Third Shelf

The kids will be awake soon, so I won’t have time to do a whole
shelf, but Scott (of all people! he sees these shelves every day) has
been clamoring for another bookshelf post, so here goes.

Same bookcase, third shelf down:

My Charlotte Mason series: her six books, shelved here for easy access. I return to these over and over again.

A boxed set of Edward Eager novels: Half Magic, Knight’s Castle, Magic by the Lake, The Time Garden.

Not that I can actually see any of the above right now, since Scott
has a bunch of music CDs stacked in front of them. But I know they’re
there.

Then comes one of the several Lord of the Rings sets
we own. Scott and I both brought copies into the marriage, but I think
this set is much newer, a Christmas gift to one of the girls a couple
of years ago.

An Old-Fashioned Girl by Louisa May Alcott.

And then my favorite Alcott, Little Men.

Mystery Train by Greil Marcus, "generally considered
the first truly scholarly exploration of rock and roll, its history,
its importance, and its uniquely American properties," says my husband.
I haven’t read this one, can you tell?

A biography of Richard Wagner by Robert W. Gutman. Scott’s read it, I haven’t.

Elvissey by Jack Womack. Has a library sticker on the
spine so must be something Scott picked up on the discard pile. He
reads a lot about music, as you can see.

Rowan of Rin by Emily Rodda, the first book in a favorite series of my girls.

The Brownie and the Princess, a collection of stories
by Louisa May Alcott. I’ve not read it yet. Jane enjoyed it. She says a
couple of the stories are set during the Revolutionary War. The title
story, she says, is very sweet.

Exile on Main Street and In the Aeroplane Over the Sea,
two books in a series called 33 1/3, which is a collection of small
books, each by a different author and about a single record album.
Scott has really been enjoying these lately. I’m seeing them all over
the house.

Latin for Children DVDs.

And then a sideways stack of craft and home arts books:

Mrs. Sharp’s Traditions by Sarah Ban Breathnach.

Festivals, Family, and Food

Crafts Through the Year by Thomas and Petra Berger.

Knitted Animals

Magical Window Stars

Catholic Traditions in Crafts

The Nature Corner

Rose Windows

I’ll try to come back later and add authors and Goodreads links and
maybe some commentary to these titles, but morning has broken* and I
need to get a move on.

*Whoops, glanced at this hours later and see that I never hit ‘publish.’

One thought on “Third Shelf”

  1. That set of shelves could almost be mine. We have been savoring “Little Men” for a couple of months now. My favorite part is the little working wood stove set into the bay window. We’re heading down to visit Orchard House when we finish. I found “Mrs. Sharp’s Traditions” last year and have enjoyed it very much. It helps me when I do talks at our Waldorf school about families and festivals to be able to root some of the festivals in historical traditions.

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