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Middle Grades, Historical Fiction (and more!) - September 2020 Reading Recap

So many books in September!

These books went along with preparations for SQUILT LIVE! music appreciation lessons, an increasing interest in stories of immigrants, and historical fiction. Of course, I always throw in a little “fluff”, too.

Audiobooks are becoming a bigger part of my reading as well (I really look forward to folding laundry so I can spend time with my book!).

If you’ve yet to check out the monthly book lists I keep, please take a look. I have a feeling if you’ve landed on my blog you and I might have similar reading tastes.

Why do I read so much? Why is it so important to me to carve out time each day to read?

I read to broaden my horizons and become a better homeschooling parent. I read for relaxation. I read for socialization (book people are awesome people!).

September 2020 Reading Recap at Homegrown Learners #homeschool #reading

Get out your notepad, or open up Goodreads - and let’s talk about the books from September.

Honestly, I get giddy sharing what I’ve read with you!


Books for Middle/High School Grades

Each time I pick up a middle grades book I wonder why I don’t read more of them. (Don’t worry, I have a couple on my list for October!)

The Mozart Question

This audiobook was accompanied by beautiful music from the London Philharmonic Orchestra - such a treat! This story is a fictional account of musicians in a concentration camp during WWII. There is much to be learned about history, the violin, and several prominent works of music.

Civil War Drummer Boy

We used this short elementary & middle grades chapter book for our study of American music in SQUILT LIVE! John Lincoln Clem was an actual Civil War drummer boy. This book should be integral to a study of the Civil War!

We Are Not From Here

After reading American Dirt, I wanted to read more about the immigrant experience. I would only recommend this book for older high school students. There is a lot of graphic violence and language in the book - but I found it to be a very realistic portrayal of the plight of immigrants. I think I actually preferred this book over American Dirt.


Historical Fiction

I love this genre - but I’ve been trying to spread my reading wings a bit. This month only contains two historical fiction books.

Secrets of a Charmed Life

Susan Meissner is one of my favorite authors. This book did not disappoint. It takes place in London during the blitz of WWII. I was a bit tired of WWII books, but this book was completely wonderful!

A Land Remembered

As a native Floridian, I found this book extremely interesting. Spanning the years from the Civil War to the present, this is the story of one family and how they made their way (and fortune) in the Florida landscape.


Non Fiction

My Dearest Dietrich

I recommend this book if you’re interested in the life - and particularly the love life - of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. From what I understand, most of what takes place in this book is very close to the truth. Quite interesting!

The Girl Who Smiled Beads

This was a hard (a good kind of hard) read. Clemantine Wamariya writes poignantly about living through the Rwandan genocide. We meet her as a young girl and follow her as a refugee through many countries in Africa to her eventually settling in the United States in her teens. This event in history is no longer just a name to me - this book gave it a name and face that will always stay with me.

The Reading Life

“Those of us who have been true readers all our life seldom fully realise the enormous extension of our being which we owe to authors. We realise it best when we talk with an unliterary friend. He may be full of goodness and good sense but he inhabits a tiny world. In it, we should be suffocated. The man who is contented to be only himself, and therefore less a self, is in prison. My own eyes are not enough for me, I will see through those of others. Reality, even seen through the eyes of many, is not enough. I will see what others have invented.” ~ CS Lewis

I listened to this book - and will listen to it many more times I am sure. Because CS Lewis is the author you know there were so many “aha!” moments… it only took me 90 minutes to listen to this book - well worth the time!

Counterpoint

This book fell completely flat for me. While I did learn a lot about J.S. Bach (in particular his Goldberg Variations), I found it was hard to read a book written by someone with a fundamentally different worldview than my own. The author is a self-proclaimed atheist, so as he is trying to make sense of his mother’s death, it stands to reason that I would deal with the same thing in a very different way. I found myself getting a bit annoyed with him by the end of the book, but I did finish it and I’m glad I stuck it out until the end.


Books Just For Fun

P.S. I Love You

What a feel-good book this was! Once I finished it I also watched the movie on Amazon Prime. This is the perfect way to just check out from real life for a bit!

Room-maid

This book was part of Amazon Prime Reading - Prime members can choose from several free books to read on Kindle each month. I thoroughly enjoyed Room-maid. It was all fluff, little thinking involved - a fun romance. Perfect!

Anxious People

Wow! Fredrik Backman always delivers a story that is humorous but incredibly poignant at the same time. If you enjoyed A Man Called Ove, then I think you will like this book. The audio (via Libro.fm) was exceptional!

What You Wish For

Katherine Center is another one of my go-to feel-good authors. I flew through this book in just two days. It is a sweet romance, but with some serious issues we all face at the core.


Sources for Books

Many people wonder where I obtain my books - here is a list of my favorite sources for physical, digital, and audio books.

  • Amazon (I order lots of physical books here, but also take advantage of the Amazon Prime Reading freebies each month.)

  • The Library (I use the physical library and also the Overdrive and Libby apps)

  • NetGalley - this book review site has been great. You can request and obtain books for review. I generally try to do about one book per month through Netgalley.

  • Libro.fm - I am part of the Libro.fm influencers program, which entitles me to several free audios each month. I also have a membership because I can get audiobooks I want much cheaper this way! I love their selection and the app is super simple and reliable!


I’d love to know what you’ve been reading!

Leave me a recommendation in the comments below.

August 2020 Reading Recap

Raise your hand if you hide from your family so you can finish a book!

(I don’t actually “hide” - but sometimes folding the laundry or cleaning up in a specific room might take me a bit longer than usual.)

I feel strongly about homeschool parents reading - reading widely and well. It’s fun to keep track of the books I’ve read and now start to look at patterns - which genres I choose and why - and how those patterns coincide with current events and the events going on in my own life.

Reading also helps me become well-educated - it assists me in my quest to figure out what I think is important for my children to know.

 Reading is everything. Reading makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something, learned something, become a better person. Reading makes me smarter. Reading gives me something to talk about later on. Reading is the unbelievably healthy way my attention deficit disorder medicates itself. Reading is escape, and the opposite of escape; it’s a way to make contact with reality after a day of making things up, and it’s a way of making contact with someone else’s imagination after a day that’s all too real. Reading is grist. Reading is bliss.— Nora Ephron

I read for all of the same reasons as Nora Ephron - “Reading is bliss!".

August Reading Recap at Homegrown Learners

I accomplished a lot of reading in August thanks to audiobooks. This has been a huge change for me in the past year, and when people tell me they just can’t pay attention long enough for an audiobook I tell them I had to TRAIN myself to listen.

Whether it is my son reading aloud to me (and I’m modeling listening) or I’m listening to an audiobook, listening is a SKILL that you are never too old to cultivate. I believe this skill of listening is translating to more than just books, too.


Books Read in August

August’s books were a mix of historical fiction (my favorite genre), homeschool development, memoir, and fiction. Intentionally I also pulled in a cozy mystery and fantasy, too.

Historical Fiction

I would recommend every book in this category! Each taught me something about a particular time period in history and added to my body of knowledge.

When We Were Young & Brave was probably my favorite - it is a story I knew NOTHING about - the internment teachers and children in a British run missionary school in Japan during WWII.

Homeschool Development

Memoir

  • The Beauty in Breaking

    I never go wrong with a Book of the Month Club selection. I love my membership in BOTM because I’m always guaranteed a good read that many other readers will be discussing, too. This memoir, by an African American doctor working in Emergency Room medicine, opened my eyes to a problem in our health care system that desperately needs to be fixed. It also addressed issues of racism and inequality in our healthcare system.

    (If you use my BOTM Club link you can get a discount on your first order.)

Fiction

Genres I Wouldn’t Normally Read

Both of these books were a pleasant surprise for me.

The first is a fantasy and the second is a cozy mystery.

I found 7 of the Maisie Dobbs books at a thrift store for $.50 each and I will definitely be reading all of them! (Apparently, this was quite the find because a lot of avid readers have been telling me how jealous they are.)

The House in the Cerulean Sea was one of my favorite audios of all time - it was just so whimsical and magical! Normally I don’t enjoy reading those types of books on my own, but I’m thinking maybe I’m wrong about that!


“Bookish” Necessities

A lot of followers on my bookish Instagram account requested I share about some of my book accessories.

Sigh. Yes, I have “bookish” accessories and my family thinks I’ve gone round the bend.

  • My favorite book light - this light keeps my marriage intact because it allows me to read late into the night while I’m in bed without disturbing my husband. I love it.

  • The iBeani - this is a great little beanbag for my iPad or Kindle - I can prop either device in it while I’m reading in bed or sitting on the sofa. There is also a pocket for your phone. I can see this being a GREAT gift for a college student! (see the carousel below for a picture of mine - I got the cute forest animals print that you see in the picture and it’s ADORABLE!)

Do you have a favorite book right now?

Tell me about it in the comments below!

August 2020 Reading Recap at Homegrown Learners