Search Results for: christopher smart

54 Wonderful Projects

I love projects: reading projects, relationship projects, educational projects, travel projects, daily projects, weekly projects, goofy projects, serious projects, all kinds of projects. There’s something about the discipline and the long term commitment to a project that intrigues me, even though I’m much better myself at beginning projects and reading about them than I am at actually completing them.

Here are a few of the projects that I have been working on, or I wish I could do, or I wish I’d thought of, or I plan to try someday, or I at least want to read about:

1. Wave at the Bus. This dad dressed up in a different costume every day for an entire school year to wave at his high school son’s school bus as it passed by the house.

2. The Reading Promise: My Father and the Books We Shared by Alice Ozma. Alice (actually Kristin Brozina) and her dad Jim read together every night for at least ten minutes, usually longer, for 3218 consecutive nights, or nine years. Wow! A review of the book by Sam Sattler at Book Chase.

3. The Whole Five Feet: What the Great Books Taught Me About Life, Death, and Pretty Much Everything Else by Christopher Beha. New York TImes Book Review.

4. Praying for Strangers by River Jordan. Ms. Jordan not only prays for a stranger each day, but she also often feels led to tell the person that she will be praying and asks for prayer requests. That’s a little intimidating. See, I’m really rather shy and reserved. The idea of going up to a complete stranger and telling them that I’ll be praying for them is, well, actually terrifying. I did try doing this, but I can’t make myself go up and talk to people I don’t know. So I’ve been sort of praying covertly.

5. Use a plan to read through the entire Bible in a year. I have done this project and plan to continue doing it each year. THis book looks good (reviewed by Becky): Read Your Bible One Book At A Time: A Refreshing Way To Read God’s Word with New Insight and Meaning by Woodrow Kroll. And here’s a Semicolon post with more ideas for Bible study and Bible reading projects.

6. Scratch Beginnings: Me, $25, and the Search for the American Dream by Adam Shepard. Adam Shepard went to Charleston, South Carolina with $25, a sleeping bag, and the clothes on his back. His goal was, by the end of a year, to have a car, a furnished apartment, and $2500 in the bank.

7. A Walk Across America by Peter Jenkins. I read this book when I was in high school, I think, and it may be the book that inspired my fascination with people who take on Big Projects. The second half of Mr. Jenkins’ walk across the United States is chronicled in The Walk West.
I also read this nonfiction book about two women at the turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century who walked across the country: Bold Spirit by Linda Lawrence Hunt. Two fictional accounts of this mother/daughter walk are The Daughter’s Walk by Jane Kirkpatrick and The Year We Were Famous by Carol Estby Dagg.

8. A family I know had a project of visiting and taking a picture of every county courthouse in Texas. That’s 254 pictures of 254 county seat courthouses. What a great idea for learning and family bonding.

9. From The Bard Blog: “One big undertaking in 2010 was my Summer Shakespeare extravaganza. I made sure to see as many productions of the Bard as I could within a 2 month period.” Or for more Shakespeare madness, one could try out this project: reading Shakespeare’s 38 plays in 38 days, one each day.

10. Tolstoy and the Purple Chair by Nina Sankovich. Sankovitch vowed to read one book a day for an entire year and blog about it as a way of coping and working through her grief over the death of her sister.

11. In A Severe Mercy by Sheldon VanAuken, the author relives his courtship and marriage with his beloved wife Davy, who died of cancer. He celebrates their life together by consuming the music, the books, old letters, notes, diaries, and other artifacts of their marital life. He calls it The Illumination of the Past. It seems to me to be an almost obsessive way to mourn, but the way Mr. Van Auken writes about his journey makes it a healing process.

“I travelled through the past at the rate of a month or two a day. I could not go much faster and still listen to the music–often whole symphonies–and read the poems. The books, novels, and the like, I read at night, after I had written to her.”

12. No-Man’s Lands: One Man’s Odyssey Through The Odyssey by Scott Huler. The author retraces the route of Odysseus from Troy to Ithaca. I haven’t read the book, but I’d like to someday.

13. The Year of Living like Jesus: My Journey of Discovering What Jesus Would Really Do by Ed Dobson. The fact that this book is recommended by Rob Bell, who annoys me, is something of a letdown. But it still sounds intriguing.

14. The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible by A.J. Jacobs. Mr. Dobson was inspired to do his Jesus project by his reading of Mr. Jacobs’ book. Mr. Jacobs was (is) a nonobservant Jewish man who took a year to endeavor to live a strictly Biblical, law-abiding life.

15. The Know-It-All: One Man’s Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World by A.J. Jacobs. Before he “got religion”, Mr. Jacobs chronicled his journey as he read through the entire Encyclopedia Brittanica in a year.

16. Reading the OED: One Man, One Year, 21,730 Pages by Ammon Shea. If one man can read an entire encyclopedia in a year, why can’t another read the twenty volume Oxford English Dictionary in a year? And then write a book about it.

17. Walking the Bible: A Journey by Land Through the Five Books of Moses by Bruce Feiler. Mr. Feiler. an American Jew, made a 10,000-mile journey from Mount Ararat to Mount Nebo, following in the footsteps of the patriarchs.

18. Howards End Is on the Landing: A Year of Reading from Home by Susan Hill. “In pursuit of a book on her shelves, Susan Hill encountered dozens of others that she had never read, forgotten she owned, or wanted to read for a second time. The discovery inspired her to embark on a year-long voyage through her books in order to get to know her own collection again.”

19. Prayer Walking: A Journey of Faith by Dan Crawford and Calvin Miller. Recommended by Joe McKeever. This prayer project seems to me just as intriguing as the praying for strangers book (#4). But how does one develop the self-discipline to be consistent in prayer?

20. Racing Odysseus by Roger H. Martin. Recommended at Seasonal Soundings. “Roger H. Martin, president (at the time) of Randolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia goes back to school as a freshman at the age of 61. Martin’s sabbatical takes him to St. John’s College in Annapolis, Maryland.”

21. Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana. This project is one that I would not dare to undertake even if it were possible in this day and age. Nevertheless, it would be worth reading about. Recommended by Lars Walker at Brandywine Books.

22. A memory project: Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art & Science of Remembering Everything by Joshua Foer. Absolutely fascinating.

23. My 20th Century history project.

24. I’ve mentioned this Blank Bible Project before, and I still think it’s a great idea. I’m not doing this project, but I have been writing notes in my Bible for several years with the intention of giving the Bible to one of my children someday.

25. My Newbery project. The plan is to eventually read all of the Newbery Medal books and all of the honor books, too.

26. My Reading Through Africa project.

27. 100 Movies of Summer. I started this project last year, and of course, we didn’t finish. But we did watch several old movies (actually, nine) that I either hadn’t seen or hadn’t shared with the urchins. I think we’ll try again this summer to watch some more—maybe we’ll finish all 100.

28. Make some art, maybe a photograph or a painting or a drawing. Put the art in a nice frame, one that isn’t brand new. Then, hang your framed art in a place you aren’t supposed to, but where people will assume it is supposed to be, like the lobby of your apartment building, in the hallway at your office, on the smallest wall in a motel room, in the quiet corner of a library, outside the downstairs restroom at a restaurant or bar, the back room of a club, in the bathroom of a museum. From the website 52 projects.

29. List the years that you have been alive. Then, in a word, sentence or short paragraph, write down a significant memory from each year. From the website 52 projects. It sounds like a great birthday project, doesn’t it?

30. 1000 Gifts by Ann Voskamp. Anne Voskamp started a list of 1000 reasons to be grateful to God. She ended up with a life full of gratitude and blessing, even in the hard times.

31. In the Neighborhood: The Search for Community on an American Street, One Sleepover at a Time by Peter Lovenheim. “When a murder-suicide occurred in his community, a suburb of Rochester, NY, Lovenheim, a journalist and author who teaches writing at the Rochester Institute of Technology, set out to get to know his neighbors and create a sense of community that is lacking in contemporary America by asking if he could spend the night at their houses.”

32. The Film Club: A True Story of a Father and Son by David Gilmour. I have a feeling from reading the reviews that this book might be a little too male for my taste, but I’d like try it. Father David Gilmour allows his sixteen year old son, Jesse, to drop out of high school with two conditions: he couldn’t do drugs, and he had to watch three movies a week with dad. The book is about their movie-led “homeschooling” experiment.

33. 1000 Places to See Before You Die by Patricia Schultz. If I had the money, I’d do it –or write my own list. No doubt.

34. 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die: A Comprehensive Reference Source, Chronicling the History of the Novel. Preface by Peter Ackroyd. General Editor: Peter Boxall. Arukiyomi has a spreadsheet for keeping track of the book you’ve read from the 1001. Of the books on the 2008 list, I’ve read 126. I think it’s skewed toward the last hundred and eleven years, and I’ve read many more nineteenth century novels than twentieth century and beyond. Nevertheless, it’s a fun project.

35. One Red Paperclip. I remember hearing about this project: this guy traded his red paper clip for something a little better. Then he traded again. And again. “I’m going to make a continuous chain of ‘up trades’ until I get a house. Or an island. Or a house on an island. You get the idea.”

36. England’s Thousand Best Churches by Simon Jenkins and Paul Barker. Now wouldn’t visiting all of these churches be a project to remember!

37. In 2008 Stephanie Dean made a New Year’s resolution to use her slow cooker every single day for the entire year. Here’s a list of the recipes she used.

38. While we’re on the subject of cooking projects, Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously by Julie Powell was the inspiration for the movie Julie and Julia (which I haven’t seen). Ms. Powell’s project was to cook all 524 recipes in Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume I in a year.

39. Then, of course, there are the “40 days” spiritual projects (based on the 40 days of Lent?):
Rick Warren’s The Purpose-Driven Life,
Get out of That Pit: A 40-Day Devotional Journal by Beth Moore,
40 Days Living the Jesus Creed by Scot McKnight.

40. Experiencing God: Knowing and Doing the Will of God by Henry Blackaby and Claude King is one of the best Christian “project books” that I’ve ever read. Mr. Blackaby walks you through the steps to knowing God through Christ and then knowing and doing His will in your life. I need to repeat this project.

41. Do you believe this one? Organizing Magic: 40 Days to a Well-Ordered Home and Life by Sandra Felton. I tried Flylady, and I crashed. I’ve read other organizing books, and the authors obviously didn’t have eight children and a husband who wants to store everything in the attic until he can get around to using it or fixing it.

42. The Six Hundred Club was a project for memorizing some of the most famous and inspirational 600 lines of poetry or 600 lines from Shakespeare’s plays, a brainchild of my English professor, Dr. Huff. Dr. Huff invented The Six Hundred Club, and I am a proud member. You can read more about it here, and if you would like to embark upon this particular project, email me. I’ll be happy to send you the lines from Shakespeare or the particular poems to be memorized.

43. A poem-writing project: Where I Am From. Here are some instructions for writing your own “where I am from” poem. If you write one, please come back and share it with the rest of us.

44. The U.S. Presidents Reading Project has a list of all of the U.S. presidents and suggested reading selections (non-fiction) for each one. The challenge is to read one biography of each one. A couple of years ago I read biographies of George Washington, John Adams, James and Dollie Madison, and Alexander Hamilton (I know, not a president, but closely related). Last year I read about John Quincy Adams and his wife Catherine and about my favorite president, TR, “Teddy” Roosevelt. I have American Lion by Jon Meacham on my shelf awaiting me, and I also have two presidential books in my library basket, 1912: Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft and Debs–The Election That Changed the Country by James Chase and Florence Harding: The First Lady, the Jazz Age, and the Death of America’s Most Scandalous President by Carl Serrazza Anthony.

45. Texas Tuesday Project. I also plan to go back to posting about books set in or published in or related to Texas on Tuesdays. Or at least on most Tuesdays. Some Tuesdays?

46. My Madeleine L’Engle reading project, with a goal of reading or re-reading her complete oeuvre, is ongoing. It started out as a project for January 2007, but I quickly saw that I’d need more time to read all of the books. Here’s a link to my annotated bibliography of Madeleine L’Engle’s books.

47. The Happiness Project: Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun by Gretchen Rubin. Reviewed by Amy at Hope Is the Word.

48. I forgot all about Carrie’s Reading My Library Challenge. She and her children are reading all of the children’s picture books in her library. And BekahCubed plans to read Every Single Book in her local branch library in Lincoln, Nebraska. Maybe the two of them should write a book together.

49.Among Schoolchildren by Tracy Kidder. Back in the 1980’s author Tracy Kidder spent a year in a fifth grade classroom—and lived to write about it. I remember it as an excellent and insightful look into the life of a teacher and her students. Kidder also wrote House about the trial and joys of having your own house built. Now that’s a project!

50. Moonwalking With Einstein by Joshua Foer. Mr. Foer spent a year developing his memory so that he could compete in the U.S. Memory Championships. Reviewed by Alice at Supratentorial.

51.

52.

53.

54.

Can you suggest more projects or project books to fill out the list? Why 54? Stay tuned to find out . . . next week.

Saturday Review of Books: February 28, 2008

“Give me books, fruit, French wine, and fine weather and a little music out of doors, played by somebody I do not know.”
~John Keats

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books.

Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

Thanks to everyone for participating.

1. Maw Books (Ella the Elephant Series)
2. Maw Books (Baseball Saved Us)
3. Maw Books (Passage to Freedom)
4. Maw Books (Be Water My Friend)
5. Maw Books (The Year the Swallows Came Early)
6. Maw Books (Henry\’s Freedom Box)
7. Maw Books (Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom)
8. Maw Books (The Voice that Challenged a Nation)
9. Maw Books (Letters from a Slave Girl)
10. Jen Robinson (Wintergirls)
11. Deanna (Green Rider)
12. Deanna (The Love Letters)
13. Biblauragraphy (How to Ditch Your Fairy)
14. Deanna (Hood)
15. At Home With Books (Silent on the Moor)
16. At Home With Books (The Lost City of Z)
17. Margot (Gods and Generals)
18. Margot (The Way West)
19. Bonnie (World War I British Poets)
20. Bonnie (Sir Gawain and the Green Knight)
21. Fate (The Monster Garden)
22. pussreboots (Legs Talk)
23. pussreboots (The Gift of the Deer)
24. pussreboots (American Rifle)
25. pussreboots (When Boston Won the World Series)
26. pussreboots (Cry of Justice)
27. FleurFisher (The Borrowers)
28. FleurFisher (The Good Soldier)
29. Meg @ Literary Menagerie (Slow Hands by Leslie Kelly)
30. Cassandra @ Literary Menagerie (Sundays at Tiffany\’s by James Patterson)
31. Farm Lane Books (The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society-Audio)
32. Farm Lane Books (The Bone People)
33. Farm Lane Books (The Cellist of Sarajevo)
34. Farm Lane Books (The Moonstone)
35. Lazygal (The Believers)
36. Janet (So Brave, Young, and Handsome)
37. Hope (Cry, The Beloved Country)
38. gautami tripathy (The Simplest of Acts And Other Stories)
39. gautami tripathy (Cool Jew)
40. CoversGirl (Stargazing: Memoirs of a Young Lighthouse Keeper)
41. a lovely shore breeze (Irreplaceable)
42. Mo (Backstabber)
43. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Kirby Larson interview!)
44. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (The Gift of Psalms)
45. Just One More Book! Children\’s Book Podcast (There\’s a Babirusa in my Bathtub)
46. Just One More Book! Children\’s Book Podcast (Dr. White)
47. Diary of an Eccentric (Too Tall Alice)
48. Diary of an Eccentric (The Heretic Queen)
49. Margaret (Sarah\’s Key)
50. Shonda (Run for Your Life)
51. PisecoMom (Anansi Boys)
52. Joy (Still Alice)
53. Belinda (The Senator\’s Wife – Audio)
54. Page Turner@Lines from the Page (Under a Wing – Lindbergh Memoir)
55. Captive Thoughts (Anne Morrow Lindbergh biography)
56. SmallWorld Reads (Conversations with the Fat Girl)
57. Bookeywookey (The Invention of Air)
58. Bookeywookey (Middlemarch)
59. caribookscoops (The Journal of Curious Letters)
60. caribookscoops (Wanda Gag The Girl Who Lived to Draw
61. Dana(Guernsey Literary)
62. caribookscoops (The Hunt for Dark Infinity)
63. hollybookscoops (Pretties)
64. Dana(Sunday Phil Club)
65. melydia (Naked)
66. Jocelyn (Wondrous Strange)
67. Jocelyn (A Kiss In Time)
68. Sarah M., LH (The Making of a Marchioness)
69. Sarah M., LH (The Sittaford Mystery)
70. Word Lily (In the Deep Midwinter)
71. Word Lily (Birds of a Feather (Maisie Dobbs #2))
72. Word Lily (Cutting for Stone)
73. Carrie, RtK (Space books & Giveaway)
74. SuziQoregon (A Body to Die For)
75. Carrie, RtK (Riven)
76. 5M4B (Riven)
77. 5M4B (Tender Grace)
78. 5M4B (Funny in Farsi & Laughing Without an Accent)
79. SuziQoregon (Murder on a Girls\’ Night Out)
80. 5M4B (The Joys of Love)
81. 5M4B (Gardenias for Breakfast)
82. SuziQoregon (The Winner)
83. SuziQoregon (Beyond Reach)
84. 5M4B (Fireflies in December)
85. 5M4B (Ruby and the Booker Boys)
86. SuziQoregon (The Woods)
87. Framed(Waiting for Gertrude)
88. Framed(Second Glance)
89. Amy@The Sleepy Reader( Scream)
90. Jew Wishes (Why Faith Matters)
91. Amber (Kitty Goes to Washington)
92. Books and Other Thoughts (3 Willows: The Sisterhood Grows)
93. Abiding(The Boy Who Drew Birds)
94. Amber (Literacy and Longing in L.A.)
95. Books and Other Thoughts (Boneyard, Vol. 1)
96. Amber (Devil In a Blue Dress)
97. MFS of Mental multivitamin (On the nightstand)
98. Belinda (The Hiding Place)
99. Books and Other Thoughts (Bewitching Season)
100. Books and Other Thoughts (Blood Trail)
101. Books and Other Thoughts (An Incomplete Revenge)
102. Books and Other Thoughts (The Trolls)
103. Books and Other Thoughts ( Anima, Vol. 1)
104. Lynne (MATRIMONY)
105. Lightheaded (Black Maria)
106. Lynne (MAN OF THE HOUSE)
107. Lynne (SONGS FOR THE MISSING)
108. S. Krishna (Knit Two)
109. S. Krishna (The Smart One)
110. S. Krishna (Watchmen)
111. Lightheaded (The Moon-Spinners)
112. S. Krishna (Sonata for Miriam)
113. S. Krishna (My Best Friend’s Girl)
114. Lightheaded (The True Story of Hansel and Gretel)
115. S. Krishna (The Pluto Files)
116. Girl Detective (Blue Iris)
117. Girl Detective (The Heartbreak Diet)
118. Girl Detective (City of Refuge)
119. Memory (Bite Me!)
120. Memory (Carnival)
121. Bookish Ruth (Drood)
122. Memory (Dead Until Dark)
123. Carol (My Lucky Star)
124. Melanie (Hatbox Letters)
125. tanabata (An Artist of the Floating World)
126. Nymeth (Black Hole by Charles Burns)
127. Nymeth (The Love We Share Without Knowing by Christopher Barzak)
128. Nymeth (Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan)
129. Nymeth (Old Man\’s War by John Scalzi)
130. BOOKIE WOOGIE (Old Bear)
131. Krakovianka (February\’s reading log)
132. The Book Lady\’s Blog (I\’m Sorry You Feel That Way)
133. The Book Lady\’s Blog (The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao)
134. Hermie\’s Mom (The Broken Parachute Man)
135. Suzanne (The Zookeeper\’s Wife)
136. Kristi(Trail of Crumbs)
137. Kristi (Age Before Beauty)
138. Kristi (I Do Again)
139. Kristi (The Fruit of My Lipstick)
140. Serena (Uncommon Reader)
141. Serena (Plum Lovin\’)
142. Teddy (Still I Rise)
143. Tasses (The Glister)
144. ChristineMM (Real Education)
145. ChristineMM (Destroy All Cars)
146. ChristineMM (Purge)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Book Blogger Appreciation Week

The Official BBAW Giveaway List

If you follow along for the festivities of BBAW at My Friend Amy, you will find many chances to win LOTS of goodies! Like what? Well have a look below. All of these things will be given away between September 15-19. There will be a huge variety of ways to win them and giveaways will be announced constantly throughout the week. So be sure to check in often!

A HUGE thank you to Hachette Book Group, Penguin Group USA, Harlequin, The B&B Media Group, Shera of SNS Blog Design, WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group, Catherine Delors, Pamela Binnings Ewen, Andromeda Romano-Lax, Cecelia Dowdy, Sormag, Book Club Girl, Savvy Verse and Wit, Cafe of Dreams, Fashionista Piranha, and Hey Lady! Whatcha Readin’?.

Daily Raffles:
Monday–Books and Chocolate sponsored by My Friend Amy and Hey Lady! Whatcha’ Readin?
Tuesday–Books and Going Green sponsored by My Friend Amy
Wednesday–Books and Coffee sponsored by My Friend Amy
Thursday–Books and Charity sponsored by My Friend Amy and Fashionista Piranha
Friday–Books and Movies sponsored by My Friend Amy

Win a Book Club Girl Hostess Survival Kit!
Do you find it’s your turn to host book club and not only do you not know what to serve but you don’t know what books to offer up for the next month’s selection?! Let Book Club Girl come to your rescue with the Book Club Girl Hostess Survival Kit.

One lucky winner of the kit will receive:

* A basket of cheese, crackers, cookies and wine for up to 12 people
* 5 great book group books to vote on for your group’s next pick. And Book Club Girl will then donate 12 copies whichever book is chosen for your entire group to read.
* 12 Book Club Girl mousepads to give out as party favors that night
* 12 Book Club Girl bookmarks to mark everyone’s favorite passages
* 12 Book Club Girl coasters to protect your coffee table from all those wine glasses!

TWO SORMAG Goody Bags containing books and more!

A Special Pamper Me Basket from Cafe of Dreams!
From Avon Foot Works
~ Inflatable watermelon shaped foot tub
~ 3.4 FL oz Watermelon Cooling Foot Lotion
~ 3.4 FL oz Watermelon Exfoliating Foot Scrub
~ 12 count Watermelon Effervescent Foot Tablets
~ An ARC of So Long At The Fair by Christina Schwarz
~ A variety of Hot Chocolate and Tea mixes

A pre-made blog template from SNSDesign!

A Subscription to Poetry Magazine from Savvy Verse and Wit!

BOOKS
Mistress of the Revolution by Catherine Delors
The Moon in the Mango Tree by Pamela Binnings Ewen
The Spanish Bow by Andromeda Romano-Lax
John’s Quest by Cecelia Dowdy
Confessions of a Contractor by Richard Murphy
Acedia & Me by Kathleen Norris
The Wordy Shipmates by Sarah Vowell
The Lucky One by Nicholas Sparks
The Book of Lies by Brad Meltzer
Supreme Courtship by Christopher Buckley
A Tale Out of Luck by Willie Nelson with Mike Blakely
The Heretic’s Daughter by Kathleen Kent
When Will There Be Good News by Kate Atkinson
An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination by Elizabeth McCracken
Exit Music by Ian Rankin
The Smart One and the Pretty One by Claire LaZebnik
Gunmetal Black by Daniel Serrano
Isolation by Travis Thrasher
The Miracle Girls by Anne Dayton and May Vanderbilt
Every Freaking! Day With Rachell Ray by Elizabeth Hilts
Dewey by Vicki Myron
The Shiniest Jewel by Marian Henley
Keep the Faith by Faith Evans
The Book of Calamities by Peter Trachtenberg
A is for Atticus by Lorilee Craker
After the Fire by Robin Gaby Fisher
Mike’s Election Guide by Michael Moore
War as They Knew It by Michael Rosenberg
Fixing Hell By Col. (ret.) Larry C. James
Wild Boy: My Life with Duran Duran by Andy Taylor
The Last Under-Cover: The True Story of an FBI Agent’s Dangerous Dance with Evil by Bob Hamer
Border Lass by Amanda Scott
Insatiable Desire by Rita Heron
Hungry for More by Diana Holquist
Free Food for Millionaires by Min Jin Lee
Trespassers Will Be Baptized by Elizabeth Emerson Hancock
He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not by Trish Ryan
Never Surrender by General Jerry Boykin
Dream in Color by Congresswoman Linda Sánchez, Congresswoman Loretta Sánchez
Beyond Belief by Josh Hamilton
Cobain Unseen by Charles R. Cross
Doing Business in 21st Century India by Gunjan Bagla
Branding Only Works on Cattle by Jonathan Salem Baskin
Launching a Leadership Revolution by Chris Brady, Orrin Woodward
How to Hear from God by Joyce Meyer
Knowing Right from Wrong by Thomas D. Williams
Pope John Paul II: An Intimate Life by Caroline Pigozzi
Pure by Rebecca St. James
He Loves Me! by Wayne Jacobson
So You Don’t Want to Go to Church Anymore by Wayne Jacobson and Dave Coleman
Move On, Move Up by Paula White
The Rosary by Gary Jansen
Shoot the Moon by Billie Letts
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks
Right Livelihoods by Rick Moody
by George by Wesley Stace
The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold
Trunk Music by Michael Connelly
Hollywood Crows by Joseph Wambaugh
Dead Boys by Richard Lange
The Gifted Gabaldon Sisters by Lorraine Lopez
Sisterchicks Go Brit! by Robin Jones Gunn
Beyond the Night by Marlo Schalesky
With Endless Sight by Allison Pittman
Harlequin Titles: To Be Announced

Many other blogs are giving away books and prizes for BBAW as well! You can see the links to all of these giveaways here.

Interested in gaining entries into the daily raffles? Post this complete list on your blog with links and you’ll earn two extra entries!

Semicolon’s September: Celebrations, Links and Birthdays

Saturday Review of Books: September 13, 2008

“Books are the compasses and telescopes and sextants and charts which other men have prepared to help us navigate the dangerous seas of human life.”
~Jessie Lee Bennett

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books, the Hurricane Ike edition.

Here’s how it works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

1. Carrie K. (The Penderwicks)
2. Carrie K. (The Heretic\’s Daughter)
3. Carrie, RtK (The Moffats)
4. 5 Minutes for Books (States Alphabet)
5. 5 Minutes for Books (Children\’s Bibles)
6. 5M4B (The New Science of Perfect Skin)
7. 5M4B (Get Cozy Josey)
8. 5M4B (America\’s Hidden History)
9. Benjie (Breaking the Missional Code)
10. Carey (The Lost Diary of Don Juan)
11. Carey (The Last Queen)
12. Laura (Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Story)
13. Joanne (When We Were Romans)
14. Joanne (Crooked Little Vein)
15. Joanne (Shade)
16. Joanne (Front Porch Prophet)
17. Captive Thoughts (Two-Part Invention)
18. Captive Thoughts (A Grief Observed)
19. pussreboots (A Bell for Adano)
20. pussreboots (The Chinese Orange Mystery)
21. pussreboots (The Bridge of San Luis Rey)
22. Bonnie (Epic of Gilgamesh)
23. Bonnie (Love in the Time of Cholera)
24. Alessandra (Dying for Icecream)
25. Alessandra (Coraline)
26. Alessandra (Second Glance)
27. gautami tripathy (Novel About My Wife)
28. Jane-Much Ado (The Jane Austen Book Club)
29. yasmin
30. Jane-Much Ado (Fields of the Fatherless)
31. JustOneMoreBook! Podcast (But If They Do….)
32. Brenda (Book One: The Maze of Bones)
33. Sarah N. (Kneeknock Rise and others)
34. Sarah N. (Clementine)
35. Sage (The Legal Limit)
36. Across the Page (My Mentor)
37. Jama (George Washington\’s Breakfast)
38. SmallWorld Reads (A Million Little Pieces)
39. Shonda (Murder 101)
40. Framed (Barometer Rising)
41. Framed (the Ride of Our Lives)
42. Framed (The Haunted Bookshop)
43. Framed (At Bertram\’s Hotel)
44. Framed (Coraline)
45. Sarah M, LH (Emmy And the Incredible Shrinking Rat)
46. Joy (Last Days of Summer)
47. Sarah M., LH (Sister Carrie)
48. david e (Here Lies Arthur)
49. Darla D (Fearless Fourteen)
50. Darla D (On All Hallow\’s Eve)
51. Darla D (Cat)
52. Darla D (Mariah Mundi: The Midas Box)
53. Darla D (The Alchemyst)
54. Darla D (Four and Twenty Blackbirds)
55. MFS (American Widow)
56. The Sleepy Reader(Gone)
57. SuziQoregon (Cat\’s Eye)
58. SuziQoregon (The Zookeeper\’s Wife)
59. S. Krishna (Laughing Without an Accent)
60. S. Krishna (The Writing Class)
61. S. Krishna (Beach Girls)
62. S. Krishna (The Secret Bride: In the Court of Henry VIII)
63. Literarily (The Heretic\’s Daughter
64. Literarily (The Smart One and the Pretty One)
65. Literarily (An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination)
66. Literarily (Night of Flames)
67. Becky (The Other Side of the Island)
68. Becky (The Ghost\’s Child)
69. Becky (Please Don\’t Tease Tootsie)
70. Becky (A is for Art)
71. Becky (Darcys & Bingleys)
72. Becky (Cycler)
73. Becky (Two Bobbies)
74. Becky (Devouring)
75. Becky (Best Book To REad)
76. Becky (Big Little Monkey)
77. Becky (Little Panda)
78. Becky (Little Monkey)
79. 5 Min for Books (Life in NO after Katrina)
80. Mindy Withrow (The Story of Christian Spirituality)
81. Bookfest (An Artist of the Floating World)
82. Jennifer (Looking for Alaska)
83. Nicola (Home by Marilynne Robinson)
84. Girl Detective (Zot! 1987-1991)
85. Girl Detective (Gertrude and Claudius)
86. Girl Detective (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead)
87. Caribousmom (The Heretic\’s Daughter)
88. 3m (Undiscovered Country)
89. 3m (Oryx and Crake)
90. The Autumn Rain (The Art of Travel)
91. My Friend Amy (in the Shadow of Lions)
92. Stephanie(The Bleeding Dusk)
93. Jen Robinson (Hurricane)
94. Word Lily (Three Cheers for the Paraclete)
95. Nicole (The Wife)
96. JewWishes (novel Sarah\’s Key)
97. Lori (novel – Vita)
98. unfinishedperson (Right As Rain)
99. unfinishedperson (The Alchemist)
100. 3m (The God of Animals)
101. Terri B. (Down to a Sunless Sea)
102. Suzanne :: Adventures in Daily Living :: (Blindness)
103. Presenting Lenore (Anatomy of a Boyfriend)
104. Heather J. (Life Is So Good, and John Adams)
105. Heather J. (Spiderwick Chronicles)
106. Sara (Hudson Taylor and Maria)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Semicolon’s September: Celebrations, Links and Birthdays