RAE’S READS

  • After reading Rubin’s The Happiness Project recommended by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz, the next logical step was to read a book she read toward her own Happiness Project, Bonjour, Happiness. This book promises “secrets to finding your joie de vivre.” Influenced by her French grandmother, this is not the first time Callan has studied Frenchwomen for their secrets; she has also written about how Frenchwomen dress, eat, and love.

    After making a study-work trip to France, the author learned to take joy from “simple, everyday pleasures,” establishing her own joie de vivre, or “being alive in each delicious moment.” She fascinated this senior citizen with how Frenchwomen handle aging,” celebrating their bodies,” and balancing their lives, as femmes d’un certain age, who were elegant and confident at 70 plus. At the end of each chapter, there is a nifty summary titled “French Lessons,” a very helpful, reinforcing time to think and rethink what has been covered in each chapter. Callan often quotes Frenchwomen she interviewed or conversed with, as in this definition of what joy de vivre actually is:

    Joie de vivre is about loving life, loving people, loving to be alive. It is about smiling, being in your heart, and being grateful for all the beautiful things in your life: being in good health, being able to hear, to see, to walk, being grateful for all the loving people…for the nature surrounding us and all it gives to us.” If a woman is grateful for all these things, isn’t it a given that happiness and joy will follow?

    This book made me happy and joyful. I am very glad I read it.

  • sjhigbee's avatarBrainfluff

    Some do-gooders insist you shouldn’t eat any species that can beg for mercy. You can ignore this nonsense by biting their heads off before asking them if they want to be spared.

    Castellan the Black, mighty dragon warrior, features in my short story Picky Eaters, written to provide a humorous escape from all the stuff that isn’t happening on Wyvern Peak… All proceeds for the duration of its publishing life are donated to mental health charities.

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  • Rae Longest's avatarLiteracy and Me

    MORE POETRY?

    It’s time to read another poetry collection, since reading more poetry is one of my 2021 Reading Goals, and here’s one that’s been sitting on my TBR shelf since Jee Wan reviewed it on her blog, Hooked on Books. My experience with this blogger is that she has an “eye out” for good poetry, and her taste is spot-on. (Perhaps this is because she is an excellent poet, herself.)

    I thought if I put this collection on Literacy Lessons, it would commit me to at least starting it. Not soon; not tomorrow; TODAY! Stay tuned for more about this book of poetry.

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  • Waiting for the semester to start, and trying to stay safe at home, I did a good deal of reading to pass the time.

    I Was able to tie up some loose ends by finishing several books I’d started some time ago. (Grunge rubber stamp with word Finished inside,vector illustration)

    TO BE REVIEWED SOON ON PWR.

    Will probably not review this one. I found it disturbing, especially since it was a speculative “take” on an actual situation.
    An especially helpful book–first non-fiction read of 2021

    Started and finished this book in the 2 week time period between Sunday Summaries as part of my Madeline L’Engle project for 2021. TO BE REVIEWED SOON ON PWR
    Started and finished in this 2 week time frame again. REVIEWED RECENTLY ON PWR
    Read in two days, a real page turner TO BE REVIEWED SOON ON PWR

    My go-to inspirational reading for daily thought

    Panchinko by Min Jin Lee–I have checked this out of the library and just begun it this weekend.

    I WILL NOT BE POSTING WHAT I WATCHED THIS TIME, WATCHED WAAAY TOO MUCH!

    That’s it for today’s Sunday Summary. Classes begin after the MLK Holiday, so I hope I will be reading as much in the days to come. In the meantime,

    HAPPY READING!

  • Rae Longest's avatarLiteracy and Me

    Do you want to be happy? Who doesn’t? Reading this book is guaranteed to make the reader take on achieving happiness as a “project”, which is exactly what Rubin does. Subtitled “Or Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun,” this 2009 publication is scientifically researched and a literal study of happiness. I had heard of the book shortly after its publication from Deb Nance, a fellow blogger from Readerbuzz, who took on a happiness project of her own shortly after she read this amazing book. Deb and I agree that the author is brilliant and of very high intelligence, writing from a desire to “focus on things that really matter.” Rubin states that “the smallest of changes can make the biggest differences–” I really liked that! She uses anecdotes from her own marriage and…

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  • This book definitely includes a warning about telling the truth.

    The girl in this book is a habitual liar, not because she uses lying to get out of trouble (she sometimes does), but because what she can make up is a lot more interesting than the truth. Everyone in her class knows she lies, and often the old childhood chant is aimed at her. Pretty soon no one believes her even when she is telling the truth, and sure enough something spectacular really does happen to her, and no one believes her with the exception of one classmate.

    It all works our in the end, but how she and all the characters in the story get there makes for a really fun, sometimes funny tale. I recommend this one for ages 7-12.

  • Both Hoarding Books and Wandering Words have excellent choices on this meme.

    “History has failed us, but no matter.”

    This is the first line from Pachinko by Min Jin Lee, a huge undertaking from my local library.

  • Today’s Tuesday Teaser comes from Tanya Maria Barrientos’ Frontera Street:

    I am just a couple of chapters into this book and have already been surprised.

    “I was seven months into my pregnancy, and my legs and ankles were perpetually swollen. The baby kicked whenever I stretched my arms over my head to reach the uppermost button drawers.”

    This is said by Dee, a Gringa, who arrived at the fabric shop on Frontera Street in the Barrio one day and promptly fainted. Strangely enough, she stayed, and her story unfolds along with that of Alma, who already works there. This is a story of “friendship and forgiveness,” a story of women being there for each other, one which I am sure I am going to enjoy.

  • In a hopeful, albeit futile, attempt to control the fates of 2021…

    Jen Payne's avatar

    I am a Winter Warrior

    and a Manifesting Angel

    I’ve Finished Strong
    and Started Stronger™

    Unraveled My Year™

    Found My Word

    and my Theme Song

    I did an Angel Card reading
    and consulted the Runes

    I’ve completed my Vision Board

    committed to Read 50 Books

    set my Intentions

    and in a hopeful, albeit futile, attempt to control the fates of 2021,

    I wrote my Resolution:

    REST


    Poem ©2021, Jen Payne. Painting, Femme couchee, dormant by Felix Vallotton

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  • Tony Single's avatarunbolt me

    focus
    just
    focus
    sounds easy right?
    except
    i have designed
    a life
    full of
    distractions…
    focus
    just
    focus
    it’s my mount everest
    my moby dick
    if i could only
    focus
    nothing could stop
    me.

    by emje
    © All rights reserved 2020

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