Sunday, February 28, 2010

Sunday Drives and Family Time

Last night Lyle drove up in the mountains a bit to pick up our older daughter from a friend's house. The rest of us went along for the ride. I had been told that the night view was spectacular from this friend's house with the lights twinkling in the valley below and I wanted to see it. Also, the moon was full last night and it was just a nice night for a drive. As we drove home we were commenting on the beauty of the drive, and the evening in general.

Our younger daughter said, "We should go for a Sunday afternoon drive tomorrow! We haven't done that in a long time!" (Mainly because it's been winter for a long time!)

Sunday drives are a favorite family activity around here, in case you hadn't noticed. I've wondered, though, if it was really something that Lyle and I mainly enjoyed and the kids just came along because they didn't have much choice. So I asked 'Becca what she liked about it... "Oh, just getting to go for a drive and seeing the mountains... and the deer... and snow... and getting stuck in the snow... and family time!"

I am grateful that our teen children want to do things with us!

And in case you wondered, we didn't end up going for a drive today. We have a trip coming up in a little over a week, so we decided to stay in today... though we were tempted!

Reading Challenge Update

Continuing with the 2010 100+ Reading Challenge, here are the books I read in February:

15. When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit by Judith Kerr
16. Laylie's Daring Quest by Kersten Hamilton
17. Days of Gold by Jude Deveraux
18. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
19. Face of Betrayal by Lis Wiehl
20. Amazing Insider Secrets by Jeff Bredenberg
21. Secrets by Jude Deveraux
22. Finding Inner Peace During Troubled Times by William Moss
23. One Million Arrows by Julie Ferwerda
24. Listen by Rene Gutteridge

The other challenge that I'm participating in is What's in a Name? The idea of this one is to read books with titles which fit into 6 different categories. It can overlap with other challenges, so I thought it would be interesting to see if I end up with any titles that fit the categories. I haven't been deliberately looking for book titles to fit these categories, though I made need to before the year is over! We'll see!

Here's where I stand so far...

  1. Food:
  2. Body of water:
  3. Title (queen, president): Raising a Modern-Day Princess by Pam Farrel and Doreen Hanna
  4. Plant: Lavender Morning by Jude Deveraux
  5. Place name:
  6. Music term:

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Plain Jayne - review

Plain Jayne by Hillary Manton Lodge is an Amish story with a twist. Actually, more than one twist. First of all, it's set in Oregon, not the typical Pennsylvania or Ohio. Also, the story is about a big city reporter who goes to stay with an Amish family as a kind of retreat. The Amish customs are as "foreign" to her as they would be to me or you. It was a very intriguing story. Here's a little more about it:

Jayne Tate is an investigative reporter for a major daily. When her editor demands she take time off to grieve the death of her father and get her writing back up to par, Jayne instead follows her instincts. She's certain there's a story to uncover about the Amish, but where to start?

An initial interview with the intriguing owner of an Amish furniture store opens the door for Jayne to live with the Amish family he left behind. What she doesn't yet know is that her journalistic observations of this sincere, yet conflicted family are destined to cause reflections of her own childhood.

"A Young Girl's Dream"

If you've read my blog for very long you know I have a small collection of vintage dishes... just odds and ends I've picked up here and there. Most don't have any sentimental value. I just think they're pretty.

One of my faithful blog readers is my Aunt 'Lene who blogs at Meditations and Memories. She also collects pretty dishes, but she's been at it a lot longer than I have! Last summer when I went to Louisiana for my grandmother's funeral, Aunt 'Lene gave me this pretty Norman Rockwell plate. She has a whole collection of them on the wall of her dining room but she wanted me to have this one. She said it made her think of me and she thought I would like it. She even let me look at her other Rockwell plates to see if there was another one I would like better. There wasn't. She was right! This one was my favorite!

So she told me me the story about it. She had seen the plate advertised in a magazine, 25 years ago or so, and just loved it. So she splurged and bought it for herself. She said it reminded her of a trip she made by bus when she was a young lady. (Aunt 'Lene, correct me if I got the story wrong!)

It's a limited edition plate (though not particularly rare) with a date of 1985 on the back. That must have been about the time Aunt 'Lene got it... and it was the year I was married. So that makes it even more special to me!

Right now I have it on a shelf with other dishes in the living room. I plan to eventually hang it in the bedroom when I finally finish re-decorating in there. I think it will look neat with a vintage suitcase and some old linens nearby.

Visit Coloradolady for more Vintage Thingy Thursday posts.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Beehive Reader - review

Over the years I have looked at, read, and considered many, many beginning readers. My younger daughter, who has learning delays, was at the beginning reading level for much longer than an average student, so we have gone through just about any beginning level reader I could get my hands on. Some were, of course, better than others.

Beehive Reader 1 is much nicer than most I've seen. It is a lovely hardback book. The illustrations are beautiful soft pencil drawings. And the stories are not "twaddle". My daughter has (finally) moved on from this level, but when our review copy arrived she was eager to read it anyway. She whipped through it in a few minutes and then enjoyed telling me about the stories.

Beehive Reader 1 is designed to go along with All About Spelling Level 1. It is $19.95. For more reviews visit the TOS Homeschool Crew blog.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Simple Days in February

Outside my window... it's pretending to be spring! The sun is shining and I declare I see buds on the trees and bushes! But reality says that spring doesn't come this early. I'm enjoying the sunshine anyway!

I am thinking... of my To-Do lists for the next couple of weeks.

I am thankful for... sunshine and the promise of spring!

From the learning rooms... we're learning about the Civil War on one hand, and the Cold War, the Space Race, and the Civil Rights movement on the other (using Sonlight Cores 4 and 300, which don't exactly go together!), plodding through the first level of the Madsen Method, and reviewing a GED test study book to make sure we have all the bases covered. Yeah, that's what school looks like when you teach 2 children at different levels with different objectives! (I don't recommend this approach for new homeschoolers!)

From the kitchen... I'm learning to grow my own bean sprouts! They add such a nice flavor and crunch to a salad, and they are super-cheap and super-easy to make! I got a pound of the dried mung beans for $1.69, and it only takes a couple tablespoons of the seeds to make a baggy of sprouts. The only equipment required is a wide mouth quart jar and a screen for the lid. I'll have to take pictures and blog about it soon!

I am creating... my third pair of socks for the winter. I love the new 2-at-a-time technique I learned!

I am going... to Loveland, Colorado in 2 weeks for my first homeschool convention of the season!

I am reading... Sons of Thunder by Susan May Warren.

I am hoping... to finish up some projects this week that have been hanging over my head for awhile.

I am hearing... violin music as the girls practice for their classes.

Around the house... are topply stacks of books. I'm sorting through my books and curriculum. Getting ready to sell what I'm through with, and deciding what I'll need for display at my Sonlight booth this season.

A few plans for the rest of the week: the usual homeschooling and office work at home, orchestra classes for the girls Tuesday and Wednesday, Bible study in our home Thursday evening, skiing on Friday-- just our normal schedule for this winter.

This post is part of The Simple Woman's Daybook.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Value Fiction "Grab Bag" - review

I received two random books from WaterBrook Multnomah as part of the Value Fiction "Grab Bag" blog tour.

First up is Yesterday's Promise by Linda Lee Chaikin. This is a historical novel set in nineteenth-century South Africa. It is the second book in the East of the Sun series. "Rogan Chantry faces danger from tribesmen, ruthless politicians, and his own family as he searches for gold in South Africa. In England, his beloved Evy is injured by a mysterious assailant. The greed and intrigue surrounding the diamond mines could very well drive them irrevocably apart."

I also received Faithful Heart by Al Lacy. This is a "western" historical novel which takes place shortly after the Civil War. It is the second book in the Angel of Mercy series. "The adventures of certified medical nurse and dedicated Christian Breanna Baylor continue as she travels by wagon train to visit her sister, Dottie, in California. Little does she know that her most dangerous encounter might be with Jerrod, her brother-in-law, who’s suffering from dementia caused by combat fatigue."

Math Mammoth - review

One advantage that I've found to having workbooks in an e-book format is that you can print out just the pages you need, and as often as you need them, to best fit your family's situation. This has worked out well for us with books from Math Mammoth.

I was offered my choice of workbooks from Math Mammoth as part of the TOS Homeschool Crew. I chose the Fractions and Decimals books from the Blue Series, which is designed for topic-specific review. The workbooks included instruction, practice worksheets, and even some games for reinforcement. They were great supplemental materials for topics that my girls struggle with.

Math Mammoth offers "fully reproducible math workbooks and worktexts for grades 1-12." The electronic versions of the Blue Series books, like what I got, cost between $2.00 and $7.00 apiece.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Ski Report - Week 5

This past Friday was the warmest ski day we've had yet. Driving over, the weather was kinda weird. It was bright and sunny when we left home, but densely foggy as we drove over the Pass, and then bright and clear again when we reached Kellogg. The mountain scenery was particularly spectacular as we rode up the gondola. When we finally reached the snow level, the snow appeared to be twinkling in the sunshine!
We've been wondering if the snow is going to hold for the rest of the classes (3 more weeks) with the unusually warm weather we've been having. With the clear skies it was easier to see how much of the mountains are not snow-covered this year. We left the mountain about 3:00pm and it was 50 degrees when we got back to the car at the base of the gondola!

We aren't all that far from Vancouver. I asked Lyle if they were having problems with snow for the Olympics. (I'm a very casual glance-at-the-TV-in-passing Olympics viewer. Not following them very closely at all.) He said he had heard they trucked in snow for one event, but that the ski events were a good bit further north in the mountains. So it's probably colder there.

Abigail - review

I have always enjoyed well-researched novels based on the lives of Bible characters because they peak my interest to dig deeper into Scripture myself to learn more about that particular character. Abigail by Jill Eileen Smith is no exception. It is obvious that the author has done her research on Bible times and customs, yet the story was easy to read for modern readers. It is the second in a trilogy of King David's Wives. I have not read the first one, Michal, but found that Abigail was fine as a stand-alone novel. Available February 2010 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group. Here's a little more about the story:

Abigail's hopes and dreams for the future are wrapped up in her handsome, dark-eyed betrothed, Nabal. But when the long-awaited wedding day arrives, her drunken groom behaves shamefully. Nevertheless, Abigail tries to honor and respect her husband despite his abuse of her.

Meanwhile, Abigail's family has joined David's wandering tribe as he and his people keep traveling to avoid the dangerous Saul. When Nabal suddenly dies, Abigail is free to move on with her life, and thanks to her brother, her new life includes a new husband--David. The dangers of tribal life on the run are serious, but there are other dangers in young Abigail's mind. How can David lead his people effectively when he goes against God? And how can Abigail share David's love with the other wives he insists on marrying?

Smith draws on Scripture, in-depth historical research and her vivid imagination to unveil the story of Abigail and David in rich detail and drama, for a riveting page-turner that will keep readers looking forward to the next book in this trilogy.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Country House Courtship - review

One of my favorite genres of fiction is Regency romance (a la Jane Austen). I have been enjoying the Regency novels by Linore Rose Burkard. The third in her Regency series is The Country House Courtship. Here's the blurb from the publisher:
Linore Burkard’s fans devoured her first two Regency novels Before the Season Ends and The House in Grosvenor Square. Now, as her third novel opens, the year is 1818 and Miss Beatrice Forsythe is determined to marry well. After all, her sister, Ariana, married The Paragon, Mr. Phillip Mornay, five years earlier--which all but guarantees that she, Beatrice, can also make a famous match to a wealthy man.

But her sister and husband have disappeared from high society as they raise a family at their country estate. Can Beatrice persuade them to chaperone her in London? And what about Beatrice's business with the curate, Mr. O’Brien, whom she rashly promised to marry years earlier. At seventeen now, she has no wish to marry a mere clergyman—despite his agreeable countenance and gentle, understanding ways.

When Mr. Tristan Barton becomes the tenant of the Manor House, Beatrice's hopes seem to have found their object. But when Ariana falls gravely ill, secrets come to light, motives are revealed, and the pretenses that are easy to keep up in the darkness begin to crumble. Hearts are bared, truths uncovered, and when all is said and done, a country house courtship like no other has occurred!

As always, Linore Burkard delivers “spirited romance for the Jane Austen soul.”

Great Musicians - review

As part of our study of American History this year, we enjoyed a classic biography from Zeezok Publishing: Stephen Foster and His Little Dog Trey. The book included printed music for many of Foster's songs, as well as several spirituals and other songs that influenced his style. My daughter enjoyed cuing the companion CD to play the songs as we came to them in the story. We also tracked Foster's life events on our timeline, using the study guide that came with it.

 The "special offer" set we received for review also included Edward MacDowell and His Cabin in the Pines. These easy-to-read biographies are reprints of titles originally published in the mid-1900s. They remind me very much of the Childhood of Famous Americans series. The set we received (2 biographies, study guides for each book, and a companion CD with music from each book along with printable coloring pages) is $35.80. There are other books about other composers in the Great Musicians series.

Zeezok also publishes other history materials and a penmanship program. For more reviews from this publisher visit the TOS Homeschool Crew blog.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Listen - review

Words have meaning... and words can hurt. Rene Gutteridge addresses the problem of gossip in her latest novel Listen. It's a great "whodunit" mystery, but also very thought-provoking. Check out the first chapter below! Special thanks to Vicky Lynch of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. for sending me a review copy.



Present Day

Damien Underwood tapped his pencil against his desk and spun twice in his chair. But once he was facing his computer again, the digital clock still hadn’t changed.

In front of him on a clean white piece of paper was a box, and inside that box was a bunch of other tiny boxes. Some of those boxes he’d neatly scribbled in. And above the large box he wrote, Time to go.

This particular day was stretching beyond his normal capacity of tolerance, and when that happened, he found himself constructing word puzzles. He’d sold three to the New York Times, two published on Monday and one on Wednesday. They were all framed and hanging in his cubicle. He’d sent in over thirty to be considered.

He’d easily convinced his boss years ago to let him start publishing crosswords in the paper, and since then he’d been the crossword editor, occasionally publishing some of his own, a few from local residents, and some in syndication.

The puzzle clues were coming harder today. He wanted to use a lot of plays on words, and he also enjoyed putting in a few specific clues that were just for Marlo residents. Those were almost always published on Fridays.

A nine-letter word for “predictable and smooth.”

Yes, good clue. He smiled and wrote the answer going down. Clockwork.

He glanced over to the bulletin board, which happened to be on the only piece of north wall he could see from his desk at the Marlo Sentinel. Tacked in the center, still hanging there after three years, was an article from Lifestyles Magazine. Marlo, of all the places in the United States, was voted Best Place to Raise a Child. It was still the town’s shining moment of glory. Every restaurant and business had this article framed and hanging somewhere on their walls.

The community boasted its own police force, five separate and unique playgrounds for the kids, including a spray ground put in last summer, where kids could dash through all kinds of water sprays without the fear of anyone drowning.

Potholes were nonexistent. The trash was picked up by shiny, blue, state-of-the-art trash trucks, by men wearing pressed light blue shirts and matching pants, dressed slightly better than the mail carriers.

Two dozen neighborhood watch programs were responsible for nineteen arrests in the last decade, mostly petty thieves and a couple of vandals. There hadn’t been a violent crime in Marlo since 1971, and even then the only one that got shot was a dog. A bank robbery twenty years ago ended with the robber asking to talk to a priest, where he confessed a gambling addiction and a fondness for teller number three.

Damien’s mind lit up, which it often did when words were involved. He penciled it in. An eight-letter word for “a linear stretch of dates.” Timeline. Perfect for 45 across.

So this was Marlo, where society and family joined in marriage. It was safe enough for kids to play in the front yards. It was clean enough that asthmatics were paying top dollar for the real estate. It was good enough, period.

Damien was a second-generation Marlo resident. His mother and father moved here long before it was the Best Place to Raise a Child. Then it had just been cheap land and a good drive from the city. His father had been the manager of a plant now gone because it caused too much pollution. His mother, a stay-at-home mom, had taken great pride in raising a son who shared her maiden name, Damien, and her fondness for reading the dictionary.

Both his parents died the same year from different causes, the same year Damien had met Kay, his wife-to-be. They’d wed nine months after they met and waited the customary five years to have children. Kay managed a real estate company. She loved her job as much as she had the first day she started. And it was a good way to keep up with the Joneses.

Until recently, when the housing market started slumping like his ever-irritated teenage daughter.

The beast’s red eyes declared it was finally time to leave. Damien grabbed his briefcase and walked the long hallway to the door, just to make sure his boss and sometimes friend, Edgar, remembered he was leaving a little early. He gave Edgar a wave, and today, because he was in a good mood, Edgar waved back.

Damien drove through the Elephant’s Foot and picked up two lemonades, one for himself and one for Jenna, his sixteen-year-old daughter who had all at once turned from beautiful princess or ballerina or whatever it was she wanted to be to some weird Jekyll and Hyde science experiment. With blue eye shadow. She never hugged him. She never giggled. Oh, how he missed the giggling. She slouched and grunted like a gorilla, her knuckles nearly dragging the ground if anyone said anything to her. A mild suggestion of any kind, from “grab a jacket” to “don’t do drugs” evoked eyes rolling into the back of her head as if she were having a grand mal seizure.

So the lemonade was the best gesture of kindness he could make. Besides offering to pick her up because her car was in the shop.

He pulled to the curb outside the school, fully aware he was the only car among the full-bodied SUVs idling alongside one another. It was a complete embarrassment to Jenna, who begged to have Kay pick her up in the Navigator. Some lessons were learned the hard way. But his car was perfectly fine, perfectly reliable, and it wasn’t going to cause the ozone to collapse.

She got in, noticed the lemonade, asked if it was sugar-free, then sipped it and stared out the window for the rest of the ride home. It wasn’t sugar-free, but the girl needed a little meat on her bones.

“Your car’s ready.”

Finally, a small smile.

***

“Have a seat.”

Frank Merret shoved his holster and belt downward to make room for the roll of belly fat that had permanently attached itself to his midsection. He slowly sat down in the old vinyl chair across from Captain Lou Grayson’s cluttered desk.

“You got a rookie coming in this morning.”

“I thought we had an agreement about rookies.”

“You ticketed Principal MaLue. We had an agreement about that too.”

Frank sighed. “He was speeding in a school zone.”

“He’s the principal. If he wants to hit Mach speed in the school zone, so be it. The rookie’s file is in your box.” Grayson’s irritated expression said the rest.

Frank left the captain’s office and killed time in the break room until lineup, where the rookie stood next to him, fresh-faced and wide-eyed. He was short, kind of stocky, with white blond hair and baby pink cheeks like a von Trapp kid. There was not a hard-bitten bone in this kid’s body.

Frank cut his gaze sideways. “This is Marlo. The most you can hope for is someone driving under the influence of pot.”

Lineup was dismissed, and the kid followed him out. “That’s not true. I heard about that bank robbery.”

“That was twenty years ago.”

“Doesn’t matter,” the rookie said. “I’m on patrol. That’s cool. I’m Gavin Jenkins, by the way.”

“Yeah, I know.”

“Did you read my stats from the academy?”

“Not even one word.”

Gavin stopped midstride, falling behind Frank as he made his way outside to the patrol car. Gavin hurried to catch up. “Where are we going? Aren’t we a little early?”

Frank continued to his car. Gavin hopped into the passenger side. Frank turned west onto Bledsoe.

“Listen, Officer Merret, I just want you to know that I’m glad they paired me with you. I’ve heard great things about you, and I think it’s—”

“I don’t normally talk in the morning.”

“Okay.”

So they drove in silence mostly, checking on a few of the elderly citizens and their resident homeless man, Douglas, until lunchtime, when they stopped at Pizza Hut. The kid couldn’t help but talk, so Frank let him and learned the entire history of how he came to be a Marlo police officer.

Gavin was two bites into his second piece and hadn’t touched his salad when Frank rose. “Stay here.”

Gavin stared at him, his cheek full of cheese and pepperoni. “What? Why?”

“I’ve got something I need to do.”

Gavin stood, trying to gather his things. “Wait. I’ll come.”

Frank held out a firm hand. “Just stay here, okay? I’ll come back to get you in about forty minutes.”

Gavin slowly sat down.

Frank walked out. He knew it already. This rookie was going to be a thorn in his side.

Excerpted from Listen by Rene Gutteridge. Copyright ©2010 by Rene Gutteridge. Used with permission from Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved.


Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Homeschool reviewer try-outs

 
I'm sure you've noticed my reviews with the TOS Homeschool Crew this year. I just wanted to let you know that they are now accepting applications for the 2010-2011 school year. If you are a blogger and a homeschooler, and this sounds like something you would like to be involved with, you may get more information here.  It has been a great experience for me, and I have enjoyed trying out a wide variety of different products for homeschoolers.

Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling - review

Over the years I have read (or at least skimmed) as many homeschooling how-to books I could get my hands on. Some were, of course, better than others. Many were quite dated in the information they shared.  As part of my "continuing education" (and as part of the TOS Homeschool Crew) I was interested to read The Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling by Debra Bell. Even after all these years, I was pleasantly surprised at what I learned from this valuable resource. It is full of great tips and suggestions for giving your kids the best possible education.

One drawback I did notice was the strong dependence on a homeschool co-op that was encouraged throughout the book. My family was involved in a homeschool co-op for about a year-and-a-half and it just didn't work out well for us. We were able to get more done by staying home that extra day a week. Families who haven't tried it may get the impression from reading this book that you really need to be involved in a co-op to be a successful homeschooler. Of course, I know many families who greatly benefit from that option, as well, but it's definitely not necessary for everyone.

If you are just beginning to explore your homeschool options, or if, like me, you are a veteran homeschooler, I highly recommend this book as a great resource you will probably refer to again and again. It is a BIG book... and available for $20 from Apologia Press.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Swinging on a Star - review

Swinging on a Star is the second in the Weddings By Bella series by Janice Thompson. I haven't read the first one in the series, but I was easily able to pick up on the story and jump right in. It is a fun, "chick-lit" style story about a wedding planner and her rambunctious family and wacky friends. Here's the blurb about the story:
In this latest release from Thompson, Bella Rossi's life is nearing perfection. She's got the perfect guy, she's running a successful business, and she's about to plan her most ambitious wedding yet, a Renaissance-themed fairy tale come true, complete with period costumes and foods, horse-drawn carriages, and even a castle. There's just one hitch. The best man just happens to be Brock Benson, Hollywood's hottest and most eligible bachelor. Oh, and did we mention he's staying at the Rossi house to avoid the paparazzi?

With all the pressure surrounding this wedding, Bella's not sure she's going to make it through. Add her starstruck sister, her feuding aunt and uncle, and a trio of large, sequined church ladies with even bigger personalities, and you've got a recipe for disaster—and a lot of laughs.

All Things Hidden - review

All Things Hidden by Tricia Goyer is Book 18 in the Home to Heather Creek series from Guideposts. I always enjoy reading Tricia's books, and now that I know that she has written a total of 4 books in this series so far, it has whetted my appetite to read the whole series! Tricia's first book in the Home to Heather Creek series was Sweet September (book two) followed by Every Sunrise (book seven) last spring and Sunflower Serenade this summer. Here's a little more about All Things Hidden and the Home to Heather Creek series:

All Things Hidden
The past is brought to light...

Charlotte is cleaning out the basement of Bedford Community Church when she comes across a tattered and yellowed newspaper article. The clipping, published more than a century ago, implicates her great-great-grandfather in the loss of funds intended to help finish building the church. Charlotte has heard stories about the incident through the years, but now it seems the past has come back to haunt her. Is it just her imagination or are people treating her differently now that they think she's descended from a crook? Will Charlotte be able to clear her family's name once and for all?

Meanwhile, Sam is spending time with a new girl in town-and is keeping secrets from his grandparents about where they go. Christopher is trying to get an article published in the local paper, and Emily reluctantly partners with a foreign exchange student on a class project and eventually comes to see that they're not that different after all. As old secrets are brought to light, the whole family is reminded that the truth is often more complicated than it seems.

Come home to Heather Creek. Get to know Charlotte Stevenson, who is raising her grandchildren on the family farm after a tragic accident changes all of their lives forever. With the help of her husband Bob and a close-knit circle of friends, she will do whatever it takes to keep this fragile family together. See how God, who makes the sun rise and the crops grow, watches over our lives too.

About Guideposts' Home To Heather Creek series!

Charlotte Stevenson's world is turned upside down when her daughter, Denise, dies in a tragic car accident. She ran away at eighteen and Charlotte has never forgiven herself. Now, Denise's children, abandoned by their father, are coming from California to live on Heather Creek Farm in Bedford, Nebraska.
I received a free copy of this book in return for participating in the blog tour. Visit other blogs on the tour here!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Winter? Where?

Will you forgive me if I gloat--just a bit!--that we are not having the snow and ice that so much of the country has right now? After all, we had more than our share last year and the year before
In fact, this past Saturday just felt like spring! The sun was shining in our neighborhood and the temps got up close to 50. In the sun, it felt even warmer. If you squint real hard you can probably see just a little snow on the mountains in the distance. But not much! If you squint even harder, you might can imagine that the grass is beginning to turn green! Okay... maybe not.
I made the rounds in the yard checking for buds. I'm sure it won't be long before the rhododendron bush, the little azalea bush, and the lilacs will be blooming!
In the meantime, I'm enjoying my seasonally-challenged Christmas Cactus who usually blooms around Valentines... or Easter... or maybe even Thanksgiving... but never Christmas! (I have a theory that it has to do with hours of daylight, and the days are just too short this far north around Christmas-time.)
Spring is coming!

Ray's Arithmetic - review

Probably everyone has heard of the classic McGuffey Readers that were used in American schools 100 years ago or more. But if you're like me, you may not have heard of Ray's Arithmetic which was the "math" program that was used alongside the McGuffey Readers for years and years.

As a member of the TOS Homeschool Crew I had the opportunity to try Ray's Arithmetic with my own children. It is a complete K-12 math curriculum, from counting to calculus, and I received the whole thing in electronic format. "The Ray's series includes a total of 38 books. These include the 12 core Textbooks, + Answer Key's, Teachers Editions, and several intriguing books of mathematical pursuits for the aspiring student, such as Surveying and Navigation, Astronomy, Book Keeping, and Physics."

It seems to be a solid math program, and very economical at $59 for the entire set of books in PDF format on CD. (Of course  you do have to print them out yourself, so it's not quite as cheap as it seems-- but still, considering that it's 12 years' worth of math, I think it's a bargain.) It is, obviously, very old-fashioned, and includes an abundance of story problems which relate to real-life situations. We had to laugh at the prices in some of the money problems! Another advantage is that because this program was originally developed for the one-room schoolhouse setting, it works great for homeschoolers. "The Ray's Arithmetic was originally created to be used by frontier Americans, Americans that often lived in areas where available teachers were few, often far away, or even completely unavailable. For this reason the books are designed to allow children, once they can read, to educate themselves to a very great extent." I probably won't use this program as my main math curriculum, but I do like having it on hand as a supplement.

So Long Insecurity - review

Here's the first chapter of Beth Moore's latest book, So Long Insecurity: You’ve Been a Bad Friend to Us.Special thanks to Vicky Lynch of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. for sending me a review copy. Enjoy!


Mad Enough to Change

I’m seriously ticked. And I need to do something about it. Some people eat when they’re about to rupture with emotion. Others throw up. Or jog. Or go to bed. Some have a holy fit. Others stuff it and try to forget it. I can do all those things in sequential order, but I still don’t find relief.

When my soul is inflating until my skin feels like a balloon about to pop, I write. Never longhand, if I can help it. The more emotion I feel, the more I appreciate banging on the keys of a computer. I type by faith and not by sight. My keyboard can attest to the fact that I am a passionate person with an obsession for words: most of the vowels are worn off. The word ticked really should have more vowels. Maybe what I am is peeved. That’s a good one. How about irrationally irritated to oblivion? Let that one wear the vowels off a keyboard.

The thing is, I’m not even sure exactly who I’m ticked at. I’m hoping to find that out as I hack away at these chapters. One thing is for certain. Once I figure it out, I probably won’t keep it to myself. After all, you know how the saying goes: hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. And I’m feeling scorned.

But not just for myself. I’m feeling ticked for the whole mess of us born with a pair of X chromosomes. My whole ministry life is lived out in the blessed chaos of a female cornucopia. I’ve been looking at our gender through the lens of Scripture for twenty-five solid years, and I have pondered over us, taken up for us, laid into us, deliberated over us, prayed about us, lost sleep because of us, cried for us, laughed my head off at us, and gotten offended for us—and by us—more times than I can count. And after a quarter of a century surrounded by girls ranging all the way from kindergarteners to those resting on pale pink liners inside caskets, I’ve come to this loving conclusion: we need help. I need help. Something more than what we’re getting.

The woman I passed a few days ago on the freeway who was bawling her eyes out at the steering wheel of her Nissan needs help. The girl lying about her age in order to get a job in a topless bar needs help. The divorcée who has loathed herself into fifty extra pounds needs help. For crying out loud, that female rock star I’ve disdained for years needs help. When I read something demeaning her ex said about her recently—something I know would cut any female to the quick—I jumped to her defense like a jackal on a field mouse and seriously wondered how I could contact her agent and offer to mentor her in Bible study.

Several days ago I sat in a tearoom across the table from a gorgeous woman I love dearly. She has been married for three months, and they did all the right things leading up to that sacred ceremony, heightening the anticipation considerably. After an hour or so of musing over marriage, she said to me, “Last weekend he seemed disinterested in me. I’ll be honest with you. It kind of shook me up. I wanted to ask him, ‘So, are you over me now? That quick? That’s it?’”

I’m pretty certain her husband will perk back up, but what a tragedy that she feels like she possesses the shelf life of a video game.

I flashed back to another recent communication with a magazine-cover-beautiful thirty-year-old woman who mentioned—almost in passing—that she has to dress up in costumes in order for her husband to want to make love to her. I’m not knocking her pink-feathered heels, but I wonder if she is paying too much for them. I’m just sad that she can’t feel desirable as herself.

Then yesterday I learned that a darling fifteen-year-old I keep in touch with slept with her boyfriend in a last-ditch effort to hold on to him. He broke up with her anyway. Then he told. It’s all over her high school now.

I’ve got a loved one going through her third divorce. She wants to find a good man in the worst way, and goodness knows they’re out there. The problem is, she keeps marrying the same kind of man.

I’m so ticked.

If these examples were exceptions to the rule, I wouldn’t bother writing, but you and I both know better than that. I hear echoes of fear and desperation from women day in and day out—even if they’re doing their best to muffle the sound with their Coach bags. Oh, who am I kidding? I hear reverberations from my own heart more times than I want to admit. I keep trying to stifle it, but it won’t shut up. Something’s wrong with us for us to value ourselves so little. Our culture has thrown us under the bus. We have a fissure down the spine of our souls and, boy, does it need fixing.

This morning while I was getting ready for church, my cell phone nearly vibrated off the bathroom counter with six incoming texts from a single friend who was having a crisis of heart. I answered her with what little I had to give, even as I grappled with my own issues. I decided that what I needed was a good sermon to keep me from crying off my eyeliner, so I flipped on the television to a terrific local preacher. Lo and behold, the sermon was about what a woman needs from a man.

Deep sigh.

Actually, it was a great message if anyone had a mind to do what he was recommending, but knowing human nature and feeling uncharacteristically cynical, I could feel my frustration mounting. The preacher had done his homework. He offered half a dozen Scripture-based PowerPoint slides with state-of-the-art graphics describing what men should do for women. “Women want to be told that they are captivating. That they’re beautiful. Desirable.”

I won’t deny that. What woman wouldn’t thrive under that kind of steady affirmation?

But here’s my question: What if no one tells us that? Can we still find a way to be okay? Or what if he says it because he’s supposed to, but to be honest, he’s not feeling it? Are we hopeless? What if a man is not captivated by us? What if he doesn’t think we’re particularly beautiful? Or, understandably, maybe just not every day? Are we only secure on his “on” days? What if he loves us but is not quite as captivated by us as he used to be? What if his computer is full of images of what he finds attractive, and we’re light-years from it? What if we’re seventy-five, and every ounce of desirability is long behind us? Can we still feel adequate in our media-driven society?



Adapted from So Long Insecurity by Beth Moore. Copyright © 2010 by Beth Moore. Used with permission from Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved.



Sunday, February 14, 2010

Ski Report - Week 4

It was foggy and drizzly when we headed up the mountain this past Friday. It seems a little strange to go skiing when there's no snow--none!--on the ground when we get on the gondola to ride up the mountain.
We were assured that it was snowing at the lodge, and when we got to the top we found it to be true!

The weird thing about the weather this week was that it kept changing every few minutes. First, it would be relatively clear, with a few clouds, but a decent view to the valley.
The next time I looked out we were completely socked in, with the snow just a-flyin'! It changed like that several times throughout the day.
When the girls had had enough of the snow and the wind we headed back down during a "clear" spell. We enjoyed this breath-taking view of the Silver Valley.
That's I-90 winding through the valley. I have really appreciated having that easy access to skiing this year. I would much rather ride the gondola up the mountain than have to drive the icy mountain roads.