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T O P I C    R E V I E W
knittinchick Posted - Oct 18 2010 : 9:03:14 PM
Hi everyone! I really enjoyed reading about, well, what everyone is reading this week! So, this week I'm reading Chicks With Sticks (It's a Purl Thing), which is teen chicklit about this girl who becomes addicted to knitting after losing a family member. I'm also reading The Lucky One by Nicholas Sparks. I'm enjoying it so far. What about everyone else? What's on the bookshelf this week?
God's Blessings,
Megan aka Loretta Rae

At heart, I am both a sassy city girl and a down-home country gal.

The dictionary is the only place where success comes before work.
25   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
knittinchick Posted - Nov 09 2011 : 5:44:05 PM
Judy, you know it! School is challenging, but my English class allows me to read books I wouldn't otherwise!
God's and Farmgirl's Blessings,
Megan

At heart, I am both a sassy city girl and a down-home country gal.

The dictionary is the only place where success comes before work.
herblady55 Posted - Nov 08 2011 : 3:06:18 PM
Megan, Sweetie.....where have you been? So happy to see you on here! School must be hard this year,huh? Miss you!

Sister-chick# 905(Sept.14th 2009)
Judy
French-Hugs&Squeezles!
I am not contained between my hat and my boots! -Walt Whitman-
"Why couldn't I have been born Rich instead of So Good Looking?"
knittinchick Posted - Nov 08 2011 : 10:48:28 AM
I just finished reading Kate Chopin's The Awakening for school, and it was okay. Not the best, but it could've been worse. For fun I'm reading More Coffee with Nonna, which is really good so far!
God's and Farmgirl's Blessings,
Megan

At heart, I am both a sassy city girl and a down-home country gal.

The dictionary is the only place where success comes before work.
Tea Lady Posted - Nov 06 2011 : 05:06:21 AM
Judith - I think you will like the series by Robin Paige - I think the first book in the series is Death at Bishop Keep. And I LOVE the Darling Dahlias series. She's got another winner..

Lorraine
(aka Tea Lady)
Farmgirl #1819
www.birdsandteas.com
forgetmenot Posted - Nov 05 2011 : 5:31:07 PM
Have read all of China Bayles series so far. Have not started the Beatrix Potter Series. I'm looking for the Edwardian series. Silly me..I was not looking under Robin Paige. And, I am half way through Darling Dahlias-The Cucumber Tree. Fun books!

"Courage is not the absence of fear, but the belief that something is more important than fear." Ambrose Red Moon
Tea Lady Posted - Nov 05 2011 : 4:42:21 PM
I'm working my way through The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter by Susan Wittig Albert. The first book in the series is The Tale of Hill Top Farm. They chronicle Beatrix Potter's life in the early 1900s from the time she bought Hill Top Farm until she married Will Heelis in 1911 - a great blend of fact and fiction. This series would be great for young adults too - they are very light reads and incorporate the perspective of the animals in the area - and yet there's enough substance and detail to make it appealing to adults.

Susan Wittig Albert also writes the China Bayles series and she wrote a Victorian mystery series with her husband under the pen name of Robin Paige. AND she just started another series "The Darling Dahlias" sent in GA in the 1920s. She/they do a fabulous job of blending fact and fiction.

Lorraine
(aka Tea Lady)
Farmgirl #1819
www.birdsandteas.com
Simply Satisfied Posted - Nov 04 2011 : 08:51:00 AM
I can't seem to mustered one book at a time. Seems like depending on the moment I feel like a different book. Currently at Mary Jane Farm recommendations I am reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. This is a horrible book to read in the fall in Montana because it just makes me want to garden. I am currently trying lettuce near my window and sprouts trying to beat the cold. I am also reading Worms Eat My Garbage and Mr Darcy Takes a Wife. I love Jane Austen so we will see if mrs. Berdoll can make a good sequel toPride and Prejudice.

Emily
Farmgirl # 3591
forgetmenot Posted - Nov 04 2011 : 08:00:12 AM
Reading "Medicine of the Cherokee: The Way of Right Relationship" by J.T.Garrett and Michael Garrett. Excellent. Picked this up on the Cherokee Reservation in the Smokies. Also, reading "A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose" by Eckhart Tolle, a gift from my sister. Also, very good.

"Courage is not the absence of fear, but the belief that something is more important than fear." Ambrose Red Moon
ClaireSky Posted - Nov 03 2011 : 11:10:46 AM
I just bought the book "The Art of Racing in the Rain". As a big dog lover, my friend thought I would really enjoy this book.

Julie
Farmgirl Sister #399
West-Central WI Farmgirls

"Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful." Herman Cain
Pammy Posted - Nov 03 2011 : 09:52:18 AM
I read Winter Garden and really liked it. I have just finished South of Superior by Ellen Airgood, it takes place in the UP of Michigan, it was pretty good a bit predictable, the author's brother lives in our town. also read Just Take My Heart by Mary Higgins Clark it was ok. I have started House of Secrets by Tracie Peterson.
Pam
debbies journey Posted - Oct 30 2011 : 11:21:48 PM
I just finished the novel Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah. I think this is one of those heartbreaking
stories that I will remember for a very long time, like the Dollmaker and Angela's Ashes.
Debbie
textilelover Posted - Oct 28 2011 : 03:52:43 AM
I liked Caleb's Crossing but my all-time favorites by Geraldine Brooks are Year of Wonders and People of the Book. I'm reading Tolstoy and the Purple Chair: My Year of Magical Reading by a woman who reads a book a day and reviews it on a blog. It's her therapy after a beloved older sister dies of cancer. Dianne in the Hudson Valley

Sister #749

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." --Leondardo da Vinci
vmfein Posted - Oct 23 2011 : 4:52:28 PM
Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks for the book club that I belong too.

Farmgirl Sister #2619

http://www.etsy.com/shop/vmfein
forgetmenot Posted - Oct 22 2011 : 09:06:19 AM
We just returned from an accidental trip (long story) through Charleston and Savannah, GA. Took a quick drive through historic parts of cities and Bonaventure Cemetery. Purchased the book Midnight In The Garden of Good and Evil, by John Behrent for my B'day. Just finished reading it in 2 days. I kept referring back to the pictures we had taken and the tourist books of the historical areas. Felt I knew exactly where the story was being told. Very interesting.

"Courage is not the absence of fear, but the belief that something is more important than fear." Ambrose Red Moon
Aunt Jenny Posted - Oct 15 2011 : 2:57:23 PM
Just finished "The Last Letter" by Kathleen Shoop...LOVED it! and just started Union Quilters by Jennifer Chiviarinni (I bet I got THAT wrong!) latest Elm Creek quilt book in series.

Jenny in Utah
Proud Farmgirl sister #24
Inside me there is a skinny woman crying to get out...but I can usually shut her up with cookies
http://www.auntjennysworld.blogspot.com/ visit my little online shop at www.auntjenny.etsy.com
textilelover Posted - Oct 15 2011 : 05:07:23 AM
Michael Ondaatje wrote The English Patient too. The Cat's Table sounds good! Tell us how you like it. I finished Major Pettigrew's Last Stand and just loved it! Dianne in the Hudson Valley

Sister #749

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." --Leondardo da Vinci
J.F. Brown Posted - Oct 14 2011 : 11:17:44 PM
Just starting "The Cat's able" by Michael Ondaatje. We heard him read from it at Wordstock in Portland last weekend and it is so beautifully written. I pretty much get all my fiction reading material from the library, but I make an exception for his work, and buy it.
one_dog_per_acre Posted - Oct 12 2011 : 06:24:38 AM
I am about to crack open the Prayer of Jabez by Bruce Wilkinson. My good cousin recommended it.

Trish

Make cupcakes not war!
hsmommel Posted - Oct 06 2011 : 5:10:56 PM
I just blew right through (seriously, it took four hours) "Heaven is for Real" by Todd Burpo. Incredible!!

"What you do speaks so loudly I can't hear what you are saying." -- Benjamin Franklin
textilelover Posted - Oct 06 2011 : 3:32:58 PM
Reading Major Pettigrew's Last Stand and loving it so far! Dianne in the Hudson Valley

Sister #749

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." --Leondardo da Vinci
FarmDream Posted - Sep 25 2011 : 8:14:05 PM
I just started The Resolution for Women by Priscilla Shirer.

~FarmDream is Farmgirl Sister #3069

Live Today, Cherish Yesterday, Dream Tomorrow

http://naturaljulie.etsy.com
http://julie-rants.blogspot.com
herblady55 Posted - Sep 24 2011 : 10:26:18 AM
Like I said before, feel free to tell a bit about a book so that(I)can tell if it interests me!
Thank you-Thank you-Thank you Penny!

Sister-chick# 905(Sept.14th 2009)
Judy
French-Hugs&Squeezles!
I am not contained between my hat and my boots! -Walt Whitman-
"Why couldn't I have been born Rich instead of So Good Looking?"
Acelady02 Posted - Sep 23 2011 : 5:09:19 PM
Judy, I hope this explains THE SHACK...I really recommended...great book


"The Shack" is a one of a kind invitation to journey to the very heart of God. Through my tears and cheers, I have been indeed transformed by the tender mercy with which William Paul Young opened the veil that too often separated me from God and from myself. With every page, the complicated do's and don't that distort a relationship into a religion were washed away as I understood Father, Son and Holy Spirit for the first time in my life. --Patrick M. Roddy, ABC News Emmy Award winning producer


Mackenzie Allen Philips' youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. Four years later in the midst of his Great Sadness, Mack receives a suspicious note, apparently from God, inviting him back to that shack for a weekend. Against his better judgment he arrives at the shack on a wintry afternoon and walks back into his darkest nightmare. What he finds there will change Mack's world forever.

In a world where religion seems to grow increasingly irrelevant The Shack wrestles with the timeless question, "Where is God in a world so filled with unspeakable pain?" The answers Mack gets will astound you and perhaps transform you as much as it did him. You'll want everyone you know to read this book!

(((((Hugs All)))))Penny

Farmgirl Sister #3343

God gives Miracles to those who Believe, Courage to those with Faith, Hope to those who Dream, Love to those who Accept, & Forgiveness to those who Ask...
njaw09 Posted - Sep 23 2011 : 4:36:27 PM
Very excited...reading "The Liberty Book of Home Sewing".
herblady55 Posted - Sep 19 2011 : 10:33:23 AM
Penny, what's The Shack about...please!/?

Sister-chick# 905(Sept.14th 2009)
Judy
French-Hugs&Squeezles!
I am not contained between my hat and my boots! -Walt Whitman-
"Why couldn't I have been born Rich instead of So Good Looking?"

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