July 30, 2023

Excellent (again)!

New Spring: The Graphic NovelNew Spring: The Graphic Novel by Chuck Dixon
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Loved reading this one again. Reading it parallel with New Spring, i am impressed at how well this graphic adaptation follows the entire story line of the novel. Excellent (again)!

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July 28, 2023

especially sweet in the re-read

New Spring (The Wheel of Time, #0)New Spring by Robert Jordan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This one was especially sweet in the re-read. Noticed lots of things i missed first time through. Great story and prequel to the Wheel of Time.

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July 10, 2023

a better way to communicate

Declarative Language Handbook: Using a Thoughtful Language Style to Help Kids with Social Learning Challenges Feel Competent, Connected, and UnderstoodDeclarative Language Handbook: Using a Thoughtful Language Style to Help Kids with Social Learning Challenges Feel Competent, Connected, and Understood by Linda K. Murphy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Excellent introduction and overview of a better way to communicate with kids and folks with Social Learning Challenges. Can't wait to learn more and start practicing it daily.

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July 8, 2023

rich adventure, ended too soon

O America: Discovery in a New LandO America: Discovery in a New Land by William Least Heat-Moon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

"O America: Discovery in a New Land" is a different approach to a travel book. Usually, travel books are written by someone describing who and what they encounter as they travel on a journey and as they stop to experience places and people along the way. Some are serious, some add humor, some are philosophical, but most add information to greatly increase the readers understanding and second-hand experience of the places visited. Some are set in modern contemporary times (Bryson, McMurtry, Heat-Moon), and others were written in the past about past experiences (Steinbeck, Mark Twain). What makes this account unique among the travel books i've read is that this is written in the present as historical fiction, narrated by a traveler displaced in time from the author. In this case, the time is 1848 and the traveler is a Caribbean born British physician visiting and exploring 1848 America for the first time. For me, it is a refreshing approach to visiting an America of our past, looking on it as an outsider, somewhat objectively. The adventure is rich, but ended too soon. This could have been a book 2-3 times longer, and still been engaging and rich. I enjoyed reading it.

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