Saturday, December 5, 2020

♡ All Creatures Great and Small ♡

 








All Creatures Great and Small. Finished. Wonderful.







War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy...95% complete
How to Draw Your Beautiful Ordinary Life...98% complete
The Book of Idle Pleasures...31% complete
Year of Pleasures: Classical Music for Every Day...68% complete
Yin Yoga...28% complete
The Novel Cure: From Abandonment to Zestlessness: 751 Books to Cure What Ails You...32% complete





BookExpo is cancelled for 2021. No one knows if it will return. Very sad.



Publisher Simon & Schuster is reportedly being bought by Penguin Random House for $2,000,000,000, resulting in what The New Republic calls "an industry-dominating behemoth."


I'm participating this year in the 11th Annual Broke & Bookish Secret Santa.


I posted:










Take a look at the Do Good December calendar. You can print it out here.




We put up our Christmas tree oh-so-early this year. We've also ordered all our Christmas gifts. In past years, we've often shopped on December 23rd, so this is amazing for us.







Good Thing #2...New Christmas header for Readerbuzz



Good Thing #3...Year of Wonders: Classical Music for Every Day





I'm delighted you made your way to the Sunday Salon. Sunday Salon is a place for us to link up and to share what we have been doing during the week, and it's a great way to visit other blogs and join in the conversations going on there. 

Some of the things we often talk about at the Sunday Salon:
  • What was your week like?
  • Read any good books? Tell us about them.
  • What other bookish things did you do? 
  • What else is going on in your life?

Other places where you may like to link up over the weekend are below. Click on the picture to visit the site.


My linkup for Sunday Salon is below.

Thursday, December 3, 2020

2020 Nonfiction Reader Challenge (Finished!) and 2021 Nonfiction Reader Challenge (Joined!)

 


The aim of the Nonfiction Reader Challenge is to encourage you to make nonfiction part of your reading experience during the year.

The Nonfiction Reader Challenge runs from January 1st to December 31st, 2020. Participants may join at any time up until December 1st, 2020.

There are three levels:

Nonfiction Nipper: Read 3 books, from any category

Nonfiction Nibbler: Read 6 books, from any category

Nonfiction Know-It-All: Read 12 books, one for each category

I aimed to be a Nonfiction Know-It-All. 

I succeeded.

Categories

1. Memoir: Kitchen Yarns: Notes on Life, Love, and Food by Ann Hood

2. Disaster Event: The Storm of the Century: Tragedy, Heroism, Survival, and the Epic True Story of America's Deadliest Natural Disaster: The Great Gulf Hurricane by A. L. Roker

3. Social Science: Tightrope: Americans Reaching for Hope by Nicholas D. Kristoff

4. Related to an Occupation: Confessions of a French Baker: Breadmaking Secrets, Tips, and Recipes by Peter Mayle

5. History: Dreams of El Dorado: A History of the American West by H. W. Brands

6. Feminism: What Would Cleopatra Do? Life Lessons from 50 of History's Most Extraordinary Women by Elizabeth Foley

7. Psychology: Good Morning, Monster: A Therapist Shares Five Heroic Stories of Emotional Recovery by Catherine Gildiner

8. Medical Issue: Good Blood: A Doctor, a Donor, and the Incredible Breakthrough that Saved Millions of Babies by Julian Guthrie

9. Nature: Around the World in 80 Trees by Jonathan Drori

10. True Crime: Vanished Smile: The Mysterious Theft of Mona Lisa by R. A. Scotti

11. Science: A Farewell to Ice: Report from the Arctic by Peter Wadhams

12. Published in 2020: Vesper Flights by Helen Macdonald



I'm so happy to have completed this challenge in 2020, and I'm signing up now for the 2021 challenge. I will try for the Know-It-All level once again, and that means reading one book from each of the following categories: 

1. Biography

2. Travel

3. Self-help

4. Essay Collection

5. Disease

6. Oceanography

7. Hobbies

8. Indigenous Cultures

9. Food

10. Wartime Experiences

11. Inventions

12. Published in 2021

How did you do with the 2020 challenge? Are you planning to participate in 2021? Here's the post to sign up for 2021. Thank you, Shelley, at Book'd Out.

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

The 2020 Virtual Advent Tour: Let's Read Some Wonderful Children's Holiday Picture Books


What is the Virtual Advent Tour?
Has there ever been a year that is better suited for a Virtual Advent? 

2020 has been a hard year for everyone, and the current world scenario doesn’t suggest the upcoming holidays are going to be any easier. We’re all thinking about how to celebrate differently at a time when tradition is particularly dear. But there are some annual events that can continue unabated, and the Virtual Advent Tour is one of them, hosted for the sixth time by Sprite Writes

As you likely know, the typical Advent calendar is a season-marking device, often paper, but sometimes crafted of other materials, to count down from December 1st until Christmas. Each day, you open a door to unveil a hidden scene or piece of chocolate or some other delight. The Virtual Advent Tour is a bloggers’ take on that. In our version, each morning Sprite Writes will point you to a post at someone’s blog in which they share something about their holiday season.


Let's Read Some Wonderful Children's Holiday Picture Books

I'm a retired librarian and one of the things I love to do every Christmas is to read aloud children's holiday picture books. 

One year, the staff at my school---the principal and assistant principal, the counselor, a school police officer, the school librarian (me!) and others---were invited to read Christmas books aloud as I videotaped them. These were shared so that the whole school could view them each morning at the beginning of the day.



Here are some more wonderful holiday stories.

Mrs. Graham Reads Santa Claus: The World's Number One Toy Expert

Mrs. Vargas Reads A Pinata in a Pine Tree: A Latino Twelve Days of Christmas 



My Virtual Advent Tour posts from the past:

2009 Virtual Advent Tour: Children's Picture Books

2010 Virtual Advent Tour: Walk-a-Mile

2012 Virtual Advent Tour: Uff da! Norwegian Fattigmands!

2013 Virtual Advent Tour: The Last Year We Decorated Christmas Cookies with My Mom

2015 Virtual Advent Tour: Walk-a-Mile: 6 Churches, 1 Mile

2016 Virtual Advent Tour: No Traditions? Start One!


 

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Quotes That Have Helped Me Get Through 2020



Here are my favorite quotes from my reading this year.


"You do not think yourself into a new way of living as much as you live your way into a new way of thinking."

— Richard RohrYes, and...: Daily Meditations


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"The best criticism of the bad is the practice of the better."

— Richard RohrThings Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality


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"There was a motto Barack and I tried to live by, and I offered it that night from the stage: When they go low, we go high."

— Michelle ObamaBecoming


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"Our charge is not to save the world....It is to live in it, flawed and fierce, loving and humble." 

― Courtney Martin, quoted in Krista Tippett's Becoming Wise


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“We have to muster the moral strength to reimagine America....The moral stamina to fight this fight requires that we cultivate our own elsewhere, because the one 'who finds no way to rest cannot long survive the battle....' We have to find and rest in a community of love....In our time, with so much hatred and venom in our politics and our culture, we must actively cultivate communities of love that allow us to imagine different ways of being together.”

― Eddie S. Glaude Jr., Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own


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“Breathe, darling. This is just a chapter. It's not your whole story.”

― S. C. Lourie, quoted in Hoda Kotb's I Really Needed This Today


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"Instead of pathologizing every human quirk, we should say, By the grace of this behavior, this individual has found it possible to continue."



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“In my own worst seasons I've come back from the colorless world of despair by forcing myself to look hard, for a long time, at a single glorious thing: a flame of red geranium outside my bedroom window. And then another: my daughter in a yellow dress. And another: the perfect outline of a full, dark sphere behind the crescent moon. Until I learned to be in love with my life again. Like a stroke victim retraining new parts of the brain to grasp lost skills, I have taught myself joy, over and over again.”

― Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson


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“But now ask the beasts, and let them teach you; And the birds of the heavens, and let them tell you. Or speak to the Earth, and let it teach you; And the fish of the sea declare to you. Who among all these does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this, In whose hand is the life of every living thing, And the breath of all mankind?”

― Job 12:7-10


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“Swifts aren't always cresting the atmospheric boundary layer at dizzying heights; most of the time they are living below it in thick and complicated air. That's where they feed and mate and bathe and drink and are. But to find out about the important things that affect their lives, they must go higher to survey the wider scene, and there communicate with others about the larger forces impinging on their realm....Not all of us need to make that climb...but as a community, surely some of us are required, by dint of flourishing life and the well-being of us all, to look clearly at the things that are so easily obscured by the everyday.”

― Helen MacdonaldVesper Flights


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"Let's see what love can do." 

― Julia Alvarez, Afterlife


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Do any of these speak to you? 




Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each Tuesday That Artsy Reader Girl assigns a topic and then post her top ten list that fits that topic. You’re more than welcome to join her and create your own top ten (or 2, 5, 20, etc.) list as well. Feel free to put a unique spin on the topic to make it work for you! Please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own post so that others know where to find more information.