
This is a great boxed set with replicas of dog tags, ration book, etc. from WWII. Really cool!




This is a great boxed set with replicas of dog tags, ration book, etc. from WWII. Really cool!



This historical fiction piece is actually two stories that eventually come together midway through the book. The events appalled me and were extremely hard to imagine. But then again, anything surrounding the events of the Holocaust are very hard to digest. I actually read the book in two days (almost 300 pages) because it was so engrossing. I learned a part of French history that I had never been exposed to...French police helping the Nazis to roundup their own people to send them to the concentration camps. The story also details how Sarah lives with the pain and agony of what has happened to her and her family. This aspect of the story was intriguing to me. How does a person who has endured such pain deal with it all? How do you emotionally survive after experiencing such circumstances as a child?
The memorial set up to honor those the endured the roundup at the Velodrome d'hiver.

You can see more of his work at the bottom of my blog. I will continue to add photos as I get them from my dad. My goal someday is to decorate one of the rooms in our house with all his photos.


Family Read Alouds These are wonderful historical fiction selections that tie in with the history you are studying. We have loved almost all of these. We normally do this as a before bedtime event.
In order to be entered into the giveaway please leave a comment with a way to contact you (email or your blog). I will randomly choose a winner on Monday, February 2nd. Please check back on the 2nd to see if you are the winner. Good Luck!
Check out Passionate Homemaking! She is hosting a freezer meal carnival where you can get tips, ideas and recipes that work well for bulk cooking.
Here is the inside of the card....Thanks, Dad! We all loved the card! So creative!
Here's a couple stories surrounding Noah's birth....If we had listened to Zach (who was three at the time), we would have known that our second child was going to be a boy too. Zach insisted from the time I was 5 months pregnant that the baby was "Hangboy". We kept telling him that it might be a sister and not a brother. But in his 3 y/o mind he just "knew" that it was a boy and that his name was "Hangboy". Well, there was no way we were going to name any child of ours "hangboy"...so we just kind of ignored the comments....at eight months pregnant I went into early labor (this was highly traumatic for me because I had miscarried the year before)...I went into the hospital and the dr. performed tests. She came back saying that my labor was backing off and I could go home, but before she left she said, "If this is a girl she will do fine if she is born early (baby girls are stronger than boys), but if it is a boy you better pray he hangs in there." Well, he did...born a few days before his due date..."Hangboy" had hung in there and made it to term...although his name now is Noah. The moral of the story: Listen to your three year old son...he may know more than you think!


For Noah, we will be doing about three units this month...the first book is a story I absolutely love! You can find the lessons plans for it here.
The next unit is from Five in a Row...lots of fish stories in this one!
The Cello of Mr. O can be found here. We will also be doing a lapbook with this one!