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2024 Build Your Library Reading Challenge
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
My Bookish Baby
5:24 AM
Someone (I believe it was Gaye of Inside a Book) recently accused me of not posting any new pictures of my baby on this here blog. In my defense, it's a book blog, not a Mommy blog, so I try to keep things mostly book-related. However, my daughter has grown a lot since I last showed you a photo of her. She hardly even resembles the cute little toddler I'm holding in the photo on my right sidebar (*sigh*). Obviously, she's still cute, it's just that she's such a big girl now. It makes me a little sad to watch her getting so grown up and independent. Really, where has the time gone?
Luckily for Gaye, my mother-in-law shot some pictures of little Miss J. just a couple of weeks ago. not only are they dorable, but they're also bookish in nature. So, here you go:
Isn't she just too cute for words? That huge grin is always on her face. It's absolutely infectious and has gotten her out of trouble many, many times. Someone once said that this little girl's special talent is making people happy and I couldn't agree more. She brings joy into our lives every single day.
The pictures are of J. using the Little Free Library my in-laws set up in their front yard. Have you heard about this small, but ingenious movement? It's been a fun little project for my in-laws. Their lush, well-maintained yard has always received lots of attention, but now that it's got this small, take-a-book-leave-a-book library, it's become an even more popular spot!
In other news, I'm now only 8 reviews behind. Maybe I will finish writing them sometime in this lifetime! One can always hope ...
Luckily for Gaye, my mother-in-law shot some pictures of little Miss J. just a couple of weeks ago. not only are they dorable, but they're also bookish in nature. So, here you go:
Isn't she just too cute for words? That huge grin is always on her face. It's absolutely infectious and has gotten her out of trouble many, many times. Someone once said that this little girl's special talent is making people happy and I couldn't agree more. She brings joy into our lives every single day.
The pictures are of J. using the Little Free Library my in-laws set up in their front yard. Have you heard about this small, but ingenious movement? It's been a fun little project for my in-laws. Their lush, well-maintained yard has always received lots of attention, but now that it's got this small, take-a-book-leave-a-book library, it's become an even more popular spot!
In other news, I'm now only 8 reviews behind. Maybe I will finish writing them sometime in this lifetime! One can always hope ...
Book of Mormon Girl Power Story Has Definite Potential
1:00 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
Maybe it's because she's got three brothers. Or because her best friend Ezekiel "Zeke" is a boy. Or maybe it's for some other reason entirely, but 15-year-old Keturah wants to be a soldier. All the teenage boys in the land of Zarahemla are gathering, forming an army they hope the prophet Helaman will command in the war against the Lamanites. Keturah longs to be part of that army, to prove herself on the battlefield. She knows she's at least as tough as her 12-year-old brother, who's getting combat training every day. So, she watches the boys in secret, practicing the moves they're taught, hoping to learn enough to show Helaman she can fight just as well as any boy. Maybe better.
Not everyone is thrilled about Keturah's desire to fight. Her mother and brothers would prefer she stick to something more ladylike. Keturah's boldness angers Zeke, her intended husband, even as it amuses Gideon, an intriguing stranger who's training with the other boys from Melek. Since she's the only girl in her household, Keturah's job is to help her mother. Keturah has no intention of shirking her responsibilities at home; she wants to train in addition to doing her chores. And she will—no matter how hard she has to work, no matter how much others disapprove, no matter what her nontraditional desires will cost her.
As the bloodthirsty Lamanites make their way toward Zarahemla—a place full of adults who have buried their weapons of war, vowing never to take them up again—every member of the rising generation must do what he/she can to defend the land of their inheritance. Keturah wants a chance to do just that. If only she can show the men in charge that she means business. It's a question of how far she's willing to go, how much she's willing to risk to get what she wants. As the Lamanites march ever closer, Keturah must battle her own heart to decide whether she should do what's expected of her or follow her own path, even if it means endangering her reputation, her family's good name, and her future marriage to the man who loves her as much more than just a best friend.
Obviously, Daughter of Helaman by Misty Moncur, isn't the only novel ever to have been inspired by stories from The Book of Mormon; it is, however, the only one I've read. For some reason, I shy away from this genre. I don't have a problem with it per se, I just find it a little ... strange. Is that weird? I don't know, something about a Nephite boy uttering, "Whatever, dude" (or some such) just rubs me the wrong way, you know?
(Readalikes: Um, I can't think of anything. Can you?)
Grade: C
If this were a movie, it would be rated: PG for violence and mild sexual innuendo
To the FTC, with love: I received a PDF of Daughter of Helaman from the generous folks at Cedar Fort via the Whitney Awards Committee. Thank you!
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