How my crazy kids do their first day of school picture. The fact that Twinkles has a pen in her hand and is about to draw on herself should've been a sign of things to come. |
Some of the following books are suggestions. Some are reflections. And some are cautionary tales. You can determine which books belong in which categories.
The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis :: The kids and I had just started The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe when we left Texas. We systematically read through the whole series, the kids picking their favorite characters as they went and adding lots of book references to our family lexicon of jokes. Finally, we blew threw The Last Battle in record time, the week before school started--thank you, Twinkle, for taking really excellent afternoon naps two days in a row. Hands down my favorite part of this whole experience? Seeing the kids' faces light up every time Aslan appeared in the story. May I model for them that same joy for Jesus, our real live Aslan.
Teaching from a Place of Rest by Sarah Mackenzie :: Earlier in the summer, I enjoyed Mackenzie's latest book The Read-Aloud Family. Then a new neighborhood/homeschool friend asked me if I'd be willing to "book club" through Teaching from a Place of Rest, and of course I said yes (our version of book clubbing--the only kind of clubbing I do--is walking around the block in the pitch black dark, talking as loudly as possible about our homeschooling perils in order to hopefully scare away the black bears. They should be scared by both the noise and the topic of conversation: if we can survive homeschooling, we can survive anything). I'm going slowly through the book, but it is giving me a lot of much needed encouragement as we tackle yet another year of home schooling, this time with four kids studying and one very attention hungry one year old doing her best to distract us. At this point, I would give it a highly recommend, but I promise to update the book blog if next chapter she suggests duct taping my kids to their chairs and playing Baby Einstein videos for them while I nap.
The kids and I have been on an audiobook kick since July. Honestly, I'm kind of mad that it took me so long to jump on the audiobook band wagon. The Man tried to tell me, but I was so convinced that it wouldn't work for us that I didn't listen. How wrong I was. How much crow I have eaten.
Here's the Man graciously reading to Twinkle instead of saying "I told you so." |
The Wizard of Oz by Frank L. Baum :: Our next pick was The Wizard of Oz, and honestly, I really think audiobooks are saving us from a sense of frustration regarding the commute time here. Coming from San Antonio, I thought that all the people who warned us about commute time in our small city here were just complaining unnecessarily. But the truth is: it takes forever to get anywhere here, and I still can't really figure out why. But at least we had Dorothy, Toto, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion to keep us company this month. We're watching the movie on Friday, and the kids are so excited, although I warned them that Dorothy's slippers are ruby red in the movie, not silver. As an insight into my children's souls though, yesterday I overheard the twins pretending to be the Wicked Witch of the West (Bee) and the winged monkeys (Bruiser--he is a whole pack of winged monkeys rolled into one).
The Little Man's solo chapter book reading is exploding right now too. Although I did bribe him to read something new the other day (one cannot continuously reread even Harry Potter and the Chronicles of Narnia without eventually having one's mind turn to mush). The promise of two chocolate chips introduced him to:
A Barrel of Laughs, A Vale of Tears by Jules Feiffer :: Roger makes people laugh, not by being funny but just by being. Everything in Roger's life is hilarious--except for the fact that no one around him can stop laughing. Littles also could not stop laughing. I counted introducing him to this book as my parenting win for the year. Now I can rest on my laurels until 2019.
Mr Lemoncello's Library Series by Chris Grabenstein :: One of the joys of loving children's literature and having actual children of your very own is getting to read children's books with impunity and then introduce the ones that you really like to the kids that you really like. I blew threw the Mr Lemoncello's Library series and have now gotten Littles sucked into them (when he comes up for air in between Redwall books). In fact, I even got the Man's super old kindle working so that Littles could read the ones our library doesn't have but Army MWR Library does. Thank you, online library of a different military branch for being awesome. And for letting me bum off you forever and ever. And ever.
The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place by Maryrose Wood :: Oh so quirky. Oh so fun. I'm three books in on this six book series and waiting for the sequels is killing me. I'm considering just buying all six of them for the kids to read (because they have managed to make learning fun as well as just being fun), but it bothers me that they don't come in a box set, which I realize is unbelievably petty. If you want to know what it would be like to be a fifteen year old prim, British governess to three children who were, presumably, raised by wolves, you too could enjoy these books. Personally, I'm enjoying them for all the wonderfully abstract sayings of Agatha Swanburne. This series is next on my list of books to bribe Littles to read.
Wonder by R. J. Palacio :: As for the other kids, they are reading a smattering of everything (we are still finishing up Noel Streatfield's Ballet Shoes) but our main enjoyment right now has been Palacio's Wonder. It's my second time reading it, but it's still making my heart so happy. Also, it's making it cry a little, but the kids just think I'm doing a really good job reading all the voices and don't get that I'm actually choked up.
Last but not least, a few words on board books (let us not forget Twinkle in all these Big People Books).
Where's Spot? by Eric Hill :: Seriously, why is this book even a thing? I get that it's super fun to open all the little flaps (or, in Bruiser's case, to rip off all the little flaps with impunity--Twinkle's copy was a post-twin gift), but why do we feel it necessary to solidify in our one year old's vocabulary the word, "No"? Couldn't Eric Hill have worked in a different word? Twinkle already knows how to express her "no"s perfectly well without his help. Thanks, but no thanks, Eric Hill.
Goodnight, Moon by Margaret Wise Brown :: Does it bother anyone else that the bowl full of mush is just going to sit there all night, not getting eaten, completely wasted, and congealing to the bowl? It will be a concrete block of mush by morning. Good luck cleaning that out. I have to know: does this bother anyone else? Anyone?!
At any rate, these are just a few of our latest reads because books are happiness, and happiness should be shared. Consider this my "Just Because I Love You" book blog. Because I do. Also, I realize that the littlest Friz was unfairly represented in this blog, but it was not purposeful. She's just the only one who tolerates photo shoots right now. It's not because she's cuter than the rest of them or I love her more. In fact, she was neither cuter nor more lovable when she opened a new box of raisins this morning while I was in the middle of the twins' reading lesson and dumped half of them onto the carpet which badly needed to be vacuumed thereby covering aforementioned raisins with a thick coating of pet fur. She also wasn't cute nor terribly lovable when she dumped water in the play dough that I was using to keep the twins happy so I could finish Spanish with the Boys. But you know, that's neither here nor there. Books are happy! That's the take away. Happy Wednesday-almost-Thursday!
1 comment:
Lots of good books here. Glad you were able to bribe Smig to read A Barrel of Laughter A Vale of Tears. Classic.
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