Book discussions:

If you're reading, PLEASE
make sure you join the facebook group so you can chat with us:

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Chats are at 9pm EST the 1st Thursday of every month.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

The first 3 books of 2012:

Book Chats are always the 1st Thursday of the month!

December
State of Wonder by Ann Patchett
Book Chat: Jan. 5


January
Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult
Book Chat:  Feb. 2

February
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
Book Chat: March 1

March American Dervish by Ayad Akhtar (release date: Jan. 9)
Book Chat: April 5

March's Pick: American Dervish

http://www.amazon.com/American-Dervish-Novel-Ayad-Akhtar/dp/0316183318

This book will be released Jan. 9, 2012
Keep checking your library throughout January to get on the list right when it comes in!
 
Synopsis on AMAZON:
Hayat Shah is a young American in love for the first time. His normal life of school, baseball, and video games had previously been distinguished only by his Pakistani heritage and by the frequent chill between his parents, who fight over things he is too young to understand. Then Mina arrives, and everything changes.

Mina is Hayat's mother's oldest friend from Pakistan. She is independent, beautiful and intelligent, and arrives on the Shah's doorstep when her disastrous marriage in Pakistan disintegrates. Even Hayat's skeptical father can't deny the liveliness and happiness that accompanies Mina into their home. Her deep spirituality brings the family's Muslim faith to life in a way that resonates with Hayat as nothing has before. Studying the Quran by Mina's side and basking in the glow of her attention, he feels an entirely new purpose mingled with a growing infatuation for his teacher.

When Mina meets and begins dating a man, Hayat is confused by his feelings of betrayal. His growing passions, both spiritual and romantic, force him to question all that he has come to believe is true. Just as Mina finds happiness, Hayat is compelled to act -- with devastating consequences for all those he loves most.

American Dervish is a brilliantly written, nuanced, and emotionally forceful look inside the interplay of religion and modern life. Ayad Akhtar was raised in the Midwest himself, and through Hayat Shah he shows readers vividly the powerful forces at work on young men and women growing up Muslim in America. This is an intimate, personal first novel that will stay with readers long after they turn the last page.


When Mina meets and begins dating a man, Hayat is confused by his feelings of betrayal. His growing passions, both spiritual and romantic, force him to question all that he has come to believe is true. Just as Mina finds happiness, Hayat is compelled to act -- with devastating consequences for all those he loves most.

American Dervish is a brilliantly written, nuanced, and emotionally forceful look inside the interplay of religion and modern life. Ayad Akhtar was raised in the Midwest himself, and through Hayat Shah he shows readers vividly the powerful forces at work on young men and women growing up Muslim in America. This is an intimate, personal first novel that will stay with readers long after they turn the last page.

Friday, November 18, 2011

January Pick: Sing You Home

The Marriage Plot may be a longer wait than we thought!  So we are swapping:

Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult

Synopsis:
Every life has a soundtrack. All you have to do is listen.
Music has set the tone for most of Zoe Baxter’s life. There’s the melody that reminds her of the summer she spent rubbing baby oil on her stomach in pursuit of the perfect tan. A dance beat that makes her think of using a fake ID to slip into a nightclub. A dirge that marked the years she spent trying to get pregnant.
For better or for worse, music is the language of memory. It is also the language of love.
In the aftermath of a series of personal tragedies, Zoe throws herself into her career as a music therapist. When an unexpected friendship slowly blossoms into love, she makes plans for a new life, but to her shock and inevitable rage, some people—even those she loves and trusts most—don’t want that to happen.

***This book has hit a lot of controversy, should be a great, lively chat when we have the monthly Book Club Chat.  Please remember to be respectful of others' views!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Recap of upcoming book picks

Book Chats are always the 1st Thursday of the month!

November
Sister by Rosamund Lupton
Book Chat: Dec 1

December
State of Wonder by Anne Patchett
Book Chat: Jan. 5

January
Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult
Book Chat:  Feb. 2

February
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
Book Chat: March 1

Monday, November 7, 2011

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Recap of upcoming book picks

November= Sister by Rosamund Lupton

December= State of Wonder by Anne Patchett


Plus, please get on the wait list for:
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides--- we'll aim for January with this one, but see if everyone's up on the waiting list first

Thursday, October 27, 2011

November's Book Pick: Sister



Gong for a genre we haven't touched yet...


When the body of Beatrice’s beloved younger sister, Tess, is discovered in an abandoned building in Hyde Park and ruled a suicide, Beatrice knows the police have made a mistake. She’s certain her sister was murdered. Determined to uncover the truth, Beatrice impulsively begins to hunt for clues on her own. So begins Rosamund Lupton’s stunning debut, Sister, at once an engrossing thriller and a powerful meditation on the bonds of family. Writing her story as a letter to Tess, Beatrice gradually connects the strange, varied occurrences leading up to Tess’s death--Tess’s pregnancy; a trial drug from a pharmaceutical company; a man who may or may not have been a figment of Tess’s imagination. Beatrice’s former life falls apart as her search veers toward obsession, and she realizes she might pay a terrible price for the truth. An adrenaline-filled psychological thriller, Sister’s emotional impact comes from Lupton’s heartrending portrait of the love between Beatrice and Tess. --Lynette Mong

Monday, September 12, 2011

December Book Pick

Published 2011
In State of Wonder, pharmaceutical researcher Dr. Marina Singh sets off into the Amazon jungle to find the remains and effects of a colleague who recently died under somewhat mysterious circumstances. But first she must locate Dr. Anneck Swenson, a renowned gynecologist who has spent years looking at the reproductive habits of a local tribe where women can conceive well into their middle ages and beyond. Eccentric and notoriously tough, Swenson is paid to find the key to this longstanding childbearing ability by the same company for which Dr. Singh works. Yet that isn’t their only connection: both have an overlapping professional past that Dr. Singh has long tried to forget. In finding her former mentor, Dr. Singh must face her own disappointments and regrets, along with the jungle’s unforgiving humidity and insects, making State of Wonder a multi-layered atmospheric novel that is hard to put down. Indeed, Patchett solidifies her well-deserved place as one of today’s master storytellers. Emotional, vivid, and a work of literature that will surely resonate with readers in the weeks and months to come, State of Wonder truly is a thing of beauty and mystery, much like the Amazon jungle itself. --Jessica Schein

Feb. 2012 Book Pick

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides  will be out:  Oct. 11



Review

In Eugenides' first novel since the Pulitzer Prize-winning Middlesex (2002), English major and devotee of classic literature Madeleine Hanna is a senior at Reagan-era Brown University. Only when curiosity gets the best of her does she belly up to Semiotics 211, a bastion of postmodern liberalism, and meet handsome, brilliant, mysterious Leonard Bankhead. Completing a triangle is Madeleine's friend Mitchell, a clear-eyed religious-studies student who believes himself her true intended. Eugenides' drama unfolds over the next year or so. His characteristically deliberate, researched realization of place and personality serve him well, and he strikes perfectly tuned chords by referring to works ranging from Barthes' Lovers' Discourse to Bemelmans' Madeline books for children. The remarkably à propos title refers to the subject of Madeleine's honors thesis, which is the Western novel's doing and undoing, in that, upon the demise, circa 1900, of the marriage plot, the novel 'didn't mean much anymore,' according to Madeleine's professor and, perhaps, Eugenides. With this tightly, immaculately self-contained tale set upon pillars at once imposing and of dollhouse scale, namely, academia ('College wasn't like the real world,' Madeleine notes) and the emotions of the youngest of twentysomethings, Eugenides realizes the novel whose dismantling his characters examine." --Annie Bostrom, Booklist
POSSIBLE:
Backup book is by same author:  Middlesex
If The Marriage Plot is too high in demand and none of us can get it at the library, we'll go ahead witht he backup

October Book Pick

Published 2010

Martin compresses the wild and crazy end of the millennium and finds in this piercing novel a sardonic morality tale. Lacey Yeager is an ambitious young art dealer who uses everything at her disposal to advance in the world of the high-end art trade in New York City. After cutting her teeth at Sotheby's, she manipulates her way up through Barton Talley's gallery of "Very Expensive Paintings," sleeping with patrons, and dodging and indulging in questionable deals, possible felonies, and general skeeviness until she opens her own gallery in Chelsea. Narrated by Lacey's journalist friend, Daniel Franks, whose droll voice is a remarkable stand-in for Martin's own, the world is ordered and knowable, blindly barreling onward until 9/11. And while Lacey and the art she peddles survive, the wealth and prestige garnered by greed do not. Martin (an art collector himself) is an astute miniaturist as he exposes the sound and fury of the rarified Manhattan art world. If Shopgirl was about the absence of purpose, this book is about the absence of a moral compass, not just in the life of an adventuress but for an entire era. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Place this one on hold! Nov or Dec pick:

State of Wonder by Anne Patchett

it seems to be VERY high in demand!
At my local library there are 21 copies and I am number 71!  Another D.R.E.A.M. member is #94!!!!
We'll aim for November!

Synopsis:
In State of Wonder, pharmaceutical researcher Dr. Marina Singh sets off into the Amazon jungle to find the remains and effects of a colleague who recently died under somewhat mysterious circumstances. But first she must locate Dr. Anneck Swenson, a renowned gynecologist who has spent years looking at the reproductive habits of a local tribe where women can conceive well into their middle ages and beyond. Eccentric and notoriously tough, Swenson is paid to find the key to this longstanding childbearing ability by the same company for which Dr. Singh works. Yet that isn’t their only connection: both have an overlapping professional past that Dr. Singh has long tried to forget. In finding her former mentor, Dr. Singh must face her own disappointments and regrets, along with the jungle’s unforgiving humidity and insects, making State of Wonder a multi-layered atmospheric novel that is hard to put down. Indeed, Patchett solidifies her well-deserved place as one of today’s master storytellers. Emotional, vivid, and a work of literature that will surely resonate with readers in the weeks and months to come, State of Wonder truly is a thing of beauty and mystery, much like the Amazon jungle itself. --Jessica Schein

SEPTEMBER BOOK CLUB PICK: Freedom

I am going to try to start announcing picks earlier.  Depending on where you live, it may take longer to receive a book once you place a hold.  In that spirit, I'll try to post choces 6 weeks before we talk about them, and ones that I can tell are in demand, I'll try to give a 3 month lead.  -Emily


Freedom by Jonathan Franzen Published 2010

SYNOPSIS:
Patty and Walter Berglund were the new pioneers of old St. Paul, Minnesota—the gentrifiers, the hands-on parents, the avant-garde of the Baby Boomers. Patty was the ideal sort of neighbor who could tell you where to recycle your batteries and how to get the local cops to actually do their job. She was an enviably perfect mother and the wife of Walter's dreams. Together with Walter—environmental lawyer, commuter cyclist, total family man—she was doing her small part to build a better world.
But now, in the new millennium, the Berglunds have become a mystery. Why is Walter working away from home so much? What has happened to their teenage son? Why has Patty, the bright star of Barrier Street, become "a very different kind of neighbor," coming unhinged before the street's attentive eyes? And what exactly is eccentric rocker Richard Katz—Walter's college best friend and rival—still doing in the picture?
As the story explores the nature of love, it also tackles our tenuous relationship with nature. When Walter fights to preserve a habitat for an endangered bird, the troubled history between Patty, Richard and himself threatens to topple the deal, along with everything he believes about truth and illusion.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

August's Book Club Pick: To Be Sung Underwater

6 out of 5--- YES--it was that good.





I cannot remember the last time I sobbed so hard at the last chapter of a book.  I wanted so desperately to make a certain character go back in time and make ONE different choice to change two people's lives.  In fact, it's ridiculous how much I still want to do that after finishing the book 6 hours ago.  I've  even gone back and read the last two chapters again just looking for answers to be different.
This book was amazing and sad and perhaps the best love story I have ever read--- well, best I guess because it's romantic, but maybe I should say saddest.  I loved it, loved it.  But wishing I could change the course of events.  Feeling melancholy today!

SYNOPSIS:
Forty-four-year-old Judith has the veneer of a happy life, but there are cracks. Her job on a TV drama isn’t completely satisfying. She regrets the way her daughter is growing up, and her seemingly loving husband is having a dalliance with a co-worker.

Amid all this turmoil, she experiences what she calls a “swerve” in life, and she begins thinking of her first love, Willy Blunt, a young carpenter she fell in love with when she was 17.
Judith begins to question her life, her choices and everything she has done since she was with Willy. She’s so richly drawn, so quirkily compelling, that we’re immediately invested in her. In one of the novel’s strangest turns, she rents a storage unit and begins to turn it into a refuge, a kind of home away from home that might feed her yearning. She even takes on a secret identity, changing her name to the puckish Edie Winks. One day, pining for her past, she tracks Willy down and makes a pilgrimage back to what she considers the life she should have led.McNeal moves ef­fortlessly through time to tell the twin tales of Judith’s past and present, making you feel the radiant importance of 17-year old Judith’s summer with Willy, when her parents’ marriage split.
Their courtship is sweet and authentic, and we get to experience it from first blush to last kiss. It’s hard not to fall in love with Willy yourself, because he’s a guy who expects the best from people and has a code of honor so strong that it seems shatterproof. McNeal takes his time drawing Willy out with lovely scenes of picnics and surprises. The only person not completely happy is Judith’s father, who fears his daughter will be boxed in too soon, the way he was. But as Judith settles into this blissful life, something happens that changes the trajectory of their lives — and their love.
Fast forward 22 years. The failed dreams of her father, the ruined marriage of her parents, her own restless yearning for a time when everything seemed perfect — they all take a toll. Judith’s search for Willy is really a search for the kind of love that “picks you up in Akron, Ohio, and sets you down in Rio de Janeiro.”
And then, just as you’ve given your heart to this story, McNeal breaks it with an ending that makes you feel cheated: a tacked-on shock that’s a shame, because everything that comes before is so ravishing.
Still, McNeal captures the flush of first love and the endurance of real devotion, even as he probes deeper questions: Who are we with the ones we love, and who are we without them? “For you, I was a chapter,” Willy tells Judith. “For me, you were the book.”

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Join the chat group!

Make sure you join our group so you can do the Book Club Chats!

http://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/170578896345072

Sunday, July 24, 2011

15 Minutes Outside

Reading this here and there until August's Book Club pick starts...

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

What Alice Forgot


July BOOK CLUB PICK:



Synopsis:
Alice is twenty-nine. She is whimsical, optimistic and adores sleep, chocolate, her ramshackle new house and her wonderful husband Nick. What's more, she's looking forward to the birth of the 'Sultana' - her first baby.
But now Alice has slipped and hit her head in her step-aerobics class and everyone's telling her she's misplaced the last ten years of her life.
In fact, it would seem that Alice is actually thirty-nine and now she loves schedules, expensive lingerie, caffeine and manicures. She has three children and the honeymoon is well and truly over for her and Nick. In fact, he looks at her like she's his worst enemy. What's more, her beloved sister Elisabeth isn't speaking to her either. And who is this 'Gina'everyone is so carefully trying not to mention?
Alice isn't sure that she likes life ten years on. Every photo is another memory she doesn't have and nothing makes sense. Just how much can happen in a decade? Has she really lost her lovely husband for ever?


Online chat on the book will be August 4th at 9:30pm
Please post your AIM screenname below!

UPDATE:  July 14:  Have read 346 pages in less than 12 hours and I have 2 kids!  This book is addicting!

UPDATE:  REVIEW July 24
Amazing book---wonderful--page-turner.  Go get it!

Book Club chat will take place Aug. 4 at 9:30pm EST on instant messenger.  Please RSVP here:
http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.228215543872738.73948.117195448308082#!/event.php?eid=224273370939450

Friday, June 17, 2011

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle




I feel the need to add this disclaimer each time:  This is NOT an official book club pick, but I'll be posting on whatever I am reading at the moment.

10 pages in and liking it so far!!

UPDATE July 13:  Okay-- I got 34 pages in and I DO like it, but I just can't do another "eat whole foods" book right now.  My mind needs an escape.  I do plan to come back to it, though, especially since my family just joined a CSA.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Imperfect Birds


UPDATE:  June 11... I'm giving up on this book for now.  I've read 26 pages and it's depressing and doesn't seem so good.  I am really not a book giver-upper, but I want to read something right now, and I keep avoiding this book.
Rating:  Incomplete
____________________________________________

I feel the need to add this disclaimer each time:  This is NOT an official book club pick, but I'll be posting on whatever I am reading at the moment.

Just starting this one because I heard Tina Fey said she was reading it on a day I was wondering what to read next.  (The Help was completed in 36 hours-- I hadn't expected to be sucked into that so thoroughly!)

This looks a bit depressing, but also looks like it has a good parenting message... we'll see!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

June's Pick: The Help


Rating:  5 (1-5)


The Book Club pick will be announced on the 1st of every month.  Imagine-- reading 12 books a year, mamas!   Whoohoo!

June's pick is The Help by Kathryn Stockett.  For those low on cash, the Jax library has 86 copies-- reserve one!

I swear I picked this before I knew they were making a movie of it (debuting August 2011).  I was waiting til the 1st to reveal.

And.... GO!  Enjoy.
__________________________
Review:  So good--- lived up to the hype and beyond.  I read this in under 36 hours because I was SO sucked in.  No laundry, dishes, sleep or... anything, really, got done while I was reading this.  Set in the 1960s, it tells the stories of the black maids/nannies working for white women in their 20s.  The one white girl who actually finished college and comes back (unmarried, tsk, tsk) begins to see the town in a new light and wants to write a book about "The Help" from their perspective.  (i.e. They do 90% of the child-rearing--they leave that to them--but at the same time put out a memo about how 'negros are diseased and we must keep a separate toilet for them'.)  Such a great read, well-written, gripping.

Friday, May 20, 2011

The Good Daughter


Book:  The Good Daughter
Author:  Jasmin Darznik
Rating:     5 (1-5)


Review:

Okay... I know, I keep rating everything 5 stars!  But to be fair, I am mainly picking books out of random interviews I m hearing on NPR to and from Zoe's school, so they are already getting recognition.
This book had me hooked.  I couldn't stop reading it--it was just too interesting.  My heart broke for this woman, Lili--the author's mother.  Her story is insane--- talk about a survivor.  Married off at 13, beaten by her new husband (26 years old and a sadist), pregnant 2 months after the wedding, and whisked away to a derelict horrible part of town because her grandmother-in-law (who was rich) didn't want to have to see her "getting fat".
I also learned so much about Iranian culture and found it fascinating.  (Well, Iranian culture set against the 1950s/60s backdrop, anyway).

One author's quote on the back of the book sums up the feeling I had:
"Darznik's deeply affecting memoir about her mother, lili, illuminates the complexity of Iranian women's lives as few books have ever done.  Once you read this book, you will see Iran and Iranians with new eyes.  A brilliant debut." 

Ultimately, I was totally entranced by this woman's story.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

May's Pick: Cinderella Ate My Daughter

Book:  Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture
Author:  Peggy Orenstein
Rating:     5

This is the FIRST OFFICIAL book of our book club here.  We begin reading/discussing May 15.  Go get/rent/borrow it!

REVIEW:
In the spirit of this blog----"mothers have no time/I'd rather do an "okay" job and have it done than sit on it forever" -----I've decided to keep my reviews short and simple.


Every parent of a daughter should read this book. 
At the least, every parent of a daughter should read the first chapter.

As I was reading this book and talking about it daily, I would get reactions from moms like:
1.  "Everything in moderation is fine." 
2.  "My daughter went through it and she's 9 now and doesn't care about princesses."
3.  "It's just girls being girls."
4.  "Moms these days are too worried about every little thing."
5.  "Oh, please.  Why does everything have to be so gender neutral?"

I may have said one of these things before I read the book... but this is not what the book is about!  It's about the parts we DON'T realize.  That aren't obvious.  CONFESSION:  I have a bit of a pet peeve when it comes to people weighing in on things without having actually read them.

To answer just two of the above comments:

2.  Yes, Orenstein addresses this.  As the Disney execs will tell you--- all girls DO pass through it.  That isn't the point.  3-5 yrs old is the time when girls are forming their ideas of who they are, yet are also the most rigid in their thinking.  Take my daughter.  Not yet 4, she already refuses to wear anything that a princess wouldn't wear including shorts and her glasses.  I mean, she will throw herself on the floor before wearing shorts.  Yes, part of me says who cares--but the part that read this book says she is boxing herself in to thinking that she isn't beautiful in shorts (yes, her exact words).It isn't the fact that they shouldn't have access to this stuff--it's that they are using it to define them, their sense of beauty, acceptance, etc--from here on out.  Orenstein does a better job of disseminating the research (and I only start labeling quotes the last 30 pages when it finally occurred to me).
4.  Hmm, not really.  Or maybe the wrong things in some cases.  We give in because it's a tiring job.  But lip gloss, vanity mirror, etc.  Try to think of specific girl toys that have NOTHING to do with looks.  Try to even offhandedly compliment your daughter without it being about her looks or attire in ANY way.

As my friend Stacy put it below, "What strikes me the MOST...I think it would be my own realization of how numb I had become to the marketing and products targeting little girls."

It is a slow, slow, slippery slope. I feel like I'm not even sure how we ended up with so much princess stuff OR how we went from Zoe wanting EVERY Thomas train and boy Toy Story undies to only caring about wearing skirts or dresses.

Bottom line---- read it/scan it/Google articles on it.  It's important and eye-opening.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Ignore them for a book vs. an iPhone

Read with us wherever you are in the world.  Moms or not, commit to reading 5 minutes a day.  Surely, we can find 5 minutes to indulge in a BOOK--and what a great example for our kids to see us ignore them for a book vs. an iPhone

I'm Over All That

Book:  I'm Over All That
Author:  Shirley MacLaine
Rating: 4     (1-5)

  I started reading Shirley MacLaine the summer after I graduated college in 2002.  I have now read 11 of Shirley's 12 books.  (Waiting to read 'Out on a Leash' when I am ready to be a dog owner.)
I love this woman.  As I like to say, Shirley MacLaine is my favorite person I've never met.
I loved the book, but it hasn't replaced my favorites of hers.  (Out on a Limb, It's All in the Playing and The Camino.)
If you're open-minded, you'll enjoy her point of view.  If you're curious, her insights make for great discussion and probing.
A lot of the book is her giving a quick opinion on certain subjects (rude people,  boring people, liberals and conservatives, vanity, fear based religions, her time with Sinatra, Jack Kennedy, etc.).  But the parts I liked best involved her talking about spirituality and how it ties into what is happening with the world today-- the speeding up of everything and human beings not tapping into the connection they share.
This was a quick read and I loved almost every minute.  Giving it 4 stars only because it still dosn't make my Top 3 Shirley MacLaine favs.

I'll leave you with one of the passages I enjoyed:
"We go about our lives, or work, our shopping, our raising of children, in half-trance.  We don't know what to do about the speed of life and information that we can't keep up with.  We don't even know we can't keep up.  We just feel it... We are half awake as to who we are, who we aren't, and even what our needs would be if they could be fulfilled."

Bossypants

Book:  Bossypants
Author:  Tina Fey
Rating:  5   (1-5)

Technically, I finished this last week, so I won't elaborate, but I loved it.  I love her humor and found myself cracking up every 3-5 pages--- who laughs out loud at a book?  I also really appreciate her no-nonsense feminism.  She doesn't waste time with the issue, she just seem to press through them.  Also, it made me feel like we are best friends, so you might want to stalk her a little bit after reading this book.  Loved it.

The D.R.E.A.M.

Let me first say, I am a doer----not a perfectionist.
I wholeheartedly believe in these two things about so-called perfectionism:
1.  The perfect is the enemy of the good. -Voltaire
2.  Perfectionist is just a nicer word for Procrastinator. 

I am also a mother.  A Mother/Doer.  Family birthday?  Pictures uploaded same day.  Someone's birthday?  Let's just quickly make all the birthday cards we'll need for the month so we don't forget.  Do I feel bad that I have my 3 year old sit and draw them all at once?  No.  Do I feel guilty when she's bored halfway thru and only finishes with one color crayon?  No.  Because, I KNOW they won't get picked up again if we stop now--- the thought won't get finished, and I am sorry, it's not really so much the thought that counts.  We started the cards, let's have our friends open them on their birthday and have a smile!

I hear a lot of moms talk about what they don't have time for.  Now, I have two kids-- I totally get it.  But ultimately, we make time for the things that are important to us.  Even if it's only 3.9 minutes a day.  It adds up.  There is always a choice.  Leave the clean up and watch Modern Family?  Abandon the laundry and hop on Facebook for 30 minutes?

But sometimes if I mention a book I am reading, I'll get a judgmental quip back, "Wow, how do you have time to read books?  I have no time with kids, the house, cooking...", etc.  Who has time?  I take it out of my sleep, I do it while I nurse, or I set my kids up with some toys and do it.  I just love to read too much.

So, for all the moms out there who love to read and feel guilty about it--- or have let it slip and want to get back to the Ravenous-Book-Place--- here is my blog.  I am going to post about whatever book I am currently reading.  Hopefully you can get a copy from your library or book store and read along with me.  We'll be the kind of online book club you'd actually like to go to in clean clothes every Tuesday, but here I care a little less about hygiene, so you're more likely to show.

I may slack off from time to time and not be reading, so feel free to call me on it.

Here's to D.R.E.A.M. Book Club... Determined Readers Even After Motherhood.