FROM AUNT PEACHY & UNCLE ROLAND: "Singdaan Faailohk!" Merry Christmas from Macau! We've had a wonderful year, and are finding it hard to believe we'll be home next Christmas. Being able to share the message of the Savior of the World on a daily basis makes it seem like Christmas all year long. We are so grateful for the gospel, and for the love and support of family. How blessed we are!
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Merry Christmas!
FROM AUNT PEACHY & UNCLE ROLAND: "Singdaan Faailohk!" Merry Christmas from Macau! We've had a wonderful year, and are finding it hard to believe we'll be home next Christmas. Being able to share the message of the Savior of the World on a daily basis makes it seem like Christmas all year long. We are so grateful for the gospel, and for the love and support of family. How blessed we are!
Thursday, December 2, 2010
OUR CHRISTMAS FAVORITES
NOTE: I really thought there would be more duplication of favorites than there was. But the following books made it on to more than one list: Secret Santa by Anne Osborn Poelman, The Polar Express by Chris Van Allsburg, Snowmen At Night by Caralyn Buehner, and A Christmas Carol by Dickens.
- Skipping Chrstmas by John Grisham
- Christmas Secret by Anne Perry
- Finding Noel by Richard Paul Evans
- Secret Santa by Anne osborn Poelman
TORI'S FAVORITES:
We have a basket of our favorite Christmas books and try to read one a day leading up to Christmas. We have weeded these out through the years and we really like all of these- sorry that there are so many!
- Lemony Snicket- The Lump of Coal
- The Best Christmas Pageant Ever- Barbara Robinson
- The Gift of the Magi- O. Henry
- The Other Wise Man- Henry Van Dyke
- How Santa Got His Job- Stephen Krensky
- The Little Match Girl- Hans Christian Andersen
- An Ellis Island Christmas- Maxinne Rhea Leighton
- Olive, the Other Reindeer- J. Otto Seibold
- The Hat- Jan Brett
- Always the Elf- Kimberly Jensen
- Are You Grumpy Santa?- Gregg and Evan Spiridellis
- The Snow Must Go On (a way, way off-broadway adventure)- Molly Wigand
- Drummer Boy- Loren Long
- The Polar Express- Chris Van Allsburg
- Dear Santa Claus- Alan Durant
- Mooseltoe- Margie Palatini
- Frosty the Snowman- Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins
- Snowmen at Night- Caralyn Buehner
- I Spy Christmas -photographs by Walter Wick
- How the Grinch Stole Christmas- Dr. Seuss
- Harvey Slumfenburger’s Christmas Present- John Burningham
- If You Take a Mouse to the Movies- Laura Numeroff
- Bob- Sandra Boynton
- The Night Before Christmas- Clement Clark Moore
TREV'S FAVORITE: My favorite book is A Christmas Carol by Dickens. Not very original, but I love it.
RACHEL'S FAVORITE: The past few years I’ve read A Christmas Carol by Dickens during the holiday season and I love re-reading it. No matter what, the message is always good and makes you want to be better. So that’s the one I recommend, especially if you’ve never read it.
SOME OF ADRIENNE'S FAVORITES:
- The Velveteen Rabbit
- The Polar Express
- Secret Santa
- “A Night Without Darkness” (There's book with that title and there is also a story in any old Children's Friend Magazine. Both are very good.)
- The Gingerbread Baby
AUNT LOUISE'S RECOMMENDATIONS:
As mentioned earlier one of our family’s Christmas traditions was to burn an advent candle in the evening before bedtime and read a Christmas story or two every night during December up to and including Christmas Eve when we would read THE Christmas Story from Luke. I now have a large cupboard filled with my collection of Christmas books. But over the years certain books and stories stand out as time honored favorites! And usually the illustrations are as wonderful as the storyline itself. (That's important to me!)
For Children with Parental Supervision:
- The Jolly Christmas Postman by Janet & Allan Ahlberg
- Any of the Christmas pop up books by Robert Sabuda
For Children:
- The Polar Express by Chris Van Allsburg
- Snowmen At Night AND Snowmen At Christmas by Caralyn & Mark Buehner
- The Amazing Christmas Extravaganza by David Shannon
- The Tale of Three Trees retold by Angela Elwell & Tim Jonke
- Christmas Oranges by Linda Bethers & Ben Sowards
- The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey by Susan Wojciechowski & P.J. Lynch
- This is the Star by Joyce Dunbar & Gary Blythe
For Adults/Young Adults:
- Secret Santa by Anne Osborn Poelman
- Two From Galilee by Marjorie Holmes
- Don’t Forget The Star by George D. Durrant
MUST HAVE: If I could recommend only one book for your Christmas reading it would have to be "THIS IS THE SEASON"by Simon Dewey. The tender text (lyrics to the well-loved Christmas carol “The Nativity Song” by Patricia Kelsey Graham) and Dewey’s incredible artwork are accompanied by wonderful insights from great church leaders as well as scriptures that “inspire those who wish to pause amidst the hustle and bustle of the season and reflect on the things of God and his Son, ‘the dear baby of Bethlehem, little Lord Jesus, the Savior of Men.’” If you don’t have it.....that’s really too bad! I just checked the internet for available copies. I guess it’s out of print and Deseret Book has none. Amazon has some new ones for over $200 each and used ones for $75 or more each. (I bought it for $20 in 2002!) Check the libraries and used book stores as this is a must read/must have.
JENNIFER WRITES: I'm sorry this has taken me so long, but I thought I'd add to your Christmas book list.
We also have several short stories that we read each year that have become favorites. Some of these are probably published as books, but I just have them as typed up stories.
Merry Christmas!!!!
If anyone else wants to add their list, PLEASE DO! And everyone please, have a WONDERFUL CHRISTMAS SEASON!
Love,
Aunt Louise
In January we’ll look forward to your comments on The Actor & The Housewife.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
The Hiding Place & The Actor and The Housewife
- That was Father's secret: not that he overlooked the differences in people; that he didn't know they were there.
- Happiness isn't something that depends on our surroundings, Corrie. It's something we make inside ourselves.
- How often it is a small, almost unconscious event that marks a turning point.
- This was evil's hour: we could not run away from it. Perhaps only when human effort had done its best and failed, would God's power alone be free to work.
- Like waifs clustered around a blazing fire, we gathered about it, holding out our hearts to its warmth and light. The blacker the night around us grew, the brighter and truer and more beautiful burned the word of God. "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?...Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us."
- Surely there is no more wretched sight than the human body unloved and uncared for.
- Oh, this was the great ploy of Satan in that kingdom of his; to display such blatant evil that one could almost believe one's own secret sins didn't matter.
- When He tells us to love our enemies, He gives, along with the command, the love itself.
- Whatever in our life is hardest to bear, love can transform into beauty......when we're feeling poorest–when we've lost a friend, when a dream has failed, when we seem to have noting left in the world to make life beautiful–that's when God says: You're richer than you think. – Elizabeth Sherrill in the last chapter entitled "Since Then"
"I guess she's getting her wish! There are a lot of points to debate in the book--if I picked one it would be the ending. I really don't like the ending because it seems like Becky starts grasping at straws just to make all the dots connect. I guess I'll read your comments to see what everyone else thinks."
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
THE HUNGER GAMES Discussion
Jenn will be commenting soon. But I thought I might as well get things started.
Since I had never heard of The Hunger Games previously, when I saw Becca reading it, during our family's summer get-together, my first thought was “Oh...another diet book.” Obviously though, no diet book could have riveted her attention the way this did.
Unlike the other books we’ve been reading I wasn’t inspired to do a lot of underlining and margin noting, but it certainly held my interest. The whole idea of the hunger games reminds me of ancient Rome and the gladiators. It’s so barbaric and uncivilized that initially it seems beyond the realm of possibility. But it did happen anciently, and as a society we’re certainly on a downward slope and moving fast! I can’t help but think of our fascination with reality tv shows where only the cleverest and strongest...... the fittest survive, and I wonder if it could ever actually evolve into such nightmarish evil.
– Aunt Louise
Grandma Mary wrote:
I have mixed feelings about The Hunger Games. It is an exciting book to read and far different from the books I ordinarily read. I can understand why younger people and especially teenagers would enjoy this book. I was glad to finish it and it left me up in the air. It is a trilogy – so the end is far away. I don’t think I will read the other two books – but would dearly like to see the last page of Book III!!!
JENNIFER'S DISCUSSION POINTS:
I heard the buzz about The Hunger Games long before I finally decided to read it. I would overhear people talking about it in little bits and pieces – never enough for me to understand the plot, but I was intrigued. Finally, I decided to check it out for myself, and it didn’t disappoint.
Although the book is futuristic, I appreciated the text to world connections. I felt like Suzanne Collins was giving a nod to Survivor, Wipe Out, Lost, and American Gladiator. It makes you wonder if this is where reality TV is headed? What will TV producers and directors do to push the envelope to keep ratings high…Extreme Survivor? And more importantly, what will the public do about it… Will we choose entertainment over humanity?
As in The Giver, 1984, Freedom Factor, and more recently The Uglies trilogy, the theme of the book is government control. The possibility of such a thing is perplexing and disconcerting. However, I think it is important to realize that every day we are inching closer and closer.
This book was not one of my all time favorites, but it was a great read. From the “grabber” lead to the very last page, I was captivated. It’s a book that really made me think and ponder. Ilah recently started reading it, and I am anxious to discuss it with her.
Looking forward to YOUR comments on The Hunger Games!
Monday, September 13, 2010
My Antonia • Final Thoughts
I was entirely happy. Perhaps we feel like that when we die and become a part of something entire, whether it is sun and air, or goodness and knowledge. At any rate, that is happiness; to be dissolved into something complete and great. When it comes to one, it comes as naturally as sleep. – Jim alone in the garden
I can remember how glad I was when there happened to be a light in the church, and the painted glass window shone out at us as we came along the frozen street. In the winter bleakness a hunger for colour came over people, like the Laplander’s craving for fats and sugar. We used to linger on the sidewalk outside the church when the lamps were lighted........The crude reds and greens and blues of that coloured glass held us there. – Jim on the Methodist Church in winter
At the piano, he swayed in time to the music, and when he was not playing, his body kept up this motion, like an empty mill grinding on...... To hear him, to watch him, was to see a Negro enjoying himself as only a Negro can. It was as if all the agreeable sensations possible to creatures of flesh and blood were heaped up on those black-and-white keys, and he were gloating over them and trickling them through his yellow fingers. – Jim on Blind d’Arnault (sounds kind of like Stevie Wonder or Ray Charles)
When boys and girls are growing up, life can’t stand still, not even in the quietest of country towns; and they have to grow up, whether they will or no. That is what their elders are always forgetting. – Jim
Disapprobation hurt me, I found – even that of people whom I did not admire. – Jim after his actions had disappointed his grandmother
–it is so necessary to be a little noble! – Jim as he contemplated leaving Lena to pursue his education
The Hunger Games. Jenn, since you suggested the book it seems to me you should begin our "discussion". Send me your comments via e-mail and I will create a new post for the blog! But any of you that want to share your impressions on The Hunger Games please feel free to do so – whenever. Officially we have to the first Sunday in October and then we will be Reading The Hiding Place.
Love,
Aunt Louise
PS For those of you who feel you can't remember well enough to comment as it's been a while since reading, I'm amazed that every book we've read so far has study helps and questions on-line for groups just like ours.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Willa Cather Lecture
Last night Richard and I took Grandma Mary to hear Marilyn Arnold, a Willa Cather expert, speak at Barnes & Noble here in St. George about Death Comes For The Arch Bishop. Since we have just finished reading Cather's My Antonia I thought you might enjoy reading some of the things we learned from Marilyn about Cather herself.
- Her real name was Wilella.
- She was the oldest of seven children.
- At the age of 14 she wrote in an album/diary that she wanted to be a doctor; her favorite color – sea green; favorite flower – “cauliflower”; favorite writer – Shakespeare; favorite season – when the roses bloom again; favorite music – the bawling of babies; favorite trait in others – an original mind; trait she was most tolerant of in others – passion; trait she was least tolerant of in others – lack of nerve; and qualtiy she most desired in a spouse – lamb-like meekness.
- Later in life she had at least one sweetheart, Julio, but maybe he wasn't meek enough as she never married.
- She was a poor speller and had very bad handwriting, but was highly educated, cultured, and spoke several languages.
- She loved the desert and said something to the effect that people are the only interesting things in the world, but you have to come to the desert to find that out.
- Most of the central towns in her books are based on her home town, Red Cloud, Nebraska.
- When you read Cather you must read EVERY word.
- She was extremely experimental in her writing, and every book’s style is different.
- She felt the mood and spirit of her books were what was most important.
- Her books are morality based, so they have gone in and out of fashion.
- She felt Death Comes For The Arch Bishop was her best work.
- It was her will that her letters never be published, and that her books would not be made into movies, or published in paperback. (The intellectual property rights that protected her will regarding her books have expired, so they are available in paperback and several have been made into movies, but her letters have not yet been published. It is interesting to note that most of this information was taken from her unpublished letters that are part of collections in various university libraries. )
Cather felt that novels which celebrate nobility of character are the novels that are finally loved. We have certainly loved My Antonia!
This is our friend and lecturer Marilyn Arnold.....author of some of Grandma Mary's favorite books!
Sunday, August 29, 2010
The Hunger Games & The Hiding Place
It's time to get our young adult readers involved in the book club. I think they will enjoy reading The Hunger Games, as well as The Hiding Place, and gain a greater appreciation of the freedoms they have always known and have perhaps taken for granted.
THE HUNGER GAMES
Jennifer recommends The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins as her most recent favorite young adult book. She feels it would generate some good discussion as it really makes you think. It is a quick read so we will plan to read it during the month of September. Jennifer, we look forward to hearing anything and everything you feel makes this a book you would recommend.
For those of you who are not at all familiar with this popular book, the following is a super condensed version of a review found on the internet.
"After society’s collapse from environmental chaos and a subsequent failed rebellion, what’s left of humanity is organized into 12 districts. Kept in poverty by a totalitarian government, the populace is forced to labor to keep The Capitol in sumptuous splendor. Katniss and her mother and sister live in District 12. Every year, a boy and a girl are chosen via lottery to “represent” their district in The Hunger Games...a blood sport in which the 24 teens are dumped, gladiator-style, into a locked arena and left to fight it out in front of cameras. The last one alive wins freedom and a lifetime of riches. Collins largely avoids graphic descriptions of violence, but a couple of the players’ deaths are emotionally disturbing. The book is considered suitable for readers 12 and up, but that would depend on the 12- (or even 13-) year-old."
Something I didn't know until I went to buy the book is that it's part of a trilogy. Has anyone read all three?
THE HIDING PLACE
The book for October is The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom.
The following plot summary was taken from the internet for those who haven't read it before.
"Published in 1976, a bestseller, and still in print, this is the famous autobiography of Corrie Ten Boom who lived through the Nazi occupation of Holland in WWII and formed part of the Dutch resistance in Haarlem. It tells how the Ten Booms smuggled Jews, and others sought by the soldiers, out into the countryside and abroad. Eventually Corrie and her sister Betsie were caught and sent to Ravensbruck concentration camp. Corrie miraculously survived to tell the tale and help in the post-war reconstruction of Holland and work tirelessly for reconciliation in Europe."
I've read it before, and saw the movie years ago in Vegas......but like so many other things it is no longer fresh in my mind. I look forward to re-reading it and marveling once again at this woman's incredible ability to forgive! *Grandma will have some comments on it shortly, but for me it ranks right up there with The Diary of Anne Frank.
Love, Aunt Louise
PS It's not too late to comment on My Antonia! I'll be commenting as soon as I've finished the book. Don't know why it's taking me so long this time! Just a slow reader I guess.
*GRANDMA MARY'S THOUGHTS ON "THE HIDING PLACE" (Added September 2, 2010)
I haven't read the The Hiding Place for years. I just remember the impression it left me with. I knew I wanted to read it again, to realize what some of the Jewish people went through and to read about a truly great lady. There is so much wickedness and selfishness in the world, but there is also true greatness and goodness.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Hunger Games?
Thursday, August 19, 2010
My Antonia
August 15 at 3:40pm
Rachel Crosby Garner: I’m still fuzzy on how to pronounce it. Every time I read it in the book I had to go back and forth between ways to pronounce it! I loved the book regardless. It was a great read for me.
August 15 at 4:45pm
Louise Crosby: I called Marilyn Arnold, who knows EVERYTHING about Willa Cather.....taught her at BYU and has written about her and her work extensively. She told me that the proper pronunciation is ANN-tuhn-EE-uh, with the heavier emphasis on the first syllable. (The phonetic spelling is mine after listening to Marilyn say it.)
For anyone near enough, Marilyn will be talking about Death Comes for the Archbishop, another of Cather’s works, at the Barnes & Noble Book Store here in St. George on Monday the 30th in the evening. We might see if we can get Grandma to go with us for a special FHE.
Natalie Crosby: I am about 250 pages into it, and I really like the vivid descriptions that the author uses. However, I am still waiting for something to happen. This book feels more like a commentary on life in the midwest then on an actual event, mystery, or adventure with a beginning, middle, and end to it. This seems like a book that I will like the more I think about it.
August 15 at 10:54pm
Natalie Crosby: I finished My Antonia that other day, and I really liked it. The edition that I got from the library has pictures of the actual people that the characters are based on, as well as the homes that the characters lived in, and some very interesting facts about Willa Cather. I am looking forward to a discussion soon.
14 hours ago
About FACEBOOK:
In case you didn't get the message, Natalie felt, and suggested, that it would be a definite plus to the book club to use facebook for on-going discussions and notifications of new posts on the blog. She set it up for me, and I'm trying to figure out how to use it properly....... I may need some tutoring on it. But I like the idea.
She also suggested, and grandma Mary concurs, that the book club would be more interesting if we opened it up to some of your favorite books as well. We have tentatively decided that we would do one of grandma's books one month, and one of yours the next. The question remains however which of you would like to lead out and when? I'm tempted to suggest Jennifer as we are due for a children's book and as an elementary school teacher she is up on the best and the newest. That would be for September, and I'll ask grandma to come up with a suggestion for October. What do you all think? Who wants to choose for November?