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Writing, Reading, and Rural Life With a Border Collie


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Surprised by C.S. Lewis

Letters to Children

C.S. Lewis (1996)

Editors: Lyle W. Dorsett and Marjorie Lamp Mead

via: Library

Genre: Non-fiction

Pages: 115

Mom and I are humungous C.S. Lewis fans. Far as we’re concerned, if C.S. Lewis books were an Olympic sport, they’d bring home the gold. Both fiction and non-fiction.

You gonna eat that?

Now, you may know Lewis from The Chronicles of Narnia. Probably his best-known and most beloved work. But he wrote like, a ton of other stuff, too. Some of our other faves include Mere Christianity. The Great Divorce. The Problem of Pain.  The Screwtape Letters. Surprised by Joy. And his autobiography, Till We Have Faces. Lewis notes that altho Till We was not a commercial success, it’s his favorite work.

Indeed, we’ve read pretty much everything “Jack” ever published. Except this here puppy. Missed this one. But we found it the other day in the Book Place. Sitting on a shelf. Calling our name. Diving in, this book actually surprised us. Here’s why:

In his life, Lewis received thousands of letters from young fans who were eager for more of his bestselling Narnia books and their author. This book is a collection of many of his responses to those letters, in which he shares his feelings about writing, school, animals, and of course, Narnia. Lewis writes to the children – as he wrote for them – with understanding and respect, proving why he remains one of the most beloved children’s authors of all time.

Rare, Remarkable

Letters to Children offers a rare, luminous glimpse into the heart and mind of a remarkably eloquent and equally gracious genius. There’s so much wit and warmth in Lewis’s letters to young readers. In fact, Lewis carried on a loquacious correspondence with many of his young correspondents for years, even into their adulthood. The sheer volume of his correspondence is astounding. Ditto the amount of wit and whimsy in each letter. It’s remarkable.

Lithe and limber, Lewis’s letters brim with warmth and vitality. They’re perhaps as surprising as they are charming.

Offering advice to a young correspondent, Lewis writes:

  1. Always try to use the language so as to make quite clear what you mean and make sure your sentence couldn’t mean anything else.
  2. Always prefer the plain direct word to the long, vague one. Don’t implement promises, but keep them.
  3. Never use abstract nouns when concrete ones will do. If you mean “More people died” don’t say “Mortality rose.”

Write On!

There’s more. But our personal favorite on Lewis’s list is:

  • In writing. Don’t use adjectives which merely tell us how you want us to feel about the thing you are describing. I mean, instead of telling us a thing was “terrible,” describe it so that we’ll be terrified. Don’t say it was “delightful”: make us say “delightful” when we’ve read the description. You see, all those words (horrifying, wonderful, hideous, exquisite) are  only like saying to your readers “Please will you do my job for me.”

Write on, dude.

C.S. Lewis also writes about his health issues, the weather, gardens, and so on. He reads and responds to every letter received personally – in long hand. (Note to young whipper-snappers: That’s called “pen and ink.” Before computers.) Lewis’s responses are soaked in kindness and encouragement. He shows an unflagging interest in each of his young correspondents’ lives, their families, schools, and writing endeavors, often offering encouragement per the last.

More?

When his correspondents ask for more Narnia a stories, Lewis gently explains, “I’m afraid the Narnian series has come to an end.” He urges them to write their own stories. 

We love that!

“It is a funny thing that all the children who have written to me see at once who Aslan is, and grown-ups never do” writes Lewis in the final letter in this tome, typed the day before he died in 1963.

Kimber: Good thing we’re not grown-ups, huh Mom?

Have you read C.S. Lewis?

What’s your fave Lewis book?


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Delivery or DiGiorno? Are THESE ‘Best Sellers’ All They’re Cracked Up to Be?

In The World According to Her Momness, the Four Basic Food Groups are:

  1. Dark Chocolate
  2. Milk Chocolate
  3. White Chocolate
  4. Raspberry White Chocolate Cheesecake.

Who’s got a fork?

Remembering Mom’s penchant for all things chocolatey and chuckle-worthy, someone recently suggested we check into author Karen Scalf Linamen. Linamen published several popular faith-flavored books in the 1990s and early 2000s “offering unique insights and humor.”

So we scoured the shelves of our local library. Zip. Zero. Nada. Not to fret. We ordered a coupla Linamen titles via Interlibrary Loan. It took a while. But they finally arrived. Both recommended titles are “best sellers.” They are… drum roll please:

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6 Most Unusual Books We’ve Read This Year

So there I was. Minding my own business. Snoozing away. When Her Royal Momness comes bouncing down the stairs with a Royal Stroke of Genuis:

“Kimmi! I have a great idea! You know those last six books we read? The True Crime thing, the post-apocalyptic thing, the second True Crime thing, the “self-help” motivational thing, and the other two True Crime thingies? All pretty diff, huh? Let’s do a combo post on all six!”

So that’s how I wound up here. With William Oldfield’s Inspector Oldfield and the Black Hand Society,  J. W. Rawles’ Founders, Gregg Olsen’s If You Tell,  John Glatt’sTangled Vines. and Climbing Your Personal Mount Everest: A Journey of Self Discovery and Leadership, by Mitch Lewis.  And that Other Thingy by Ann Rule, Green River Running Red.

The things I do for Mom. Sheesh.

Well. As long as we’re here, let’s dive in to six of the most unusual books we’ve read so far this year. They’re “unusual” cuz they’re genres we don’t typically select.

One other thing. With the exception of the last title, all of the books below are 3.5s. In case you’re wondering. No extra charge:

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Fiction & Non Two-Fer!

She Who Must Be Obeyed (sort of) says we’re doin’ a ‘two-fer’ today! I’m thinkin’ bacon and more bacon! Or peanut butter! But nooooo! Her Momness says we’re doin’ two books by two different female authors. One fiction. One non. Both have strong female characters or POVs.

They are She Left Me the Gun: My Mother’s Life Before Me by Emma Brockes (non-fiction). The other is On Mystic Lake. By Kristin Hannah.

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Tales From a Rogue Ranger Scores ‘Bow-Wow Boogie’

Tales From a Rogue Ranger

Rosanne S. McHenry (Indie author, 2024)

Genre: Non-Fiction/Memoir/Outdoors

Via: Blog Tour/Author Request

Pages: 236

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

We didn’t think our favorite ranger, Ranger Rose the PAWsome, could top her last book, Trip Tales: From Family Camping to Life as a Ranger. Which we like, totally love-ified. (See our brilliant review: Outdoor Memoir Delights in Trip Tales.

Just shows you what we know.

She’s Baaaack!

Cuz Ranger Rose is back! With as much insight, info. and entertainment as ever! In fact, her latest book, Tales From a Rogue Ranger, Totally Rocks. In fact again, Her Momness almost dropped it in the sink. Reading while teeth-brushing. Cuz Mom couldn’t put it down!

Silly Mom. (Like that’s new. Insert Kimber eye roll here.)

Anyway, here’s the scoop on Ranger Roses’s latest magnum opus:

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‘Who Saved Who’ A Little Too Woo-Woo

Who Saved Who

By Roslyn Cohn

Tampico Press, 2023

Genre: Non-fiction

Pages: 150

Via: Blog Tour

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

“We save dogs, Roz, that’s what we do.”

This is the story of a woman who loves dogs. So far, so good. Here’s the main book blurb:

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Cycling Adventures The Dog’s Bow-Wow in ‘Five, Ten, or Never’

Five, Ten, or Never

Leaving home and careers for a life of spontaneous and unusual travel

By Judy Kashoff (Indie author, 2023)

Genre: Non-Fiction: Travel/Memoir

Pages; 263

Via: Author request

‘What?’

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Her Momness: Kimber, what are you doing?

Kimber: Don’t interrupt now, Mom! I’m practicing my pedaling.

Her Momness: You’re what?

Kimber: You know, pedaling. Like that book we just read. About those two hoomans who travel all over creation on their buy-shekels. (No idea what that means. Sounds expensive.) You can fill peeps in while I keep pedalling…

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‘Stubborn Love’ Shines Thru New Memoir

The Ignorant Man’s Son

A Memoir

By Victor James Hill, Indie Author

Genre: Non-fiction/Memoir

Pages 174

Via: Author Request

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

When  Her Momness was young a whipper-snapper – back when dinosaurs roamed the earth – she spent a coupla summers on staff at a Christian camp in California. One of the musical guests one week was a tenor. He sang a song Mom never forgot. (And for Mom, that’s really sayin’ somethin’!) It was called His Stubborn Love. We’ll get to the lyrics in a min. So kindly keep your shirt on. But this memoir reminded Her Momness of that song. 

I’ll let Mom explain:

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Memoir Highlights Recovery, Self-Discovery After Stroke

Miracle in the Desert: A Journey of Self-Discovery After a Stroke

By Marco Giovannoli 

Indie Author, 2023

Genre: Non-Fiction/Memoir

Pages: 269

Via: Author request

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

 

This is a book about recovery and self-discovery. It’s a first-hand account of how the author recovers from a stroke suffered in September 2022, smack dab in the middle of the Abu Dahbi desert. At age 46. While training for the Budapest Marathon. Giovannoli explains that he writes to share his story and offer hope for recovery after a stroke.

For more, click here.

 


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XMAS BOOK BASH #1: Let it Glow With ‘Hair on Fire’

‘Tis the season, friends! Christmas is just around the corner! Oh boy! Oh boy! Oh Boy! You know that one of us is like a Major Sucker for good Christmas yarns. Here a yarn, there a yarn. Everywhere a yarn, yarn.

Wait. Where was I?

Christmas Book Bash

Oh yeah. Christmas yarns. Well. Her Momness and I have come across some pretty good ones recently. We’ll be sharing select titles here during December. We’re calling it our “Christmas Book Bash.” Throwin’ this in at no extra charge. Although a little extra crispy bacon never hurts. Just sayin.

So. Our first selection for our December Christmas Book Bash is a Christmas memoir thingy. No idea what that means. But Mom liked it. Mostly. So let’s go:

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