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Any poetry lovers out there? I have always loved poetry.

This poem reflects survivors in any situation.

It can certainly work for caregivers who are struggling on a day to day basis. You are stronger than you know.


The Oak Tree

by Johnny Ray Ryder Jr.

A mighty wind blew night and day.

It stole the Oak Tree’s leaves away.

Then snapped it’s boughs and pulled it’s bark

until the Oak was tired and stark.

But still the Oak Tree held it’s ground while other trees fell all around.

The weary wind gave up and spoke,

“How can you still be standing Oak?”

The Oak Tree said, I know that you can break each branch of mine in two,

carry each leaf away, shake my limbs and make me sway.

But I have roots stretched in the earth,

growing stronger since my birth,

You’ll never touch them, for you see

they are the deepest part of me.

Until today, I wasn’t sure

of just how much I could endure.

But now I’ve found with thanks to you,

I’m stronger than I ever knew.
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I remembered in the night that the Fall of Jerusalem and Masada guy was Josephus, not Herodotus. I've been kicking myself! Not that anyone would probably care a pin...
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MargaretMcKen,

I re-read Pepys Diary every two or three years
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Beatty, I read Hidden Valley Road. Isn't it an amazing book. The view it gives you into mental illness, how it has been diagnosed and treated over time is alone amazing, but this family's story is quite beyond belief.
Margaret, yes, I keep only what I want to re read and my library is bursting. Next on my read it again list is Norman Mailer's Ancient Evenings. I still remember it so fondly.
Want Biblical studies and History and a con man story and a Woman Harvard Professor of Divinity goes rouge? I am mesmerized and underlining like mad in
"Veritas: A Harvard Professor, a Con Man, and the Gospel of Jesus's Wife" . You think the Da Vinci Code was fun? This one is more fun, and it's real life. Author is Ariel Sabar.
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I’ve never joined this thread because I don’t like current-release novels, and I read several books at a time. Here goes:
* Shakespeare’s Wife, by Germain Greer, plus comparisons with Shakespeare the Enigma (mostly about Shakespeare’s father), and the sonnets (or some of them). I even read ‘Venus and Adonis’, his first published work, viewed as semi-porn at the time, because I kept seeing references to it.
* Pepys, Savior of the Navy (but I’m getting bored with this, haven’t picked it up since Pepys left Tangier). I think I’ll reread Claire Tomalin on ‘Samuel Pepys', to remind me of much more interesting stuff.
* Great Excavations (archeology to match up with other reads, including Agatha Christie Mallowan’s ‘Come Tell You How You Live’).
* Black Sheep, Georgette Heyer regency romance. I know most of these almost by heart, and recite them to myself in the night when I’m stressed.
* A couple of books including info from Herodotus, like the fall of Masada and the fall of Jerusalem, plus 'Great Excavations' and the Bible for comparison.

The theme that comes next depends on a decent Op Shop! My current reading matter always litters the house in piles. I only keep the books I want to re-read.
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Gershun, I have just added that to my reading list! It sounds like it’s a good book, has great reviews!
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I am reading Hidden Valley Road by Robert Kolker.

Back of book quote 'The heartening story of a mid-February American family with twelve children, six of them diagnosed with schizophrenia, that became science's great hope in the quest to understand the disease'.

Holy Cow! I am fascinated, appalled, sad & inspired.
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Worried, I'm reading a book right now that is during that time just after the Holocaust. It's called The Diplomat's Wife by Pam Jenoff. Quite good so far.
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Just finished “Night” by Ellie Weisel, it was difficult in the beginning and I had to stop reading for a few days. I can’t say I enjoyed the book because of the horror of the holocaust. It is a gripping story and I am glad I read it. It is very well written.

I have now started “The Last Sunrise” by Harold Gordon, who is a local holocaust survivor. He was around 10 and a Jew living in Poland during the holocaust. My husband and I met him & his dear wife around a decade ago, maybe longer, at Starbucks and he was kind enough to gift us a copy of his book. We were all regulars at the time and we run in to each other at Starbucks regularly. He & his wife and their friends were so warm and welcoming. So kind. We have not seen them in a few years though.
anyway If you are in to history or like me, just want to learn more about the holocaust, I recommend this book. I am about 1/4 of the way through and am at the part where the Germans have just invaded Poland (Russia had already come in & taken over and I must say, reading what life was like after the Russian army arrived in Poland, I know understand why some Californians call Newson “Hitler with hair spray”. Not that anything he has done to Californians compares to the holocaust. What I mean is, his COVID orders are strikingly similar to how Jews were treated in the beginning-curfews, not allowed to operate certain businesses, not allowed to patronize certain businesses)Anyway....the first 1/4 of the book Mr. Gordon describes his family dynamics, his childhood and what life was like in Poland as the world war was brewing. I really enjoyed his perspective, which is that of a 10 year old boy. I am not sure I am prepared for what is to come in his story though.
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Houseplant,

I heard that was really good. Aren’t they doing a Netflix special on it?
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The Radium Girls by Kate Moor. Women & industrial WWs 1 & 11.

The World According To Fannie Davis by Bridgett Davis. (Bridgett's mom worked the numbers (gaming) to support her family in pursuit of the American Dream.

I buy a couple magazines each month from the bookstore.
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Joyce Carol Oates "Night, Sleep, Death, The Stars" which is wonderful so far.
John Banville's mystery "Snow".
Reading two and three books at a time now, but they have to be very different, so as not to confuse characters, story lines, hee hee.
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Should have knocked on wood now they have stopped working again.

Now I think AC is freezing my kindles. It doesn't happen on other sites.

Could this be AC?
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Just as I decided it was time for a new kindle, it arrives, then the silk tabs start working again.

And I have two kindles, both started having the same problem.

Haven't even opened the new one. Guess I will return it, I sure don't need three of them.
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I'm still plowing through the same book I posted about last time. I have about 50 pages to go. Then I'll most likely hurl it at the wall.🤨
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My newest is Veritas, A Harvard Professor, a Con Man and the Gospel of Jesus's Wife is my newest. I am underlining like mad, and ruining this book, but I will be keeping it, and I paid for it, so I get to do that. I am an atheist, but I am fascinated by religion, ALL religion, and as much as I THOUGHT I knew about the hidden gospels, the gnostics, and the coptics, I knew not much at all. I am entranced by this book. I love a good con story as well, as I love the books on any "art heist", so I would have paid twice for this one.
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A Man Called Ove and The Mountain Between Us (sooo much better than the movie) have been my 2 favorites in the last few months. Before We Were Yours was really good too. I’m now reading The Guest List which is grabbing me more and more as I get closer to answers.
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I was putting books away, and dipped into ‘All the President’s Men’ by Woodward and Bernstein, the journalists who pursued Watergate in the Nixon era. I realised that it will be great to read the inevitable book/s about these last few months. Not so stressful as reality, and let us all hope that there will be a positive ending!
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I just finished Crow by Amy Spurway.
I had this on my must read list for a long time but was ambivalent to start because I couldn't envision how a story about someone who is dying could keep from being either hokey and unrealistic or depressingly maudlin. Although it is very culturally Cape Breton I don't think you need to be Canadian to identify with the setting or the characters. I give it ⭐⭐⭐⭐
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Am now in middle of Elizabeth Berg's "I'll be Seeing You", a book about her own and her sister's care of their aging (90s to their 70s) parents. Diary form full of present day problems and past memories of her parents. EXCELLENT for any caregiver.
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I agree with Golden & Chriscat. I have six books waiting to be read by my bed. 😊
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Golden, I'd say your quote suits me perfectly right now. There's nothing better than a stack of new books with your name on them, waiting to be read...
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Golden,
💞🤣🤣🤣🤣💞
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Found a quote that fits me well.

"Sometimes you just need to lay on the couch and read for a couple of years."
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Wow 14 generations, what year would that be NHWM? The longest branch of my tree I have info on in North America takes me back 7 generations to the 1750's and my great uncle traced a couple of generations beyond that in Europe. I suppose counting forward from my own there are an additional 2 generations now.
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I’m reading Deadly Cross by James Patterson.
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I am reading genealogy records. So far I have gone back 14 generations!

I love reading the beautiful names of my ancestors.

Ever wonder what future generations are going to think of these new names? LOL

I named my girls traditional names.

I am loving reading the census records.

My parents only paid $5.00 a month in rent when they first married. This was for a furnished apartment!

I traced my English roots back to Suffolk.

My family from Spain are from the Canary Islands.

I had some trouble at first. I discovered that my great uncle changed the family name. He was doing a bit of bootlegging! So, in case he got busted he didn’t want to disgrace the family. Hahaha 🤣

Oh, I found a few cousins that I was able to contact and they helped me in my search too.

I am doing my husband’s family too.

It’s been fun!
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I am with CM on this one. I don’t finish a book that I am not interested in.

I have been known to walk out on a movie too if I strongly dislike it.

I am a self confessed music snob. I refuse to listen to crappy music!

Years ago my husband and I went to see a movie that seemed like it would be interested in.

I didn’t understand any of that stupid movie. I hung in there because I kept thinking that it had to get better.

When we left I asked my husband to please explain the plot to me. He said, “Honey, if I understood it, I would be glad to tell you. I am just as lost as you are.” LOL

That confusing movie ended up cleaning up at the academy awards! Go figure! We both hated it.

I blocked it out so badly that I can’t even remember the name.

It was one of those ‘artsy’ movies that was extremely boring!

After that, we left the movie if we felt it was a stinker!

I love interesting movies but this one was just plain weird!
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I hear ya CM. I read the whole book and if it's cr*p I drop kick it somewhere.

I guess this compulsion to read the whole book is a little OCD or maybe cause we didn't have much growing up and getting books at the library was a treat that I didn't take for granted.

Or maybe I'm just an idiot. :P
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I used to think that, Gershun. I always admired Dorothy Parker's bold criticism "this book should not be tossed aside lightly, but hurled with great force" but I thought her too harsh, and I thought it was good for my soul to try harder.

I can't remember which title or author it was that liberated me, but I got to the end and thought "well that's eight hours I'll never get back." I saw red, then I saw the light, and nowadays if I don't finish a book I consider it the writer's failure and not mine.
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