This year (2025) finds me with 53 years of teaching “under my belt.” I have taught all levels from pre-K “(library lady” or “book lady”–volunteer) to juniors, seniors, and graduate students enrolled in my Advanced Writing class at the university where I have just completed 34 years. My first paying teaching job was junior high, and I spent 13 years with ages 12-13, the “difficult years.” I had some of the “funnest” experiences with this age group. When I was no longer the “young, fun teacher,” I taught in an elementary school setting before sixth graders went on to junior high, teaching language arts blocs, an assignment that was a “dream-fit” for me. After completing graduate school in my 40s, I went on to community college, then university teaching. This past fall I accepted a part-time teaching job at Apogee Gulf Coast Schools in its first year at the Alvin campus. After my Better Half died n 2022, I achieved a lifelong dream: opening a bookstore of my own, Rae’s Reads. A year later, I sold the house we had lived in for 47 years and moved into the bookstore. My goal is to circulate and repurpose books.
Just as teaching is “in my blood,” so is a passion for reading, writing, libraries, and everything bookish.
This blog will be open to anyone who loves books, promotes literacy and wants to “come out and play.”
For months now, my TBR shelves have been filling up, I have six books I received from requests at my local library, there’s a Jemisin sci-fi book I haven’t gotten to—IT’S TIME FOR A PERSONAL READATHON!!! Who wants to join me? SIGN UP TODAY!
SATURDAY, OCTOBER SECOND, beginning at 7 a.m. CDT
Read along with Rae in the READ WITH ME READATHON
Get your snacks from the store tomorrow and cook ahead, so all you’ll have to do Saturday is warm over.
My Better Half is the first to sign up…look for the comments and be the next. There is no ending time, just read, read, read for as long as you can, then sign off. I hope to do at least twelve hours, myself.
You may remember the village in Malawi that got its first school after a Jamaican-Canadian woman met a young Malawi vendor in a market in Cape Town, S. Africa and discovered that he yearned to become a teacher and educate his village.
Well, that young man Chimwemwe Musa (who goes by the name “Happy”) recently completed his teacher education and is now a fully qualified teacher!
The women learned how to sew and now use their skills to make school uniforms and other clothing. And the men have been learning cabinet-making. Here are some of their creations:
I am happy to share this good news story because good news it is!
Here’s one I finished recently.A Reese Witherspoon Book Club Selection
This 2021 publication is one I read about in a Sunday edition of The Houston Chronicle. It took weeks to get it from our Alvin Library, but it was worth the wait. The book deals with the Mexican American experience in Los Angeles and rebuts the old saying, “It’s always seventy-two and sunny in LA.” The Alvarado family is one with engaging characters; the reader begins to care about them early on as they go about their “messy lives.”
The story begins during a drought, keenly observed by weather-obsessed Oscar, who is the family’s patriarch. Kelia, his wife of many years, is a sculptress who creates erotic statues and sells them in a gallery in Mexico City. Their daughters, Claudia, a TV chef; Olivia, and architect; and Patricia, who is caught up in social media and lives at home with her son round out the cast of characters/family. Escandon, the author, demonstrates “quick wit and humor,” and once this reader realized it was ok to laugh at the absurdness of the family’s lives, she appreciated the total “badness” of the daughters, husbands, lovers who are very comical. One never knows what to expect from the twists and turns of the plot and leaves the reader thinking, “What next!?!”
I have not done too much reading this week because I have filled the week with socializing, doctor’s appointments and tests, and binge watching Netflix.I checked this out from the library and should finish soon. Stay tuned for a review.Still receiving relevant messages each day from this secular devotional book. When I reach the last day of the year, I will regift it to a friend. Borrowed this meme from Deb Nance’s READERBUZZ. If you haven’t checked out her blog, do so; it’s a treat!More of thisMore of this.
That’s all for today, Wednesday, September 29th KEEP ON READING, and enjoy!
Note: I wrote this post 2 months back but just didn’t feel like it said everything I wanted to and still feel that way. But I hope you get the sentiment behind this post.
Greetings, it’s National Coffee Day. September 29th is National Coffee Day in the U.S., just two days ahead of International Coffee Day on October first.
Let’s celebrate the glories of coffee! Nothing acts like a perk-me-up, like a help-me-stay-up-late, like a wake-me-up like good old coffee.
However you take your coffee, whether you add something to it or take it black, coffee has insinuated itself as part of the American lifestyle.
Let’s celebrate first thing Wednesday morning together with our first cuppa’ together, giving coffee its due and toasting mugs to National Coffee Day.
This time, I took a page from my friend Carla’s book and listened to the audiobook on Hoopla.
I was unaware of this 2020 publication until my blogging friend Carla reviewed in on Carla Loves to Read. I had read Olive Kitteridge, Strout’s introduction to this character as a Third-Tuesday book club selection some time ago and thoroughly enjoyed it. In that novel, Olive was a middle-aged junior high math teacher, who reminded me of many math teachers during my time teaching in junior high. She is one of my favorite literary characters.
“Prickly, witty, resistant to change, yet ruthlessly honest and deeply empathetic”, in the sequel, Olive Kitteridge struggles to understand others and herself. If nothing else, she is resilient. Themes of aging, loss, loneliness, and love are what Olive is dealing with now that she is an old woman.Olive’s story is set in Cosby, Maine, and as often is the case with Strout, she deals with “ordinary moments in the lives of ordinary people.” I found the New England setting interesting, coming from Virginia and now living on the Texas Gulf Coast, and agree with one critic who says of Strout, She “startle[s] us, move[s], and inspire[s] us [with] moments of transcendent grace.” It is a well-written novel and a darned good read/listen.
The ides behind Tuesday Teaser is to copy a few lines from a current read and tempt other readers to add your book to their TBR stack/shelf.
Today’s Tuesday Teaser comes from Brene Brown’s The Gifts of Imperfection.
I promised myself I would read more non-fiction books in 2021. As of September, I am doing great.
“Comparing yourself with other people makes you boring, not better.” I try to remember this advice whenever I look at Facebook. LOL
Review:
Being ok with not being perfect is important; in fact it can be an asset.
Bene Brown is a Texas writer, who started out at the main campus of my university, The University of Houston. (I teach at The University of Houston Clear Lake campus.) This is one of the best self-help books I have read. Gifts of Imperfection includes the ability to “embrace your inner flaws, to accept who you are, instead of constantly chasing the image of who you’re trying to be, because other people expect you to act in certain ways.” (Four Minute Books).
There are many quotable statements in this 2010 publication (I can’t believe I am just now getting around to reading this one!). The lessons, take-ways, and applications of this examination of perfection and the ok-ness of NOT being perfect are abundant. Something that will get me through many future situations is the concept that being uncool is ok. LOL
I highly recommend this book to anyone seeking her authentic self and wanting to feel good about what she finds there.
This book will allow you to feel good about yourself, no matter how imperfect you may be.Thanks, Evin
This was a donation to my Little Free Library from an unknown neighbor. One of the perks of having a LFL is that you get first pick of things put in.
“The Brownski House is a book like no other. Some readers have called it the finest novel they’ve ever read, yet it is no novel; others have said that it redefines travel writing and historical narrative, yet its grip on the reader’s heart compares to the greatest works of fiction. Behind it all is the true account of a woman’s journey back to her childhood home.” This is the beginning of the inside cover blurb that describes this book. The story takes place during the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939. The main character, Sofia Browinski and her mother, Helena flee Poland and eventually end up in England. It covers the war years and runs all the way through 1992 when the narrator and Sofia make the return trip to Belorussia after sixty years. Many challenges and misadventures follow Sophia/Zophia as they escape (sometimes barely) the invading troops, and the hardships they endure test the mettle of even the strongest of women.
The amazing thing about this action-packed, page-turning story is that it is all true.
THANK YOU KIND PERSON WHO DONATED THIS FINE BOOK TO MY LFL.
This will be the second time I have participated in Cybils awards.How exciting! Last time, a couple of years ago, I read middle grade fiction. This time, I’m trying something new–POETRY.This is definitely something I need to read more of. Reading more poetry was one of my 2021 goals.Thanks, Evin.