Books read for the first time are marked with a #
"Marion Howard or Trials and Triumphs" #
"Marion Howard or Trials and Triumphs" #
by May Ramsay
[Catholic fiction]
[Catholic fiction]
(free Google book)
"Love God And Do What You Please"
by St. Alphonsus Liguori
adapted by M. J. Huber
[spiritual reading]
a favorite of mine; thank God it wasn't one of the books
lost when I moved!
a favorite of mine; thank God it wasn't one of the books
lost when I moved!
{reserved for Sunday}
"1 Corinthians"
"2 Corinthians"
"Home for the Holidays" #
by Heather Vogel Frederick
[fiction]
[fiction]
{carried over from last week}
(Kindle book)
"First We Have Coffee
and then we talk"
by Margaret Jensen
[Christian (Protestant) nonfiction]
{carried over from last week}
"Beezus and Ramona"
"Henry and the Paper Route"
"Henry and the Clubhouse"
{carrying over into next week}
{carrying over into next week}
by Beverly Cleary
[children's fiction]
(openlibrary.org loans)
(it's just a coincidence that I'm reading
that last book at this time, but LOL!)
(it's just a coincidence that I'm reading
that last book at this time, but LOL!)
"Penina Levine is a Potato Pancake" #
by Rebecca O'Connell
[children's fiction, Judaica]
"grace notes"
by Dandi Daley Mackall
[children's/YA fiction, Christian (Protestant), Blog On! series)
(Google Book, replacing copy lost when I moved.)
"Betsy-Tacy"
by Maud Hart Lovelace
(children's fiction)
I started re-reading the Betsy-Tacy books (and the three Deep Valley books in which Betsy is NOT the main character) yesterday (Friday), on the anniversary of the day "Betsy" and "Tacy" became friends. I'm reading no more than ONE book a day; I finished Betsy-Tacy today, and will go on to Winona's Pony Cart tomorrow.
"Try Giving Yourself Away, Third Edition"
by David Dunn
[nonfiction]
(This is another dearly beloved book lost when I moved,
and now replaced. The edition I now have gives some interesting information about David Dunn!)
{carrying over into next week}
"The Books You Read"
by Charles E. Jones
[nonfiction]
(another lost book, recently replaced)
{carrying over into next week}
2 comments:
Beverly Cleary is one of the few authors my daughter and I both loved.
I love the way this review for "Ramona the Pest" begins:
"Ramona's going to school... who needs a review?"
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/beverly-cleary/ramona-the-pest/
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