Reading List - Junior Year

September 15, 2006 by stormschool

This is what I’d like her to get through this year.  Others will, of course, be added.  Some we probably won’t manage.  But we’ll attempt it.

Jane Eyre
One Hundred Years of Solitude (she read some, gave it up, we’ll try again later)
Clockwork Orange
Gone with the Wind
To Kill a Mockingbird
A Town Like Alice
On the Road (currently reading)
Robinson Crusoe
Moby Dick
Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Poetry and short stories (Audre Lorde, Lucille Clifton, others from an African American syllabus a friend sent me)

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Junior Year Belated Update

September 15, 2006 by stormschool

Oops, once I started Fast Times this blog sort of fell by the wayside. It’s not Fast Times’ fault, it’s a really busy schedule’s fault. Michelle is busy.


She’s working two days a week at Burrito Brothers (order some frozen burritos to be shipped to you, tell them Michelle sent you!). She goes to the community college, five days a week. She’s never there more than a few hours a day but that takes a lot out of a girl (and her moms).


Here’s what she is taking:

  • English Composition
  • American History
  • Art Fundamentals
  • Intermediate Algebra



  • She’s still working on that blasted FLVS SAT prep course. She’s in the last module which is full of practice tests and essay writing and she’s grumbling her way through every step of it.


    Once the SAT prep course is finished, she’ll be back here with updates about homeschool and dual enrollment classes on a regular basis. Probably not daily, but often. Particularly to share book reviews. (I’ll get her reading list for the year posted in just a second, so you can follow along.)


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    Rose of No Man’s Land

    August 22, 2006 by stormschool

    This summer I’ve been reading Michelle Tea’s new book, her first novel, Rose of No Man’s Land. It’s about a young teenage girl named Trisha who is a bit of a loner and has a really strange family. Her sister lies to get her a summer job at the most popular store in the mall "Omigod!". The girl that used to work there, Kim, tried to kill herself and so Kristie, Trisha’s sister, tells the owner that Kim and Trisha were friends which is not the case. Then Kim’s real friends come in and reveal the truth about Trisha. At least Trisha met someone (her summer goal was to make a friend) before she was fired, Rose. Trisha steal’s Kim’s cell phone from under the desk and she and Rose recieve a phone call from "xxx". "XXX" turns out to be a drug dealer and from there the girls get into all sorts of trouble. The book was amusing and slightly disappointing. I liked it, but not as much as a Francesca Lia Block book.  I think Michelle Tea is now my second favorite author.

    Sense and Sensibility

    July 24, 2006 by stormschool

    In the first couple of chapters of this book, the author
    tries to introduce you to the Dashwood family. It explains how the older Mr.
    Dashwood brings his son and his grandson’s families into his home but only
    leaves a fortune for his grandson. Then the younger Mr. Dashwood passes on and has
    his son promises to take care of his wife and three daughters (Elinor, Margaret,
    and Marianne). Also during the first few chapters you get the sense of the
    three girls finding marriage.

    Before Mrs.
    Dashwood and her daughters move to her cousins, Elinor starts to find comfort in
    a man named Edward Ferrar. This man seems plain to Elinor’s sisters but she is
    till very fond of him. But after they arrive at Barton cottage Elinor and Marianne
    begin to fall for two other men. Elinor falls for Colonel Brandon and Marianne for
    John Willoughby. However both of these men have to go away to London for a good bit of time and leave the two girls heartbroken. However, shortly
    after Wiloughby by leaves, Elinor finally receives a short visit from Ferrar and
    during this visit she is still confused by his aloof emotions. Lucy Steele, a
    distant relative then reveals that she has been engaged to Edward Ferrar for
    four years secretly because Lucy has no fortune.

    Elinor and
    Marianne then go on a trip to London with their relatives, Lucy and Mrs. Jennings. Marianne is excited to see
    Wiloughby but Elinor is apprehensive about possibly seeing Lucy and Edward
    together. Marianne is devastated when Wiloughby keeps avoiding her when there
    is great talk about their ‘engagement’. But after she finally sees him, he is
    rude to her and the next day sends her a letter informing her of his engagement
    to another woman.

    Colonel
    Brandon visits Elinor to discuss Marianne’s situation and then proclaims that
    he was once deeply in love with a woman but she was married to his brother so as to ensure her fortune for the family. She
    disappeared shortly after they divorced. Colonel then found the woman dying and
    promised to take care of her three year old daughter. Wiloughby placed her in
    school and visited her periodically. Brandon then tells how this girl is the girl that Wiloughby is engaged to!

    The girls
    also get a visit from their brother John. He tells Elinor that she should marry
    Colonel Brandon but she assures him that she has no intentions of doing so.
    Lucy then visits and brags about Edward’s favorable behavior to her at a party.
    A servant suddenly announces the arrival of Mr. Ferrars, and Edward walks into
    the room. He looks immediately uncomfortable after realizing that both Lucy and
    Elinor are in attendance. Marianne, who does not know anything about Lucy’s
    claims of an attachment to Edward, expresses her joy at his arrival.

    Mrs.
    Jennings then reveals, after a visit with a friend, that Edward and Lucy have
    been engaged for over a year. Elinor then tells her sister.  Marianne is amazed at how calm Elinor remained over the last
    four months. John Dashwood visits his sisters again and tells them how Edward
    mother knows about the engagement and he has refused to break it off so now
    Robert will get all of her inheritance.

    Before
    Marianne and Elinor leave London, Colonel Brandon visits them and tells then how
    he is going to give some of his inheritance to Edward so he can support
    himself. Before returning to Barton the
    girls go along with the Palmers to their estate in Cleveland.
    When they arrive at Cleveland,
    Marianne takes several, long walks in the evenings and
    catches a violent cold and Colonel then volunteers to bring Marianne back to
    Barton to get better. Just before the expected arrival time of Mrs. Dashwood
    and Colonel Brandon John Willoughby comes to offer Elinor an apology for his
    behavior toward Marianne. He tells her that he always knew that he could never
    afford to marry Marianne and did not appreciate love when he first became
    attached to her. He confesses to marrying Miss Grey for her money and will
    forever hold Marianne in the highest regard.

    Willoughby asks Elinor to communicate his confession to Marianne and request her
    forgiveness. Mrs. Dashwood and Colonel
    Brandon arrive at Cleveland and are
    relieved to learn of Marianne’s improved state. Mrs. Dashwood tells Elinor that
    on the long carriage ride from Barton to Cleveland,
    Colonel Brandon confessed his love for Marianne. Elinor
    tells Marianne of Wiloughby’s confession on a walk one day and Marianne feels
    much better knowing that his abandonment of her was not the final revelation of
    a long-standing deceit, but rather the result of his financial straits. They
    then receive news that ‘Mr. Farrars’ has married Lucy. This news distresses
    both Elinor and Marianne. Soon after though, Edward arrives and the girls
    confront him about the news. He then says that they are mistaken. Robert has
    married Lucy. Within the next three hours, Edward proposes to Elinor and she
    accepts. Elinor and Edward live together at Delaford and invite both Marianne
    and Colonel Brandon to visit often, in the hope that the two will form an
    attachment with one another. Their plans is successful, for the Colonel and the
    younger sister later become engaged and move in with Elinor and Edward at
    Delaford.

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    Some long overdue updates

    July 1, 2006 by stormschool

    Let’s see…. Michelle is reading Sense & Sensiblity for that SAT Prep class through FLVS. She’s hating it. I believe she had to read the first chapter three times in order to sort out who was who. She was on chapter 4, on Thursday. She’s probably still on chapter 4.



    Michelle went to “school” on Thursday and I will be blogging about that, very soon. It made me nervous. It’s making me a little nervous for the fall.


    Speaking of the fall, she goes into the college in 2 weeks to choose her classes and get her ID.


    And speaking of blogging, I will be blogging about homeschooling Michelle at a brand new blog, Fast Times @ Homeschool High. Be sure to bookmark it or add it to your feedreaders. Michelle (and I) will be blogging here together, as usual, in the fall - or whenever something interesting happens. I’m sure she will blog about Jane Austen, SAT stuff and Michelle Tea’s “Rose” before school starts in August. So don’t ditch this blog, :-).


    Happy Summer!

    An assigned book….

    May 30, 2006 by stormschool

    Michelle has to choose a book from this list (scratched out books she’s already read) for her SAT prep class.  What do you think she should read?

    # Achebe, Chinua. Things Fall Apart

    # Agee, James. A Death in the Family. 1957. The enchanted childhood summer of 1915 suddenly becomes a baffling experience for Rufus Follet when his father dies.

    # Austen, Jane. Sense and Sensibility

    # Bernstein, Leonard. The Joy of Music. 1959. Bernstein describes all aspects of classical music.

    # Brown, Dee. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West. 1970. There’s another side of America’s western expansion: the one seen through Native American eyes.

    # Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring. 1962. This landmark book gave birth to the environmental movement.

    # Chopin, Kate. The Awakening. 1899. Edna Pontellier, an unhappy wife and mother, discovers new qualities in herself when she visits Grand Isle, a resort for the Creole elite of New Orleans.

    # Cisneros, Sandra. The House On Mango Street. 1991. In short, poetic stories, Esperanza describes life in a low-income, predominantly Hispanic neighborhood in Chicago.

    # Edelman, Marion Wright. The Measure of Our Success: A Letter to My Children and Yours. 1992. A child advocate shares her thoughts on values, raising families, and the future of our country.

    # Forster, E. M. Howards End.

    # Gaines, Ernest. A Lesson Before Dying. 1993. When Jefferson’s attorney states, "I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair as this," disillusioned teacher Grant Wiggins is sent into the penitentiary to help this slow learner gain a sense of dignity and self-esteem before his execution.

    # Gibbons, Kaye. Ellen Foster. 1987. Casting an unflinching yet humorous eye on her situation, eleven-year-old Ellen survives her mother’s death, an abusive father, and uncaring relatives to find for herself a loving home and a new mama.

    # Hamilton, Edith. Mythology. 1942. Gods and heroes, their clashes and adventures, come alive in this splendid retelling of the Greek, Roman, and Norse myths.

    # Hayakawa, S. I. Language and Thought in Action.

    # Hersey, John. Hiroshima. 1946. Six Hiroshima survivors reflect on the aftermath of the first atomic bomb.

    # Kendall, Elizabeth. Where She Danced. 1979. The contributions of major innovators and the conditions of their times are the basis for this history of modern American dance.

    # Keneally, Thomas. Schindler’s List. 1982. Oskar Schindler, a rich factory owner, risks his life and spends his personal fortune to save Jews listed as his workers during World War II.

    # Mason, Bobbi Ann. In Country. 1985. After her father is killed in the Vietnam War, Sam Hughes lives with an uncle whom she suspects suffers from the effects of Agent Orange, and struggles to come to terms with the war’s impact on her family.

    # McPhee, John. In Suspect Terrain. 1983. Traveling along I-80 with geologist Anita Harris, McPhee describes the geologic features that reveal the history of the Appalachians.

    # Mori, Kyoko. Shizuko’s Daughter. 1993. In the years following her mother’s suicide, Yuki develops the inner strength to cope with her distant father, her resentful stepmother, and her haunting, painful memories.

    # Morrison, Toni. Sula.

    # Paton, Alan. Cry the Beloved Country.

    # Shaara, Michael. Killer Angels. 1974. Officers and foot soldiers from both the Union and Confederacy steel themselves for the bloody Battle of Gettysburg.

    # Sheehan, Neil. A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam. 1988. A soldier exposes the corruption undermining the American war effort in Vietnam.

    # Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein.

    # Wright, Richard. Native Son. 1940. For Bigger Thomas, an African American man accused of a crime in the white man’s world, there could be no extenuating circumstances, no explanations and only death.

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    Consider Homeschooling?

    May 23, 2006 by stormschool

    Mary Tsao has blogged about homeschooling over on Blogher. Anyone interested in commenting? (Either about her links or her post itself?) I certainly hope you comment…. you do have to register (it’s free) to comment but it is worth it, right? ;-)


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    The Scarlet Letter

    May 16, 2006 by stormschool

    The Scarlet Letter was one of the worse books I ever read. It’s about a woman named Hester who commits adultery and must wear a scarlet a stiched on her dress at all times. She does not reveal who the father of her daughter, Pearl is but you find out in the book. Her husband from Amsterdam, Chillingworth also shows up and tells her that he will be staying in town until he finds out who Pearl’s father is. Reverend Dimmesdale is Pearl’s father and because of the secret he grows ill. Chillingworth is a doctor and takes care of Dimmesdale. I really just hated the storyline to this book and how it read.

    The Best Breakfast

    May 11, 2006 by stormschool

    The best breakfast pizza isn’t really a pizza at all. Easy Breakfast Pizza - Michelle prefers this over the Strata for One a la Food Julia.




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    The Celestine Prophecy

    May 2, 2006 by stormschool

    One of the last books I read for this year was The Celestine
    Prophecy by James Redfield. This book is an adventure book about people being
    united and finding spiritual enlightenment. I’ve been describing the spiritual
    enlightenment as the "Alex Grey Way"
    to my friends so that they will understand that it is about energy.

    The book starts off in the states with the main character, John, feeling
    restless with life. (The book does not actually say his name but it is John in
    the movie.) Then his old friend, Charlene, calls him and tells him about a
    manuscript. In this manuscript there are insights. Charlene reveals the first
    one to John but in order to find out the others, he goes to Peru.
    When he gets there the man he met on the plane is captured and then he meets Wil
    who takes him on this journey to learn the 8 insights and find the 9th.

    On this journey John meets many people; each at the right time to help him
    learn the next insight. And, throughout the whole book the characters rely on
    their instinct and do not take coincidences for granted. The journey is
    dangerous due to the government not wanting the manuscripts revealed. So, many
    people do get captured and some are even killed.

    This book was a good book. I loved the idea of all of the insights. I also
    liked the adventure part of it. I thought that this book managed a good balance
    of the different aspects a book should have. Apparently there are two more
    books following this one. I can’t wait to read the next one.

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