-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
I don’t paint things. I only paint the difference between things. ~Henri Matisse
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Nathan Sawaya Angela Mellor James Deahl Nick Brandt Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens Americana PBS Perfecr Suite 6 J Tillman Carl Sandburg Cristians In The Visual Arts Art Brooklyn Alicia Keys Facebook Backwards Film Posters John F. Kennedy Mixed Media Bamian caves Photocrati Lightroom 3 Larry Norman Children in a Field Cowboy Junkies POW Calvin College Green Living Flirtation Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Kindly Olivier Beaudoin Rilke Olga's Gallery Van Gogh Wendy Cope Silent Music Creative Textures Foreign Films by Madeleine L'Engle Alice N. Persons Mathew's House Project Billy Collins Monet The Streets Rachel Zucker Self Image The Lone Ranger Science Seagull.To Win National Poetry Month Environment Pablo Neruda Scholastics books Water Hyacinth Typolution Cara Barer Katja Mater Rhina P. Espaillat Poet Laureate Emily Dickinson Boy Flower Portrait Word Robert Burns Mary Louise Parker Train Station Katrina Math Ox Cart Man Netflix Pixie Foudre Pane e tulipani Dale Chihuly Film MOMA I Shall Be Released Snow Africa Kevin Young Jess Lopez-King Find Work Jack Smart Roger Mitchell Art Theft. White Winter Hymnal Tina Dico Ocean Waves Black and White Leonard Cohen Ottawa Jon Pineda Psalm 34:8 Robert Frost Girl The Air That I Breathe Fractals Samuel Bak paper sculpture Hiram Larew Paper Cutting Oscars Sigur Rós Sunset Everyman Photo Contest Kumi Yamashita sculpture Jewish Ocean Sunset Winds Flickr Nancy Henry Dennis Sampson The search Paperclay Hearts and Minds Michael Kenna The Shadow Scotland An Wine Waiting Nature Bonnie Ferrill Roman Bread and Tulips Alistair Heseltine Denise Levertov Animals Makoto Fujimura Silent World Color Macmillan Old Time Radio Family Afghanistan Trinity Art Conference Interview Reading Short Film Walker Percy Pause H. PALMER HALL Player Piano London Floyd Skloot Biscuit Jennifer Maestre New Water WILLIAM AARNES Peggy Noonan Love In Black And White White As Diamonds Theodore Roethke Sky King memories Vladimir Tatlin Arthur and Yu Evaporation Fleet Foxes Animated Poetry Boy and Girl New Video Kathleen Adcock Terry Evans Nail Art Body Image In Camera Harriet Tubman Makato Fujimura Ben Zion Ed Knippers Otherwise William Doreski Holbrook AZ Webb Sisters Ethics in Photography A SONNET FOR NAPALM Love William Blake Music Dylan Covers Movie Robert Haas The List Peter Callesen Susan Springer Poetry Out Loud Arizona Sunsets At The End Of Paths Not Taken Louise Gluck The Shirt Shadow art Chip Cain Degas New York Text Art William Stafford Donald Hall Animated Short basketry B&W I See One Simple Question They Sit Together on the Porch Photo Contest Holocaust Trinity Arts Conference Georges Rouault Count To Ten Lane Smith Wendell Berry 1 Question Robert Hayden musician Michael Nichols WineKIng Galleries New Yourk City Cisco Kid Mark Doty Black History Sunsets Word Art Camera Toss Western Sunsets Wordle Glass art Art and Christianity Piano Biblical art Naomi Shihab Nye John Bisbee Poetry Prisoner of words Daniel Hoffman Square Halo Rita Dove Bianca Rossini Jane Kenyon Marc Chagall Angela Shaw NEA Japanese Artist weaving onOne John Keats Video Dance Birthday Random Art John Leax If It Be Your Will Ted Kooser Acadamy Awards Vespers Poverty Earth Day Cezanne National Geographic Philip Larkin Legos Wire Sculpture Bob Dylan Sharon Chmielarz Beach Art Conference Bryce Alan Flurie The Fat Man Alela Diane Kelli Russell Agodon Pencil Art Christian Rock OTR And As If The Rain Dillon Gallery Troy DeArmitt Mark Strand Hardly Art 50 People photography Bird John Donne
Tag Archives: Reading
Scholastics books: a memory.
Last week I saw a Scholastics‘ book order belonging to a co-worker’s son. This brought back memories of when I begged my mom for a list of books long enough to supply myself, and my seven siblings, with reading material for a year: my four sisters and three brothers supplied mom with equally long lists. And of course, mom wanted to eliminate ordering four copies of Old Yeller and four copies of the latest Nancy Drew books that we were sure was our God-given-right to own as our own personal copies. But mom’s gentle approach always melted our stubborn commitment toward even the most unholy of things.
Although I was from a large one income family my parents allowed us, except for duplicates, almost any book we would ask for through Scholastics. This must have been an expense that hit the family budget in tangible ways that I was too young to realize. I suspect my parents saw it more as an investment than expense. After a couple of very long weeks the books would be delivered to our school. Some years I would have a teacher who thought best to leave the books piled along the window sills until the end of the day. I am sure she wanted me personally to keep my mind on her lesson de’ jour but all I could do was drool over what was to come. The end of the day would eventually come and with books in hand, since back packs were not used then, I would walk home. Sometimes having to protect my treasures from sleet, freezing rain, and snow deep enough to shut the whole nation down if it had happened in today’s society. Ok, my memory could be a bit off on that part but I can clearly remember that after dinner that evening I would fight for my rightful place in one of the hand me down chairs and sofa we had.

Recent Comments