Up at Jane's, I finished Wicked and left if for Jane and Kelsie (who promptly photographed the book and posted it to facebook!). The story's definitely imaginative and delightful, although the ending is weak and anticlimactic.
On Jane's deck, I also began (again) Leopold's A Sand County Almanac. I'll keep working through that as I continue my book-a-week (at least) project.
Because it doesn't seem as though I can read one book at a time, I'm also taking bites out of another antique book I found, probably with Lisa last year: Catholicism and the American Mind was published in 1928. Interestingly, what I've read so far (that we Americans should accept those mysterious Catholics in our midst) could be applied to Muslims today.
On Jane's deck, I also began (again) Leopold's A Sand County Almanac. I'll keep working through that as I continue my book-a-week (at least) project.
Because it doesn't seem as though I can read one book at a time, I'm also taking bites out of another antique book I found, probably with Lisa last year: Catholicism and the American Mind was published in 1928. Interestingly, what I've read so far (that we Americans should accept those mysterious Catholics in our midst) could be applied to Muslims today.
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