Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Saturday, May 9, 2020

Alice Morse Earle and Colonial History

Some years ago I ran across a book by Alice Morse Earle called "Home Life in Colonial Days". I love history so I picked up the book and read it and was delighted with the detail of day to day life of this period that the book described. It covered everything from Colonial courtship to eating practices, to the process of making linen clothing to the "Horn Book", an early primer for childhood education. 

Alice Morse Earle is an American Historian who lived from 1851 to 1911. Her books are very detailed historical accounts about life of the Colonial period in America. You can find her books pretty much anywhere. The first book I bought was in a second hand book store.  If you use Kindle, there are some of her books that can be found inexpensively there.  

I haven't read all of her books; only about five so far, but have liked each one. I am currently reading Colonial Days in Old New York. 

Here is a list of some of her books with publishing dates:
The Sabbath in Puritan New England (1891)
China Collecting in America (1892)
Home Life in Colonial Days (1893)
Customs and Fashions in Old New England (1893)
Diary of Anna Green Winslow, A Boston School Girl of 1771 (1894)
Costume of Colonial Times (1894)
Colonial Dames and Goodwives (1895)
Margaret Winthrop (1895)
Colonial Days in Old New York (1896)
Curious Punishments of Bygone Days (1896)
In Old Naragansett: Romances and Realities (1898)
Child Life in Colonial Days (1899)
Stagecoach and Tavern Days (1900)
Old Time Gardens (1901)
Sun Dials and Roses of Yesterday (1902)
Two Centuries of Costume in America 1620-1820 (2 vol.) 1903

Monday, October 24, 2016

Leaf Magic

Even though my kids are grown and gone, I still have children's books around the house. I have classics that I read as a kid, books I read to my kids and now I read to my grandchildren when they visit.

I thinks this book is a real treasure. It's called Leaf Magic, by Margaret Mahy and was written in the 1970s.

This book is about a boy who wants a dog but finds instead that he is being followed home by a big orange leaf. The rest is magic. :-)

Leaf Magic by Margaret Mahy

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Three Favorite Homemaking Books.

Raising happy, positive families is important. Just as important is to teach them to be responsible, productive, and thrifty.

When I first got married, my homemaking experience was nothing more than taking care of my brothers while my Mom worked. My Dad had passed away when I was in 8th grade and my sister was attending high school in another town. (another story)

As a kid I had done some gardening, laundry, and kept up with my room. I also had taken sewing through 4-H.

When Dad passed away it became incumbent upon me to take care of my brothers so Mom could work.

That first summer I pretty much burned everything I tried to make. About all I could manage was Hamburger Helper. Me and brothers lost weight that summer!

Sometimes Mom worked two jobs so she didn't have much time for teaching me housekeeping skills but we managed.

Fast forward to being a newlywed and shortly afterward, a young Mom; I knew I needed help.

I ran across the homemaking books of author Beverly Nye. Her methods were geared to basic and perhaps more old fashioned homemaking but I learned a lot from her. My books became so dog-eared and stained that I wound up years later buying additional copies of each book.

These are three of Beverly Nye's books:
Everyone's a Homemaker - recipes, canning, food storage, household hints and cleaning helps.

A Family Raised on Sunshine - mostly a cookbook but has great advice on economical buying and cooking and on families in general.

A Family Raised on Rainbows - homemaking, crafts, gardening

I would personally recommend all three books, which can be bought used on Amazon and very cheaply I might add.

In closing, I would say that I found these books very useful especially in terms of saving money because although sometimes you just want to make quick meals, they do cost more and knowing how to cook from scratch will save you lots of dollars and Beverly's miscellaneous homemaking tips were also very valuable to me.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Land of Plenty

I am reading Home Life in Colonial Days by Alice Morse Earle. The book was originally written in 1898. This book offers incredible detail of the life of the colonist of the 1600s. 

In reading the book I am astounded at the natural resources that were available to them. Game and forests were plentiful, and it was not uncommon to catch lobsters 6 feet long or crabs as much as a foot long! Rivers that are now polluted were once teeming with fish. 

Sad to say much has changed in our landscape and our rivers and ocean since those days. I would love to see this country return to that kind of plenty but I don't know that it will ever happen. 

People wasted then like they waste now. Even though we don't see the kind of wildlife and forests that they did, we are not without resources and if we are wise and not wasteful we would have all we need for many years to come. 

I think natural resources today go beyond what the land and waters offer us. There is still plenty but it should be used carefully. What we have now in plenty is in the term of second hand goods and things that we already own. 

There are mountains of manufactured items in landfills and thrift shops that can and should be re-purposed. Recycling companies should continue to find ways to reuse items in landfills and we as consumers should be more careful with what we buy, find more ways to use what we have and use it efficiently and even find ways to re-purpose things in the second hand stores. 

I don't like that we are a country of such mass consumption and waste. I am not referring only to those who are in upper classes. Those who have less can be just as wasteful and it seems sometimes that we are hell bent on using every resource available so that there will be nothing left for future generations. 

This country is still a land of plenty although we might have to be a little more creative sometimes. I think most of us are up to the challenge though and if we set our minds to it can make sure it is still an abundant land for future generations.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Love Me Some Free Kindle Books!

This is a wonderful website that has FREE and 99 cent kindle books: You just need to go to Amazon first and log in and then go to this website then click on the book you want. 

You also need to look at the price when it brings up the amazon page for the book and make sure it still says 0.00 for the kindle book and you need to make sure it is set for your kindle so it will deliver to it. 

There are some pretty good books on the web site and you can search by category. 

You can also sign up at the web site to make a list of books you want so you can keep track of when amazon drops the price on them which is another wonderful feature, which I have not taken advantage of yet, but plan to soon.  

Here is the link:

http://www.ereaderiq.com/freebies/ 

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Childrens History and Economics Book and Curriculum Resource

I always like to share great links that I have run across and this is one that I found some years ago while searching for some info on Laura Ingalls Wilder. 

Blue Stocking Press focuses on Children's History, Economics and Government books and curriculum. They don't have a huge assortment, but what they do have is great, and any homeschoolers or those who are just looking for books on these subjects to broaden the kids' perspective about today's working world and about our history will like this website.

Blue Stocking Press 

Monday, September 10, 2012

Edible and Useful Plants of Texas and the Southwest

I have been reading Edible and Useful Plants of Texas and the Southwest by Delena Tull and though I am not that far into it, I am so struck by her thoughts on cultivating native plants in agriculture. To me it makes so much sense.

For some time now we have advocated using natives in our landscapes because they are more adapted to the area, use less water, are more disease resistant, and more drought tolerant. Why on earth are we not doing the same with the many plant based food sources available to us, in all countries and especially those facing severe food shortages? Why do we continue to grow the few primary crops that require so much water and pesticides when there are so many other native plants?

According to the book, there are about 500,000 species of plants and we only use 1000 for food even though there are many more that are edible. One of the many often ignored plants that could be cultivated more in the U.S. at least, is Amaranth.

There are many more plants I could mention here that I have read about so far, but I can see this post is already getting long so I will post more later. The key thought here I think, is cultivating desirable wild edible plants to feed a starving world.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Read From Your Email For Free


Just got the first of 90 Berlitz Spanish Lessons in my email from Daily Lit.com I am also reading a couple books from there. It is a great source for having books delivered by chapter to your email so you can read on your cell phone or computer. Most but not all, of the books are free.

Daily Lit

Thursday, January 8, 2009

California Or Bust by Dale Walker

CALIFORNIA OR BUST – AND I THINK THEY DID ‘BUST’

This story is one of those that comes from memory. This happened in 1922 or 1923. I was delivered into this world April 5, 1924 so you can see why I say it comes from memory.

I remember my mother telling about breaking the windshield out of the truck the day before they were to leave. Back then, it wasn’t like it is today – go to the phone or better yet, take your phone out of your pocket and call some company in Eagle Pass or Uvalde and tell them you needed a windshield and they would come and fix it the same day. No,. some different back then. Soooo, they drove to California without a windshield and back home too. I would imagine the budget wouldn’t allow fixing it anyway. Times were hard back then – that was the reason they were going to California to work; cash in on some of those hi wages!

My grandfather Rule – my mom’s dad – came to this country from Iowa and bought a farm here in Zavala County, a farm in Taft, Texas and property in Corpus Christi, Texas. I guess one could say he was quite wealthy. However, in the process of farming and things not going the way they should such as crop failure, river going dry leaving no water to irrigate with and train cars of vegetables getting lost on their way to the markets in the north or most likely, being stolen. He had borrowed all the money he could from local banks and ended up a broke man. He lost all the property he had acquired by the early 1920’s. He came to this country about 1910 give or take. He had a daughter living in California who was from his first marriage and he had another daughter and three sons. These three sons, I learned from my mother, helped him go broke. As I said, he had borrowed all he could and had cashed in on his insurances to try to help his sons and lost it all. His first wife had died back in 1890 give or take and he married my mother’s mother some time after. My mother was born in the year 1896. He and my grandmother went out to California and I don’t know if he was sick when he went or if he became ill after he arrived. Seems like his daughter lived somewhere near L.A. At any rate, my grandfather died.

Times were hard here so my grandmother tried over and over to get my mom and dad with their three kids to come out to California – wages were very good and she knew they could do well out there. My dad had a flat bed truck which he did hauling with when he could find some to do. They also had a farm out north of Crystal on the Nueces River they were trying to farm. He fixed his truck so he could haul spinach and did some hauling of groceries for a store here in Crystal. I remember him talking about going to Del Rio for these supplies for this store.

This truck was the one they went to California in. He fixed bows up and over the bed of the truck and extended the top forward enough to reach the windshield. This truck did not have a cab on it. And remember, my mom had knocked the windshield out the day
before they left. He stretched canvas over the bows and fixed a pretty good tent on wheels.

Okay, now you know why they were going to California and how they were going.

My grandparents on my dad’s side were the J.P. Walkers – some of you older readers may remember them. Their youngest was a daughter whose name was Gladys. They didn’t like some of the company she was keeping here at home so they decided to send her to California with my dad and mom to get her away from this undesirable company. When arriving my mom’s half sister’s in California, a young freight conductor came by to visit this sister’s family whose husband also worked for the rail road. To make a longer story shorter, he, the young conductor, swept Gladys off her feet, married her and took her to North Platte, Nebraska where they lived, raised their family and died there. (years later.)

Okay, now we shall start the trip to California as I remember being told.

They left here heading to Del Rio and the first thing of excitement was crossing the Pecos River between Comstock and Langtry. I’m sure most of you have been across the Pecos River high bridge and will agree that it is a beautiful piece of scenery. Back then, you had to go all the way to the bottom of the canyon to cross the river on a cement slab and then up and up on the other side. I remember them telling about having to run into the side of the road which was straight up and down to stop the truck in the steeper places. The brakes on that Model T Ford just wouldn’t hold enough. Now, going up the other side was another story. The road was pretty steep and the fact that the truck’s gas tank was under the seat and the system used gravity flow to supply the carburetor with gasoline and going up steep places placed the gas tank level lower than the carburetor and all of a sudden, you were out of gas. Well, what they had to do was turn the truck around and go up the hill in reverse. Well, that worked pretty good until they found that on the steeper places, the truck didn’t have enough power to climb it. Okay, what they did was to unload a lot of their cargo making the truck lighter and take some on up to the top and then come back down and load up what they had left and go back to the top and load up and head on west.

On west mother said they were about to enter the desert and were hoping to find a store somewhere along the way – they needed some bread. Sure enough, they came to a little store along the way and they did have a loaf of bread. Mom said they bought the bread and headed on west and after a few miles they said it was time to camp. Mom said when they opened the bread, it was molded so bad that they couldn’t use it. She said she thought that the store keeper knew that the bread was molded and was glad to pond it off on some poor travelers. Out in the desert there was a vehicle that came up behind them and after following them for a ways, wanted to pass them. The road was very narrow and really not enough room to pass but decided to go around. Well, okay, sure enough the guy got stuck in the sand. My dad stopped and backed up to him and with a chain, pulled the guy out. After that, the fellow decided he could stay behind.

Some where along the way and I don’t know if on the way out or their way back home. They were camped in a place where they could be off the road a ways. Dad said another out fit had camped a little ways from them. Sometime after they had gone to bed, they heard voices out side in a low tone. Dad said he reached and got his Winchester and worked the lever to load it. He said the voices got quiet and then one of them asked, “you got any salt?” Dad said he answered back and said “no salt”. He said those guy left. You know, its funny how a very familiar sound can make a big difference. There is nothing else that sounds like loading a model 94 Winchester and those guys knew what it was.

Finally arriving in California at their destination they rented a house. My dad got busy hunting for work and ended up getting hired as a carpenter’s helper . I don’t remember them saying they ever worked in any of the harvest in the area.

My oldest brother, John, was 4 or 5 years old and my twin brothers, Jim and Harold, were 3 or 4. I remember mom and dad telling about Jim getting run over by a car – I think they were playing in the street. Most likely an old model T or something else going slow. Boy, this day in time, it most likely would have been different. I don’t think it hurt him very much.

I don’t remember just how long they stayed there in California – if it was weeks or months but I think they decided the margin of profit wasn’t enough. The cost of house rent and higher cost of living evidently was more than here in Texas at home. At any rate, they decided they would come home. They gave the proper notice to the land lord and low and behold, the land lord rented the house to some one else and these people moved right in on them This caused a lot of confusion as you can imagine. My mother said she lost her prize ring and she knew those people stole it.

They got their act together and headed home back to Texas. The trip home my mother said, took them 14 days and it rained on them 12 of those days. They said the trip out there took only 12 days.

Back in Texas, they stayed north coming through Sonora and Ozona in order to cross the Pecos River in flatter country and on to Rocksprings and down to Uvalde and down to Crystal City. However, near Rocksprings there is an attraction they wanted to see called The Devil’s Sinkhole. I just looked on the map and the Sinkhole is about 6 miles north east of Rocksprings.

On home now and settled in. I came along April 5, 1924 and grew up during the Great Depression. In 1930 we moved to the farm on the Nueces River and that same year, I started to school. My dad got a job driving a school bus and stayed with that job my whole 12 years in school. On the farm we lived off the land. Beef calves were sold so to have money to buy clothes and other necessary items – we lived off the land as I said. We boys learned to hunt early in life which furnished meats for the table such as rabbits, squirrels, deer and turkey. I never remember going hungry – mother always had food on the table and all we wanted. We did butcher hogs once in a while in the winter. Hogs furnished good meat as well as lard for all cooking needs.

You have read about how tough things can be and if you try, you can pull through. We four boys all graduated from high school here in Crystal City and all four served our country during World War II and all returned – luckily! I lost my twin brothers, both died back in the 90’s. That leaves my oldest brother (almost 91) and myself. (almost 85) My wife and I both fully retired back in 1998 and since then, I have written and published two books. Both full of stories about things that happened to me or things I caused to happen since about 1928 and just a few years ago. This first book, RAMBLIN’ ON can be ordered directly from Dale R. Walker,for 10 dollars plus 3 dollars postage. Please contact the blog host on the contact form below and she will give you ordering details. My second book is titled RAMBLIN’ ON AND ON and can be ordered on my web site – www.ramblinonandon.com

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Ramblin On with Author Dale Walker

It never ceases to amaze me, the number of authors and various talent that has come out of Crystal City, TX. I am so proud to be a former Crystal Citian and know some of these great people. One of these wonderful talents is Dale Walker and he is author of not one, but two books.

Dale Walker was kind enough to give me information on how we can purchase the two books that he has written. These books contain true stories based on life experiences from as far back as 1928.

His first book is called Rambin On and was copyrighted 2002 and published by Morris Publishing Co. Ramblin on has 80 short, true stories.

Copies of Ramblin On can be purchased directly from Dale Walker by writing to him at 505 East Kinney, Crystal City, TX 78839. You can also use the contact form at the bottom of this page and your inquiry will be immediately passed on to him.

Book prices are as follows.

Although the book originally sold for 21.95, It is now being offered for $10.00 plus $3.00 shipping and handling or two for $20.00 and free shipping and handling.

Better yet, if more than 2 copies are purchased, they will be $5.00 each after the first 2 ($20.00) and shipping is free.

****************

Dale's second book was published earlier this year. It's title is Ramblin On and On, and was published by Xlibris Publishing Company.

This book can be ordered through your nearest book store or from the website which is Ramblin On and On Here you will find a picture, description and excerpt of the book.

Meal Plan

  I had a calm and pleasant Mother's Day yesterday. I hope you all did as well. I started the day making oatmeal cookies with cranberrie...