a spy in the house of love

(Source: sovietkitsch, via annnniegirl)

#Books    #reading    

(via ladyeclectic)

#Books    #Reading    #True life    
File this one under: My Publisher is Awesome. 

That is all.

File this one under: My Publisher is Awesome. 

That is all.

#The Darkest Minds    #YA Lit    #Young Adult    #Books    #Reading    
firstbook:

Our friends at Random House Children’s Books have generously agreed to donate one brand-new book for each new follower we gain on Tumblr, Facebook, and Twitter this week. Those books will go to thousands of schools and programs serving kids from low-income families across the country.
Please Re-blog!
To learn more about First Book, please visit: www.firstbook.org

First Book is an incredible program!  Please consider reblogging!

firstbook:

Our friends at Random House Children’s Books have generously agreed to donate one brand-new book for each new follower we gain on TumblrFacebook, and Twitter this week. Those books will go to thousands of schools and programs serving kids from low-income families across the country.

Please Re-blog!

To learn more about First Book, please visit: www.firstbook.org

First Book is an incredible program!  Please consider reblogging!

(via aaknopf)

#books    #writing    #reading    #do it for the children!    
—Jeanette Winterson, Lighthousekeeping (via laregina)

(Source: kstwylah, via laregina)

#jeanette winterson    #lighthousekeeping    #reading    
I’ve been reading this book on and off for the last few weeks and I love it. I can’t even begin to tell you what it’s like to grow up as an introvert and constantly have people expect extroverted behavior out of you—it really is agony sometimes.

From the author’s website:
Sixteen Things I Believe
1. There’s a word for “people who are in their heads too much”: thinkers.
2. Our culture rightly admires risk-takers, but we need our “heed-takers” more than ever.
3. Solitude is a catalyst for innovation.
4. Texting is popular because in an overly extroverted society, everyone craves asynchronyous, non-F2F communication.
5. We teach kids in group classrooms not because this is the best way  to learn but because it’s cost-efficient, and what else would we do  with the children while all the grown-ups are at work? If your child  prefers to work autonomously and socialize one-on-one, there’s nothing  wrong with her; she just happens not to fit the model.
6. The next generation of quiet kids can and should be raised to know their own strength.
7. Sometimes it helps to be a pretend-extrovert. There’s always time to be quiet later.
8. But in the long run, staying true to your temperament is the key to finding work you love and work that matters.
9. Everyone shines, given the right lighting. For some, it’s a Broadway spotlight, for others, a lamplit desk.
10. Rule of thumb for networking events: one genuine new relationship is worth a fistful of business cards.
11. It’s OK to cross the street to avoid making small talk.
12. “Quiet leadership” is not an oxymoron.
13. The universal longing for heaven is not about immortality so much as the wish for a world in which everyone is always kind.
14. If the task of the first half of life is to put yourself out  there, the task of the second half is to make sense of where you’ve  been.
15. Love is essential, gregariousness is optional.
16. “In a gentle way, you can shake the world.” – Gandhi

I’ve been reading this book on and off for the last few weeks and I love it. I can’t even begin to tell you what it’s like to grow up as an introvert and constantly have people expect extroverted behavior out of you—it really is agony sometimes.

From the author’s website:

Sixteen Things I Believe

1. There’s a word for “people who are in their heads too much”: thinkers.

2. Our culture rightly admires risk-takers, but we need our “heed-takers” more than ever.

3. Solitude is a catalyst for innovation.

4. Texting is popular because in an overly extroverted society, everyone craves asynchronyous, non-F2F communication.

5. We teach kids in group classrooms not because this is the best way to learn but because it’s cost-efficient, and what else would we do with the children while all the grown-ups are at work? If your child prefers to work autonomously and socialize one-on-one, there’s nothing wrong with her; she just happens not to fit the model.

6. The next generation of quiet kids can and should be raised to know their own strength.

7. Sometimes it helps to be a pretend-extrovert. There’s always time to be quiet later.

8. But in the long run, staying true to your temperament is the key to finding work you love and work that matters.

9. Everyone shines, given the right lighting. For some, it’s a Broadway spotlight, for others, a lamplit desk.

10. Rule of thumb for networking events: one genuine new relationship is worth a fistful of business cards.

11. It’s OK to cross the street to avoid making small talk.

12. “Quiet leadership” is not an oxymoron.

13. The universal longing for heaven is not about immortality so much as the wish for a world in which everyone is always kind.

14. If the task of the first half of life is to put yourself out there, the task of the second half is to make sense of where you’ve been.

15. Love is essential, gregariousness is optional.

16. “In a gentle way, you can shake the world.” – Gandhi

#Books    #Reading    
Words are the voice of the heart.     
Confucius

Words are the voice of the heart.    

Confucius

#reading    #books