RAE’S READS

Author: Rae Longest

  • Today’s delightful book is The narrator, a young boy thinks Mrs. McWee, who lives down the hall in his apartment building, is a witch. But, he’s “not so sure.” He thinks she has ESP, but “he’s not so sure.” He thinks many things and uses scant evidence to back up what he thinks, but his…

  • One of my favorite types of poetry is the parody. It is easy to write and often very funny. Here is a parody over an American phenomenon : “Stopping By Starbucks on a Snowy Evening” “(with apologies to Robert Frost) Whose beans these are I think I know. They’re ground to brew and packed to…

  • Originally posted on The Ethereal Unicorn: Are you human, Tris? Being up this high doesn’t scare you at all? Tobias Eaton, Divergent In the beginning it seems like a long climbWhere would you be if not all your stars seem to align?Doubts run wild, and so does imaginationThe thought of soaring freely fuels your passion.…

  • I read this book in two days–just kept turning pages to figure out the mystery at the center of the plot. We first meet Maud Drennan, who works for a caretaker/housekeeper company, as she is tackling Mr. Flood’s falling-down, stuffed-to-the-gills house. Cathal Flood, her employer, is a belligerent curmudgeon, hoarder who is trying to outsmart…

  • To celebrate today, I’m featuring a poem I have always loved and have shared with students on many levels. “Swift Things Are Beautiful” “Swift things are beautiful: Swallows and deer, And lightning that falls Bright-veined and clear, Rivers and meteors, Wind in the wheat, The strong-withered horse, The swift runner’s feet. And slow things are…

  • April 4-10 is National Library Week. This past week, I made a pick up of reserved books on hold at the Alvin Library. Two non-fiction books to help with my 2021 goal to read more non-fiction, and two Books about Books. That should keep me busy for a while.

  • Originally posted on Literacy and Me: IN HONOR OF NATIONAL POETRY MONTH, HERE IS A POEM THAT ALWAYS REMINDS ME OF WHAT MATTERS. “I read In a book Where a man called Christ Went about doing good. It is very discouraging To me That I am so easily Satisfied With just going about.” (Author Unknown)

  • In honor of National Poetry Month, my Tuesday Teaser comes from a great book of poetry, This is a parody from Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” “Two Roads” “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I I took the one less traveled by… Since then I’ve been completely lost. Thanks for nothing, Robert Frost!”

  • Today I received my newsletter from The Academy of American Poets in the mail. Some of the more interesting points were as follows: “Twenty-five years ago in April of 1996, it was Academy of American Poets members who provided the initial seed money for us to announce and carry out National Poetry Month for the…