Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Read Me in January, I'll Meet You in February

Unexpected Weather Events
on a window ledge
Why, hello 2024! 

The new year already has plans for you, me, and Unexpected Weather Events

On Sunday, January 28th, the Get Lit! Book Club with Tricia will be held at Auntie's Bookstore. January's selection is none other than Unexpected Weather Events. The discussion starts at 6 PM. This a readers' discussion and so I will not be present. But! here are all the details about the event: https://www.auntiesbooks.com/event/get-lit-book-club-tricia-10

Nearly a month later on Thursday, February 22nd, I will be on the rooftop of the Chronicle building for Northwest Passages, an author discussion series. Luckily, Shawn Vestal will be with me, and we will be tied to each other at the waist in the event that one of us falls, the other will hold on to dear life to a brick or decorative ledge. Shawn Vestal will be leading the conversation about my book, and I will speak back. To witness this, and what I am told is a beautiful venue, you can purchase a ticket for $7. Event starts at 7 PM. Details here: https://www.spokesman.com/northwest-passages/events/unexpected-weather-events-by-erin-pringle/

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Sunday, December 24, 2023

Book Your Stocking 2023 with Bobbi Jean Bell

Book Your Stocking 2023 features readers sharing children's books from their past or present. Perhaps you'll stumble upon forgotten books or titles you somehow missed. Should a book find its way into a stocking near you, all the better.

Please tip your hat for today's reader, Bobbi Jean Bell, all the way from Albuquerque, New Mexico.



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My Favorite Place to Go

by Bobbi Jean Bell 

My favorite place to go, from as far back as I can remember, was the local library. We were a library family. A weekly visit was prepared for with great delight and anticipation. While reading all the titles borrowed from the previous visit, I'd be making a list of books to bring home the next visit. As the youngest of us kids, I always enjoyed exploring the titles my older brother and sister chose. I was often told, “You’re not old enough yet for this book.” I couldn’t wait to be old enough

When I think back to the library days, I don’t have a strong memory of any one book. Books quickly came into and out of my life. Ravished and consumed. Read aloud. Read silently. Then, returned. That all changed in 1966 when my sister, Wendy, gave me my first book.

My book.

For me.

Oh! What an unexpected gift!

The Golden Treasury of Poetry: Selected and with a commentary by Louis Untermeyer, illustrated by Joan Walsh Anglund

After unwrapping this gorgeous book, I sat with Wendy to begin our exploration of poetry. A first for me. She found favorites in the collection and together we read them aloud. We exclaimed over the illustrations. We found time to peruse the chapters – reading one from “Creatures of Every Kind” and then, perhaps, another from “Unforgettable Stories” or “Laughter Holding Both His Sides.”

It is here that I met my first pirate, characters from the Canterbury Tales, Robin Hood, and Queen Mab. It is here that I read aloud, for the first time, Lewis Carroll’s “Jabberwocky,” and Edward Lear’s limericks. Robert Louis Stevenson, William Blake, Emily Dickinson, Wiliam Shakespeare, Robert Frost, Ogden Nash, T. S. Eliot… and more… and more… and more. Each poem became a friend. What a treasure! Each poem, an adventure. Words to relish, to savor, to ponder, to revisit. 


Wendy is eight years my senior. She took me to my first live theater performance, Tartuffe, at New Haven’s Long Wharf Theatre. Together, we explored Shakespeare and Mozart and Bach. We gathered in her room every Saturday afternoon to listen to the Metropolitan Opera on the radio. Her passion for the written word was contagious.

Even as our lives took us miles apart, books kept us together. Hours on the phone catching up with what we were reading. And many more hours of our lives sharing our passion for reading with others. For her, as a Children’s Librarian. For me, through interviewing writers on live radio.

I don’t know if The Golden Treasury of Poetry is still in print. I still have mine. It’s worn to the point of lacking resale value. You can see, though, in one of the pictures that the book is happiest being open—and that is priceless.


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About Bobbi Jean Bell: Bobbi Jean Bell loves books, music, poetry, the radio, and all things Western. And if you can't find her at home, in the library, or working at her business OutWest Shop, then you'll find Bobbi on the air talking about books, music, poetry, and all things Western. 

On Thursday mornings, she co-hosts Campfire Cafe and Saddle Up America with Gary Holt on equestrianlegacy.net, live at noon-1:00 PM (CST) and on demand. 

On Thursday evenings 6 PM (PST), she hosts Rendezvous with a Writer Outwest, in which she interviews every stripe of writer with husband Jim Bell. For nearly a decade, she hosted the writer-interview show The Writer's Block with co-host Jim Christina (archived shows here).

Bobbi also hosts the OutWest Hour radio show featuring Western, Western Swing, and Cowboy Country music, as well as Cowboy Poetry, on KUPR  (Placitas, New Mexico Community Radio) Saturdays 5-6 PM (CST) or on demand.

For details about her upcoming shows, follow her Facebook page.

And if you've recently read a wonderful book, you should tell her. She wants to hear all about it..

Bobbi Jean Bell


Sunday, October 8, 2023

Thanks to Auntie's Bookstore for a busy afternoon

The Auntie's announcement board
with my event written so artfully.


I spent the hours of 11-2 today greeting customers from where I sat near the front doors of Auntie's Bookstore. In 2020, I'd sat beneath the giant metal fish, but perhaps out of an abundance of caution of an author being eaten by a sculpture, the staff set up the book-signing table across from the main cash registers, which made for a good place because I could say good morning when people swept in and goodbye when people left, and it made sense for all of us--and so the only awkward moments are the ones I created for myself, and will not go into here (there were two, and very small in the scheme of things). As an unexpected bonus, one of the booksellers was super awesome and we swapped funny stories between the lulls.  

This morning the annual Spokane marathon was held, with its starting point near Auntie's, and so perhaps in part due to that, the bookstore was hopping. There might have been something at Gonzaga, too, as there were more than a few families coming in with their college-aged children. The day itself was beautiful, too. The best of what Autumn can do when the leaves are changing and the sunlight lights through them. Light sweaters optional.

More than one person treated themselves to a tote-bag of books, and several more walked out with full stacks balanced against their chests--like old bellhops carrying too many packages to see over. 

It was nice having more than a moment to admire the old wooden doors, the radiator in the breezeway--now protected by a metal grate--the wooden floors and long counters. All of it created a good vibe. Children carrying a book with one arm while holding hands with a mother or grandfather. Couples browsing separately then coming together at the cash register with their discoveries. The purposeful walkers, the meandering browsers, the two women on their way to lunch at an adjoining restaurant but with plans to return to browse, as they seemingly must often do. And when they returned, and I asked, they raved about their eggs on toast, their French toast covered in fresh berries, and the bread made by the woman downstairs. I'm not sure what is downstairs, the woman said, but that's where the woman bakes the bread. It's such good bread.

After today, I now know that if I owned a store and then retired from working there, I'd still return weekly to say hello and chat with the customers of the day. 

Thanks to everyone who came by--to friends who took the time and to the shoppers who approached the table. By the end of my time there, far fewer books were left than had begun. 

Just before I left, a woman rushed into the store, husband following, and asked if I knew whether this had always been a bookstore, and did I know its history? I'm not sure, I said, but it has been a bookstore for as long as I remember. 

And isn't that the sort of place you want to be in? 

I certainly do.

(P.S. Even if we missed each other, there are a few copies of Unexpected Weather Events left to buy.)  


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Thursday, October 5, 2023

Unexpected Weather Events at Giant Nerd Books, Spokane

After the weekend release of Unexpected Weather Events, I stopped by Giant Nerd Books to drop a few copies off with Nate. 

It had been a hot minute since our last visit, so we swapped updates. The store itself is more full of books than I've ever seen it, and it's hard to imagine the very small space that the bookstore began in years ago. In addition to any sort of book you'd want, for your visual delight and curious heart, the store has a sarcophagus bookshelf, a few giraffe bones, local art, and so very much more. How the Garland District survived without Giant Nerd until a few years ago, I'll never know. It is clearly an essential part of the good vibe.

While I was there, Nate pointed out the winner of the recently held Giant Nerd Books logo art contest. The winner is a block-printed design and displayed atop a book shelf nearest the front door. T-shirts will be made! The main rules were to include the name of the bookstore and the store's mascot, Nate and his girlfriend's dog Elvira (who was so quietly curled on the chair beside the counter I didn't see her until she was pointed out).

Outside, on the large display window you can view all of the logo art entries. This one caught my eye in particular, thanks to my great appreciation for The Little Prince. Do you see the reference? 


Now is one of the best times to visit Giant Nerd, what with the weather inviting cozy evening reading. And there is simply no other place in Spokane where you can browse books with an eclectic energy mixed from drive-in culture, B-movie affection, spiritualism, and the strange and curious. Take yourself and a friend with even one interest, and you'll be sure to find what you're searching for, from vintage comic books to classic children's novels to long-lost paperbacks. Giant Nerd bookstore is a living collection like no other, and we here in the Garland District are damn lucky that we're allowed to wander through it, much less take a part of it home with us--whether that's signed first-editions, glass eyes, thick art books, local nostalgia, or the unexpected.

Tell Nate I said hi when you go, and give Elvira the dog a sweet gaze.

Giant Nerd Books

607 W. Garland

Spokane, WA 99201

509-868-0420

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Friday, August 4, 2023

Read a Book in the Park: August 5, 2023

Read a Book in the Park

READ A BOOK IN THE PARK

I realized that as a writer, I can hardly fret over people buying but not reading my books if I myself have a difficult time reading books. Social media, true-crime podcasts, animals behaving hilariously on reels--all of these not only suck my time into the black hole of a quickly passing present, but also make it difficult for me to focus or transition to a concentrated activity that requires mental participation.

An idea was then born that seems silly when you first think about it: Read a book in the park. Together.

And so here we are. I'm officially inviting you to join me in Audubon Park tomorrow morning (Saturday, August 5) from 8-9 AM. We will read our books together--but silently, alone, and from our own blankets, hammocks, or other reading apparatus.

Bring the book you're reading or have been meaning to read.

Leave your cellphone in the car or at home. (Audio-bookers are encouraged to read a print book for this event.)

No book? No blanket? No worries. I will have both for borrowing--for all readers: infants to teens to those who crave Cormac McCarthy on a bright Saturday morning. Ha!

At the end of our hour of reading, we share what book we're reading or we don't. We pack up and move into the rest of our day, or we read for longer. The first time we gathered (and we've so far only gathered once), a reader remarked on the revolutionary nature of the event--how it felt like she was participating in a silent protest. 

Yes. I want my brain back. I want books back. If you feel the same way, join us. 

Then maybe we'll wind up reading in a park near you, and if you're not near us, I hope you read in your park.

Read a Book in the Park

  • Saturday, August 5
  • Audubon Park (Southeast side, closer to Northwest Blvd. than to Finch Elementary)
  • 8:00-9:00 AM
  • Free

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NOTE: More reading-in-a-park sessions have been scheduled. Our next one is Saturday, August 19 (same place and time). For updates, new reading meetups, or to share and enjoy pictures of books and parks, join the FB group Read a Book in the Park: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fusediversity

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (1/8/23)

We've reached another Sunday! Time for coffee and poetry.

 

Poems read: 

  • Winter by Billy Collins
  • Some Questions You Might Ask by Mary Oliver (from her book House of Light)
  • First Date by Daniel Halpern (from his book Traveling on Credit)
  • January by Robert Hass (from his book Human Wishes)
  • Poem without Angel Food by c.d. wright (from her book Shallcross)

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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Happy New Year! Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (1/1/23)

Happy New Year! Thanks for joining me for coffee and poems. We do this most every week, and I hope you'll drop in again next Sunday. If there's ever a poem or poet you'd like to hear, let me know by contacting me through this website or le
aving a comment on the video on my Facebook Page. Enjoy!





Poems read:

  • Pain for a Daughter by Anne Sexton (from her book Live or Die)
  • Nights and Days by Adrienne Rich (from her book The Dream of a Common Language)
  • Lost Poem by Molly Saty (from her book put sparklers on my grave)
  • Remembering to Sing by Patricia Smith (from her book Blood Dazzler)
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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (August 7, 2022)

I missed all of you last Sunday! All is well, and here we are in August already. Welcome back (or for the first time) to Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee, a weekly gathering in the virtual world wherein I read good poems by other people while we all drink coffee. And some of us may brush our hair for the occasion, but clearly I am not of that party.

Poems read:

  • In the Reunion of All My Selves by Aline Mello (from LatiNEXT: The BreakBeat Poets, Volume 4)
  • We May No Longer Consider the End by Ruth Ellen Kocher (from The Best American Poetry, 2019)
  • Riddle by Laura Kasischke (from Space, in Chains)
  • My Brother is Asking for Stamps by Michael Torres (from Poetry, Feb. 2021)
  • Look at What I’ve Done! by Porsha Olayiwola (from her book I Shimmer Sometimes, Too)
  • from Sand Creek by Simon J. Ortiz 

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🠊 More poetry sessions here: http://www.erinpringle.com/p/wake-to-words-and-brew-some-coffee.html

🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (March 20, 2022)

 

Poems read:

  • Upper Broadway by Adrienne Rich
  • The Jars by George MacKay Brown
  • The Kookaburras by Mary Oliver 
  • We Lived Happily During the War by Ilya Kaminsky
  • XII. by Wendell Berry (from Sabbath Poems 2015)

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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, March 6, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (March 6, 2022)

Every Sunday, good poems by other people. You bring the coffee.

 

Poems read:

  • 126 by Osip Mandelstam, translated by Clarence Brown and W.S. Merwin
  • Domination of Black by Wallace Stevens
  • The Munich Mannequins by Sylvia Plath 
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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, February 27, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (February 27, 2022)

Every Sunday.

Good poems by other people.

Coffee.

 

Poems read:

  • The Spindle by Hashem Shafeeq, trans. by Sadek Mohammed
  • The Needle by Hashem Shafeeq, trans. by Sadek Mohammed
  • When he exploded by Salam Dawai, trans. by Soheil Najm
  • The Porch Over the River by Wendell Berry
  • As Soldiers March, Alfonso Covers the Boy’s Face by Ilya Kaminsky 
  • Your last day by Laura Kasischke
  • The Arm by Martin Espada
  • Poem in a Trance by c.d. wright 

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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (February 20, 2022)

Good Poems.

By other people.

Every Sunday.

Over coffee.

 

Poems read:

  • Wallace, Idaho by Linda L. Beeman
  • The Mission by Linda L. Beeman
  • Manifest by Cynthia Dewi Oka
  • This Online Shopping Habit is Sympathetic Magick by Caroline Crew
  • VIZ by Julia Drescher

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🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (February 6, 2022)

Good poems by other people.

A weekly poetry reading.

Every Sunday.

Over coffee.

 

Poems read:

  • Time Capsule by Porscha Olayiwola
  • Argument by Daniel Halpern
  • Somewhere in California by Rumsha Sajid
  • Love and Friendship by Emily Bronte
  • Amorous Friendship by Belle Randall
  • New Friend by Sandra McPherson
  • Friends by John Ciardi 

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🠊 Listen to more poetry sessions here: http://www.erinpringle.com/p/wake-to-words-and-brew-some-coffee.html

🠊 Catch the live show on Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Friday, January 7, 2022

People Along the Sand by Rachel King: Yes, you should read it

People Along the Sand by Rachel King
(cover)
Last night, I finished the novel People Along the Sand by Rachel King. It’s a quiet, calm, and deep exploration of several people who live in the 1960s in a small, coastal town in Oregon. 

It’s difficult to say what the novel is about.

It’s not about The Vietnam War, though that is happening and there are those who turn away from the daily news of it, those who enlist whole-heartedly, and those who try to figure out what they’ll do if they’re drafted. Later, a childhood summer friend will be killed in the war and, as with any sudden and unexpected death, the parents of the living child are faced with how to share the bad news and watch their child grieve.

It’s not about the Beach Bill that ensures public access to the Oregon beaches, although several characters door-knock in support of it and others worry how it will affect their businesses or homes. An estranged father and adult son are tossed back together because of the issue but the rift between them is too vast to keep them together.  

It’s not about the changing role of lighthouses, their automation, and the many storm-wrecked deaths that have happened and will now be prevented. But a retired lighthouse keeper’s whole life has been his knowledge and experience, and even after the death of his wife and the estrangement of his son, he still has no idea how to puzzle his personal history with his professional history. But he keeps trying.

It’s not about the swelling of women’s rights and equality or equal pay for equal work, but several women own businesses in the town and are unique in that. Another woman who has worked full-time as an accountant for her husband’s hotel as part of the marriage begins to want a decision-making role in the hotel, too, and starts to wonder why she both isn’t allowed that and isn’t paid for what is clearly beyond the role of wife and partner. She is starting to shift in her awareness of self and while others want a clear articulation of what that means or how they should act in response to that, she herself is in the midst of it and is trying to articulate and understand it herself.

It’s not about living beside the tumultuous ocean and under so many gray skies, but everyone gravitates to the ocean and everyone knows each other through the ocean—whether they grew up in the town or married into it. Each of them walk the beaches, know the hiding places of starfish, understand the precision and patience required to find agates, and are bound to each other in the shared but individual experience of coastal life. 

It’s not about baking or running a bakery but there is a character who runs her own bakery and does all the baking, ordering, and serving. She thrives in each aspect and enjoys the quiet, dark mornings and the care and focus of kneading, creating. And while she lives a life of solitude, it is her steadiness that others seek out.

The novel is exactly about what great novels are about: the shifting, beautiful lives of people and how our lives press against each other in unexpected, pivotal, quiet, or hardly detectable ways. It is about the pull of grief and the changing lives of mothers and children. It’s about leaving signs that you have lived and the dust left on aspects of the lived parts of our lives. The novel understands nostalgia and reality, broken legs and confused husbands. It understands the confusion of youth and the intimacy of two people talking about music. 

It’s a very good book. 

You should probably read it.

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Thursday, December 23, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Tom Noyes

Book Your Stocking 2021
Book Your Stocking: Day 23

So glad to have you back! We are nearly finished with this year's edition of Book Your Stocking, and hopefully, you're nearly finished with making, buying, and wrapping gifts to your favorite people. Each day avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer. 

Please welcome Tom Noyes back to the series.



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Why: Wang doesn't write just one kind of story in this collection, and he doesn't create just one kind of character or employ just one perspective or pursue just one theme. His vision is as vast and varied as the settings, time periods, and personalities he brings to life in this buzz-worthy debut. (Winner of the 2021 Pen America Robert W. Bingham Prize)
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About today's reader: Tom Noyes is a writer and professor; his newest book is the novel The Substance of Things Hoped For (Slant Books 2021).

Tom Noyes

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Jeremy Toungate

Book Your Stocking 2021

Book Your Stocking: Day 22

Welcome to the last Tuesday of Book Your Stocking. As you may or may not know, every day through Christmas Eve, avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer. 

Today's reader is the most avid reader I have ever met in my entire life. At one point, I opened our car door and removed no less than seventy-five books. He'd read them all. In a few months. 

Please welcome my best friend, Jeremy Toungate.

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Why: Everything around me seems more distinct and visually stunning after I read Toppi's work. 

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About today's reader: Jeremy Toungate lives and writes in Spokane.

Jeremy Toungate



Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Neal Hallgarth

Book Your Stocking 2021
Book Your Stocking: Day 21

Book Your Stocking continues with a new book to slip into your stocking or your favorite person's stocking. 

Please welcome today's avid reader, Neal Hallgarth.







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Recommendation: What It Is by Lynda Barry




Why: By doing the exercises, I was able to recall memories I hadn't accessed in decades. 

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About today's reader: Neal Hallgarth writes, draws, and DJs in Spokane.
Neal Hallgarth

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Mandy Chapman Orozco

Book Your Stocking 2021

Book Your Stocking: Day 19

Here we are, nineteen days into this year's edition of Book Your Stocking. If you haven't stuffed all your stockings, then this is the perfect place to be. If friends give you gift-cards to bookstores, this is an even better place to be. Every day avid readers recommend the book for your stocking (or your favorite reader's stocking).

Please welcome Many Chapman Orozco who is today taking care of socks, stockings, and your booklist.


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Why: I'd love to get this book in my stocking because there's a lot of noise right now, and this book poetry is the opposite of all that--it is thoughtful, powerful, and lovely.

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About today's reader: Mandy Chapman Orozco reads and writes in Spokane.

Mandy Chapman Orozco

Friday, December 17, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Tina Žigon

Book Your Stocking 2021
Book Your Stocking: Day 17

Book Your Stocking continues, and I'm glad that you continue with it. If this is your first visit, welcome! Each day of December, leading up to Christmas, avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer. 

Today, Tina Å½igon is the avid reader with the book for your list (and stocking).



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Why: Because it's been on my to-read forever, and I finally read it this year, and it felt it was just the right time to do so, and it blew my mind.
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About today's reader: Tina Žigon grew up in Slovenia, has lived and taught English on three different continents, and currently resides in the Midwest with her husband and son.

Tina Žigon

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Hannah Rigney

Book Your Stocking: Day 15

Thanks for returning to, or finding, this year's edition of Book Your Stocking. Each day avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer.

Please welcome today's avid reader, Hannah Rigney.






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Why: I was laughing and crying the whole time I was reading it, and I thought it was eye-opening into the life of a child with a learning disability. 

(Book is written toward middle-school readers.)
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About today's reader: Hannah Rigney is an eary-childhood Montessori educator.

Hannah Rigney