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sarahjean77

sarahjean77

I am a married, busy, stay-at-home mom of three.
More about me...

my reading blog: http://50bookchallenge.neggies.com

my paperbackswap account: http://sarahjean.paperbackswap.com more »
  • Rapid City, SD, USA
  • member since February 21 2007

My Favorite books

     
 
 
 

Public Notes

  • Judy F

    Judy F says

    Dear SarahJean:
    Hello. How are you and your family? I tried knitting once but can't seem to get the hang of it. Could you please tell me how to do it? I would really like to try it again. What genres of books do you enjoy most? I like mysteries (that keep you guessing), romance, romantic comedy, romantic suspense, some true crime, animal stories, funny books and I am going to try reading some chick lit books. I would like to be your friend on Shelfari. If you can recommend some good books I would appreciate it. Do you have any books listed on Frugal Reader? Do you let other people borrow your books when you're done with them? Please write back. Sincerely, Judy

    posted 5 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Peter C

    Peter C says

    Dear Sarahjean: I am an author from Massachusetts. My debut novel HUNTING THE KING was published in April. If you enjoy reading a good thriller like DA VINCI CODE, you might like HUNTING. The novel revolves around a charismatic young woman named Molly O’Dwyer. Molly was five years old when she witnessed her mother die in a fire. She never knew her father. After her mother’s death, she was raised on the campus of a Jesuit college. Now an archaeologist, she has been recruited to participate on a dig in war torn Iraq. As a scientist she is compelled to discover whatever or whoever is buried under the sands of ancient Babylon. As an observant Catholic, she is scared that whatever she finds will have devastating consequences for her faith. There is a wonderful YouTube book trailer well worth watching if you have the chance. Peter

    posted 9 months ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    Visit The Rory Gilmore Book Club to nominate our Winter Read!

    Looking forward to seeing you there!

    posted 12 months ago. ( send a note )
  • Mana S

    Mana S says

    I am the Moon everywhere and nowhere.
    Do not seek me outside;
    I abide in your very life.
    Everybody calls you towards himself;
    I invite you nowhere except to yourself.
    Poetry is like the boat and its meaning is like the sea:
    Come onboard at once!
    Let me sail this boat!


    –Rumi

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Mohammad R

    Mohammad R says

    FATHER FRANK’S RANTS

    Rant Number 318 10 September 2008

    That 9/11 Again

    A wolf once reproached a newborn lamb: ‘I know you. You are the one who dirtied my water last year!’

    ‘It wasn’t me’, bleated the poor creature.

    ‘Yes, it was you!’ the wolf growled.

    ‘I wasn’t even born last year!’ the lamb pleaded.

    ‘Well, it must have been your mother then!’ the wolf grinned, and quickly devoured the lamb. The lamb’s poor mother was helpless. With horror, she witnessed her little lamb torn to shreds by the wolf’s sharp teeth. Can you blame her when afterwards, in a fit of motherly passion, she butted the wolf?

    A simple story. Actually, Osama Bin Laden narrated it. Just after 9/11. In a video shown on Al Jazeera TV. A straight allegory, folks. The big bad wolf is America. The ewe lamb stands for the worldwide victims of her unjust policies, notably towards Muslims. The harmless sheep which dares to hit back at the nasty wolf…well, you’ll easily figure that out.

    Somehow, Bin Laden’s curious use of this parable reminds me of a stock rhetorical question that WWI judges investigating the motives of conscientious objectors often asked: ‘If a German was about to kill your mother, what would you do?’ Nasty one, eh? It usually confused the objectors. Until the day a bright one refused to be intimidated. He countered: ‘Well, there is one thing I would certainly not do. I would not set out to kill the German’s mother in return.’

    He was right. Two wrongs don’t make a right. Tendentious as the question was, whatever the moral dilemmas involved in how to stop an unjust attacker, the solution cannot lie in committing another, similar or worse injustice. Such as the killing of other innocent persons. Too bad that’s precisely what Al Qaeda’s ghostly leader got wrong. Let Uncle Sam’s foreign policy sins be as scarlet as those of the harlot in the Book of Revelation. No matter. Still, the people massacred in the twin towers were innocent. Pace homely raconteur Bin Laden, they were not like savage wolves. Nor were they intent on killing anyone. They were not fighting a war. They wore no military uniforms. As civilian non-combatants, they were strictly morally innocent. As objectively innocent as the mother of my imaginary German soldier. Anyone endowed with a shred of moral sense would grasp that to murder her would have been a crime. And so indeed a great crime it was to massacre the innocent civilians in the twin towers. Sad Bin Laden couldn’t get that.

    My son Linus, with whom I was sharing these thoughts online, objected. ‘But dad, you forget Bin Laden was the Americans’ own creature. Virtually a CIA agent he was. Suited their purposes pretty well when they armed him and his men to fight in Afghanistan against the Soviets. To me it’s like the Frankenstein’s story. The monster they created turned against them. It’s kind of poetic justice, isn’t it?’ And he went on to quote Noah Chomsky: at the time the CIA funded and backed the Afghani jihadists because ‘they were the best killers around.’

    It grieves me to agree with my cantankerous lad (takes after his dad, I confess) but he has a point. Only a small one, however. It is true, for example, the American feminists who howl loudly about the Taliban’ attitudes towards women don’t seem to notice Afghani females were never as free as under the socialist Soviet-backed, Najibullah regime. That never stopped the Reagan administration from waging its ferocious proxy war against the Rousskies. Surely they knew the Afghani resistance was outright misogynist, measured by Hillary Clinton’s standards. Brutal power politics overrode the rights of women, clearly. Sigh… what’s new?

    Dear Linus, you are right. In using Bin Laden’s services, Uncle Sam made a rod for his own back. Similarly, the Israelis way back nurtured and supported Islamist Hamas against the secularist PLO. Bet they wish they hadn’t now. Kind of karmic, isn’t it?

    Nevertheless the Soviets had no right to invade Afghanistan. And Bin Laden way back was definitely a hero in the eyes of Muslims. But all that still does not make 9/11 right. Call me old-fashioned, the deliberate, direct killing of innocent people is never justified. That principle has an important intellectual pedigree, rooted in natural law thought. In the 16th century, the great Spanish theologians Vitoria and Suarez affirmed it in the face of the abuses of the conquistadores in the Indies. The Indians were children of God, endowed with natural rights. They could not be deprived of their properties, enslaved or killed. Indeed, Vitoria taught that the Muslim enemy had rights too. He thus stressed the vital matter of moral innocence. ‘The children of the Turks…should not be killed. Because they are innocent.’ Of course, the conquering Spaniards often ignored the teachings of the Church, just as today no Western government gives a damn for the laws of Christianity. Yet the natural law theologians’ achievements were later incorporated into international law. To ignore those teachings and norms today is to sink back into barbarism.

    ‘Dad, could you get me an interview with Bin Laden? I’d make a great film.’ Eh? Cheek! To explain. Linus trained in London as a film director. Now based in Sweden, he isn’t exactly the new Ingmar Bergman, believe you me. He also overrates his long-suffering father’s powers. I rather fancy the idea, though. Discussing theology with the Al Qaeda leader is an old ambition of mine. Not easily realisable, I grant you. Knocking around Peshawar souks, inquiring after old Osama’s mountain address might strike the locals as a bit quirky. And land the poor priest into some pretty grotty jail. The Yanks might even ship me off to Guantanamo. No, thanks.

    Should I, however, ever make it to meet Bin Laden, I’d risk telling him my own wolf story. Better, more optimistic than his own. One involving that wonderful Christian dervish, St Francis of Assisi. Look it up in the Saint’s Little Flowers. About the wonders of God’s grace. How it can turn even a ravenous wolf into a friend…

    Revd Frank Julian Gelli - numapomp@talk21.com

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    The Rory Gilmore Book Club: Discussion for Part Three of The Fountainhead is up. It's not too late to join in.

    Hope to see you there!

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Wanda McKiver

    Wanda McKiver says

    Please check out my book trailer at:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6k3ygQEVPrU

    Thank you!

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    I've just posted the discussion for Part Two of The Fountainhead on the Rory Gilmore Book Club. It isn't too late to join in!

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • ksn

    ksn says

    what did you like about TTTW?

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Rohan

    Rohan says

    Hi,
    Nice shelf... :)

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Shyam

    Shyam says

    Hi SarahThanks for accepting my Frd request...Happy reading

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    Rory Gilmore Book Club News:

    I've begun some discussion topics for Part One of The Fountainhead. I found some really great questions that should get us going on good discussion threads. I hope you'll be joining in.

    Also, if you do not have the introduction by Ayn Rand in your copy of the book, please send me an Admin message. Unless everyone has it, it is definitely worth it for me to type out the whole thing and get it up on the board!

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    Hi!

    The Fountainhead is our official Rory group read this summer. Since it is such a large book, I'm breaking down the four parts of the books into our four months of the summer season.

    June: Peter Keating
    July: Ellsworth M. Toohey
    August: Gail Wynand
    September: Howard Roark

    I'll send you a message when the discussion begins. Happy Reading!

    HH

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Karen J

    Karen J says

    I finally finished that ya-ya book. It was too cutesy for words! Even their nicknames were too precious. In the 1st book, Vivane commits incest against her children and it's not even brought up once in the 2nd ya-ya book. Weird! Did you read the 1st one?

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • HemingwayHeroine

    HemingwayHeroine says

    Summer Reading with Rory is here! Please visit the Rory Gilmore Book Club to vote for this season's good read.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • hnbrown

    hnbrown says

    I saw it on your wish list. :-) It's not out in paperback, though.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Maria M

    Maria M says

    Hi Sarah Jean, I just signed up for Shelfari last week to try to get the word out about my novel, and since you’re in the "chick lit" group I thought I'd drop you a note. (Plus given your moniker I'm guessing you were born in 1977, which makes you the perfect target age!)

    My book, “Perfect on Paper,” is about a 30-year-old single woman in San Francisco whose life is hardly perfect. Anyhow, I thought you might want to check it out. I have to start somewhere to get word-of-mouth going outside of my own friends, right? :)

    If you decide to read it, I hope you enjoy it- and if you enjoy it, please spread the word b/c grassroots marketing is all I have to get this thing off the ground!

    Thanks Sarah Jean! (and btw the book is on my shelf if you want to take a look)--

    --Maria
    mariamurnane@yahoo.com

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Barbara B

    Barbara B says

    Thanks for accepting my friend request. I see we have a lot of books in common. Hopefully, we'll have the chance to talk about them.

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )
  • Maggie Marr

    Maggie Marr says

    Sarahjean77
    Thank you for accepting my friend request.
    xo
    Maggie Marr
    Secrets of The Hollywood Girls Club
    Hollywood Girls Club

    posted 1 year ago. ( send a note )