
We have added a lot of books to the shelves this month! A lot of good books came up on the Facebook page from which I buy a lot, and a large pile was donated to the library. I haven’t read as many from my backlog this month as last, but I did get through a few that are being added to the shelves. This first picture shows books from the A. D. Chronicles series. Neither Esther nor I has actually read any of these books, but we had one of the series on the Adult Fiction Shelf, so I decided to take a chance on them. Have any of you read this series, or books by these authors, and care to offer your opinion on them?
Esther added these beautiful, small-format books to the Classics Shelf. She is working on collecting individual copies of all of Jane Austen’s books; she has an omnibus edition of all of them, but has decided that it is too hard to read from such a big volume.


Esther also bought Pippi Goes Aboard, to complete that series on the Independent Readers Shelf. The Pippi books are fun tall tales! We had Books 1 and 3; now we also have Book 2.
We have been using Sonlight Curriculum since about 2003 or 2004, when Esther was in Kindergarten or First Grade–I can’t remember exactly. We have collected almost all of the books that Sonlight uses, but occasionally I find one we didn’t have. Mostly, those are the Preschool books, since this year is the first time I have ever used that level (with my last child!). I was delighted to be able to purchase Mike Mulligan and More (used in Sonlight Preschool) and Stories From Around the World (used in the Pre-K level we’re working through right now). We have individual copies of three of the four Virginia Lee Burton books already, but they are Esther’s, so I wanted my own–and this includes the one we hadn’t gotten yet! We’ve been reading Stories From Around the World from Internet Archive, but it is much nicer to read a print copy. I’m putting both of them on the Picture Books Shelf. The same person was also selling Beverly Cleary’s Ralph S. Mouse series. Again, we had Books 1 and 3–now we also have The Mouse and the Motorcycle, which is Book 2, to add to the Junior Fiction Shelf.



The books I managed to read this month from the backlist included Tug of War and Between Two Worlds, about a family from Latvia who had to flee their home during World War II. The duology follows them as they travel from one refugee camp to another in Europe, and then immigrate to Canada after the war. Very interesting additions to our Young Adult Shelf! I don’t recall ever reading about people from Latvia before, although we had someone live for a time with our family several years ago who came from there. Survival: Blizzard is not a great book, but a good one for children who love stories about surviving in the wilderness. There are two main characters, a boy and a girl, so it will appeal to both genders. This one is on the Junior Fiction Shelf.



The next two books I read were Anastasia and A Night Divided. What really struck me in Anastasia was the vast divide between the luxurious life of the ruling class and the absolute poverty of the poor–and how the rich had no idea what life was like for the poor. The Tsar’s family seemed utterly unaware of the disparity and how the lower classes viewed them. A Night Divided is an amazing story. I’ve known about the Berlin Wall all my life; I remember studying about it in third grade. I haven’t read many, if any, stories about it and the effect it had on the lives of the people of Berlin, however. This book really pulled me in. I knew that, since it was a novel, the ending had to be happy–but until about three pages from the end I couldn’t be sure! It took me about a week to read this one, and at least twice it dominated my dreams at night as I tried to figure out how Gerta and Fritz could complete their task and escape–before they were caught by the Stasi, or secret police. These books have both been placed on the Junior Fiction shelf.


I also managed to read two books that have been on our shelves, unread, for several years. These are ones I bought from Sonlight Curriculum several years ago, but never got to. I read Code Talkers aloud to the children. What an amazing story! There are parts that are not so nice to read, as it describes World War II in the Pacific, but for the most part it is not too graphic. What I found most fascinating was the way the Navajo Indians used their language as a code to transmit radio messages, and how that code was never cracked by the Japanese. I remember my dad telling me about it, probably less than ten years after that story was declassified, but had never actually read anything about it. This book is a must-read for any study of World War II. The other book is also about World War II–actually, the time immediately after the war. I have been wanting to read this one for several years, and it perfectly fit a prompt in a reading challenge. This one is about a Jewish girl who survived the concentration camps and then found herself wandering through a hostile Poland where Jews were still not wanted. She was found by a Zionist group and helped to lead a large group of children to Palestine. There is some language, and a couple of romantic scenes that I would leave out if I were to read it aloud, but it is an incredible story. Both of these books are on the Young Adult Fiction shelf.


I needed something from Amazon recently, and they offered free shipping if the order was a certain size. Because I had some gift cards, I decided to use them to buy a few books I wanted that also offered free shipping (that’s hard to find to our location!). I came across the Tree Street Kids series a couple of months ago, and listened to the first three with the children while we were on a road trip. We all enjoyed them, and I was impressed with the family values and Christian worldview, so I decided to buy the series. These Junior Fiction books will be enjoyed by anyone who likes the Brady Street Boys series, or Sugar Creek Gang (which we don’t have). I still needed a few more dollars to get the free shipping, so I found Desert Dog. Some day, I want to have all of Jim Kjelgaard’s books on the shelf–one at a time!


Now, on to the donations! A local religious group who publish some books sent us a boxful of some of their titles.








Some of these, especially the ones about New Zealand’s history, look pretty interesting!
A friend who patronizes our library donated this book about Michael Faraday. She picked it up somewhere, their family read it, and then she decided it would do better being in our library than languishing on her shelves. It looks quite interesting, and will help to fill out our Junior Biography Shelf!
