Music Monday - Awake at Last feat. Spencer Charnas "The Change"
Not exactly sure why, but I can’t get this song out my head lately.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: A Delicate Deception (Regency Imposters #3)
Author: Cat Sebastian
Publisher: Avon 2019
Genre: Romance
Pages: 275
Rating: 3/5 stars
Reading Challenges: Finishing the Series
Spice Rating: 5
When Amelia Allenby escaped a stifling London ballroom for the quiet solitude of the Derbyshire countryside, the very last thing she wanted was an extremely large, if—she grudgingly admits—passably attractive man disturbing her daily walks. Lecturing the surveyor about property rights doesn’t work and, somehow, he has soon charmed his way into lemon cakes, long walks, and dangerously heady kisses.
The very last place Sydney wished to be was in the shadow of the ruins of Pelham Hall, the inherited property that stole everything from him. But as he awaits his old friend, the Duke of Hereford, he finds himself increasingly captivated by the maddeningly lovely and exceptionally odd Amelia. He quickly finds that keeping his ownership of Pelham Hall a secret is as impossible as keeping himself from falling in love with her.
But when the Duke of Hereford arrives, Sydney’s ruse is revealed and what started out as a delicate deception has become a love too powerful to ignore. Will they let a lifetime of hurt come between them or can these two lost souls find love and peace in each other?
I finally picked up the final volume in the Regency Imposters series. And while I enjoyed Amelia and her the duke, this wasn’t my favorite. I found the story a little too slow to get moving. Couple that with a decided lack of an ending and I a pretty underwhelmed by this one. I did enjoy the idea of these adults finding a family situation that works for them and pursuing their happiness. I wanted Amelia to keep true to her own boundaries and was very excited to see that she did. But Sydney just didn’t captivate me as a FMC. I much preferred Lex and wanted the story to focus more on him. So decent read, but not one that going to go on my forever shelf.
Regency Imposters
#3 A Delicate Deception
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: The City of Dreaming Books
Author: Walter Moers
Publisher: Overlook 2007
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 464
Rating: 5/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
Optimus Yarnspinner’s search for an author’s identity takes him to Bookholm―the so-called City of Dreaming Books. On entering its streets, our hero feels as if he has opened the door of a gigantic second-hand bookshop. His nostrils are assailed by clouds of book dust, the stimulating scent of ancient leather, and the tang of printer’s ink.
Soon, though, Yarnspinner falls into the clutches of the city’s evil genius, Pfistomel Smyke, who treacherously maroons him in the labyrinthine catacombs underneath the city, where reading books can be genuinely dangerous . . .
In The City of Dreaming Books, Walter Moers transports us to a magical world where reading is a remarkable adventure. Only those intrepid souls who are prepared to join Yarnspinner on his perilous journey should read this book. We wish the rest of you a long, safe, unutterably dull, and boring life!
I don’t quite know how to explain this book and why I enjoyed it. It’s a weird meandering trip through a strange land that reveres books and authors above all else. We follow Optimus Yarnspinner as he falls into a treacherous situation full of shady and shadowy characters. We stumble around in the dark catacombs under Bookholm and begin to uncover its secrets. This book is very descriptive and meandering in its plot. There are portions where not much happens. But I was still intrigued in following Yarnspinner through the dark hoping he can find his way out again. I literally gasped out loud a few times when the twists were revealed. Utterly delightful. I can’t wait to discuss this with my Nerdy Bookish Friends. One final note: this book is meant to be read with your eyes, Moers includes a variety of illustrations that add to the fantastical nature of the book. Without those illustrations, I don’t think I would have enjoyed it as much as I have. You must read it on paper or as an ebook.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: Wicked All Night (Night Rebel #3)
Author: Jeaniene Frost
Publisher: Avon 2021
Genre: Romance
Pages: 368
Rating: 4/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
Spice Rating: 5
A gift from the gods...
Veritas and Ian have finally defeated their worst enemy, but the power it took to pierce through to the netherworld has unexpected consequences. Soon, Veritas is forced to rely on the last person she trusts---a golden deity named Phanes, who seeks far more than a temporary alliance with the beautiful vampire.
Can unleash hell...
But a supernatural escape soon pits Veritas and Ian against beings seeking to rule over mortals once again. Now, they must rally friends and foes alike--if the vampire council doesn't execute Veritas first. Plus, a wedge between Veritas and Ian threatens to destroy their love. Can they stand together against the unearthly powers about to be unleashed? Or does their love--and humanity--not stand a chance?
A fitting conclusion to the Night Rebel series and the to my reading of the Frost’s Night Huntress World. I really enjoyed Ian and Veritas’s story and was excited that they got to find their HEA. As all of Frost’s novels, I enjoyed the plot and the pacing, but the endings always feel so rushed. I wanted to sit just a bit with Ian and Veritas after they defeat their enemies and ride off into the night. I did enjoy seeing a variety of character show up for their final battles and acknowledge their unusual but fitting relationship. Overall, I really enjoyed getting to know Ian more and see his story play out.
Night Rebel
#3 Wicked All Night
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: Unlikeable Female Characters: The Women Pop Culture Wants You to Hate
Author: Anna Bogutskaya
Publisher: Sourcebooks 2023
Genre: Nonfiction - Media Criticism
Pages: 340
Rating: 4/5 stars
Reading Challenges: Fall TBR
Female characters throughout history have been burdened by the moral trap that is likeability. Any woman who dares to reveal her messy side has been treated as a cautionary tale. Today, unlikeable female characters are everywhere in film, TV, and wider pop culture. For the first time ever, they are being accepted by audiences and even showered with industry awards. We are finally accepting that women are—gasp—fully fledged human beings. How did we get to this point?
Unlikeable Female Characters traces the evolution of highly memorable female characters, examining what exactly makes them popular, how audiences have reacted to them, and the ways in which pop culture is finally allowing us to celebrate the complexities of being a woman. Anna Bogutskaya, film programmer, broadcaster, and co-founder of the horror film collective and podcast The Final Girls, takes us on a journey through popular film, TV, and music, looking at the nuances of womanhood on and off-screen to reveal whether pop culture—and society—is finally ready to embrace complicated women.
A decent breakdown of various female archetypes in movies and television. This is my favorite gender studies book in years. It is entertaining and informative without being too dense or overly reductive. Bogutskaya deftly details the nine archetypes and how they have been represented in a variety of movies and television. I especially love the Mean Girl and the Angry Girl chapters. I’ll admit that this book was completely illuminating for me because of my past studies and general reading, but I did enjoying reading this book.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Reading: So close to finishing The City of Dreaming Books by Walter Moers for Nerdy Bookish Friends book club. It’s such a weird book but I am enjoying it.
Watching: We finished Loki S2 and I definitely started tearing up at the end. I’m super sad that this is the end of Loki, but it’s a beautiful ending for the character.
Listening: Still trucking along through old episodes of 99PI. I’m put to the end of 2016. Only about 250 episodes to go.
Making: The kids in coop are working on their board games. I’m helping them create supply lists for their games.
Feeling: Loving the lower temps and cozy vibes. I’m all about sweater weather, but I’m usually way too hot.
Planning: Working on planning my Holiday reads TBR. Lots of good choices for this year.
Loving: The coop gained two new families with week. While they won’t join Thursday meetings until January, they’ve officially joined the group. We hope to see them at an extra event soon.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Arthur’s History, Science, Math, and ELA
Another week full of activities that impeded on our book work. We managed to find two mornings to focus on book work. In looking at the next week, we’re going to have the same thing happen. Oh well. Right now we’re all about the activities.
Quentin’s Math, ELA, and Spider Unit
Arthur is all in with reading Tristan Strong Destroys the World. It’s number two in the series. B&R has the first book in its curriculum for grade 4, but we’ve already read it. So I’m just adapting. We are enjoying this sequel. Beyond the actual literature, we are working on some basic grammar skills and starting our writing journey. He also continued his Super Secret Notebook from Blossom & Root.
Poetry for Young People: American Poetry
Reading Explorer: Intro
Tristan Strong Destroys the World by Kwame Mbalia
Quentin read books about bats in honor of our coop themes and the time of the year. He also worked on some basic grammar.
Sing a Song of Seasons
Fairy Tales Collection
The Other Side of the Story
Mr. Bat Wants a Hat by Kitty Black
Amara and the Bats by Emma Reynolds
I Am Bat by Morag Hood
The Bat Book by Charlotte Milner
Bat Colonies by Karen Latchana Kenney
Bat Count by Anna Forrester
Bats Biggest! Littlest! by Sandra Markle
Bats in the Band by Brian Lies
Bats at the Ballgame by Brian Lies
Bats at the Library by Brian Lies
Good Night, Bat! Good Morning, Squirrel! by Paul Meisel
Little Bat in Night School by Brian Lies
It's Raining Bats and Frogs by Rebecca Colby
Chemistry Class
Arthur continued to dive into Singapore 5A. We are definitely going to slow down our math lessons a bit to make sure that Arthur achieves mastery. These past weeks, the units were very much a review of decimals and fractions. We also continued our next logic book.
Singapore Common Core 5A
Orbiting with Logic
Quentin continued with the Tinkeractive Math Book and worked through about a third of it this week. We’re all about review right now. I don’t anticipate starting Singapore 2A until January. We also continued our logic book.
Lollipop Logic Book 3
Tinkeractive Math Grade 1
Arthur covered the beginning of the immigration unit with a discussion of the waves before and right after the Civil War.
DK American History
We were There Too! Young People in US History
Words that Build a Nation
Heart and Soul
Nat Geo Our Country’s Presidents
An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States
This is Our Land: A History of American Immigration
Prairie Lotus by Linda Sue Park
Quentin finished exploring Egypt. We focused on daily life and the myths and stories. Next week, we’ll move on to Mesoamerica. So much to learn and explore!
History Quest Early Times
DK When on Earth?
Human Wold
DK History
DK Timelines of Everything
DK A Child Through Time
A History of Western Art
DK Science Year by Year
DK Myths, Legends, and Sacred Stories
Ancient Worlds by Miranda Smith
Nat Geo Investigates: Ancient Egypt by Jill Rubalcaba
Egypt in Spectacular Cross Section
Ancient Egypt by Jinny Johnson
DK Eyewitness Ancient Egypt
Hieroglyphs by Joyce Milton
What Did the Ancient Egyptians Do for Me? by Patrick Catel
Tales of Ancient Egypt by Roger Lancelyn Green
Arthur learned about Periodic Groups this week. We did an experiment about the difference Sodium and Potassium.
RSO Chemistry
DK Super Simple Chemistry
Story of Science Vol. 2: Newton at the Center by Joy Hakim
DK The Elements
Quentin got back into RSO Life with a unit on Arthropods and specifically arachnids. Q really got into spiders!
RSO Life
DK Oversimple Biology
Are You a Spider by Judy Allen
Frank the Seven-Legged Spider by Michaele Razi
The Spider and the Fly by Mary Howl
Spiders! Strange and Wonderful by Laurence Pringle
The Eeensy Weensy Spider Freaks Out by Troy Cummings
Board Games at a Coffeehouse
Arthur continued his exploration of board games. By the end of the six weeks, the kids will have created their own board games. We learned about the elements of games and created a rough and dirty race-to-the-end game as an example. Quentin’s class finished their theme on government.
STEM Day
None this week. Maybe next week…
DK Music and How it Works
DK The Arts
Modern Art Adventures by Maja Pitamic and Jill Laidlaw
13 American Artists Children Should Know
A Child's Introduction to Art
Women in Art by Rachel Ignotofsky
We are Artists by Kari Herbert
We had a field trip planned for Tuesday, but it completely fell apart at the last minute. The boys and I pivoted and went to one of the new parks. We played for a few hours before continuing with our planned day.
On Wednesday, we got to participate in DoSpace’s STEM Day. The kids cycled through four different topics and projects through the morning. They learned about hydroponics, rockets, robots, and DNA. The logistics were a little messy, but we had a good time.
Making a board game at coop
We had a successful meeting with a new coop family coupled with the boys playing a few board games with their friend. We followed that up with a board game meet-up with some coop friends.
Quentin’s Math and Bats Unit
A friend started a Pokemon group. We went, but it was so draining for me. I know the boys had fun, but my goodness, I was so tired afterward. Hopefully this will get better as the kids really learned to play.
Quentin’s Egypt
Arthur’s ELA and Math
Finishing Tristan Strong?
Covering more classic tales
Reviewing multiplying and dividing fractions (A)
Lots of math review (Q)
Move to Meosamerica for Q’s History
Moving into industrialization for A’s History
Covering more of the Periodic Table
Pokemon Club
Next up on the TBR pile:
As I look outside my window: After weeks where our backyard tree stayed green with just a tinge of red on one side. In two days, all of the leaves dropped. I didn’t get my beautiful red tree this year. Feeling a bit sad…
Right now I am: Pulling out my book for my normal Sunday morning reading time. I haven’t been able to do it for a few weeks and I miss it!
Thinking and pondering: Should we get donuts this morning? The eternal Sunday question…
On my bedside table: So many books! I have a stack of spicy romances to preread for Dirty Book Month, a few book club books, and a stack of Christmas romances. Not sure what I’m going to pick up next. First I need to actually finish my very strange but enjoyable book.
On my tv this week: We had to watch the S2 finale of Loki; it had me close to tears. And we have watched a few more Nicolas Cage movies to continue our retrospective.
Listening to: I managed to listen to multiple podcast episodes in the last few days. Nearing the end of S1 of Hello from the Magic Tavern, nearing the end of 2016 for 99PI, and continuing with a few of my currently airing podcasts like If Books Could Kill.
On the menu for this week:
Monday - Pork and Green Chile Stew
Tuesday - Spicy Thai Noodles
Wednesday - Fettuccini Alfredo with Chicken, Bacon, and Broccoli
Thursday - Leftovers
Friday - Apple Bacon Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
Saturday - Italian Beef Sandwiches
Sunday - Peanut Sauce Chicken and Broccoli Bowls
On my to do list: Meh. I’m feeling very over my to do list right this second. I’m sure I have a ton of things to do, but I’m going to focus on prepping our curriculum and getting my Chemistry and Coop lessons set aside. Otherwise, I’m just existing this week.
Happening this week:
Monday - Meeting with a potential coop family; Chemistry Class
Tuesday - Kids’ Dentist Appointments; Book Club
Wednesday - Playdate with a friend
Thursday - Coop; Pirate Putt
Friday - Nature Explorers at Fontenelle Forest
Saturday - Kid Birthday Party
Sunday - Breakfast Club
What I am creating: Nothing beyond piles… seriously I’m just making piles of clothes and things to get rid of. I don’t often do a spring cleanout. I do a before Christmas cleanout.
My simple pleasures: Hot tea, apple cider, Italian soda — apparently I was very thirty this week!
Looking around the house: Beyond the piles, I got a ton of the first floor back under control. I do want to vacuum today and get the laundry done, but otherwise, the house is in decent shape.
From the camera: Got my semiannual hair chop! So much lighter and able to get a bit of volume through the winter months.
My favorite season of the year. We’re diving into the spooky season and planning on soaking up all the fall fun.
Visit Vala’s 6x ✓
Celebrate Friendsgiving
Read 50 Books - in progress
Complete Spooky Movie Month ✓
Execute a Halloween Party for Coop ✓
Have an Art/Craft Day
Three State Park Visists ✓
Two Zoo Visits
Pick Out and Carve Pumpkins ✓
Go Trick-or-Treating ✓
Jump in a Pile of Leaves
Go Through a Corn Maze ✓
Make 5 Fall Recipes
Make Leaf Art ✓
Go Pick Apples ✓
Go on a 3 Fall Forest Hikes (2/3)
Make 3 Pumpkin Recipes
Go Bowling
Use our GetOut Pass 2 Times
Decorate for Fall ✓
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: Wicked Bite (Night Rebel #2)
Author: Jeaniene Frost
Publisher: Avon 2020
Genre: Romance
Pages: 371
Rating: 4/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
Spice Rating: 5
Some promises are meant to be broken…
Veritas spent most of her life as a vampire Law Guardian. Now, she’s about to break every rule by secretly hunting down the dark souls that were freed in order to save Ian. But the risks are high. For if she gets caught, she could lose her job. And catching the sinister creatures might cost Veritas her own life.
Some vows are forever…
Ian’s memories might be fragmented, but this master vampire isn’t about to be left behind by the woman who entranced him, bound herself to him, and then disappeared. So what if demons, other Law Guardians, and dangerous, otherworldly forces stand against them? Come hell or high water, Ian intends to remind Veritas of the burning passion between them, because she is the only person seared on his mind—and his soul…
A fun continuation of Ian and Veritas’s story. I liked how we moved beyond the Dagon storyline from the original book. We get to see some more players and learn more about Veritas’s nature. Her love story with Ian continues to evolve while staying true to who both of them are. I would have liked a few more conversations between the two and less miscommunication, but I realize that it’s in both their natures to conceal their true plans from others. I’m excited to finish off their story with the last book in the trilogy.
Night Rebel
#2 Wicked Bite
#3 Wicked All Night
Next up on the TBR pile:
Here's my randomness for the week:
This week has been nonstop with activities. I need a break.
Nic Cage November has been an interesting experiment. Slowly making our way through.
Planning a very quiet very small reading weekend for February. There’s some cute options within 2 hours of here.
I still need to clean out the clothes in my dresser. It’s been slow going.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: Find Him Where You Left Him Dead (Death Games #1)
Author: Kristen Simmons
Publisher: Tor Teen 2023
Genre: YA Horror
Pages: 272
Rating: 3/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
Four years ago, five kids started a game. Not all of them survived.
Now, at the end of their senior year of high school, the survivors—Owen, Madeline, Emerson, and Dax—have reunited for one strange and terrible reason: they’ve been summoned by the ghost of Ian, the friend they left for dead.
Together they return to the place where their friendship ended with one goal: find Ian and bring him home. So they restart the deadly game they never finished—an innocent card-matching challenge called Meido. A game without instructions.
As soon as they begin, they're dragged out of their reality and into an eerie hellscape of Japanese underworlds, more horrifying than even the darkest folktales that Owen's grandmother told him. There, they meet Shinigami, an old wise woman who explains the rules:
They have one night to complete seven challenges or they'll all be stuck in this world forever.
Once inseparable, the survivors now can’t stand each other, but the challenges demand they work together, think quickly, and make sacrifices—blood, clothes, secrets, memories, and worse.
And once again, not everyone will make it out alive.
This was strange and weird and gory. Usually I would love those adjectives when describing a horror book, but ultimately this one wasn’t really for me. We’re thrown right into this story with little set-up. I had a little trouble connecting to the four main characters and getting their backstories straight to understand their current situation. From there, the game starts. I didn’t mind not knowing the rules. What I minded was the fact that I could never really get a sense of the setting and action. The writing was really unclear at times. I never could really see the story in my head. From that, I was annoyed. And the characters themselves. Too whiny, too closed off, not enough growth for anyone over the course of the novel. Plus there was a big subplot about the Empress character that just never went anywhere. Not my cup of tea.
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: The September House
Author: Carissa Orlando
Publisher: Barley 2023
Genre: Horror
Pages: 344
Rating: 5/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
When Margaret and her husband Hal bought the large Victorian house on Hawthorn Street—for sale at a surprisingly reasonable price—they couldn’t believe they finally had a home of their own. Then they discovered the hauntings. Every September, the walls drip blood. The ghosts of former inhabitants appear, and all of them are terrified of something that lurks in the basement. Most people would flee.
Margaret is not most people.
Margaret is staying. It’s her house. But after four years Hal can’t take it anymore, and he leaves abruptly. Now, he’s not returning calls, and their daughter Katherine—who knows nothing about the hauntings—arrives, intent on looking for her missing father. To make things worse, September has just begun, and with every attempt Margaret and Katherine make at finding Hal, the hauntings grow more harrowing, because there are some secrets the house needs to keep.
Another new random book from the library. I had to sneak in a few more spooky books even if it is November now. This one did not disappoint. I was creeped out by the first chapter. We’re told about this house in snippets and flashbacks injected with Margaret’s very detached narration. The events that she recounts are certainly creepy, but are they real? I was desperate to find to the answer to that question. And the book does not disappoint. We get an answer by the end, and it’s a good one. This is very horror filled and not for the feint of heart.
Next up on the TBR pile:
A’s History and ELA/Math
Art and Music Books
I think that I’ve accepted that this past week is going to be a new normal. We just don’t have enough hours in a week to shove everything in and I need to make some cuts. Basically, I have slowed down our book work to continue our nature hikes, extra coop activities, and errands. At some point I have to actually go to the grocery store and the library. We made time for all of that this week and I don’t feel like our school work completely disappeared. This year has really been about adjusting expectations with two kids doing full-time work.
Arthur is all in with reading Tristan Strong Destroys the World. It’s number two in the series. B&R has the first book in its curriculum for grade 4, but we’ve already read it. So I’m just adapting. We are enjoying this sequel. Beyond the actual literature, we are working on some basic grammar skills and starting our writing journey. He also continued his Super Secret Notebook from Blossom & Root.
Poetry for Young People: American Poetry
Reading Explorer: Intro
Tristan Strong Destroys the World by Kwame Mbalia
Quentin covered the B&R theme of Tell it in Three with books on the Goldilocks and Three Little Pigs fairy tales. He loved them! We also did a mini unit on pumpkins. He also worked on some basic grammar.
Sing a Song of Seasons
Fairy Tales Collection
The Three Bears by Paul Galdone
Goldilocks and the Three Knocks by Gregory Barrington
Goldy Luck and the Three Pandas by Natasha Yim
Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs by Mo Willems
The Other Side of the Story
You Choose: Goldilocks and the Three Bears
The Three Little Pigs by Paul Galdone
The Three Little Pigs by Barry Moser
The Three Little Pigs by James Marshall
The Three Wolves and the Big Bad Pig by Eugene Trivizas
The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by Jon Scieszka
Three Three Superpigs by Claire Evans
The Three Swingin' Pigs by Vicky Rubin
It's Not the Three Little Pigs by Josh Funk
The Three Little Pigs and the Somewhat Bad Wolf by Mark Teague
The Three Little Javelinas by Susan Lowell
Let's Celebrate Halloween by J. Patrick Lewis
The Pumpkin Mystery by Carol Wallace
Pumpkin. by Jackie Lee
Ten Little Pumpkins by Rosie Greening
Pumpkin Heads by Wendell Minor
When Pumpkins Fly by Margaret Lawrence
The Bumpy Little Pumpkin by Margery Cuyler
The Great Zombie Pumpkin Parade by Robert Burleigh
Flat Stanley and the Missing Pumpkins by Lori Haskins Houran
Mystery Vine by Cathryn Falwell
Rocket and the Perfect Pumpkin by Tad Hills
Oh My, Pumpkin Pie by Charles Ghigna
Duck, Duck, Dinosaur: Perfect Pumpkin by Kallie George
Pumpkin Day by Candice Ransom
Mr. Pumpkin's Tea Party by Erin Barker
A Unicorn Named Sparkles and the Pumpkin Monster by Amy Young
Pumpkin Trouble by Jan Thomas
Let's Explore Pumpkins by Jill Colella
The Great Pumpkin Contest by Angie Rozelaar
Runaway Pumpkins by Teresa Bateman
10 Spooky Pumpkins by Cris Grimly
The Runaway Pumpkin by Kevin Lewis
It's a Pumpkin by Wendy McClure
Ancient Egypt
ELA/Math and Goldliocks Books
Arthur continued to dive into Singapore 5A. We are definitely going to slow down our math lessons a bit to make sure that Arthur achieves mastery. These past weeks, the units were very much a review of decimals and fractions. We also continued our next logic book.
Singapore Common Core 5A
Orbiting with Logic
Quentin started a Tinkeractive Math Book and worked through about half of it this week. We’re all about review right now. I don’t anticipate starting Singapore 2A until January. We also continued our logic book.
Lollipop Logic Book 3
Tinkeractive Math Grade 1
Happy Halloween!
The Great Candy Sort of 2023 (complete with math lesson)
Arthur covered cowboys vs. farmers and the end of the west for this week’s history. Our next big unit is all about Industrialization, Immigration, and Urbanization. We’re getting to my favorite time period in U.S. History.
DK American History
We were There Too! Young People in US History
Words that Build a Nation
Heart and Soul
Nat Geo Our Country’s Presidents
An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States
Which Way to the Wild West by Steve Sheinkin
Bill Pickett: Rodeo-Riding' Cowboy by Andrea D. Pinkney
Prairie Lotus by Linda Sue Park
Quentin continued exploring Egypt. We focused on the famous pharaohs. We have one more week in Egypt before we cross an ocean to Mesoamerica. So much to learn and explore!
History Quest Early Times
DK When on Earth?
Human Wold
DK History
DK Timelines of Everything
DK A Child Through Time
A History of Western Art
DK Science Year by Year
DK Myths, Legends, and Sacred Stories
Ancient Worlds by Miranda Smith
Tut’s Mummy Lost and Found by Judy Donnelly
Howard's Mummy: Howard Carter and the Search for King Tut's Tomb by Tracey Fern
Nat Geo Investigates: Ancient Egypt by Jill Rubalcaba
Egypt in Spectacular Cross Section
Ancient Egypt by Jinny Johnson
DK Eyewitness Ancient Egypt
Tutankhamun by Demi
The Pharaoh’s Boat by David Weitzman
Pharaohs and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt by Kristine Carlson Asselin
Hatshepsut: His Majesty, Herself by Catherine M. Andronik
Arthur covered another chapter in our Story of Science. This was our break week from Chemistry class. We’ll get back into the periodic table next week.
RSO Chemistry
DK Super Simple Chemistry
Story of Science Vol. 2: Newton at the Center by Joy Hakim
DK The Elements
The Periodic Table of Elements by Jenny Karpelenia
Quentin got back into RSO Life with a unit on Arthropods and specifically insects.
RSO Life
DK Oversimple Biology
Waiting for Wings by Lois Ehlert
Are You a Ladybug by Judy Allen
Are You a Butterfly by Judy Allen
Are You a Grasshopper by Judy Allen
Are You a Dragonfly by Judy Allen
Are You a Bee by Judy Allen
Becoming a Butterfly by Karen Wallace
Nat Geo Kids: Great Migrations Butterflies by Laura Marsh
Insects by the Numbers by Steven Jenkins
Wild Kratts: Wild Insects and Spiders! by Martin Kratt and Christ Kratt
Insects and Spiders by Christine Taylor Butler
Bug Off! Creepy, Crawly Poems by Jane Yolen
Insects Biggest! Littles! by Sandra Markle
My Life as a Monarch Butterfly by John Sazaklis
Insect Detective by Steve Voake
B is for Bee y Catherine Ipcizade
Ants Don't Wear Pants by Kevin McCloskey
Insects by Seymour Simon
Small Wonders: Jean-Henri Fabre & His World of Insects by Matthew Clark Smith
Butterflies are Pretty Gross by Rosemary Mosco
Bugs are Insects by Anne Rockwell
How to Build an Insect by Roberta Gibson
One Million Insects by Isabel Thomas
DK Eyewitness Insect
A’s Math, ELA, and History
Arthur started his exploration of board games. By the end of the six weeks, the kids will have created their own board games. I taught this week and focused on “What is a game” and the History of Board Games. The kids got to play some ancient board games. Quentin’s class started their theme on government. They learned about the city council and pretended to vote on some issues.
Q’s Math and Tell It in Three (Three Little Pigs)
Q’s Insect Unit
I actually fit in art and music this week! I’m so excited. We actually covered two artists (Amrita Sher-Gill and Oscar Howe) and two musicians (Miles Davis and Camille Saint Saens). The boys really enjoyed heir free art time this week.
DK Music and How it Works
DK The Arts
Modern Art Adventures by Maja Pitamic and Jill Laidlaw
13 American Artists Children Should Know
A Child's Introduction to Art
Women in Art by Rachel Ignotofsky
We are Artists by Kari Herbert
Amrita Sher-Gil: Rebel with a Paintbrush by Anita Vachharajani
Birth of the Cool: How Jazz Great Miles Davis Found His Sound by Kathleen Cornell Berman
Looking for Bird in the Big City by Robert Burleigh
Welcome to Jazz: A Swing-along Celebration of America's Music by Carolyn Sloan
The Carnival of the Animals by Jack Prelutsky
Carnival of the Animals: Poems Inspired by Saint Saens' Music edited by Judith Chernaik
Q’s Insect Unit (Part 2)
Miss Allyson teaching Q chess
No proper field trip this week, but we did have the Coop Halloween Party on Halloween. The organizers secured an indoor space as it was freezing that day! The kids got to do some crafts and trick-or-treat indoors while hanging out with their friends. That night, I did take the boys trick-or-treating in the neighborhood. We also got in a nature hike on Friday. It was the perfect temperature. We definitely needed a bit of outdoor exercise time.
Playing the Royal Game of Ur
Q’s Math and Pumpkin Unit
After coop, I took the boys to the Library Book Sale to use their Summer Reading Programs coupons for a free book. I forgot that the library does not take credit cards so we couldn’t really dig into the shelves (My Low). We took our three books up to the checkout where the ladies told us that each coupon actually gets us three kids books! So we went back and got a few more. Thank you to the library ladies for helping us out and getting more books that we were anticipating. I’m planning on getting some cash from the ATM and going back this week after coop. I saw some brand new workbooks and summer bridge books and hope they will still be there (I’m sure they will be…).
Q’s Pumpkin Unit (Part 2)
Continuing Tristan Strong
Covering more classic tales
Reviewing multiplying and diving fractions (A)
Lots of math review (Q)
Finishing Egypt for Q’s History
Moving into industrialization for A’s History
Covering more of the Periodic Table
Learning about spiders and bats
Hitting the Library Book Sale again!
Next up on the TBR pile:
As I look outside my window: The temperatures have increased and we’re back to the high 50s and low 60s.
Right now I am: Deciding what to make for brunch. I have sausage and eggs, but what else? Maybe cranberry orange muffins? Or lemon poppy seed scones?
On my bedside table: Rest of the Night Rebel series by Jeaniene Frost; The City of Dreaming Books by Walter Moers
On my tv this week: We started our Nic Cage November this week. Multiple movies in and we’re loving it.
Listening to: Nothing much this week. I’ve just been putting my Apple Music on shuffle while in the car.
On the menu for this week:
Monday - Pomegranate Chicken
Tuesday - Leftovers/Snack Dinner
Wednesday - Lemon Butter Shrimp and Asparagus
Thursday - Apple-Cheddar Stuffed Chicken
Friday - Pork and Green Chile Stew
Saturday - BLT Pasta Salad
Sunday - Kofta Patties
On my to do list: Hmm… Guess I need to look at my brain dump.
Happening this week:
Monday - Chemistry Class
Tuesday - Squirrel House Jail Tour; Coop Happy Hour
Wednesday - DoSpace STEM Day; Board Games at a Friend’s
Thursday - Coop; Me Haircut
Friday - Hasta La Muerte at The Orpheum
Saturday - Home Day
Sunday - Home Day
What I am creating: Still working on my September Memory Planner pages.
Looking around the house: I really need to clean up some stuff in preparation for Monday’s chemistry.
From the camera: A neighbor had a fun claw machine for the kids to play on Halloween. The kids got three tries to get something. Quentin managed to grab one of the cauldrons. Arthur didn’t get anything but the guy had extra candy for him.
Title: Shades of Wicked (Night Rebel #1)
Author: Jeaniene Frost
Publisher: Avon 2018
Genre: Romance
Pages: 370
Rating: 5/5 stars
Reading Challenges:
Spice Rating: 6
The Rule Breaker...
Master vampire Ian is unrepentant, shameless…and every shade of wicked. He’s made one too many enemies in his two centuries of existence, including Dagon, a demon who now lays claim to his soul. Ian’s only chance to escape Dagon is to join forces with a Law Guardian, but he's never been able to abide by the rules for long.
The Law Maker...
Veritas’ normal role is police, judge, and jury to reprobates like Ian. But she has her own ax to grind with Dagon, so if she can use Ian as bait...well, all’s fair in law and war. As they scour supernatural hotspots to perfect their trap, Veritas soon realizes Ian’s carefully cultivated, devil-may-care roguish image hides something much more powerful. And Ian discovers Veritas has shocking secrets of her own. As they’re drawn to each other with a passion as intense as their peril, either love or justice will prevail. But each will have devastating consequences.
Finally, finally, finally we get Ian’s story! I got super excited when his storyline got teased in Vlad’s quartet. I was hoping for a good romance adventure that didn’t nerf Ian’s quirky and rebellious nature. Thankfully, this is still Ian. He’s still brash and at times grating. But darn it, he’s still so incredibly hot. Pairing him with Veritas is genius. We have to have a strong female character to go up against Ian. Their romance is delightful. Beyond that, I really enjoyed the adventure story. The battle with the demon is perfect! I can’t wait to see where their story goes next. This book is great fun!
Night Rebel
#1 Shades of Wicked
#2 Wicked Bite
#3 Wicked All Night
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: The Dragon’s Bride (A Deal with a Demon #1)
Author: Katee Robert
Publisher: Trinkets & Tales 2022
Genre: Romance
Pages: 179
Rating: 3/5 stars
Reading Challenges: Romanceopoly - Haunted House (Monster Romance)
Spice Rating: 6
Briar Rose might have a name out of a storybook, but she learned at a very young age that no prince was coming to save her. She’ll have to save herself. Unfortunately, even that is an impossible task in her current situation—trapped in a terrifying marriage to a dangerous man.
Desperate times call for desperate measures, which is how she finds herself making a deal with a demon. Freedom from her husband…in return for seven years of service.
She expects the service to be backbreaking and harsh. She doesn’t expect to be put on an auction block in a room full of literal monsters and sold to the highest bidder.
To Sol. A dragon.
He might seem kinder than his fearsome looks imply, but she knows better than to trust the way he wants to take care of her, or how invested he is in her pleasure. In her experience, if something seems too good to be true, it certainly is.
Falling for Sol is out of the question. She’s suffered enough, and she has no intention of staying in this realm…even if she leaves her heart behind when she returns to her normal life.
Unlike yesterday’s 3 star book, I liked this one much more. But I still ended up coming to the end of this book with a general air of meh. We first meet the demon bargainer in another one of Robert’s book. I was intrigued but the setup of the auction of the various women in exchange for a favor. I’m glad to read about one of those women’s story in this book. Briar has so much trauma and I really connected to her anxiety and trepidation about getting involved in someone else. Sol creates a safe space for Briar to heal. All of those parts, I really enjoyed. The actual romance I enjoyed less. The sex scenes are often very strange. I don’t mean the monster-human pairing, I’m referring to the tone. The tone is often very weird and I wasn’t quite buying into the sexual attraction. Oh well. Maybe the next one will be more my style.
A Deal with a Demon
#1 The Dragon’s Bride
#2 The Kraken’s Sacrifice
#3 The Gargoyle’s Captive
#4 The Succubus’s Prize
#5 The Demon’s Bargain
Next up on the TBR pile:
Title: Brutal Prince (Brutal Birthright #1)
Author: Sophie Lark
Publisher: Bloom Books 2020
Genre: Romance
Pages: 304
Rating: 3/5 stars
Reading Challenges: Fall TBR
Spice Rating: 5
The Griffins and the Gallos have been battling for control of Chicago’s underworld for generations.
Their bitter rivalry reignites when Aida, the youngest and wildest Gallo sibling, crashes a party at the Griffin mansion, accidentally setting fire to the library.
To stave off all-out war, her father arranges a marriage with Callum Griffin, eldest son and heir.
Cold, ambitious, and brutal, Callum is determined to tame his headstrong bride. Aida is more than capable of giving as good as she gets – starting with poisoning Callum on their wedding night.
In their struggle for dominance, who will break first?
Pretty disappointed in this one. I was hoping for a good spicy romance with fun characters, an enemies-to-lovers setup, and spicy sex scenes. What I got was the pretty icky trope of forced marriage (forced by their families) with some episodes of dubious consent. Throw in an age-gap, which I’m not always opposed to, and I was not here for it at all. The age gap is now quite as much of a concern to me as the maturity gap. I wanted to like Aida so much, but she spent most of the book very horny for her husband while simultaneously acting like a spoiled teenager. But also constantly talking about how independent and mature she is. Spoiler alert, she’s not. I just couldn’t root for her at all. And then Lark decided to throw in some commentary about being sex positive. I do not have issues with being sex positive. I wanted to see communication and empowerment happening within characters. I did not see that at all. This was a contender for dirty book month, but I’m definitely crossing it off my list now.
Brutal Birthright
#1 Brutal Prince
#2 Stolen Heir
#3 Savage Lover
#4 Bloody Heart
#5 Broken Vow
#6 Heavy Crown
Next up on the TBR pile: