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Book-Spotting #2

Mommy Life’s Barbara Curtis on Les Miserables(the book and the musical) by Victor Hugo. Yes. Yes. Yes. Preach it, Barbara!

The Anchoress recommends People I Have Loved, Known or Admired, a book of essays by Leo Rosten.

Kate asks about re-reading books. She’s reading Rereadings: Seventeen Writers Revisit Boks They Love–for the first time, I believe. Do you re-read books? Which ones? Go tell Kate all about it, or leave a note here.

The Royal Society of Literature (British) asked J.K. Rowling, Philip Pullman, and Andrew Motion (who’s he?) to each choose ten books that they thought children should have read before they left school. Kimbofo at Reading Matters has the rather interesting resulting list. I like Beatrix Potter and Maurice Sendak, but . . . . And why did Pullman choose I Samuel, chapter 17 (David and Goliath) out of the whole Bible?

Planning and Inspiring

Charles Dickens has a birthday this month (February 7th), and some of us are already reading A Tale of Two Cities for the British Literature class I’m teaching at co-op. I would like for the family to read Nicholas Nickleby aloud together in the evenings, but the teenage urchins aren’t being too cooperative about working some read aloud family time into their busy schedules. Any suggestions?

Oh, by the way, I want us to read Nicholas Nickleby because two of the aforementioned teenagers are performing in a play based on that book in May. It promises to be a long, complicated and enjoyable drama, but I thought it would be helpful if some of us knew the basic story before we saw the play. Does anyone else have what they think are wonderful educational ideas in which no one else in the family wants to participate? Do you compel participation? Do you give up? I told someone the other day that I don’t think I know how to be an inspirational teacher. I have lots of what I think are good ideas, but I’m not too good at getting everyone else “on board” so to speak.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 30th

Walter Savage Landor, b. 1775.

Ann Taylor, b. 1782.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, b. 1882.

Angela Margaret Thirkell, b. 1890. Read a short piece on Ms. Thirkell’s book, Private Enterprise or County Chronicle by the same author.

Barbara Tuchman, b. 1912.

Lloyd Alexander, b. 1924.

Dick Cheney, b. 1941.

Don’t-peek-at-the-links trivia questions for today:

What famous children’s song lyrics did Ann Taylor and her sister Jane write?

Who wrote the book A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous Fourteenth Century?

What fictional part of England forms the setting for Angela Thirkell’s 30+ novels?

What is the name of Lloyd Alexander’s Assistant Pig-Keeper?

Who said, “Four years ago, some said the world had grown calm, and many assumed that the United States was invulnerable to danger. That thought might have been comforting; it was also false. Like other generations of Americans, we soon discovered that history had great and unexpected duties in store for us.”?

Who said, “Be sincere; be brief; be seated.”?

Who said, “I warmed both hands before the fire of life; It sinks, and I am ready to depart.”?

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 28th

Sabine Baring-Gould, b. 1834. Victorian archaeologist, he had fifteen children and wrote the hymn “Onward Christian Soldiers”. More information on his eccentricities here.


Vera B. Williams, b. 1927, children’s author and illustrator. She wrote and illustrated two of my favorites, A Chair for My Mother and Two Days on a River in a Red Canoe. Her bio sounds as if she’s led a colorful life: she helped start a “community” (sounds like a commune) in the hills of North Carolina and a school based on the Summerhill model. Then she moved to Canada and lived on a houseboat for a while–where she wrote her first book. Oh, and she spent a month in the federal penitentiary in West Virginia after a “peaceful blockade of the Pentagon.” Well, anyway, the books are great and not really counter-cultural at all.

Lesson plan for teaching A Chair for My Mother.

The Children’s Blizzard by David Laskin

“Januray 12, 1888, began as an unseasonably warm morning aacross Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Minnesota, the weather so mild that children walked to school without coats and gloves. But that afternoon, without warning, the atmosphere suddenly, violently changed. One moment the air was calm; the next the sky exploded in a raging chaos of horizontal snow and hurricane-force winds. Temperatures plunged as an unprecedented cold front ripped through the center of the continent.
By Friday morning, January 13, some five hundred people lay dead on the drifted prairie, many of them children who had perished on their way home from country schools.”


The Children’s Blizzard was both fascinating and disturbing. I’ve never lived “up North.” Reading Little House on the Prairie books is the extent of my exposure to blizzards and the like. So reading about the horrible possibilities inherent in an American plains blizzard was eye-opening. Did you know:

that in a particularly bad snowstorm something can occur called St. Elmo’s fire or point discharge, manifested as sparks of static electricity rippling through the air that discharge into the nearest conductor? Human bodies make great conductors.

that what “windchill factor” really means is that the actual temperature, say 25 degrees, is not indicative of how fast you’ll freeze to death? “If the wind is blowing at 30 miles an hour, the exposed parts of your body are losing heat at the same rate that they would if the temperature were in fact 8 degrees.”

that some people just before they freeze to death throw off all their clothes and remove any wraps from their necks? It’s called “paradoxical undressing”.

that sometimes people who survive for hours in below freezing temperatures, die of a heaert attack when they are moved? The heart has gone into a kind of suspended animation and can’t stand the shock of movement and renewed circulation.

There’s lots more: chapters about weather and what causes a blizzard like that of January 12, 1888, chapters that explain the abilities and the limitations of weather forecasters in the late 1800’s, and stories. Laskin follows the stories of five families who suffered, some more and some less, in the terrible blizzard of 1888. Most of those he tells about were immigrant families recently moved here from Germany or Ukraine or Scandinavia. He also explains why these immigrant families, although they were used to cold and freezing temperatures, were completely unprepared for an American prairie blizzard.

One interesting contrast that Laskin touches on came to my mind early in my reading. How do you think people in 1888 reacted to a disaster of this magnitude?

“Today a “surprise” storm that killed over two hundred people would instigate a fierce outcry in the press, vigorous official handwringing, and a flood of reports by every government agency remotely involved, starting with the National Weather Service.”

Oh, yes, and this little observation was written pre-Katrina. I could add that the politicians would be clamoring to offer compensation to any who had suffered in the storm, and the Democrats would imply that the entire storm and its death toll were somehow George Bush’s fault. The newspapers would be investigating what went wrong, and sinister conspiracy theories would run rampant over the internet.

In 1888, however, people called the blizzard “an act of God,” not in the sense of blaming God, but in a sense of acceptance that bad things happen and that the weather is no respecter of persons. The journalists found heros and heroines to write about, people who survived or rescued others, and the newspapers collected funds to distribute to some of the survivors of the storm and to the families of those who died. Only one person left the Army Signal Corps (the government agency responsible at that time for forecasting the weather) in the storm’s aftermath, and that one man simply resigned and went back to his regular army job. For better or for worse, my, how times have changed.

All my friends up North should find this book to be riveting. I think this book would be excellent as the basis for a homeschool unit study combining history, geography, human physiology, and meteorology for those children who are old enough to handle the somewhat gory details. The lesson, of course: don’t be caught out on the prairie in a blizzard. I don’t expect to get caught in any snowstorms myself, but still as a piece of American history, I was engrossed by the story of the storm that became known as “The Schoolchildren’s Blizzard.”

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 27th

Lewis Carroll, b. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, 1832 at Cheshire, England. Now you know where the name for the Cheshire Cat came from. At least, I assume so.

My favorite Lewis Carroll poem: Jabberwocky

My favorite scene from Alice in Wonderland: The very mixed-up croquet game in which the players keep on chasing their hedgehog balls round the lawn.

My favorite Lewis Carroll quote:

“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less.”

“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”

“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master – that’s all.” Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll

Newbery Award, 2006

Newbery Medal 2006: Criss Cross by Lynne Rae Perkins. Sequel to Perkins’ debut novel All Alone in the Universe. This one is described in various places as “poetic”, “Zen-like”, “lyrical”, and “experimental”. With those kinds of descriptors it could either be very good or very bad.

Newbery Honor Books:

Whittington by Alan Armstrong. It’s about Dick Whittington (Lord Mayor of London) and about a boy named Ben who is dyslexic. Sounds appealing.

Hitler’s Youth: Growing Up in Hitler’s Shadow by Susan Campbell Bartoletti. Nonfiction. I’ve seen this book recommended here and there. If you’re interested in this subject, I’d suggest an old book, but a good one: Hansi, the Girl Who Left the Swastika by Maria Anne Hirschmann. It’s the true story of a member of the Hitler Youth who becomes disillusioned with the promises of Hitler and the Nazis, becomes a Christian and later immigrates with her family to the United States.

Princess Academy by Shannon Hale. This selection is the only one of this year’s Newbery books that I can say anything about, and not because I’ve read it. I haven’t read any of these. However, I did read Shannon Hale’s Goose Girl and liked it very much.

Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson. Also nonfiction(?). Woodson tells the history of the women of her family from slavery through today and also the history of her family’s “show way” quilts. HornBook says the book has a “patchwork motif.”

Here’s a list of all the Newbery Medalists since 1922.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 25th

Robert Burns, Scots poet, b. 1759.
Kate’s Book Blog on Burns’ Birthday
Semicolon: January 25, 2004
Rebecca celebrates with a whole slew of Robbie Burns posts from last year.

Somerset Maugham, b. 1874. “There are three rules for writing the novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are”

Virginia Woolf, b. 1882. Eldest Daughter on Virginia Woolf: “To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. This is a beautiful poetic exploration of the ephemerality of human relationships. You can have Joyce; give me Woolf for the highest example of the stream of consciousness technique. Because with her it’s not about the technique, it’s about the people.” I couldn’t say. Modern-day philistine that I am, I’ve never read Joyce or Woolf.

Edwin Newman, b. 1919. Longtime anchorman of NBC News, he also wrote the book Strictly Speaking about the use and misuse of the English language.

More Booklists

Mental Multivitamin gives her list of top ten must read books for high school students. In the same post, she defends the inclusion of Catcher in the Rye on the list. I never read it when I was a young adult. Would I appreciate it now? Also do you notice anything interesting about MMV’s revised list in comparison to College Board list she’s revising? Hint: Melissa at MMV says she had great success in teaching these works to students “from college lecture halls and writing centers to a juvenile detention facility for young men.” (Italics mine) I’m not criticizing Melissa’s list, just wondering about the implications.

Seasonal Soundings has a picture of her proposed reading list for 2006. And she ordered personalized bookplates featuring the photo. I have a “from the library of” stamp that I plan to use on all my books–someday. Do you mark your books with your name? Do you use bookplates, handwritten name, or a stamp–or something else? Do you write in your books?

Mrs. Happy Housewife lists all the great books she got at the library’s used book sale for only $25.00. I love library book sales!

Michael Hardt at Family Home School has set up a website for his kids to post a running list of what they’re reading. And he says your kids and mine can use it, too. I think I’ll check it out soon. By the way, I found the link to Mr. Hardt’s post at The Fourth Carnival of Homeschooling hosted by The Common Room this week.