This year (2025) finds me with 53 years of teaching “under my belt.” I have taught all levels from pre-K “(library lady” or “book lady”–volunteer) to juniors, seniors, and graduate students enrolled in my Advanced Writing class at the university where I have just completed 34 years. My first paying teaching job was junior high, and I spent 13 years with ages 12-13, the “difficult years.” I had some of the “funnest” experiences with this age group. When I was no longer the “young, fun teacher,” I taught in an elementary school setting before sixth graders went on to junior high, teaching language arts blocs, an assignment that was a “dream-fit” for me. After completing graduate school in my 40s, I went on to community college, then university teaching. This past fall I accepted a part-time teaching job at Apogee Gulf Coast Schools in its first year at the Alvin campus. After my Better Half died n 2022, I achieved a lifelong dream: opening a bookstore of my own, Rae’s Reads. A year later, I sold the house we had lived in for 47 years and moved into the bookstore. My goal is to circulate and repurpose books.
Just as teaching is “in my blood,” so is a passion for reading, writing, libraries, and everything bookish.
This blog will be open to anyone who loves books, promotes literacy and wants to “come out and play.”
Today is the first Sunday in June, and already there are named hurricanes developing. Here on the Texas Gulf Coast, it is too hot to venture outside for long, so a good plan for a Sunday afternoon is to grab a huge glass of iced tea crank up the air conditioning, and read all afternoon. Below is a summary of my reading adventures for the past two weeks:
Because I read several books at a time, I seem to finish them up on the same day, or at least, in the same week.
I finished the following books in the past two weeks:
I had read The Book of Joy by the same author, but this one focuses on His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, and his ability to forgive the tremendous atrocities China has done on his homeland and his people.
A fun read, one which introduced me to fan fiction and all it entails. I had heard the term and never stopped to investigate what it meant. This book will be reviewed on PWR this next week.
Another fiction fav for many YA readers who are fascinated with boarding schools, especially British ones.Because this “find” (actually, it found me!) of a book is arranged by a short piece featuring a gutsy woman each day, it will be on my “continuing to read” list for a good while.Another book I am reading a selection from each day.I haven’t read short stories for a long while; it’s good to take them up again.This book is helpful as well as pleasing to read. It as reminded me of why I like Quindlin’s writing/essays so much.I found myself copying pages of this helpful book. It came as a freebie with an offer some time ago, so a few “tips” are outdated, but some are timeless. A fun book to page through.I had put this novel aside for awhile, but these past two weeks, I’ve picked it up again and made some progress.ANNE LAMOTT’S TAKE ON SPIRITUALITY IS OFFBEAT AT BEST, BUT VERY PRACTICAL AND. VERY HELPFUL TO ME.
LAST NIGHT I FINISHED LISTENING TO THE CHILDREN’S CLASSIC, THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS. I DOZED OFF TO THE EXCITING WEASEL’S INVASION OF TOAD HALL, AND HAD TO FINISH THE STORY FIRST THING THIS MORNING.
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