Winter Reading Challenge
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Trish of A Joyful Heart has thrown down the gauntlet to all fellow bibliophiles: How many books can you read between now and the beginning of Spring, March 20?
And, there's a $25 Amazon gift certificate to be awarded at random to a registered challenger! Head on over to her site to read the rules and register.
This is timely for me, because one of my Christmas presents from my beloved was a $200 Barnes and Noble gift card. Talk about speakin' my love language! After about a week and a half of pulling out the card just to caress it, kiss it and rub it against my cheek Chuck finally said, "Spend the thing already!"
So, I did. Mostly. I left just under $50 on the card to save for later.
Not all on my list are from my two-day B&N bender, and many of these I've started, but here are the books in, on and around my nightstand:
Fiction and Literature:
The Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan
The House of Mirth, Edith Wharton
The Portrait of a Lady, Henry James
Gilgamesh, translated by Stephen Mitchell
Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift
The Stranger, Albert Camus
The Trial, Kafka
Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert
Collection of five Charles Dickens novels
Possession, A. S. Byatt
The Tenth Circle, Jodi Picoult
S is for Silence, Sue Grafton (A gift from my boys.)
Non-Fiction: Writing
The Fiction Editor, The Novel, and The Novelist, Thomas McCormack
Easts, Shoots & Leaves, Lynn Truss
Chapter after Chapter, Heather Sellers
Page after Page, Heather Sellers
The Complete Handbook of Novel Writing, Meg Leder, Jack Heffron, and the editors of Writer's Digest
The Writers Way, Sara Maitland
Writing to Change the World, Mary Pipher
Writing Down the Bones, Natalie Goldberg
Non-Fiction: Religion
Timeless Writings of C.S. Lewis: The Pilgrim's Regress, Christian Reflections and God in the Dock
Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from it's Cultural Captivity, Nancy Pearcey
How Now Shall We Live? Chuck Colson and Nancy Pearcey
The One Year Life Verse Devotional, anthology compiled by Jay K. Payleitner (I got a signed copy from one of the contributors, Jinny Henson)
Non-Fiction: History
The History of the Ancient World, Susan Wise Bauer
The Art of War, Sun Tzu
The Histories, Herodotus
The Peloponnesian War, Thucydides
Non-Fiction: Other
The Well-Educated Mind, Susan Wise Bauer (from which my literature list was largely derived)
The Mislabeled Child, Brick Eide, M.D., M.A., and Fernette Eide, M.D. (on loan from Sprittibee )
The Ultimate Cheapskate's Road Map to True Riches: A practical (and fun) Guide to Enjoying Life More by Spending Less, Jeff Yeager (A buddy on the Writer's Digest forum and guest on NBC's Today Show!)
This is Good Friday
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For years I considered Easter to be one of those - meh, religious - holidays that could come or go and I wouldn't care either way.
Then, one day, I got it.
I got that God humbled himself and was born into this fallen world as the man Jesus. He lived our lives, suffered our sufferings, toiled as we do - only he did it without falling short of God's standards...he lived it perfectly. He taught others who God really is and how He desires to reconcile every man, woman and child back to Himself.
Good Friday.
Jesus allowed the very people who should have worshipped him to instead beat, torture and slay him in the most horrific way. He died, sufficiently paying the wage of sin for all mankind. He was sealed inside a tomb for three days then lifted himself from among the dead to prove that he is who he says he is - and will do whatever he says he will do. All who humbly seek Him will find Him and all who cling to Him are justified to spend forever with Him.
Amazing. Now that I get it...I can't get over it.
Go, meet with God this Good Friday and I pray you all a blessed Easter!
Barber in a Box
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When my husband quit his job to start his own company, we knew we’d have to find ways to tighten the budget.
"Hey, Cindy," Chuck said, eyeing the clearance table, "Look at this, hair clippers on sale. Why don't you cut the family’s hair to save a little money?"
"I don't know," I answered, "I've never cut hair." It was almost true, I did snip my little sister's curly locks when I was five. On the other hand, that was thirty-five years ago and I’d since gained proficiency with scissors.
"Okay," I agreed, “how hard can it be?”
I opened the box and scanned the enclosed brochure which promised I’d “style hair like a pro.” It was beautiful. The weight of the tool in the palm of my hand felt like a natural extension of my body. I popped the blade protector and ran my finger along the comb. I dreamed of people stopping me to ask who does our hair. "Oh, I do it myself," I'd smile and do that hand wave thing people do when feigning modesty.
Finally, the day arrived. "I need my hair cut,” Chuck said, handing me the box like it held the key to a new Porsche or a gift certificate for maid service.
I laid out the attachments and perused the instructions. “Position victim’s head at operator's eye level.”
“Victim?”
“No,” I joked, “I added that.”
Chuck was not at eye level, but I figured I could bend and squat. “Next, Comb hair to remove tangles and hold clipper in a relaxed, comfortable grip for best control.”
I switched the machine on and it hummed to life. Starting at the base of his neck, I carefully clipped around Chuck’s head.
As I continued, the gentle hum gave way to a greedy, gnawing sound and a thick shock of hair fell to the floor. “That didn't sound good," Chuck laughed.
It didn’t look so good, either. And I don’t know why I thought bending and squatting would work, I’ve never been good at gymnastics.
Once accustomed to his new look, Chuck suggested that I cut the boys’ hair. It took some bribing, but our youngest agreed to sit first.
It’s hard to clip the hair of a four year-old with the wiggles. I started to panic and lost my relaxed, comfortable grip. I made blind passes across his head, desperate for an even cut, but he kept shaking his head and finally slid his body off the chair. When he looked at me, I nearly cried. Gone were his wispy blond waves, replaced by what looked like the work of a pocket knife in the palsied hands of a drunk.
"Here, let me try," Chuck smiled and took the clippers from my hand. “There,” he announced after a few passes, “you look great!” He lied.
Our older son, who had been silently observing, piped up, "You look like a clown! I don't want my hair cut!"
“Please keep your comments to yourself,” Chuck admonished, “you know your brother is afraid of clowns.”
The following day, we took the boys to a real salon. The stylist glanced from father to son, but I caught the flash of pity.
“Dad hair cut, eh? We see it all the time,” she said and offered the guys lollipops.
I studied the grain on the hardwood floors.
The boys left the salon looking handsome again, and I vowed to leave our hair cutting to professionals and find another way to stretch the budget.
Like a garage sale. First item - one set of clippers.
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