Tuesday, August 5, 2014


Response to TW Poetry prompt from Nikki Grimes


Vocabulary Lesson

Bell, Shadow, Leaf, Lemon, Bullet


Bell                  translates offense to
          rippling sound
                     
Shadow           dark contingent on light

Leaf                 brief chapter to a tree

Lemon             tang of sunshine


Bullet               terminate ripples still.


Linda M.
8/5/14

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Teachers Write '14: Word Hoard Response

7/9/14 Response to Teacher’sWrite prompt. Guest author: Megan Frazer Blakemore
Alice May
Frank
Delia
Fun
Lucky
Alls-well-that-ends-well
Dusty
Weekend
fashionable
“I”
Compel
polite
Sunday
Gotta-get-back
Right now
Sunshine
Hide
flowers
Laugh
Reserve
smile
Sing
Mouth-the-words
harmonize
Purse
Pocket
Hankerchief
Starch white
Undershirt
Sunday dress
Cucumber sandwich
Buttered bread
Berries off the vine
Saddle shoes
Polished black tie-ups
Black leather mary janes
Cashmere bouquet dusting powder
Shaving soap
Ivory soap and water
Stockings with garter and girdle
Socks with garter
Cotton socks
Hello
Good afternoon
Well hello there
Daisy
chicory
primrose
Rent
Own
Farm homestead
Collier’s magazine
Newspaper
psalms
Silver
Gold
pearl
Sponge bath
Wash basin
Wash tub
Tea
Bourbon
coffee


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

What I call a copy/write from my first day of Teachers Write 2014! In the lingo of TW....this is a WIP ( with huge, gigantic apologies to Robert Frost).

I'm going out back
with the dog to the swing
carrying coffee and my notebook.
I'll just write a note to morning
seeing how she's new.

I'll join the receiving line
of color shaking off the dew
petals in the garden widening smiles
for serious shoppers
and sleepy browsers
touching sleeves and hems
on the way to mid-day.

My pen answers early doves
between sips and sighs with squiggles
jabbering with the robins of
rushing sprinklers
shushing tires turning toward highways
not yet wavy with heat.

You come too.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Seeing Red First Day of Summer

Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, it is the first day of summer for me! School ended and I got to be home a teensy bit early with my own kiddos for ice cream and world cup futbol. Hurray!

First book of my summer?  Seeing Red by Kathryn Erskine. 

LOVED it! Historical fiction is admittedly my first love of genres. So, I fell into this book easy. And, Virginia is my adopted home state. I simply love  all stories, lore and bits of information about the place I now live. Seeing Red is set in rural Virginia, not too far from Washington DC.

This is how my favorite book source, Novelist  an EBSCO database that my public library carries, describes Seeing Red: "When twelve-year-old Frederick "Red" Porter's father dies in 1972, his mother wants to sell their automobile repair shop and move her two sons back to Ohio, but Red is desperate to stop the sale even if it means unearthing some dark family secrets in a Virginia rife with racial tensions."

I listened to Seeing Red on audible, my new favorite way of taking in a book: (http://tinyurl.com/kfkugwd)

The narration was good...but it was the characters that hooked me right away. I just love Red Porter and the way he thinks about things with a curiosity that leads the story. And, he has a great,  group fascinating group of friends: Miss Georgia is 93 years old, Rosie is 12, Beau is an adult with a huge heart of loyalty and possibly intellectual challenges and Thomas who is 14 but from a world that isn't Red's. 

Early on in the story, Red finds himself in the kind of trouble that only happens to young people who think they are ready to make choices and decisions independently when they really aren't. Red finds out what my grandfather used to say about "bad guys" of any sort: "once you say yes.....you don't get to say no ever again." But, Red is from a good family with a recently deceased father known for always having done "the right thing". Red has to find his way between what's easy and what's right, what's wrong and what's right and what's popular and what's right all on his own when his friendship with Thomas becomes impossible. These opposing forces for such a young man are what make a novel set in 1972 very relevant to today's readers.....I hope especially the boys.

Some of the subjects listed by Novelist for this novel include: automobile repair shops, family, fathers, grief, prejudice, preteen boys, race relations, small town, the seventies.

I enjoyed this novel similarly to how I enjoyed Okay for Now by Gary Schmidt. The stories are different in subject and setting. But, the character driven story that leads a young man to reflectively grow up has the same feel.



BONUS FEATURES!
-Discussion Questions with CC links by Scholastic: http://tinyurl.com/o34m9c8
-Kathy Erskine @ National Book Festival 2013







Book cover taken from Kathy Erskine's wonderful author website. Check it out!

http://www.kathyerskine.com/Kathryn_Erskine/Books.html