the author mentions a memory of being chased by a big old rooster whenever she went to the outhouse, Grandma wrote two words "Sounds Familiar!" I have vague memories of her telling us of being chased by a rooster but I will have to call Grandpa to see if he knows. Another spot in the book is talking about the churches practice of giving Patriarchal Blessings, to which Grandma recalls her fathers blessing "Yep! The great and glorious patriarchal blessings. Like the one my father had which state (sic) he was blessed by God to be healthy and strong and would live to be 85 yrs old! Did "God" have a change of heart? Or did the priesthood bearer merely say anything that came into his head - like a fortune teller?" Grandma wrote this paragraph at least 50 years after her father passed away at the age of 46 (39 years before his blessing said).
Enjoy your Adventures in Reading!
Autumn
P.S. Grandpa remembers a rooster chasing my mom around the Ranch
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
The Butterfly Effect
I was sitting at a cross roads in my life; I had just finished some major medical procedures, no job, limited money and a rebellious teenager when I was given the opportunity to read a book which has truly and profoundly moved me with it's simple concepts.
The Butterfly Effect by Andy Andrews is, in short a guide to living your life. The long story is that everything we do has an effect on not only our immediate surroundings, but everything.
Take for example, the bullet maker and Andrew Carnegie. In 1872 an English bullet maker showed Andrew Carnegie a simple though revolutionary new way to create steel; blast hot air through molten iron which caused the carbon impurities to burn off. For the first time ever, steel is affordable to make.
One English bullet maker has forever changed the way we look at metal and how we build. Without this simple concept for the production of steel, our skyscrapers and automobiles would not exist the way we know them.
Mr. Andrews’ The Butterfly Effect Takes this concept and humanizes it.
…And my own personal crossroads? The teenager is still rebellious, but we are talking now instead of hollering, money is still tight, but my new job is awesome, and I am completely healed from my medical procedures.
Enjoy the Adventures in Reading!
Autumn
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Awesome Bookish Quote!
Anne Tyler
I love it! This sums up what it is like for my family.
Enjoy your Adventures in Reading
Autumn
Book Crossing

I found a fun site tonight while investigating books: http://www.bookcrossing.com. I have heard about this in the past, a place where books roam around in the wild and you can read/release them (kind of like fishing catch and release). Anyway I decided to do a wild release on one of my favorite books that I have a duplicated of, Wuthering Heights.
The summary that I feel best describes this rich (and only) novel by Emily Brontë comes from: http://www.wuthering-heights.co.uk/summary.htm
Many people, generally those who have never read the book, consider Wuthering Heights to be a straightforward, if intense, love story — Romeo and Juliet on the Yorkshire Moors. But this is a mistake. Really the story is one of revenge. It follows the life of Heathcliff, a mysterious gypsy-like person, from childhood (about seven years old) to his death in his late thirties. Heathcliff rises in his adopted family and then is reduced to the status of a servant, running away when the young woman he loves decides to marry another. He returns later, rich and educated and sets about gaining his revenge on the two families that he believed ruined his life.
Enjoy your Adventures in Reading!
Autumn