Friday, December 30, 2011

2011 Book Challenges

What a grand year of reading!  I signed up for three reading challenges...and here are the results!

Dana Huff's Challenge Books I Should Have Read in High School : I initially signed up to read twelve books.  Yes, aggressive!  However, I did read eight, achieving "graduate student."
  1. The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
  2. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  3. The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
  4. Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  5. A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
  6. The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
  7. The Awakening by Kate Chopin
  8. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Vern

What's in a Name :  Uh, oh!  Missed this challenge by one!  I should have paid more attention and chosen a book for each category.
  • A book with a number in the title:
    • Fahrenheit 451
    • The 360 Degree Leader
    • Michael Vey: The Prisoner of Cell 25
    • Slaughterhouse Five
    • The 9th Judgement
    • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
  • A book with jewelry or a gem in the title:
    • Hum...just cannot find a title from my list that fits within this category! 
  • A book with a size in the title:
    • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (league is a size, right?!)
  • A book with travel or movement in the title:
    • The Walk
    • The Sun Also Rises
    • Miles to Go
  • A book with evil in the title:
    • The  Poisonwood Bible (poison!)
    • Wicked
    • The Book of Unholy Mischief
    • City of Fallen Angels
  • A book with a life stage in the title:
    • Dead in Dallas
    • The Christmas Wedding
RIP :  This was my second year to complete this challenge!  September and October are just the perfect times to read such novels!
  • The Sugar Queen by Sarah Addison Allen
  • Dead in Dallas by Charlaine Harris
  • Cross Fire by James Patterson
  • The House at Riverton by Kate Morton
Gillmore: More Reads in 2011 - This was a personal challenge to myself.  I won!
All in all, this has been an excellent year of reading!  Yes, I had hoped to read more professional books, more classics, but again, all in all, a very good year!

#59: Focus

My final read for 2011, Focus:  Elevating the Essentials to Radically Improve Student Learning, by Mike Schmoker, is the selected read for our entire school district.

Our superintendent read this book, and it spoke to him as the answer to our implementing the Common Core Standards.

Here are my initial thoughts on Focus in a post entitled Surreal? No, Real Focus and later here in post A Friendly Literary Merge, where I also discuss PĂ©rsida Himmele's and William Himmele's professional development book Total Participation Techniques.

The first three chapters discuss the what and how we teach literacy, discussing two templates the author promotes:  authentic literacy and interactive lecture. Then, the next four chapters focus on the curriculum areas of English language arts, social studies, science, and mathematics.

Schmoker repeatedly promotes teaching less more indepthly and utilizing textbooks, which is interesting since our department no longer uses textbooks. Hum...

We have spent one professional development day reading portions of the book, then discussing in our PLN's.  We are scheduled to continue our work with this book and the implementation of its key components next Wednesday as we return to school for another day of developing professionally.

I recommend this book, for it is based on common sense, of which education needs a healthy dose!

More December Reads: #56-58

Christmas Break is a success when one is reading, and that has been my main goal this week!

#56:  The Christmas Box Collection by Richard Paul Evans

I meant to read this before Christmas...just glad I pulled it off my bookshelf.  These three inter-connected stories essentially tell the story of  David and Mary Parkin over a span of several decades years and in several flashbacks and their impact on others.

I recommend reading all three, as I did, as one read.  Waiting until an author completes a series has its advantages!

As a  Christian, concerns consumed me that Evans did not proclaim Christianity more vehemently, as he had the narrator seem to question God at times.  For this reason, I really appreciated the character Mary...the mother...wonder if that name were chosen deliberately?...for she bears much, looses much, then is eternally rewarded with much.

I also so appreciated the stand David took for Laurence as he fought the Goliaths of his time.  Yes, another intesesting connection.

If you are an Evans fan, then please read this collection!

#57 The Awakening by Kate Chopin

A read often assigned in our AP Lang class, this one I had been meaning to read for some time.  Hum, how do I say this?  Well...I was glad when I finally finished all 117 pages of the novella. 

I do not like the main character Edna.  Maybe I am not supposed to?

I suppose I began reading the novel with some presuppositions, thinking that this would be a read about women's rights, about a woman learning who she truly is and overcoming all odds...which Edna does to some degree.

For this read, I would have to agree with peer teacher Amanda when she states she just does not care for American writers.  I just did not care for this novel.  That was hard for me to admit/type!

#58 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne

Interesting.  I agreed to read this novel with a lit circle group in one of my English 11 classes back in October.  Needless to say, I did not meet that reading deadline!  Did meet the deadline, though, for this to be a part of Dana Huffs Books I Wish I Had Read in High School but Didn't Reading Challenge.

First, let me say everyone needs to read this book because of all the allusions made to this novel.  Definitely a classic.  Jules Verne is definitely the father of science fiction!

Reading the introduction helped me immensely when Bruce Coville grants permission for some readers to skim/scan the lists and lists and lists of the many underwater species that Verne includes (although these lists certainly add validity to the novel!).

The novel relates the 20,000 league journey of several men in an underwater vessel, one unlike anyone has ever encountered.  The professor, narrator of this adventure, brings to life Captian Nemo (might keep in mind that Nemo means nobody), Harpooner Ned, and his personal servant Conseil.

While I could have forgone the many lists, I actually did learn much about life underwater and the geography of the journey.  I just thinking...if I were teaching this novel, my students and I would create a Google Map of the journey.  That would be cool!

Yes, I definitely recommend this novel...just be prepared to journey 20,000 leagues!

Monday, December 26, 2011

December Reads: Books #52-55.5

Christmas has come and gone...amazing!  With the passage of December, thus far, I have read three Christmas novels and, along with the season, have enjoyed these literary creations

The Christmas Wedding by James Patterson

A quick read, this one tells the story of a mom who invited all her kids home for Christmas and to her wedding to a groom she has yet to announce...from the three who have proposed.  Interesting dilemma!  One that I enjoyed, though!  More info here on the James Patterson website...

A Chesapeake Shores Christmas by Sherryl Woods

The O'Briens have fallen in love and desire to remarry, but mother Meagan holds out for the approval of all her children.  As I completed this one, I wished for the next in the series.  Ah..will have to wait for next year, I suppose!  AND according to the Sherryl Woods website, I am year behind in this series.  Uh, oh!

A Log Cabin Christmas Collection by various authors

Last year, I began the first in what I now think is going to be a series of these short story collections....A Prairie Christmas Collection. I only completed half of the short stories then, so I resumed where I stopped, and then while shopping for a Christmas present in a local Christian store for a friend, I found A Log Cabin Christmas Collection.  Now, I just hope there is a third installment to this series!

Shakespeare Christmas by Charlaine Harris

The third in the Lily Bard series, this novel takes the reader to Lily's home town for her sister's Christmas wedding and a few murders.  I just love this series!  Lily, a survivor of a brutal rape, works hard to become physically independent (she's very strong now), has a hunky boyfriend (her past scars do not deter him), cleans houses for a living (this just makes her even more believable to this working mom), and assists in solving crimes (in her spare time, of course!).

I went in search of the next in this series, but having misplaced it from myself, I instead chose Richard Paul Evan's The Christmas Box Collection.  December is not over yet!  Good, so far...more on that to come!

I hope your holiday is finding the gift of books in your life also!