The Last Sunday Salon of 2009

The Sunday Salon.com

With Christmas and all the fun the holidays have entailed, I have not had time to read, thus only two books have been reviewed this past week. With New Year’s approaching, until I begin The New Year’s Read-a-Thon at 5pm December 31st, I may not accomplish much reading as I am enjoying this time with my husband and 3 sons.

This past only two review went up:

I am hoping to read (but will be lucky to make it through the first novel):

  • To read Deadly Codes by JP O’Donnell (206 pages)
  • To begin Leading Lady by Heywood Gould (297 pages)
    Happy Reading and please feel free to leave comments or suggestions.

    All are welcome to join The Sunday Salon.

    Photobucket

I Used to Know That by Caroline Taggart: A Book Review

Title: I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot From School
Author: Caroline Taggart
Publisher: Reader’s Digest
Publication Date: March 5, 2009
Hardcover: 175 pages
ISBN: 9780762109951
Genre: Reference/Trivia

Photobucket

About the Book:

Facts from School You Forgot to Remember

Take an entertaining trip back to the classroom with I Used to Know That. Witty, engaging, and fun, this little book will appeal to the student in each of us. A one-of-a-kind collection of hundreds of facts learned long ago, it includes:

* Our Changing World: Test your knowledge of the latest geography.

* Prose and Poetry: From Shakespeare to diphthongs, English class will come alive again here.

* Math and Science: Quotients, phalanges, and protons . . . do these long-forgotten words take you back to high school days?

* History: As Santayana once said so well: “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”

My Review:

I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot In School by Caroline Taggart, is a delightfully witty and educational book filled with facts everyone should know but most likely have forgotten since their schools days. This small book is filled with intriguing facts interspersed with witty repertoire. The book is divided into seven sections; English, Literature, Math, Science, History, Geography, and General Studies. From Basic geometry to the countries and capitals of the world, this book holds information for everyone. Need a refresher on grammar or Einstein’s theory of relativity, have you forgotten the master composers or artists, look no further. Caroline Taggart’s book is certain to please the hardest to shop for and will provide hours of fun and educational information as well as fun trivia for all ages.

About the Author:
Caroline Taggart has been an editor of non-fiction books for nearly 30 years and has covered nearly every subject from natural history and business to gardening and astronomy. She has written several books and was the editor of Writer’s Market UK 2009.

I would live to thank FSB Media for supplying me with a copy of this book. My review was in no part influenced by my receiving a free review copy.

Photobucket

Thank You Secret Santa

I truly enjoyed being able to participate in The Neverending Shelf’s Secret Santa this year. I had a lot of fun choosing books for my person and I am thrilled with the books I received.

I am not certain who had me, so I do not know who to personally thank. Thank you Secret Santa for The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood and The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri. Both books will make wonderful additions to my library and I look forward to reading them.

Photobucket

I Wish You A Merry Christmas!

“I heard the bells on Christmas Day. Their old familiar carols play. And wild and sweet the words repeat. Of peace on earth goodwill to men.”
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Photobucket

Christmas Bonus: 12 Pearls of Christmas: Celebrate

What Really Matters
by Dawn Meehan

In the hustle and bustle and commercialism of Christmas, take time to remember the real reason why we celebrate – the birth of Christ, our Lord and Saviour. May you all have a blessed Christmas!

I had a VERY long day with the kids doing little but fighting. By the time we left for church, we were all short tempered, snapping at each other, and not at all in the Christmas spirit. Thankfully, once at church, we calmed down. Things were put in perspective for us. We sang Christmas songs and began to smile at one another again. The kids didn’t fight once while we were there. Well, they did use their battery operated candles as light sabers for a minute, but we’ll forget about that part.

I never sent out cards (sorry to all my family and friends). It just didn’t happen this year. I don’t think I ever completely finished my shopping, but it’s a little late now. Several items I ordered online have been back ordered. I just realized that the kids have eaten all the cookies I’ve made and there are none to put out for Santa now. I encouraged them to leave him a glass of wine instead. And I failed to read the Christmas story to the kids before they went to bed.

But you know what? None of that matters. It really doesn’t. Christmas is here! Christ is born! And He doesn’t care if we sent out Christmas cards. He doesn’t care if we ate all the cookies we baked. He doesn’t even care if we never got around to baking a single cookie at all! He loves us no matter how much we screw up.

Now that’s worth celebrating!

_____________________________

Dawn Meehan (aka mom2my6pack) grew up in Chicagoland where she began her writing career at the age of 5 with her widely praised, The Lucky Leprechaun, an epic tale of a leprechaun who is- yes, you guessed it, lucky.

Dawn has six children, basically because she didn’t want seven. She is the author of Because I Said So and spends her days blogging at BecauseISaidSo.com, changing diapers, cleaning pudding off her ceiling, tackling insurmountable piles of laundry, and explaining to her kids why they can’t have a pet squirrel or an indoor slip-n-slide.

__________________________________

A three strand pearl necklace will be given away on New Year’s Day. All you need to do to have a chance of winning is leave a comment here. Come back on New Year’s Day to see if you won!

12 Pearls of Christmas Series and contest sponsored by Pearl Girls®. For more information, please visit www.pearlgirls.info

Photobucket

Bonus Day:12 Pearls of Christmas: Slow Down, Pray & Give Thanks

All Decked Out For Christmas
by Maureen Lang

One of the reasons so many of us love the holiday season is that it’s just so…pretty! Twinkling lights, shiny ornaments, packages that glisten with bows and fancy wrapping. Our houses are trimmed with wreaths and glowing trees, and the neighborhood lights up the night with strands of icicles and glimmering reindeer.

Even we get decked out for the holidays! Chances are most of us will attend at least one party this season, and if we don’t usually don clothing or jewelry with a bit of sparkle, now’s the time to take a chance with something that reflects the holiday.

Smiles are another reason this season is such a popular one. They accompany that familiar greeting-Merry Christmas! Smiles go with the gifts we give and with the gifts we receive. Smiles go with the old Christmas carols and classic movies we watch every year.

The holiday season is a time when everything can seem amplified. But what if we’re all decked out on the outside, from the sparkling clothing to our best effort at a smile, and on the inside we’re anything but happy? If life isn’t what we expected it to be, the gap between reality and our happy, hopeful expectations seem wider when everyone around us is laughing through the season.

I know there are as many reasons to be unhappy as there are to be happy, and I wouldn’t begin to have the answer to make this season bearable for everyone. But I do know a few things that have worked for me:

Slow down. What? During the busiest time of the year? Yep. I know when I feel completely overwhelmed it’s because I’m pressuring myself to do too much. So I try to plan ahead, settle for less than perfection, do my best without driving myself and everyone around me crazy. Choose what’s really important and let go of the other things. And I’ve adopted my aunt’s favorite saying: “However it turns out, that’s how we like it.” Works wonders on attitude!

Pray. As my pastor reminded me this weekend from Psalm 34:18: the Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit. God may not deliver us from our troubles, but He promises to stay beside us-in fact, closer than when everything seems hunky-dory.

Find a moment to give thanks for what you do have (without looking around at those who have more).

This last point deserves a moment of reflection, and is something I’m still learning to do. I have a child severely handicapped by Fragile X Syndrome, a genetic form of mental retardation. For years I thought I’d accepted his condition. I obediently said to God, “thank you even for this,” since it taught me many things about adjusting to the life I’ve been given rather than the one I might have chosen.

But as my son gets older, I see new forms of acceptance making that feeling of gratitude more genuine. I think I’m finally letting go of some of the hopes and dreams I had for him, my oldest son. I can no longer imagine him any other way than the way he is, even though I’d be first in line if a cure is ever found.

I still think it’s a good thing to give thanks in all things, even if it begins out of obedience rather than tender gratitude for whatever thorn we live with. But realizing it’s okay to grow into that gratitude was a blessing to me.

Maybe some of the bruises on our spirit seem tender during the holiday season, a reminder that all the glitter on the outside might not light us up on the inside. My prayer is trust Psalm 34:18. Let’s lean on Him this season-He’s right here beside us!

______________________________


Maureen Lang grew up loving to tell stories, and God has blessed her immeasurably to be able to tell them to a wider audience these days. For the latest goings-on, please check her blog!

__________________________________

A three strand pearl necklace will be given away on New Year’s Day. All you need to do to have a chance of winning is leave a comment here. Come back on New Year’s Day to see if you won!

12 Pearls of Christmas Series and contest sponsored by Pearl Girls®. For more information, please visit www.pearlgirls.info

Photobucket

A Little Time Off…

Merry Christmas Eve!

I shall be away for a few days, to enjoy the Christmas festivities with my husband and sons. I will be back posting and reviewing books a few days after Christmas.

Photobucket

Day 12: 12 Pearls of Christmas: Wondrous Mystery

Magnificat
by Anna Joujan

Holy. Holy. Holy is the Lord. The familiar catch of breath. The sting in the eyes. And the tears begin to flow with the falling rain. Or do the tears fall with the flowing rain. What is it in these words that I whisper that wrenches at my heart so? Why does Mary’s prayer touch the core of my being, so many centuries after it was spoken?

I think it must be because I know that she was just a girl, just a human being, with a woman’s heart like my own. And so, when I hear her wondering words, I can feel with her the emotion she must have felt. To bear the son of God-what wondrous mystery, what glorious honour! And she was, like me, just a young woman-much younger, in fact, than I am now. And so, no matter how often I hear the story and read her words, it still has the power to bring abrupt and unsought tears.

What a gracious God, to work wonders with such frail and faulty creatures as us!

__________________________________________

Anna G. Joujan was born in South Dakota, as a Canadian citizen, and was raised in Zambia, the child of missionary teachers. Since her family’s move to the U.S., Anna spent her childhood and early adulthood traveling throughout the world thanks to various educational and work opportunities . . . France, China, Peru, and Jamaica being some of the stops in her journeys. Her undergraduate degree in French Literature led to a Masters in Information Sciences, and to work as a college and high school librarian, and a cross country coach. She has also returned to Zambia multiple times to teach for individual families and for local schools. All the while continuing pursuing her passions of writing, artwork, photography . . . and running to a fault. She blogs at Full of Grace.

__________________________________

A three strand pearl necklace will be given away on New Year’s Day. All you need to do to have a chance of winning is leave a comment here. Come back on New Year’s Day to see if you won!

12 Pearls of Christmas Series and contest sponsored by Pearl Girls®. For more information, please visit www.pearlgirls.info

Photobucket

Bûche de Noël – Wordful and Wordless Wednesday

Bûche de Noël


One of our Christmas traditions that happens to be delicious!

Mom Blogs

To view other Wordful Wednesday blogs head over to:

Photobucket

These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer: A Book Review

Title: These Old Shades
Author: Georgette Heyer
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Publication Date: October 1, 2009
Paperback: 384 pages
ISBN:9781402219474
Genre: Historical Romance

Photobucket

About the Book:

Set in the Georgian period, about 20 years before the Regency, These Old Shades is considered to be the book that launched Heyer’s career. It features two of Heyer’s most memorable characters: Justin Alastair, the Duke of Avon, and Leonie, whom he rescues from a life of ignomy and comes to love and marry.

The Duke is known for his coldness of manner, his remarkable omniscience, and his debauched lifestyle. Late one evening, he is accosted by a young person dressed in ragged boy’s clothing running away from a brutal rustic guardian. The Duke buys “Leon” and makes the child his page. “Leon” is in fact Leonie, and she serves the Duke with deep devotion. When he uncovers the true story of her birth, he wreaks an unforgettable revenge on her sinister father in a chilling scene of public humiliation.

My review:

Georgette Heyer captivates the reader’s heart and mind in her brilliant historical novel, These Old Shades. Immediately the reader is whisked to the aristocratic societies of France and England and profoundly into the life of Justin Alastair, Duke of Avon. True many call him satanas, but can a foundling he purchases off an abusive brother on the streets one fateful evening turn the Duke’s heart forever changing his behaviour or further convince society of the Duke’s scandalous nickname. Heyer’s beautiful prose, diligent detail to descriptions and her uncanny ability to make characters spring to life make These old Shades not only a delightful read, but one the reader will recall fondly and want to re-read time and time again. I cannot praise this novel enough and yet fear of saying too much and giving away any of the novels many treasures. I was captivated by the story line from the beginning, delighted in the plot twists, enchanted by the budding romance, and teased by the chapter headings into reading far into the night. These Old Shades is indeed a must read and definitely one of the most splendid books I have read this year. I look forward to reading more of Georgette Heyer’s works. I cannot praise this book enough and would recommend it to anyone who is looking for a novel that will capture the reader and keep the reader engrossed for hours on end. My word of caution, make certain to clear one’s schedule before beginning this book as one will not likely want to put it down.

About the Author:

The late Georgette Heyer was a very private woman. Her historical novels have charmed and delighted millions of readers for decades, though she rarely reached out to the public to discuss her works or personal life. She was born in Wimbledon in August 1902, and her first novel, The Black Moth, published when she was 19, was an instant success.

Heyer published 56 books over the next 53 years, until her death from lung cancer in 1974. Her work included Regency novels, mysteries and historical fiction. Known also as the Queen of Regency romance, Heyer was legendary for her research, historical accuracy and her extraordinary plots and characterizations. Her last book, My Lord John, was published posthumously in 1975. She was married to George Ronald Rougier, a barrister, and they had one son, Richard.

I received a free copy of No Wind of Blame by Georgette Heyer from Sourceboks. Receiving a free copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned novel.

Photobucket