RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized

  • I have been reading up a storm (pun intended) after a 5:30 break to sit outside and watch the weather forming, listening to the rubble of thunder and drink fruit smoothies made in the blender as a light supper treat, followed by a sample of the Halloween candy as dessert. I have finished another novel…

  • Today’s recommendation for kids is a special anthology of poems, all addressed to Planet Earth. This fine book is a Cybils nominee. Interesting facts about the formation and qualities of our planet are included as answers to the queries of children who live there. Questions about gravity, orbit, natural resources all come together in an…

  • Yes, I got up early, and I started reading without checking in or posting first. Within the first hour, I had finished Anne Lamott’s Some Assembly Required. (Heads up, Deb Nance of Readerbuzz–I put a sticky note with your name on this one; you will love it. Maybe I can trade it for a Canva…

  • Although I have a few plans for tomorrow, I plan to participate in my third Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon. I am going to plan the books to read and make some snacks tonight. I’ll have two specific goals: Read as many Cybils contenders in the poetry category as possible. I picked up several at the…

  • center of attention

    Originally posted on Annette Rochelle Aben: When you’re remembered With fond appreciation Your heart overflows With joy, peace, and contentment Leaving with you more to give back ©2021 Annette Rochelle Aben

  • Usually blogging friends do WWW Wednesdays, answering What have you finished? What are you currently reading? and What will you read next? Instead, I’m only going to answer one “W,” What have you finished? Zadie Smith is an established writer whom I’ve read in The New Yorker and in more than one novel. These essays…

  • Originally posted on Bethany House Fiction: Readers, what can we say? We love our books. And that love can sometimes be borderline obsessive. See how many of these signs of bookaholism apply to you. It might not be too late to get help. One: You find yourself referring to fictional characters as if they were…

  • Originally posted on Literacy and Me: Everyone has someone they look up to: heroes. I have several heroes I have accumulated over the course of a lifetime. Here are a few: Virginia Kernaghan, a Speech and Theater Arts teacher, who taught junior high with me for thirteen years, and taught me many life lessons about…

  • Today’s Saturday morning recommendation is a Cybils nominee I finished last night. This novel in verse is set in a strange situation. The protagonist finds herself left behind after an equally strange evacuation. Dealing with many questions and what ifs, she spends over three years totally alone, learning survival skills as she goes. Her father…

  • Friday Firstliners should be from a current read. Here’s mine from a book I’ve just begun: “You can tell a lot about a person from the library books they borrow.” These are the opening thoughts from June, the librarian at the Chalcot Library in a very small town. Soon she gets word that the city…