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The Weekly Spark: One Good Thing

In homes around the world, it is about to get real.  December is frenetic with the end of Hanukkah, holiday and end of year parties at work and with friends, Festivus, Christmas, Kwanzaa, and New Year’s.  And it is hectic even if you don’t celebrate ANY of those things.

one good thing

Before you start meeting a different group for dinner and gift exchange each night, before you start your elaborate Elf on the Shelf or Advent calendar or Secret Santa or Grinch plans, before you do anything else, I need you to plan for your own upkeep.  I need you to really think about your self-care.  Because here is the thing, you cannot do anything else for anyone else in any sustained way if you aren’t not doing for yourself first.  You can, in fact, give until you give out.  And this is the prime time of year where people do that.  Then they wake up, spent on January 1st, with a crud that has descended into both lungs (and sometimes it even feels like their feet) and it takes us weeks and weeks if not months and months to recover.  Then we feel like we lost the new year and all the momentum it holds and well, hell, we’ll just try again next year.  Nope, not this time.  This time, this year, I want you bathed daily in a little bit of personal lushness so that you can sustain yourself as you give and give.  This year, I really want you tuned into some self-care.

So right now, before you close out this computer screen, I want you to think of one good thing you can do for yourself every single day between now and January 1st, one good thing that will make you feel nurtured or noticed or cared for by you.  One good thing that refills your well a little bit every single day.  It doesn’t have to take more than ten minutes (but I do suggest at least ten minutes) but it needs to feel really nourishing.  If you want to be an overachiever, think of two good things or even three.  And then share them here with all of us to create a little inspiration for us and a little accountability for you as you claim your care.

As for me, I am going to claim three daily habits for this month:  at least 50 ounces of water daily (ideally more but I want to have a good minimum), at least 10 minutes of reading a day, and daily movement (at least 30 minutes for 5 days a week and a couple shorter bouts are fine for weekend/rest days).

What one good thing will you be doing this month to claim your care and refill your well?

The Happy Sheet: Peace is in you

peace is in you

this moment

trading out this week’s Friday Reflections for ‘a moment’ so I can soak up a few more moments with the family…

Tree Hugger

Happy Thanksgiving!

thank you

this holiday’s singular must (and you have to give it to yourself)

holiday season

So, here we are.  If you are stateside, we are just hours away from kicking off the most wonderful time of the year… the Thanksgiving to New Year’s time span that is filled to overflowing with togetherness, love, goodness, merriment, joy, happiness, and, well, if we are being real here, anxiety.  Because while, in theory, we all love to get together with those we love, there is also this little underbelly of worry that we can’t help but wonder about as we load the car with suitcases, brown-paper packages, and carefully prepared casseroles.  And the voice of that worry likes to ask these questions:

Is my cousin going to ask why I am still single?

Is my mom going to ask me if I’ve lost weight, gained it, thought about losing some, thought about gaining some, or some other weight iteration nightmare?

Is my  aunt going to say, “you would be so pretty if…”

Basically, in short, is someone, under the auspices of loving me, going to make me feel utterly unlovable with his or her judgments?  And, more importantly, am I going to let them?  Am I going to walk away from that dinner, stuffed from food that couldn’t satisfy the hole that was opened with those words, and think, “I SHOULD HAVE SAID SOMETHING!”  Am I going to feel betrayed not just by my loved ones but by me?

And, so, in the midst of all of your other preparations for the big day Thursday and all the other big days that are to come in the next five weeks, I want you to add one more thing to your list of preparations.  I want you to add planning to take care of you to that list.

Now, there are many ways that we can take care of ourselves and those are all important.  But, today, we are focusing on the one thing you must be able to do this holiday season to get through it with your soul safely intact if you have people in your life who like to take care of you by taking you apart.

You have to teach people how to treat you.  

And you do that by setting boundaries. So, sometime today, while the pumpkin bread is baking or the laundry is drying or you are wrapping presents or idling in traffic, I want you to turn your attention to taking care of you.  I want you to think about what you might hear from your family members that might result in a wound for you if you aren’t vigilant.

“Isn’t it time to start dying those grays?”

“That baby is five years old; shouldn’t you be rid of the baby fat?”

“Do you dress this way to work?”

And then, first and foremost, I want you to remember that those comments are never about you.  If someone feels the need to comment to you about your looks, your station in life, anything, really, it is not about you.  Those comments are a mirror into that person’s life and the challenges he or she has with the issue being mentioned.  I promise.

But, next, I want you to take it a step further.  The person who has his or her own wound often looks for a way to pass that wound on.  Think about it.  A wound like that is so hard to carry around, it is so bone-crushing.  And, sometimes, if we can give it away for a moment, if we can just take the edge off of our own misery for a moment, well that feels a little like relief.  It’s only later, with counseling or deliberate insight and personal growth, that we can realize that it wasn’t relief at all.  It was a way to numb ourselves.  We numb in so many ways, don’t we?  With food.  With alcohol.  With substances.  By being snarky and bitchy and mean.  We numb because we think the worst thing possible would be to face ourselves, to be vulnerable, to be real- we think that realness, that admission of imperfection is as bad and painful as it gets.  But I promise you this.  No one who has a healthy relationship with herself has ever looked at another person who stands real in the midst of her vulnerability and said “that looks weak.”  Look carefully.  From where I am sitting, vulnerability, realness, truth?  They all look a lot like courage.  Until we give up the myth that both perfect and imperfect exist, we’ll keep missing the real truth: there is no perfect, there is no imperfect, there is only glimmering, vulnerable, soul-refreshing realness and it’s polar opposite.  And the polar opposite is wounded and wounds others.

And those who wish to wound look for the most vulnerable target- a target they know who will not see their barb for what it is and a target who will quietly accept it- in their desperate desire to pass off their own pain for a moment.  For your empathy and sympathy and politeness (oh, she won’t make a scene!), you are being targeted.

But that doesn’t have to be your role anymore.

Spend some time thinking about what you hear and then come up with two comebacks.

#1  The comeback that would most satisfy you if you could just say whatever you wanted to say which might look a little like this:

Your mom:  ”Honey, don’t you think you would just be so much happier if you just lost 20 pounds?”

You:  ”Mom, don’t you mean that you would be so much happier if I just lost 20 pounds?”  or “I would actually be happier if you didn’t always think my body was up for grabs.”

#2  The comeback that you can legitimately stomach giving– one that will set a boundary, one that will teach the person how to treat you, but one that will not send you to the bathroom for the duration of the get-together because you are so nauseous over delivering it.

Your mom:  ”Honey, don’t you think you would just be so much happier if you lost 20 pounds?”

You:  ”I actually don’t think you have to lose weight in order to be happy” or “This isn’t a productive conversation for us to have.”

Sometimes, comeback #1 and comeback #2 are the same but what I have found is that if you are a person who has spent your life receiving these barbs, it is very hard to go from receiving them and not saying a word to really strongly zinging the person the next time he or she says something.  Moreover, a big zinger isn’t the key difference maker.  Just identifying the boundary for the person you are interacting with and letting he or she know it has been crossed and you won’t be quiet anymore usually goes a very long way.  Very rarely does it take more than just a handful of times of setting that boundary before the person leaves you alone and either chooses to deal with his or her own stuff or moves on to, unfortunately, another victim.

Boundary setting is hard, hard work.  But it is important work.  Not just because it teaches other people how to treat us, but because it also shows us that we can take care of ourselves.  And when we begin to understand that, everything changes.  Maybe that can be this year’s holiday miracle.

Take care of you.  Promise?

xoxo

a few of my favorite things:: a radical self-acceptance, luscious self-care holiday gift guide

favorite things

I love coming up with gift ideas. And with the holidays coming, I am brainstorming fun things- big and small– to give that will help the lovely ladies in my life take care of themselves and treat themselves more lovingly.  So here are some gifts I love to give, in case they are a fit for someone on your list!

You’re Beautiful wall decal.  I bought these in bulk last year to give to all the girls who attended Right in the Middle.  Such a great reminder for mirror gazing young ladies!

The Body Shop Body Butter:  I’ve been using these body butters for at least eight years and I just love them.  They smell amazing, feel great, and absolutely quench my skin’s thirst.  My standard “flavor” is Coconut but I’ve tried lots of others from Aloe to Olive Oil and haven’t been disappointed.  A decadent, body loving gift for one of your favorites.

Creamed Honey:  This creamed honey is made by monks in Virginia and has become a favorite gift to give to my foodie friends.  There are amazing flavors— cinnamon is my favorite- and you can put together a four pack of delight for your loved ones.  I love it in tea, and I also love it in these ridiculously good oatmeal raspberry muffin cakes.  Such a simple gift to delight your favorite people.

The Artist’s Way:  This book is one of the best gifts I have ever been given.  My college roommate/lifetime bestie gave this to me for my 24th birthday, and it was a game changer.  In fact, I had no idea how critical writing was to my happiness until I completed the book’s journey.  When I finished the book and had that huge epiphany, I started researching MFA programs. I am not sure that I would have started writing professionally without this book.  I now recommend it all the time for women who are in a period of transition and want to get in touch with their creative foundation.

Personalized Letterpress Stationary.  I love letterpress and this is my current stationary.  It’s beautiful quality– love the kraft paper envelopes- and the paper is nice and heavy.  Really a quality gift– perhaps a nice, thoughtful option for teachers?

Curvy Yoga Goodness:  Do you have a yogi or an aspiring yogi in your life?  Anna Guest-Jelley is the driving force behind Curvy Yoga and she does a wonderful job of making yoga accessible for every single body.  From videos to books, there are a range of gifts available for the women in your life!

Hand-stamped Personalized Necklace:  This is another one of my go-to-gifts this year.  I’ve alternated between having LOVED stamped on it and having my friends’ words of the year stamped on it.  Either way, I’ve loved giving this gift– so pretty and personal.  Whatever you put on it, it will be a lovely tribute to your loved one.

Pottery Barn Bathrobe:  One of my 40th birthday gifts was this bathrobe.  I think BF was desperate to give me a bathrobe because I had been using the bathrobe I had for more than 20 years (yes, it was my college bathrobe) and it had an enormous hole, was so worn that it could no longer be called a terrycloth robe and had a burn mark on the sleeve from where I caught it on fire while cooking scrambled eggs for breakfast (hazard of a gas stove, right?).  Putting it on is a like a crazy, warm hug.  Give someone in your life a big, lush hug.

Karina Dress: With a tagline of dresses for every body, Karina Dresses offer great fitting, limited edition dresses that are machine washable and don’t wrinkle.  I have several of these dresses- and my current favorite style is the Penelope (pockets!!!).

A Personal Favorite:  My college roommate/lifetime bestie recently gifted me with a  gorgeous piece of jewelry made by her late mother who I absolutely adored.  It was such a personal gift that I wept.  Do you have something in your life that powerfully conveys how you feel about someone in your life?  Share it!

An Alternative Gift:  Think of a cause your love one supports and make a donation on her behalf.  Many nonprofits are prepared with alternative gift cards that celebrate the gift.

What gifts are you excited to give this holiday season?

And, a small note, none of these links are affiliate links or anything like that.  These are just things that I love to give (or get) that I wanted to share with you.

 

The Happy Sheet: Power

power

Mission Manifest goes virtual!

you are here on purpose

When I was finishing up grad school, my final advisor approached me.

“I noticed that I never saw you in a publishing workshop,” he said. “Did you go to any?”

I explained that I hadn’t.  The publishing workshops had been optional, and I went to graduate school with one intention to be a better teacher.  To be the kind of teacher who could help my students use the power of writing to find the voice, embrace their passion, discover their purpose, and move into giving their gifts to the world fueled by powerful self-awareness.  I had no desire to publish.

He starred at me as I said all this, a look of incredulity on his face.

“Would you have felt better if you had, at let’s say, 20, read any of this stuff that you just spent the last two years writing?  If someone had written these things for you to read?”

“Well, yeah,” I said, confused.

“You have to think of your classroom as more than just four walls.  Books can be classrooms.  Aren’t you learning all the time from books?  I understand that your mission is to teach but I want you to understand that your classroom is not just a physical space that you occupy with your group of students.  Classrooms are that but there are all sorts of classrooms in this world and what you write can be a classroom if you would let it.”

I am thinking of this story this week because just like I expanded my sense of where I could be in community after that conversation with my graduate school advisor (and that conversation is the only reason I ever looked into publishing), I am once again expanding my sense of community.

Last month, as I was promoting my Mission::Manifest workshop (where participants write mission statements that claim their passion and purpose and personal manifestos inspired by their own values and ways of being in the world), I was asked by many people to offer this workshop virtually.  And those requests made me think again about how when we share space, it doesn’t have to be confined to four walls.

And so I am so excited that those requests inspired me to reconceptionalize Mission:Manifest so that anyone, anywhere can participate and you are invited to join me at the virtual table.

What is Mission::Manifest?

Imagine having a one sentence touchstone to refer to every time you are trying to make the call on whether an opportunity is right for you or not.

Consider the magic of having your rules for being in the world prominently displayed in your home or office, grounding you in your truth, your sense of what’s right, your sense of how to be.

Mission:: Manifest is a journey into your truth that will reveal to you a powerful mission statement and inspiring manifesto so that you can use these two tools everyday to clarify who you are, what you want, and how you wish to be in the world.

It is powerful work– work you’ll start with a inspiring pre-workshop workbook then crystalize into your unique mission and manifesto during our two hour fun, energizing, and powerful tele-seminar on December 10th from 7 to 9 pm EST.

Wondering what is it like to work with me?  

Well, I can say that I think it is fun and intense in the best possible way and, hopefully, inspiring, but I am sure you’d much rather hear what others’ have to say.  So here you go…

Rosie Molinary lights up a room the moment she enters.  Rosie’s contagious enthusiasm for helping each woman live the life she wants inspired our group beyond my expectations.  I hired Rosie to speak at to the Charlotte General Electric’s Women’s Network about the tools she developed to help women create their own “Hopeful Year” based on the recommendation of a colleague that had participated in a similar workshop with Rosie at the Charlotte Junior League.  Rosie taught us to use information to make changes rather than to be judgmental and self-critical.  She taught us how to be more purposeful rather than getting wrapped up in a list of to dos created based on others’ needs.  Rosie’s real life examples hit home for all of us.  Her casual, down-to-earth style led everyone to be an active participant.  Rosie drove us to dig deeper into what we each really want and to examine why we aren’t giving it to ourselves.  Then she gave us the tools we need to make changes in our lives and to be proud of ourselves for who we are and what we want to do with our time.  Rosie was an inspiration to all of us.  Every woman in attendance raved about how inspiring Rosie was and they all left talking about how they are going to make their lives happier.  I can not thank Rosie enough for the gifts she imparted on our GE community.

~Lisa Firestone, Wharton MBA/Board of Directors GE Women’s Network Charlotte/Marketing – GE Capital Retail Finance

If I could describe my Passion Purpose Plunge retreat experience in one word, it would be REJUVENATING. Rosie has a great mix of wonderful, whimsical enthusiasm and specific, organized planning. These came together to create a plan for my upcoming year that excites me and challenges me. It’s no longer a clump of vague ideas wrestling with each other, but a set plan that purposefully moves me forward and offers many opportunities for growth and new experiences. It was great to talk about my desires and hopes and have someone listen and forge them into something attainable, someone to remind me that a lot is in my hands – for one, how I face and treat each day.  Having Rosie as a mentor is refreshing and life-giving. From the food provided to the exercises of discernment and planning we did, I felt taken care of and listened to. It was great to be able to step back from my assumptions of what society thinks I should do with my life and think about what I actually want to do. No matter where you are or what you’re looking for in life, Rosie will provide a safe space and affirming ways to go forward.

~Claire Asbury

I attended Rosie’s 2012 VisionSPARK workshop with the hopes of setting some clearer work goals for myself. Those hopes were met and far surpassed. Just by spending time with Rosie I felt smarter, more grounded, and more capable. One of her coolest gifts is the ability to listen to women and extract the truth about what they are feeling. I think this has something to do with her amazing insight and incredible vocabulary…  Rosie is like a modern day shaman and midwife; she sees your best potential and then helps you deliver it to the world.

~Michelle Icard

 Want to claim your mission and pen your manifesto? 

Join me on December 10th (7 to 9 pm EST, all you need is a phone!).  And because this is my inaugural tele-seminar, I am offering it for just $35 USD.  Register now.  

I cannot wait to play, explore, dream, and claim with you!

Questions?

Let me know. I would be happy to answer them!

Friday Reflections

bright smile
Friday Reflections is all about reflecting on the week by observing our senses.  My hope is that this will be a gentle, easy way to tune into how we are doing and what we are experiencing weekly when journaling in general can feel so daunting.

Now, for this week’s Friday Reflections (with each sense as your inspiration, consider how experiencing it impacted your week).

Here is my sensory round-up for this week:

40th Collage

tasting ::  homemade birthday cupcakes (vanilla on vanilla), hot chocolate, a football stadium hotdog, hibachi vegetables and shrimp, hummus and naan, mashed potatoes and asparagus, zucchini fritters, a wheat berry salad, fontina grilled cheese, chocolate covered pretzels, Brunswick Stew

hearing ::  the electric cheers of a stadium full of people thrilled that their team is playing on Monday Night Football and on a winning streak.  BF surprised me with MNF football tickets featuring the Carolina Panthers vs. the New England Patriots, playing ON my fortieth birthday, and the Panthers won in the most thrilling fashion.  We stood in the cold for three and a half hours and screamed, clapped, stomped, and it was a friggin’ ball.  It will also take me a full week to recover from standing for hours and staying up late because I am forty and all but it was so worth it.

smelling :: the heady fragrance of a beautiful bouquet of flowers (I call them my Miss America flowers) that my college roommates/besties sent me for my birthday.  Gorgeous to look at and to smell as they grace our dining room table.

seeing ::  my sweet, sweet parents as we spent the weekend with them celebrating my dad’s 76th birthday.  It has been a batch of hard, hard years for my family and so I just savor up any time we get to just be with each other and forget about things like cancer, strokes, brain injuries and more.

feeling ::  really loved.  My friends, extended family, and immediate family showered me with birthday affection and it was just so surprising and so sweet.  I am a lucky woman.   

wishing/hoping ::  for a nice, relaxing weekend before the hubbub of the season starts.  I love the hubbub but I also love some counterbalancing yin to my yang and so I am looking forward to the calm before the celebration.

What about you?  What were your sensational experiences this week?  Please share!

This post was inspired by Teacher Goes Back to School who was inspired by Pink of Perfection’s Five Sense Friday.

My favorite reads in my 39th year

39th year reads
I love talking about books. Since reading a certain number of books each year is one of my birthday list items, I wanted to look back and share my favorite books with you from my 39th year.
As I read over the list I was struck by how many of the books are ones that I could recommend. A few years ago, I adopted a policy of not finishing books that I didn’t truly find compelling and that mean that the books that make it to the list are usually ones I want to finish (a few rare exceptions like books I finish for book club that I may not have loved or books that I finished because they are only one I had with me while I was traveling).  Although I really could recommend most of the books from my list, in the interest of being discerning, I am picking out my favorites (for different reasons) for you.  There are some definite themes in the books I sought out this year:  younger adult books, split time periods, thrillers, books that incorporate storytelling in really modern ways (using email, google searches, Facebook status posts, Google searches and more as ways to drive the plot forward), books that incorporate storytelling in “old” ways (the use of letters!!!), and books with some comedic chops.  So, in no particular order in terms of favorites– the order is based on the order I read them in this year-,my favorite reads from this past year…
The synopsis from Powell’s:  A heartbreaking, stay-up-all-night novel from the New York Times bestselling author of Me Before YouA Brief Encounter for our time, The Last Letter from Your Lover is a sophisticated, spellbinding double love story that spans decades and thrillingly evokes a bygone era. In 1960, Jennifer Stirling wakes in the hospital and remembers nothing—not the car accident that put her there, not her wealthy husband, not even her own name. Searching for clues, she finds an impassioned letter, signed simply “B,” from a man for whom she seemed willing to risk everything. In 2003, journalist Ellie Haworth stumbles upon the letter and becomes obsessed with learning the unknown lovers fate—hoping it will inspire her own happy ending. Remarkably moving, this is a novel for romantics of every age.
My thoughts:  Oh, this tale of lost love was sweet and surprising and will be of interest to any romantic.  I loved the different points of view featured, the simultaneous love stories, and the different periods of time represented in this piece.
The synopsis from Powell’s:  Díaz turns his remarkable talent to the haunting, impossible power of love — obsessive love, illicit love, fading love, maternal love. On a beach in the Dominican Republic, a doomed relationship flounders. In the heat of a hospital laundry room in New Jersey, a woman does her lover’s washing and thinks about his wife. In Boston, a man buys his love child, his only son, a first baseball bat and glove. At the heart of these stories is the irrepressible, irresistible Yunior, a young hardhead whose longing for love is equaled only by his recklessness — and by the extraordinary women he loves and loses: artistic Alma; the aging Miss Lora; Magdalena, who thinks all Dominican men are cheaters; and the love of his life, whose heartbreak ultimately becomes his own. In prose that is endlessly energetic, inventive, tender, and funny, the stories in the New York Times-Bestselling This Is How You Lose Her lay bare the infinite longing and inevitable weakness of the human heart. They remind us that passion always triumphs over experience, and that “the half-life of love is forever.”

My thoughts: I have heard Junot Diaz speak twice and really love his perspective.  He has a unique, powerful voice.  He’s not for everyone– his language is a bit direct and if F bombs make you blush, stay away.  But this group of linked short stories are so powerful and real and true and Diaz’s voice is like no other.  I listened to this one on tape and Junot Diaz is the reader, and he’s a fabulous reader (not every writer is, to be honest).  He zeroes in on the human condition– especially for boys and men of color– in an honest, searing, incisive way and it’s breathtaking.
The synopsis from Powell’s:  A “cheerfully engaging”* novel for anyone whos ever asked herself, “How did I get here?”

 Alice Love is twenty-nine, crazy about her husband, and pregnant with her first child.  So imagine Alices surprise when she comes to on the floor of a gym (a gym! She HATES the gym) and is whisked off to the hospital where she discovers the honeymoon is truly over — shes getting divorced, , she has three kids, and shes actually 39 years old. Alice must reconstruct the events of a lost decade, and find out whether its possible to reconstruct her life at the same time. She has to figure out why her sister hardly talks to her, and how is it that shes become one of those super skinny moms with really expensive clothes. Ultimately, Alice must discover whether forgetting is a blessing or a curse, and whether its possible to start over…
My thoughts:  One of my focus areas is on intentional living, making sure that the life you get is one you wanted to get and not having life happen to you so that you wake up, ten years later, and think, “How the hell did that happen?” And because empowering women to be intentional is such a part of my focus, this book had me in its first pages, when Alice wakes up with partial amnesia and cannot believe that the life she is living is her life because it is so different from what she (the 29 year old she that she thinks she still is) imagined for herself.  I also loved how this book so powerfully showed how little things can splinter, fractures build up, things change if we are not careful and deliberate.  It is a light, tender, and thoughtful read.
The synopsis from Powell’s: Ellen OFarrell is a professional hypnotherapist who works out of the eccentric beachfront home she inherited from her grandparents. Its a nice life, except for her tumultuous relationship history. Shes stoic about it, but at this point, Ellen wouldnt mind a lasting one. When she meets Patrick, shes optimistic. Hes attractive, single, employed, and best of all, he seems to like her back. Then comes that dreaded moment: He thinks they should have a talk.  Braced for the worst, Ellen is pleasantly surprised. It turns out that Patricks ex-girlfriend is stalking him. Ellen thinks,Actually, thats kind of interesting. She’s dating someone worth stalking. She’s intrigued by the woman’s motives. In fact, she’d even love to meet her.  Ellen doesn’t know it, but she already has.
My thoughts: Years ago, I taught a college seminar on Exploring the Creative Process.  One of the assignments I gave my students was an immersive experience where they had to fully take in the full catalog of an artist’s work.  The one requirement was that it had to be somebody whose work they really loved.  From there, they had to read every book they had ever written, listen to every album they had ever released, watch every movie they had ever directed, or look up every work of art they had ever painted.  I bring this up because I feel like I am going a bit immersive with Moriarty right now as I have two recommendations for you now and have her newest book, The Husband’s Secret, on my bedside table.  This book is a really great mix of intrigue and romance and it has a gorgeous passage in it about parenting.
The synopsis from Powell’s: Bernadette Fox is notorious. To her Microsoft-guru husband, she’s a fearlessly opinionated partner; to fellow private-school mothers in Seattle, she’s a disgrace; to design mavens, she’s a revolutionary architect, and to 15-year-old Bee, she is a best friend and, simply, Mom.  Then Bernadette disappears. It began when Bee aced her report card and claimed her promised reward: a family trip to Antarctica. But Bernadette’s intensifying allergy to Seattle — and people in general — has made her so agoraphobic that a virtual assistant in India now runs her most basic errands. A trip to the end of the earth is problematic.  To find her mother, Bee compiles email messages, official documents, secret correspondence — creating a compulsively readable and touching novel about misplaced genius and a mother and daughter’s role in an absurd world.
My thoughts: If you have talked to me at all about books this year, then you already know that I have insisted you read this book.  It is hysterical– laugh out loud funny which is such a feat for a writer.  Semple’s characters are colorful and her dialogue fabulous.  Moreover, I love how she uses unconventional tools like emails and more to tell the story.  It is a fast and furious read that will delight you.
The synopsis from Powell’s: When Kate, single mother and law firm partner, gets an urgent phone call summoning her to her daughter’s exclusive private school, she’s shocked. Amelia has been suspended for cheating, something that would be completely out of character for her over-achieving, well-behaved daughter.  Kate rushes to Grace Hall, but what she finds when she finally arrives is beyond comprehension.  Her daughter Amelia is dead.  Despondent over having been caught cheating, Amelia has jumped from the school’s roof in an act of impulsive suicide. At least that’s the story Grace Hall and the police tell Kate. In a state of shock and overcome by grief, Kate tries to come to grips with this life-shattering news. Then she gets an anonymous text:  Amelia didn’t jump.  The moment she sees that message, Kate knows in her heart it’s true. Clearly Amelia had secrets, and a life Kate knew nothing about. Wracked by guilt, Kate is determined to find out what those secrets were and who could have hated her daughter enough to kill. She searches through Amelia’s e-mails, texts, and Facebook updates, piecing together the last troubled days of her daughter’s life.Reconstructing Amelia is a stunning debut page-turner that brilliantly explores the secret world of teenagers, their clandestine first loves, hidden friendships, and the dangerous cruelty that can spill over into acts of terrible betrayal.
My thoughts:  This is a heart in your throat read, especially for parents.  But it is good and gripping and also uses alternative methods of storytelling to move the narrative forward.  Another fast and furious read as you try to figure out what exactly happened to Amelia.

The synopsis from Powell’s:  A sweeping story told in letters, spanning two continents and two world wars, Jessica Brockmole’s atmospheric debut novel captures the indelible ways that people fall in love, and celebrates the power of the written word to stir the heart.  March 1912: Twenty-four-year-old Elspeth Dunn, a published poet, has never seen the world beyond her home on Scotland’s remote Isle of Skye. So she is astonished when her first fan letter arrives, from a college student, David Graham, in far-away America. As the two strike up a correspondence — sharing their favorite books, wildest hopes, and deepest secrets — their exchanges blossom into friendship, and eventually into love. But as World War I engulfs Europe and David volunteers as an ambulance driver on the Western front, Elspeth can only wait for him on Skye, hoping he’ll survive.  June 1940: At the start of World War II, Elspeth’s daughter, Margaret, has fallen for a pilot in the Royal Air Force. Her mother warns her against seeking love in wartime, an admonition Margaret doesn’t understand. Then, after a bomb rocks Elspeth’s house, and letters that were hidden in a wall come raining down, Elspeth disappears. Only a single letter remains as a clue to Elspeth’s whereabouts. As Margaret sets out to discover where her mother has gone, she must also face the truth of what happened to her family long ago.

My thoughts:  I am a former high school history teacher so I have to be honest, I now typically shy away from any book that is historical in nature.  I got filled up on history early in my life.  Is that awful to say?  Well, it is my truth so it is what it is.  That said, this was a book that I had to read regardless of it going back in time and dealing with two periods in history that I read and studied A LOT in order to teach them.  A romantic book, these letters will make you ache in loss, recognition, and hope.  Really spellbinding.

Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell                                                                                                                                                                                                                   The synopsis from Powell’s:  “Eleanor & Park reminded me not just what its like to be young and in love with a girl, but also what its like to be young and in love with a book.” John Green, The New York Times Book Review

Bono met his wife in high school, Park says.

So did Jerry Lee Lewis, Eleanor answers.

I’m not kidding, he says.

You should be, she says, we’re 16.

What about Romeo and Juliet?

Shallow, confused, then dead.

I love you, Park says.

Wherefore art thou, Eleanor answers.

I’m not kidding, he says.

You should be.

Set over the course of one school year in 1986, this is the story of two star-crossed misfits — smart enough to know that first love almost never lasts, but brave and desperate enough to try. When Eleanor meets Park, you’ll remember your own first love — and just how hard it pulled you under

My thoughts:  This is such a nostalgic book for anyone who grew up in the 80s and, even better, it is nostalgic for anyone who had a teenage first love.  Oh, my heart reading this one.  I loved both Eleanor and Park so much and really related to their experiences of not quite fitting in until they found each other.  The storytelling in this is brilliant, and I love the perspective of each narrator.

The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion  

The synopsis from Powell’s:  Don Tillman, professor of genetics, has never been on a second date. He is a man who can count all his friends on the fingers of one hand, whose lifelong difficulty with social rituals has convinced him that he is simply not wired for romance. So when an acquaintance informs him that he would make a “wonderful” husband, his first reaction is shock. Yet he must concede to the statistical probability that there is someone for everyone, and he embarks upon The Wife Project. In the orderly, evidence-based manner with which he approaches all things, Don sets out to find the perfect partner. She will be punctual and logical — most definitely not a barmaid, a smoker, a drinker, or a late-arriver.  Yet Rosie Jarman is all these things. She is also beguiling, fiery, intelligent — and on a quest of her own. She is looking for her biological father, a search that a certain DNA expert might be able to help her with. Don’s Wife Project takes a back burner to the Father Project and an unlikely relationship blooms, forcing the scientifically minded geneticist to confront the spontaneous whirlwind that is Rosie — and the realization that love is not always what looks good on paper.  The Rosie Project is a moving and hilarious novel for anyone who has ever tenaciously gone after life or love in the face of overwhelming challenges.

My thoughts:  This one reminded me so much of Where’d You Go, Bernadette.  Here, the quirky male character must face himself and his fears when life goes in a direction he didn’t expect.  Conditioned to maintain control, Tillman has to figure out what to do when things get a bit out of control.  It is funny and tender and you’ll find yourself rooting for everyone, even a philandering husband.

What have been your favorite reads this year?  Have you read any of these books?  What did you think of them?