RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized

  • Set in a bookshop, London during the blitz, a touch of romance, a touch of tears, plenty of light, good-natured humor, and more–what more could one ask for in a good “read”? Oh, yes, the audio version–that too. This was an exceptionally fulfilling reading experience for me. It was just the diversion I needed from…

  • September is known for being a month dedicated to literacy. Maybe it’s because it’s traditionally “back-to-school” time of the year, or maybe fall just lends itself to snuggling up with a good book and reading the hours away. In any event, September is National Literacy Month, National Library Card Sign Up Month, Be Kind to…

  • This 1992 publication is by the author of a novel selected by my Third Tuesday book club, The Goldfinch, and is one I enjoyed a great deal this summer. it is “compelling, elegant, dramatic, and playful.” Tartt’s History tells the story of a group of college students who are “clever, eccentric, misfits,” which includes themes…

  • If R.J. Palacio, author of Wonder recommended a book, would you read it? Well, I did. Roll With It, another story of a unique kid who has a disability,  by Jamie Sumner, tells the story of Ellie, who has Cerebral Palsy, a creative, audacious pre-teen trapped in a wheelchair. Because her grandfather has Alzheimer’s, she and her mom must…

  • First Line Fridays, which I like to refer to as Friday Firstliners, was started by The Purple Booker. The idea is to copy the first line or so of a book you want to read, are reading, or have read recently in hopes those who read your post will add that book to their TBR…

  • Currently I am reading daily from The Gifts of Perfection by Brene Brown has a whole section in my everyday journal/notebook that I am copying parts I want to read again and again in. I am enjoying The Ninth Hour a great deal. It reminds me of Call the Midwives. Blue Like Jazz has its…

  • Although I finished my Non-fiction challenge much earlier this year, I am still trying to read more non-fiction. Recently, a friend, Susan, gave me some books she had left over from when she was the CFO of Alvin Independent School District on team management and communication. One of these books, which I’m just getting around…

  • The Comfort Book by Matt Haig offers just that–comfort. Opening it at random this morning before returning it to the library, I found these words as a reminder of how to start and spend my day: “A Thing I Discovered Recently” “I love stillness. Slowness. When nothing is happening. The blueness of the sky. Inhaling…

  • In an effort to read more poetry this year than last (a 2021 goal), I am challenging myself with a short objective–to read a poem a day for ten days. And, what better way to do this than to use poets.org, the “original poetry service publishing new work by contemporary poets.” I subscribed today, Sunday,…

  • I failed; I quit; I did not finish Madeline L’Engle’s The Other Side of the Sun. I tried, honest I did, but after almost fifty pages I did not care about the characters, nor was I blown away by the strangeness and mystery of the homeplace where the main character was placed, awaiting her husband’s…