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July 02, 2009

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mom

Wish I'd thought of photographing the contents of MY purse - and to lay it all out so neatly. I wanna do that, too. But I won't smack HIM on the behind....and no, it is not wrong....to watch the sky.....nor is it wrong to clean out your purse....and no, it is not wrong to smack HIM on the behind.

Meredith

That's what I was hoping you'd say.

Todd

For the record, the team is 5-5, and had you been paying attention, you'd have seen your husband score 3 times in a 7-5 win. But he doesn't care if you watch, as long as you come.

emily

i don't think so. in fact i find myself doing that all the time at the various softball games i end up watching... well, maybe not cleaning out my purse. i'm not really a purse kinda gal...

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What I'm Reading

  • Barry Chevannes: Rastafari: Roots and Ideology (Utopianism and Communitarianism)

    Barry Chevannes: Rastafari: Roots and Ideology (Utopianism and Communitarianism)
    Been working on this one since my spring sojourn in the Caribbean. Though it's certainly interesting, I'm reading it with pencil in hand to underline and make notes in the margins. I may have to return to Little Seal before I have time for such concentrated study again.

  • Jane Goodall: Harvest for Hope: A Guide to Mindful Eating

    Jane Goodall: Harvest for Hope: A Guide to Mindful Eating
    My brother read excerpts of this book aloud to me as we drove to Maine this summer. I'm working on the whole thing now. Goodall brings an interesting perspective to the local and whole foods discussions, and she uses funny acronyms like "FOJ" (friends of Jane).

  • Mike Fay: Last Place on Earth (National Geographic)

    Mike Fay: Last Place on Earth (National Geographic)
    Nick Nichols and Mike Fay undertook an incredible task as they traversed the Congo and Gabon. Now that I'm working for Nick, I'm getting pretty intimate with the contents of this book. From a totally unbiased position (!), let me say that the photographs are stunning and the changes they inspired in West Africa are truly remarkable.

  • Greg Mortenson: Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time

    Greg Mortenson: Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time
    I am only a few chapters in to this true story of an American climber whose failed summit of K2 leads to a life dedicated to giving back to Pakistan. At least that is what I think it's about... Very excited to meet Greg Mortenson when he comes to speak at Village School this month!

  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Love in the Time of Cholera (Vintage International)

    Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Love in the Time of Cholera (Vintage International)
    Picked this one off the bedside table at my aunt's house on Vinalhaven Island. I'm early in the chapters and am already thinking that love is a frightening thing. Deliciously frightening, I think. Wish I could read the book in Spanish.

  • Sara Gruen: Water for Elephants: A Novel

    Sara Gruen: Water for Elephants: A Novel
    This captivating novel about train-traveling circus folk somehow complements my own current existence, as I swoosh across Japan and marvel at this foreign world. I mean, there are no elephants, freaks, or hobos around here. But somehow Asia feels like the perfect place to read a magical love story about another world to which I'm an outsider.

Static.


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