A Darcy Christmas – A Holiday Tribute to Jane Austen

Jane Austen springs to life again in this book of three Darcy Tales revolving around the wonderful characters of Pride and Prejudice.

Sheila

 

In the first story, ‘Mr. Darcy’s Christmas’; Darcy is visited by the ghosts (of yes, you guessed it!) Christmas past, present, and future.  A fun twist together of two wonderful classics that I found to be an imaginative if not a bit predictable mix.

The second tale is ‘A Christmas Present’, where we find a very anxious Mr. Darcy fretting over Lizzy who is about to give birth.  This middle story really set a picture in my mind of what the Darcy family could have been like.  This center story really was my favorite.

The third and final installment of the book is ‘A Darcy Christmas’, takes us through the Darcy Christmas’s one by one, some of joy, and some that let’s just say having the Kleenex close by is not ill advice.   I enjoyed these peeks into the Darcy Christmas’s – it was like looking into a family photo album.


 

For someone (errrrrr me……) who has avoided all of the spin offs with vampires, zombies, and sea monsters… this book came as a pleasant surprise.  I enjoyed the stories centered around the Darcy’s and the fact that this book holds the three stories as a collection was perfect for the time of year when my mind tends to travel towards a sort of book a.d.d. and I skip from one thing to the next.

Amazon Rating

Thank you to Source Books for allowing me to review this book

Morning Meanderings… Blog reading Can Be Dangerous

Good morning! I am starting to get back into the norm of things around here now that I am back. This will be my second day back to work and I am looking forward to the tasks I have.

I have made it half way through the Monday What Are You Reading Posts as well as several of the book blogs I enjoy checking in on. In my travels thus far, here is what I have found that I am interested in knowing more about:

 

At Bookworm With A View this book is mentioned as part of a “Pay It Forward” plan and while Mari picked up this title from another blogger, I picked it up from her.  🙂

In her words, she describes the book like this:

Synopsis:  One day in 2005, shortly after her father’s death, an episode of Oprah changed everything. The show about women in the Congo depicted atrocities too horrible to comprehend: millions dead, women gang-raped and tortured, children starving and dying in shocking numbers. That day Lisa woke up to her dissatisfaction with the “good” life and to her role as an activist and a sister.

What started as a solo 30-mile run has now grown into a national organization in connection with Women for Women International. Run for Congo Women holds fundraising runs in four countries and ten states, and continues to raise money and awareness. In A Thousand Sisters, Lisa shares firsthand accounts of her experiences visiting the Congo, the women she’s helped, and the relationships she’s formed. With compelling stories of why she remains committed to this cause, Lisa inspires her audience to reach out and help as well, forming a sisterhood that transcends geographic boundaries.

That to me sounds like a must read and I have requested it at my Library.

 

Lydia over at The Lost Entwife had this one on her reading list this week.

In the third trimester of her pregnancy, Baltimore private investigator Tess Monaghan is under doctor’s orders to remain immobile. Bored and restless, reduced to watching the world go by outside her window, she takes small comfort in the mundane events she observes . . . like the young woman in a green raincoat who walks her dog at the same time every day. Then one day the dog is running free and its owner is nowhere to be seen. Certain that something is terribly wrong, and incapable of leaving well enough alone, Tess is determined to get to the bottom of the dog walker’s abrupt disappearance, even if she must do so from her own bedroom. But her inquisitiveness is about to fling open a dangerous Pandora’s box of past crimes and troubling deaths . . . and she’s not only putting her own life in jeopardy but also her unborn child’s.

I have become a fan of Laura Lippman just this past six months and this one sounds interesting to me too.  Another one I have requested from the library.

 

Operation Paperback

And last but certainly not least, At Coffee And A Book Chick I discovered this wonderful cause.  Click on the picture and go to her post which contains a list of books that troops from around the world have requested as books they would like to read.

 

Tonight is our Christmas Bookies Book Club meeting.  Last year in December we celebrated our 100th Bookies meeting.  This year we are at 112.  We do a gift exchange, have a potluck, and will be reviewing A Christmas Sweater by Glenn Beck.  I am finding this book hard to come up with review questions for.  If you have read this, I would be interested in any discussion question ideas.  😀

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading, is where we gather to share what we have read this past week and what we plan to read this week.  It is a great way to network with other bloggers, see some wonderful blogs, and put new titles on your reading list.

I love being a part of this and I hope you do too!  As part of this weekly meme I love to encourage you all to go and visit the others participating in this meme.  I offer a weekly contest for those who visit 10 or more of the Monday Meme participants and leave a comment.  You receive one entry for every 10 comments, just come back here and tell me how many in the comment area.

Two weeks ago winner:

Teddyree from Eclectic Reader


Congratulations!  Please choose an item out of the PRIZE BOX and email me your choice with your mailing address as well!   journeythroughbooks@gmail.com


I came home from Honduras early (real early) Saturday morning.  I have been having a great time catching up on blog reading and prepping a few posts for this upcoming week.  I did post a couple meanderings from Honduras while I was away:

A Couple pictures from my bedroom window

Baby cows and me

Same little boy – different year (seeing Samir)

A giveaway from Honduras

Chicken Tortilla Lasagna (recipe from Honduras)

I did finish a couple of books while I was away but have yet to write reviews for them.


This week here is what is on the agenda:


Despite his single mother’s financial hardships, 12-year-old Eddie is certain this Christmas he will receive his much-desired Huffy bike. To his dismay, what he finds under the tree is “a stupid, handmade, ugly sweater” that his mother carefully modeled after those she can’t afford at Sears (one of four places she keeps part-time jobs). Eddie tosses the sweater and insults his mother before the two go visit his grandparents at their farmhouse. On the drive home, though, Eddie’s exhausted mother falls asleep at the wheel and crashes, dying instantly. Sent to live with his grandparents, an increasingly bitter and angry Eddie lashes out at his accommodating guardians, engages in typical teenage angst and grapples with belief in God.

This is our current book club read and our meeting and Christmas party potluck is this Tuesday.


Top student Erin has her sights on one of the five slots for her AP art history class’s summer trip to Italy. Her best friend, Lindsay, just wants Megan, the class bully, to leave her alone. Stylish, outgoing Samantha is fiercely loyal to both Erin and Lindsay. Their friendship takes a turn for the paranormal when Erin receives a pink crystal ball and a set of cryptic instructions after her aunt’s death. Erin’s questions to the ball about school and boys start to come true, but not quite in the ways she hoped. Too late, she figures out that the ball’s magic is limited, but by then she’s made a mess of school and her personal relationships… Academic success remains at the forefront of Erin’s mind, but as the pink crystal ball works its magic, she grows as a student and a friend, becoming more self-reliant.

Sounds like an adventure to me!


Proust’s infamous madeleine cannot hold a candle to the lush, winsome memories of meals past that you’ll find in Muriel Barbery’s Gourmet Rhapsody. M. Pierre Arthens is France’s premier restaurant critic—so premier in fact that he’s simply called the Maître—and we meet him as he lies in bed, waiting to die. Fervently he mines years of gastronomic delights and discoveries in search of one single flavor, one that he says is “the only true thing ever accomplished.” What unfolds—in vignettes narrated by him and by a chorus of his familiars (most human, some quite comically not)—is a portrait of a man in thrall to the very ingredient that makes French cuisine so inescapably, ecstatically, seductive: It’s not cream, nor cognac, but the cook who defines those glorious tastes. “The only true work of art, in the end,” he says, “is another person’s feast.”

I picked this book up in Honduras and started it on the plane home.


Ok that’s the plan.  I am really excited to see what everyone is reading this week!  I feel like I missed my “book jonesing” last week!  😀

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Chicken Tortilla Lasanga

This is a recipe I picked up in Honduras last year when I went.  I have made it here at home as well and when they made it again this year I just knew I had to share it.

Sheila

 

Chicken Tortilla Lasagna

 

2 1/2 pounds of skinless chicken breasts

1 large can of cream of mushroom soup

2 cans 8 oz. diced chilies

3 cups of shredded cheddar cheese

2 cups  of sour cream

salsa

2 packages flour tortillas


Cook the chicken breasts in a pan until done and then cut in bite size pieces.   Lightly grease a 13 x 9 cake pan and put in a layer of tortillas .  Mix the chilies and sour cream with the cream of mushroom soup, then add a layer of this mixture over the tortillas.  Sprinkle on a layer of the cheese.  Now place in a layer of the chopped up chicken breast, followed by a light layer of the salsa.  Put a layer of tortillas over the top of this.

Repeat layers.

Cover top layer with tortillas and sprinkle remaining cheese over the top.

 


 

Morning Meanderings… Feeling a little LOST

Good morning!  Sipping the coffee this morning, writing a post, and heading out the door by 8 am….

ahhh….. it’s good to be back.

Yesterday I went up town one time… to pick up a few groceries and to the book store to pick up my book club read that is up for discussion on Tuesday, The Christmas Sweater by Glenn Beck.  The rest of the day I sat in the recliner downstairs with my laptop doing a little blog reading and watching LOST episodes one after another.


When LOST was on TV I never felt caught up.  If I missed an episode I would be wondering why someone who had previously died or been missing, was now walking around the show set like all was right with the world.  The flash forwards, flash backs, and the occasion flash sideways had me feeling….. well….. uhhhhhh……

lost.

So I stopped watching the shows and decided that I would take this winter to go through them all starting right from Season one episode one.  And that is what I am doing.

We had a moment in Honduras when as we trudged through some jungle like territory to view a water system that would bring water to people who previously did not have it, I thought that we were on the set of LOST.

See:

Anyway… today I hope to watch more LOST, do a little laundry and relax some more as tomorrow…. it is full steam ahead.  Later today I hope to share a recipe with you that will make your mouth water and possibly a review as well if I can get my act together.

Any fun Sunday plans?

Morning Meanderings… Back in Minnesota and with a giveaway!

Good morning!

I am sitting at MY OWN kitchen table this morning with MY OWN coffee cup.

We left Honduras (84 degrees) yesterday at 1:00 pm and arrived back on my doorstep at 1:30 a.m. (17 degrees and snowing) this morning.

Finally… the snow on my blog makes sense again.

I am glad to be home and over the next few days I will share pictures, happenings, and recipes with you surrounding the 10 days I spent traveling around Honduras with 6 friends, exploring options of where we can team up in the future.  It was an amazing trip, but we spent a lot (A LOT) of time in a car traveling here and there, sometimes 4 -5 hours one way so you can imagine that I am excited to start moving (literally) again!

The people who were with us and drove us around were Terry and Colleen Hawk.  Missionaries of Honduras and amazing people.  I have known them for years, but this year was the year these two amazing people went from acquaintances to friends.


Terry’s dad, Don Hawk was the man who came to Honduras on a banana boat in 1968 to start a school for underprivileged boys.  He applied to do this through a mission agency and was turned down – however he felt called to do this anyway, so packed up his wife and his two small sons at the time and to Honduras they went.

Now all these years later, while Don passed away at the age of 59, the school (the farm school I showed pictures of earlier) flourishes, and Terry’s sons and grandchildren are still doing things in Honduras that has really changed the country.  It was an honor to spend time getting to know Terry and Colleen better.

Terry and Colleen Hawk

SO – I tell you all this today because the book, Come What May by Betty Hockett is the story of Dawn Hawk.  I read it several years back but now that I know more of the story, I want to read it again.


The Giveaway

The giveaway I want to do is for a bag of Honduran coffee (which is delicious!).  All I would like is a comment here for letting me know a trip that you have taken that has inspired a book purchase (trip and book title).

One Bonus Entry

If you would like to subscribe to my blog (upper right side bar) and let me know in a separate comment here (or if you already subscribe) and that will count as an extra entry.

Winner will be chosen using random.org on Wednesday morning – December 14th.

 

It’s good to be home!

Guest Post: Christmas Memories

Laurel is one of the first bloggers I remember really connecting with back when I first was a rooky blogger.  She was new as well so we bounced ideas off of each other.  Laurel is an author of several books and runs more blogs than anyone I know! She’s great to stop in and visit me in the mornings with her own coffee cup in hand.

Sheila

 

 

When we think about home, we are immediately swept away by all kinds of images—emotional ones, to be sure—and they range from nostalgic to other, less positive images.

There are many clichés about home, from “home is where the heart is” to “you can’t go home again.”  We each have a wide range of memories about home, starting with our own childhoods.  Probably the ones that are most familiar are those associated with special events and holidays.

Right now, with Christmas looming, “home for the holiday” themes abound, from the ads we see to the TV movies that strike a nostalgic chord about home.  Those “Norman Rockwell” images used to grace the covers of popular magazines.


My childhood was full of TV families in their homes that came into our own homes, creating an image of home and family— from “Ozzie and Harriet” to less conventional ones, like “The Beverly Hillbillies.”  One such TV family’s existence owed its life to a holiday special about home, which then expanded into a TVseries.  Remember the voices calling out in the evening?  “Good-night, John-Boy!”  Of course, you say, “The Waltons”—they became almost an institution, with those homey scenes.  Those poignant tones calling out at the end of the day conjured up nostalgic images.  Even if you never had “home-like” experiences like those.

Some of you missed out on those particular scenes, growing up after shows like that faded away.  But for us “Baby Boomers,” our younger days were replete with these shows.

In my own life, my homes have been varied.  Growing up in a farmhouse surrounded by fields and country roads, I had a different kind of experience from my own children, who lived in all kinds of houses, including apartments and townhouses, as well as suburban ranch style or English tudor ones.  We even lived for awhile in an A-frame cottage in the foothills.  But in each “home,” their fathers and I brought our own little piece of home into the physical dwellings, and encircled our families with our traditions.

These days, I live alone, but grown children and grandchildren come to my home periodically, so I have created still another version of home for the holidays with these special visitors in mind.  I have collected a few holiday-themed items over the years, but have none of the ornaments from my own childhood or my children’s.  Instead, I have more recent acquisitions that are themed to evoke childhood memories, like my Disney collections.  They were selected with the goal of reminding me of special childhood feelings and memories.


Referring to these collections as part of my “second childhood” series, because of that aspect about them, I can fantasize to my heart’s content and create the ambiance that I seek.

Two days ago, my grandson Noah helped me pull some of my special decorations out of their boxes, and we surrounded ourselves with the “home for the holidays” theme, Disney-style.

Here are a few of my favorites.

This first one says “hearth and home” to me, while the second one says “welcome,” with the miniature tree covered in ornament frames of each of my grandchildren.  Then, instead of hanging my stockings on a mantle, you’ll see them on my folding screen.  One of them belongs to my son who is not going to be home for the holidays, because he lives in Europe.


Then, on my largest bookshelf, I have clustered various Christmasy Disney images, with a family of Christmas bears tucked away underneath, next to the giant Mickey Mouse.  In the final photo, Mr. and Mrs. Santa cozy up to a birdhouse, a birdcage, and some more bears.


So there you have it!  My current version of “home for the holidays.”


Visit Laurel at Creative Memories to see what is going on in her life.

Morning Meanderings… I Am Coming Home!

Good morning.  This is my last morning in Honduras.  We are up and packed and head to the airport at 10 am.  Our flight leaves at 1 pm today and we will land in Minneapolis around 10 pm tonight. Then drive two and a half hours back to Brainerd after we have recaptured our luggage and caught a shuttle to the park and fly and pick up our cars.

Travel days really sucks….

As I look out my window this morning in Tegucigalpa, Honduras I am going to miss the warm weather. I will have to get home and put away the Capri’s and sleeveless shirts again!

On the flip side of that… it will nice to be home.

Right: Me, Megan Pence, Julie Steiff, and Colleen Hawk (Tegucigalpa, Honduras)

See you all soon in Minnesota!

Guest Post: Christmas Cheer and Giving

Trisha really cracks me up!  I had the privilege of meeting her at BEA this past spring and knew after I met this fun full of life person that I had to watch her blog!  She writes amazing posts and I had the opportunity to fill in as a guest post for her a few months back and it was a lot of fun!

 

Sheila


This time of year makes it perfectly clear
That women really run the show.
Their skirts and their tops stay pleasantly hot
Despite the cold and the snow.

They jingle and jangle in beads and in bangles
With nary a wince or a frown.
With red-lipped smiles and feminine wiles,
They inspire men to lay money down.

To charity it goes for food and for clothes
Presents for those who are without.
Spreading good cheer, at this time of year,
Is what the holiday is all about.

So bring on the minis, on the curvy and skinny,
Sweet perfume wafting gently on air.
We’ll give you a peck, if you give us a check
To show the whole world how you care.


Sheila is off to Honduras on a mission trip, and in the spirit of her giving nature, I thought I would provide you guys with some links to charities which would love your support this Christmas:

Toys for Tots: The mission of the U. S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots Program is to collect new, unwrapped toys during October, November and December each year, and distribute those toys as Christmas gifts to needy children in the community in which the campaign is conducted.


Make a Wish Foundation: The Make a Wish Foundation grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength and joy.


Angel Tree: Angel Tree, a program of Prison Fellowship, seeks to reconcile prisoners and their families to God and to each other through the delivery of Christmas gifts and the Gospel message.


Soldiers Angels: To make sure that no soldier goes unappreciated, Soldier’s Angels provides Christmas care packages with blankets, snacks, socks, and holiday cards.

If you know of a great charity to donate to for Christmas, please leave a link in the comments section!

 

Stop in and visit Trisha at Eclectic Eccentric

Morning Meanderings…. Another awesome morning in Honduras

 

Good morning!  Como esta?

Uhhh… yeah I know a little Spanish.  VERY LITTLE.

We have been having a wonderful time here in Honduras.  What an experience to travel every day to new areas of opportunity.  We have been to so many different projects and missions.

Yesterday we were able to go to AFE which is a school for children who live in the dump of Tegucigalpa.  I have been here and worked here a few times before, including the group I came with last November.  There is a little boy there names Samir who has captured my heart since the first time I seen him.  Every year that I have returned he knows me by name and I melt every time I hear him say it.  There are many people who come from the states and work at this school so the fact that he remembers me just impresses me all the more.

We were toured around the school this year by the wife of the man who created the X Box.  No kidding.  We were told that he had come to Honduras on a trip and loved what was happening at AFE and really helped financially with the project.  While walking through the school and seeing all they have done in the last year I heard a little voice,

“Cheala!”  (They have trouble with the “Sh” sound.)

I turned and there was Samir.

That made my day!

If you look at the sticky post above this one, Samir is the boy in the picture with me.  That was November of 2009.  Yesterday, my husband took a new picture for me.

 

Samir and I - December 2010

Today, about an hour from now, we are off to visit the transition house.  This is a place where kids go when taken off the streets to assist them in getting off the drugs and leading a healthier life.  I have been here before too and there is a little boy here – Louise, who was taken off the streets a few years back at one year old.  I am hoping I get a chance to see him today.  He was with his older brother on the streets when they were found, his older brother is at Manuelito who can house older boys but children as young as Louise stay at the transistion house until they are a bit older.  I would think in the next year or two he was move out to Manuelito with his brother.

Having my coffee, enjoying the start to my day…..  😀

A home in Talanga Honduras
A home in Talanga Honduras

 

 

Flowers in Tegucigalpa
Flowers in Tegucigalpa

 

 

 

The room we are staying in Honduras