Archive | May 2006

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

Jeanette’s nine year old grandson could teach us all a lesson —do all the good you can do. Via The Anchoress.

After reading this post, I’ve decided that here at Semicolon, we’re Semi-schooling. Go read to find out what that is and why I like the idea –other than the euphonious combination of the two semis.

I have learned whatever state I am in therewith to be content. Relevant Girl in France learns to find her refuge and her home in Jesus.

“I realized a long time ago that I was never going to be the Cookie-Baking Mom or the Sewing Mom or the Better Homes and Gardens Mom or the Ma Ingalls Mom: I figured the best I could do was try to be the Fun Mom.”Melissa In the Bonny Glen.
So what happens if I’m none of the above? I think I’m the Grouchy, Messy, Reader/Blogger Mom, but my Karate Kid still says I’m the best mom in the world—when he wants a cookie.

A Message from New Orleans

So, for those who are still living away, I want to say this. Come home as soon as you can. We will welcome you back. Drive through your city. It’s your home, make no mistake. You came back, you love this place, you have hurt in absentia, and now you’re going to hurt in person. You will shed some tears, and if I’m any judge, you will be depressed. It’s part of the price one pays for loving.

Joe McKeever, Director of Missions for Southern Baptists in New Orleans, has a blog. I’m finding it to be compelling reading: compelling me to think, to sympathize, sometimes to cry, to pray. He just writes about what’s going on in New Orleans, the rebuilding efforts, the continuing difficulties, the politics, the churches and their pastors, the work, the prayers. If you’re interested at all in reading about what God is doing in New Orleans these days, read Mr. McKeever’s blog.

Everywhere I go away from here, people come up to tell me they pray for us. Some say, “I’ve never met you, but I pray for you every day.” I am so touched and we are so honored, and I tell them so. But today, it finally occurred to me that this is the reason these Wednesday gatherings are so right. Christ is in this place and people are lifting us up.
We sincerely thank you. And we promise you this: when it’s all over, the miracle of the new New Orleans will be yours. I agree with Jeff Box. This is a great time to be ministering in this city. But the main reason is because of the lovely men and women of God who come to assist us. I’m 66 years old and started pastoring in 1962, and I have never had more fun, never shed more tears, never hurt more often or in a deeper way, and never prayed better than right now.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born May 4th

John Dunton, b. 1659. English bookseller, journalist and writer. He wrote an autobiography called Life and Errors of John Dunton. He was Samuel Wesley’s (father of John and Charles) brother-in-law, married to Susanna Wesley’s sister, Elizabeth.

Horace Mann, b.1796. Educator and author known as the Father of Public Education in the United States. “A house without books is like a room without windows. No man has a right to bring up his children without surrounding them with books, if he has the means to buy them.” I’m not so enamored of Mr. Mann, but he’s got the right idea about books.

William H. Prescott, also b.1796. Historian and author of History of the Conquest of Mexico. He “suffered from failing eyesight after a thrown crust of bread was temporarily lodged in his eye.” This bread-in-the-eye incident occurred while he was a student at Harvard. Moral: Stay away from Harvard, or bread.

Thomas Henry Huxley, b. 1825. He was an early supporter of Darwin and his theories of natural selection and evolution. His grandsons, Julian and Aldous, carried on the twin family traditions of writing and scientific endeavor.

Free Science Stuff

Spunky of Spunky Homeschool is giving away a Benz Microscope and Apologia Biology Set this week. Click Here to get the details. We use Apologia for science, and I can definitely recommend their elementary level and secondary level science programs.

The free download from Homeschool Estore this week is called Super Science Concoctions: 50 Mysterious Mixtures for Fabulous Fun (Bonus: you can use the title to teach alliteration). I am really enjoying storing up al this free stuff from the Homeschool Estore for use next year in school.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born May 3rd

Niccolo Machiavelli, b.1469, d.1527. In his most famous work, The Prince, he set down rules for a science of political power –how to gain power and how to stay in power no matter what means were necessary. Hence the word machiavellian meaning “being or acting in accordance with the principles of government analyzed in Machiavelli’s The Prince, in which political expediency is placed above morality and the use of craft and deceit to maintain the authority and carry out the policies of a ruler is described or more generally, characterized by subtle or unscrupulous cunning, deception, expediency, or dishonesty.”

What other adjectives can you think of that are derived from an author’s name? (Eponyms: “words derived from the name of a real, fictional, mythical or spurious character or person.”) I’m asking only for adjectival eponyms that derive from authors’ names.

Shakespearean, as in Shakespearean sonnet, or Petrarchan, named after the Italian who did Petrarchan sonnets instead, or even Spenserian sonnets, the third type after Edmund Spenser.

Freudian, as in a freudian slip.

Orwellian. “Of, relating to, or evocative of the works of George Orwell, especially the satirical novel 1984, which depicts a futuristic totalitarian state.” Are we living in an Orwellian age?

Darwinian, the Darwinian theory of evolution.

Socratic. Have you ever engaged in a Socratic dialog?

Dickensian. Can you think of any Dickensian characters outside of Dickens’ novels?

Kafkaesque. How about Kafkaesque moments?

If you can’t think of any more eponym that come from authors’ names, you can always make up your own:

Semicolonic: Of or pertaining to a pause for thought between two parts of related thoughts or ideas. Example: The semicolonic silence in the room was only momentary as Engineer Husband completed the theory that his erudite helpmeet had begun to elucidate.

Wasn’t that fun?

Summer Reading

Melissa Wiley In the Bonny Glen wrote about seasonal reading choices here. She asks the question, “How do the seasons affect your reading choices?”

Then later on in the post she says that Charlotte’s Web may be the best summer book ever. I agree that Charlotte’s Web is meant to be read in the summertime, and it may be the best. However, I thought I’d list a few other summer books; it may not be summer yet where you live, but it’s definitely headed that direction here in Houston. Karate Kid started swim team practice yesterday.

Picture Books
Roxaboxen by Alice McLarren. A group of children in Arizona or New Mexico, somewhere dry and desert-y, make a play town out of old woden crates, rocks, cacti and desert glass. The illustrations are by Barbara Cooney. This book remends me of the story Engineer Husband tells of making “towns” in the dirt in his backyard and then flooding them with the garden hose. Except I don’t think Roxaboxen ever suffered any floods.

Nothing To Do by Russell Hoban. I love this book. Unfortunately, it’s out of print. Walter Possum, a Frances-like character but related only by author, is bored and can find nothing to do. When he complains his father gives him a “magic stone” that will give him ideas if he will only rub it and think really hard and wait for the ideas to come. This one is just as good as the Frances books, and I wish I owned a copy.

The Moon Jumpers by Janice May Udry Illustrated by Maurice Sendak. Four children play together on a summer evening under the light of the moon.

The Summer Night and The Storm Book by Charlotte Zolotow One’s about a summertime walk at night, and the other’s about a summer thunderstorm. Both are beautiful and delightful, perfect for summer’s day or evening. Charlotte Zolotow wrote gentle, easy-to-digest stories about normal everyday occurrences. These make good bedtime stories, too.

Harry by the Sea by Gene Zion. Harry, a white dog with black spots, tries to find a way to cool off at the seashore.

For children and for reading aloud
The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy by Jeanne Birdsall. I wrote about our reading this book aloud here. Suffice it to say, we enjoyed this one very much, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the urchins picked it up and re-read it this summer.

Thimble Summer by Elizabeth Enright. Garnet finds a silver thimble, the summer on her family’s farm becomes a magical one in which fun and interesting things happen to Garnet and her family. This book reminds me of Charlotte’s Web in a way; I guess its because of the fair in which Garnet’s pig wins a prize. Gone-Away Lake by the same author is also a summer time book.

Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome. A group of children sail boats and camp and have adventures, the Swallows versus the Amazons. There’s a whole series of these books, and we haven’t read them all. However, this summer may be a good time to make a start on the list.

Young Adult Books:

The Moon By Night by Madeleine L’Engle. One really ought to read Meet the Austins before reading this one and Ring of Endless Light afterwards. But this one is the summer book. The Austin family goes on a cross-country camping trip, and Vicky, age 15, meets some interesting characters, including Zachary, a poor little rich boy who’s alternately fascinating and alarming.

Summer of My German Soldier by Bette Greene. A 12 year old Jewish girl from Arkansas meets a German prisoner of war and helps him to escape. As her family life deteriorates, her emotional involvement with her German friend grows. Rebecca of Bec’s Book Blog reviews Summer of My German Soldier.

Grown-up Books

Cold Sassy Tree by Olive Ann Burns. Maybe it’s just that Southern books feel like summer books. Summer is a a big part of the setting in lots of Southern fiction. It’s just so hot down here; the heat affects the brain and makes us think and act differently than we do in the winter or than they do Up North. I can’t remember whether it’s summer or spring, but Grandpa Rucker in Cold Sassy Tree goes a little bit crazy and runs off with a woman half his age way too soon after the death of his first wife. My pastor’s wife recommended this book to me a long time ago, and I am indebted to her for the enjoyment and lessons learned.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Of course, not all this book takes place during the summer, but it’s definitely a summer book. Atticus proves himself as a deadly shot during the dog days of August. The trial takes place in the summer in a hot, unair-conditioned courtroom. The children’s games and encounters with Boo Radley are mostly the result of a long summer with nothing to do but get into mischief. Oh, I wish I could read To Kill a Mockingbird again for the first time.

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Rich careless people while away a long hot summer playing at life without the energy or attention span to really focus on much of anything.

Madeleine L’Engle’s adult books: Certain Women or A Severed Wasp or, my favorite, The Love Letters, the story of a woman who is running away from a difficult marriage. She runs to Portugal, of all places, where she learns about love and responsibility and commitment from a 17th century Portuguese nun who broke her vows for the sake of a handsome French soldier. All of these books have a summer-y atmosphere.

So, what do you read in the summer? Does the season affect your reading choices?

I noticed that many of the books that felt like summer to me were set in the South. Are Southern novels particularly appropriate for summer because it’s almost always hot down here?

Are there movies that are especially suited for summertime viewing? Maybe that’s another post.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born May 2nd

Quiz Time:

Henry M. Robert, b. 1837. He was a general in the U.S. Army and served with the Army Corps of Engineers. After his retirement and after the devastating Galveston hurricane of 1900, Henry Robert led a group of engineers to design and construct the Galveston seawall upon which Galveston, Texas is still dependent for protection from tropical storms and hurricanes. What book did Mr. Robert write that he is most famous for?

Benjamin Spock, b. 1903. He was the eldest of six children. He attended Yale University and then medical school to become a pediatrician. What is the title of his famous book that sold initially for a mere twenty-five cents?

Ken Gjemre, b. 1921. Who is he, and why is he important to book-lovers in Texas, Illinois, Missouri, Arizona, California, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Wisconsin? (My sympathies to the rest of you.)

A book that changed the English-speaking world was published on May 2, 1611. What was the book?

Answers accepted in the comments. Prizes include a cheer and a virtual bouquet of May flowers.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born (or Celebrated) May 1st

Joseph Addison, b. 1672. “Books are the legacies that a great genius leaves to mankind, which are delivered down from generation to generation as presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn.”

Elizabeth Marie Pope, b. 1917. Author of the Newbery Honor book The Perilous Guard. I haven’t read this book since I was a kid of a girl, so I’m not sure how well I’d like it now. I might enjoy it very much IF the pagan, fairy elements are truly pagan and in opposition to Christianity instead of melded into some sort of vague benevolent spirituality. This book uses the legend/ballad of Tam Lin as a sort of of jumping-off place, according to reviews at Amazon. Interesting, because I read Tam Lin, a novel by Pamela Dean based on the same ballad, and I’m still not sure what I think about it. Dean’s novelization of Tam Lin is set on a modern day college campus that is “haunted” or maybe invaded by faery folk disguised as professors and students. The students themselves are rather pagan, with very little hint of even the vestiges of Christian thought to inform their decisions. And to add to the theme, I’m now reading I, Coriander by Sally Gardner, a YA book about a girl in the time of Cromwell whose mother came from fairy land and who is caught between that place outside of our world and the world of Cromwell’s London. All these faery/fairy tales with realistic human-size fairies are making me think about fairy tales and paganism and the relationship of pagan tales of evil and malicious beings to the freedom that’s found in Christ. Could today’s neo-paganism easily turn dark and savage (as those tales often are), and does contemporary Christianity have the insight and power to counter that darkness?

May 1 is also Mother Goose Day.
From last May 1st: My favorite nursery rhyme is one that Organizer Daughter altered when she was little:

Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With silver bells and taco shells,
And pretty maids all in a row.

The Mary in the rhyme was either Mary, Queen of Scots or Bloody Mary (Elizabeth I’s half-sister) or Mary Magdalene. And the silver bells and cockle shells are either decorations on a dress or instruments of torture. The pretty maids? Mary’s ladies in waiting or the guillotine. Take your pick. Admit it. Don’t you like our version better than the original? Taco shells are so harmless, and they have no hidden symbolic meaning as far as I know.

For more information on how to celebrate Mother Goose Day, go to the Mother Goose Society website.
For recipes, crafts and coloring pages, try mother goose.com, or go to this Nursery Rhyme page for more educational links.

Picture Book Preschool Book of the Week: Week 18

Flack, Marjorie. Angus Lost. Doubleday, 1932.

Angus is a little black Scottish terrier who is tired of the same old yard and the same old house and especially the same old fence keeping him from seeing the great wide world that he is so curious to explore. Like Curious George, Angus’s curiosity is his downfall. He goes out the gate when it is left open one day, and he gets lost in that big world. He meets another bigger dog, and a stranger, and cars, and even a bird with huge dark eyes, but finally he follows a familiar face home again to the same yard and the same house where he is safe again.

Psychologically comforting, this story is also just cute and satisfying. The illustrations alternate between black and white drawings, and the same kind of drawings with a bit of color added. Angus has a big adventure, for a little black dog, and he gets home safe and sound.

Ms. Flack wrote and illustrated two more books about Angus, Angus and the Cat and Angus and the Ducks. All three are worth acquiring for you and your preschooler to read over and over again. These are simple enough to read to a two or three year old, but should also hold the interest of four and five year olds. You may, however, have to explain some things, like the milkman and the funny old-fashioned cars, since this book was written back in the 1930’s. It holds up remarkably well.

Marjorie Flack also wrote The Story About Ping and Ask Mr. Bear, as well as many other picture books for children. Her book, Boats on the River, won a Caldecott Honor award for its illustrator, Jay Hyde Barnum.

Weston Woods has a video based on Angus Lost, and here is a study guide (pdf) with teaching activities that could be used with either the book or the movie.

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.