Showing posts with label Bissisterhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bissisterhood. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

July Book Reviews: Summer Reading List 2016-- WOW!!!


July flew by here.  We had some visitors and took a crazy and quick trip back to California, but I did still manage to get a good amount of reading in, thanks to organizing and making reading and prayer top priorities in my days.  It also helped that we were in the car for looooong hours to CA.  I read a book and then some in those few days alone.  

A couple books on my list (Lizzy and Jane and The Nightingale) were books I had seen on a blogging friend's (Bobbi at Revolution of Love) lists, so I decided to check them out at our local library and see what I thought.  And I even formatted my review system similarly to hers, pulling from Amazon summaries and giving my own take as well.  Enjoy. 

by Katherine Reay

I adored this book.  A lovely and easy to read book.  One that was filled with food, family relationships, and real life struggles.  I laughed, I cried, and I ate food along with the characters.  It was like Food Network meets Jane Austen meets real life.  

Definitely grab your own bowl of fresh fruit and fresh whipped cream (or whatever food strikes your current fancy) and dive into this book. 


Amazon's summary:

Elizabeth left her family’s home in Seattle fifteen years ago to pursue her lifelong dream—chefing her own restaurant in New York City. Jane stayed behind to raise a family. Estranged since their mother’s death many years ago, the circumstances of their lives are about to bring them together once again.

Known for her absolute command of her culinary domain, Elizabeth’s gifts in the kitchen have begun to elude her. And patrons and reviewers are noticing. In need of some rest and an opportunity to recover her passion for cooking, Elizabeth jumps at the excuse to rush to her sister’s bedside when Jane is diagnosed with cancer. After all, Elizabeth did the same for their mother. Perhaps this time, it will make a difference.

As Elizabeth pours her renewed energy into her sister’s care and into her burgeoning interest in Nick, Jane’s handsome coworker, her life begins to evolve from the singular pursuit of her own dream into the beautiful world of family, food, literature, and love that was shattered when she and Jane lost their mother. Will she stay and become Lizzy to her sister’s Jane—and Elizabeth to Nick’s Mr. Darcy—or will she return to the life she has worked so hard to create?

by Jacqueline Winspear

I really enjoyed the first book in the Maisie Dobbs series, so I snagged up the next one on my Kindle from our local library.  It was just as fun and intriguing a read as the first and I loved the historical elements as well.  Time to grab the next one, hopefully for the latter part of August....

Amazon Summary:

Jacqueline Winspear’s marvelous debut, Maisie Dobbs, won her fans from around the world and raised her intuitive, intelligent, and resourceful heroine to the ranks of literature’s favorite sleuths. Birds of a Feather, its follow-up, finds psychologist and private investigator Maisie Dobbs on another dangerously intriguing adventure in London “between the wars.” It is the spring of 1930, and Maisie has been hired to find a runaway heiress. But what seems a simple case at the outset soon becomes increasingly complicated when three of the heiress’s old friends are found dead. Is there a connection between the woman’s mysterious disappearance and the murders? Who would want to kill three seemingly respectable young women? As Maisie investigates, she discovers that the answers lie in the unforgettable agony of the Great War.

by Kristin Hannah

I loved this book and cried my eyes out reading it.  There aren't many books I have cried so much through.  The characters were so relate-able, the historical elements were thoroughly interesting, the horror behind the history was devastating, and it just came together in a beautiful story that touched every emotion I have.  Love, family, war, separation, fear, guilt....  This book rocked my world and made me think differently and more deeply about life and the blessings I have.  

Amazon summary:

In love we find out who we want to be.

In war we find out who we are.

FRANCE, 1939

In the quiet village of Carriveau, Vianne Mauriac says goodbye to her husband, Antoine, as he heads for the Front. She doesn't believe that the Nazis will invade France … but invade they do, in droves of marching soldiers, in caravans of trucks and tanks, in planes that fill the skies and drop bombs upon the innocent. When a German captain requisitions Vianne's home, she and her daughter must live with the enemy or lose everything. Without food or money or hope, as danger escalates all around them, she is forced to make one impossible choice after another to keep her family alive.

Vianne's sister, Isabelle, is a rebellious eighteen-year-old girl, searching for purpose with all the reckless passion of youth. While thousands of Parisians march into the unknown terrors of war, she meets Gäetan, a partisan who believes the French can fight the Nazis from within France, and she falls in love as only the young can … completely. But when he betrays her, Isabelle joins the Resistance and never looks back, risking her life time and again to save others.

With courage, grace and powerful insight, bestselling author Kristin Hannah captures the epic panorama of WWII and illuminates an intimate part of history seldom seen: the women's war. The Nightingale tells the stories of two sisters, separated by years and experience, by ideals, passion and circumstance, each embarking on her own dangerous path toward survival, love, and freedom in German-occupied, war-torn France--a heartbreakingly beautiful novel that celebrates the resilience of the human spirit and the durability of women. It is a novel for everyone, a novel for a lifetime.



by Emily Cavins

This was my Saint biography choice for the month of July since St. Kateri's feast day is July 14 (my sister's birthday).  Our oldest, Kayla, loves St. Kateri, and has already read the Encounter the Saints series book about St. Kateri, which we were (and still are) reading aloud.  I know only a very basic story about St. Kateri, so I picked this up earlier in the year at a closing sale, so that I could learn more and better relate to my daughter's great love for this Saint.  I did really enjoy learning more about St. Kateri, and I was floored by the intensity of her devotion, love, and choice to suffer for and with Christ.  


Amazon summary:

Even before Kateri Tekakwitha’s canonization on October 21, 2012, many had been inspired by the story of the young Native American mystic who lived in the Mohawk Valley during the seventeenth century. With Emily Cavins's skill for weaving together historical facts and a compelling story, readers will discover Kateri’s path to sainthood against the backdrop of her life as a Native American in New York. These pages will reveal:
What led to Kateri’s desire to become a Christian
Her piety and self-denial in the face of persecution and illness
Her impact on the Catholic Mohawk community
The long road to sainthood, including two miracles attributed to Kateri
More than just a compelling story of Kateri’s short life, readers will also learn how to avail themselves of Kateri’s intercession, why Kateri has become known as the patron saint of the environment, and of her connection to St. Francis of Assisi.


by Maria Morera Johnson

The title might throw some (I know it would drive my own mother batty), but I LOVED this author's approach.  I loved her style of writing, her wit, and the real true to life element she weaved into a book about saints.  She weaved in her own experiences, those of other strong, amazing women, and a wonderful collection of women Saints to teach lessons and inspire women everywhere to live holy, grace-filled, empowered, and courageous lives of faith.  


Ave Maria Press summary:

In this edgy, honest, and often audacious book of Catholic spirituality, blogger and popular podcaster Maria Morera Johnson explores the qualities of twenty-four holy women who lived lives of virtue in unexpected and often difficult circumstances.

In My Badass Book of Saints: Courageous Women Who Showed Me How to Live, Johnson shares her experience as a first-generation Cuban-American, educator of at-risk college students, and caregiver for a husband with Lou Gehrig’s disease. Through humorous, empowering, and touching portraits of twenty-four spiritual mentors who inspired her, Johnson shows how their bravery, integrity, selflessness, perseverance, and hope helped her and can help others have courage to reach for a closer connection to God.

She presents remarkable holy women and saints—including the gun-toting Servant of God Sr. Blandina Segale, who tried to turn the heart of Billy the Kid; and Nazi resister Irena Sendler, who helped smuggle children out of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II—in a way that brings their vivid personalities to life and helps readers live out the challenges of their lives with virtue and conviction. The book includes a group discussion guide.


...and we're still working through a few books that we started in June and/or July, so August should bring lots of wonderful books and reviews as well.  

Did you read any books in July?  

Share away!

Friday, June 3, 2016

7 Quicktakes Friday- Any Part of May that I Didn't Cover in Another Post....

.....plus the these first few days of June......

1. Reading

We read a lot around here.  Kayla's reading chapter books.  Currently I am reading a St. Martin de Porres chapter book aloud to the girls.  Chris and I are reading The Imitation of Christ together.  Chris is reading a World War II novel by Jeff Shaara.  You've seen my book list so have an idea of what else I'm reading.  And we go to the library at least once a week to find new titles for the girls to devour.  


You better believe we are stoked to jump on board with the summer reading program at the library in a week or so!!



2.  Sophie Can Use a Spoon...

...mostly properly.  She looked like she could be ready the last couple weeks, so I let her try.  And she's pretty darn good at it.  Not much mess for mom to clean up.  WIN with that accidental perfect timing for "spoon training". 

                            
Yeah, yeah.  The video doesn't show her greatest work.  But you she's got form and she does actually get more on the spoon than this video shows.  She just doesn't perform as well under pressure, I guess.
 




3. Lilacs and Family Walks

I love lilacs.  We used to have wild bushes of them that grew in the empty lot behind our house growing up.  In addition, we had a bush or two that grew in our yard.  And I grew up in Spokane where lilacs are "the" thing.  There's a lilac parade and everything each year.  So....when I say I love lilacs, I mean it.  They bring back wonderful memories and their scent is delicious.  They grow well here in CO apparently, because lots of people have them.  I want a bush SO BAD, but we're renting, so I'm trying to be patient.  But I totally stop and unashamedly smell and admire any that I see on our evening family walks.  Give me all the lilacs!  Mmmmmm!


The girls picked up on my habits...


4. School is Out

Well technically according to the Charter School we go through, we have one more day (Monday), but Kayla has been done with most of her school books since the end of April/beginning of May, and we finished Math last week, so this week was our "fun week" of lots of extra hands-on experiments and projects and we're DONE!!  I officially graduated her from First Grade to Second Grade today.  To celebrate, we had a "field day" and went to a local park with a water feature and had a picnic afterwards.  Yay, Kayla!  We're proud of you, baby!
card games to promote math skills

Her second semester goal for school was to learn how to tie her shoes.  We only ever use shoes with shoelaces when we hike, so it hasn't been much of a priority, but she made it her goal, and she conquered it.  
Making a stethoscope to hear our heartbeats!

Elise is interested in school too (just in time to start Kindergarten in the fall) and is making leaps and bounds in copying her letters.  



5. Exploring Local Parks and Meeting New Friends

In the last few weeks, we have visited several different parks in our area and set up a few playdates.  I'm part of a Denver Catholic moms group as well as the Blessed Is She group where I've been able to connect with many other moms locally.  Can't wait to meet up with more, but here's a few pictures I snagged of the girls exploring some fun new parks.  

 

                         


 


6.  Sophie at Bat

One of Sophie's many favorite outdoor activities recently is "playing" Tee-ball.  It's cute. 


                           

 I snagged this for free on Craigslist to keep her a from running out in the street constantly while her sisters ride bikes.  She plays for awhile before she wants out so she can ride her little bike and then play tee ball and eventually play her little game of "Make Mom and Dad Chase Her Out into the Street".   I daresay I would have paid $15 or $20 to get the thing just to keep from having to constantly haul the preggo self into the street when she makes a run for it.  Oh, this age.  They are so mischievous.  



7. Flower/Herb Garden

I can't get my lilacs yet, but we did do some planting of a little flower and veggie and herb garden.  The girls were thrilled to help pick out flowers and veggies to grow in our little plots.  

 

Kayla wanted to buy some of those little fawn statues for the girls desperately.  Sorry, sweetie....they are cute, though.   There was also a doe that she wanted to get for me....

 

Elise really wanted to buy that moose for Chris.  Deer for all the girls, and a HUGE moose for Dad.  Lol.  

Friday, April 15, 2016

7 Quicktakes Friday- The Week Before the Move

I'm actually going to do 8 quicktakes because I am going to share about the last 8 days instead of just the past week.  It's been a whirlwind of fun, crazy, and busy, let me tell you.....Let's start with the fun laaaaast Thursday at the beginning of the "farewells". 

1. Fond farewells




For months now, this wonderful group of moms that I connected with through the Blessed Is She regional group online has met once a month at a park in central Orange County to visit while the kids get some exercise and play together.  For my final BIS park date, the gals all brought snacks to share and we had a little potluck and got a little sad about having to part company.  Boo on that part. Hurray for the amazing friends. 

The wonderful gals in my Mother's Ministry at church, made the girls each a fleece blanket to take with us to the cooler weather in Colorado.  5 blankets in all because they made one for little Baby #5 too.  So thoughtful. 

Additionally, at group on Wednesday, the gals threw me a big going away party and brought delicious food to eat so we could just hang out and recall many fun memories and try not to cry.  :)  These women are some of the most loving and generous in the world, I'm convinced.  They gifted us with two new soft ice chests filled with snacks for our road trip and fun activities and books for the girls.  We are blessed indeed.  
 

(sweet tulips which are one of my favorites from childhood days when they grew in our yard--my favorite part of spring. They didn't know that part, of course... )




We also had our last Young Families Ministry group this week.  It's crazy to think that this ministry that we helped begin isn't going to be part of our lives anymore.  But hopefully there will be something similar at our new parish!



2. Phil Keaggy concert


Phil Keaggy is an incredible guitarist that Chris has enjoyed listening to since his childhood.  At some point during his career, he had a conversion and now his concerts are mostly at church venues. He openly sings songs with Christian lyrics that he's written since his conversion.  Phil has an amazing voice (even at his age) and is an incredible guitar player for those who care to listen and know much about the instrument.  For a couple like us who both play the guitar (Chris is far my superior, but I do play some), this date was a real treat.  Time spent together listening to a truly talented and extremely humble, funny, down-to-earth musician.  

(Chris took the Phil Keaggy pics)

He played this song at the concert titled "Mercy."  As a Catholic in this Year of Mercy, having just consecrated myself to God's merciful love, I was loving every second of it.  

This is another great example of some Phil Keaggy- instrumental this time.  We listen to his instrumental albums on the computer as we drift off to sleep, and play it for the girls as well (often instead of the somewhat annoying lullaby cds you find sometimes for kids).  Fantastic stuff.  


3. Billy and Joy's Wedding


 

My apologies for the terrible pictures.  I was too far away at the actual ceremony to get anything good, and it was pretty dark by the time I thought to snap another during the cake cutting at the reception.  Chris was a groomsman, so it was a very full and somewhat logistically challenging day since it was an adults only wedding (except flower girls and ring bearers), but we had a fun time visiting with friends and celebrating the Sacrament of Marriage with the lovely couple.  





4.  Test Rating

Last month, I passed training to score a new elementary test through the Educational Testing Service after they discontinued the CA test I had previously been scoring.  A session began this month, so I grabbed about 4 shifts before our move, so that they don't think I'm a flake.  It's been a bit challenging wearing so many different hats this week, but God is sustaining us and Chris and I aren't at all new to juggling schedules and some pretty intense time management and multi-tasking.  

My favorite sentence from my shift yesterday was: 

"This class feels like a cup of hot cocoa and we're all the sweet-sticky marshmallows."



5. Packing Progress


We are pretty much done.  

I'm serious.  Moving day is Monday, and we have just about everything boxed up or packed up for the moving truck.   What's left is being packed up for our family road trip, so we are nearly done thanks to God's grace, the help of kind friends for an hour here and there, the miracle of all 4 kids cooperating to let me pack everyday, and intense organization and packing days around here.   Considering we literally hadn't started packing until a week ago (when we returned from our CO house hunting trip), we are thrilled and amazed that we are already so near to being done. 



6. Dinner with friends

We've been invited to/had dinner with friends a few nights this week amidst all the other busyness.  This proved to be a nice break from all the stress of packing and a great opportunity to spend a little time with people whom we won't see in awhile.  :(  This move has been a very emotional one.  We are leaving a large community of friends who have become like family and who have loved and supported our family in amazing ways these past 2+ years here in Southern California. 


7. Kayla's Final Ballet "Recital"

Kayla's teacher, Miss Marisa, was gracious enough to suggest a "mini recital" so that Kayla could showcase the routine she's been learning the last several weeks at ballet class.  She let her borrow a fancy tutu and Kayla and a little boy in her class performed a sweet dance number for our family and Paul and Agnes.  It was so special and sweet.  We will miss our wonderful ballet studio here and most especially Kayla's amazing teacher for the past two years, Miss Marisa.  
 

                          

 

 



*BONUS*
8. Baby's Ultrasound


Yesterday, Chris and I got to take a break and see our sweet little baby #5 squirming and bouncing around in my womb.  (S)he was likely asleep when we first began, but after all the prodding, woke up and was pretty excited to move around and show us just how healthy and active (s)he is.  I am 19 weeks along and will be exactly halfway next week as we move into our new place in Colorado.