Thursday, March 15, 2012

Art of Argument, Classical Academic Press


Have you ever heard (Or said) this line... "With all the arguing you do, you're sure to become a lawyer!"
Well, I think I can recall being on the "spoken to" side, and I've been tempted to use that line myself! That being said, the book "The Art of Argument" by Classical Academic Press ISN'T about the every day quarreling that might go on amongst siblings. It focuses on the ART of arguing~ the finer points of discussing a given topic with someone who may not agree with you, and the ability to point out where their argument fails, due to their lack of logic(This may not gain your children any friends, but it WILL increase their ability to think straight ;D ).

I experienced my fair share of this sort of argument when I was on a debate team in high school (Sometimes, my argument was with my partner~ sorry, Dan ;) ~ although we usually worked well together). We might have had an extra edge if we had the benefit of learning and recognizing the various fallacies that we might encounter.

The Art of Argument does just that~ it is a course the introduces the informal fallacies that we run into every day~ in the media, in advertising, amongst our fellow citizens, friends, and families. So... what exactly IS a fallacy? Here are some dictionary definitions for you~

fallacy |ˈfaləsē|
noun ( pl. -cies)
a mistaken belief, esp. one based on unsound argument : the notion that the camera never lies is a fallacy.
• Logic a failure in reasoning that renders an argument invalid.
• faulty reasoning; misleading or unsound argument : the potential for fallacy which lies behind the notion of self-esteem.

The Art of Argument introduces and discusses the 28 informal fallacies in 3 units that cover the fallacies of Irrelevance, Presumption, and Clarity in 28 chapters (One for each fallacy).  There are many examples given(Both written and visual/advertisements), and there is a bit of a "Socratic Dialogue" between, well... Socrates and a couple of college students, Nathan and Tiffany.

Here are my thoughts on The Art of Argument (Which, BTW, I was very pleased to be able to review, as I have been a big fan of other Classical Academic Press products)
Pros~
  • Interesting text, that is livened up and/or interspersed with ads and visuals~ creative as I expected from Classical Academic Press
  • Methodical and organized in approach~ which makes it easier to remember
  • Uses real life examples, which could be considered either a pro OR a con, depending on the example, and your perspective. (More on that under cons) 
  • Visual examples of fallacious advertising~ These are probably one of the favorite features of this course~ If this course had relied entirely on this sort of example I would have been extremely pleased with the entire thing~ an excellent introduction for the young Jr. High age student.
  • Quick reference guide to the various fallacies on the inside front cover of the student text is a GREAT resource!
Cons~  (Just a note about my "cons" in any given review. They tend to be rather lengthy, not because I really dislike a given product, but because I'm trying to fairly explain WHAT it is that doesn't work for us~ sometimes that very reason is the reason why it WILL work for someone else... just thought you should know that)
  • The introductory chapter seemed to be somewhat repetitious and confusing~ as I was reading it to my Eldest and Middlest, I could kind of see their eyes glazing over~ A lot of good information there, but I think it could have been delivered a little more succinctly for the intended age. 
  • Now here is a "This doesn't work for my family that well, but it might for yours" point~ The Art of Argument tackles controversial moral and ethical subject matter(starting in the dialogue in the first chapter) that I personally don't include in my children's schooling just yet. I understand that there are a variety of perspectives on many controversial subjects, and how and when to approach them. My husband and I have determined to allow our children to be children, and maintain their innocence for as long as possible. They have their entire adult lives to deal with tougher moral/ethical issues. Personally, I would use this text for 10th-12 grade, as written, although 9th grade isn't unreasonable. Yes... we tend to be over-protective at times, and in a homeschool, where there are many ages of ears listening in on discussions, this can be a sensitive area.
With that being said, I can see using this curriculum more as a resource and reference as we discuss various fallacies in the course of our schooling, rather than as a full-blown course, until the kiddos are just a smidge older.

Nitty-Gritty~
The Art of Argument
  • Student Text $21.95
  • Teacher's Edition $24.95 includes the entire student text, answers to all exercises, and new chapter and unit tests
  • DVD Set $54.95 features three experienced logic teachers and four students discussing the 28 fallacies(we watched a portion of a sample DVD, but because I was never sure where it was going in any given discussion, we didn't continue~)
  • Bundled set of all three $88.95 
Age recommendation~ Publisher ~7th grade +   Personal~ 9th or 10th + as written, younger with parental discretion

Classical Academic Press sent other Crew members The Argument Builder (The second book in their Logic series) to review. Please, be sure to visit the Crew Blog, and check out other reviews, as there are sure to be those whose experiences and opinions differ from mine.

Blessings~
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this/these item(s)/service for free as part of the TOS Crew Review Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

How Tasking... or not(!)

Have you ever come across something totally "new" to you, that exceeded your expectations? Had a lightbulb moment? Saw something that made you say "Wow....  Keep It Simple Sweetie really works!"
This is how I feel about this latest review that I received as part of the TOS Crew.

Creek Edge Press offers "Task Cards" that combine elements of Classical, Charlotte Mason, and Montessori style education. There are cards for History, Art, Music, and Science (Crew members received cards from a variety of these fields, and you can read about their experiences on the Crew Blog). The cards are listed as being appropriate for ages K-8, but I think the ideal target ages are 2-6th grade for more "independent" work, with a couple of grades on either end able to utilize the cards with a little more parent involvement (to either help/simplify the process, or beef it up a bit).

We received the Physics and Digital Science Task Cards and Instructor's Manual.
The Manual includes:
Introduction on how the above-mentioned teaching styles are incorporated and How to Use the cards with different ages and abilities.
Approach the Tasks~ defines what abilities and actions are expected from the students as they "approach" the tasks on the cards
Preparing the Environment ~involves tips and recommendations on setting up what could be considered a learning center.
Book List and Tips is what it sounds like~ a list of resources to choose from to complete the tasks given.
Card by Card listing of the entire set (an index, if you will)

The "meat" of this program is the set of 30 task cards. Rather than a traditional textbook, these cards make use of research oriented tasks utilizing Encyclopedias, and further reading in other books or on the internet. There are hands-on activities that continue to extend the learning opportunities and serve as evidence of student comprehension.

Middlest really took to this idea. He was excited to have research activities that are more open-ended, and I think that perhaps the lack of a specific "Text" really freed him up to explore and discover, perhaps with more creativity than a more traditional text allows.
Here you can see one of the task cards in his set (#5 Simple Machines Screw) and some of the pictures of "Simple Machines" that he found and/or created. (Hey! Finally had an opportunity to use our Lego Simple Machines kits that I purchased YEARS ago.... Yay! :D)


We chose to go through the cards at the beginning, at the pace of roughly 2 per week, as we have touched on simple machines before. However, I started to slow him down a bit when we had Lego Kit activities to do, as those took a bit of extra time(Especially with youngest wanting to watch and participate some). I think that one card per week is a very reasonable pace.


Middlest enjoyed searching the internet for information. His favorite resource was The Dirtmeister's Science Reporters on Scholastic's website. Kind of cracks me up that he ended up using a "Teacher's Resource" part of the site in his research. :)

One of the things that I really like about this approach is that it is more "Real World" learning~ here's your task~ go do the research and come back to tell me what you learned. That's how real jobs work~ there are no "textbooks" in life with all the answers for which your boss is looking.




The Science Task Cards come in the following sets:
($18 individually, or $65 for set of all 4)
  • Chemistry and Great Scientists
  • Earth and Space
  • Life Science
  • Physics and Digital Science

If you are looking for a new/different approach to History, Art, and Music, don't forget to check out
crew members' experiences with those Creek Edge Press topics, on the Linky at the Crew Blog.

As always, I hope that this review is helpful as you seek out curriculum that fits your family's lifestyle, learning styles, and budget.

Blessings~
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this/these item(s)/service for free as part of the TOS Crew Review Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

Thursday, March 8, 2012

C is for ... Cauliflower Chowder~ New favorite! :)

Photobucket
Hey! I've recently discovered that my children like Cauliflower..... a lot! :) Love it when I'm chopping up veggies for soup and Littlest comes wandering by asking for "samples" .... and keeps coming back for more! :)

So~ I had a head of cauliflower and was in the mood for some soup~ The recipe I started out with was Lee Drummond's (The Pioneer Woman) Cauliflower soup. I changed things up a bit, and don't have nearly as many pretty photos, but this is what I ended up with~

3 TBS butter or EEVO
1 onion, chopped,
4-5 carrots chopped
2 stalks of celery, chopped
1/2 orange pepper, finely chopped
1 head of cauliflower, coarsely chopped
2 tubs of Knorr Homestyle Chicken Stock
7 cups of water
1 cup 1/2 & 1/2
sour cream 
Butter, Milk, and Flour from your favorite white sauce (I followed Lee Drummond's amounts this time~ 4 TBS butter, 2 cups milk, 6 TBS flour. I have to say, that my white sauce didn't "Sauce up" as nicely as hers, but it was still yummy).

Saute' up the onion in the butter/EVOO on medium heat until transparent, then add the celery and the orange pepper, saute' for a couple of minutes, then add the cauliflower, cover and cook for 15-20 minutes.

While that is cooking, reconstitute the Knorr Homestyle Stock. I actually use our Keurig machine set for 12 oz hot water to reconstitute and add the rest of the water after. Now~ I have to say that I was sent a free sample of this broth to try out, in the hopes that I would have favorable comments, and well... I do! I am not a fan of broth granules (They usually have MSG in them, if nothing else nasty), but have enjoyed using concentrated broths in the past. One of the benefits to the Knorr Stock is that it plops neatly out of it's little container (The other broth I use comes in little tubes that can be a tad messy at times). This Stock has no HFCS, MSG or Hydrogenated oils. That's always a + in my book! The other thing that I like about this stock is that it doesn't take up much space in my pantry~ Very good!

So~ back to the recipe~ After cooking the veggies for 15-20 minutes, add the stock and water to the pot, bring to a boil, then simmer for another 10-15 minutes. While it is simmering, make your white sauce~ and when the timer goes off stir it into the soup, add the 1/2 & 1/2, and continue simmering for 15 minutes or so.

To serve, plop a generous tablespoon of sour cream in each bowl and then add the soup~ stir to combine and serve (You may wish to add a little pepper, I didn't find this soup to require any extra salt beyond that in the stock and that which is naturally occurring in the celery). Everyone from the Dadda to the Littlest declared this soup to be delish and have requested it to be made on a semi-regular basis. The photos are actually from two different soup days one week apart because they asked for a repeat! :) If that's not a recommendation, I don't know what is..... :)


Blessings~

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received the Knorr Stock for free. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

B is for .......


Can you guess???
This time around "B" is for Books!

I've been reading a few books via the Kindle app(Some good, some less good), and right now, I've barely got time to get this post in before it closes, because.... Eldest decided I needed to read
"The Hunger Games" ..... (If you've read them, you may know that they are difficult to put them down, if you haven't... clear your calendar a little before you start! Oh, and get your request in to the library well in advance~ we had to wait for weeks before a copy became available in our entire Library Consortium!)




Here are a few favorites of mine~
The first picture book that I ever purchased with my own money~ when I was 11, The Ship's Cat  (If I get the chance, I'll edit and add some pictures~ the illustrations are what drew me)

The first book that made me cry~ Rose in Bloom, by Louisa May Alcott ~ yep... I'm a sentimental bit of a thing....  If you've read it you may recall the scene I'm thinking of.






The first book I didn't finish the first time I decided to read it~I was far too young~ I think maybe 12 or so.... I did read it after high school, and while I found it depressing, it was a good book....






 The first set of books that gave me nightmares, but in an odd sort of way that might be a recommendation? (I have a habit of "Getting into" the books I read)~ They are very good stories, I'm just funny that way sometimes. (BTW, Eldest has read them, and they didn't give HER nightmares.... ;) )




 One of my favorite "Make you think" books from the past few years (Yes~ I am a lover of good fiction, regardless of whether it is intended for children, young adults or adults~ This is a short but very good read!) 





OK, I really need to get back to "Catching Fire," the second book in the series~
Let me know if you've read any of these, or what some of your favorites are! :)
Blessings~




* Note~ the images do lead to Amazon, and are affiliate links~ if you are inclined to purchase through them, I thank you, but I mainly included them as an easy way to add images to the post~ :)

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

One Way or Another, Rhonda Bowen


It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!



Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

Dafina; Original edition (February 28, 2012)

***Special thanks to Dee Stewart of DeeGospel PR for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Christian Fiction Romance Author Rhonda Bowen writes for Kensington Publishing Corps (Dafina Books.) She has written two faith based novels Man Enough for Me and her current release One Way or Another. She is also an event planner and currently resides in Toronto, Ontario Canada.

Visit her at www.rhondabowen.com or her Learning the Ropes Blog at www.learningtheropes.wordpress.com.


SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:


Atlanta reporter Toni Shields will do whatever it takes to get a good story. So when she's arrested for sneaking around the mayor's house, she's prepared. What she's not prepared for is getting demoted--or her run-in with stubborn Adam Bayne, director of the local young men's rehab center. . .

The first time Adam saw Toni, she was wrangling with the cops. Now she's looking for a scoop at Jacob House. Adam has no intention of letting her near his boys--yet as usual, her pushiness wins. And when she genuinely helps a teen in trouble, Adam sees a side of her that cares about more than just a headline. Soon, they become close--their attraction growing. But there's more to both their lives than meets the eye. Toni has a haunting family secret, one that is taking a great toll on her. And when she uncovers that Adam has a devastating past of his own, not only their relationship, but their futures, and their faith, lie in the balance.

Praise for Man Enough for Me

"A sweet Christian romance." –Publishers Weekly

"Enough drama, romance, and faith that keeps you turning pages." --Tiffany L. Warren, Essence® bestselling author



Product Details:
List Price: $14.00

Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: Dafina; Original edition (February 28, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0758259581
ISBN-13: 978-0758259585



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


ONE WAY OR ANOTHER
Rhonda Bowen
(February 28, 2012)


Chapter 1


The metal felt icy and unwelcome as the cuffs snapped tight around Toni’s wrists. She grimaced. This was not how she planned to spend her Wednesday night.
The burly police officer dragged her to the cop car, placing his hand on her head of long dark silky hair as he lowered her into the backseat. At least he was being civil. The same couldn’t be said for the one manhandling Afrika.
“Get your nasty hands off my butt, you perve,” Afrika snapped, shoving him away with her shoulder.
The short dull-looking cop stumbled back a bit, seemingly surprised at her force. Yeah, he didn’t know. Afrika might look tiny but you didn’t want to mess with her. More than once Toni had seen her friend take a chunk out of her pro-basketball-playing ex-boyfriend Tyrone. She was nobody’s victim.
For once though, Toni wished Afrika would take it down a notch. It was bad enough that the cops had caught them snooping around the mayor’s premises. No sense encouraging the Atlanta PD officers to find a creative way to actually charge them.
Toni’s mind scrambled for a solution as she sat in the back of the cop car on the way to the station. The clock on the dash said 10:34 p.m., leaving her with barely an hour to file her story and get out of this mess. She thought of all her possible lifelines, including her brother, Trey, and her sister-in-law, Jasmine. But none of those options were appealing. Her brother’s smug look she could deal with, but she would rather spend the night in a cell than get another lecture from Jasmine, who seemed to forget that at twenty-seven she was the same age as Toni and not in fact her mother. That left only one person. Unfortunately, said person was sitting beside her, just as helpless as her, and a lot less cooperative.
By the time they got to the mini-precinct, south of downtown Atlanta, Toni realized that she was on her own.
“So, Miss Shields, you want to tell us why you were in the area of the mayor’s residence tonight?”
Toni smiled at the large man who had been the one to handcuff her earlier. “Just taking a walk, Officer Powell.”
“I’m looking at your file here, Miss Shields, and you seem to like taking walks near the homes of well-known people in this city.”
Toni shrugged. “What can I say? I’m a fitness buff.”
She hoped Afrika was holding up okay. They had been separated, and the other officer was questioning her in another section of the station. Toni could see her, but couldn’t hear what was going on.
“And what about that camera you were carrying?” he asked, an eyebrow raised.
“I like photography too. It’s a new hobby.”
Officer Powell rubbed his eyes. “Where’s the memory card, Miss Shields?”
“Memory card?”
“Yes,” he said. “You know, that little thing that records the pictures? There was none in the camera. And we didn’t find it when we searched your things.”
Toni shrugged. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Officer Powell sat forward, his forehead wrinkling. “Miss Shields, you were caught wandering near the mayor of Atlanta’s home in the dead of night with a very professional grade camera and a major zoom lens,” he said. “I personally think you might have even been on the mayor’s property but unfortunately there’s no way to prove it. Do you expect me to believe that there was no card in this camera?” he asked. “Now, either you produce the card on your own or we’re going to have to search you.”
“But you already searched me,” Toni said innocently.
The officer glowered. “A full body search.”
Toni pursed her lips. “You can’t do that. Full searches can only be conducted by someone of the same sex. And I’m looking around and all the officers I see on duty tonight are men.”
He rubbed a hand over his head tiredly. “Then you can be someone else’s problem.” He closed her file and stood. “My shift is over anyway.”
Toni looked at the wall clock. 10:45. Right on schedule.
“Okay, please tell me you have a plan to get us out of here,” Afrika hissed into Toni’s ear moments after Officer Powell seated them beside each other in the holding area.
“Sort of.” Toni turned her head left and then right as she tried to work the kinks out of her neck. The back of that cop car had not been good to her.
“Sort of? You’re gonna need to give me something better than that.” Afrika twisted around in her seat, giving Toni full access to her glare. “I can’t go to prison, Toni. I may act hard, but I ain’t no criminal. I can’t go down like this!”
The hysteria in Afrika’s whispers went up a notch at each statement, and Toni had to bite her lip to keep from laughing. Afrika would definitely not see the humor. And with Toni’s hair looking a shaggy mess, she couldn’t afford to have her best friend and hair stylist not talking to her.
“Afrika, we weren’t caught doing anything wrong,” Toni said, hoping her even tone would mellow her friend out. “They have nothing to charge us with. All they can do is detain us for a couple hours.”
She left out the part about what could happen if they searched her and found the memory card in her bra.
Afrika narrowed her eyes at Toni. “How long is a couple?”
Toni shrugged and glanced away. “Maybe four or five.”
Or seventy-two, she thought.
“A lot could happen in four or five hours,” Afrika murmured.
Toni saw her friend glance out the corner of her eye at the thick red-skinned woman who had taken up the entire bench across from them with her size ten frame and size twenty attitude. The bottle blonde had skewered them with her bloodshot eyes when they first came in, before going back to the production of picking her nails, which were so long they seemed like weapons themselves. A darker skinned woman of indeterminable everything lay buried in multiple layers of clothing on the only other bench, snoring.
“Don’t worry. It’s usually pretty quiet this time of night,” Toni said, leaning her head back against the wall.
Afrika scowled but didn’t say another word. Toni knew her friend was still mad, but she was glad that Afrika had calmed down. It would be a long twelve minutes if she had to sit there and listen to her whine.
“Well, well. Looks like it’s ladies night up in here.”
“Mikey?” Afrika had a puzzled expression on her face. “What you doing here?”
“Hey, cuz.” Mikey chuckled and unlocked the door to the holding cell. “I work here. What you doing here?”
“Keepin’ bad company,” Afrika said, throwing a nasty look Toni’s way.
“Toni,” Mikey said. Her name on his lips sounded as oily as the chicken grease that had stained his uniform. There was no doubt he’d had a three piece for dinner.
Toni forced a smile even though she really wanted to gag. If he was any other cop on any other day, Toni would have given him a piece of her mind for the way his eyes were roaming all over her. But she needed this Good Times reject, and he knew it.
She got up off the uneven bench and followed Afrika out of the cell, feeling the heat of Mikey’s gaze on her behind. She scowled. She was used to guys raking their eyes over her five- foot-four frame, particularly her generous behind, but it still disgusted her.
“So it says here that you aren’t charged but you need to be searched,” Mikey said, a toothpick in the corner of his mouth as he flipped through Afrika’s and Toni’s files.
“Don’t even think of putting your nasty hands on me,” Afrika warned.
“Easy, cuz.” Mikey laughed. “The search would have to be done by another woman.”
He turned his eyes on Toni. “Unless you want to waive that right.”
Toni fought her gag reflex again. “Thanks, Mikey, but you can already see we don’t have any weapons. Plus, like you said, there are no charges. You’re gonna let us out in a couple hours anyway. Why not save yourself some time?”
Mikey raised an eyebrow and Toni sugared up her statement with a smile. He laughed again. She wasn’t sure if that was good or bad.
“I guess you have a point there,” he said a moment later, stepping forward and removing the cuffs from Afrika’s wrists.
“It’s about time.” Afrika scowled. “Where’s my stuff?”
Mikey pulled a small plastic tray of items from behind the station desk and slid it over to Afrika.
Toni held up her wrists toward him expectantly
He glanced at her hands but didn’t reach for the keys. “You’ve been in here an awful lot lately. Maybe you need to sit in a cell a couple hours and cool off.”
Toni scowled.
“Or maybe you could help me change my mind,” he suggested. His eyes swept her frame again and she noticed his voice had ducked to a whisper.
“How about dinner again?” He leaned forward to drop the last words. “This time at my place.”
Toni resisted the urge to step back as the slightly rank smell from Mikey hit her. She would bet anything that homeboy had been rocking the same frowsy uniform all week. Nothing short of a gun to her head was putting her anywhere inside Mikey’s place.
“I don’t think so, Mikey,” Toni said, just as she heard the doors to the station open behind her.
He glanced up and nodded to the newcomer before moving around the desk and away. “Well then, I think I’m gonna have to take a little more time writing this release,” Mikey said stiffly. “I don’t want to miss anything important.”
He looked past Toni at the person behind her. “How can I help you?”
“I heard one of my kids was here. Rasheed Roper?”
“Oh yeah,” Mikey said, turning back to the desk and flipping through the stack of reports. “He got picked up with some other youngbloods near the old Bankhead Courts. Residents called it in--said they were a bit noisy. We found a little weed on a couple of them, but your kid was clean.”
Toni tapped her foot impatiently as she listened to the exchange. She glanced up at the clock--11:00. The Thursday morning edition would go to print in the next hour with or without her story. And if the latter was the case, all the crap that she had gone through tonight would be for nothing. She wasn’t having that--not after she’d had to beat out the other Metro section reporters for the front page.
“Let me get him and then you can sign him out.” Mikey turned away.
“Mikey”--Toni grabbed his arm before she lost him completely--“the cuffs?”
“Toni, we going or what?” Afrika asked from the door, a sour look plastered on her face.
“What did you say your kid’s name was?” Mikey looked past Toni as he started moving toward the back again.
“Rasheed Ro--”
“Come on, Mikey,” Toni whined, slapping the desk in frustration with her handcuffed palm. “You really gonna do me like this?”
“Like what? Girl, I never told you to get your behind locked up. You the shizzle up at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Tell your boss come bail you out.”
“Do I look like I have time for all that?” Toni shot back.
“Uh, hey, you think you could get Rasheed . . . ?”
Forget Rasheed.
“Can you just hold on? Your kid will still be a criminal in five minutes,” Toni snapped, swinging around to glare at the stranger who kept interrupting.
Her anger died on her lips when she saw exactly who was behind her. As she craned her neck to take in all of his six-foot-something frame, she couldn’t help but think of the fence she nearly broke her neck scaling less than an hour earlier. Now here was a brother who did not need a boost. And with his I-do-real-work-every-day arms he could have probably hoisted her over without breaking a sweat.
However, the expression on his gorgeously angular face told her he wasn’t inclined to do anything for her at that moment, except maybe help Mikey put her back in the holding cell. The slight downward turn of his full lips and the tightness in his strong jaw confirmed the irritation.
But, boy, did he make ticked off look good.


She was trouble personified.
Adam could tell before she even opened her pouty mouth. It was in her flushed cinnamon-toned skin, the dark inquisitive eyes, and the legs that he was mad at himself for looking at. Women with legs like hers shouldn’t be allowed to wear jeans that looked like they had been painted on. It was just wrong to mess with a brother’s head like that. Especially when he was trying to keep it PG-13 upstairs.
He felt bad for staring. But she kept looking at him with those huge eyes and he couldn’t turn away.
“You don’t look old enough to have grown kids,” she said after a moment.
“I think you got bigger things to worry about,” he said. “Like making it out of this place tonight. But it looks like you already have a plan for that.”
The big beautiful eyes turned into slits. “Maybe you shouldn’t be so quick to judge, seeing that I’m not the only one at the police station in the middle of the night.”
“Only one of us is wearing cuffs,” he shot back.
“It takes one to raise one,” Toni said. “In your case I’m sure the blunt wasn’t rolled far from the weed.”
“Whatever.” Her tongue was sharper than an army knife. He had nothing.
He didn’t even know why he was getting so riled. Maybe because he was ticked off that his day had had to end with him in a police station picking up Rasheed. But more likely it was because the woman in front of him was stealing more of his attention than he wanted to give. And the joker in the too-small uniform sexually harassing her was working his last nerve.
“All right, here he is,” Mikey said, returning from the back with a cross-looking Rasheed only a few steps ahead of him.
Adam felt the corners of his mouth drop into an even deeper frown. He saw Rasheed visibly tense when he saw him.
“Yo, Bayne, I wasn’t even doing anything!” he protested.
“I don’t wanna hear it, Rasheed,” Adam said, shaking his head. “Go sit over there, till I get through with this mess.
“You got something for me to sign?” he asked the sloppy officer.
Mikey nodded and began pulling together a sheet and clipboard for Adam.
“Toni, I’m calling a cab, and I’m leaving.”
So her name was Toni. Adam glanced back at the young woman standing at the door. She looked even more annoyed than he felt.
Toni turned back to the officer. Desperation and frustration fought for position on her face. “You really gonna make her leave me, Mikey? You know if I don’t get back and get this story in I’m done.”
Mikey shrugged as he handed Adam the clipboard.
“Say the word and you can be out of here right now,” Mikey answered.
Adam found himself hoping that Toni turned down whatever homeboy was offering. Instead, she stomped her foot, and uttered a word he used to use quite frequently before God put a noose on his tongue.
“Fine, I’ll do it,” she hissed through her teeth.
“Really?” Mikey said, sounding surprised. “I never actually thought--”
Mikey stopped short when he caught her glare. “So eight on Friday then?” He tried to whisper but Adam still heard him. Adam shook his head in disappointment.
“Whatever,” Toni said. “Just get me out of these.”
Mikey grinned as he fumbled with the keys and freed Toni’s hands from the restraints. With a look of pure annoyance, she snatched the release form from Mikey’s pudgy fingers and examined it. She probably wanted to make sure that whatever she had done didn’t end up on her record.
Adam frowned but began to scan the form in front of him. He just wanted to sign Rasheed out and be done with it. The night had gotten too weird. However, when Mikey leaned in a little too close to the woman, Adam couldn’t help but look up again. And when the rent-a-cop put his hand on Toni’s behind, Adam didn’t even think before he reacted.
“Brothah, you need to back up,” he said, stepping forward angrily. Who did this toy cop think he was?
But before he acted on his temptation to handle matters in a less verbal manner, the petite woman turned around and kneed the officer hard in a place so close to the groin that it made Adam shudder. Mikey hollered like a five-year-old and doubled over in pain.
“You think you feel something now?” Toni hissed at his bent over form. “You lucky I never put my foot where it really wanted to go.”
“Oh man, she got you!” Rasheed hollered with a laugh.
“If you ever put your hands on me again, you’ll be sorry you ever met me, you got that?” Toni snapped angrily in the officer’s ear.
Rasheed was still hooting in laughter as she stuffed the release into her pocket and grabbed her stuff out of the tray on the table. Adam stepped way out of her way as she stormed past him and through the door, pulling her friend behind her.
He glanced at the cop, still crouched over and holding on to the table for support, then at the door where Toni had just exited.
Yes. That woman was definitely trouble.


--End of Chapter One--

This was a roller-coaster ride of a story. I cared about all the characters in this narrative, not just the major players, and their lives and stories were well fleshed out. It was interesting to read, from a small Northeastern city perspective, as the inner city Atlanta/Baltimore culture is not one that I am familiar with~ There was some "Slang" that I didn't catch, but that didn't affect my appreciation. Beyond that, there are some wonderful themes couched naturally in the story that I will carry with me~ Honesty, Forgiveness, Restoration, Truth, and yes, Love.

Here's a little Book Trailer if you'd like to hear even a little more....

While I may not be a "sister" from a skin-color perspective, I am a "sister" from a spiritual perspective, and I enjoyed this book on all counts.

You can visit Rhonda's Facebook page to find out more and interact with the author.
Blessings~


Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this/these item(s)/service for free as part of the FIRST Wild Card Tours. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

Friday, March 2, 2012

Reading Eggs (Crack the code right open?)

It has certainly been fun to have a pre-reader, interested in letters and learning this year! Youngest has just had the opportunity to try out the online program ABC Reading Eggs (For 3-8 year olds). Reading Eggs is a product of Blake eLearning, an Australian company that "is a recognised leader in creating innovative, exciting programs that both teachers and children enjoy using." 

If your child is older, you may wish to read about the partner site Reading Eggspress for 7-12 year olds. There are a few Crew Reviews that include information on that program as well.  
This screenshot shows that this student is on map 8, and stepping stone 71. The strip on the left is the tool bar, which enables the student to move around the website~ from the lessons on the map to a playroom, a store, their own "house",  a "story factory," and more. Navigation is fairly intuitive here.

Basic set up~ Your child creates a "Reading Egg" avatar, and starts out on the Stepping Stone Reading Lessons. Each stepping stone is a lesson, and each lesson is filled with 9 or more different activities and games that teach various phonemes, lessons in phonics decoding, sight words, vocabulary and comprehension. The lessons build upon one another, with an occasional quiz (And corresponding certificate) to measure retention and/or trouble areas.

The majority of the games in each lesson were fun and interesting to Littlest, although we have had some troubles that are typical with laptop use~ the combination of track-pad vs mouse-pad ease of use when combined with "Timed" activities.  We ran into a situation where he appeared to  "double mouse-click"  on the track pad which would make an answer wrong by virtue of the second click answering a question he didn't even see (This shouldn't be too much of an issue for desktop users, but all we have is a laptop, so that's what we use!).  Thankfully only a few of the activities are impacted by this, so I hang out when he's doing those and "Assist" by clicking where he points on the screen. ;)
Dragging and dropping on a track pad can be interesting, but we've figured out how to manipulate that fairly consistently (hold the item on the trackpad with one finger and move  the item across the trackpad with a finger on the other hand). 

Although we haven't been doing this long enough to determine if Littlest is actually learning to read, I can say that his letter sounds have improved greatly, and he is able to identify all of the letters of the alphabet(He was previously shaky on some of the lesser used ones... u, v, w, y). He was also able to pass the first "Quiz" with a silver certificate, so he's definitely retaining what he's seeing.

One thing I really like about the program as a parent are the progress reports, and the ability to see his statistics on the parent dashboard.

The progress reports are sent directly to my email after he completes a quiz (Every 10 lessons, at the end of each map). They detail exactly what was accomplished~ Here is the first one:

XXXX  has just completed the Zoo 1 Quiz at the end of Map 1.
XXXX  passed the quiz, earning a Silver certificate. To see and print out this certificate go to your child's My Stuff page and click on Certificates.

In this set of ten lessons, your child learnt the following words, sounds and skills.
Map Information : Level 1 Map 1 Lessons 1 – 10
Letters and sounds – m, s, t, b, c, f, am, at
Words learnt – I, a, am, at, Sam, cat, bat, sat, fat, mat
Sample of sentences read – I am a cat. I am Sam.

The Reading Eggs lessons are designed to be played more than once. All children benefit from repeating lessons as it reinforces learning and builds automaticity (instant recall). We recommend that young learners repeat each lesson at least three times for maximum benefit.

Littlest asks to do Reading Eggs, so I know that it's a positive and fun experience for him and I can tell that he is right on target when I look at the dashboard, which tells me that his current "Reading Age" is 4.75, and he knows 34 of 237 phonics skills, and he has learned 4 of 200 sight words.

So far, I'd say this is a popular program in our homeschool (And it helps to keep him productively occupied while I work with the olders, or get something done in the kitchen, etc). He has been known to want to do more than one lesson at a sitting, although I try to discourage this so that he won't get burnt out. I haven't had success just yet in having him repeat any of the lessons as recommended, but if he gets frustrated with anything beyond the technical at any point, we'll definitely back up and repeat a few.

Just a side note~ the voices can be set to have American, Australian, or British Accents~ how fun is that? :)

Now for the Nitty Gritty~ 
ABC Reading Eggs
Recommended ages 3-8
Price options: 14 day free trial  No credit card required!
1 month recurring: $9.95
6 month subscription: $49.95
1 year subscription: $75.00
Family discount: Add a second or third child to either the 6 month or 1 year subscription at the same time and receive 50% off their subscription price.

I hope that this was helpful to you as you navigate all of the options and opportunities available to help to teach your child to read. For more reviews and opinions, please do visit the TOS Crew blog.

Blessings~
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this/these item(s)/service for free as part of the TOS Crew Review Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Promised to Another (FIRST Wild Card Tour)


It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!



Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

Whitaker House (March 1, 2012)

***Special thanks to Cathy Hickling of Whitaker House for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Laura V. Hilton is a pastor’s wife, homeschooling mother of five, breast cancer survivor, author and book lover. Although her educational background is in business, reading is Laura’s lifelong passion, and writing a gift she’s developed to the delight of her growing fan base. Laura’s reputation for the authenticity of her Amish settings is no accident – it’s in her blood as she learned as a child from her Pennsylvania Amish grandmother. Besides her Amish of Seymour Series for Whitaker House, Laura published two novels for Treble Heart Books, contributed to a Zondervan devotional, and has written hundreds of book reviews for the American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW), Christian Suspense Zone, and a variety of Internet publications. She also posts reviews on her book review blog: www.lighthouse-academy.blogspot.com. Laura and her family live in Horseshoe Bend, Arkansas.

Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:


Annie Beiler is a spunky, spirited schoolteacher, but she's struggled ever since the man she was promised to "jumped the fence" and left the Amish of Seymour. She needs a man who is committed to his Amish beliefs. And now, she's struggling to regain the trust of the school board members and the parents of her pupils for taking her class on an unauthorized field trip to a nearby Civil War battlefield. She's put on probation, and one wrong step could cost her the position permanently.

Joshua Esh of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, moved to Missouri ostensibly as part of the man swap meant to bring new blood into the community. Annie Beiler caught his attention the moment he arrived in Seymour, but he's disheartened to discover that she is promised to another man–Luke, who left the Amish but vowed to return one day and claim "his" Annie. So, Josh fills his social calendar with singings and frolics, taking a different girl home from every event–with the exception of Annie, since she is already committed to someone.

When Luke comes home, Annie pushes him away, and Josh Esh comes to her rescue. But the situation becomes awkward, since Josh is staying with Luke's family. An awareness of each other's attraction to Annie causes the awkwardness to escalate, and Annie's father soon invites Josh to stay with his family. But not all of the Beilers are happy about this new arrangement.

Soon, a buggy accident ends in a shotgun wedding after the bishop witnesses a kiss between Josh and Annie and insists they get married right away. The two protest, but the bishop is adamant. He later tells them why: he'd overheard some talk about a scheme Luke was launching to force Annie to marry him.

Marriage brings some dark secrets to the surface, and Annie and Josh must confront their issues and deal with the past if they plan on a future together.



Product Details:
List Price: $10.99

Paperback: 304 pages
Publisher: Whitaker House (March 1, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1603742573
ISBN-13: 978-1603742573



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


“May I take you home from the singing?”
Annie Beiler’s breath hitched, and her gaze shot from the dusty toes of her powder-blue tennis shoes to the drop-dead-gorgeous man standing not three feet in front of her. Unfortunately, his tentative smile wasn’t aimed in her direction.
Nein, Joshua Esh’s hazel eyes were locked on Rachel Lapp. Annie had to admit Rachel was cute, with her strawberry blonde hair and green dress that perfectly matched her eyes.
Joshua was what her Englisch friends called a “player,” for sure. Everyone talked about how he never took the same girl home from singings twice. And Annie couldn’t help hoping that he would eventually make his way to her.
Rachel’s face lit up. “Danki, Joshua. I’d love a ride.”
Annie scowled. If and when he got around to asking her, she’d turn him down. Someone should have the willpower to say nein. Just that evening, Rachel had been talking with Annie and some other girls about Joshua’s flirtatious ways. It appeared that she’d merely been jealous since he hadn’t asked to take her home.
Okay, to be honest, Annie did feel a bit envious, too. Make that more than a bit. And it wasn’t just because of Joshua, although he had played a big part in it. The truth was, none of the buwe who’d come from Pennsylvania in the man swap had ever offered to give her a ride. Not a single one.
She didn’t consider herself that unfortunate-looking.
Annie brushed past Joshua and Rachel and left the barn. Immediately, she regretted having gone outside, because she did need to find a way home—unless she rode along with another couple. But she didn’t think she could stand there alone by the barn doors, hopeful, when all the buwe she noticed didn’t seem to know she was alive.
Like Joshua Esh.
Especially Joshua Esh.
Annie kicked a rock and winced when it didn’t budge.
“Annie? Is that you?” A familiar male voice sounded from out of the darkness ahead of her.
She jumped. She hadn’t expected to hear that voice. Not in a month of singings. She frowned. “Luke?”
“Jah.” He moved into the circle of light from the lanterns hanging around the barn.
Annie planted her fists on her hips. She wouldn’t make the mistake of falling for Luke Schwartz twice—not that she’d really fallen for him the first time. It was just that he’d asked. And a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, right? Okay, she’d realized he wasn’t what she wanted—he wouldn’t make her top-ten list of the dreamiest Amish men—but he was better than nothing. She pulled in a deep breath, steeling herself. “What are you doing here?”
“Ach, that’s a wunderbaar way to welkum me. I’ve kum home.”
She stilled, her hope building, despite her internal warnings. “For how long?” She didn’t want to spend her life alone. Didn’t want to rely on the kindness of other couples for rides. Didn’t want to be the only girl left unattached, unaccepted, unwanted.
Unloved.
But, then again, she didn’t want to settle for just anyone, either.
Luke didn’t quite meet her eyes. “You wound me.”
Ach. Not for gut, then. The pencil fell from behind her ear, and she stooped to pick it up, careful not to glance at him as she rose.
“Never without that ever-present pencil, I see.”
She winced, hating that he mocked her. It wasn’t common to take a pencil to singings, she knew, but what if she wanted to write something down? The name of a book she’d like to read, perhaps, or something she wanted to mention to her students the following week. Maybe even the initials of her number one dream guy, who stood somewhere nearby but didn’t pay any attention to her. Who didn’t know she was alive. “Sarcasm doesn’t suit you.”
He sighed. “May I give you a ride home? Looks like things are breaking up.”
She took a deep breath. “I’m sorry, but I already have a ride. Maybe another time.”
Luke laughed. “Right. I heard how popular you are. Having to beat the buwe off with a stick, ain’t so?”
Annie stiffened. “So, you couldn’t pay rent on that run-down trailer and ran home to your parents, jah?”
Someone moved up beside her, and she turned her head. Whoever it was didn’t register. What she did notice was that others were gathering around her and Luke, watching their exchange.
She was in enough trouble already, having nearly gotten dismissed from her teaching post. The school board had permitted her to continue teaching, provided she was put on probation. All she needed was for one of these eavesdroppers to go home and tell his or her folks. She’d be out of a job so fast, a racing horse and buggy wouldn’t be able to keep pace. She searched for something to say, something to defuse the situation.
Luke’s glance slid from her to whoever had stepped up to offer wordless support. He sneered, then backed up a space. “Well, since you have a ride, I’ll just catch you later, then. Gut to see you, Annie.”
She forced a smile. “Glad you’re back, Luke.”
He turned and disappeared into the darkness.
***
Joshua stood beside Annie for a moment. Silent. Wishing he could say something to salve the hurt she must feel. He sensed the pain radiating from her as she watched the redheaded man walk away.
The whole situation confused him. He’d been attracted to Annie the moment he’d met her, but when he’d fished for more information about her, he’d found out she was taken. Off limits. All but engaged to Luke Schwartz, who had vowed to return for her someday. Apparently, that day was now.
Yet Annie hadn’t been waiting with bated breath.
Joshua didn’t know exactly what that meant.
He knew only what he wanted it to mean.
The crowd around them thinned as the pairs began to make their ways to their buggies. Joshua became conscious of Rachel standing on the other side of him, twisting her apron in her hand while she waited on him to do something. He wasn’t sure what.
He swallowed the lump in this throat and turned to face the brunette schoolteacher. “Um, Annie. I’m going right past your haus. I can give you a ride, if you’d like.”
The expression in her dark eyes could have withered a lesser man. “I couldn’t possibly impose on a courting couple.”
“Ach, you know gut and well Rachel and I aren’t courting.” He couldn’t commit to anyone. Not when his attention had been caught and held by one certain Amish schoolteacher. But he wouldn’t approach her—not until he knew for sure what was happening between her and Luke. Or seeing if he could somehow catch her eye. Choosing a future frau was a serious thing. After all, he’d be spending the rest of his life with her.
It wasn’t like God would point her out with a bright-neon light, one that he’d be sure to notice in this quiet, rural community. Then again, maybe He had. Joshua had certainly sat up and taken notice of Annie.
“I’m going right past your haus,” he repeated, tucking his thumbs into his suspenders to keep from reaching out and touching her arm, grasping her hand, or otherwise physically imploring her to just hush up and come along.
The good Lord certainly hadn’t made Annie Beiler into a submissive maidal. Not like Rachel Lapp, who still stood silently on his other side, waiting for him to finish. She’d probably be a docile, obedient frau. Unfortunately for her, he liked a bit of spunk.
Spunk was something that Annie Beiler possessed in abundance, if what he’d overheard during the school board meetings was true.
Ignoring him, Annie turned around and headed for the barn. He watched her go, torn whether to follow or not. Rachel still waited quietly by his side, so he straightened and faced her. “Shall we?”
She met his gaze, her green eyes wide. “Maybe we should wait to see if Annie needs a ride first. Her sister left with a beau, and her brother isn’t here.” She looked around. “Neither is her best friend.”
“Jah.” Joshua swallowed, then glanced back at the barn. “I’ll ask again.”
“Has Luke returned home for gut?” Rachel asked before he’d taken a step.
Joshua shrugged. “He was at the haus when we came back from church this afternoon, and he said he’d kum home.”
“His parents must be so happy.”
Joshua nodded, but the truth was, he didn’t know. The Schwartzes had both seemed rather skeptical when they’d found Luke on the porch after church. Already, the whole community seemed to know about his homecoming. Who needed a phone when the grapevine was so effective? Annie had looked surprised to see him, however, so perhaps the news hadn’t spread as quickly as Joshua thought.
“I’ll go see if I can find Annie. Be right back.”
Rachel smiled. “I’ll wait at your buggy.”
Joshua gave a brief nod, then headed back inside the lantern-lit barn, where he breathed in the scents of animals, dust, and hay. He skirted the table, still laden with sandwiches, vegetables, and cookies left over from the singing, and walked toward a far corner where he thought he saw a brown dress in the shadows. Annie always wore brown, as if she wanted to go unnoticed. Hidden from view. Invisible.
Of course, given the recent conflicts with the school board, maybe flying low was the best thing for her.
With a sigh, Joshua paused, backtracked, and grabbed a couple of peanut butter cookies off the table. Taking a bite of one of the crumbly cookies, he retraced his steps toward the corner where he thought Annie was hiding. He swallowed. “Annie?”
No answer.
He rounded a pile of hay bales and saw her, crouched low. “Hey. You’ll never find a ride hiding back here.”
She jumped up and straightened her shoulders. “I wasn’t hiding. I was….” She looked around and picked up a piece of straw, poking it back into the bale. “Cleaning. They missed this corner.”
Joshua raised his eyebrows and silently watched her pick up more straw for several moments. Fighting a grin, he leaned against another bale of hay.
Annie balled her fists and planted them on her hips. “Aren’t you going to go? Take Rachel home?”
“It’s more fun watching you pick up straw. And I’m sure the Stoltzfuses will appreciate that you took so much time cleaning this part of their barn. By hand, no less. I’ll be sure to tell Shanna.”
“You’re insufferable. Nein wonder your community swapped you out.”
Her comment couldn’t have been farther from the truth, but he didn’t mind. That was just what he wanted everyone to believe—for now, at least. But it didn’t matter. The temptation to grin won out. “Jah. I’ll just be the thorn in your side, here. Now, quit being so stubborn and admit you need a ride home.”
“I’ll admit nein such thing.”
***
She needed a ride, of course, but the thought of imposing on Joshua and Rachel—that wasn’t right. How could she? Besides, she didn’t want a ride as an act of charity. Yet that was the only way she’d get one. She thought about walking, but she refused to give Luke and Joshua the pleasure of seeing her reduced to setting out on foot.
“I’ll wait until you have a ride, then. Or till you accept one from me.” Judging by the obstinate set of Joshua Esh’s jaw, refusing was no longer an option.
She pulled in a deep breath and then nodded. “I guess I can let you drive me. Danki.” It hurt to say that. If only he had asked her first, because he wanted to, instead of asking out of a sense of obligation. As if she was a charity case.
Annie followed him outside and climbed in the backseat of the buggy behind Rachel and Joshua. His was an open buggy, not one for courting, and the two sat with a good foot between them—a respectable distance. Annie reached for the folded quilt on the seat beside her and pulled it close, wanting the comfort. The security.
Joshua glanced over his shoulder at her. “Cold?”
“Nein.” It was a bit breezy. The scent of autumn filled the air, though only a few leaves had started to turn. There was no good reason for wanting the quilt, other than her insecurity. She wrapped her arms around it, cuddling it like she would one of Mamm’s quilted throw pillows when company came, and she wanted to hide but had to be physically present. Not that the pillow hid her, but it made her more comfortable. And this quilt certainly wouldn’t hide her either. She glanced down at it. Maple leaf pattern. It was beautiful.
Joshua turned around once more and studied her, open concern in his hazel eyes. The horse snorted and tossed its head, as if to show its impatience to be off. Annie squirmed, again wishing someone else had asked to take her home. Well, someone had. Luke. She winced, her stomach suddenly churning. An ex-beau or Joshua and his girl of the day: a lose-lose decision.
“I’ll take Rachel home first, then you,” Joshua said. He clicked his tongue to the horse.
“Nein, take me home first.”
Joshua shook his head. “That doesn’t make any sense. We’ll kum to Rachel’s haus before yours. If I take you home first, I’ll have to backtrack to drop her off and then again on the way to the haus where I’m staying.”
Annie frowned. “But—”
“I hate backtracking.”
She pulled the quilt closer, crossing her arms over it.
Joshua glanced at Rachel before looking ahead at the road again. They hadn’t spoken, but Annie was sure they’d communicated nonverbally. Probably a mutual acknowledgment of the unwelcome third party in the buggy. She’d never know.
“We got a lot done at the Kropfs’ haus last week, ain’t so?” Rachel turned sideways in the seat so that she faced Joshua and could see Annie. “You did a great job painting in the kitchen, Annie. It looks so much brighter with a fresh coat of white paint. Those brown water stains on the wall were nasty.” She glanced at Joshua. “You were working upstairs, ain’t so? Helping the other men put on a new roof?”
He nodded.
Annie sank into the back seat, glad that Rachel filled the silence with chatter. But still, she didn’t need any more proof that her presence had put an awkward spin on things. What would she have to say to Joshua after Rachel was gone and they were alone? She supposed she could apologize for ruining their evening. She studied Joshua’s profile when he glanced at Rachel, wishing for the thousandth time that he’d asked to take her home because he wanted to. She hugged the quilt closer.
Rachel still chattered nonstop. “I heard that the floorboards upstairs were rotted, too.”
“Jah. We had to be careful where we stepped. Should be as gut as new now.”
“I think it’s a shame that Amos Kropf let his haus fall into such a bad shape. Don’t you?”
Joshua voiced appropriate responses to her comments, and, soon, their conversation was a vague drone in Annie’s ears. Yet, all too soon, he pulled the buggy into the drive that led to Rachel’s haus. It was a tidy stone place that looked hardly big enough to house her entire family. It didn’t need to, of course, since all of her siblings but one were grown and married. Her younger brother, Esau, was fourteen, so this was the last year Annie would have him in class. He was one of the big buwe, but he hadn’t caused her any trouble. He was as sweet as his sister. She’d actually miss him, she realized.
“I’ll be right back.” Joshua glanced at Annie, then vaulted out of the buggy and came around to walk Rachel to the door. They talked too quietly for Annie to make out what they said. All she heard was the muffled sound of voices.
The horse raised its tail and made a deposit. Annie glanced away, readjusting the quilt on her lap.
Too soon, Joshua was back. He climbed into the buggy and twisted around to look at her. “Move up here by me. I’m not a chauffer.”
“Jah, that’s exactly what you are.”
He hesitated, studying her. “Either that or a taxi service, jah?”
She smiled, in spite of herself. “Jah.”
He grinned back. “Get up here.”
After a moment, she laid the quilt where she’d found it, smoothing the wrinkles. Then, she climbed over the buggy seat, settling in next to him. Closer to him than Rachel had sat. “Danki for taking me home.”
His grin liquefied her knees. Good thing she wasn’t standing. Had he smiled at Rachel that way? He reached for the brake, released it, and clicked his tongue. Seconds later, they were back on the road.
“Did you have fun at the singing?”
“Jah.” It had been okay, until Luke had showed up.
“Gut. You haven’t kum to many singings in the past few weeks. Just on occasion.”
He’d noticed her? Annie fought the urge to smile. “You’re new in town. I go to all the singings. Well, almost all of them.” She had missed a good number after Mamm’s accident.
“I’m not that new. I’ve been here since the end of June. Four months. And I would have noticed if you were there all the time. Believe me.”
He’d noticed her enough to miss her? Then, why hadn’t he asked…?
“Sorry I tagged along on your ride with Rachel.”
He glanced at her. “I don’t mind giving you a ride. It’s a pleasure. As for ruining the evening with Rachel, don’t worry. I might decide to visit her later this week.” He shrugged as if it didn’t matter.
Annie’s heart sank. She leaned back in the seat, shifting away from him as far as she could. Not that she’d been sitting indecently close. She did have a reputation to uphold. Such as it was.
He glanced at her again. “So, heard that you are meeting with the school board on Monday to discuss some things.”
Tomorrow. She shut her eyes briefly. “News does get around.”
“Heard you rented a van to take the students on a field trip to a Civil War battlefield. Without permission.”
She fought the urge to bow her head in shame. Instead, she held steady, tightening her lips, glad that he didn’t have any kinner in school, and would have no reason to attend.
But then, he lived at the haus where the meeting would be held. With Luke’s family.
Jah, he’d be there, to witness her humiliation firsthand.


This was a very sweet read. In reading this book I finally realized what might be the main draw of Amish fiction for me~ The Amish community maintains rules governing relationships that encourage innocence and moral behavior without negating strong emotions. There are consequences within the community for questionable behavior, which truly deters actions and attitudes that are destructive. A return to simpler more peaceful times, if only in my imagination (The amazing part being that there are entire communities today that are like this)!

Blessings~





 







Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this/these item(s)/service for free as part of the FIRST Wild Card Tours. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255: "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising."

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