I joined librarything in the first round of IHCPL. I think I would prefer a live book club so I could have the intimacy of seeing people's faces and visting with refreshments.
We have a book club at our library, but it's for adults. We could try a children's or teen book club. I think it would be cool to have a teen(or preteen book club) and have the kids pick the titles at least half the time, unless they seemed like they needed more direction and more suggestions. I would definitely like there to be refreshments there. I liked the ideas for icebreakers listed on the Reading Group Choices site-one listed asked patrons to bring favorite book, numbers are displayed in lieu of person's name by each book-you try to match the person who brought the book. Reading Group Guides suggested The Book Thief by Markus Zusak for a YA book club book.
3. 78 people had Animal Shelter Mystery on Shelfari and it received 4 and 3/4 stars and compared that to Amazon's 4 1/2 stars. On Shelfari 36 members have Ghost Hunt, it got 4 out of 5 stars. On Goodreads An. Shelter Mystery received a rating of 3.72 and Ghost Hunt series ranged from 3.93-4.38.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Saturday, October 31, 2009
#53 Finding Books Online
1. The three closest bookstores according to google are Family Christian Bookstore, Andy's Bookstore, and Libreria Cristiana Amisadai. Family Christian has an online prescence with a sophisticated website as it is part of a chain-great graphics and sections for movies, pre-buy, email sign-up, clearance, kids, apparrel, and music besides books.
2. At Barnes and Noble Animal Shelter Mystery is $4.50 or $4.05 member, $1.99 used. I did not find an ebook for it on Barnes and Noble or Harris County for listening or reading online.
3. The ebook I chose was off of 20+ places for public domain ebooks;they had many sites for ebooks listed -I clicked on many books.net. At first I tried Abbot's Ghost by Louisa May Alcott, but the language was very formal so I then chose Adopting an Abandoned Farm by Kate Sanborn 49pg unabridged. It tells of a poet around 1889 who visits a friend in the country and decides to rent a house across the street for 3years for 40 dollars. It takes place in Gooseville, Conn. and assumed name for Foxboro, Mass. It tells of her experiences with local auctions, horses, dogs, hens, etc. I don't prefer reading online at length compared to print-unless it's news or something, but that gets annoying too with so many changes to websites with videoclips, etc. I only read about 20 pages in 30 minutes. It was hard to focus at times and when I scrolled down it would jump to the next page alot before I'd read the last paragraph on the page. A smaller device I would like even less, although it would be advantageous in a situation where you're waiting somewhere like at an airport,etc. Also, it can't be damaged or lost like a book, at least not in the same way-water damage still issue. Also, I like how they are automatically returned. Books more intimate of course.
2. At Barnes and Noble Animal Shelter Mystery is $4.50 or $4.05 member, $1.99 used. I did not find an ebook for it on Barnes and Noble or Harris County for listening or reading online.
3. The ebook I chose was off of 20+ places for public domain ebooks;they had many sites for ebooks listed -I clicked on many books.net. At first I tried Abbot's Ghost by Louisa May Alcott, but the language was very formal so I then chose Adopting an Abandoned Farm by Kate Sanborn 49pg unabridged. It tells of a poet around 1889 who visits a friend in the country and decides to rent a house across the street for 3years for 40 dollars. It takes place in Gooseville, Conn. and assumed name for Foxboro, Mass. It tells of her experiences with local auctions, horses, dogs, hens, etc. I don't prefer reading online at length compared to print-unless it's news or something, but that gets annoying too with so many changes to websites with videoclips, etc. I only read about 20 pages in 30 minutes. It was hard to focus at times and when I scrolled down it would jump to the next page alot before I'd read the last paragraph on the page. A smaller device I would like even less, although it would be advantageous in a situation where you're waiting somewhere like at an airport,etc. Also, it can't be damaged or lost like a book, at least not in the same way-water damage still issue. Also, I like how they are automatically returned. Books more intimate of course.
#52 What to Read
1. I searched in Novelist plus for Nora Roberts and it suggested Joann Ross, Anne Stuart, Suzanne Brockman, Christine Feehan, & Jayne Anne Krentz among other authors to try (for similar reads). In What Should I Read Next suggestions were Jude Devereaux, Catherine Anderson, and Cara Lockwood. Webrary.org results were pretty non-existent. I found her on a list w/romance authors but there was no link and she was not on their list of authors w/read-alike links.
2. For a fourth grade girl choice #17 on novelist for animal fiction was The Animal Shelter Mystery by Gertrude Warner. Since the genre wasn't specified I did a search for nonfiction also and first on list was Animals and their young how animals produce and care for their babies by Pamela Hickman. For her 13 yr old brother I searched for all (instead of fiction or nonfiction)-#6 on the list was Ghost Hunt anime series by Shiho Inada and #13 was The Ghost Behind the Wall by Melvin Burgess-those are my picks.
3. For Dean Koontz I went to Library Booklists and Bibliographies and was connected to Atomz.com and if you like. It was not nearly as easy to use as novelist, I had to look for him under horror authors-first other horror authors listed are Jonathan Aycliffe and Clive Barker(not exactly horror?) I didn't see him on webrary. Novelist Plus gave me Greg Bear and Dan Simmons.
4. For the Tamora Pierce series I chose Novelist -the name of the series is Song of the Lionness
. Alanna: the first adventure (1983) 2. In the hand of the goddess (1984) 3. The woman who rides like a man (1986) 4. Lioness rampant (c 1988)
(links from author to title to series)
2. For a fourth grade girl choice #17 on novelist for animal fiction was The Animal Shelter Mystery by Gertrude Warner. Since the genre wasn't specified I did a search for nonfiction also and first on list was Animals and their young how animals produce and care for their babies by Pamela Hickman. For her 13 yr old brother I searched for all (instead of fiction or nonfiction)-#6 on the list was Ghost Hunt anime series by Shiho Inada and #13 was The Ghost Behind the Wall by Melvin Burgess-those are my picks.
3. For Dean Koontz I went to Library Booklists and Bibliographies and was connected to Atomz.com and if you like. It was not nearly as easy to use as novelist, I had to look for him under horror authors-first other horror authors listed are Jonathan Aycliffe and Clive Barker(not exactly horror?) I didn't see him on webrary. Novelist Plus gave me Greg Bear and Dan Simmons.
4. For the Tamora Pierce series I chose Novelist -the name of the series is Song of the Lionness
. Alanna: the first adventure (1983) 2. In the hand of the goddess (1984) 3. The woman who rides like a man (1986) 4. Lioness rampant (c 1988)
(links from author to title to series)
Friday, October 30, 2009
Holiday, Cooking, and recipes oh my! #51
Jack-o'-lantern Quesadillas Get 2 Free Trial Issues!
.See This Recipe In...
Menu: Kids' Halloween Dinner Menu
See Wine Pairings for this recipe
.Related Recipe Collections
Appetizer Recipes for Every Occasion Halloween Treats Cheese Recipes .My Notes
(Only you will be able to view, print, and edit this Note)
Edit Note
. Rate the RecipeRead Reviews (0)Cost per serving: $1.21
Yield: 8 Servings
Cost per Serving: $1.21
Ingredients
16 (8-inch) flour tortillas, preferably red or orange
8 teaspoons vegetable oil
4 cups grated pepper Jack cheese (12 oz.)
Preparation
Preheat broiler to high and place an oven rack about 5 inches from heat source. Line a baking sheet with foil and mist with nonstick cooking spray. Stack 8 tortillas on a cutting board and use a sharp paring knife to trim away some of top, leaving a 1-inch "stem" so tortillas are shaped like pumpkins. Repeat with remaining 8 tortillas. Use a knife to cut two triangles for eyes and a crescent for a mouth into 8 tortillas.
Warm 1 teaspoon oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add a tortilla without eyes and mouth, sprinkle with a scant 1/2 cup cheese. Cover with cutout tortilla. Cook until underside is golden, 1 to 2 minutes, slide onto baking sheet, and repeat to make three more quesadillas.
Place baking sheet under broiler and broil until tops are golden. Slide onto a serving platter and loosely tent with foil to keep warm. Repeat with remaining tortillas and cheese. Serve immediately.
Nutritional Information
Calories:524
Fat:25g (sat 11g)
Protein:19g
Carbohydrate:55g
Fiber:3g
Cholesterol:45mg
Sodium:753mg
All You, OCTOBER 2007
Conversion using Recipe Conversion Calculator which connects to FruitfromWashington.com for 2 people instead:
4 Tortillas
1 tbsp and 1 tsp of vegetable oil
2 cups grated monterey jack cheese
I went to myrecipes.com for the recipe and planned to go to Southern Living but right off the home page they had a picture with halloween recipes that I liked.
.See This Recipe In...
Menu: Kids' Halloween Dinner Menu
See Wine Pairings for this recipe
.Related Recipe Collections
Appetizer Recipes for Every Occasion Halloween Treats Cheese Recipes .My Notes
(Only you will be able to view, print, and edit this Note)
Edit Note
. Rate the RecipeRead Reviews (0)Cost per serving: $1.21
Yield: 8 Servings
Cost per Serving: $1.21
Ingredients
16 (8-inch) flour tortillas, preferably red or orange
8 teaspoons vegetable oil
4 cups grated pepper Jack cheese (12 oz.)
Preparation
Preheat broiler to high and place an oven rack about 5 inches from heat source. Line a baking sheet with foil and mist with nonstick cooking spray. Stack 8 tortillas on a cutting board and use a sharp paring knife to trim away some of top, leaving a 1-inch "stem" so tortillas are shaped like pumpkins. Repeat with remaining 8 tortillas. Use a knife to cut two triangles for eyes and a crescent for a mouth into 8 tortillas.
Warm 1 teaspoon oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add a tortilla without eyes and mouth, sprinkle with a scant 1/2 cup cheese. Cover with cutout tortilla. Cook until underside is golden, 1 to 2 minutes, slide onto baking sheet, and repeat to make three more quesadillas.
Place baking sheet under broiler and broil until tops are golden. Slide onto a serving platter and loosely tent with foil to keep warm. Repeat with remaining tortillas and cheese. Serve immediately.
Nutritional Information
Calories:524
Fat:25g (sat 11g)
Protein:19g
Carbohydrate:55g
Fiber:3g
Cholesterol:45mg
Sodium:753mg
All You, OCTOBER 2007
Conversion using Recipe Conversion Calculator which connects to FruitfromWashington.com for 2 people instead:
4 Tortillas
1 tbsp and 1 tsp of vegetable oil
2 cups grated monterey jack cheese
I went to myrecipes.com for the recipe and planned to go to Southern Living but right off the home page they had a picture with halloween recipes that I liked.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Texting module/Potluck #57
I have used text before. A year or two ago when I was on a family plan I just did a few times because it cost extra. Two months ago I bought unlimited text and have been texting often, but could probably get away w/500 a month text plan because I don't think I go over that.
I'm a regular texter now. I use text lingo, but mostly just whatever abbreviations that come to mind.Text 2 lingo seemed not too useful for me, but for those who are confused by text lingo and need practice or translations it was ok.
After reading the New York Times article, I definitely will avoid texting while driving altogether in stead of just doing it occasionally. It seems even more distracting then talking on the phone. It's pretty unbelievable-the statistic they mention that teens are averaging almost 2000 texts a month!
I'm a regular texter now. I use text lingo, but mostly just whatever abbreviations that come to mind.Text 2 lingo seemed not too useful for me, but for those who are confused by text lingo and need practice or translations it was ok.
After reading the New York Times article, I definitely will avoid texting while driving altogether in stead of just doing it occasionally. It seems even more distracting then talking on the phone. It's pretty unbelievable-the statistic they mention that teens are averaging almost 2000 texts a month!
Recession Busters #60 Fun food & frugality
1.I really enjoyed Clara's video. I liked her little side stories of the price of potatoes in the depression, having to quit high school because no money for socks or clothes and a lady trying to steal from her garden.
Here's a Recession Recipe from the net. Looks like I could have picked an even cheaper one, but this is something I have eaten before and really like so...
Here is a healthy and frugal recipe that my husband, daughter & I LOVE (my son, not so much...). I fix this when green peppers are 4/$1 ~ I usually have the rest of the ingredients on hand.
2 medium sized green peppers
1 lb 90% lean ground beef
1/3 cup chopped onion (1 small)
2 medium tomatoes, peeled and cut into small wedges
1/2 cup long grain rice
1/2 cup water
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1/2 teaspoon dried basil or oregano, crushed
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/2 cup shredded lower-fat natural cheddar cheese (2 ounces)
Halve peppers lengthwise and remove stem ends, seeds, and membranes. Immerse peppers into boiling water for 3 minutes. Invert onto paper towels to drain well.
In a large skillet cook meat and onion until meat is brown and onion is tender. Drain off fat. Stir in the tomatoes, uncooked rice, water, Worcestershire sauce, basil or oregano, and pepper. Bring to boiling; reduce heat. Cover and simmer for 15 to 18 minutes or till the rice is tender. Stir in half of the cheese. Spoon meat mixture into peppers. Place peppers in a 9 x 13 inch baking dish. Spoon any remaining meat mixture into baking dish.
Bake, uncovered, in a 375 degree oven about 15 minutes or until heated through. Sprinkle with remaining cheese. Let stand for 1 to 2 minutes or till the cheese melts. Makes 6 servings.
Enjoy and God bless ~ Thrifty Gal
I really enjoyed Clara's video. I liked her little side stories of the price of potatoes in the depression, having to quit high school because no money for socks or clothes and a lady trying to steal from her garden.
2. Tips on recession I've read about in the media include shopping around for car insurance, and increasing deductibles to lower rates and cutting out unnecessary coverage, and using the library!
3.Tips I've used include the obvious: buying soup, eating in more, turning up thermostat not running heater, avoiding driving and trips, saving and using coins, and adding water to liquid soap (also wearing jeans twice-yuck!)
2.
2.
Here's a Recession Recipe from the net. Looks like I could have picked an even cheaper one, but this is something I have eaten before and really like so...
Here is a healthy and frugal recipe that my husband, daughter & I LOVE (my son, not so much...). I fix this when green peppers are 4/$1 ~ I usually have the rest of the ingredients on hand.
2 medium sized green peppers
1 lb 90% lean ground beef
1/3 cup chopped onion (1 small)
2 medium tomatoes, peeled and cut into small wedges
1/2 cup long grain rice
1/2 cup water
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1/2 teaspoon dried basil or oregano, crushed
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/2 cup shredded lower-fat natural cheddar cheese (2 ounces)
Halve peppers lengthwise and remove stem ends, seeds, and membranes. Immerse peppers into boiling water for 3 minutes. Invert onto paper towels to drain well.
In a large skillet cook meat and onion until meat is brown and onion is tender. Drain off fat. Stir in the tomatoes, uncooked rice, water, Worcestershire sauce, basil or oregano, and pepper. Bring to boiling; reduce heat. Cover and simmer for 15 to 18 minutes or till the rice is tender. Stir in half of the cheese. Spoon meat mixture into peppers. Place peppers in a 9 x 13 inch baking dish. Spoon any remaining meat mixture into baking dish.
Bake, uncovered, in a 375 degree oven about 15 minutes or until heated through. Sprinkle with remaining cheese. Let stand for 1 to 2 minutes or till the cheese melts. Makes 6 servings.
Enjoy and God bless ~ Thrifty Gal
I really enjoyed Clara's video. I liked her little side stories of the price of potatoes in the depression, having to quit high school because no money for socks or clothes and a lady trying to steal from her garden.
2. Tips on recession I've read about in the media include shopping around for car insurance, and increasing deductibles to lower rates and cutting out unnecessary coverage, and using the library!
3.Tips I've used include the obvious: buying soup, eating in more, turning up thermostat not running heater, avoiding driving and trips, saving and using coins, and adding water to liquid soap (also wearing jeans twice-yuck!)
2.
2.
Monday, October 26, 2009
#74 Social Petworking
I looked at some of the sites and decided to create a profile for Rocky on Animalattraction.com. It wasn't too hard or lengthy to sign up, but it wasn't real clear that to activate the account that i had to click on the site in an email received. I had tried to login after signing up, and after repeated attempts clicked on send password just to see. It sent the password i had already been trying to my email account but activated my account when i clicked on site from there. I also entered Rocky in a second pet contest on the site. I don't know that I would make this a regular stop for me but I liked the idea of $1 being donated to petfinder.com for everyone that you refer to the site.
Kim
Kim
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