We are pleased to announce that during May we received a total of 267 legitimate comments on our blogs so will donate $134 to The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Thanks to all our readers who took extra time to leave comments!
For June, we are excited about donating 50 cents per comment on all four of our blogs to Joni and Friends. Joni is a person Gerard most admires and whose ministry is close to his heart. Joni is a paraplegic, an artist and founder of Joni and Friends. After reading Out Of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper, I have more compassion for those with disabilities and got a better understanding of their needs and what they go through. I am so grateful that I do not have these struggles and want to help those who do. Donating to Joni and Friends is a good way to help.
Joni and Friends is a Christian organization that seeks to meet physical, mental, emotional and spiritual needs of the physically challenged. The exciting part is that up until July 15, there is a group of supporters who will match each donation received up to $250,000. That means our donation will be doubled so this is the right time to donate! Visit Joni and Friends website to learn more about this fantastic organization.
Please visit our blogs and comment away! The best way to visit our blogs regularly would be to include us in your blog roll so you can easily see when we update and remember to visit.
If you donate to a charity per comment on your blog, kindly let us know so we can include you in our special “comments for charity” blog roll and support you as well. Take a look at it to find other blogs that are doing this. Our other three are listed there.
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Comment For Our Charity For June: Joni And Friends
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Tuesday Teaser: "The Chosen One" and "If You Believe"

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading,. Anyone can play along, so I thought I would play for fun! Just do the following
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title and author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teaser.
Me? What? Me to be married? I think I have no blood. I think I have lost the ability to breathe.From page 24 of The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams.
Karen's:
He didn't reach for her. His only touch was with his eyes. And somehow that look, that glance, was more intense and physical than any touch she'd ever known.From page 88 of If You Believe by Kristin Hannah.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? You can help our charity of the month just by leaving a comment on any of our blogs! We will donate 50 cents per comment at the end of the month. The charity for this month is at the top of our blog.
Sunday, May 29, 2011
"Two Kisses For Maddy" by Matthew Logelin
WOW! What an awesome book Two Kisses For Maddy by Matthew Logelin is! Matt never intended to write a book, but when his wife, Liz, died the day after giving birth to their daughter, Maddy, he did. This book pulls no punches. Matt describes his feelings so well! He takes the reader through the birth of their daughter, his wife's death, funeral and how he has to raise a daughter on his own. All this from a guy who says he has trouble hanging a picture on a wall! I enjoyed the book very much. I just wish like he does, he did not have to write it. I encourage you to read this book—it's very good! Visit his website at http://www.mattlogelin.com/
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? You can help our charity of the month just by leaving a comment on any of our blogs! We will donate 50 cents per comment at the end of the month. The charity for this month is at the top of our blog.
Labels:
death,
family,
fathers and daughters,
Gerard's favorites,
grief,
memoirs,
non-fiction,
sad
Friday, May 27, 2011
"The Emergency Teacher" by Christina Asquith
I was disappointed in The Emergency Teacher--the Inspirational Story of a New Teacher in an Inner City School by Christina Asquith. It’s about a journalist who decides to be an emergency teacher for a year in an inner city school in Philadelphia that has a reputation as a bad school. The school district was so desperate that it accepted practically anybody—no teaching degree necessary. Even then, the special Ed class never did get a steady teacher. This book tells the tragic story about the inequities in education in America. The author wrote about her own experience in teaching a 6th grade class in a bilingual school. She soon found out teaching was not as easy as she thought it would be.
This is not the typical inspirational story about how a teacher goes into a tough class and turns it around, making a difference in their lives. This one sadly is probably more realistic. Yes, the teacher tries to teach; yes, she becomes attached to her students and cares about them; and yes, her students come around and like her for the most part. However, few if any graduate. It shows more failures than successes. It started off very slow and I almost gave up on this one but then about halfway through it finally got better.
(Karen's review)
Here's my teaser.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? You can help our charity of the month just by leaving a comment on any of our blogs! We will donate 50 cents per comment at the end of the month. The charity for this month is at the top of our blog.
Labels:
inner city,
middle school,
non-ficion,
teachers,
teaching
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Three Little Words by Ashley Rhodes-Courter (UPDATED 6-1-11)
Wow and wow! I didn't think I would like Three Little Words by Ashley Rhodes-Courter this much, but I did! Always a good thing when I am pleasantly surprised. Three Little Words is the true story of Ashley and her brother who were put into foster care because their mom was unfit to raise them. It reads like a novel but the sad part is that it is true. It was an eye opener for me that this kind of stuff goes on. I enjoyed it right from the start. It has a super ending! I highly recommend you put this on your TBR list!
(Gerard's review)
Here's our teaser for this. Karen plans on reading this one too.
UPDATED 6-1-11 (Karen's review):
Books like this make me so proud and grateful for parents who were foster parents to two sisters and a brother so they wouldn't have to be split up. The boy was the youngest, age 4, when they moved in and it was the only foster home they ever had. The girls were 5 and 6. Although my parents never adopted them, we were definitely a family!
Three Little Words by Ashley Rhodes-Courter is both heart-breaking and inspirational. When reading this, I was outraged at some of the foster homes this girl lived in and some of the social workers. Fortunately, it is not all bad and shows there were some very special people who came into her life that really helped her find good parents. Ashley and her brother were together in some homes but then were separated. I felt bad that her adoptive parents wouldn't take the boy too.
I really related to her feelings about visiting her mom and looking forward to the day when they would be reunited. The kids we took in always had this same hope that never materialized until after the girls graduated. Then they moved in with their biological dad nearby for a short time. I highly recommend this book to anyone who cares about kids. Maybe it will even prod you to open your home to a child who needs a family!
Sorry for my personal experience tossed into this review, but it really hit a nerve with me. Thanks, Mrs. 4444 at Half-Past Kissin' Time for recommending this book to us!
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? You can help our charity of the month just by leaving a comment on any of our blogs! We will donate 50 cents per comment at the end of the month. The charity for this month is at the top of our blog.
Labels:
abuse,
foster care,
Gerard's favorites,
inspirational,
Karen's favorites,
memoirs,
mothers and daughters,
Our Favorites,
sad
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

