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  • December 2009 Wrap Up

    Books Read:

    • Cracked Up to Be
    • I Used to Know That
    • Love You, Hate You, Miss You
    • The Source of Miracles
    • Elmer the Christmas Elf
    • Inside Out
    • A Christmas Carol: Special Edition
    • Da Cajn Critter

    Contests Hosted:
    • "Mr. Darcy's Dream"
    • Donate a Book Review
    • "The Man Who Loved Books Too Much"

    Guest Reviews:
    • "The Summer of Cotton Candy"
    • "Dragon's of Autumn Twilight"
    • "And Tango Makes Three"
    • "City of Bones"
    • "Hush Hush"
    Challenges Participating In:

    Awards:

    • Proximade Award
    • One Lovely Blog Award

    Movie Reviews:

    Book Shelf Pictures:

    • 12.11.09

    Random:

    • Privacy Policy
    • Review Policy

  • End of Fall Reading (Fall 2009 Edition)

    End of Fall Reading (Fall 2009 Edition)

    Well, I survived my last fall semester of my undergraduate career. I surprised myself by being able to maintain all of my school activities and keep this blog running. Most of my inspiration comes from the fact that as of now (yes right now, I have three applications out) potential employers will be reading this blog.

    Since August 15th, I have read and reviewed 18 books. And I have hosted TWENTY Guest Reviews that are posted as of right now. I'd like to give a big thanks to the bloggers who have made time out of their crazy schedules to be a Guest Reviewer — you have no idea what it means to me. Thank You!

    I have received the following awards: Zombies and Chickens Award, Who Loves You Baby, Let's Be Friends, Zombies and Chickens Award (2), Sharon's Rose Petal Award, BBAW Sheila Award, Who Loves You Baby (2), Proximade Award, and One Lovely Blog Award. Thank you for all of these great awards!

    I have hosted the following Giveaways: "Sugar Time, " "Thanksgiving at the Inn ", "Mr. Darcy's Dream, " and "The Man Who Loved Books Too Much. "

    I have acquired 36 followers. Thank you — it means the world to me!

    I created a Privacy Policy and a Review Policy. I also hosted my first Holiday Campaign for Guest Reviews. To date, I have 72 book reviews posted!

    In the past six months I have met so many great people and because of these amazing people I have read some amazing books! Thanks to you all!

    PS: Picture is of Pippin on Christmas Day — it's Santa Pippin

  • Award 12.28.09

    Award 12.28.09

    A month ago (I know, I'm late), Justine from A Bookful of Thoughts was nice enough to give me this great award! I apologize for only now getting to it (I didn't forget). I just got caught up in the Holiday Festivities! Thank you so much Justine for such an awesome award and for discovering my blog. Please stop by and visit Justine — go ahead, spread some book love.

    Here are the rules of the "One Lovely Blog Award": Accept the award, post it on your blog together with the name of the person who has granted the award, and his or her blog link. Pass the award to 10 other blogs that you’ve newly discovered. Remember to contact the bloggers to let them know they have been chosen for this award.

    The 10 blogs I've newly discovered:

    1. A Bookful of Thoughts:)
    2. The O.W.L.
    3. Red House Books
    4. The Book Bug
    5. That Teen Can Blog
    6. The Crooked Shelf
    7. A Passion for Books
    8. Poisoned Rationality
    9. Handle Like Hendrix
    10. The Book Cellar

  • Sunday Salon 12.13.09

    Sunday Salon 12.13.09
    The Sunday Salon.com

    Well, my computer is still down — STILL! It's extremely aggrivating.

    I somehow managed to survive last week. I'm almost done. Tomorrow begins finals week and I have it pretty easy, I have my final HP paper (that should be a lot easier than all the rest) due on Monday and my Senior Thesis Paper on Milton and HP due on Tuesday. Wednesday I leave to represent the University at the Board of Regents meetings in Madison, SD — so I'll be gone the rest of finals week!

    Sadly, due to pre-finals and what not, I didn't get around to reviewing anything (gasp!) I wont even lie to you, I haven't picked up "The Source of Miracles" since last week. Furthermore, I am no further along on my audiobook "Confessions of a Shopoholic" — but Christmas break is almost here! I did, however, get an award and I posted my first Project Blog post, featuring my Guest Reviewers post. I even posted a somewhat new bookshelf post.

    Jasmyn was this week's Guest Reviewer — donating her review of Dragon's of Autumn Twilight. Please share some book love and visit her at Jasmyn's Stuff.

    My new holiday campaign to collect Guest Reviews has been a great hit — we've aquired 40 reviews! Thanks to everyone who has donated! Campaign ends January 4th and is open to absolutely everyone! If you are interested in helping out — tomorrow would be a great day to start (HINT HINT!)

    I still have 31 amazing followers. Thank you!

    On going bit of fun: Register to win a Kindle!

    My "To Do" list for blog related things — not just reading:

    • Survive finals

    Happy Sunday everyone!

    What did you finish this week?

  • Award 12.7.09

    Award 12.7.09

    The Proximade Award was given to me by Sharon at Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews a couple weeks ago. Thank you, Sharon for this awesome Award!

    The Proximade Award is given to blogs that invests and believes in the Proximity — nearness in space, time and relationships. These blogs are exceedingly charming. These kind bloggers aim to find and be friends. They are not interested in prizes or self-aggrandizement! Our hope is that when the ribbons of these prizes are cut, even more friendships are propagated.

    Please give more attention to these writers! Deliver this award to eight bloggers who must choose eight more and include this clever-written text into the body of their award

    I choose for my eight bloggers to recognize...

    Sheila from One Person's Journey Through a World of Books

    Esme from Chocolate and Croissants

    Sandy from Pirate Penguin Reads

    Gina from Book Dragon's Lair

    Jasmyn from Jasmyn's Stuff

    Leslie from That Chick That Reads

    Scarlett from From the Heart

    and... of course, Sharon from Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews

    Please visit these blogs and share some book love!:) Thank you Sharon for such a great award!

  • November 2009 Wrap Up

    Books Read:

    • The Great Grammar Book — Marsha Sramek
    • Lighting Their Fires — Rafe Esquith
    • Prince Harming Syndrome — Karen Salmansohn
    • The Recipe Club — Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel
    • Thanksgiving at the Inn — Tim Whitney

    Contests Hosted:
    • "Thanksgiving at the Inn"
    • Donate a Book Review

    Guest Reviews:
    • Blood Promise — Richelle Mead
    • Viola in REEL Life — Adriana Trigiani
    • Bloodroot — Bill Loehfelm
    • Perfect Chemistry — Simone Elkeles

    Challenges Participating In:
    • Everything Austen Challenge
    Awards:

    Movie Reviews:

    Book Shelf Pictures:

    • 11.3.09

    Random:

    • Halloween Recap
    • Literary Snobs Beware

  • Rafe Esquith's Article

    If you read my review of Rafe Esquith's book, "Lighting Their Fires," you know that I absolutely loved his book. Esquith has reinspired me to be the best teacher that I can be. Thanks to Caitlin, from FSB Associates, I am able to post this article for you all to get a taste of Esquith's writing. I highly, HIGHLY, recommend that you purchase this book if you are a parent or an educator. Very few books I will recommend to buy, as I am a firm supporter of my library — but I just couldn't help but highlight the inside of this book.

    Five Tips to Help Your Child Develop Their Natural Gifts By Rafe Esquith,

    Author of Lighting Their Fires: Raising Extraordinary Children in a Mixed-up, Muddled-up, Shook-up World

    It'd be nice if there was a secret I could tell you about how to instantly make your kids more successful in school and life. But there is no magic pill, only that old stand-by, hard work. And the funny thing about that is, you can't force kids to work hard. I suppose you could try, but I've rarely seen anything useful come from kids whose parents had to hold their noses to the grindstone. If there's something close to a secret, perhaps it's this: Kids work hard when they want to work hard, and this happens only when are motivated to do so by some positive internal goal, and not by fear or because they are worried about disappointing others. They work hard because they value hard work. Instilling kids with values like this is the first step the long road to real success.

    But that doesn't mean there's nothing you can do to make this happen. Here are five ways to put your kids on the path to extraordinary:

    Toot Your Own Horn. Ask anyone who knows me and they'll tell you I sound like a broken record when it comes to spreading the gospel of music education. Put simply, every child should play an instrument, and parents should make whatever sacrifices are necessary to put a flute, trumpet, guitar, or tuba in their kid's hands. I don't have room here to list all the valuable skills that playing music can help develop, but one of the most important is the ability to listen to others: to make great music, a child must learn to pay attention to what others are playing. Doing so improves focus and teaches a valuable lesson about collaboration.

    Be the Example. We've probably all seen a parent yelling at her kids to be quiet and perhaps chuckled to ourselves about the mixed signals sent by this gesture. It seems like an easy lesson: for kids to understand why things are important, you have to be consistent. But this isn't just situational advice. Kids mirror parents and adults in far more depth than we often realize. They internalize our values by watching what we do, which is why it's essential that we live the way we want them to live. We can stress the importance of being on time until we're blue in the face, but if we're constantly late to pick them up from school, that's what they're going to remember.

    Great Books are Great for a Reason. Kids have two backpacks: the physical one they carry their books in, and the mental backpack where they store all the lessons and experiences they'll use to help make decisions. A paperback copy of To Kill a Mockingbird won't take up much room in the first one, but the wisdom contained within this book can be carried in the mental backpack for a lifetime. There are lessons here about choosing generosity over selfishness, making the right choice even when it's the difficult one, and standing up for your beliefs. I also recommend Thornton Wilder's fantastic play Our Town, and anything by Shakespeare (important note: kids are never too young for Shakespeare). A kid with a library card has the world at her fingertips, and when parents read with her, they can serve as map to help make sense of that world.

    Do Unto Others. Volunteering is a great way to build character and teach values while making an important contribution to the community. Working at a soup kitchen on Thanksgiving, visiting an elderly person at a retirement home on a regular basis, or planting trees and helping to beautify your town are all great ways to help kids learn about the importance of selflessness and humility. I know several families who volunteer together on a holiday schedule: on each day off, they pick a different activity and spend a few hours volunteering together. This way, parents get to be the example, reinforcing the positive message.

    Patience, My Dears. In today's on-demand world, kids are taught that anything worth having can be had instantly. This is an incredibly bad lesson, and parents must work to counteract this by instilling kids with patience and focus — the skills that will let them buckle down to achieve the truly great things that invariably take much time and effort. I've found that gardening is an excellent choice when it comes to teaching patience. Kids see that reaching their goal is a slow process, one that requires dedicated care and attention at every phase. And since they get to watch their garden grow as they tend to it, they learn that the real pleasure is in the process (though ripe tomatoes are certainly also a pleasure, and tasty!).

    You may have noticed that most of these "success" tips don't have anything to do with school. That's because making kids extraordinary people is the first step toward making them extraordinary students. All follows from values and character, and in working to instill these, you'll create kids that you — and the rest of the community and country — can be proud of.

    ©2009 Rafe Esquith, author of Lighting Their Fires: Raising Extraordinary Children in a Mixed-up, Muddled-up, Shook-up World Author Bio Rafe Esquith, author of Lighting Their Fires: Raising Extraordinary Children in a Mixed-up, Muddled-up, Shook-up World, has taught at Hobart Elementary School in Los Angeles for twenty-four years. He is the only teacher to have been awarded the president's National Medal of the Arts. His many other honors and awards include the American Teacher Award, Parents magazine's As You Grow Award, Oprah Winfrey's Use Your Life Award, and People magazine's Heroes Among Us Award. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Barbara Tong.

    For more information, please visit www.hobartshakespeareans.org

  • Thanksgiving Food and Friendship Article

    The authors of The Recipe Club have written a Thanksgiving article that, thanks to Caitlin from FSB Associates, I am able to post for your Thanksgiving holiday taste buds. I hope you are all gearing up for a wonder Thanksgiving Holiday!

    Tales of Thanksgiving Food and Friendship By Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel, Authors of The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    For some people, Thanksgiving evokes warm feelings triggered by memories of a close-knit family gathering, where relatives share traditions and a home-cooked meal.

    For others... it's the beginning of a holiday season stuffed with lunatic relatives, family dysfunction, bitter recriminations, and heartburn.

    We heard a wide range of Thanksgiving Tales this year while traveling around the country for our Recipe Clubs. Inspired by the plot and structure of our book, Recipe Clubs are storytelling and friendship circles in which women gather to share true-life food-related stories along with recipes. Recipe Clubs are not about cooking; they're about creating community and fostering friendship... they're about laughing and crying... they're about honoring our own lives and the lives of others. They show us how the simplest, sweetest, or funniest tales about food can turn into deep revelations about our lives.

    Just about everybody has at least one quintessential Thanksgiving food memory that perfectly captures the complicated feelings surrounding the holiday. Here are some of our favorites:

    GIVING THANKS One Recipe Club friend recalls the first time she ever cooked a Thanksgiving meal on her own. Her mother, who traditionally did the meal, was recovering from surgery. Her father was working. And her sister was flying in just in time for the meal, but not early enough to help cook.

    So our friend rose to the challenge, proclaiming that she would do the entire meal, on her own. No problem — until reality set in. She woke at dawn, shopped, chopped, and soon realized her oven was half the size it needed to be. By the time the turkey wanted basting the chestnut stuffing required baking — and the brussel sprouts were definitely not cleaning themselves!

    But things really went south when it came time prepare her grandmother's famous pumpkin pie. This was the pie recipe that had been handed down through generations. If it didn't come out perfectly, our friend knew she'd feel like a failure.

    Of course, nothing went right. The pie crust was too wet, then too dry. There was too much nutmeg, not enough ginger. With every crimp of the dough her head swam with the imagined voice of her southern grandmother: "A woman is judged not just by who she is, but by what she can bring to the table."

    When the pie came out of the oven, the crust was too brown, and there was a giant crack running down the middle of the filling. Our friend fought back tears, took a deep breath, and set the pie out to cool, knowing more clearly than ever that neither it — nor she — was, or would ever be, perfect.

    But when it came time for everyone to gather at the table, something shifted. Her parents and sister praised her hard work and loved the meal. And our friend realized she had somehow been carried on the wings of the generations of women who had cooked before her, without complaining, to serve a Thanksgiving meal to their family. She felt truly thankful for all the work that her mother, grandmother, aunts — indeed all the women she'd known through her life — had accomplished each holiday. Triumphant, connected, and happy, she understood that food cooked with love is its own kind of perfection.

    FINALIZING THE DIVORCE One Recipe Club friend recalled her first Thanksgiving after her divorce.

    Since carving the bird had always been her ex-husband's job, she delighted in finding a new, turkey-free recipe. She settled on an apricot-glazed ham, and went to work cooking a glaze of brown sugar, cloves, and apricot nectar (an ingredient that gave her extra pleasure knowing her ex-husband detested it.)

    When her grown children came for dinner, they were childishly upset not to have their usual 12-pound bird. But it was delicious, and in the end each one complimented the chef. On her way out, the youngest daughter told her mother, "maybe we all need to learn how to gracefully accept change."

    For this new divorcee, serving ham became a way of asserting her independence, showing her children there was life after marriage, and teaching the whole family to find new ways to be together.

    IT'S ALL RELATIVE The truth is, we don't pick our relatives. So if the Thanksgiving gathering of the clan is an annual emotional challenge, you aren't alone.

    In a recent Recipe Club circle of old friends and new acquaintances, we met a woman who admitted that for most of her life she dreaded Thanksgiving; all it evoked for her were memories of family fights. The contrast of what she knew Thanksgiving was "supposed" to be, versus what it was in her home, always made her feel ashamed and disappointed. And yet every November she felt compelled go home for a family Thanksgiving meal.

    But one year, that changed, when her parents and brother decided to have Thanksgiving away from home. They journeyed together to Nantucket, where they ate dinner at a seaside inn. The inn served a New England clam chowder, rich with cream and warm on a cold autumn night. And they discovered that a new location, with new foods, away from the house where memories were often more fiery than the jalepeno cornbread, turned out to be just what the family needed.

    Now, every year, back at home, they have a new tradition: serving New England Clam Chowder at their Thanksgiving feasts, each spoonful bringing back fond memories of a peaceful and loving family holiday.

    A FAMILY OF FRIENDS Finally, a little tale of food and friendship.

    A reader of our book told us that she had a choice this year. She could invite Uncle Tim and Aunt Zoe, the way she does every year, and spend the entire holiday worrying about whether or not the perpetually complaining couple were happy. She could include cousins Beth and Sean, knowing they would be competitive, putting down her choice of food, her way of cooking, her table setting. She could extend an invitation to her brother and dreaded sister-in-law, who would sit in silence the entire meal and pick at the food.

    Or... she could shake things up and do something entirely different: invite only friends. True friends. People she enjoyed being with. Who made her laugh. Who spoke truthfully. Who shared her passions for good books, good wine, and good music.

    She took the leap. She dumped the whiners, broke with tradition, irritated several family members — and never looked back. The moral: good food and good friends are the perfect combination. Sometimes it's a good idea to trim the guest list before you serve the bird with all its trimmings.

    ©2009 Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel, authors of The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    Author Bios for The Recipe Club: A Tale of Food and Friendship

    Andrea Israel is a producer/writer for ABC's Focus Earth. She was a producer/writer on Anderson Cooper 360, Dateline, and Good Morning America (which garnered her an Emmy Award). Her story In Donald's Eyes was recently optioned for a film. Ms. Israel is the author of Taking Tea. Her writing has appeared in many publications.

    Nancy Garfinkel is co-author of The Wine Lover's Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino(Chronicle Books, 2005). A creative strategist, design consultant, writer, and editor for magazine, corporate, and non-profit clients, she has won a host of graphic arts and editorial merit awards. She has written extensively about food and graphic arts.

    For more information please visit www.therecipeclubbook.com

  • Nonfiction Recommendations for HS Students — The Poll Is In!

    Nonfiction Recommendations for HS Students — The Poll Is In!

    A few weeks months ago I asked for your opinion: what books would you recommend to my students. I had a fantastic response. If my stats for that post are any indication, this question has been asked many times before and people, especially teachers, are still looking for those great recommendations. Well, after asking my mom (a school librarian) and the librarian at my school, I'm finally making public what we have put together. I'm pretty sure everybody can find something on this list; I know that nonfiction is an area I need to work on as well and as I'm expecting one nonfiction read from my students by the end of the semester I've set the same standard for myself.

    If you'd like to look at these lists in a Google Doc format: Recs from Readers and Recs from Teachers

    Here are the recommendations from other readers:
    Title of Book
    Diary of Anne Frank
    In the Garden of Beasts
    Manhunt
    Farewell to Manzanar
    Graphic Novels: Maus and Persepolis
    Half Broke Horses
    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
    The Meaning of Matthew: My Son's Murder in Laramie, and a World Transformed
    What is the What
    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
    Freakonomics
    Under the Black Flag
    Cleopatra: A Life
    All But My Life
    Freedom Riders
    Einstein's Refrigerator
    Brothers in Arms
    The Devil In The White City
    Little Princes
    360 Degrees Longitude
    Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

    You Had Me at Woof
    Decoded
    Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us
    Night
    Eat, Pray, Love
    I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee I am Scout: The Biography of Harper Lee
    The Glass Castle
    The Children's Blizzard
    Rocket Boys
    Stitches: A Memoir

    And here are the recommendations compiled by two fantastic school librarians:

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    © 2018 «The Best Reader»
  • October 2009 Wrap Up

    Books Read:

    • Everything Sucks — Hannah Friedman
    • The Lovely Bones — Alice Sebold
    • The First Thirty Seconds — Stephen Armstrong
    • A Duty to the Dead — Charles Todd

    Contests Hosted:
    • "Thanksgiving at the Inn" — CHECK IT OUT!
    • "Mr. Darcy's Diary"

    Guest Reviews:
    • Identical — Ellen Hopkins
    • Candor — Pam Bachorz
    • Dreaming Anastasia — Joy Preble
    • The Time it Snowed in Puerto Rico — Sarah McCoy

    Challenges Participating In:
    • Everything Austen Challenge
    Awards:
    • Who Loves You Baby
    • BBAW
    Movie Reviews:
    • Lost in Austen

  • Sunday Salon 11.1.09

    Sunday Salon 11.1.09
    The Sunday Salon.com

    Last week was a doozy, I didn't get anything accomplished that I had set out to do. But in my defense, on Monday I woke up with a 104.5 temperature, went to the doctor and tested positive for Influenza A and was suspected to have H1N1. So you can about imagine how fun my week was. I was so delirious I couldn't even spend those days at home with a book! But... now I'm back. I can't promise I'll get a whole lot accomplished this week either though. My professors were pretty lenient when it came to extensions — but now I have last week's homework and this week's homework to do before Monday. Oh boy.

    I am still hosting a contest — "Thanksgiving at the Inn" is the perfect book to come out of the Halloween season with. I loved it! AND I decided to extend the deadline until November 15th! I reviewed a GREAT book — really, it is phenomenal -" A Duty to the Dead." And to make the week complete, I received an award from Laura at Laura's Reviews.

    Sharon was also this week's Guest Reviewer — donating her review of The Time it Snowed in Puerto Rico. Please share some book love and visit her at Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews.

    I have decided to give up "Mr. Darcy's Dream." I just cannot force myself to finish it. I will think about doing another contest or perhaps a quick — someone send me a review and I'll give you the book — type of thing. Stay tuned this week.

    Still at 30 amazing followers.:)

    My goal for this week is to get 100% better and do my homework — sorry guys, this week is going to be a bit boring.

    (This if from last week — I'll try to do this) Also, each week I'm going to start making a "To Do" list for blog related things — not just reading. It's soon to be the time of year when I'll be sending the HTML address for Miss Remmers' Review out to prospective school districts and I want to make sure it is "spot on". if you have any ideas as to how to make this blog more awesome — please let me know.

    • Rewrite/hone my Guest Reviewer 's post.
    • Rewrite/hone my Mission post.
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "A Circle of Souls "
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "A Vengeful Spirit "
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "Audrey, Wait "
    Yesterday was Halloween, due to my sickness I had to cut back on my activities A LOT! But, I did make an appearance at the last college football game I will attend as a full time undergraduate college student (exciting!). I then spent the day in the library working on a Harry Potter paper and a Milton presentation on Book IV of Paradise Lost. For the evening, I curled up with my best friends in the dorms and watched Hocus Pocus and pigged out on candy (all while wearing my witch's cape — I might put a picture up later). Today, I finished off the Halloween season by undecorating my room (sad day) and going out and spending the last fifty dollars to my name on reduced priced halloween decorations. Next year I'll have a whole house to decorate — it's going to be intense!:)

    Don't forget about my awesome giveaway!

    Happy Sunday everyone!

    What did you finish this week?

  • Award 10.27.09

    Award 10.27.09

    This week I was lucky enough to receive an award from Laura at Laura's Reviews!

    Who Loves You Baby! Award is given to those bloggers whom you love and who have awarded you in the past! Pass it on!

    While I think that EVERYONE deserves this award, to save my own selfish time and effort, I'm only going to list the kind bloggers who have awarded me with... erm... awards since the last time I was given this award.:)

    1. Sheila over at One Person's Journey Through a World of Books
    2. Sharon from Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews
    3. La Coccinelle at The Ladybug Reads

    Thank you so much Laura! :)

  • Sunday Salon 10.25.09

    Sunday Salon 10.25.09
    The Sunday Salon.com

    Wow — I'm slowly but surely getting back on track to being a better blogger. Check out my last Sunday Salon.

    This week I put up my very first ever book trailer — I am extremely proud of it. I am hosting another contest — make sure to check it out, "Thanksgiving at the Inn" is the perfect book to come out of the Halloween season with. I loved it! I reviewed a GREAT book — really, it is phenomenal -"The First Thirty Seconds." And to make the week complete, I received an award from Sheila at One Person's Journey Through a World of Books.

    Speaking of Sheila, she was also this week's Guest Reviewer — donating her review of Dreaming Anastasia. Please share some book love and visit her at One Person's Journey Through a World of Books.

    I still have not touched "Mr. Darcy's Dream," I may have to give up on it. There's no point in reading a book that I don't find compelling or interesting. But I'll give it one more day. Last Sunday I started "A Duty to the Dead" and I finished it yesterday, GREAT book. I would have finished it earlier if I didn't have this whole school thing to devote myself too. This week I want to either finish or give up "Mr. Darcy's Dream" and start another book — TBA.

    Still at 30 amazing followers.:)

    This week I have a lot fun things planned! On Monday check back to see a book trailer that I created for an education class. I have never done anything like this before so it took me a lot of time and I'm very proud of it! On Tuesday look for a contest! Ohhh exciting!

    My goal for this week is to finish "A Duty to the Dead" and "Mr. Darcy's Dream".

    Also, each week I'm going to start making a "To Do" list for blog related things — not just reading. It's soon to be the time of year when I'll be sending the HTML address for Miss Remmers' Review out to prospective school districts and I want to make sure it is "spot on". if you have any ideas as to how to make this blog more awesome — please let me know.

    • Rewrite/hone my Guest Reviewer 's post.
    • Rewrite/hone my Mission post.
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "A Circle of Souls "
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "A Vengeful Spirit "
    • Proofread/Professionalize Review: "Audrey, Wait "
    If you read my In My Mailbox post yesterday, you know that I had a slight computer malfunction. One of the Techfellows (people who fix students computers on campus for free) called on Thursday to tell me that thus far he had deleted 836 viruses or malware from my poor computer (I know, right!). I very much miss my computer, but overall, I got lucky. I didn't have any crazy papers or assignments do this week. But I would still appreciate them getting it fixed and back to me as soon as possible. Said friend also told me that I have 27 GB of photos and 17GB of music on poor computer. He suggested I invest in an external harddrive so that should my poor computer crash and be unsavable — all is not lost. When I was freaking out about poor computer and whether or not it would be saved, I was most freaking out about all the years of pictures and music that I have stored — so I think that I WILL invest in an external harddrive. Anyone have any ideas? I'm fairly new to this concept. So please, keep in your prayers my poor computer.

    I found out this week that a new professor (the one teaching the Harry Potter course) is planning a Harry Potter trip to England for this Spring break. I really want to go, but I'll be student teaching.: ( So to make myself feel better I am determined to remind myself that if i do go abroad I don't want to only see Harry Potter things — I want to Shakespeare, Jane Austen, and Chaucer things (among others). I know — it's a sad substitution, still.

    This weekend I participated in the Haunted Forest as a guide. I walked over 24 miles and lost three pounds (also sad). But overall, I just love it. I love Halloween and I wish that I would have planned further ahead and had fun Halloween reviews — but I didn't have time this year. Hopefully next year I'll be more on the ball. What am I going to be for Halloween you ask. Oh, I have no idea. I really want to go as Little Red Riding Hood (here in the midwest we have to plan our costumes around the weather, and a hood would be nice next weekend). But I've yet to find the costume — not that I've gone out looking yet.

    Whew — this was a long post. I miss you all! Don't forget about my awesome giveaway!

    Happy Sunday everyone!

    What did you finish this week?

  • Award 10.23.09

    Sheila over at One Person's Journey Through a World of Books graciously awarded me with her BBAW Award for her favorite blogs that did not make the short list. Sheila thank you so much for thinking of me and I apologize it took me so long to post this.

    Sheila has been such a great friend and role model for me as a blogger. I've known her for a couple months and I feel privileged to call her a friend. Make sure to stop by and visit her — especially her Morning Meandering posts (they are my favorite!).

  • September 2009 Wrap Up

    Books Read:

    • My Name is Will — Jess Winfield
    • Aurora of the Northern Lights — Holly Hardin
    • Night of Flames — Douglas W. Jacobson
    • Frozen Tears — Mary Ann MacAfee

    Contests Hosted:
    • Banned Books Week — "I Read Banned Books" Pins

    Guest Reviews:
    • Eyes Like Stars — Lisa Mantchev
    • The Miles Between — Mary Pearson
    • Northern Lights — Philip Pullman
    • Chin Up, Honey — Curtiss Ann Matlock
    • Siberia — Ann Halam

    Challenges Participating In:
    • Everything Austen Challenge
    Awards:
    • Who Loves You Baby
    • Let's Be Friends
    • Zombies and Chickens Award
    • Sharon's Rose Petal Award

  • Sunday Salon 9.27.09

    Sunday Salon 9.27.09
    The Sunday Salon.com

    Wow — I ALMOST missed this post! But... I made it!

    This week I reviewed Frozen Tears. I finished "Everything Sucks" and began "Mr. Darcy's Dream". Yes, I still need to finish "Lost in Austen". This week I also put up two awards — the Zombie and Chicken Award and Sharon's Rose Petal award! Make sure to check them out!

    Still at 29 followers — Thank you!

    Yesterday was the beginning of Banned Books Week 2009. To celebrate I am offering 15 (now 10) "I Read Banned Books" buttons in exchange for reviews. Super simple — check it out!

    This week's Guest Review was "Chin Up, Honey " by Sharon, Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews. If you're interested in submitting a Guest Review — please find out how.

    My goal for this week is to finish "Lost in Austen", "Mr. Darcy's Dream", and start "A Duty to the Dead".

    Happy Sunday everyone!

    What did you finish this week?

  • Award 9.25.09

    Award 9.25.09

    So Sharon, from Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews, has done it again. No, not in the naughty sense! But in the "Nominated me-for-another-award" sense! And I love her for it! Sharon is such a great person — really! She goes above and beyond all things book related! So upbeat and outgoing — I feel like should nominate her for her own award! And you know what... I just might! Thank you so much Sharon — I feel so loved and important to be one of the first ones to have ever received YOUR first Blogging Award!

    Who do I visit most? Well, lets see! I'm not going to list everyone — simply because I sometimes feel as though I'm nominating the same people all the time. So I'm going to try to an expand my horizons — but it's not that I don't love you all. I do.:)

    Sharon — Seriously, like previously mentioned, you think her blog is awesome (and it is)... but the blog is just a fraction of how awesome this woman is. Thank you Sharon!

    Sarah — I love her taste in movies and books! Maybe because it's so similar to my own?

    Maggie Shayne — I love how powerful her voice is on her blog. It's inspiring!

  • Award 9.22.09

    Award 9.22.09

    Another Award! I'm so excited I'm on Cloud Nine! This is awesome!

    The blogger who receives this award believes in the Tao of the zombie chicken — excellence, grace and persistence in all situations, even in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. These amazing bloggers regularly produce content so remarkable that their readers would brave a raving pack of zombie chickens just to be able to read their inspiring words. As a recipient of this world-renowned award, you now have the task of passing it on to at least 5 other worthy bloggers. Do not risk the wrath of the zombie chickens by choosing unwisely or not choosing at all...

    Thanks to La Coccinelle at The Ladybug Reads!

  • Sunday Salon 9.20.09

    Sunday Salon 9.20.09
    The Sunday Salon.com

    Compared to last week... I have finally stepped up!:) Thank you all for remaining so patient with me — I'll definitely require this patience until May. I reviewed The Night of Flames. I finished "The Lovely Bones" and "Thanksgiving at the Inn" and have just started "Everything Sucks" and I'm currently an hour into "Lost in Austen". So I hope to get a lot accomplished tomorrow. AND — this week I received TWO awards! "Let's Be Friends" from Sharon at Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews and "Who Loves You Baby" from Gofita's Page s. What a great week for awards! Thank you!

    Still at 29 followers — Thank you!

    To celebrate Banned Books Week 2009 I am offering 15 (now 13) "I Read Banned Books" buttons in exchange for reviews. Super simple — check it out!

    This week's Guest Review was Northern Lights by Scarlett, From the Heart! If you're interested in submitting a Guest Review — please find out how.

    My goal for this week is to finish "Lost in Austen", "Everything Sucks", and start "A Duty to the Dead".

    This week I'll be taking off for a Texas Wedding on Thursday, but I'll try to get some posts scheduled so no one thinks I've given up on them!:) Thank you all so much! I miss our late night talks!

    Happy Sunday everyone!

    What did you finish this week?

  • Award 9.18.09

    Award 9.18.09

    Thanks to Sharon from Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews, I received another award! Wow — I am on fire. It feel so good not to be forgotten — granted I've had scheduled posts everyday, but I have over 1000 posts to read in Reader soon because of RA Training. Thank you so much Sharon for this award!

    I'm focusing on bloggers who are new to Miss Remmers' review — I really appreciate you! (All of you are awesome!)

    Sharry from Always Dreaming — This girl always has something awesome to say! I love reading her comments.
    Leslie from That Chick That Reads — Again, awesome commenter! Plus she's a fellow English Major!
    Jasmyn from Jasmyn's Stuff — A relatively new blogger who is so considerate and thoughtful.
    Myckyee from BookBound — A very thoughtful blogger who deserves some recognition.

Random for life: