Rose Wilder Lane and Anne Morrow Lindbergh

The Aviator’s Wife by Melanie Benjamin.

A Wilder Rose: Rose Wilder Lane, Laura Ingalls Wilder, and their Little Houses by Susan Wittig Albert.

This week I serendipitously read both of these biographical novels about two strong women of the early twentieth century: Rose Wilder Lane, who was an author and independent world traveler, and Anne Morrow Lindbergh, also an author, a mother, and wife to the most famous American man of the 1920’s, aviator Charles Lindbergh.

Both Rose and Anne have been in danger of being overshadowed by their more famous family members and collaborators, Laura Ingalls Wilder and Charles Lindbergh, respectively. Both women wrote under difficult circumstances: Rose while essentially supporting her parents and two adopted “sons” through the years of the Great Depression, and Anne while raising a family of five children almost single-handedly during Charles’ long and frequent absences. Both women have not always received the credit due them for their extraordinary accomplishments.

It was fascinating to read about Rose Wilder Lane and Anne Morrow Lindbergh and realize as I read that these two women could very well have crossed paths during their lifetimes, maybe more than once. Of course, Anne’s life story is dominated by her marriage to Charles Lindbergh and by the tragic kidnapping and death of the couple’s first son, Charlie, when he was only two years old. Anne Morrow knew when she married the famous aviator who had been the first to fly across the Atlantic Ocean that her life would be forever changed and circumscribed by Lindbergh’s overwhelming fame and by the press that hounded him and wrote about every detail of his days. But she had no idea how Charles Lindbergh’s celebrity and popularity would damage her family and transform even her accomplishments.

“Working for months on an account of our trip to the Orient, in the end I still wasn’t satisfied with it; I had found it impossible to capture the innocence of that time before my baby’s death. It had done modestly well, and Charles was proud of it, although I couldn’t help but think that most people bought it out of morbid curiosity. The bereaved mother’s little book—cold you read her tragedy between the lines? I’d imagined people paging feverishly through it, eager to find evidence of a splotch tear, a blurry word, a barely suppressed sob.”

The sad thing is that, if I am honest, back when I first read Anne Lindbergh’s published diaries, and again when I read this novel about her life, I was waiting to get to the part where her son was kidnapped. I wasn’t “paging feverishly”, but I was anxious to see how the tragedy would be written, how the utter horror of the defining event in the Lindberghs’ family life would be handled in print. Well, it’s vey sad and quite moving to read about a family torn apart by journalistic excess and by criminals who fed on that excessive notoriety that made the Lindberghs a target.

It’s very interesting that both of these books are not biographies, but rather fictionalized blends of fact and imagination that both Ms. Benjamin and Ms. Albert felt were more vivid ways to tell the real story of these two women than a straight piece of nonfiction would have been. In A Wilder Rose, Rose Wilder Lane tells her mother, Laura Ingalls Wilder, several times that her books (Little House on the Prairie and its companions and sequels) can’t be told as the exact history of her family’s travels and travails as they really happened. The family stories must be turned into fiction, shaped and reworked as stories that hang together and have a beginning, a middle and an end. And somehow in doing that reshaping, the story become more true than it would be if it were a simple recitation of the dry facts. The fiction gives the stories a context and a theme and tells more about the feelings and drama behind the history than could be done without the framework and freedom of fiction.

“‘I want to tell the true story,’ she said firmly. Her blue eyes darkened and her mouth set in that hard, stubborn line that I knew very well. ‘I’m sorry if it’s not exciting enough to suit those editors in New York, but I’m not going to make up lies to make it more exciting.’
‘Nobody’s suggesting that you tell lies,’ I replied cautiously.’But sometimes we need to use fiction to tell the truth. Sometimes fiction tells a truer story than facts.'”

It’s an odd truth, but it works in both of these books and in the Little House books. I very much enjoyed reading about Rose Wilder Lane and Ann Morrow Lindbergh, and I feel as if I know them both in a way. I must say, however, that I don’t think I would have liked Ms. Lane very much, too prickly and independent, and I’m sure I would have wanted to slap Charles Lindbergh up the side of the head, if he really did what the book says he did and if I knew anything about it.

The Aviator’s Wife by Melanie Benjamin has been quite the popular beach read this summer and is available in bookstores, libraries, and from Amazon. A Wilder Rose by mystery writer Susan Wittig Albert is due to be published in October, 2013, but is not yet available for pre-order, as far as I can tell.

Sunday Salon: Coming this Fall to a Bookstore Near You

These are some of the books set for publication in fall 2013 that I would really, really like to read:

The Song of the Quarkbeast by Jasper Fforde. 09/03/2013 The Chronicles of Kazam, Book Two, sequel to The Last Dragonslayer.

Silence: A Christian History by Diarmaid MacCulloch. 09/12/2013

United We Spy by Ally Carter. 09/17/2013

The Book of Common Prayer: A Biography by Alan Jacobs. 09/30/2013

One Summer: America, 1927 by Bill Bryson. 10/01/2013

Allegiant by Veronica Roth. 10/22/2013

Sycamore Row by John Grisham: Grisham’s latest is a sequel to A Time to Kill, his first book. 10/22/2013

We Are Water by Wally Lamb. 10/29/2013. I just finished Lamb’s The Hour I First Believed, and although I wouldn’t recommend it to everyone, I found it quite absorbing and insightful.

The Valley of Amazement by Amy Tan. Read about three generations of women from Shanghai, a remote Chinese village and San Francisco. 11/05/2013

The Minor Adjustment Beauty Salon by Alexander McCall Smith. 11/05/2013

Roomies by Sara Zarr and Tara Altebrando. 12/24/2013

And the one I’ve already read, thanks to Net Galley, due out September 10th, is Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein, a companion novel to Wein’s Code Name Verity. I can tell now that Rose Under Fire is an excellent read. Look for my review in September.

Saturday Review of Books: August 17, 2013

“
It’s not that I don’t like people. It’s just that when I’m in the company of others– even my nearest and dearest–- there always comes a moment when I’d rather be reading a book.” ~Leave Me Alone, I’m Reading by Maureen Corrigan

Is this reading addiction true of you? I’ll admit it’s closer to the truth about me than I’d like to admit.

SatReviewbutton

Welcome to the Saturday Review of Books at Semicolon. Here’s how it usually works. Find a book review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can link to your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Friday night/Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky 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.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. Becky (Love Finds a Home)
2. Becky (Pleasure and Profit in Bible Study)
3. Becky (Imperfect Spiral)
4. Becky (Frozen: Heart of Dread)
5. Becky (New Lands)
6. Becky (Secrets at Sea)
7. Becky (The Unruly Queen)
8. Becky (When We Were Very Young)
9. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (The Spark)
10. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Rose Harbor in Bloom)
11. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Another Man’s Moccasins)
12. The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Bronte
13. Jessica Snell (“Catch a Falling Star”)
14. the Ink Slinger (The Little Black Book of Violence)
15. Hope (Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry)
16. Glynn (Foundation)
17. Beckie @ ByTheBook (On Distant Shores)
18. Beckie @ ByTheBook (Winter in Full Bloom)
19. Beckie @ ByTheBook (Dead Lawyers Tell No Tales)
20. Beckie @ ByTheBook (Death Be Not Proud)
21. Beckie @ ByTheBook (Captives)
22. Yvann @ Reading With Tea (Return To Oakpine)
23. Yvann @ Reading With Tea (Meet Me At The Cupcake Cafe)
24. Yvann @ Reading With Tea (The Paris Architect)
25. Thoughts of Joy (Out of My Mind)
26. Thoughts of Joy (The Girl You Left Behind)
27. Janet (Huckleberry Finn)
28. Susanne~LivingToTell (The Light Between Oceans)
29. Girl Detective (Matched)
30. Girl Detective (The Giver)
31. JD (The Book of Lost Things)
32. Hope (A Child al Confino – WWII)
33. Reading World (anne of denmark)
34. Reading World (Colony)
35. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (Faithful Preaching)
36. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (Back on Murder)
37. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (10 Sacred Cows in Christianity that Need to Be Tipped)
38. Brenda (The Hero’s Guide to Saving your Kingdom)
39. Anna @ Diary of an Eccentric (Rutherford Park)
40. Anna @ Diary of an Eccentric (Austenland)

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Poetry Friday: Plagiarizing Donne

The following poem was kinda, sorta plagiarized by me from John Donne’s poem, A Lecture Upon the Shadow. I was trying to write some song lyrics for my musician son to put to music, and I liked the images and thoughts in Mr. Donne’s poem. So I captured them in my own poem/song, and I also used a quote from Downton Abbey that I liked and believe to be true. Quoth Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham: “One way or another, everyone goes down the aisle with half the story hidden.”

So, anyway, here’s my take on shadows and secrets and the clarity of love:

'No thank you!' photo (c) 2011, Mathias - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/
Stand still and I will read to you,
A shadow lecture in the sun
Three hours we’ve spent, two shadows went,
A-walking hand in hand.
A-walking hand in hand.

And everyone goes down the aisle
With half the story hidden.

The sun is just above our heads,
The shadows underfoot.
In clearness brave, all things reduced,
Disguises flow away,
Disguises flow away.

'Hochzeit M & R' photo (c) 2010, !Koss - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/But everyone goes down the aisle
With half the story hidden.

And after noon new shadows shall
We make the other way.
At first we’re blind, these come behind,
And westwardly decline.
And westwardly decline.

Oh love’s day is short, if love decay,
Love needs a growing or constant light;
His first minute, after noon, is night.

And everyone goes into night
With half the story hidden.

Celebrate August 13th: Alfred Hitchcock’s Birthday

“Once a man commits himself to murder, he will soon find himself stealing. The next step will be alcoholism, disrespect for the Sabbath and from there on it will lead to rude behaviour. As soon as you set the first steps on the path to destruction you will never know where you will end. Lots of people owe their downfall to a murder they once committed and weren’t too pleased with at the time.” ~Alfred Hitchcock

Famous movie director Alfred Hitchcock took many of his movies ideas from books or short stories. How many of these books or stories, turned into movies by Hitchcock, have you read?

Rebecca by Daphne duMaurier.
Reviewed by Rebecca at Rantings of a Bookworm Couch Potato: “Daphne DuMaurier’s writing is beautiful, I often found myself just getting taken away by her words. Many times I felt myself needing to slow down as I read, to reread a passage in order to fully absorb the language.”
Reviewed by Carrie at Reading to Know: “Although I think that Daphne Du Maurier is an extremely clever writer and makes beautiful usage of the English language, she also wrote a very broken story with Rebecca.” (Note how in his movie Hitchcock “fixed” to some extent the brokenness Carrie writes about.)

Jamaica Inn by Daphne duMaurier.
Watch Jamaica Inn (1939) with Charles Laughton and Maureen O’Hara.
Reviewed at Library Hospital: “The descriptions, the phrasing before I turned that first page I already felt with nearly all my senses the scene she was describing. It was as if in my minds eye I could almost see and with my nose I could smell and with my body I could feel that November weather. I nearly forgot it was the middle of August and I was sitting on my couch chilled only by the air conditioning and a fan.”

The Birds by Daphne duMaurier (short story).
Reviewed at Savidge Reads: “. . . the story is nothing like the film apart from the fact that birds do turn on humans. I would say that (having watched the film again since) Daphne’s original version is much darker.”

Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith.
Reviewed at Becky’s Book Reviews: “Disturbing and super-creepy, but effectively so. I think the whole point of the novel was to show what could be lurking deep inside (or not-so-deep inside, perhaps just barely under the surface) of the person sitting next to you, the stranger.”

Rear Window by Cornell Woolrich (short story).
Reviewed by Dani at A Work in Progress: “Cornell Woolrich . . . was a successful writer of pulp and detective fiction, and I read that more of his stories and novels have been adapted to film than any other crime writer.”

Vertigo based on the novel D’entre les morts, aka Sueurs froides by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac.
LitLove compares the book to the movie: ” In the novel it’s the man’s innate sadness which seems to suck in tragedy, whereas in the film, it’s the woman’s. In the film, the woman is dangerous for the man, whereas in the novel, the man is dangerous to himself.”

The 39 Steps by John Buchan.
Reviewed at Woman of the House: “I was amused rather than dismayed at the long pile-up of unlikely events throughout the story. Our hero, Richard Hannay, has the uncanniest luck I have ever seen and is more than once saved from certain demise by the unlikeliest of rescuers.”

The Lady Vanishes, based on The Wheel Spins by Ethel Lina White.
Reviewed by Dani at A Work in Progress: “It has all the right elements to create a perfect suspense story–a speeding train crossing Europe filled with holidaymakers returning home, a woman who mysteriously disappears, and a lone witness whom none of the passengers believe.”

Psycho by Robert Bloch.
Reviewed at The Literary Lollipop: “Highly readable and compulsively entertaining. If you’re looking for a scare this Halloween, you don’t have to look very far.”

Marnie by Winston Graham.
I couldn’t find any reviews of the book, but one blogger does call it a good movie, but a bad novel.

The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad.
Reviewed at Lizzy’s Literary Life: “It’s not a thriller in the modern sense for the lens is not focused on the derring-do of spies and terrorists. It’s an examination of the fallout of a terrorist act gone badly wrong.”

Topaz by Leon Uris.
I couldn’t find any reviews of this thriller by one of my favorite authors back in the day, the days, that is, of my teen-age reading. I was a great fan of Mr. Uris’s WW II/Holocaust novels: Exodus, Mila 18, and QB VII. I’m sure I also read Topaz at some time, but I don’t remember it.

To Catch a Thief by David Dodge.
No reviews of the book, and I’ve not read it.

The Trouble with Harry by Jack Trevor Story.

Stage Fright, based on the short story Man Running by Selwyn Jepson.

Sunday Salon: Books Read in July, 2013

I’m a little late here, but I didn’t keep a list last month. So I had to go back and “round up” my memory of what I read, the books on my Kindle, the ones I returned to the library, and the ones I didn’t return, and the reviews I completed, to make up this list of July books.

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
The Lucy Variations by Sara Zarr, reviewed at Semicolon.
Being Henry David by Cal Armistead, reviewed at Semicolon.
Double Crossed by Ally Carter and Uncommon Criminals by Ally Carter, both reviewed at Semicolon.
Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein. ARC. My review will be published here at Semicolon in September, but I can say now that I thought it was just as good as the first “companion book” to this one, Code Name Verity.

Adult Fiction:
Buried in a Bog by Sheila Connolly, reviewed at Semicolon.
No Dark Valley by Jamie Langston Turner, reviewed at Semicolon.
Heirs and Spares by JL. Spohr. I had mixed feelings about this ARC of a debut novel set in a fictional kingdom in (Elizabethan) 1569. Review coming soon.

Nonfiction:
Running the Books by Avi Steinberg, reviewed at Semicolon.
Joni and Ken by Kena and Joni Eareckson Tada, reviewed at Semicolon.
Seeing Through the Fog by Ed Dobson, reviewed at Semicolon.
Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief by Lawrence Wright, reviewed at Semicolon.
Jesus in the Present Tense by Warren Wiersbe. I’m studying the “I AM” statements of Jesus in the book of John (I AM The Good Shepherd, IAM the Light of the World, etc.) for a women’s retreat that our church will sponsor next spring. I’m helping to write some of the Bible study material for the retreat. I think this book by Wiersbe will be the backbone of the study, along with the book of John itself, of course.

Saturday Review of Books: August 10, 2013

“We are what we love to read, and when we admit to loving a book, we admit that the book represents some aspect of ourselves truly, whether it is that we are suckers for romance or pining for adventure or secretly fascinated by crime. ” ~Nina Sankovitch, Tolstoy and the Purple Chair

What do your reading tastes say about who you are?

SatReviewbutton

Welcome to the Saturday Review of Books at Semicolon. Here’s how it usually works. Find a book review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can link to your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Friday night/Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky 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.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (Secondhand Spirits)
2. the Ink Slinger (A Princess of Mars)
3. Barbara H. (The Last Battle, C. S. Lewis)
4. Barbara H. (The Wedding Dress)
5. Carol in Oregon (5 Great Endings)
6. Amy @ Hope is the Word (The Fields of Home)
7. Seth@Collateral Bloggage (Hell is Real But I Hate to Admit It)
8. Beth@Weavings (Hannah Coulter)
9. Beth@Weavings (Whose Body?)
10. Thoughts of Joy (The Silent Wife)
11. Hope (Books read in July)
12. Hope (Do you Keep a Book Log?)
13. Lazygal (Heartbeat)
14. Lazygal (The Lavender Garden)
15. Lazygal (My Favorite Mistake)
16. Lazygal (Chocolates for Breakfast)
17. Lazygal (Chimera)
18. Lazygal (A Dual Inheritance)
19. Lazygal (The Whatnot)
20. Lazygal (The White Princess)
21. Glynn Young (Rapture’s Rain)
22. Glynn Young (Olde Mysterium)
23. Aloi @ Guiltless Reading (This is Pradise)
24. Becky (Anomaly)
25. Aloi @ Guiltless Reading (Godiva)
26. Aloi @ Guiltless Reading (Return to Cardamom)
27. Becky (The Quiet Gentleman)
28. Aloi @ Guiltless Reading (Persephone’s Torch)
29. Becky (The Borgia Bride)
30. Aloi @ Guiltless Reading (The Mirrored World)
31. Becky (The Shade of the Moon)
32. Becky (Wool Omnibus)
33. Becky (The Grand Sophy)
34. Becky (The Magic Pudding)
35. SmallWorld Reads (And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini)
36. Beckie (The White Princess)
37. Chris (Gospel Call and True Conversion)
38. Joseph R. @ Zombie Parents Guide (Eifelheim by Mike Flynn)
39. Girl Detective (World Made by Hand)
40. Anna @ Diary of an Eccentric (The Language of the Fan)
41. Anna @ Diary of an Eccentric (Winter in Wartime)
42. Harvee (Tahoe Chase)

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Poetry Friday: The Lighthouse by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

I’m still thinking about lighthouses, since Wednesday’s National Lighthouse Day post. And I’m rather fond of Longfellow. So here’s a poem about a lighthouse by that homely poet of homespun Americana.

'Lighthouse in rough water' photo (c) 2010, Julian Garduno - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/The rocky ledge runs far into the sea,
And on its outer point, some miles away,
The Lighthouse lifts its massive masonry,
A pillar of fire by night, of cloud by day.

Even at this distance I can see the tides,
Upheaving, break unheard along its base,
A speechless wrath, that rises and subsides
In the white lip and tremor of the face.

And as the evening darkens, lo! how bright,
Through the deep purple of the twilight air,
Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light
With strange, unearthly splendor in the glare!

Not one alone; from each projecting cape
And perilous reef along the ocean’s verge,
Starts into life a dim, gigantic shape,
Holding its lantern o’er the restless surge.

Like the great giant Christopher it stands
Upon the brink of the tempestuous wave,
Wading far out among the rocks and sands,
The night-o’ertaken mariner to save.

And the great ships sail outward and return,
Bending and bowing o’er the billowy swells,
And ever joyful, as they see it burn,
They wave their silent welcomes and farewells.

'MN LkSuperior Split Rock Lighthouse 2007-31' photo (c) 2007, Janalyn - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/They come forth from the darkness, and their sails
Gleam for a moment only in the blaze,
And eager faces, as the light unveils,
Gaze at the tower, and vanish while they gaze.

The mariner remembers when a child,
On his first voyage, he saw it fade and sink;
And when, returning from adventures wild,
He saw it rise again o’er ocean’s brink.

Steadfast, serene, immovable, the same
Year after year, through all the silent night
Burns on forevermore that quenchless flame,
Shines on that inextinguishable light!

It sees the ocean to its bosom clasp
The rocks and sea-sand with the kiss of peace;
It sees the wild winds lift it in their grasp,
And hold it up, and shake it like a fleece.

The startled waves leap over it; the storm
Smites it with all the scourges of the rain,
And steadily against its solid form
Press the great shoulders of the hurricane.

The sea-bird wheeling round it, with the din
Of wings and winds and solitary cries,
Blinded and maddened by the light within,
Dashes himself against the glare, and dies.

A new Prometheus, chained upon the rock,
Still grasping in his hand the fire of Jove,
It does not hear the cry, nor heed the shock,
But hails the mariner with words of love.

“Sail on!” it says, “sail on, ye stately ships!
And with your floating bridge the ocean span;
Be mine to guard this light from all eclipse,
Be yours to bring man nearer unto man!”

August 7th: National Lighthouse Day

'Lighthouse' photo (c) 2006, snowgen - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/On August 7, 1789 The U.S. Congress approved an act for “the establishment and support of lighthouses, beacons, buoys, and public piers.” Then, the first federal lighthouse was constructed at the entrance to Chesapeake Bay.

“Books are lighthouses erected in the great sea of time.” ~E.P. Whipple.

“We are told to let our light shine, and if it does, we won’t need to tell anybody it does. Lighthouses don’t fire cannons to call attention to their shining- they just shine.” ~Dwight L. Moody.

“A good book is a lighthouse; a wise man is a lighthouse; conscience is a lighthouse; compassion is a lighthouse; science is a lighthouse! They all show us the true path! Keep them in your life to remain safe in the rocky and dark waters of life!” ~Mehmet Murat ildan.

A handful of picture books set in lighthouses:
The Lighthouse, the Cat and the Sea by Leigh W. Rutledge. Reviewed at Puss Reboots.
The Lighthouse Keeper’s Daughter by Ariel North Olson.
The Lighthouse Cat by Sue Stainton.
Who Sees the Lighthouse? by Sue Fearrington.
Abbie Against the Storm: The True Story of a Young Heroine and a Lighthouse by Marcia K. Vaughan.
Keep the Lights Burning, Abbie by Peter Roop.
Lighthouse Seeds by Pamela Love.
The Storm by Cynthia Rylant.
The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge by Hildegarde H. Swift and Lynd Ward.

Other related books and fun facts:
The Lighthouse Mystery is number eight in The Boxcar Children mysteries.

There’s a book in the For Kids series called Lighthouses for Kids: History, Science, and Lore with 21 Activities by Katherine L. House. One could easily put together a unit study on lighthouses using this book and others on this list.

Who’s read To the Lighthouse by Virginia Wolf? Does it have anything to do with an actual lighthouse?

The Bolivar Point lighthouse survived the Great Hurricane of 1900 which devastated nearby Galveston, Texas.

Sisters Day

The first Sunday in August is Sisters Day. How can you celebrate your sister or help your children celebrate sisterhood?

Read a picture book.
Big Sister and Little Sister by Charlotte Zolotow.
A Baby Sister for Frances by Russell Hoban.
A Birthday for Frances by Russell Hoban.
Flicka, Ricka, Dicka Bake a Cake by Maj Lindman.
One Morning in Maine by Robert McCloskey.
Big Sister, Little Sister by Leuyen Pham.

Give your sister a book.
Some fiction books that feature sisters and their lovingly complicated relationships are: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley, Deadly Pink by Vivian Vande Velde, Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall, Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild, With a Name Like Love by Tess Hilmo, All-of-a-Kind Family by Sydney Taylor, The Other Half of my Heart by Sundee Frazier, Shanghai Girls by Lisa See, Beautiful by Cindy Martinusen-Coloma, Secret Keeper by Mitali Perkins, I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver, Sense and Sensibiity by Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Losing Faith by Denise Jaden, Beezus and Ramona by Beverly Cleary, Cranford by Mrs. Gaskell.

Call your sister. Send her a letter. Do something together if you can.

Book Tag: Do you have any favorite “sister books” to suggest? The Book Tag rules are:

In this game, readers suggest a good book in the category given, then let somebody else be ‘it’ before they offer another suggestion. There is no limit to the number of books a person may suggest, but they need to politely wait their turn with only one book suggestion per comment.