Lou's Year in Books

Finally, at age 10, Lou truly dug into reading for pleasure this year. She's still a very active girl who prefers to dig into her violin or into invention projects, but she settles into reading now too.

She read all three Mysterious Benedict Societies.
The Fire Within
The Invention of Hugo Cabret
The Dealing with Dragons books
The Septimus Heap books
The Percy Jackson books
Sadly, she fell in love with The Beacon Street Girls and read more than I care to admit.

Some classics which I'm glad she found included:
Ballet Shoes
Roller Skates
Enid Blyton's Wishing Chair and Folk of the Faraway Tree books

Together we read:
Edith Nesbit's The Phoenix and the Carpet (a big hit)
Louisa May Alcott's Little Women and Jack and Jill

This spring I hope to continue reading more Edith Nesbit to her as well as The Wind in the Willows. Next year, 6th grade at Waldorf focuses on the Middle Ages, so I'm looking forward to introducing her to the Crispin books, The Door in the Wall, and The Midwife's Apprentice.

Here's the list of previous books we've read together along with recommendations many readers made for us.

I'm always looking forward to new books to introduce to the girls. This year I'm especially interested in books about ancient Greece, Rome and the Middle Ages. Fire away if you know of some hits!

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Meet Tim and Tin

For Kayla and Emily,

Meet Lou's soda can robot
When standing this way, it is Tim (who is a boy)

and when in this direction, it is Tin (who is a girl)

Tim/Tin likes to dress in pom poms.

Soda can robots are pretty fun!

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A Year in Books

Lots of historical fiction and books featuring textiles!

Physick Book of Deliverance Dane (Katherine Howe)
I loved this book which told the multi-generation story of the Salem witch hunts with the premise that just possibly there really were witches. A great, twisty plot.

The Lace Reader (Brunonia Barry)
Continuing with the Salem witch theme, this book takes place in the present and also has a twisty plot.

Prayers for Sale (Sandra Dallas)
This is about a friendship between an elderly storyteller and a young girl, both living in a gold mining town high in the mountains. The stories of this special time and place are interwoven with quilting. The combination of history, storytelling, and quilting made it a fun read for me.

Casting Off (Nicole Dickson)
In addition to the Salem witch thread, I also followed a textile thread...moving from lace, to quilting, to knitting in this book. This book is about a young girl who arrives in Ireland to study the lore of fisherman's sweaters. A sweet, light read with lots of yarn(s).

The Forgotten Garden (Kate Morton)
In 1913, a little girl arrives in Brisbane, Australia, and is taken in by a dockmaster and his wife. She doesn’t know her name, and the only clue to her identity is a book of fairy tales tucked inside a white suitcase. The book travels back in forth in time among 3 generations of mothers and daughters. This is the story that got Lou up a mountain this summer.

Pope Joan (Donna Cross)
I really loved this story of the Dark Ages. I thought the author did a good job of bringing the character and her world to life.

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet
(Jamie Ford)
This book, while not a favorite, launched me off into stories about the Japanese Internment.

In July I read a lot of books about the American South.

The Help (Kathryn Stockett)
This story takes place in Jackson, Mississippi, 1962. The main character discovers social activism and decides to take down the stories of the black women in her community. The many stories are layered and build on each other.

Their Eyes Were Watching God (Zora Neale Hurston)
This classic tells the story of an African-American woman in search of her female identity. I read this book in the early mornings in steamy Florida, which really set the tone.

To Kill a Mocking Bird (Harper Lee)
I re-read this because I'll be in Alabama this summer and I just had to re-acquaint myself with the book.

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Maya Angelou)
This autobiography provides a window into a tight-knit black community in Arkansas during the Depression. I went on to read all the rest of her autobiographies and loved them.

Mudbound (Hillary Jordan)
This book takes place in the Mississippi delta on white sharecropper's farm. A college-educated woman adjusts to rural life, a racist father-in-law, and black tenants. It gave me a different perspective from the previous books.

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men
I then got interested in sharecropping and read this book which is a complex documentary with incredible WPA photos.

Race: A History beyond Black and White
(Marc Aronson)
This history of Race raised countless questions for me.

Rosa Parks: A Life (Douglass Brinkley)
This was a very readable biography about Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights Movement.

FOOD WRITING
Food Matters (Mark Bittman)
This book fits into lots of the recent food writing about the relationship the state of the environment to the American diet, but he also includes some great recipes and suggests basic ingredients you should keep stocked in your pantry.

The Art of Simple Food (Alice Waters)
This is the book I'll give Helen when she's ready to really learn to cook. I love how she walks you through the basics--how to make a good stock, a simple salad dressing, etc.--and then show how to vary what you do.

Other books worth mentioning include: Cutting for Stone, The Lost Symbol, Strength in What Remains, Julia & Julia, Little Bee, Child 44, The Secret Speech, & Julie and Julia.

What's on my shelf for January?
The Gift of an Ordinary Day, Simplicity Parenting, The Broken Teaglass, The Seamstress, and hopefully some other books that feature women and handwork.

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Handmade Christmas Eve Gifts

The highlight of our Christmas continues to be the handmade gifts on Christmas Eve. Most of the gifts were actually surprises this year which can be hard to achieve between needing secret spaces to work, needing the occasional helping hand, and needing to actually keep one's work a secret. The gifts get more exciting each year as the girls' abilities grow.

Nels is wearing pajamas made by Helen and a bathrobe made by me.

Helen was absolutely thrilled to get a plaid scarf made by Lou and a buckwheat hull/lavender sleeping pillow made by me. She'd been asking for one of these pillows for a long time.

Here is Lou wearing the pajamas from Helen, holding a pillow from me, and displaying a writing desk made by Nels. Lou as well has been wanting big pillows to decorate her room.

Here's Hels with her writing box.

Lou and Nels made me this Advent Spiral. Wow.
Nels describes how he made it at his blog Proud Hands.

Lou made Nels this book of coupons arranged in categories:
  • "baking"--1 free batch of homemade chocolate chip cookies, 1 free batch of homemade brownies
  • "helping hands" --1 free hour of help with something that has to do with wood, 1 free 1/2 hour of a home improvement job
  • "other stuff" --1 free of strife practice session & 1 1/2 hours of any help you need
Lou made us all these beautiful hanging stars.

Nels and I have really noticed over the years how much this emphasis on making gifts for each other has changed the energy of Christmas for the girls. It truly is all about the joy of giving and I think there is more excitement about this handmade gift exchange on Christmas Eve than the anticipation of Christmas morning.

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Christmas Eve in the Kitchen

Lobster Casserole for Christmas Eve --Nels' specialty

Buche de Noel for Christmas Day--Helen's specialty

Jam-Filled Thumb Cookies for Santa --Lou's specialty

Cinnamon Buns for Breakfast --my specialty


Forest Creatures for the Buche de Noel
Give my kids a tube of marzipan and they will be occupied for hours

Merry Christmas!

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The darkest night

Spiraling In

And back out with the light


Just Delicate Needles
It's so delicate, the light.
And there's so little of it. The dark
is huge.
Just delicate needles, the light,
in an endless night.
And it has such a long way to go
through such desolate space.
So let's be gentle with it.
Cherish it.
So it will come again in the morning.
We hope.


Rolf Jacobsen
Translated by Robert Hedin
Copper Canyon Press

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Light the Advent Candle Four

Last week brought Nels' birthday

Christmas with the extended family

Lots of short breads for teachers

Preparations for tonight's big solstice party
ice lanterns


Light the Advent candle four
Think of joy forevermore
Christ Child in a stable born
Gift of love that Christmas morn.

Candle, candle, burning bright,
shining in the cold winter night
Candle, candle burning bright
Fill our hearts with Christmas light.

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Santa Lucia

At long last, after 10 years of watching Santa Lucia, it was Helen's turn. Here she is singing as she arrives in the kindergarten.

She was followed by a long trail of 2nd graders wearing white gowns and tall star crowns. They brought tea and saffron buns to the kindergarten.

She was so thrilled!


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Light the Advent Candle Three

Welcome to our morning of carols, muffins, and tree trimming. Trimming the tree seems almost as exciting as opening presents. We each have our most very favorite ornaments to find. The owl goes on first, then all the glass pine cones and birds.

Muffins and mimosas keep us going as we trim the tree.


The afternoon brought some serious attention to gift-making. Helen has quite an ambitious stack of projects. Luckily, she gets to cut out here and sew during handwork class at school.

Lou is deep into origami and paper crafts this year. They are intricate and beautiful. She was sick all last week and spent much of the time in bed with paper, scissors, and a lap desk.

Nels spent much of the afternoon down in the basement. I'm getting excited about his projects.

Light the Advent candle three
Think of heavenly harmony
Angels singing "Peace on Earth"
At the Blessed Saviour's Birth.

Candle, candle burning bright,
Shining in the cold winter night.
Candle, candle burning bright
Fill our hearts with Christmas light.

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Light the Advent Candle Two

Scenes from our busy 2nd Advent weekend

We bound 50 soup cookbooks to sell at the school's Winter Fair.


Helen spent all Friday afternoon decorating the school. I was a proud Mama as I received several phone calls and emails from parents who said they could not have done their work without her. She spent a lot of time designing the Crystal Cookie Cave. It was pretty magical in the dark with twinkling lights, crystals, and sugar cookies.

Here's a little scene from inside the gnome house. Children crawled into this space to view a scene from each of the 4 seasons. On the way out, they could choose their own little gnome to keep.

On Sunday we got out the Christmas decorations. Lou was inspired to make some origami. She created this star.


She also made Christmas cookies for an afternoon tea party where we sat by the fire, admired the decorations, and read about last year in the Christmas journal.

Here's our dining table now--some birds have joined our advent claw/candelabra and our beloved spiral is counting the days to the solstice.


Light the Advent candle two,
think of humble shepherds who,
filled with wonder at the sight,
of the child on Christmas night.

Candle, candle burning bright,
shining in the cold winter night.
Candle, candle burning bright,
fill our hearts with Christmas light.


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Tutorial: needle-felted figures

tutorial: Balloon Lanterns

tutorial: neede-felted advent spiral

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