Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Journal of a Solitude, by May Sarton

I read this book over months and months, reading one or two entries a day.  T'was lovely.  It's a journal she kept for one year, sometime in the 70s I think.  She was a solitary writer, living alone in a house on the east coast.  She reminded me a lot of myself, in ways in which I did not necessarily want to be reminded!!!  But I liked the book a lot, and often was inspired to write after I read something she wrote.  208 pages.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Here are the books that Natalie has read!!!

“Ararat” by Louise Gluck
“The Clerk’s Tale” by Spencer Reece
Autobiography of Red” by Anne Carson
“Traveling in the Family” by Carlos Drummond de Andrade
“ABCs of Reading” by Ezra Pound
“Crush” by Richard Siken
“Women Who Run with the Wolves” by Clarissa P. Estes
A Room of One’s Own” by Viriginia Woolf
“A companion for Owls” by Maurice Manning
“Poems of George Trakl” tr by James Wright and Robert Bly
The House on Mango Street” by Sandra Cisneros
American Women Poets in the 21st Century” ed Claudia Rankine
“A History of the Only War” by Christopher Davis
“The Skin I’m In” by Sharon Flake
“Spacecraft Voyager I” by Alice Oswald
“Fragment of a Head of a Queen” by Cate Marvin
“We Weep for our Strangeness” by Dennis Schmitz
“No Greater Love” by Mother Teresa
“Eros the Bittersweet” by Anne Carson
“Here All Dwell Free” by Gertrude Mueller Nelson
“Dreamsongs” by John Berryman
“Snow Country” by Yasunari Kawabata
“Walking Across Boundaries” by Russell M Linden
“Cuttlefish Bones” by Eugenio Montale
“Embryos and Idiots” by Larissa Szporluk
The Complete Poems of Stephen Crane
“About Night” by Dennis Schmitz
“Learning Human” by Les Murray
“Lament for a Son” by Nicholas Wolterstorff
Beauty and Sadness” by Yasunari Kawabata
Steppenwolf” by Hermen Hesse
“They Are Sleeping” by Joanna Klink
“The Book of Nightmares” by Galway Kinnell
“Eat, Pray, Love” by Elizabeth Gilbert
Certain Women” by Madeleine L’Engle
“The Solace of Fierce Landscapes” by Belden Lane
The Bean Trees” by Barbara Kingsolver
“Til We Have Faces” by CS Lewis
Books 2-4 of the “Chronicles of Narnia”
Twentieth Century Latin American Poetry
Homeric Hymns” tr by Charles Boer
The Hunchback of Notre Dame” by Victor Hugo
“Collected Poems and Prose” by Mallarme
“The Triggering Town” by Richard Hugo
“Noonday Demon” by Andrew Solomon
As I Lay Dying” by W. Faulkner
“Decreation” by Anne Carson
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down” by Anne Fadiman
“Radical Wisdom” by Beverly Lanzetta
The Poetics of Space” by G. Bachelard
The Seeker” by Nelly Sachs
“Collected Poems” by Czeslaw Milosz
Portrait of a Lady” by Henry James
“News of the Universe” ed Robert Bly
“Monkey” by Wu Ch’Eng-En
“The Tree Pillars of Zen”
“Native Guard” by Natasha Tretheway
“Writing Down the Bones” by Natalie Goldberg
“Collected Poems” by Rimbaud
Worshipful Company of Fletchers” by James Tate
“Journal of a Solitude” by May Sarton
“My Alexandria” by Mark Doty
Complete Poems” by Marianne Moore
“The Flexible Lyric” by Ellen Bryant Voigt
“Ahab’s Wife” by Sena Jeter Naslund
“Walk with Jesus” by Henri Nouwen
“Mists of Avalon” by Marion Bradley

total pages: 15,547

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Everything is Illuminated, by Jonathan Safran Foer

This book certainly goes on the "Best Books I've Read" list. It's hilarious, gorgeously written, unflinchingly true. It's about....the Holocaust, if you had to just say one thing it's about....but within that, it's about friendship, love, betrayal, forgiveness, evil, death....I highly recommend it! 276 pages.

Tamie

Waking, by Matthew Sanford

This is a memoir of a man who was in a car accident at age 13 and became paralyzed from the chest down. At the age of 25, he started practicing yoga, and eventually became a yoga teacher! It's not the best-written book on the planet, but it sure is an interesting story, and was especially fascinating to me since I want to teach yoga. 253 pgs.

Tamie

Friday, November 28, 2008

Whew -- Intense Stuff

Right Behind You by Gail Giles

Man, this was good. Young adult fiction about a teenager, who, when he was 9 yo, set another child on fire. He spends several years in a juvenile ward and then had to move to another state because of how angry the community was. Really really good stuff. How do you forgive yourself? How do you define a good/bad person? What is forgiveness/redemption? Yep. I liked it. 292 pages

Buffy

Monday, November 17, 2008

The End of the Year Approaches -- Where is everybody?

Hurry Down Sunshine: A Memoir by Michael Greenberg
Very good memoir relating the author's (then) 15yo daughter suddenly starts showing bipolar behavior. Interesting to read a parent's perspective -- we so often try to figure out what we've done wrong. Also good to read the honest accounting of his relationship with his wife.
233 pages.

December by Elizabeth Hartley Winthrop
Fiction about an 11yo girl who stops speaking. Good. Very interesting to read immediately after Hurry Down Sunshine.
239 pages.

The Little Book by Selden Edwards
Such good stuff. Wheeler Burden. living in 1988 San Francisco, suddenly & unexplicably finds himself in Vienna in 1897. Enter Freud, Mahler, and all kinds of other goodness. I liked it, if you couldn't tell. So many many intersections of people and events.

405 pages

The Black Tower
What really happened to Louis-Charles, the son of Marie-Antoinette and King Louis XVI? Great first sentence: "I'm a man of a certain age -- old enough to have been every kind of fool -- and I find to my surprise that the only counsel I have to pass on is this: Never let your name be found in a dead man's trousers." Lots of real historical characters in this one, too.

352 pages

The Book of Murder by Guillermo Martinez
short. author from argentina, translated from spanish. i liked it. "a chilling crime story in which the line between reality and deception has been erased" 215 pages.

The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness
Whew. So intense. First in a new young adult series. Sadly it was just published -- I'm ready for the next installment. from the book flap:
Todd Hewitt is the last boy in Prentisstown. But Prentisstown isn't like other towns. Everyone can hear everyone else's thoughts in an overwhelming, never-ending stream of Noise. There is no quiet, no privacy, no room for secrets. Or is there? Just a month away from the birthday that will make him a man, Todd and his dog, Manchee -- whose thoughts Todd can hear, too, whether he wants to or not-- stumble upon an area of complete silence. Which is impossible. Prentisstown has been hiding something form him, a secret so awful that Todd and Manchee are suddenly running for their lives. But how can you feel when your pursuers can hear your every thought? And where can you run when there's nowhere to go?
479 pages



Buffy

Saturday, November 15, 2008

the holy longing

by Ronald Rolheiser

I wanted to really like this book, but I could only sort-of like it. The premise is that we all have a crazy and wild fire inside of us; what we do with that fire is our spirituality. The rest of the book is all about what we should do with the fire.

I love the premise! The rest of the book I found myself never fully trusting. There were parts that I underlined; there were parts I rolled my eyes at. I'm glad I read it, but I wish the author had done something different with his premise.

241 pages.

-Tamie

Friday, November 7, 2008

The Post-Birthday World & Child 44

The Post-Birthday World by Lionel Shriver

Man, did I like it. I want to say it hit me like a freight train, but that's too instant -- it was more like medicine I took that I didn't know would make me dizzy.... lots to think about for me -- in some ways, really related to my own life. It reminded me of Sliding Doors -- though part of what struck me about the pbw -- the part where it was a conscious decision on the main character's part that affected the path the rest of her life took -- is not present in sliding doors --- more of a "fate/timing" kind of thing...........

517 pages

by Tom Rob Smith

A good one -- not cheery, but good.... First few pages set in 1930s Soviet Union, rest of the book takes place in 1950's S. Union. From the book flap:
Quote:
The mere suspicion of ideological disloyalty ... sends millions of innocents into the Gulags or to their executions. Defending the system from its citizens is the MGB, the State Security Force. And no MGB officer is more courageous, conscientious, or idealistic than Leo Demidov.
When Leo begins to believe that a murderer is on the loose -- an impossibility in Stalin's Soviet Union, where there is no crime -- he quickly becomes one of the suspected ones.

Knocked out my desire to trust ANYONE for a while, I think.
Another first novel.

446 pages

Buffy

Sunday, November 2, 2008

the translator

I just finished The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur. I really "enjoyed" reading it, if you can enjoy reading a book about genocide. I would love to meet Daoud Hari, the author, whose heart is soft and wide open. Beautiful. For more of my thoughts on the book, go here.

-204 pages....from Tamie

Monday, October 27, 2008

Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer

A meteor hits the moon and knocks it closer in orbit, messing with the earth's climate majorly (do you like my technical terminology?). Good stuff. The entire book is 16 year old Miranda's journal entries. I liked it. Definitely made me want to stockpile way more non-perishable food than we currently have. You'll like the few veiled references to President Bush.

337 pages.

Buffy

Monday, October 20, 2008

the history of love

by Nicole Krauss

Ah, such a lovely book. She's married to Jonathan Safran Foer, and her writing style is definitely more similar to his than anyone else's I've read. The book is about........friendship, death, love, the Holocaust, books, deception......yeah, it's good. 255 pages.

Tamie

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

no, really, that's what it's about....

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski

Whew -- long and intense. Been called a modern-day Hamlet -- set in Wisconsin -- with dogs. Yep. I was telling somebody about it the other day, speaking in Spanish, which is not my first language, and I'm pretty sure they thought I was just translating poorly. :)

566 pages.

Buffy

Sunday, September 21, 2008

the sun shines

I read the September issue of The Sun Magazine. I really liked all the Reader's Write writings on porches. 48 pages.

-Tamie

Friday, September 12, 2008

New England Excitement

America America by Ethan Cain

Interesting story about politics in New York State in the early 70s and how it affected one man's life. A little hard for me to keep track of the three different time periods in which it took place. 458 pages.

The Lace Reader by Brunonia Barry

Almost finished with this one, takes place in modern-day Salem, Mass. I liked it...... (one thing I take away from it is how interesting it would be to live there today..) from Amazon:

In Barry's captivating debut, Towner Whitney, a dazed young woman descended from a long line of mind readers and fortune tellers, has survived numerous traumas and returned to her hometown of Salem, Mass., to recover. Any tranquility in her life is short-lived when her beloved great-aunt Eva drowns under circumstances suggesting foul play. Towner's suspicions are taken with a grain of salt given her history of hallucinatory visions and self-harm. The mystery enmeshes local cop John Rafferty, who had left the pressures of big city police work for a quieter life in Salem and now finds himself falling for the enigmatic Towner as he mourns Eva and delves into the history of the eccentric Whitney clan. Barry excels at capturing the feel of smalltown life, and balances action with close looks at the characters' inner worlds. Her pacing and use of different perspectives show tremendous skill and will keep readers captivated all the way through.
390 pages.


Buffy

Sunday, September 7, 2008

So I haven't posted in a while, but I promise I've been reading :)

I really wanted to share this book with you all out there. I checked it out of the library Saturday afternoon and as of Sunday night am 4/5ths of the way done. Though not finished, I feel confident recommending it to you all.

The Different Drum: Community Making and Peace by M. Scott Peck

What I love about it: 1) gender pronoun equality 2) community as a tangible, realistic goal 3) makes me feel normally about my obsessive desire for community 4) even though it was published in 1987, it is completely relevant to today (maybe that is sad that we have the same problems 20 years later...)

So, that's not a very good summary. Here's what the dustcover says...In his profound and powerful new book, he challenges us to take another journey in self-awareness: to achieve, through the creative experience of community, a new "connectedness" and wholeness which, in turn, can be shared by all the peoples and nations of the world.

Has anyone read it? I would love to discuss! If you haven't, go get it now. Give it to your friends.

Reading Rocks!
-Michelle "Who knew such amazing stuff has been sitting on library shelves for my entire lifetime" McMillan

the hours

Last night I finished The Hours, by Michael Cunningham. I highly recommend this book. It follows three story lines, each one day of the life in a woman, and the more you read the more you realize how interwoven they are. The first woman is Virginia Woolf--the day she started writing Mrs. Dalloway. The second woman is a woman named Laura who lives in the 50s. The second woman is Clarissa, whom her best friend calls Mrs. Dalloway--she lives in New York in the 90s. It's a beautifully written book, such amazing observations about being human. 226 pages.

-tamie

Monday, September 1, 2008

North Carolina and Sherlock Holmes and Oxygen

Back to Wando Passo by David Payne
I really liked this one -- in fact, several of us said we wish we'd had more discussion of it at book club (maybe we should have a second meeting to actually discuss the book) This was a re-read for me and I wasn't sure if it would strike me the same way the second time -- but it did.
It's such a complex storyline in some ways, I'm going to c & p from Amazon...

In this ambitious novel, Payne ( Gravesend Light, 2000) intertwines two troubled marriages--one contemporary and one from the 1860s--for a blend of history and suspense that deals with racism, slavery, miscegenation, incest, and voodoolike practices, as foreboding builds until the two stories intersect. At 45, former rock star Ransom "Ran" Hill, bipolar and off his meds, returns to his wife, Claire Delay, who took their children and left him five months earlier for her family home of Wando Passo, a former plantation south of Charleston. Although Ran desperately loves his wife of 19 years, Claire is making a new life with a new love, a story mirrored by the account of her ancestors that resurfaces when two skeletons are found on her property. Alternating chapters tell of Harlan Delay, who married Adie Huger to save himself from the sorrow and pain that ensued after his father brought home a black Cuban woman whom he loved but kept enslaved. Despite an occasional inconsistency or unanswered question, Payne handles this novel of love, loss, and betrayal deftly.

435 pages

The Moor by Laurie R. King
Another in the Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes series. This one returns to the scene of an actual Holmes story -- The Hound of the Baskervilles. I keep enjoying them. 297 pages.

Oxygen by Carol Cassella
This was good stuff -- I kept stopping to say to DH "This is a really good book". part of it, for me, was just the fact that it centers on a career I (and I think many people) know little about -- anesthesiology. Main character is an anesthesiologist in Seattle when something goes wrong in a surgery. That is the main plot, but her relationships with her sister and aging father are also involved. Yep, really really interesting stuff -- heartbreaking at times-- and I feel like I know a bit more about what it would be like to be an anesthesiologist. 288 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Sunday, August 31, 2008

so many aurelianos

This afternoon I finished One Hundred Years of Solitude, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. What can I even say about this book? It is magical realism. It is extraordinary. I think it will become part of the mythology that I live with, understand life through. Every page has sentences that amaze. It is like reading Spanish poetry. Perhaps because it is Spanish poetry. I would love to read it again. But oh man, when 20 characters share the name Aureliano, and about 7 other characters share the name Jose Arcadio....well comrades, it does get confusing here and there. 383 pages.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

two more before we move in 5 hours!

The Billionaire's Vinegar: The Mystery of the World's Most Expensive Bottle of Wine by Benjamin Wallace

Nonfiction -- interesting. (but I kept over-using the word "vintage" in normal, un-wine related conversation. 282 pages

#105 The Rain Before It Falls by Jonathan Coe
Interesting story about 3 generations of women set largely in England. 240 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Friday, August 15, 2008

This month's Sun

...made me want to find a local bank.

48 pages.

By the way, we are moving tomorrow and I'm not sure if we will have internet access anymore or not. So if you don't see me around much; that's why.

~Buffy in Denver

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The Condition

The Condition by Jennifer Haigh

Good stuff -- at the beginning it was "just a story" to me (though that phrase sort of makes me cringe as I find value in story) but still interesting and good. But at the end it was one of those books that makes me think, "Hey, I'm an okay person, life is good, embrace life, embrace others, be more loving, be more open about your love, it's okay to start over, just keep trying, other people are flawed but good, be good to them, be good to yourself. Life is both short and long, treasure both aspects." Mind, I'm not promising you that it would affect everyone this way.

I'd say more, but Fiona is desperate for a sandwich.

390 pages

Buffy in Denver

Sunday, August 10, 2008

The Lady Elizabeth

The Lady Elizabeth by Alison Weir
The author is a historian who has written several historical biographies -- I believe this is her second novel, I read the one about Jane Grey recently. I think I've finally hit the point where I've read enough novels and non-fiction about British royalty that I'm (just) starting to be able remember who they all are and how they relate to each other.... 477 pages

Buffy in Denver

Saturday, August 9, 2008

girl meets god

I have been reading this book for weeks. It's called Girl Meets God, and it's by Lauren Winner, whom I met at a conference in June. It's about how she converted to Orthodox Judaism, and then she converted to Christianity. It's about God and loss and sorrow and redemption. To be honest, I found the book kind of boring much of the time. But when I got to the last few chapters I was so moved that suddenly, unexpectedly, the whole book was worth reading. I'm really glad I stuck it out. 296 pages.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Yay for fun mysteries!

A Monstrous Regiment of Women by Laurie R. King

Another of the Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes mysteries -- the second in the series. I am really enjoying these -- they're quite intelligent -- and it's fun to know that there are several more before I run out. 336 pages.

Buffy

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

pieces & portions

Okay, here's my reading total for the moment:

July issue of the Sun. Oh man. David James Duncan has a piece in there that cuts straight to the heart. To the soul. To the bone. 48 pages.

When God is Silent, by Barbara Brown Taylor. It's 3 essays, about the silence of God. If you are interested in God's abandonment or the silence of God, I definitely recommend this book. 121 pages.

And now: pieces. I often read one chapter/essay from a book, but don't read the whole book. So I've decided to start keeping track of that kind of reading. :)

"Homosexuality and the Bible" by Walter Wink. 16 pages.
"Her Last Hours" by Nora Gallagher. 9 pages.
"Leaving Myself Behind" by Barabara Brown Taylor. 6 pages.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Yippee, Byron's Back!

Wow, some good books, Byron! I'm afraid I've been reading a lot of fluff in comparison!

Just finished:

Innocent Traitor: A Novel of Lady Jane Grey by Alison Weir
Historical fiction about the British royalty a la Philippa Gregory (apologies to the author who is probably tired of that comparison). Viewpoint shifts throughout the book. I liked it. 402 pages.

Rumors by Anna Godbersen
The second in the Luxe series. Set largely in Manhattan in 1899. I liked it and the last 100 pages or so were really engrossing -- you are pretty sure one bad thing is going to happen, but you (or at least I) thought the other was going to be okay.... young adult fiction. 423 pages.

What Was Lost by Catherine O'Flynn
I liked this one. Set in England in the 80's and more or less now. a young girl father dies soon after giving her a book on how to be a detective. She begins to watch/shadow people in her neighborhood and at the new nearby mall. She has a friendship with a young man in her neighborhood and when she disappears, he is suspected. A first novel. 246 pages.

The Sun, July 2008.
Read this while waiting for jury duty. Now I need to get to the August one! 48 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Another post by Byron

I read the Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
which was great but quite a bit sad (216)

Wobegon Boy by Garrison Keillor
Which was actually much better than I was expecting. I generally get bored
listening to him ramble on the radio. I think it works much better in print (320)

The Trial by Franz Kafka,
This was great, I think it might be famous so I won't go on about what it's about,
but he really nailed that feeling where things seem to happen for no reason (at least that you know about) but profoundly affect your life, that feeling of not being in control at all (292)

I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
I've been wanting to read this for awhile. It's wonderful. I didn't really realize this before I read it, but it's autobiographical, which is always neet. (289)

Slaughterhous Five by Kurt Vonnegut
I've read this before, and it was just as good the second time. (215)

The Things they carried - Tim O'Brien
This is a group of stories that the author wrote about his time in Vietnam using both personal experiences and those of his friends. I liked it so much I've started on another book of his.

I hope all are doing well, take care

Byron

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Anyone else going to join in this month?

A Colder Kind of Death by Gail Bowen
Another of the mystery series set in Canada/Regina. I like them -- just enough actual substance that I don't feel like I'm reading total fluff, too.
217 pages

Money Changes Everything: 22 Writers Tackle the Last Taboo with Tales of Sudden Windfalls, Staggering Debts, and Other Surprising Turns of Fortune edited by Jenny Offill & Elissa Schappell
Interesting essays. Just a warning. Don't spend 4 days in a row looking on Craigslist for a apartment you can afford while also reading this book and then go to a party in an enormous two story house with a lovely finished basement where the people are talking about their iphones and how their kids have way too much stuff -- it may leave you over analyzing your place in this world. 283 pages

The Beekeeper's Apprentice by Laurie R. King
The first in a mystery series about a young girl who meets and develops a friendship with Sherlock Holmes. I liked it and the next two are waiting for me at the library. 405 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

East Coast Novels

Palace Council by Stephen L. Carter
I like his books. This one is set over a 20 year period, give or take a few years, starting in 1952. Lots of politics.
One thing about this book (and I think it's unusual for me to think about a book this critically (in the neutral sense of the word) so it must have been a big deal) is that he kept referencing the fact that it was taken place in the past ("Harlem in those days" kind of things) -- maybe because this is his first place that doesn't take place "today"?
I'm writing this quickly as Jeremy needs the computer, so I may not be making any sense at all.....:p 514 pages

The Last Days of Dogtown by Anita Diamant
for book club tomorrow night. rich in characters. by the author of The Red Tent. Set in a tiny town in Massachusetts in the early 1800s. 263 pages

Buffy

Friday, July 18, 2008

Four more before we leave to housesit

Case Histories by Kate Atkinson
Sort of a mystery. I like stories where seemingly unrelated characters are actually connected. 310 pages.

Red Leather Diary by Lily Koppel
I think this has been getting a fair bit of press. Young reporter at the NY Times discovers the diary of a young woman living in Manhattan's Upper West Side in the 1930's. fairly interesting. 321 pages.

#90 Ever by Gail Carson Levine
Not nearly as compelling as it could have been. Some interesting takes on various conceptions of God. By the author of Ella Enchanted. 244 pages.

#91 The Wandering Soul Murders by Gail Bowen
another in the mystery series set in Canada I've been reading. I like them. 207 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Just you and me this month, Tam.

Listening Is an Act of Love: A Celebration of American Life from the StoryCorps Project by Dave Isay
What an interesting book. Some of you may have listened to StoryCorps interviews on NPR. This was my first experience with them and it was fascinating.
www.storycorps.net 270 pages.

Buffy in Denver

another sun down

I read June's issue of The Sun. I really really appreciated the interview with Edward Tick, about how the US is failing its returning soldiers (and how it could help them, if it chose to). 48 pages.

-Tamie

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Sausage Dogs and Delayed Planes

The Finer Points of Sausage Dogs by Alexander McCall Smith
the middle book in the little trilogy by the author of the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. Very short. Funny, especially if you know at all about the world of academia (or care enough to imagine). I liked this one better than the first. There were several parts I read aloud to DH. 128 pages

Dear American Airlines by Jonathan Miles
Another fairly short one. Author's first novel, I believe. Bennie Ford (53 years old) is on the way to his estranged daughter's commitment ceremony when his flight is delayed and he is stuck at O'Hare. An angry letter to the airline turns into a recitation of his life story interspersed with excerpts of the novel Ford is translating from the original Polish. Interesting.... 180 pages

Buffy in Denver

Friday, July 4, 2008

And the first four for July

Three middle grade books:

Feathers by Jacqueline Woodson
reminded me of Stargirl a bit -- just in the whole newcomer-who-is-so-different-from-'us' way. I liked it. Title comes from the Emily Dickinson poem about hope. 118 pages

Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis
I liked The Watsons Go to Birmingham (by the same author) more, but this was good. (and I still managed to cry at the end). Buxton is an actual town/community in Canada where freed and escaped slaves lived. Elijah is the first child born free in the community. A good historical novel for middle grades. 341 pages

Cicada Summer by Andrea Beatty
I think it's important for me to remember that this is juvenile literature (not young adult) and judge it on that basis. Clever writing, fun characters. Main character hasn't spoken since her brother's death, new girl comes to town.... 167 pages.

And an adult book that my library classed as sci-fi

The Man Who Turned Into Himself by David Ambrose
Loved it. I'm totally a "what if?" kind of person (as in I really like the movie Sliding Doors) and I think that is a lot of why I loved this book. It's based on the "many worlds" theory of quantum physics.
Rick Hamilton is in a middle when he suddenly feels that his wife is going to die. He arrives at the scene of the accident as she is dying. He closes his eyes in grief and when he opens them she is alive, though it's a slightly different accident and he is a slightly different person. (and they suddenly have no child.) Really good stuff, in my opinion. 197 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Five more for June

In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto by Michael Pollan
by the author of Omnivore's Dilemma. His basic points -- Eat food (ie, actual food, not food product). Not too much. Mostly plants. Good stuff. 205 pages

What I Was by Meg Rosoff
meh. this was okay -- tells of the friendship between two boys in 1960's Britain, one who lives alone in a hut by the sea, one in a boarding school. Didn't really draw me in. 209 pages

The 10 Year Nap by Meg Wolitzer
The story of four different women as they enter their late 30s (?). was okay. Deals quite a bit with motherhood/career/marriage issues. 351 pages.

The Translator by Daoud Hari
Author is a tribesman from Dafur. Excellent stuff, tells of his experiences living in Darfur and elsewhere and translating for reporters in the area. 204 pages.

The Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan
This is the fourth book in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series. I know some people are getting tired of them, but I'm still really enjoying them. Percy is a young teen (in this one it's the summer before his 15th birthday.) who is a demi-god (his father is Poseidon). I like the author's humor and just enjoy them. They are quick reads for me. 361 pages.

Buffy

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Books I'm taking back to the library today...

Gods Behaving Badly by Marie Phillips
Funny. Greek gods living in a London townhouse, losing their powers. 292 pages

Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishment to Love and Reason by Alfie Kohn
Love it. I think everyone should read it, whether you have children or not (it'll help you have a different perspective on children you see in public spaces. Talks about working with children instead of doing to them. 221 pages.

Buffy

Monday, June 16, 2008

sex sex sex

Finally I am done with this wretched book. It's called Real Sex: The Naked Truth About Chastity, by Lauren Winner. I picked it up because she is one of the teachers at a writers' workshop I'm attending next week. But, wow. It's a book about chastity, and how sex outside of marriage is a sin. It's been really frustrating, not to mention dry/boring, reading. But I prevailed, because I wanted to be able to count my pages on this blog. :) I think that the hard thing is that she has some really insightful things to say about sexuality, but they're mixed in with some (in my opinion) really ridiculous statements, like that it's scandalous that college-age men walk around campus with their shirts off, or that she finds it shameful that professors teach wearing jeans. Come ON. Sigh. I would like someone to write about sexuality from a Christian-progessive viewpoint. That would be rad. 161 pages.

-Tamie

changing light

Changing Light, by Nora Gallagher, is a book set in Los Alamos, New Mexico in the 1940s. I'm not sure what you'd say the theme of the book is, but several of the main characters are involved with building the atomic bomb. There is also a love story, interactions with indigenous people, and an Episcopal priest. I like books that are set in places I identify with--and New Mexico is Arizona's neighbor. There's really so much culture here. Also, the Episcopal stuff. It's a good book. 223 pages.

-tamie

Friday, June 13, 2008

A quick post before we leave to camp with 40 other people

Murder at the Mendel by Gail Bowen
another in the mystery series set in Saskatchewan fairly intelligent stuff -- not total fluff.
213 pages

The Seventh Well by Fred Wander
Wander was a survivor of more than 20 concentration camps. This is a novel that is loosely based on his experiences.
155 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Monday, June 9, 2008

Cedimus

All right, folks. I read. A lot. But when one is intimately involved in a doctoral program, one's energies in cataloging and enumerating can only go so far.

I hereby bequeath my pages to the magic of the Internet, relinquish my claim to the most-read person on this blog, and encourage reading of most kinds. May the most obsessed reader win.

Jeremy, bowing out

anne lamott

Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith, by Anne Lamott. This is part of her faith series, which includes Traveling Mercies and Plan B. I really like these books. They are all basically essays about her life, about her son, her deceased parents, her church, her dog...and how her plain old life interacts with her faith and with God. She has had quite the life, and she is very real and very honest, and when I read her stuff it makes me feel not-alone. 253 pages.

-Tamie

Friday, June 6, 2008

the sun and MLK

what tamie said. (except June)48 pages.

April 4, 1968: Martin Luther King Jr.'s Death and How It Changed America by Michael Eric Dyson

Really good stuff. Talks about how MLK talked about death before he died. The author gives Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and Barack Obama each their own chapter. The afterword is the author's imagining of an interview with MLK on the occasion of his 80th birthday. Very interesting book. 273 pages.


Buffy

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

the sun

If you do not subscribe to The Sun Magazine, you should rectify this problem immediately. May 2008 issue: 48 pages.

-Tamie

Whew, snuck back in just in time. :)

A Breath of Snow and Ashes by Diana Gabaldon
Last one (so far) in the Outlander series. So ya'all can stop hearing about them from me til next year, I think.... 980 pages

Resistance by Owen Sheers
Author's first novel. An alternate history of post-WWII, if Germany had won, set in the hills of Wales. 306 pages

Deadly Appearances by Gail Bowen

mystery series set in Saskatchewan. 267 pages

Welcome back Phoenix, and welcome Byron -- we like Terry Pratchett around here, too.

~Buffy in Denver

Monday, June 2, 2008

My first post ever on a blog!

Well, here's my list of books that i've read so far,
I'm not sure if i'm doing this right, but here we go,

My aunt sent me some sort of fantasy books that were pretty entertaining,
they were: Sourcery (260 pages), The Light Fantastic (241 pages) and The Color of Magic (210 pages) all by Terry Pratchett

I've recently got on a John Steinbeck kick so I've read the following of his:
Travels with Charley in search of America (232 pages)
Tortilla Flat ( 198 pages)
East of Eden (625 pages) this was a great book
and Sweet Thursday (260 pages) this is a sequel to Steinbeck's great Cannery Row

Also I read Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer, for some reason I'd been resisting reading it for awhile, but my mother in law and my brother both sent it to me to read, so I thought that I might as well, it was a lot better than I thought it would be, and I'd recommend it (207 pages)

I read Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe (around 160 pages) It was a great novel about the life and how that life changed of an African man in West Africa at the on set of colonialism

I re-read Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris (272 pages) and it was still really funny.

That's all I've been reading, but I'm working on a few more, so I'll write those up later
My total number of pages so far is 2665

Byron Ripley

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Absence makes the heart grow abscessed...

Hello all,

Forgive my recent and total absence from this lovely project. Just popped on to update-- mine eyes must be failing me-- I can't be in the LEAD! Probably Jeremy and Buffy haven't updated yet for this month. Yes, that must be it. I'm surprised they haven't entered their daughter into this contest yet... she'd probably be beating the pants off all of us.

Tamie, I was sad to read your review of The Unprocessed Child, a book I've been looking forward to reading for a long time. I still plan to read it, but how sad is it that people can take such good ideas and make them into such negative commentaries on Everything Else? Narrow-mindedness is the Devil's friend (Nietsche. Or, you know, Phoenix.)

Anyway, I'm sad to say I've read very few new books in the past month. I've been trying to keep my spending to a minimum, and so I haven't bought new books and I only just took out a library membership (I know, I know *slaps own hand*). And the new books I have read, well, they haven't exactly been much good, or very interesting to write about. Many have had to do with starting a nonprofit company, and all the little details thereof.

Oh, on that note and speaking of unschooling-- I might as well plug my own project here. My dear friend Bryan and I have decided to start an unschool of our own-- a community learning center in which children can learn at their own pace, in their own way, and where we act as mere facilitators to education. We won't be teachers, and we won't be police. We'll simply be there to help the kids learn in whatever way would most benefit them, and we plan on giving the students a lot of control over their own education.

This is a new idea, and a long way from being operational but the pair of us plan to move next year to a location to be named later to start our unschool. Until then, it's planning by phone and email (he lives in San Francisco and I live in New York and we both have real jobs and all that, so we're not making progress quite as quickly as I'd like, but that'll change next year when we move to our new state and really dig into this). We have started a blog (www.unschooledcenter.blogspot.com) in which to write down our thoughts and hopefully, when the time is right, spread the word. It only has two posts so far because Bryan and I have both been very busy, but I hope you'll check in from time to time!

Anyway, I can recommend a few books, if you haven't read them yet. Lately, I've been very curious about the Holocaust and some of the books we're always hearing about but that I hadn't read yet. I give you:

The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank, Ellen Feldman
This is fiction, but it's a very convincing fictional account of what might have happened to Peter van Pels had he been allowed to live, come to America, and start over. Very gripping, very honest, and so authentic sounding that I had to remind myself more than once that I wasn't reading the real man's words. I think it is a very good tribute to what happened, and shows as much depth of understanding as anyone who has not been through such an obscenity could ever hope to possess.

The Diary of Anne Frank
Obviously, I also have to recommend this book. I had never read it before, not even in high school. No words, really. Just... read it.

Schindler's List
I had never seen the movie and I'm not all the way through the book so I'll let you know more of my thoughts on this one when I've finished with it. But it's very good so far. I can't imagine not recommending it when I'm through.

I hope everyone is doing well.

-Phoenix

Friday, May 30, 2008

the poisonwood bible

Last night I finished The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver. Goodness. Here's a quote for you, from the very end: "We constructed our lives around a misunderstanding, and if I ever tried to pull it out and fix it now I would fall down flat. Misunderstanding is my cornerstone. It's everyone's, come to think of it. Illusions mistaken for truth are the pavement under our feet. They are what we call civilization." The book is historical fiction, about a white Southern Baptist missionary family living in the Congo (Zaire) in the late 50s, early 60s. They came to bring salvation to the poor black natives...and they encounter a world that doesn't bend to their white, Christian ways. The story is told from the perspective of the family's four daughters. It's beautifully written, poetry through so much of it. It is sad, so much of it. But as usual with Kingsolver, once you finish the book you realize just how much redemption there was all through the story--it's just different redemption from what you expect. 543 pages.

-Tamie

Sunday, May 25, 2008

more from Buffy

Portuguese Irregular Verbs by Alexander McCall Smith 128 pages

Fiery Cross by Diana Gabaldon 979 pages

Kaline Klattermaster's Tree House by Haven Kimmel 152 pages
This was a fun, short chapter book (inside flap says ages 7-12) by the author of A Girl Named Zippy. Deals with imagination, divorce, and in a vague way, learning styles.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Sunny Nancy Drew (or, The Sun Y Nancy Drew)

Girl Sleuth: Nancy Drew and the Women Who Created Her by Melanie Rehak
This was a read for book club tonight. You definitely weren't tricked into thinking you were reading fiction, if you know what I mean, but it was interesting. And there was a really broad scope of history -- especially literature/women's roles in WWI and WWII, suffrage, and the feminist movement. 317 pages

May 2008 Sun Man, I love this stuff! 48 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Monday, May 19, 2008

post #70! The Unprocessed Child

Today I finished The Unprocessed Child, by Valerie Fitzenreiter. 241 pages.

As some of you will remember, this book was recommended on this very blog, so I immediately bought it, being quite interested in the subject. It's one woman's account of raising her daughter without schooling her at all. She didn't homeschool; she simply did not force any kind of curriculum or education, whatsoever, onto her child. Overall, I'm glad that I read it. It helped me think about childhood and schooling in ways I really hadn't thought about before.

Here is one really key quote: "The true aim of school seems to be conformity rather than learning." Yep, so true. She talks about how schooling coerces and manipulates and bullies children into "learning" things that they don't care about, thus ensuring that children associate learning with boredom, fear, and manipulation. Fitzenreiter believes that children are naturally curious and intelligent, and will learn whatever they need to learn, when they want and need to learn it. If you allow them to do whatever they want, they will investigate the world, they'll play and use their imaginations and experience lots of joy and peace in childhood. She uses her own daughter as an example of the truth of this theory. (Her daughter went straight from 18 years of being unschooled into college, where she earned a 4.0.)

She addresses many issues that may arise when parenting a child this way. She talks about bedtimes (they didn't have any set bedtime; her daughter simply went to sleep when she was tired, thus learning to listen to her body and natural rhythms); about discipline (there were very few rules, and certainly no discipline); about emotions, friendship, honesty, sexuality, and socialization, among a whole host of other issues. Overall, I found myself agreeing with her, and being amazed that more people haven't thought of this sort of thing earlier. It's clear that children and parents are both miserable with the way things are, but no one realizes that things truly could be different.

But, I just can't give this book a 100% favorable review. For one thing, after a couple chapters she really really starts to sound quite self-righteous. By the end of the book, I was quite turned-off by her better-parent-than-thou attitude. Parents don't want to be berated or belittled any more than children do. I think that the vast majority of parents are doing their absolute best to raise their children, and maybe they're not doing the best that could be done, but they are doing their individual best, and they need encouragement and praise for their efforts if nothing else.

Another thing that really rubbed me the wrong way was that she built up her opponents (school teachers for example) totally as strawpeople, and then burned them to the ground. Her assessment of the folks she disagreed with was totally unfair, and often inarticulate. This is truly unfortunate because she had some legitimate criticisms, but they were unsophisticated and just came off sounding uninformed. In general, in fact, she had done almost no research, and it sounded like she was basing her entire argument on her single experience with her single child. I really felt like she'd have convinced her readership SO much more if she'd have just told her story, in memoir-form perhaps, instead of preaching and haranguing. Because she was basing her argument for unschooling just on her own experience, she didn't seem to really take into account single-parent families, or impoverished families, or any number of other circumstances that I myself haven't thought of. Again, this is unfortunate because I'm sure that there are important and sophisticated arguments to be made for unschooling, that can work across the whole spectrum of cultures and socio-economic situations.

Overall what I would say is: investigate unschooling. It's an incredibly important idea. But read this book with a pinch of salt. Or whatever the expression is.

Peace! ~Tamie

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Becoming the Parent You Want to Be

Becoming the Parent You Want to Be by Laura David and Janis Keyser

I liked this book a lot. There were a few things that didn't jive with me -- I think mostly sleep stuff and the fact that I don't think time outs are the absolute best tactic... But in general, it's a great read. It's sort of set up like a textbook, as far as questions for reflection at the end of each chapter, divided into smaller sections, etc. Good stuff. 415 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

I promise, I've got a non-fiction one to post soon.

Where Are You Now? by Mary Higgins Clark
An excellent example of where I go for my trash reading. A woman's brother disappeared 10 years ago, when he was 21, but calls their mother every year on Mother's Day. She determines to find him and in the process, the police begin to suspect that he is involved with a series of murders that have taken place during his disappearance. I wish I could make it sound more high-brow than that, but there you have it. 289 pages

The Eye of Jade by Diane Wei Liang
the first in a new mystery series -- been billed as China's answer to the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency -- maybe that's why it was just okay for me. Probably won't pursue the rest in the series, but I did get a good quote from it:


All I'm saying is that sometimes being part of something painful is in fact what helps us to survive. It helps us go on with our lives.
256 pages.

The Outcast by Sadie Jones 345 pages

The Mouse and the Motorcycle by Beverly Cleary 158 pages

Dreamers of the Day by Mary Doria Russell
interesting fiction about a teacher from Ohio who goes to the middle east after WWI and becomes acquainted with T.E. Lawrence and Winston Churchill. Part of the author's point is how much of our present comes from our past (generally of course, but specifically with regard to world history.) 249 pages

April edition of The Sun
Mentioned by Tamie previously. 48 pages.


Buffy in Denver

Monday, May 12, 2008

Cats and Kite Runners

The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents by Terry Pratchett (368 pages) - A hilarious young adult book about a cat and a bunch of rats who eat something that turns them into "people", that is they have thoughts and are self-aware. Includes a cat's reflection on his conscious, rat theology, and a stupid-looking boy.

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (400 pages) - An intense book about a boy who grows up in Afghanistan then moves to America when his country goes to the Taliban. He packs a lot into 400 pages. Please read this one so I can talk to you about it...

-Michelle

Friday, May 9, 2008

where the red fern grows

Aaron recommended this book to me. It was good, sad. I'm sure most people have read it, but I hadn't yet. Thanks for the rec., Aaron. 212 pages. -Tamie

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Going to Extremes by Joe McGinniss

Going to Extremes by Joe McGinniss

So I'm leaving for Alaska in two days. I'll be salmon fishing from 11 May to 11 October under the lash of Tamie's uncles. In order to prepare for this ordeal, I decided to read a book about Alaska. It was recommended to me by one of my coworkers in Flagstaff. Thank-you Daniel Becker.

Joe McGinniss is an NYC journalist who decides to travel around Alaska for a year in the late 1970's. He starts in the middle of winter on a ferry sailing from Seattle up along the coast toward the Alaskan panhandle. To put it mildly, it seems like everyone on the ferry aside from the author, is a stark-craving lunatic. But they are also very vivacious people. His ferry ride sets the scene for what will become a never-ending series of meetings with very eccentric people living in a very eccentric climate. McGinniss travels via plane, boat, car, foot and train all over the Alaskan wilds, from Barrow to Nome, to Juneau, to Anchorage, to Valdez, to Fairbanks and to Mt. McKinley - the tallest peak in North America.

The book reads like a highly polished travel journal and could be picked up and started, without much loss of understanding, in the middle of the book. The writing style is similar to Michael Perry's Truck: A Love Story. for those have read or heard of this book about small-town life in northern Wisconsin. McGinniss mixes humor, description, casual conversation with locals, and irony in his writings. Perhaps it is tinged with a bit of exaggeration, but this, if it does occurr, only adds to the reading pleasure. Going to Extremes is an entertaining and informative read about what makes Alaskans tick - whether it be the search for personal freedom or a get-rick-quick mentality that so often goes hand in hand with the economy surrounding the then recently built Trans-Alaskan Oil Pipeline. The only chapter that falls short is the dragging final chapter, when McGinniss backpacks through the Brooks Mountain Range with some US Park Service employees. He is clearly awestruck by the ruggedness and beauty of this faraway land, but his attempt to translate this to prose results in him repeatedly sounding like a broken record in regards to his descriptions of his majestic surroundings. I really enjoyed this book, but the last chapter could have been both shortened and reworked. (285 pages). (Reviewed by Rob Jach).

A restful book, in some ways

Hunting and Gathering by Anna Gavalda

An internet friend read this and said I would like it -- I did. Translated from French. Perfect combination of hard lives/struggle with hope and fun. A good message for me right now. Camille, a talented artist exhausted by ennui and anorexia, cleans offices at night and cowers in a shabby garret by day. Philibert, the fastidious scion of a titled family, peddles museum postcards while squatting in his dead grandmother's Parisian manse, waiting for her estate to be settled. Philibert's roommate, Franck, a talented (and womanizing) chef with ambition to burn, motorcycles once a week to look in on his stubborn, ailing grandmother Paulette, an "inmate" at a retirement home. (Italics from Amazon).
488 pages

Buffy in Denver

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

their eyes were watching god

Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston.

It's a book about a black woman, set in the South in the 1930s. It's about her life, her 3 marriages, her journey from object to subject. For most of her life she is owned, is the possession of her husband. But when she meets Tea Cake, her third husband, this all changes. There is great freedom and love and joy between them, and she becomes her own distinct person. Almost the whole book is written in dialect, which takes a little getting used to, but once you get used to it, you realize how necessary it is. I'm glad I read this book. 193 pages.

-Tamie

Where are all the May posters?

Tam, I have two Suns sitting here that I really want to read -- but I keep reading books instead --you and I have the opposite problem, it seems. :)

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
Interesting -- sort of a collection of short stories -- but the same person, Olive Kitteridge, appears in all of them, at various points in her own life, whether as the/a main character, or someone briefly glimpsed and discussed in the audience at a play. 270 pages

Mudbound by Hilary Jordan
Wow -- this was a pretty intense one. Set in the Jim Crow south after WWII. Main characters are two white brothers (the younger has just returned from the war, the older owns a farm and lives there with his wife), their father, the wife, a black couple who are their tenants on the farm and their son who has just returned from the war. Each chapter is told by one of these characters. 324 pages.

~Buffy in Denver

Thursday, May 1, 2008

last one for april & first one for may

The Dance of Dissident Daughter by Sue Monk Kidd
I feel like this had more to say to me this time than it did 3-5 years ago, when I first read it. 228 pages.

Remembering the Bones by Frances Itani
Interesting. Canadian woman (Georgie), born on same date as Queen Elizabeth, is invited to her (their) 80th birthday party at Buckingham Palace. Georgie crashes her car into a ravine on the way to the airport to go to the party. Entire story (after first 8 pages) are Georgie's thoughts as she lies, severely injured, in the ravine. 283 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Monday, April 28, 2008

read another magazine

Okay people, the thing is that I do read books, just slowly and distractedly and I have a hard time finishing them. In the meantime, I read the April issue of The Sun. My favorite part was the interview with Connie Rice, who works with cops and gangs in LA to reduce violence. It was an intriguing and inspiring interview. 48 pages.

-Tamie

Friday, April 25, 2008

Books I've Read While Housesitting


The Curse of the Spellmans by Lisa Lutz second in a series. i think they are fun. (409 pages)

All Shall Be Well; and All Shall Be Well; and All Manner of Things Shall Be Well by Tod Wodicka good. (272 pages)

Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah Good Story -- follows two women from the start of their friendship in 1974 (as 14 year olds) into the 21st century. I cried several times. Tam, I thought of you constantly while I was reading this -- partly simply because of the span of their relationship -- and thought how lucky you and I are.(479 pages)

Also started but didn't finish The Third Jesus by Deepak Chopra (82 pages)

Buffy in Denver

These are the books I've read

"Whitethorn Woods" by Maeve Binchy (449 pages)
"Vargtimmen" by Denise Mina (358)
"mig äger ingen" by Åsa Linderborg (294)
"Växa och upptäcka världen-sju utvecklingssprång under barnets första levnadsår" by Hetty van de Rijt & Frans X. Plooij (263)

For the record, these are the books I've read. :) /Anna







Friday, April 18, 2008

Catching Up

Jeremy here. I've been so busy reading I haven't had time to post, so I wanted to at least get title, numbers, a one-sentence description, and a review up before I forget them all.

1. Queen of Dreams, Chita Divakaruni. The second-generation daughter of Indian parents struggles with her mother's apparent divinatory powers, her divorce and with her thirteen-year-old daughter, and post 9/11 reconceptions of what it means to be an American. Well-written and insightful but with an unsatisfyingly abrupt and arbitrary ending. 352 pgs.

2. Duma Key, Stephen King. After a construction accident, an ordinary middle-class guy relocates to a mysterious Florida Key and realizes the power for his art to affect reality. An interesting premise, and some heart-stopping moments around page 400 or so, but we'll say 592 pages could have been 200 easily. Once you get famous, evidently you don't need an editor anymore.

3. All Shall Be Well, All Shall Be Well, All Manner of Things Shall Be Well, Tod Wodicka. A wonderful and quirky book about a man who embraces living in the medieval period as much as possible - we learn why as the book unfolds. Hildegard von Bingen, homemade mead, ethnic identity, and freeform jazz. Read it. 272 pgs.

4. People of the Book, Geraldine Brooks. I realize that if a book has anything to do with religion in any tangential way, I can justify it as research. I've actually recommended this one to several of my textual criticism friends - the main character is a book conservator dealing with the (historically real) Sarajevo Haggadah, a Jewish prayer book illuminated in a curiously Christian manner and saved during World War II by a Muslim curator. As she finds relevant artifacts in the book (a bloodstain, a butterfly wing), short stories within the text reveal more of the book's history and its constant interconnection with these three monotheistic faiths. Very nice - and it can go in my bibliography somewhere. 384 pgs.

5. Capote in Kansas, Kim Powers. Buffy asked me whether she should read this book, and I didn't have an answer. It's strange in a way that invites me to sit down and think about it more so that I can answer that question meaningfully, but I'm not likely to do so. Maybe one of you should. At any rate, it explores the fact that Harper Lee, the author of To Kill a Mockingbird, and Truman Capote, the author of In Cold Blood, grew up as friends in the same town, and the influence they may have had on each other's work, as well as issues of their sexuality, of death, o race, poverty and violence. All the great themes here, folks - read it and perhaps we can have a conversation. 304 pgs.

And for my theology colloquium:

1. Friedrich Schleiermacher, On Religion: Speeches to Its Cultured Despisers. Famous German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher, the "father of modern theology," was hanging out with his Romantic friends (he was roommates with Schlegel for a while), and they said, "Fritz, you're a fascinating and charming, intelligent, art-loving guy. What's all this religion crap about?" Schleiermacher wrote this book in response. Nice and lyrical in a way that the later analytical Schleiermacher isn't - religion is "lying on the bosom of the earth" and being caught up in rhapsodic perception of the interconnectedness of all things. I think Schleiermacher has a lot to say to many "cultured despisers of religion" today - if you ignore most of the problematic last chapter. 200 pgs.

2. David Tracy, Analogical Imagination. It may seem strange for a Mennonite theologian to be drawing on a Roman Catholic for most of his work. But I do. Tracy outlines a method for Christian theologians to engage meaningfully in a pluralist society without giving up the very important pieces of their identity, centered around the idea of the "classic" and how it speaks to the questions of existence we all have. This guy will help me write my dissertation (not really - but through his book). 467 pgs.

Keep on goin', fellow readers!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Just Barely Staying Between Phoenix and Jeremy!

Someone Knows My Name by Lawrence Hill
Lovely story about a woman who is taken from Africa as a 12 yo, sold into slavery in S. Carolina. Throughout the book she travels to Canada, Sierra Leone, and England. Ends with her as an elderly woman living in England. Good story. 487 pages

Instead of Education: Ways to Help People Do Things by John Holt
from the back cover: "Holt lays out the foundation for un-schooling as the vital path to self-directed learning and a creative life. . . . packed with examples of how to create learning opportunities outside the established educational structure, as well as fascinating stories of people who choose to self-educate, non-compulsory schools . . . Holt's most direct and radical challenge to the educational status quo and a dramatic appeal to parents to save their children from schools of all kind." This book was first published in 1976 (the year I was born) and I wonder if that is part of the reason I don't find it the most interesting book I've read on this subject... Still good, though. I also read it in two halves, with several weeks separating the reading, that probably didn't help....222 pages

Alexander and the Wonderful, Marvelous, Excellent, Terrific Ninety Days: An Almost Completely Honest Account of What Happened to Our Family When Our Youngest ... Came to Live with Us for Three Months
Meh. This was okay. I don't really recommend it. 113 pages

~buffy in denver

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Welcome Aaron!

Welcome Aaron -- you have a great start! (though I must ask -- is there really such a thing as a gratuitous amount of reading?)

The Geography of Bliss: One Grump's Search for the Happiest Place in the World by Eric Weiner
Another great non-fiction read. Author is an NPR correspondent and self-described grump. Very interesting, the discussion of what makes happiness. Each chapter describes his visit to a different country (India, Bhutan, Qatar, England, etc) Iceland is one of the happiest places on Earth -- who knew? 329 pages

The Outlandish Companion by Diana Gabaldon
This is the companion book for the Outlander series (It feels a little redundant to say that.) Some parts were more interesting to me than others -- like any good companion book, probably. I didn't read the last part, which was excerpts of books I haven't read yet. Given the chance to do over, I probably wouldn't read this one. 402 pages read.

Buffy in Denver

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

I Am Far Behind Dawgs!

Well sorry it has taken so long to post but this is Aaron. If this does not work I am sorry as I don't know how to work this confounded thing as my life philosophy is anti-myspace, anti-facebook, and anti-blog. As for those of you who have read gratuitous amounts I must encourage you to keep reading, as reading is good, but for everyone's sake stop reading. Thanks. Lets get on to business.

Gilead by Marilynne Robinson- A laid back read that overall I enjoyed 256 pages Baby!!!

A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah- Depressing but good 226 pages

Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories by Dr. Seuss- Best book on turtle stacking ever 72 pages

Open Your Eyes and Soar by Cuban Women- Great stories written by Cuban women 102 pages

Man Without a Country by Kurt Vonnegut- Amazing, go read it now 135 pages

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver- 2nd read and still awesome 400 pages

Gig by Jon Bowe- Americans essays about their jobs from garbage collector to doctors 49 pages

The Prince by Machiavelli- Ahhh Machiavelli 71 pages

A Collection of Primary Documents by Spikard- Collection of great historical writings 133 pages

1491 By Charles Mann- Good Book on Native American's impact on the enviroment 40 pages

Total that is 1444 as of now. I may have forgotten stuff and if I did I will add them later. Also if any of my professors happen to glance at this page I have read Woodrow Wilson by Thomson, The Cuban Missile Crisis by Munton and Welch and A Concise History of Modern India by Metcalf and Metcalf along with various other writings and primary documents.

Gerald Ford, Stephanie Plum, and Gemma Doyle

Write It When I'm Gone: Remarkable Off-the-Record Conversations with Gerald R. Ford by Thomas M. Defrank
The author was a Newsweek correspondent for many years and interviewed Ford many times with the understanding that nothing would be published until after his (Ford's) death. Interesting stuff about Watergate, his relationship with many other former presidents, etc.
250 pages.

Plum Lucky by Janet Evanovich
pure fluff and very short. I feel better about posting it when it's proceeded by something slightly weightier. ;)
166 pages.

A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray
New young adult fiction, the first in a series (a trilogy?) I liked it, but not sure if I'll read the rest or not.... 1895, English girl living in India, returns to England after her mother is killed, goes to boarding school, has supernatural visions....
403 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Reading backlog

It's Michelle. Here's the news from the front:

During holy week, I read Traveling Mercies by Anne Lamott (272 pgs). It is a hilarious and inspirational read. Whenever I need a smile, I read the story about her "Aunties" that she takes to the beach.

In the fifth grade, I've been reading Number the Stars by Lois Lowry (144 pgs) during their silent reading time. It is a beautiful book that I wish I had read when I was younger. It is about a girl during World War II who helps protect the Jewish family next door during the Nazi occupation.

In the sixth grade, they get to choose between several novels to read. Although Wayside Stories is a good read, I choose The Watsons go to Birmingham by Christopher Paul Curtis (224 pgs). Funny and has ridiculously long chapter titles.

And finally today I spent 4 hours finishing The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver (543 pgs). It pokes at everything in the world that need to be poked at. Religion, food production, politics, health, school. If you haven't read it, go read it now.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Behaving Badly and Behaving Well

A smorgasbord from Jeremy as spring break winds up and we spring back into comprehensive exam action. Wish me luck on the philosophy exam, friends.

1. Donald Barthelme, Sixty Stories. The master of the short story - and I do mean short, some of them three pages, ranging from the existential to the absurd. As I understand, Tamie and Buffy share a high school memory from one particular story: "I am not well, and Shotwell is not himself." Recommended, especially for future fiction writing graduate school students. 480 pgs.

2. Neil Labute, Seconds of Pleasure. The question I have to ask myself after reading a book of short stories like this is, Why do I continue to seek out misanthropic fiction? There is no answer, but I know I need to stop, for my own well-being if not Mr. Labute's. 224 pgs.

3. Tyler Knox, Kockroach. All right, so this one was misanthropic too, but in a good way. Knox inverts Kafka's famous story in which Gregor Samsa wakes up as a giant cockroach, and instead tells the story of a cockroach who wakes up as a tall and creepily attractive human. He is particularly successful in crime; given this fact, you can guess in what political office he ends up. Readable and grim. 368 pgs.

4. Larry Doyle, I Love You Beth Cooper. Kind of an American Pie in novel form; each chapter begins with a caricature of the nerdy hero's increasingly bedraggled face. Nice in concept, dull in realization. 272 pgs.

5. Marie Phillips, Gods Behaving Badly. Fun, light novel about the Greek gods barely hanging on in the 20th century; Artemis walks dogs, Apollo is a TV psychic, and Dionysius owns a night club. Refresh your mythology and read semi-chick-lit at the same time! 304 pgs.

6. In a complete reversal from the previous book, Immanuel Kant's Religion Within the Limits of Reason Alone. Final book for my comprehensives. Kant argues philosophically for the necessity of a religion based solely on obedient moral behavior. Yes, I know it's more complicated than that. 352 pgs.

First book for April

The Secret School by Avi

short-ish chapter book about Ida, a 14 year old girl in rural Colorado in 1925. When her teacher has to leave before the school year, Ida decides to become the teacher (the school board decided to simply close the school instead of finding a new teacher). A good story, I would've like it when I was 10, certainly. 153 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Thursday, April 3, 2008

So that's how you do it...

I've been wanting to post my updated numbers forever, but I haven't known how. This month, Tamie was kind enough to post instructions for morons like myself. Thanks, Tamie!

And I feel unreasonable pride at keeping pace with the out of control kids we know as B&J (not sure what your kid's name is but I hope it starts with P because than your family acronym can be a sandwich :-)). I'm kind of secretly hoping to break my leg or come down with mono so I have an excuse to lay in bed and catch up for real. Plus, you lot (speaking to the general posting public now) have been reading some good books lately! If I could read all the books you have liked lately, I'd be a happy camper.

Not a lot of new books this month, but I did reread the Chronicles of Narnia. I do that about once a year. More to the point, I did not read one single classic! Oh, it was good, my friends. I still can't talk about it. Need more time to process the relentless joy.

Clan of the Cave Bear, Jean M. Auel
This was a recommendation from a friend, and it's the first in a series that I initially mistook for a children's epic, but upon reading, changed my mind. It's pretty violent and intense in certain parts. It's about a young girl names Ayla who lives in prehistoric times when the world is split up between partially evolved humans (Clan, or "flatheads") and pretty much evolved humans ("Others"). Ayla is one of the Others, but when an earthquake kills her family and leaves her nearly dead, a Clan woman takes pity on her and raises her as one of their own.

The book is multilayered and quite a fascinating study of identity, family, home, humanity, love, and faith. This book, the first of three, details Ayla's life with the Clan and how she finds love there, despite never fitting in and always feeling/looking different. 495 pages.

Valley of the Horses, Jean M. Auel
Continuing the saga of Ayla, who finds herself alone once again, without her family and completely vulnerable to the elements-- though a good deal better equipped as a woman of fourteen than she was as a child of five. Much of the book deals with her solitary journey as well as that of another important character. Eventually, their paths cross.

As much as the first book was about family and love and what it means to belong to someone, this book was about self-sufficiency versus loneliness and it resonated with me right now. Ayla is fine going it alone, she can do it all herself and thrive, actually, as an independent strong woman. But she doesn't like it. She doesn't savor it, she doesn't relish it. The ability to go it alone does not the desire to go it alone make. How well I know. 544 pages.

Love Is A Mix Tape, Rob Sheffield
This was a very poignant, sweet book written by a young widower about the wife of his youth. Rob is a funny guy, and obviously something of a music fanatic as was his late wife, Renee. The book tells all about their relationship, and the whole thing was written while he was wrestling with his own grief (his wife died suddenly, of a brain aneurysm, completely out of the blue).

It's not deep, it's not groundbreaking, it's not witty or smart or Nobel Prize material by any means. It's just honest, and authentic. It's very heartfelt, and a lovely tribute to a woman who must have been something wonderful. 219 pages.

I'm going to read some of the books all of you have been writing about this month. Keep up the recommendations!

-Phoenix

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

One last book for March

Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions by Dan Ariely

What a great book -- I've discovered that I'm really interested in economics, or at least behavioral economics. I laughed out loud while reading this book -- should you really do that when reading a non-fiction econ book? The author is a prof at MIT who "explains how expectations, emotions, social norms, and other invisible, seemingly illogical forces skew our reasoning abilities" (from the book flap). 254 pages

Buffy in Denver

Monday, March 31, 2008

i read another book!

This one is called "Divisadero" by Michael Ondaatje. It's hard to describe. Most of it feels quite a bit like poetry. There's a lot of pathos. Characters you come to care for, although I often felt like I was reading about something, rather than really being immersed in it. I recommend the book, but not nearly as highly as The English Patient, or even Anil's Ghost. 273 pages. yay!

-Tamie

Saturday, March 29, 2008

I'm glad this wasn't my high school experience

The Battle of Jericho by Sharon M. Draper

Wow -- this was a pretty intense young adult book about The Warriors of Distinction, a high school "service" club that, in actuality, has brutal "initiation" and hazing rituals. Told from the point of view of Jericho, who has been invited to join the club. The author was National Teacher of the Year in 1997. 297 pages

Buffy in Denver

Friday, March 28, 2008

A wonderful book for book club, an okay (and short) book by local author

Mel, I think you will like Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. I haven't been able to bring myself to read The Road -- I'm afraid it's just going to be too dreary and pessimistic for me. (Though I'm truly not one who insists on happy endings, or happy beginnings. I do like to be able to find a glimmer of hope at some point in the text, though -- it doesn't have to be at the end. :))

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
Book club book for this past Thursday. Good stuff. Several heartbreaking passages/events. From Amazon
Quote:
In 2019, humanity finally finds proof of extraterrestrial life when a listening post in Puerto Rico picks up exquisite singing from a planet which will come to be known as Rakhat. While United Nations diplomats endlessly debate a possible first contact mission, the Society of Jesus quietly organizes an eight-person scientific expedition of its own. What the Jesuits find is a world so beyond comprehension that it will lead them to question the meaning of being "human." When the lone survivor of the expedition, Emilio Sandoz, returns to Earth in 2059, he will try to explain what went wrong... Words like "provocative" and "compelling" will come to mind as you read this shocking novel about first contact with a race that creates music akin to both poetry and prayer. 405 pages.

Now You See Him by Eli Gottleib
Fiction by a local author. Okay.262 pages.

Buffy in Denver

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

melissa here...

Wow! There's just no keeping up with Buffy and Jeremy! You put us all to shame.

I've a few to add to my list. Just short reviews this time. Will have to look at that Animal, Vegetable, Miracle book next!!

Nick Hornby
'A Long Way'
331 pages
My favourite so far of Hornby's. He's hilarious and excellent. This one looks at four totally diverse characters wrestling with suicide. Happens to be very funny, in spite of subject matter.

Cormac McCarthy
'The Road'
285 pages
Akin to Atwoods' "The Handmaid's Tale" and "Oryx and Crake." I feel like I have written this before, so maybe I've already counted this but don't want to go thru the archives to double check. If so, I've stolen 285 extra pages in my page count--sorry!

Mary Higgins Clark
'I Heard That Song Before'
384 pages
Horrendous soap opera. Am amazed I made it to the end, but I was slightly interested in how the plot turned out. Could have read the last chapter and discovered it all.

John Grisham
'The Appeal'
358 pages
Grisham is my literary cotton candy. He's returned to the topic of the legal system. Quite cynical. Good fluff read.

Jodi Picoult
'Plain Truth'
405 pages
I've read Picoult before. She writes about interesting, controversial subject matter, has well filled out, fully living and breathing characters, beautiful settings, and irritating plot manipulations. This woman's middle name should be Deux ex Machina. And her last name should be No Thread Left Hanging. She wraps up too many loose ends at the end of her story.
Nevertheless, I liked this book. I just ignored the last 3 to 4 pages in my imagination, after I'd read them. It's about an amish teenager who gets pregnant. I am fascinated by amish life, and I think Picoult presented a pretty fair representation.

Jodi Picoult
'The Pact'
389 pages
Funny that I find her plot twists so irritating but I read two of her books in the course of four days this week. Her subject matter is so interesting! And characters worth investing in. This book had SOME irritating plot twists but not a total Deux ex Machina ending, and left some (almost too deliberate) loose ends at the end of the book. This one was about two teenagers who made a suicide pact, but one of the two survived.

total page count this time:
2152

For overall total of:
4580

Monday, March 24, 2008

Wow -- I'm the mother of a four year old.

Today was our daughter's 4th birthday, and I'm wiped out -- just going to post titles -- feel free to ask if you want more details!

Rise and Shine by Anna Quindlen -- Fiction
269 pages

I Never Forget a Meal by Michael Tucker -- this one was a read-aloud for Jeremy and I.
242 pages

The Monster of Templeton by Lauren Groff -- James Fenimore Cooper, giant sea monster, imagined pregnancy, returning home -- a very bizarre book, in some ways. And yet not.
364 pages

Tunnels by Roderick Gordon and Brian Williams -- being hailed as the next Harry Potter -- it was okay...
472 pages

Buffy in Denver

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Youth Redeemed

1. Jack Kerouac, Desolation Angels. In my opinion, superior to On the Road in both style and content. Kerouac begins with his solitary meditations on Buddhism and life while fire-watching in Washington State, travels through the illusions of fame and recklesness with Allen Ginsberg, depravity with William Burroughs in Tunisia, and comes back home to take his elderly French mother home to live with him. Profound, beautiful, and sincerely conflicted. I wish I had the courage to live like this. 409 pgs.

2. Franz Rosenzweig, The Star of Redemption. A stunningly poetic and painstakingly crafted work by a Jewish mystical philosopher-theologian who sought to build bridges between Judaism and Christianity, philosophy and religion, while rejecting the excessive claims to truth of all of them. "Truth is not God; God is truth. God is not love; God loves." My new personal motto as an academic student of religion is, "Divine truth is hidden from the one who reaches for it with one hand only." 459 pgs.

3. John Crowley, Lord Byron's Novel: The Evening Land. Interesting epic/lyrical story-within-a-story about Byron's lost Romantic novel, his dying daughter's encryption and footnoting of it, and its modern recovery by a web programmer whose relationship with her Byronic father is just as complicated. 465 pgs.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Wayward Youth

Jeremy here. (In non-literary news, Constantine was better than I thought it would be. Either this was a high point of Keanu's career or my expectations were so low I was bound to be pleased.)

1. Rebecca Godfrey, The Torn Skirt. Inputting Jesus Saves (see below) into Amazon netted me a bunch of Amazon recommendations which I got from the library, which unsurprisingly also netted me a bunch of novels about depressed druggie teens. I'm done with that now. Read Jesus Saves and then stop. 208 pgs.

2. Ann Patchett, Run. Much better. Over the course of 24 hours, a failed politician and his adopted sons deal with race, poverty, politics, and love in its infinite varieties. Patchett is a convincing and lyrical writer who is also very readable. 304 pgs.

3. Paul Auster, Moon Palace. I am now officially a Paul Auster fan after reading this and the New York Trilogy. Auster writes about storytelling and narrative within his fiction in a very different way than the in-your-face footnoted self-aware histrionics of more recent writers (which I also enjoy, don't get me wrong). The jacket cover described this as "modern sensibility in a nineteenth-century cover," which is a very nice way to say Auster deals with deep philosophical issues at the same time as writing a great story. After the painting trip into the desert, I actually gasped out loud. That's all I'll give away - read it for yourself. 320 pgs.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Nostalgic Reading

Gone-Away Lake by Elizabeth Enright
Man, I loved this book when I was younger -- read it and read it. Newbery Honor in 1957. Just finished reading it aloud to my nearly four year old daughter. Main characters are cousins (Portia and Julian) who are spending the summer together and "discover" a swamp with a row of old, falling-down houses ... Don't want to spoil the plot twists. ;) 256 pages

~Buffy in Denver

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

The Visual Reading Explosion

So my next two books are actually books that are like a combination of reading and something else:

1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, ed. by Steven Jay Schneider. The entire "1001...You Must...Die" series is really quite good, despite their somewhat ominous titles. I've always thought short, to-the-point journalistic writing was some of the best writing out there. This series of descriptions of the must-see films of all times fits that particular bill. You don't even have to watch any of the movies afterward - the plot descriptions and intelligent comments make the book a beautiful (though hefty) joy to read. 960 pages.

The Gunslinger Born, the Marvel adaptation of Stephen King's The Dark Tower series. To put it briefly, don't bother - read the books instead. 240 pages.

Can you tell it's spring break? I'm gonna watch Constantine soon. Darn you, Keanu Reeves, for making movies I want to watch and having the gall to act in them as well.

Yippee for The Sun

Just read the March issue of The Sun. Sure enjoy it. Good, good stuff. 48 pages.
~Buffy in Denver

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Michelle here...

I also just finished reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver. Obviously, everyone else in this challenge needs to read it too! Buffy's review pretty much sums it up; it is an excellent book! I told my dad about it and he has been making fun of me for wanting to start a garden in Febuary in the north east ever since :) 354 pgs

Concerning Faith

Letter to a Godchild (Concerning Faith) by Reynolds Price
Fiona has just woken, so I'll be quick -- Price is a Professor of English at Duke University. This is the expanded version of a letter he wrote to his godson on the occasion of his baptism, intended for him to read later in life. He considers himself a Christian, but approaches faith from a broader perspective than one single religion might provide. I liked it. 95 pages.
~Buffy

Friday, March 7, 2008

Life - It's Messy

Jeremy posting so that Buffy's title doesn't become a post in itself.

Books For School

It's getting toward the end of the quarter and I'm doing projects rather than reading, so only one book: McKeachie's Teaching Tips, a helpful guide for college teachers about designing syllabi, lecturing and technology in the classroom, etc. Not really something to curl up with on a winter's night, but very helpful. 407 pgs.

Books For Fun (?)

Darcey Steinke, Jesus Saves. A dark exploration of a 13-year-old pastor's daughter dealing with her spiritual and sexual longings (and how those get confused), paralleled by the account of a kidnapped schoolmate. Disturbing and harrowingly written. 224 pgs.

Tom Perrotta, The Abstinence Teacher. An interesting parallel to the Steinke novel, this one shifts back and forth between a high school health teacher who upsets the local community when she refuses to teach the school's newly adopted abstinence curriculum, and a former addict who has newly joined the evangelical church and is now coaching the soccer team on which the health teacher's daughter plays. Their relationship unfolds in complicated and unpredictable ways. Perrotta does an excellent job of being sympathetic to the motivations of both the teacher and the soccer coach - no straw men here, refreshingly. 368 pgs.

Finally, I read through The Unprocessed Child and Animal, Vegetable, Miracle - see Buffy's reviews below. 595 pgs.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Growing Food, Growing Children, Growing Evil. Reading Magazines. Chocolate and Grammar.

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver with Steven L. Hopp and Camille Kingsolver
The authors' family tries to eat locally for an entire year and also try to grow/raise their own food. Lots of great info here -- I think it's a good book for anyone to read, simply to think more about where the food that you are eating comes from (and how much petroleum is used to get it to you.) I made the spinach lasagna recipe tonight and it was absolutely lovely. Yum. I've never made lasagna before, either! 354 pages

The Unprocessed Child: Living Without School by Valerie Fitzenreiter
Excellent -- obviously an unschooling book, but also (in my opinion) just an amazing parenting book. In fact, I think anyone who will interact with any child for more than 5 hours should read it. It's one of those books where just reading a paragraph gives me a fresh perspective and enables me to keep trying to be the parent I want to be (much like Easy to Love, Difficult to Discipline.) The author unschooled her daughter, who is now an adult. 241 pages

Added on March 2nd:

A Special Mission: Hitler's Secret Plot to Seize the Vatican and Kidnap Pope Pius XII by Dan Kurzman
More non-fiction. Wasn't as compelling as it could have been, but interesting. 247 pages.

Added on March 5:

The February issue of The Sun. Man, I love this magazine. Tamie introduced us to it several years ago and Jeremy got me a subscription for Christmas -- Good gift, husband! 48 pages.

The March-April issue of Mothering. Another good magazine. If you need a introductory lesson on cloth diapers or starter foods for babies, this would be a great issue for you. At the risk of offending someone here, let me just say -- this magazine is nothing like your average magazine aimed towards parents. It's good stuff. I would say that every issue has at least one article that would be appealing even if you don't have children. 104 pages, I'll take off 50 for ads, just to be safe ~ 54 pages.

Added March 7th:
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl -- Just finished reading this one aloud with my daughter. 162 pages

When You Catch an Adjective, Kill It: The Parts of Speech for Better and/or Worse by Ben Yagoda
This book was really really fun to read. (It was our bathroom book for a while.) One of the highlights for me was learning that ampersand (&) was once considered the 27th letter of the alphabet and was pronounced "and". When children were saying the alphabet, they would end with "and, per se, 'and'" and from that we've gotten "ampersand". Someone out there has to be as fascinated by this as I was...Right? 241 pages.