RAE’S READS

Author: Rae Longest

  • poem ~ a poem

    From one of my young blogging friends.

  • Reader, Are you having an energy crisis? I am. That is why I decided to read this book donated to my LFL. It is a 2015 publication, but its tenets are still valuable to managers, bosses, and leaders of all sorts. I found the summaries at the end of sections helpful, and although all of…

  • This blogger asks us 3 questions: WHAT have you finished reading? WHAT are you reading now? WHAT will you read next? One thing in this novel that interested me and kept my attention was its examination of public schools vs private ones. It also includes: social media, the value of therapy, bullying, and parenting issues.…

  • Carole at Random Life in Books created this meme to bring attention to books you want to read or have read that have not received enough exposure. Today I was thinking about creativity and reading an old handout from many semesters ago that I asked students to respond to entitled, “Can Creativity Be Taught?” I…

  • The Woman

    Originally posted on Annette Rochelle Aben: ? For all that life has thrown In her face, in her way She rises every day To live her truth Greeting every moment With a warrior’s pride Taking changes in stride Owning her strength Returning home each night There’s still work left to do Deep breath to see…

  • Just as Saturday Mornings were reserved for kids on TV programming, Powerful Women Readers reserves Saturday mornings for kids’ book recommendations. Today I am running a bit behind, so here is my recommendation for this weekend: Gratz’s adventure/thriller novel takes place in three different time settings, with three different protagonists, yet their stories are linked…

  • This past weekend, I finished up three books I was reading concurrently. I often read more than one book at a time with no confusion; however this time, one was historical fiction, very close to fact, set in WWII, so keeping the characters straight from the non-fiction characters in the diary made reading harder than…

  • As part of a personal “project” on Madeline L’Engle, I reread and reviewed all five books of her Murray family saga, both Many Waters and An Acceptable Time were read about the time I started blogging, so I didn’t have to write the review fresh, but could share an old review written years ago. Finishing…

  • THE PURPLE BOOKER asks us to copy a few lines from a current read to “tease” others into adding our book to their TBR pile. Here’s mine for 6/8/21, a memoir by Mary Karr. After their parents broke up, Mary, the author, and her sister move with their mother to Antelope, Colorado: “By daylight the…