RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized

  • Here is a cinquain I wrote many years ago to show my seventh graders what a chinquapin is: Books creased, dog-eared teaching, telling, transporting exciting worlds of adventure Books. My love affair with books began at an early age. I remember my British grandmother, my long-distance grandmother, sending me my first Alphabet Book when I…

  • At one time, I was very “into” memoirs. In fact, one semester , I had my students do a “memoir project” as part of their course requirements, reading then reviewing a memoir. The students actually enjoyed this assignment, and the culminating memoir they wrote from their own life was very interesting, and in some cases…

  • AGAIN, I’m late, but today is because I’ve been enjoying my out-of-town company and taking some time out to do fun shopping. Saturdays on PWR are like the TV programming on 50’s and 60’s Saturday mornings, reserved for the kiddos. Today’s book is not something I’ve read, but something that showed up in my LFL…

  • Withered Homes

    Originally posted on Random Specific Thoughts: War is what happens when language fails.―?Margaret Atwood Tokens of an era that flew past us, plague these desolate streets. There are posters from political campaigns, advertisements for miracle pills and the odd ‘For hire‘ poster in neon yellow. No one roams these streets anymore, save for the occasional…

  • I began the book, I Capture the Castle twice. I really was intrigued by the cover and blurbs for this novel, but I had a hard time keeping interested. Finally, I gave up and watched the movie instead. Dodie Smith wrote a fine novel, but the 2003 film allowed me to finish the story of…

  • Today’s First Line Friday offering comes from Annie Proulx’s Accordion Crimes: ” The Instrument It was as if his eye were an ear and a crackle went through each time he shot a look at the accordion.” Typical, beautiful prose from the pen of the author of The Shipping News, Annie Proulx.

  • Poems can be about anything. Here is a poem by William Stafford about the joys of journaling. “KEEPING A JOURNAL” by William Stafford “At night it was easy for me with my little candle to sit late recording what happened that day, Sometimes rain breathing in from the dark would begin softly across the roof…

  • We celebrated poetry in my Advanced Writing Class Wednesday. Thirteen of the twenty-two students were in attendance, and we spent the better part of the class discussing synonym poems, limericks, and a unique book of poems titled, Consider the Lemming by Jeanne Steig and illustrated by William Steig. This collection of poems, published in 1998,…

  • Originally posted on Literacy and Me: This is an old meme from National Poetry Month during 2006, but it’s quotes and “bits” are well worth sharing. The Academy of American Poets has wonderful suggestions for celebrating National Poetry Month 2022. Recently I finished this fine collection of brave and “gutsy” women who made a difference…