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So what's on your nightstand or to be read pile?


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I'm in the middle of:

Those ****ed Rebels - Michael Pearson

Aeneid - Virgil

Grant and Twain - Mark Perry

Stride Toward Freedom - Martin Luther King, Jr.

 

dk are having Brighty of the Grand Canyon for a read-a-loud.

 

What are you all reading and how are the 888 lists coming?

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LOL. This is telling for our family. We do school on my bed on Tuesdays since we don't have additional students and all we do is American History and Bible.

 

On my nightstand now:

 

Hold 'Em Wisdom for All Players by Daniel Negreanu

Winning Texas Hold 'Em by Matt Maroon

Beautiful Feet's American History, A Literature Approach for Primary Grades

Leif the Lucky

Beautiful Feet's American History for Jr. and Sr. High

The World Of Columbus and His Sons, Genevieve Foster

Bible Study For All Ages

The Light and The Glory by Marshall

 

And a book to study for a commercial driver's license in TX so my DH can drive a school bus

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I am wading through "Blue Mars" by Kim Stanley Robinson. Its the 3rd book of his Sci Fi trilogy about human colonization of Mars. They're all huge books, its an epic story. Many characters, very different and very human. A lot of science, not only current cutting edge science, but also a view as to where this science may lead us.

Robinson is one of the best.

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Guest Lorna

The Joy of Chemistry by Cathy Cobb and Monty L Fetterolf

 

Armchair science which has inspired me to dust off the chemistry set.

:leaving:

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Just finished:

A book about the great London fire and the 1665 plague

The Screwtape letters C.S. Lewis

 

Currently reading:

 

Mere Christianity C.S. Lewis

National Geographic Magazine March Issue

 

Want to read:

 

Climbing Parnassus

many gardening books

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Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addictions (David Sheff)

Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (Walter Isaacson)

The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears (Dinaw Mengestu)

 

I'm going for something light and breezy when I finish these.

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Shakespeare: The World as Stage by Bill Bryson and loved it. Next on the pile...

 

The Good Teen by Richard Lerner (parenting)

The Beautiful Fight by Gary Thomas (Christian/spiritual)

Real Food: What to Eat and Why by Nina Planck

Touchstone by Laurie R. King (fiction, author of Beekeeper's Apprentice but sadly not in that series)

The Illiad by Homer (888 selection)

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins (888 selection)

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The Lords of Discipline by Pat Conroy. One of my husband's best friends graduated from the Citadel, and after knowing this man for a while, I thought I would read the book again. (As an aside, this man's father was in the same graduating class from the Citadel as Pat Conroy, and, well, you can probably guess his opinion on Mr. Conroy.)

 

I also have two magazines, Quilting Arts and Altered Couture. One of my favorite fiber artists has clothes featured in the latter.

 

Stacked beside the magazines, I have a few calculus text books because I just found out that I was selected to take the AP Calculus course from College Board this summer. The current calculus teacher at my school is excited to have someone from an engineering perspective teaching calculus with him. He has a Ph.D. in math. Mine is in materials science and engineering, so we make a good applied/rigorous team. Hey, does anyone know, do they make a calculus Cliff Notes? I really like their geometry, trigonometry, and algebra ones.

 

I think my next read will be The Well Educated Mind and SWB's latest history book.

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A Certain Ambiguity

 

It's so good I'm limiting myself to a few pages at a time to make it last longer and to give myself time to think about some of the proposed philosophical problems before the answer is blurted out.

 

What "Sophies World" is to philosophy, this is to math. I'm really anxious for someone else from this board to read this book and tell me what they think.

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Man, I just can't seem to get around to reading lately. It's taking me forever to read:

 

Seabiscuit (I know it's a quick read, but not when you can barely keep your eyes open!)

 

Victoria magazine- a favorite from my youth is being reissued! Found it by happy accident at B&N. I'm drooling over the gardens....:tongue_smilie:

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I am reading The Autobiography of Benjamin Rush in spurts. There is so much information in the book that it often prompts me to dig deeper on certain topics. There is just too much to try to read it straight through.

 

I'm also picking my way around TWTM and Teaching the Trivium, seeking inspiration while planning the first year of high school for my eldest.

 

My reading is intertwined with working the puzzles in my Sudoku magazine.

 

We don't have a current read-aloud. I am considering Shakespeare or ... I don't know. Something. Something is necessary. I feel rather uninspired at the moment. Isn't that awful? They are all reading so much on their own that I have lapsed into laziness.

 

Crissy ~ Are you enjoying the Benjamin Franklin book? Is it based on his writings or is it in novel format?

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Here's my pile:

 

Cesar's Way by Cesar Millan

 

The Beast God Forgot to Invent by Jim Harrison (a book of 3 novellas)

 

A book of NYT crossword puzzles

 

A homeschool book by the author of Alpha-phonics (can't remember the title)

 

a book of collected poems by Donald Hall (can't remember the exact title)

 

Real Learning

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"Hold on to your Kids - Why Parents Need to Matter More than Peers" by Gordon Neufeld and Gabor Mate -- this book is fascinating. One of the best I have read this year.

 

"John Paul the Great" - by Peggy Noonan -- just started this one; I love Noonan's writing in the Wall Street Journal so I am bound to like this book.

 

"The Secret Garden" by Francis Hodgson Burnett -- my daughters are dying for winter to be over so they can plant their own garden. As a result of this book my 7yo dd has taken up the skipping rope.

 

On audio this month I am two thirds of the way through "Miles Gone By" by William F. Buckley, Jr. It is an autobiography of a man who I have admired and now miss (R.I.P.). I love hearing it read by Buckley himself.

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"Christianity Reconsidered"-Just started

 

"Ourselves" by Charlotte Mason-1/3 of way through

 

"Making a Home" (Better Homes and Gardens?)-Wanting to start

 

"A Philosphy of Education" also by Miss Mason- Trying to get through & already need to re-read some portions.

 

"Robinson Crusoe"- Read-aloud; Kids are getting into this

 

"Age of Fable"- Struggling through ch1; "Can't wait till we get to the stories", said by ds13

 

"Pilgrims Progress"- Struggling through

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Great Expectations. Sad but true, the only Dickens that I read in my youth was Oliver Twist. I will read Tale of Two Cities next and then on to Jane Austen (I have also never read any of her books). My oldest child is now 13 so I thought I should start pre-reading some of the books that I will be having her read.

 

I did read Wurthering Heights and Jane Eyre in my youth and hopefully some other "classics" that I just can't remember now.

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Crissy ~ Are you enjoying the Benjamin Franklin book? Is it based on his writings or is it in novel format?

 

I am enjoying it. My son and I are reading it together as part of his history studies. It is a typical, chronological biography, and I've noticed the author has also compiled selections from Franklin's writings in a companion volume, A Benjamin Franklin Reader. It looks like a wonderful collection.

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Two books I just finished that are still sitting on my nightstand waiting to go back to the library:

 

Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood

Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life

 

Things I'm currently reading:

 

Nectar in a Sieve

Thursday Next: First Among Sequels

 

And the kiddo and I are currently reading aloud Around the World in 80 Days (which is getting big thumbs up from him, by the way).

 

--Jenny

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I am reading How to Win Friends and Influence People(Dale Carnegie) and Lies My Teacher Told Me:Everything your High School History Textbook got Wrong (James Loewen). Recently finished The Real Lincoln (Dilorenzo).

 

The last two were recommendations from the old boards and I really enjoyed them and learned a lot.

 

Debbi

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Dante's Inferno (for Omnibus---my girls say that Dante spent entirely too much time thinking about h___!)

 

We started Inferno this week -- so far all of us are planning to read Purgatori and Paradiso as soon as we get a chance which has to be a vote of confidence in Omnibus.

 

Needless to say, that is on my nightstand, in two versions no less! I also have:

Ascent to Love; Peter J. Leithart (to help with same)

Mimesis; Erich Auerbach

Pobre Anna bailo Tango; Patricia Verano (anyone know how to do accents?)

Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World; Joanna Weaver (still!)

The Ode Less Travelled; Stephen Fry (ditto)

 

Just finished and need to remove:

 

The Civilization of the Middle Ages; Norman Cantor

Carpe Diem; Harry Mount

 

Since I made a point to include my Omnibus reading, I'm doing pretty well with my 888 -- 15 so far.

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in case you wanted to know!!! Not exactly high-level literature but I have to say that book 1 is absolutely hilarious and I highly recommend it!!!!

 

Other than that then I have Comstock's Nature Study Book, Sophie's World, and Deconstructing Penguins going....Except they are not really going anywhere!!!! I fall asleep around 9PM while nursing my baby...

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I just finished:

 

-Husband-Coached Childbirth (Bradley)

-To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee) - it's been so long since I've read this and it was sooooooo good. I just love that book.

 

Am in the middle of and almost done with:

 

- Ina May's Guide to Childbirth

- Pushed:The Painful Truth About Childbirth and Modern Maternity Care (Block)

- 2 different books on vaccines

-Knowing God (Packer) (this one is taking longer than I anticipated. Excellent book though)

 

Read alouds:

 

Dh is reading The Hobbit to dd

I am reading The Call of the Wild with dd

I am reading Farmer Boy with ds

 

As far as my 888 list goes, it's all been scratched momentarily. Well, not all, but most. I have spent more time reading books about natural childbirth and vaccines than anything else, though I have read at least 4 books on my list so far. At this point, I'm just thankful any reading is getting done at all, LOL.

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Halfway through the Sherlock Holmes mysteries by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

 

Also reading The Demon Haunted World- Science as a Candle in the Dark by Carl Sagan

 

On deck is Closing of the American Mind by Allan Bloom (I read this 20 years or so ago but don't remember much)

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A Certain Ambiguity

 

It's so good I'm limiting myself to a few pages at a time to make it last longer and to give myself time to think about some of the proposed philosophical problems before the answer is blurted out.

 

What "Sophies World" is to philosophy, this is to math. I'm really anxious for someone else from this board to read this book and tell me what they think.

 

This looks really really really interesting. Off to locate it at a library or order it. Thanks!

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