I recently re-read Silas Marner by George Eliot. Oh, my goodness! How I love this book! It's theme of love and kindness overcoming sadness and pain is so beautiful, and it is so tender. I never get tired of reading certain classics.... I gain some knowledge every time and they always feel fresh. This is one of those to me. This book has so many interesting relationships -- the townspeople one with another, the townspeople with Silas (I love the growth here!) and the relationship between Eppie and Silas. I also enjoy the imagery of the town and the stone pit -- and the colorful imagery of the gold of both Silas' money and Eppie's hair. It's just marvelous and heartwarming.
When Eppie comes into Silas' life, he begins to be healed emotionally and he begins to reach out to other people in his community. My own children have helped me heal in many ways, and I often think about all the people I admire and know because of connections forged by my children. I think I meet the best people in the world through my triplets.
I am thankful for this book... each time I read it I am reminded of the true richness of life.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
YEA!!!
One of my favorite books of ALL TIME is Rules by Cynthia Lord. It is so good. If you haven't read it, I command you to. You'll regret it someday if you don't.
It's mostly about a girl named Catherine, and her brother has autism. The majority of the book is about her feelings towards that and how she deals with it. I could relate to her so well because of my brothers, and I really liked that. Even if you can't relate to it in any way, I still highly recommend it. It might not speak as much to you as it did to me, but I loved it and I don't see why anybody else wouldn't at least like it very much. It's written really well and it can help you gain greater understanding of people with disabilities.
So, ever since I discovered that book in about fourth grade, I've been looking up the author, Cynthia Lord, to see if she's writing any new books. (I do this periodically with all my favorite authors) And a couple years ago, I saw on her website that a new book of hers Touch Blue, was coming out in Spring 2009. I eagerly waited, but I never found it. The next time I checked, it said Fall 2009. After that I pretty much gave up.
So then a few days ago we were going to Barnes and Noble to buy Princess of the Midnight Ball by Jessica Day George (my Mom just read it and I'm going to read it soon) and I see this book, next to Rules, called Touch Blue.
I was so excited I seized it off the shelf and another book went flying out of place onto the floor. I was practically jumping up and down "Can I get it? Can I get it?" I didn't care what it was about. I was just excited to read it.
I started it a couple days ago and I'm loving it! It's about a charming little island town in Maine. They go out Lobster fishing all the time in their own boat, and it's really charming. I'm about halfway through and I'll be really sad when it's over.
So anyway, that's my exciting book news for right now.
It's mostly about a girl named Catherine, and her brother has autism. The majority of the book is about her feelings towards that and how she deals with it. I could relate to her so well because of my brothers, and I really liked that. Even if you can't relate to it in any way, I still highly recommend it. It might not speak as much to you as it did to me, but I loved it and I don't see why anybody else wouldn't at least like it very much. It's written really well and it can help you gain greater understanding of people with disabilities.
So, ever since I discovered that book in about fourth grade, I've been looking up the author, Cynthia Lord, to see if she's writing any new books. (I do this periodically with all my favorite authors) And a couple years ago, I saw on her website that a new book of hers Touch Blue, was coming out in Spring 2009. I eagerly waited, but I never found it. The next time I checked, it said Fall 2009. After that I pretty much gave up.
So then a few days ago we were going to Barnes and Noble to buy Princess of the Midnight Ball by Jessica Day George (my Mom just read it and I'm going to read it soon) and I see this book, next to Rules, called Touch Blue.
I was so excited I seized it off the shelf and another book went flying out of place onto the floor. I was practically jumping up and down "Can I get it? Can I get it?" I didn't care what it was about. I was just excited to read it.
I started it a couple days ago and I'm loving it! It's about a charming little island town in Maine. They go out Lobster fishing all the time in their own boat, and it's really charming. I'm about halfway through and I'll be really sad when it's over.
So anyway, that's my exciting book news for right now.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Food and France
I just finished reading My Life in France by Julia Child and her grandnephew. I enjoyed it very much. It chronicles the story of how she became interested -- obsessed -- with food when she and her husband moved to Paris. She was about 37 or so at the time and she became mesmerized with the French cuisine and way of life. It is interesting and often charming.
The book also tells the story of how she became a chef and how she made her love of food into a career writing cookbooks, and how her television show began.
If you like to cook, this book will likely appeal to you. Bon Appetit!
The book also tells the story of how she became a chef and how she made her love of food into a career writing cookbooks, and how her television show began.
If you like to cook, this book will likely appeal to you. Bon Appetit!
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Insert a good title here...
Right now I am reading The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgsen Burnett. It is so charming! I'm loving it!!
Before that I read Cheaper by the Dozen by Frank Gilbreth and somebody else who's name I don't remember. I would highly recommend it. It's about a family with twelve kids which is totally opposite of my life; so that was fun and interesting. I really liked it.
There's also a sequel by the same authors: Belles on their Toes. I might read that one next.
I also read The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein and it was VERY good. I just love fantasy books! I can't wait to read The Lord of the Rings now, I'm excited.
A couple weeks ago I also watched the First Work and the Glory movie. I've read the first two books and own the third one, so I was curious about the movie. It was done really well. It covered only about half the first book, but it followed it SO well. It wasn't perfect, (meaning it didn't quote the book or anything crazy like that) but everything was in order and nothing was changed, and the whole feeling of the book was kept just right. I loved it, and now I'm all excited to read the other books and watch the other movies! It was also fun because I had just gotten home from Nauvoo, so I was sort of in a pioneer mood.
I'm hoping to see the Ramona and Beezus movie sometime, because I've read those books about a hundred times. I've got to see the movie, even thought it might not follow the books at all and might just make me angry. But any person who has read the books a hundred times and relates them to her everyday life has got to see the movie, right?
Happy Reading!
Before that I read Cheaper by the Dozen by Frank Gilbreth and somebody else who's name I don't remember. I would highly recommend it. It's about a family with twelve kids which is totally opposite of my life; so that was fun and interesting. I really liked it.
There's also a sequel by the same authors: Belles on their Toes. I might read that one next.
I also read The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein and it was VERY good. I just love fantasy books! I can't wait to read The Lord of the Rings now, I'm excited.
A couple weeks ago I also watched the First Work and the Glory movie. I've read the first two books and own the third one, so I was curious about the movie. It was done really well. It covered only about half the first book, but it followed it SO well. It wasn't perfect, (meaning it didn't quote the book or anything crazy like that) but everything was in order and nothing was changed, and the whole feeling of the book was kept just right. I loved it, and now I'm all excited to read the other books and watch the other movies! It was also fun because I had just gotten home from Nauvoo, so I was sort of in a pioneer mood.
I'm hoping to see the Ramona and Beezus movie sometime, because I've read those books about a hundred times. I've got to see the movie, even thought it might not follow the books at all and might just make me angry. But any person who has read the books a hundred times and relates them to her everyday life has got to see the movie, right?
Happy Reading!
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
A fun summer of reading
Hi! It's me, Allison -- finally. I have been wanting to jot down my thoughts about the books I've been reading lately, but it's been so busy here at the Goose Girls house that I've not managed it yet. But now here I am.
Well, just as an introduction, I love to read! I've always loved to read as long as I can remember. I love lots of different kinds of books... I read a lot of the same books as my daughter Abby does (Shannon Hale, The Penderwicks, anything by Deborah Wiles or Kate DiCamillo, Tuck Everlasting, The Secret Garden, Harry Potter, etc.) and I love classics (Dickens, Eliot, Hardy, all the Brontes, Austen, Anna Karenina -- one of my favorites! etc.) and history (mainly David McCullough, but I've dabbled in Nathaniel Philbrick, Stephen Ambrose and Doris Kearns Goodwin). And there are many wonderful contemporary books that I've loved -- Peace Like a River, Cry, the Beloved Country, I Capture the Castle, and lots of others.
I think my favorite book that I have read lately is Brave Companions by McCullough. It's really a series of essays about many different people and topics and I found it to be fascinating. He is such an insightful historian and has a wonderful way of painting beautiful pictures with words about people. He discusses very interesting people such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Conrad Richter, men involved with the Panama Canal and the Brooklyn Bridge, and several others in all different occupations and times. There is also a wonderful chapter on the city of Washington D.C. I highly recommend it, even if you usually don't like to read history. He uses stories that are more compelling than fiction because they are true!
While I was on vacation I re-read My Antonia and O Pioneers by Willa Cather. This was inspired by Brave Companions, because he talks about the woman who inspired the character of Antonia. We were travelling across Nebraska and it was so poetic to be reading these rich stories about the strong women who first settled there.
I just finished Wilkie Collins' The Woman in White and truly enjoyed it. It was the first novel reported to be a suspense and it is certainly suspenseful! Collins was friends with Dickens (whose writing I adore!!) and his style is somewhat similar.
Well, that's it for today. I'm currently reading a book a friend gave me called My Life in France by Julia Child. It is charming! Bon Appetit!
Well, just as an introduction, I love to read! I've always loved to read as long as I can remember. I love lots of different kinds of books... I read a lot of the same books as my daughter Abby does (Shannon Hale, The Penderwicks, anything by Deborah Wiles or Kate DiCamillo, Tuck Everlasting, The Secret Garden, Harry Potter, etc.) and I love classics (Dickens, Eliot, Hardy, all the Brontes, Austen, Anna Karenina -- one of my favorites! etc.) and history (mainly David McCullough, but I've dabbled in Nathaniel Philbrick, Stephen Ambrose and Doris Kearns Goodwin). And there are many wonderful contemporary books that I've loved -- Peace Like a River, Cry, the Beloved Country, I Capture the Castle, and lots of others.
I think my favorite book that I have read lately is Brave Companions by McCullough. It's really a series of essays about many different people and topics and I found it to be fascinating. He is such an insightful historian and has a wonderful way of painting beautiful pictures with words about people. He discusses very interesting people such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Conrad Richter, men involved with the Panama Canal and the Brooklyn Bridge, and several others in all different occupations and times. There is also a wonderful chapter on the city of Washington D.C. I highly recommend it, even if you usually don't like to read history. He uses stories that are more compelling than fiction because they are true!
While I was on vacation I re-read My Antonia and O Pioneers by Willa Cather. This was inspired by Brave Companions, because he talks about the woman who inspired the character of Antonia. We were travelling across Nebraska and it was so poetic to be reading these rich stories about the strong women who first settled there.
I just finished Wilkie Collins' The Woman in White and truly enjoyed it. It was the first novel reported to be a suspense and it is certainly suspenseful! Collins was friends with Dickens (whose writing I adore!!) and his style is somewhat similar.
Well, that's it for today. I'm currently reading a book a friend gave me called My Life in France by Julia Child. It is charming! Bon Appetit!
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