{Monthly Miscellany} June

Summer is officially heeeeeeere. As heralded by the humidity and heat I’m currently suffering from. (Notice the alliteration at the beginning of the sentence?) Ugh. But on a brighter note, summer also means lots—or at least more—of reading and free time, which I’ve been enjoying.

Let’s dive in to this month! *cue images of pools and diving boards*

{reading} 

Fourteen books. I think that’s a record for this year. And so many of them are so good.


alexhamcover

mistbornsecrethistorypromisepotokcover

asherlevcover

artandbiblecover

how-star-wars-conquered-the-universe-b52b7025c3769f6b

dearknightley

wednesdaywars

lilarobinsoncover

Hamilton-The-Revolution-Book-GalleyCat

ender'sgame

north!cover

branchofsilvercover

selectionkieracass

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re-reads: Ender’s Game // North! Or Be Eaten

posted about: Alexander Hamilton // Art and the Bible

random: Hamilton: The Revolution is beautiful. I mean, not only does it have amazing stories about how this musical came to behind, but it’s got gorgeous photos from the Broadway and all the lyrics with comments on them by Lin-Manuel Miranda himself. Here’s a peak inside:

schuylersisters

favorites: The Wednesday Wars by Gary D. Schmidt. Guys, this is one is amazing—it’s got humor and heart, simplicity and depth, a great story and poetry. There’s Shakespeare, the Yankees, and, of course, Mrs. Baker, the teacher who’s definitely out to get protagonist Holling Hoodhood’s guts. I laughed out loud during this one but also found myself pierced to tears at its poignant wisdom and portrayals of family, pain and healing, mercy and justice.

A Branch of Silver, A Branch of Gold by Anne Elisabeth Stengl. It’s always a treat to read a new book by Anne Elisabeth (I just can’t call her Stengl. It doesn’t feel right.), and this was no exception. It felt different from other Goldstone Wood books—I can’t pinpoint it, just a different feel. However, that’s not bad, and I was delighted to find that a beloved character from previous books appears in this one. As always, the characters were quirky, complex, and lovable, the Faeries were terrifying, beautiful, and flawed, and the whole thing sang. It was worth the 20+ dollars.

{writing}

So at the beginning of June I told myself I’d write a lot on that Phoenix story and finish it by the 30th. Guess what didn’t happen this month?

Yeeeeeah.

But I am almost at the end of it (and I wrote another short story plus some poetry), so to celebrate that, I thought I’d share some snippets.

That night, Mother hands me a rush-fiber quilt.

“It’s getting colder,” she explains, laying it over me. “But not cold enough yet for the llama skin.”

She smiles, and the corners of eyes crinkle. It is a joke between us, because I cannot bear being cold, and even before the first freezes arrive, I beg for the thick, soft llama skin. And each year, Mother laughs and hands me the rush-fiber first.

But tonight I do not laugh, and she quiets, leaning over me to brush back my hair. I shift away from her hand, burying my face in the rough cot. I can feel the wind of her hand as it moves away from me, and cold waves over me.

~

I wake to the cold. The cold of a bare stone cell shadowed in dark blue light, like Flamedeath twlights. The cold of iron bars covering the door facing me, thick as the scabs on my chained wrists. The cold of the utter silence bearing down on my body.

The cold of the loneliness, emptiness, nothingness that it is my new life.

~

What?” Mijah Lorren’s exclamation breaks through the din of noises and thoughts that swim around me. “I was not informed of this. Who gave you the authority—”

“I was authorized to do whatever necessary to protect our country,” the man shoots back, all steel and ice. His ferocious gaze whips back to me. It seems to burn me.

“Which will it be, Phoenix?”

{music}

Rediscovered this song: “Now We Are Free” from the soundtrack for Gladiator. I cannot tell you how much I love this song. It strikes a deep chord in me. I decided to include some of my favorite versions of it. Which one do you like best?

// Peter Hollens //

// Celtic Thunder //

// Indigo Choir //

{life}

Work. Workworkwork. I taught a lot of swim lessons this month, which was actually way more fun that I’d feared. I think the more frequently I do it, the more fun it is. I guess I get into the rhythm more. Anyway, yay for cute kids and some fun coworkers. And paychecks, of course.

Ohhh, speaking of paychecks, I used all the money I’ve been saving from work for the past nine-ish months to buy myself a fancy-schmancy camera. Thanks again to everyone who commented on my post about that. After a lot of agonizing, I settled on a Nikon D5500, plus telephoto and prime lenses. Storms, it is nice. Leagues and leagues above the point-and-shoot I have. I’m pretty overwhelmed and quite a beginner, but I’m still loving it. Once I practice some more, maybe I’ll post some photography on here.

{quotes}

My, my, it’s been a quoterly month. Ooh, I have some good ones from Chaim Potok’s The Promise (read it, guys. After The Chosen, of course):

It is strange how ideas can float about and be ignored until they are put into a book. A book can be a weapon.


A man must sometimes be forced to make choices, for it is only by his choices that we know what a man truly is.

How is your summer going? Have you read any of these books? Did you like the samples from Phoenix? Grab some lemonade, and let’s chat!

7 responses to “{Monthly Miscellany} June”

  1. Oh my goodness! I love that first quote!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Yus NoBE. And Chaim Potok. And Hamilton. Which book would you recommend more–the biography or the book on the musical?
    Can’t wait to see pictures from your camera! And I love your snippets. ❤

    Like

    1. Oh, and I forgot. What was Dear Mr. Knightley about? Is it an Austen spinoff?

      Like

  3. What’s The Wednesday Wars about? It sounds interesting. And there’s actually TWO characters who we’ve met before (or should I say later?) in A Branch of Silver, a Branch of Gold. 😀 (Possibly three- I just came up with a new idea/headcanon.)
    Yes, absolutely post some of your photography. 😀 And your Phoenix snippets sound awesome, even if you didn’t work on it as much as you hoped to.
    And I shall have to listen to those three versions of Now We Are Free and get back to you on which I like best . . .

    Liked by 1 person

    1. So it’s about this seventh-grader, Holling Hoodhood (gotta love that name), whose teacher makes him read Shakespeare while everyone else goes to religious classes (they’re all Jews or Catholics, except for Holling). It goes through his whole school year, his struggles with Shakespeare, his family’s struggles, the shadow of the Vietnam War … It’s hard to explain. Go read the Amazon blurb. xP But it’s really great.
      Two? Not including the Lumil Eliasul? *panics that I missed something (which I probably did because I was going so fast ’cause I had to know what happenssss*
      Haha, I will once I get used to this camera. =D Thank you!
      All righty. Enjoy them. =)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Interesting. I shall have to look it up.
        Yes, two. 😀 I’ll give you a hint: the second one has only shown up in one book so far other than this one, in a fairly minor role.
        Good! I look forward to seeing your photography!
        Having listened to all of them, I decided I like the Peter Hollens cover best.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. How was Dear Mr. Knightley? It sounded interesting.

    Liked by 1 person

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