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Reading Lists

What did you read this past year? What were your favorites? What did you try to read but couldn’t quite get into? Which books made a real impression on you? What was overrated? What did you waste time reading? What do you recommend?

What do you plan to read in 2006? Why?

Post a link in the comments to your own reading list for 2005–or your reading plan for 2006, and I’ll link to it here.

Writing and Living lists the books she read and the ones she planned to read in 2005: 31 books read in 2005 and a year of Dickens coming up for 2006.

Melissa of the Bonny Glen plans to read Dickens, Chesterton, and a few other books. Did you know that Chesterton wrote a biography of Dickens?

Todd is reading Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion and blogging about it.

Mental Multivitamin’s Year in Review, including a list of her ten favorite reading experiences in 2005 (scroll down).

Laura in a strange land posts her edition of THE LIST. She’s going to read Dorothy Sayers and Louisa May Alcott among others–two of my favorites.

Stefanie at So Many Books read 55 of them this year, and she lists the five best ones. C.S. Lewis’s Till We Have Faces is at the top of the list. Yes! I love that book.

Fimble Fowl’s organized and ambitious list—from the bathroom floor??

Susan(Pages Turned) has her lists for 2004 and 2005 of books read in the sidebar. She’s read some of the books I plan to read: The March, Canticle for Leibowitz, Never Let Me Go. Maybe that’s where I found them, or maybe I should check them out at her place before I commit myself.

Tim Hutchison, missionary doctor in Nairobi, has read some good stuff, including a lot of Patrick O’Brian. (Master and Commander and all that nautical jazz). Who’s Neal Stephenson, and what kind of stuff does he write?

Kathryn Judson’s Book Recommendations from 2005. I added The Privateer by Josephine Tey to THE LIST because I like Josephine Tey’s Daughter of TIme very much.

A blatant display of Amanda’s lit-geekery. Her words, not mine. I think it just looks like an interesting year of books.

Here’s Carrie Mommy Brain’s Reading List for 2006. And here’s a list of the books she read in 2005.

Sparrow at Intent implies that THE LIST is much too long and shows no restraint. What can I say? She’s right. Her list for 2006, on the other hand, is much more ladylike and sane: Jane Austen, Edith Schaeffer’s What Is a Family?, Till We Have Faces (second appearance in these links). Her list is eminently respectable, but she cheats. Wodehouse, Sayers, McCall Smith, and Ellis Peters don’t count!

Chicken Spaghetti posts her 2005 favorites in the sidebar.

John M. is reading Gibbon.

Sandra at Book World confesses that she buys more books than she reads and that she is not really reading the classics she thought she was reading. Then on New Year’s Eve she posts a plan for the new year: science, poetry, classics, Shakespeare. Buy fewer books.

Ella has a picture and commentary about her first ten books of the new year. She’s already started on War and Peace. And she’s planning on reading Thomas Hardy, Edith Wharton, Oscar WIlde, and Thoreau.

Anita just started her book blog: It’s All About the Book. She’s planning to read modern classics, mostly twentieth century stuff. I think she should start with LOTR if she hasn’t read it.

A Somewhat Dated and Highly Subjective Real Book Lover’s Guide to the Ten Best Books of 2005 by Doppelganger at 50 Books. She likes Thackeray and Wodehouse and Laura Ingalls Wilder.

Anne in Hawaii (Palm Tree Pundit) has this list of books read in 2005. Ooooh, she read Kristin Lavransdattar which I am definitely planning to get around to reading this year. I’ve been planning to read it for a long time.

At Half-Pint House, Megan read 40 books in 2005, Her goal was three books per month. I see that she read The Eyre Affair; maybe she can tell me what it was supposed to be about.

Craig and Doug blog and list books at Twenty Someone. Twenty Someone is the title of the book they co-authored, and they’re a couple of young Christian guys just out of their twenties. It looks as if they run a good blog.

CDR Salamander list seven books he read and enjoyed this past year. Nonfiction as befits a military guy.

Cinnamon at Nose in a Book posts My Reading: Year in Review. She included some Alcott, some Austen, and two-thirds of LOTR. Keep going; the ending is a tear-jerker.

Danielle at A Work in Progress is planning to read the Modern Library 100 best novels. She’s starting at the bottom of the list and working her way up, hoping to reach #80 by the end of 2006. #100 is The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington. I’ve never read it, but I have read Penrod. Does that count for anything?

Jamie from Canada has his list, mostly theology, N.T. Wright and others. No fiction!?

Amy at Perpetual Thursday read a variety of genres and subjects. In fact, I think hers is the most varied reading list I’ve seen yet.

Jonathan would like to read Total Truth and God Is the Gospel, among others. I’d like to finish those two, too. I wonder which one of us will do it.

Tym all the way over in Singapore read 19 books, including LOTR, The Lion the Witch , and the Wardrobe and several dense-sounding philosophy books.

Circle of Quiet Reading for 2006. I am honored; she says she got some of her ideas for reading material from me.

Kate’s Favorites from 2005 I disagree with her about Case Histories, but I would like to add a couple of her other favorites to THE LIST.

The lady at Seasonal Soundings has a plan for 2006–morning reading, educational reading, evening reading, even beach reading.

Roger of the A-Team group blog is starting a new blog, Never Enough Tea: Reflections on all Th.ings C.S. Lewis “My goal is to blog 2-3 times a week reflecting on Lewis, his writings, and writings about him and his writings. Though I�m reading chronologically, I�ll likely pull from stuff I�ve already read anyway. I�ll also be reading and reviewing books on Lewis and his works. From time to time I�ll branch out a bit and go into works that influenced Lewis- such as Boethius, Chesterton, MacDonald, etc.”

Kate at The Little Bookroom, who recommended several of the books on THE LIST, read some fine books last year,including Madeleine L’Engle’s Ring of Endless Light which is also one of my favorites. She also has some interesting plans for this year, books from The Modern Library list of 100 Best Novels of the Twentieth Century. I’d prefer the 19th century, but we’ll see how it goes for Kate.

Last but certainly not least, I’m going to end this list of lists with Eldest Daughter’s Top Ten of 2005. I must gloat a little; one of her top ten I recommended, and another I gave her as a Christmas gift. Am I good or what?

***(This is really fun–seeing what everyone else has read and is reading and is planning to read.I’m moving this post to the top of the blog for New Year’s Day one more time since I’ve added several more lists.)

Picture Book Preschool Book of the Week (2)


Last year, miraculously, it snowed in Houston on Christmas Eve. Most of my children had never seen real snow before this event. This year on Christmas morning we woke up four year old Z-baby.

“Z-baby, it’s Christmas! Wake Up!”
She ran to the window. It was a beautiful morning, sunny, seventy degrees outside.
“Where’s the snow?” asked Z. “It can’t be Christmas; there’s no snow.”
She hadn’t told us that she remembered the snow from last year and was expecting another Christmas miracle.

So this is the week that we experience snow vicariously through the picture books of those authors and illustrators who know what living through winter is like. Susan Jeffers is the illustrator of this book of Robert Frost’s Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening. I wish I could show you some of the pictures in this book here on the blog. It’s just beautiful. You’ll feel as if you’re riding in a sleigh through the snowy woods along with the poet and his farm horse. And when the narrator stops to play in the snow, you’ll want to join him.

I know this poem can be read on different levels, but it can just be a story of a man who stops in the woods to play for a while and “watch his woods fill up with snow” and who then realizes that he has many things to do and “miles to go” before evening. Children will enjoy the rhythm of the poem, the story and Jeffers’s illustrations. Adults will enjoy reading the picture book out loud and thinking about the poem and its meaning. Win/win . . . for winter.

This year on Mondays I’m planning to review some of the books listed in my book, Picture Book Preschool. Picture Book Preschool is a preschool/kindergarten curriculum which consists of a list of picture books to read aloud for each week of the year and a character trait, a memory verse, and activities, all tied to the theme for the week. You can purchase a downloadable version (pdf file) of Picture Book Preschool by Sherry Early at Biblioguides.

Mandatory Reading for Every Human Being on the Planet

Oprah’s sponsoring an essay contest:

On January 16, 2006, The Oprah Winfrey Show is doing something we’ve never done before. In addition to announcing my new book club selection—which I promise is mandatory reading for every human being on the planet—I will also announce Oprah’s National High School Essay Contest to accompany it.

The essay contest will be based on the book I reveal and will be open to high school students across America. Then, based on their essays, a panel of learned judges will select 50 high school students. Each finalist, along with one designated parent or guardian, will receive a trip to a special Oprah Show taping in late February.

To support this nationwide initiative, my website—Oprah.com—will offer comprehensive study materials for students, teachers and parents. This is an important book that I hope will be discussed in homes and schools across the country.

Now, I wonder, what book or books, other than the Bible (which I’m fairly sure will NOT be Oprah’s selection), would you consider “mandatory reading for every human being on the planet?” Think about that: peasants in China should read this book, Muslims and Christians should read it, young people and old people, men and women, techies, cowboys, race car drivers, mommies, everybody.

So, I have two questions.
What book would you suggest for mandatory reading for the entire planet?
In the prognostication category, what book title do you think Oprah will announce on January 16th?

HT: Camille at Book Moot, who always finds interesting stuff about books and libraries.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

Nature is an infinite sphere of which the center is everywhere and the circumference nowhere. Blaise Pascal

Sallie at TTL has some good ideas. Here she posts about “past goals I’ve successfully met that have had a tremendous positive impact on my life.” I’m going to try to incorporate some of these into my life.

Melissa Wiley, author and homeschool mom, Here in the Bonny Glen has become one of my favorite blogs since I discovered it about a month or two ago.

Amanda Witt writes about scars and allowing our children–and ourselves–to acquire them.

Spunky, on the other hand, writes about keeping and protecting our children’s hearts. She has some excellent reminders about how to keep our teenagers, especially boys, looking to parents for love and guidance.

Steve Rivkin at OUP Blog presents the Six Deadly Sins of Naming–good stuff to think about in naming blogs, businesses, or even children.

An interesting story about an adventurous autodidact. I don’t share her passions–feminism, yoga, vegetarianism–but her story of pursuing her goals, making her own way in the world, is inspiring. HT: Carnival of Education

I found this new-to-me blog while looking around this week: Wish Jar Journal. Here’s Keri’s list of good books for an artist.

HAPPY FRIDAY, EVERYONE!

Semicolon PSA

I get a lot of people coming to this blog through Google and other search engines in order to find out how to properly use the lowly semicolon. They don’t find much information since this is not a grammar and punctuation blog. However, I’ve been meaning for some time to post a simple guide to the use of the semicolon for all those inquiring minds who want to know. Since I couldn’t write anything better than Mr. Strunk has already written, here’s his entry on the use of the semicolon:

Do not join independent clauses by a comma.

If two or more clauses, grammatically complete and not joined by a conjunction, are to form a single compound sentence, the proper mark of punctuation is a semicolon.

Stevenson’s romances are entertaining; they are full of exciting adventures.
It is nearly half past five; we cannot reach town before dark.

It is of course equally correct to write the above as two sentences each, replacing the semicolons by periods.

Stevenson’s romances are entertaining. They are full of exciting adventures.
It is nearly half past five. We cannot reach town before dark.
f a conjunction is inserted, the proper mark is a comma (Rule 4).

Stevenson’s romances are entertaining, for they are full of exciting adventures.
It is nearly half past five, and we cannot reach town before dark.

Note that if the second clause is preceded by an adverb, such as accordingly, besides, so, then, therefore, or thus, and not by a conjunction, the semicolon is still required.

I had never been in the place before; so I had difficulty in finding my way about.

In general, however, it is best, in writing, to avoid using so in this manner; there is danger that the writer who uses it at all may use it too often. A simple correction, usually serviceable, is to omit the word so, and begin the first clause with as:

As I had never been in the place before, I had difficulty in finding my way about.

If the clauses are very short, and are alike in form, a comma is usually permissible:

Man proposes, God disposes.
The gate swung apart, the bridge fell, the portcullis was drawn up.

For more information on Elementary Rules of (English) Usage, William Strunk’s little book, Elements of Style is available online here.

I hope you found this public service announcement to be helpful.

Camus the Seeker?

Albert Camus, existentialist author of The Plague, The Stranger, and The Fall, died in a car accident on January 4, 1960 in Sens, Algeria.
I had not heard this story of Camus’s conversations with Methodist minister Howard Mumma until we read about it today in our new book, One Year Book of Christian History by Michael and Sharon Rusten.

According to Camus:

We have a right to think that truth with a capital letter is relative. But facts are facts. And whoever says that the sky is blue when it is gray is prostituting words and preparing the way for tyranny.

The night on Golgotha is so important in the history of man only because, in its shadow, the divinity abandoned its traditional privileges and drank to the last drop, despair included, the agony of death. This is the explanation of the Lama sabactani and the heartrending doubt of Christ in agony. The agony would have been mild if it had been alleviated by hopes of eternity. For God to be a man, he must despair.

The absurd is the essential concept and the first truth.

Beauty is unbearable, drives us to despair, offering us for a minute the glimpse of an eternity that we should like to stretch out over the whole of time.

He does seem to have struggled, alternating between hope and despair. Maybe he finally found hope.

It’s Not Racism to Want to Live in a Liberal Democratic Republic

Mark Steyn writes:

The refined antennae of Western liberals mean that whenever one raises the question of whether there will be any Italians living in the geographical zone marked as Italy a generation or three hence, they cry, “Racism!” To fret about what proportion of the population is “white” is grotesque and inappropriate. But it’s not about race, it’s about culture. If 100% of your population believes in liberal pluralist democracy, it doesn’t matter whether 70% of them are “white” or only 5% are. But if one part of your population believes in liberal pluralist democracy and the other doesn’t, then it becomes a matter of great importance whether the part that does is 90% of the population or only 60%, 50%, 45%.

This quote is only a a few sentences from a much longer piece in which Steyn comments on the collapse of birthrates in Western countries and impending death of Western civilization. If you think he’s exaggerating, read his column. Babies are our most valuable natural resource.

Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horwitz

The short summary of this book sounds like the beginning of a bad joke:

What do you get get when you cross a Pulitzer-prize winning Jewish journalist from Connecticut with a bunch of hardcore Virginia Confederate reenactors?

You get a lot of weirdness, to start with. (Quote from the front of the book: “Southerners are very strange about that war.”–Shelby Foote) I kept shaking my head while reading this book and muttering, “He’s exaggerating. Nobody’s that obsessed.” Do you believe that there are people who spend all their weekends reenacting the battles of the Civil War? That some of the guys obsess about their weight because they want to look like starving Confederate soldiers? That there are people who commemorate the anniversary of the hanging of Henry Wirz, commander of Andersonville prison, and celebrate him as a hero of the South? That the statue of Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue in Richmond is sixty-one feet high? That this quote from the book is for real?

. . . their passion for the War had crowded out everything else, including church.
“We were raised Methodists,” Sue said. “But we converted to the Confederacy. There wasn’t time for both.”
“War is hell,” Ed deadpanned. “And it just might send us there.”
But Sue didn’t worry about the afterlife. In fact she looked forward to it. “The neatest thing about living is that I can die and finally track down all those people I couldn’t find in the records.” She pointed at the ceiling and then at the floor. “Either way, it’ll be heaven just to get that information.”

I’ve lived in the South(west) all my life, and I haven’t met any of these people–although I do believe that the Civil War is still being fought, still at issue in many people’s minds and hearts. I have heard relatives correct others when someone called the War “the Civil War.” It’s the “War Between the States” or, more radically, “The War of Northern Aggression.” I have heard people talk about “those Yankees,” in fun, I hope. So I can believe that Tony Horowitz, in his tour through the Civl War states and battle sites found a subculture that is admirable (loyal and hospitable) in some ways and xenophobic (fearful and obsessive) in others. Horowitz himself is somewhat obsessed. He drew a huge mural of Pickett’s Charge on the wall of his attic as a child and spent hours poring through an old Civil War book with his father. The book is partly an attempt to understand his own affinity for all things Civil War, especially the Confederacy.

Another theme is the disappearance of many historic Civil War sites, overtaken by highways, office parks, and suburbs. Horowitz mourns the loss of these sites as he acknowledges its inevitability. He also gives readers a nostalgic picture of his visits to Antietam and Shiloh, battle fields that have been preserved and are cared for by the National Park Service.

Civil War historian and novelist Shelby Foote, who is quoted extensively in this book, says that the Civil War defined us. After reading Confederates in the Attic and thinking about its implications, I would say that War is still defining us. Will it ever be over?

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

Nature is an infinite sphere of which the center is everywhere and the circumference nowhere. Blaise Pascal

Roberto Rivera on Japan’s declining population.

And what do we lose when we don’t have children? Well, here’s a great story from Kathryn about a wild rabbit hunt going on in her backyard. I’ll bet those kinds of hunts are dying out in Japan.

Continuing in the same vein, George Grant writes about the Feast of the Holy Innocents (yesterday) in which Christians commemorate the slaughter of the children of Bethlehem and Judea by Herod the Great and also remember the many children who have died as a result of men’s greed and cruelty.

There seems to be a continuing theme here: to add to the chorus, here’s Dignan’s 75 Year Plan on Abortion, Adoption, and Compassion. He’s right that adoption in certain Christian evangelical circles seems to be a trend, a good trend. I would estimate that more than half of the families in my church have adopted children.

One of the better commentaries on The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe movie that I’ve read is Will Duquette’s review at The View from the Foothills. I agree that it was a good movie with a few “Hollywoodisms” thrown in. What else could one expect?

If you’re up for reading more, more, more about C.S. Lewis and his writing, David Mills has lots of links at Mere Comments.

Sallie’s Carnival of Beauty. Christian women bloggers pick their favorite posts from the year to share. Enjoy.

Homeschool Blog Award Winners. Some of my favorites are there (congratulations MMV), and maybe I’ll find some new favorites. Check it out.

DawnTreader picks out six important stories/influences to sum up 2005.: Terry Schiavo, US Supreme Court, biological design, C.S. Lewis, Katrina, and the Emergent church.

Tulip Girl suggests, instead of resolutions, a Mondo Beyondo List for the new year, “the list of all the wild and crazy dreams we have, the things that are so out there it is almost scary to write them down . . . the ideas that tug at your heart and are almost out of reach even of day dreams.. I don’t know if I’m brave enough to post a such a list on the internet. I want to see Tulip Girl’s list first–or yours.