Sunday, February 22, 2015

2 by Native Americans: The Lakota Way by Joseph M. Marshall III and Indian Boyhood by Charles Eastman

I just finished reading The Lakota Way by Joseph M. Marshall III and, I never got around to writing about Indian Boyhood by Charles Eastman (read in November of 2014). So, it's time for another Two for the Price of One review. I purchased The Lakota Way when Borders was going out of business [muffled sob] and bought my copy of Indian Boyhood from a secondhand shop in New Jersey, although you can download it for free in e-book form.


Humility can provide clarity where arrogance makes a cloud. -- p. 12

The Lakota Way: Stories and Lessons for Living (also subtitled Native American Wisdom on Ethics and Character) by Joseph M. Marshall III is divided into chapters headed with a particular characteristic revered by the Lakota, also known as Lakota Sioux, a Native American tribe that were nomadic hunter-gatherers in the Northern Plains and Dakotas for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years. Each characteristic is illustrated by stories passed down in the oral tradition, as well as personal tales from the author's lifetime.

The chapters: Humility, Perseverance, Respect, Honor, Love, Sacrifice, Truth, Compassion, Bravery, Fortitude, Generosity and Wisdom.

There is also an afterward that describes the history of the Lakota from their perspective, which unsurprisingly does not entirely agree with history books.

I love reading Native American tales and appreciated the way the author combined the moral code for his people with the stories that are used to illustrate right from wrong. Marshall's writing transports the reader to another time and place marvelously, whether it's the dawn of time, the 17th century or the 1950s. While I think anyone can benefit from the kind of wisdom in The Lakota Way, the afterword is particularly interesting and would be great for teaching purposes. Most history books have been written by European Americans, after all. It makes sense to teach the alternative viewpoint, as well, when discussing American history.

Highly recommended - A lovely combination of basics in morality, stories that illustrate the importance of strong character, and history. There's a bit of explanation about the spirituality of Native American tradition, as well. Although Marshall can be a little emphatic about the wrongs perpetrated upon his people, I think he has good reason for feeling that way and didn't find the book at all preachy.

Indian Boyhood by Charles A. Eastman (who was also known by his Indian name, Ohiyesa) is a book that was published in 1902. As a child of the 19th century, Eastman straddled two remarkably different time periods for Native Americans. He spent his childhood in the traditional way as a Santee Dakota Sioux, learning to hunt and observing his people living off the land and practicing the old ways. The bulk of his adulthood took place in the white man's world.

It's been quite a while since I read Indian Boyhood so details are fading but I do recall that the book is mostly about the beauty of the land, the joy of growing up in the outdoors and the sensation of freedom that he felt as a child. Occasionally, he compared his life to that of the European settlers and talked about why white children who were captured and became part of an Indian family often escaped to return to Indian life after being rescued by their families.

I can't recall how old Eastman was when his father disappeared but at some point his father was captured in battle and presumed dead. But, eventually, he returned and by then he had long since been converted to Christianity. By that point, Eastman was a grown man and he gave in to his father's influence, joining the world of the white man.

Because Eastman grew up with the traditions of his people but eventually became an Ivy League educated physician living in the modern European sense, he offers an interesting perspective from that of contemporary writers looking backward as he was able to compare and contrast the two cultures in which he participated, although the book is focused on his youth. He also learned about herbal medicine from his grandmother, so you could say Eastman had not one but two types of medical training.

Highly recommended - I've never read anything quite like Indian Boyhood. Most of what I've read regarding Native American culture has been either modern historical viewpoints or, in the case of older material, from the side of settlers. It was utterly fascinating reading about childhood as a Native American by someone who grew up traditionally and then transitioned into a completely different style of living as an adult.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

A Dozen Cousins by Lori Haskins Houran, illustrated by Sam Usher


You have to peek inside A Dozen Cousins by Lori Haskins Houran (illustrated by Sam Usher) to appreciate it. You should be able to click to enlarge the images, but in case you can't, the words are:

Anna had a dozen cousins.
All of them were boys.
They smelled like sweaty sneakers,
and they made a ton of noise.



It continues:

They read her secret diary.
They used up all her paint. 
They put a lizard in her hat
to see if she would faint.

The rest of the book is similar, with the little rapscallions using her skirt as a tree and launching her doll in a rocket, building Anna a castle and then attacking it, letting her play the bad guy and tying her to a tree then forgetting to untie her when their game has ended, and more. But, the book ends sweetly:

Anna had a dozen cousins.
None of them were girls.
And Anna, if you asked her,
wouldn't trade them for the world.

A Dozen Cousins has just vaulted to my "new favorites" category because it's one of those sweet, funny books that you can't help smiling all the way through. The illustrations are terrific -- colorful, cheerful, humorous. And, Anna is a great character. Rambunctious as her cousins are (they also hug her and stick ice cubes down her back), she holds her own, smiling at the lizard tucked into her hat, untying herself from the tree. I love it! My granddaughter doesn't have a dozen male cousins but I'm sure she'll enjoy the book when I read it to her (or her parents do). Note that Anna is reading in the two opening spreads. You can't help but love that, eh? Highly recommended.

My thanks to Sterling Kids for the review copy of A Dozen Cousins! Isabel enjoyed it, too.


©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Friday, February 20, 2015

HitRECord TV, Season 1 and a Friday Cat


First things first: a description for those unfamiliar with HitRECord. HitRECord.org is a website created by actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt, to which anyone can subscribe. Artists, musicians, illustrators, writers, filmmakers, poets and cartoonists all work together in a collaborative creative effort. HitRECord is responsible for the Tiny Book of Tiny Stories book series (I have read and loved all three and hope they'll publish more, in the future) and the HitRECord production company also has released this TV series, an auditory and visual feast.

Second things second: I have a confession to make. I got Season 1 of HitRECord TV from HarperCollins' Dey Street imprint in late 2014 and hesitated to write about it because I wanted to buy a copy of the season for a friend. He's a blog friend and I couldn't bear the thought that he'd read my gushy review and buy it before I got around to sending it to him. So, I dragged my feet.

Fortunately, Season 1 of HitRECord TV is memorable. The boxed set contains 9 booklets. One of those is a general guide; the rest are books with bits of art much like that in the Tiny Book of Tiny Stories series but with some background information about the episodes, lyrics to songs, and brief blurbs from contributors (illustrators, musicians, composers, etc.) that add a bit of dimension to the episodes. They're not stories in and of themselves but material to accompany the series.

I absolutely loved watching Season 1 of HitRECord TV. There are touching stories, funny skits, illustrated songs and poems, people playing games. Each episode is centered around a particular theme: "Games", "Money", "Trash", "Patterns", "Fantasy", "Space", "The Number 1", and "The Other Side." I had particular favorites amongs those songs, skits, stories and such -- and even favorite episodes. But, in general, I just loved being swept away, listening to the songs, thinking about the topics, singing along, being entertained by this massively creative collaborative effort.

The only thing I dislike about the HitRECord TV, Season 1? The episodes are downloaded to computer. I am old school and absolutely hate watching things on the computer. Plus, I like to have a physical copy of any television series I own. Downloads don't feel entirely real to me; and, I'm not even sure where exactly to locate them on my computer, now that I've watched them and stepped away for a couple months. The download code is on a small piece of paper that falls out when you pull out the booklets. I'm going to tape mine to either the case or that first booklet. It would definitely be much nicer to have this series on DVD.

Otherwise, I have zippo complaints, although I would have personally preferred a single book to a set of booklets. No big deal, though. It works. Highly recommended. I keep thinking "visual and auditory feast" and can't get beyond that description but let me say this . . . it will not only entertain you, HitRECord on TV will make you want to pull out your paint box, sit with your guitar, put pen to paper. It's inspiring.

Also, it's Friday, so have a cat:


©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Two thrillers: North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo and The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins

2015, besides being a slower reading year, seems to be one in which I've read a lot of books in pairs: two books about the Great Depression, two thrillers, two children's storybooks (reviews forthcoming). In the case of the two thrillers, I just happened to be in the mood for fast-paced reads at the same time I came up with a story idea that's on the thrillery side (necessitating a little thriller reading to find examples of good pacing).


Briefly, John Rodgers and Jean-Luc square off, shoot subtly hateful glances at each other. Imagining that these two men could agree on anything is like imagining that the north and south poles could overcome their magnetic issues and meet for lunch at the equator.

--from North of Boston 

North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo was one of the books recommended to me when I asked for thriller title suggestions from friends. And, then the friend who recommended the book offered to send me her copy (which has a different cover than the one at left but I couldn't find a decent image). I'm so glad she did.

Pirio Kasparov was on a fishing boat with her friend Ned on a foggy morning when a freighter ran into the boat, killing Ned and leaving Pirio clinging to flotsam for hours in frigid water. Convinced that the collision was not an accident, Pirio begins to investigate, uncovering a tangled web of deceit that leads her to discovery and danger.

I have mixed feelings about North of Boston. I loved the writing, adored some of the characters (especially Pirio and her best friend's son, Noah), appreciated those who were unreliable, liked the added interest of the question, "Why did this character survive something that kills most?" and really liked where Pirio's search led -- to a legitimate world concern. But, I didn't find the book gripping, nor did I always find Pirio's ability to keep going in spite of serious injury entirely believable. Still, a solid read, definitely well-written and recommended.

The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins was a total risk. You've undoubtedly heard of it, by now -- the book everyone is calling this year's Gone Girl, the story of a woman who sees the same couple from the train most weekdays and imagines their perfect life until . . . a kiss, a death, a mystery, and somehow Rachel ends up in the middle of a tangled web.

I haven't read Gone Girl but I'd read a few reviews of The Girl on the Train, knew friends were reading it, and saw that the buzz was growing. What convinced me to spend some of my Christmas money was none of the above. I simply liked the idea and the setting. A London setting is always going to grab my attention, especially when the story happens to fit the characteristics of something I'm seeking (in this case, of course, an engrossing, fast-paced read) with gift card money in hand.

As it turned out, I did find The Girl on the Train every bit as gripping as I hoped. The reviews I read before buying were mixed. A lot of people didn't like the characters. Too flawed, too unlikable. I tolerate unlikable characters a lot better if I know they're coming, so I opted to go ahead and order the book and hope for the best.

Fortunately, The Girl on the Train was exactly what I was looking for and, nope, I didn't mind the characters. Yes, the women are definitely unlikable -- all of them. But, each is flawed in ways that I found believable. I particularly found the alcholic and unreliable main character had the ring of truth. I also thought the use of three viewpoints worked very well and, even though I figured out "who done it" around 100 pages before the end of the book, the pages continued to fly. Highly recommended.

North of Boston and The Girl on the Train both have substance-abusing characters in addition to a mystery and it was fascinating to see how that played out in both books. I thought it was a little better handled in The Girl on the Train but Rachel is the character I considered the female protagonist, in spite of the fact that the book is told through several different points of view, and in North of Boston it's Pirio's best friend who is the substance abuser so Rachel's alcoholism is key to the plot while Thomasina's (that of Pirio's friend) is not. That may have impacted how I feel about the use of substance abuse in the characterization. Both fed nicely into the reading of my book group's latest read, The Road to Echo Spring: On Writers and Drinking by Olivia Laing. More on that later, I hope.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Two Memoirs of the Great Depression: Anneville by Thomas G. Robinson and Little Heathens by Mildred Armstrong Kalish

I feel like talking about books, finally, so I'm going to bash out some mini reviews and pre-post to my heart's content. Anneville and Little Heathens are books I acquired because I currently have a particular interest in the Great Depression.

Anneville: A Memoir of the Great Depression by Thomas G. Robinson is a little confusing, title-wise. Anneville is a memoir with names of people and places changed and written with as much accuracy as memory provides but in the introduction the author refers to it as a novel because he's aware that memory is imperfect. I don't think it was necessary to rename the book a novel within the intro, but it's a nice touch since there have been some controversies about invented memoirs in recent years.

As to the content, Anneville is absolutely charming. Thomas, the author, is clearly Thos in the book (one of 6 children) and the book is told in past tense, third person, but you mostly see things from his perspective. The Robinsons' father absconded early in the book, leaving a mother with 6 children, no income, and no relatives nearby. You get a good idea of the difficulties the family went through as they were evicted twice, each time moving into a home of lesser size and quality, and the mother had to beg the selectment of Anneville to give them a weekly allowance. This was called living "on the town" and it was frowned upon. Occasionally, Mrs. Robinson resorted to stealing electricity and, at least once, food.

But, though the book describes constant hunger, cold, outgrown shoes and clothing, and how the impoverished are treated with disdain, it's mostly about boyhood and that's what makes the book so captivating. There are tales of jaunts into the woods to skinny dip in a swimming hole, having to prove oneself tough (there are quite a few fistfights), pranks and silly games the children came up with that got them into trouble, school stories, and an adventure in which two of the boys helped a WWI vet enjoy his last days. Anneville is lovely in many ways.

The book is an Author House publication and like many self-published books, Anneville is rife with errors. There are a few inconsistencies in the memories, as well, but I enjoyed the storytelling so much that I gave the book 4 out of 5 stars, taking a single point off for the book's problems. I'm glad I read it. Just be aware that you will have to fight your internal editor a bit if you're a perfectionist. Recommended.

Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm by Mildred Armstrong Kalish is similarly misleading in that the words "hard times" absolutely do not belong in that subtitle. The author's father was out of the picture, as Thomas Robinson's father in Anneville was, but her grandparents owned a farm and a home in town debt-free and the children alternated between living at the farm and the house in town. There was never any threat of being kicked out or having their possessions hauled away.

The farm had livestock and fowl to provide milk, eggs and meat, as well as vegetables and orchards. Even honey was available, although it could be tricky to acquire. Young Mildred also had the advantage of a large, extended family that banded together. As such, the only hardship that enters into the picture at all was the fact that the houses were not fully heated, forcing the occupants to either cram together in a single heated room or bundle up and shiver.

There are some charming stories about life -- box socials, holidays with the family, splitting wood, etc. But, Little Heathens is heavily focused on food, with recipes interspersed throughout. I perused the reviews at Goodreads when I was considering requesting the book from Paperback Swap and quite a few people complained about the quantity of recipes and the author's arrogance as she often remarked that "kids today" don't know how to do this or that thing she was taught to do by hand in the olden days. Forewarned is forearmed. Those comments didn't bother me. I found the book entertaining and upbeat. Kalish set the scene beautifully, describing various aspects of her childhood in vivid detail. In fact, when she mentioned the song, "Hello, Central, Give Me Heaven," she helped add a little dimension to the reading of Parade's End, in which Sylvia Tietjens refers to her maid as "Hullo Central" because of her tinny, high-pitched voice. The operator at a central telephone exchange must have sounded oddly metallic through early phone lines, both in the U.S. and abroad. Interesting. Recommended.

Of the two books, I enjoyed Anneville the most -- in spite of its editing problems -- because the tales of childhood were so immensely entertaining and I was (and am) particularly in search of stories about how people dealt creatively with poverty, cold and hunger during the Great Depression. I liked both books very much, though, and I'm glad I read them.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

How to make your book buddies feel a little bit crazy

Blurred bookshelves. Feel like you need therapy, yet?

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

A Good Start - January 2015 Reads and Adventures

January of 2015 was a little unusual in that I deliberately slowed down my reading to try to make some life changes, so it was a very light reading month. But, since I've continued to set aside any book that doesn't immediately grab me and hold on, it was also a very good reading month. Quality came in high, quantity low. I'm happy with that. 

You already know about the planting we did, if you read my Monday Malarkey post. I'm so excited about my garden; I can't wait till I have blooming things to photograph.

Apart from reading and planting, Huzzybuns and I went on an adventure with friends, visiting a scale model of the Mississippi River built during WWII by German POWs. There is no museum. Most of the buildings have crumbled away; you must slog past a barrier and know where you're going to find the site. But when you do, it is mind-blowing -- the size of the model and depth of detail are amazing (upper right photo, below). 

January 2015 Reads in Review (links to mini reviews, where applicable):

1. Soviet Ghosts by Rebecca Litchfield - Photos of abandoned Soviet buildings bought primarily to use as story starts. I liked this a lot but did not love the text, which was all about the history of the Soviet Union and its downfall. The author used some form of the word "ideology" so constantly that seeing the word began to feel a bit like fingernails on a chalkboard. Soviet ideological this, Soviet ideology that. Kind of oddly preachy, really. What I really wanted to know was where each of those photos was taken, what the history of the building was, why it was abandoned, etc. That info was in the back of the book but I didn't know that till I got there. Irritating. I mostly bought it for the photos, though, and I do like them.

2. 1963: The Year of Revolution by Robin Morgan and Ariel Leve - A surprisingly informative book about the "youthquake" that occurred in 1963. Poorly organized and chaotic. If you weren't old enough to know many of the people interviewed (true for me), some of the point is lost unless you spend time looking up people, the art they created, videos of music, etc. I did that and it took forever to get through but in the end I found that the reading ended up being an experience because of all the time I spent immersing myself in 1963. So, I ended up loving it.

3. I Love You Near and Far by M. Blain Parker and J. Henry - A children's book about loving a child from a distance when relatives can't see little ones in person. Although the book wasn't quite what I hoped for, I liked it and hope to review it soon.

4. Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett - Nonfiction about how the afterlife is portrayed in fiction, film, games and literature. Loved it. I've never read anything quite like it. Greg is an Episcopal priest. He remains neutral, in spite of his personal beliefs, and goes beyond the Bible when comparing religious texts to fictional portrayals.

5. Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm during the Great Depression by Mildred Armstrong - A memoir of the author's life during the Great Depression. I must emphatically dispute her use of the words "hard times". The author's huge extended family banded together so there was no lack of support, in spite of the fact that her father was out of the picture. They moved between her grandparents' farm (one of their farms -- they were debt free) and a house in town. They had livestock, orchards, gardens. They only real hardship was dealing with the cold because the two homes were not fully heated but they were so well fed that most of the book is about food and it's loaded with recipes. Charming and sometimes funny, but occasionally preachy. A fun read.

6. The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami - A truly bizarre story about a boy who goes to his library, asks for some obscure titles and is sent down into the depths of the library, where he encounters a man dressed as a sheep and some other strange people who may or may not be quite what they seem. Loved it. Still not sure whether it's a children's book or a novella. Everyone seems to have a different opinion.

7. North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo - After surviving an accident at sea, the heroine (whose name I love: Pirio) goes in search of answers. I didn't find this book overly fast-paced, as thrillers go, but I did find it fascinating. I liked Pirio and the characterization in general; loved the denouement.

8. 1914: Poetry Remembers, ed. by Carol Ann Duffy - War poetry and some writings from WWI; a mixture of WWI and modern poetry. Extremely moving, passionate, brutal and heartbreakingly beautiful with one exception: I couldn't make heads or tales of Gertrude Stein's poem.

9. Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick - Parallel stories about 2 deaf children, one in 1920s New York, the other from . . . um, I forget. Montana? Minnesota? Love the illustrations and the way their stories intersected, although Wonderstruck isn't as magical as The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Still, it's a keeper. Brian Selznick's illustration is stunning, his stories beautifully told, the combination a beat apart.

10. A Dozen Cousins by Lori H. Houran and Sam Usher - A children's book about a girl who has, literally, a dozen cousins, all boys. In rhythmic verse she tells about their antics and how she loves her cousins in spite of the fact that they can be a nuisance. I absolutely love this book. I smiled all the way through the reading. I need to take some interior photos and review this one, soon. I'm looking forward to someday reading it to my granddaughter.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Monday, February 09, 2015

Monday Malarkey - 2 weeks of malarkey and a touch of green


Clearly, I still don't feel much like writing about books. I keep thinking, "I need to write some reviews," and then not doing it. So, I'm going to keep this short and see what I can come up with, review wise, later.

The photo above shows most of my library sale purchases from last week. This is the first time I've made it to a library sale in my new town and it was surprising. The room in which the book sale was held was a very small one but the quality of the books (the shape they were in) was excellent. I used a photo that cut off a couple of the book covers because I love using a photo with a cat in it and this just happened to be the only shot I got of Isabel sniffing covers. My battery ran out right after I snapped that image.

Library sale purchases:


  • Picture Machine: The Rise of American Newspapers by Wm. Hannigan and K. Johnston
  • First into Nagasaki by George Weller
  • Sea of Thunder by Evan Thomas
  • Whiter Than Snow by Sandra Dallas
  • Up in the Air by Walter Kirn
  • Oh, Play That Thing by Roddy Doyle
  • The Foreign Correspondent by Alan Furst
  • Blindness by Jose Saramago


Other recent acquisitions:


  • Trigger Warning by Neil Gaiman - from Harper Collins (William Morrow imprint)
  • The Trip to Echo Springs: On Writers and Drinking by Olivia Laing - purchased for F2F discussion
  • A Dozen Cousins by L. Haskins Houran & S. Usher - from Sterling Children's for review


Library check-outs:


  • The Wind is Not a River by Brian Payton
  • Left Neglected by Lisa Genova (I was actually looking for Still Alice)
  • Out of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys
  • Just One Day by Gayle Forman


I went to the library in search of Still Alice, Brutal Youth by Anthony Breznican, and The Trip to Echo Springs. I didn't find any of them so I had to go ahead and purchase Echo Springs, since F2F group is coming up soon. There is a copy of Brutal Youth in my library system. I could request it from the other library branch but I'd rather go on an adventure and find the building, just for the fun of it. So, that's on my future agenda. And, I'm hoping Still Alice will be available in e-book form (my new library system has e-books!!!!) but I have to go get a pin # before I can download e-books. Adventure #2!

I've only posted once since my last malarkey:




Books I've finished in the past two weeks:


  • Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick
  • A Dozen Cousins by Lori H. Houran, illus. by Sam Usher
  • Anneville: A Memoir of the Great Depression by Thomas G. Robinson
  • The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins
  • In the Loyal Mountains by Rick Bass (short stories)


Currently reading:


  • The Trip to Echo Springs by Olivia Laing
  • The Lakota Way by Joseph M. Marshall III
  • Quiet by Susan Cain


I'm also still reading Parade's End by Ford Madox Ford because I only occasionally pick it up, read 50 pages or so, and then set it aside for a week. The wonderful thing about Parade's End is that you can do that . . . it's so memorable that it's no big deal to just read a chunk, once a week. Since it's going to take me forever to read, I'm not going to mention the book, again, till I finish.

It's gorgeous, here -- in the 70s, the windows thrown open, cats happily sitting on windowsills. We have little sprouts coming up. 2 or 3 weeks ago, we dug up our front garden, planted a ton of bulbs, and put down new mulch but we worried they wouldn't do well because they didn't have the chance to winter over. Looks like everything has done fine. Green is popping up everywhere. I can't wait till things begin blooming. I realized, a year after we moved, that the one thing I cannot bear to live without is daffodils -- and the former owners had planted daylilies but no other bulbs. There are daffodils blooming already in our neighborhood so I'm really excited to see mine breaking through the mulch.


That's all for now! Hope to whip out some reviews, this week. We shall see. Happy Monday!

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Friday, January 30, 2015

Three I loved - The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt, 1963: The Year of Revolution by Morgan and Leve and Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett

The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt is so crammed with little flags that I could quote from it all day, but instead I'm going to skip quotes entirely and just tell you about it, although I may eventually do a post filled with quotes so I can remove those markers.

The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt is apparently a compact version of Mrs. Roosevelt's memoirs (which were originally published in several volumes). Although it's edited down to a single book, Mrs. Roosevelt's autobiography is crammed with wonderful anecdotes and gives the reader an excellent inside view of her life. Especially interesting, of course, are the tumultuous Depression and WWII years, during which her husband Franklin served as President of the United States.

I have long been an admirer of Eleanor Roosevelt but wow . . . she's my hero, now. She was indefatigable in her efforts to make the lives of everyday people, especially women, better. She traveled the world at her husband's request numerous times to comfort soldiers and was relentlessly picked on by the press, though the soldiers deeply appreciated her. She wrote personal letters and columns, hosted dignitaries at her home and the White House, represented the U.S. in the early years of the United Nations. She was a woman of strong character who made an indelible imprint on our nation's direction.

I think The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt would make an exceptional school resource. Although some of the characters are unfamiliar because they were prominent at the time and have now faded into history, those occasional bits that have lost their impact tend to be brief enough that they don't interfere with the reading. Annotations wouldn't be a lost cause, in my humble opinion, but for teaching purposes it would work to use selected excerpts. The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt was one of those rare books that I found so exciting I occasionally read anecdotes to my husband. He enjoyed the portions I read. Highly recommended.


1963: The Year of the Revolution by Robin Morgan and Ariel Leve is an absorbing read, in spite of the fact that I don't like the way it's organized. An introduction is followed by chapters that begin with a quotation and then consist of first-person viewpoints by the people who were a part of the "youth-quake" that took place in 1963 in fashion, art and music on both sides of the Atlantic.

Each chapter contains a number of first-person accounts from musicians, artists, and other people involved in the changing events. Some were familiar to me, like Eric Clapton, Mary Quant and Sir Alan Parker, but many were not and therein the problem lies. While I enjoyed looking up various music groups, artists, fashion leaders and their work (particularly the music), it was a bit frustrating having to keep flipping back to remind myself who this or that person was. It might be a less chaotic-feeling read to those who lived it.

However, I grew up with a lot of the music that was mentioned without actually realizing who sang songs that were still playing on the radio during my childhood. So, it was loads of fun looking up music videos. And, in spite of the fact that I disliked the manner in which this oral history was presented, I really did enjoy the reading and came out of the experience feeling like I'd learned a great deal. I even have a new favorite old song. Definitely recommended, but do be aware that the book is focused on the arts and fashion, not generalities. It's worth mentioning that even though I disliked the organization of the book and having to look things up slowed down the reading, I was never tempted to set it aside. I found 1963: The Year of Revolution utterly fascinating.

The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt and 1963: The Year of Revolution were both sent to me by HarperCollins (the former a Harper Perennial imprint, the latter from Dey Street).

Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett is a book I purchased because I love the author's writing. I pre-ordered it when he talked about it on Facebook and didn't wait long after it arrived before indulging. Subtitled "The Afterlife in Popular Imagination", Entertaining Judgment is about how Heaven, Hell and purgatory are portrayed in books, films, video games and music. Garrett talks a bit about angels, the devil and ghosts, as well.

Entertaining Judgment is as informative as it is captivating. Garrett describes how minimal the descriptions of Heaven and Hell are in religious writings and how strongly popular opinion of what exactly may await us in the afterlife has been dictated by fiction. I loved the fact that the author doesn't let his Christianity interfere with the presentation of the material, examining how the afterlife is portrayed in various religious texts without ever saying one is superior to another.

Entertaining Judgment is not all-encompassing. I thought the portions about ghosts focused a little too heavily on fear when ghosts often are portrayed as entities that help people move on. One of my favorite ghost movies, Always, is not mentioned, for example. But, there are plenty of excellent examples that I knew little about and I came out of the reading of Entertaining Judgment with a strong desire to catch up on films and literature that I've missed. It's probably worth noting that I don't play video games at all but I found the descriptions of video games every bit as absorbing as those about film, books and music. Highly recommended. I don't recall ever reading anything quite like Entertaining Judgment and particularly enjoyed it for the change of pace.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Monday, January 26, 2015

Monday Malarkey - Book flood carries Bookfool away


I confess this past two weeks there's been such an influx of books that I'm a little embarrassed. Kiddo was home and informed me that a bookstore in Vicksburg was closing, so I'd blame him but I ordered some books with my Christmas gift card money and a couple ARCs showed up. Yes, occasionally, they're still trickling in.

Above are some of my purchases:

  • The Collected Poems of Maya Angelou
  • The Pleasures of the Damned by Charles Bukowski (poetry)
  • 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami
  • Bloodcurdling Tales of Horror and the Macabre, Waking Up Screaming and Shadows of Death, all by H. P. Lovecraft (sure hope I like Lovecraft - the clerk is a Lovecraft fan and he talked me into buying 3 volumes instead of 1)
  • Descent by Tim Johnston
  • The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins

I also bought a couple volumes of photography by Robert Doisneau and Henri Cartier-Bresson:


ARCs and swap books that arrived:

  • The Bookseller by Cynthia Swanson (ARC from Harper)
  • A Reunion of Ghosts by Judith Claire Mitchell (ARC from Harper)
  • The Return of Captain John Emmett by Elizabeth Speller (swap)
  • A Cast of Stones by Patrick W. Carr (swap)
  • Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick (swap)

I've only posted twice since my last Malarkey:


Books I've finished in the past two weeks:

  • Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett
  • Little Heathens by Mildred Armstrong
  • The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami
  • North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo
  • 1914: Poetry Remembers, ed. by Carol Ann Duffy

I've read 8 books, so far this year. Usually, January is my biggest reading month and 8 books is spectacularly bad, by comparison with most years. But, I think it's just a combination of trying to read more deliberately, slotting in regular exercise (a genuine time suck but worth it), and my determination to write daily that are getting in the way, along with occasionally devoting an evening to Parade's End -- which, honestly, is going to take me till spring at this rate. I haven't managed to create a decent routine in 2015 so I'm a little frustrated with myself but the fact that I'm no longer accepting mountains of ARCs definitely helps. Upon reflection, I wish I'd just taken that hiatus I considered taking. I may still do that but I'm working on a mini review post, so not yet.

Currently reading:

Just Parade's End by Ford Madox Ford. I finished 1914: Poetry Remembers on Saturday night and read a little of Parade's End, last night. I'll probably start rereading my niece Lindsey's book, Death Wish, next.

How is your year going, so far?

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Friday, January 23, 2015

Fiona Friday - A little kiss

The cats were howling at me to entertain them, last week, so I made them a new playhouse. I cut a door in the side of an empty moving box and a single hole in the top because the box is fairly small, the idea being that they could poke their little heads up and look around. Both explored from both ends -- looking up from inside, checking out the hole, very entertaining. When Isabel went inside while Fiona was looking down the hole, I thought for certain they'd end up batting at each other. Instead, when Izzy poked her head up, Fiona gave her a little kiss. It was a surprisingly sweet moment.


©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Friday, January 16, 2015

We need to talk about this - The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami


I'd write up a summary of The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami but I think it's far better to let those who haven't read it experience this wacky novella without any forewarning (except, you know, everyone's talking about the guy in the sheep costume). I had theories about the meaning of various characters, their behavior, the deepy darkness, and all that lot. But, then I got to the end and was all full of WHAT THE HELL???

Help me out here, people. Have you read anything about this book and its meaning? Do you have theories you'd like to share? Discuss, please.

Also, let's just say anyone who hasn't read the book should not peruse the comments; I presume any theories will contain spoilers of some sort.

Incidentally, love the presentation. The Strange Library is quite a little gem. I don't love the fact that you have to fold the funky cover behind the book to read, but the illustrations are fabulous and I agree with those who've said it feels like you're holding something special in your hands during the reading.

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Monday Malarkey - I'll bet you thought I was gone for good


Peeking in, here. I came to a decision about the blog but then didn't find the time to sit down and write, last week. So, here's The Plan for 2015:

I'll be doing a weekly update, a monthly reading wrap-up, and dropping by whenever I feel like it to do reviews or just prattle. Since I like the "Monday Malarkey" title and the "Tuesday Twaddle" I've used when I post a day late, I'll stick with using those if I manage to post. However, that's a loose plan. If I don't feel like writing, I won't. If I feel like writing 10 posts in a week, fine. If I feel like writing about writing, I'll shoot for doing it on Wednesday and call it "Writing on Wednesday" because those are the magical words that popped into my head ~*poof*~ when the idea came to mind.

On to today's post nonsense.

A number of Mondays have passed since I bothered writing down book arrivals. While not all that many books arrived over the holidays (relatively speaking), I did acquire plenty. For today, I'm just going to gather up whatever I recall having arrived and call it . . .

This week's arrivals:


  • Anneville: A Memoir of the Great Depression by Thomas G. Robinson
  • Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression by Mildred Kalish
  • The Great Depression: A Diary by Benjamin Roth  


Sensing a theme? If anyone can suggest some excellent first-hand accounts of the Great Depression that I haven't already discovered, titles and authors would be appreciated. I bought 2 of those above and got the third via Paperback Swap. More arrivals:


  • Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett - I think this arrived during my break. I pre-ordered it when the author mentioned the book. I'm pretty sure he teaches a course at Baylor University on the same topic, how literature and film have effected our beliefs about the afterlife: heaven, hell, purgatory, angels, demons, etc. 
  • North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo - Sent by a friend after I asked for suggestions of "edge of your seat" reading.
  • A Deadly Wandering by Matt Richtel - An ARC sent by a friend
  • I Love You Near and Far by M. B. Parker and J. Henry - The very last book I received from a publisher in 2014 (from Sterling Children's Books).
  • I also got a box of books sent by another friend (not handy but I was particularly excited about Fourth of July Creek) and purchased a book for F2F group: Returning to Earth by Jim Harrison. So far, I'm not thrilled with the F2F read. It's a bit rambling. I set it aside and hope to get back to it in time to finish it for discussion.

Books I've finished in 2015:


  • Soviet Ghosts - Rebecca Litchfield - A picture book of abandoned places in the former U.S.S.R. with essays about the fall of the Soviet Union. I purchased Soviet Ghosts particularly for the thought of using the photos as prompts for writing. I would have preferred that the text was about the abandoned places (info about the photos and where they were taken is in the back of the book) rather than history. Almost every page had some form of the word "ideology" at least once, if not repeatedly. The repetition quickly became tiresome. Yet, the text was interesting if a bit dry and I was in it for the photography, anyway. I'm particularly fascinated by photos of places that look like they were abandoned suddenly. Not all of them were due to the Chernobyl disaster and you have to wonder why someone would have walked away from a hot drink, leaving a uniform on a chair, books on a shelf, etc. Why did they simply leave so abruptly? That's where room for stories is born.
  • 1963: The Year of the Revolution - Ariel Leve and Robin Morgan 
  • I Love You Near and Far by Marjorie B. Parker and J. Henry


Currently reading:


  • Entertaining Judgment by Greg Garrett
  • Parade's End by Ford Madox Ford
  • Little Heathens (mentioned in arrivals, above)


I'm only about 100 pages into Parade's End and it's over 800 pages long, so I may be reading it for months. During Christmas break, I focused on classics and non-fiction. Some were sent by publishers and, since I'd committed to only reading books that really grabbed me, I loved everything I read during my break. But, I have to run, no time to elaborate. I'm currently working on making good habits and that means I have to do what I intend to make habitual every single day without fail. I've succeeded at writing every day, so far, but some of those other resolutions need a bit more work on the daily concept. Anyway, must dash. Happy Monday!

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Tuesday, January 06, 2015

Big changes in 2015

Happy 2015!


Christmas in 2014 was, for this family, all about starry-eyed kitties climbing trees (Isabel), untying ribbons on packages (both kitties), turning ornaments into soccer balls (Fiona) and a good bit of general mayhem. In the past, we've either plucked Isabel out of the tree or shouted at her when she attempted to climb. This year, we delayed decorating, apart from a few unbreakable ornaments at the bottom, and just let it go. The only thing I wouldn't let the cats do? Chew on the tree. I didn't want them to ingest fake pine needles. Otherwise, I let the kitties have at it and, amazingly, it went very well. Isabel moves very cautiously when she climbs so it looked like wind was blowing through the limbs but the tree stood firm and no ornaments fell; Fiona stuck to playing with the unbreakable ornaments on the lower limbs. They both made us laugh every day.


Sometimes the two kitties even played together.



There were only three of us here, not counting the kitties. I prefer big family gatherings but have to admit that I appreciated the low-key family time. There were no big fancy dinners, no big plates of hors d'ouevres. I asked friends for sugar cookie recipes and got several suggestions, so we chose two of them, prepared both and compared, mostly for the sake of getting into the spirit of Christmas.

New Year's Eve was equally subdued. We started a new tradition, watching O, Brother, Where Art Thou? while neighbors were setting off noisy fireworks. And, I began working on keeping my resolutions before the New Year began, with the thought that I'd already come up with them so I might as well get started.

About those big changes:

I don't feel like I need to list everything I'm planning for 2015, but there are a few things worth mentioning and they're major. I'll update my Review Policy, soon, to reflect my intent for the coming year.

My priority in 2015 is writing fiction. Long before I became active in reading groups and, eventually, blogging about books, I was a writer. I wrote obsessively, was active in a number of writing groups, attended conferences, and was published (a short story, a monthly humor column that I kept up for 3 years, and a number of articles about writing). I've finished several novels. The only time in my life I can recall not writing was during my college years when I was too focused on studying and marrying that good-looking boyfriend of mine. The reason I stopped writing, pre-blog, is not something I want to go into but it has passed and I've been ready to focus on fiction writing for a long time. I just wasn't ready to change my blogging habits. I think it was pretty clear in 2014 that I was struggling with how to fit both into my life. It didn't work. This year, I've committed to writing daily -- even if that only means a single sentence -- and, so far, I've managed to do so.

That leads to what will be changing. Because I've committed to writing daily -- and I have a few other daily resolutions, which I won't go into -- it seems like my days are absolutely crammed. I think that's good in many ways but it does mean I'm going to have to stop blogging regularly. I've got a few books I desire to write about because they were excellent and they just happen to have been sent by publishers; and, I'm going to post my 2014 Reads list, tomorrow. Beyond that, I don't know. I've considered going on an extended hiatus because I haven't really felt compelled to write about books the way I used to and I think I either need to continue not blogging till the urge returns or simply go to weekly or monthly posts about what I've read -- maybe weekly Monday Malarkey and a month in review. Thoughts are welcome.

I'm going to ponder which way to take the blog for a few more days. In the meantime, I'll post my 2014 reads. Just before I went on my Christmas break, I reverted to letting books call to me rather than trying to fit in whatever ARCs were soon to be released. So far, a return to reading the old-fashioned, pre-blog way is totally working for me. I've been in a classics and non-fiction mood and the joy of reading is back. My reading goal for 2015 is lower because I intend to read slower, indulge in longer books and savor them instead of crashing through as many books as possible. Since some of the books I've read were sent by publishers I will definitely write about them soon, if only in "mini" form.

Also, that sidebar is, of course, totally outdated. I finished Eleanor Roosevelt's autobiography weeks ago (it is a fabulous rendering of political history as viewed by a woman I have long admired). I'm not sure whether I'll bother with keeping the sidebar updated. That's another thing to ponder.

The bottom line: blogging is definitely going to be a lesser part of my life in 2015, whether I go back on hiatus or just write occasional updates but I'm still considering how to go about enacting changes.

Best wishes to all for a fabulous year!

©2015 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Thursday, January 01, 2015

Books Read in 2014

January

1. Ancient Egypt: Everyday Life in the Land of the Nile - R. Brier and H. Hobbs
2. Somewhere in France - Jennifer Robson
3. The Children's Paul: A Life of St. Paul for Young People - J. G. Stevenson
4. Someone Else's Love Story - Joshilyn Jackson
5. See Inside An Egyptian Town - ed. by R. J. Unstead
6. Brain: The Man Who Wrote the Book that Changed the World - Dermot Davis
7. The Dancing Master - Julie Klassen
8. Nick and Tesla's High-Voltage Danger Lab - Pflugfelder and Hockensmith
9. Vampires in the Lemon Grove - Karen Russell
10. The Gods of Heavenly Punishment - Jennifer Cody Epstein
11. A Star for Mrs. Blake - April Smith
12. Lost Lake - Sarah Addison Allen
13. Dept. of Speculation - Jenny Offill
14. This Dark Road to Mercy - Wiley Cash

February

15. Spy Smuggler: Paul Lelaud, France, 1942-44 - Jim Eldridge
16. The Rosie Project - Graeme Simsion
17. On Such a Full Sea - Chang-Rae Lee
18. Is That My Cat? - Jonathan Allen
19. Who's in the Tree? - Craig Shuttlewood
20. Why Does Earth Spin? and other questions about our planet - Mary Kay Carson
21. Nick and Tesla's Robot Army Rampage - Pflugfelder and Hockensmith
22. Who Were the American Pioneers? and other questions about Western Expansion - Martin W. Sandler
23. The Making of a Marchioness (or Emily Fox Seton), parts 1 and 2 - Frances Hodgson Burnett
24. The Returned - Jason Mott
25. Fallen Beauty - Erika Robuck
26. How Does a Seed Sprout? and other questions about plants - Melissa Stewart
27. How Does the Ear Hear? and other questions about senses - Melissa Stewart
28. How Does a Caterpillar Become a Butterfly? and other questions about butterflies - M. Stewart
29. What Was America's Deadliest War? and other questions about the Civil War - Martin W. Sandler
30. Redshirts - John Scalzi
31. The Big Needle - Ken Follett

March

32. Shadows in the Sun - Gayathri Ramprasad
33. A History of the World with Google Earth - Penny Worms and William Ing
34. Goodnight Songs - Margaret Wise Brown
35. The Taste of Apple Seeds - Katharina Hegena
36. Logopolis by Christopher H. Bidmead
37. Children's Wartime Diaries: Secret Writings from the Holocaust and WWII, ed. by Laurel Holliday
38. The Riverman - Aaron Starmer
39. The Martian - Andy Weir
40. Savage Harvest - Carl Hoffman
41. A Hundred Summers - Beatriz Williams
42. Mr. Owita's Guide to Gardening - Carol Wall
43. You Can Date Boys When You're 40 - Dave Barry
44. Countdown City - Ben H. Winters
45. The Heaven of Animals - David James Poissant

April

46. Itch Rocks - Simon Mayo
47. 50 Children: One Ordinary American Couple's Extraordinary Rescue Mission into the Heart of Germany - Steven Pressman
48. Tooth and Claw - Jim Arnosky
49. The White Tiger - Aravind Adiga (1-paragraph description w/in text)
50. Femininity - Susan Brownmiller (brief mention)
51. How to Lose a Lemur by Frann Preston-Gannon
52. Ode to Childhood, ed. by Lucy Gray
53. The Accidental Caregiver - Gregor Collins
54. A Single Breath - Lucy Clarke
55. The Other Typist - Suzanne Rindell
56. Where the Cypress Whispers - Yvette Manessis Corporon
57. The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin
58. Poetry for Young People: Robert Frost, ed. by Gary D. Schmidt, illus. by Henri Sorensen
59. Poetry for Young People: African-American Poetry
60. Birds of America (stories) - Lorrie Moore (1-paragraph description w/in text)
61. Fidelity (poems) - Grace Paley

May

62. Fact or Fib 2 - Kathy Furgang
63. I'm Not Cute - Jonathan Allen
64. For Such a Time - Kate Breslin
65. Fact or Fib - Kathy Furgang
66. Outrageous Fortune - Anthony Russell
67. Delicious! - Ruth Reichl
68. We Were Liars - E. Lockhart
69. Acts of God - Ellen Gilchrist
70. All the Birds, Singing - Evie Wyld
71. Echo Boy - Matt Haig
72. Pigs in Heaven - Barbara Kingsolver
73. Don't Try to Find Me - Holly Brown
74. One Night in Winter - Simon Sebag Montefiore
75. Anton and Cecil: Cats at Sea - Lisa and Valerie Martin
76. The Forgotten Seamstress - Liz Trenow

June

77. Half Bad - Sally Green
78. Solsbury Hill - Susan M. Wyler
79. The Hurricane Sisters - Dorothea Benton Frank
DNF: I'm Nobody - Alex Marestaing
80. The Humans - Matt Haig
81. Bark - Lorrie Moore
82. Incendiary Girls - Kodi Scheer
83. The Longest Way Home - Andrew McCarthy (reread)
84. The Scatter Here is Too Great - Bilal Tanweer
85. Time and Again - Jack Finney (reread)
86. World of Trouble - Ben H. Winters
87. In the Sea There Are Crocodiles - Fabio Geda
88. Nick and Tesla's Secret Agent Gadget Battle - Pflugfelder and Hockensmith
89. Doctor Who: Tales of Trenzalore - Richards, Mann, Finch and Morris

July

90. Boy, Snow, Bird - Helen Oyeyemi
91. The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair - Joel Dicker
92. Parsons Green - Fiona Bagley
93. Landing Gear - Kate Pullinger
94. The Half Life of Molly Pierce - Katrina Leno
95. The Paramedics - James O. Page
96. Goodnight June - Sarah Jio
97. Atlas: Poems - Katrina Vandenberg
98. The Transcriptionist - Amy Rowland
99. Rescue - Anita Shreve
100. Run, Don't Walk - Adele Levine, PT
101. Monster Party - Annie Bach
102. Calvin Look Out! - Jennifer Berne
103. My Drunk Kitchen - Hannah Hart

August


104. If You Ask Me - Betty White
105. My Custom Van - Michael Ian Black
106. Dinosaur Numbers - Paul Stickland
107. Dinosaur Colors - Paul Stickland
108. Dinosaur Opposites - Paul Stickland
109. Dinosaur Shapes - Paul Stickland
110. Why Did T-Rex Have Short Arms? - Melissa Stewart
111. The Future for Curious People - Gregory Sherl
112. The Color of Fire - Ann Rinaldi
113. The Story Hour - Thrity Umrigar
114. Paramédico - Benjamin Gilmour
115. Why is the Sea Salty? - Benjamin Richmond
116. How Strong is an Ant? - Mary Kay Carson
117. Ghost Hunting - Hawes, Wilson, Friedman
118. Season of the Dragonflies - Sarah Creech
119. The Time Fetch - Amy Herrick
120. 2 A.M. at The Cat's Pajamas - Marie-Helene Bertino
121. Dinosaur Farm - Frann Preston-Gannon
122. Second Form at Malory Towers - Enid Blyton

September

123. Spillover - David Quammen
124. Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck
125. Poetry for Young People: Emily Dickinson - Frances Schoolmaker Bolin and Chi Chung (brief mention only)
126. The Sparrow - Mary Doria Russell
127. Poetry for Young People: Rudyard Kipling - Eileen Gillooly and Jim Sharpe (brief mention)
128. Belches, Burps and Farts - Oh, My! - Artie Bennett
129. A Survival Guide for Life - Bear Grylls
130. Tomorrow We Die - Shawn Grady
131. Puzzlehead - James Yang
132. I Am Neurotic (and so are you) - Lianna Kong
133. Imprisoned: The Betrayal of Japanese Americans During WWII - Martin W. Sandler
134. Monument 14 - Emmy Laybourne
135. Monument 14: Sky on Fire - Emmy Laybourne
136. Lock In - John Scalzi
137. Fallen Angels - Walter Dean Myers
138. Boxers - Gene Luen Yang
139. Saints - Gene Luen Yang
140. The Haunting of Hill House - Shirley Jackson
141. Me On the Floor, Bleeding - Jenny Jagerfeld

October

142. Not My Father's Son - Alan Cumming
143. Bringing Out the Dead - Joe Connelly
144. The Giver - Lois Lowry
145. Momosas - Paul Knorr
146. Ballistics - Billy Collins
147. Big Fish - Daniel Wallace
148. Doreen - Barbara Noble
149. Friend of My Youth - Alice Munro
150. Indian Boyhood - Charles A. Eastman

November

151. The Yeti Files #1: Meet the Bigfeet - Kevin Sherry
152. Deep Shelter - Oliver Harris
153. The Hobbit - J.R.R. Tolkien
154. The Hollow Man - Oliver Harris
155. The Guest Cat - Takashi Hiraide
156. A Cornish Affair - Liz Fenwick
157. The Evergreen Bride (novella) - Pam Hillman
158. The Cat in the Window and Other Stories of the Cats We Love, ed. by Callie Smith Grant
159. HitRecord TV Books (set of 9) to accompany Season 1 of HitRecord TV - J. Gordon-Levitt et al
160. Reservoir Cats - Penel Ashworth
161. Heart in the Right Place - Carolyn Jourdan

December

162. Dancing with Mistletoe (novella) - Leslie Wells
163. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up - Marie Kondo
164. Big Little Lies - Liane Moriarty
165. The Night Before Christmas - Clement C. Moore and Tom Browning
166. The Great Reindeer Rebellion - L. Trumbauer and J. Ho
167. A Pirate's Night Before Christmas - Philip Yates and Sebastia Serra
168. When, When, When Will It Be Christmas? - Cathy MacLennan
169. What Makes a Tornado Twist? - Mary Kay Carson
170. The Christmas Bus - Melody Carlson
171. The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt
172. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith
173. The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame


©2014 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery  or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.