Ancient Literature

Last year my family joined a local classical Christian homeschooling co-op that meets once a week for tutorials. I taught the literature class for 9th-12th graders, and it was a wonderful experience. I hope to post more about last year’s class soon. The co-op uses George Grant’s Gileskirk Humanities curriculum for grades 9-12, so the literature class … Read more

What I Read in 2006

I read 46 books in 2006 (not counting several that I started but didn’t finish). As always, this is an eclectic list (Hey, I’m the Eclectic Bibliophile, right?), including writing, editing, business, health, education, and classic and contemporary fiction. Persuasion by Dave Lakhani The Writing Life by Annie Dillard The Accidental Millionaire by Stephanie Frank What the … Read more

We have a new dog!

As of today, we’re the proud owners of Jodie, a beautiful Golden Retriever. My boys have been wanting a dog for a long time . . . but we have 6 cats (Bullseye, Sir Francis Drake, Bilbo, Frodo, Dixie, and Snowball) . . . so I’ve been putting it off. However, some friends are moving tomorrow … Read more

Just lock me up and throw away the key!

I know I have a serious book addiction. My friends and family know I have a serious book addiction. So I don’t know why it should surprise anyone when I behave like a bibliophile out of control.  (Is that redundant?) Just last week I had a huge book sale.  I cleared out forty (count them—40!) boxes of books … Read more

Creative Marketing for My Recent Book Sale

The shelves are full, the boxes stacked. My office space is out of whack. Boxes here, boxes there— Boxes of books are EVERYWHERE!! I cannot walk. I cannot file. Everywhere’s another pile. There’s no room for “just one more.” I cannot even see the floor. I do not like this messy room. It fills me … Read more

Spelling

My boys haven’t done much formal study of spelling, and I recently told them we need to start studying spelling.  My 11yo seemed very puzzled as he asked why. “You need to learn to spell,” I replied, not quite sure what wasn’t clear. Seemed pretty straightforward to me. “Why don’t we just read books and see … Read more

Freakonomics

I’ve just finished reading Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything. What a fascinating book! The book’s central idea is that “if morality represents how people would like the world to work, then economics shows how it actually does work.” Here are the fundamental ideas which the authors list as part of … Read more

To have written is satisfaction!

Nine years elapsed between the publication of The Great Gatsby and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s fourth novel, Tender Is the Night, which went through 3 plots and 17 separate drafts before publication. When Fitzgerald was nearly finished writing Tender Is the Night, he wrote to Maxwell Perkins, his editor at Charles Scribner’s Sons, that he would … Read more

Library Force Field

For a great laugh, hop over to Reading Mama’s blog, where she reveals the dark secret of the library force field that hinders our best efforts to return all of our library books on time: http://homeschoolblogger.com/readingmama/78724/ Mary Jo Tate

What will you stop doing in 2006?

One of the best business books I read last year was Good to Great by Jim Collins. It’s based on an impressive five-year study of companies that made the leap from good to great  . . . and comparable companies that failed to make the leap. Even though its focus is on corporations, most of … Read more