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This Week’s Favorites – The Thanksgiving Edition

November 18, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

This week, I’m sharing lots of my favorites for Thanksgiving.

Articles

Recipes and Ideas for Gluten Free Holiday Entertaining
Free Thanksgiving Ebook, Recipes and Tips, Printable Planner

 

Recipes

Gluten Free Pumpkin Pancakes – can be served 3 ways for a great Thanksgiving breakfast

Lots of sweet potato recipes
Gluten free cornbread stuffing
Carrot Souffle sounds so good! I’m going to make this for our dinner.
Gluten Free Thanksgiving Recipe Round Up
Gluten Free Sweet Cornbread
Orange Spice Sweet Potatoes – yum! I’m making this, too!
Holiday Cheese Ball
Gluten Free Holiday Snack Mix
Apple Pie Spice Whole Wheat Sugar Cookies
Pumpkin Bars
Gluten Free Bread Pudding – can be made no sugar, also.

 

Crafts and Kid Stuff

Printable Thanksgiving Diarama – I printed this out on cardstock. We haven’t made it yet, but it’s so cute!
Thanksgiving Place Cards, Kids Favors
Free Turkey Printables
Thanksgiving Coloring Pages
Crocheted Turkey Coaster

 

NEW LINKS:

DIY Origami Turkey for Kids – No need for origami paper!

Talk Like a Pilgrim

My Thanksgiving Book – printable book for the kids to make

Amazing Pumpkin Pie to Feed a Crowd

Gluten and Dairy Free Thanksgiving Help

Sweet Potato Pie with Cinnamon Roll Crust

Gluten Free Bread Stuffing

Layered Cranberry Sauce

Home Canned Cranberry Sauce – Use this recipe and these instructions to make your homemade cranberry sauce look like the store bought canned stuff. One way to get people to eat homemade. lol You can eat it without going through the canning process.

Paper Bag Turkey – a popcorn filled turkey for the kids table!

 

I hope  you found a few favorites to make your Thanksgiving extra special.

Filed Under: Linda's Favorites

40 Days to Better Living: Depression

November 17, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

 

Today’s Wild Card author is:

 

Dr. Scott Morris
and the
Church Health Center

 

and the book:

 

40 Days to Better Living: Depression

Barbour Books (November 1, 2011)

***Special thanks to Audra Jennings – The B&B Media Group – for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

From the time Scott Morris was just a teenager, he knew he would do two things with his future—serve God and work with people. Growing up in Atlanta, he felt drawn to the Church and at the same time drawn to help others, even from a very young age. It was naturally intrinsic, then, that after completing his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Virginia he went on to receive his M.Div. from Yale University and finally his M.D. at Emory University in 1983.

After completing his residency in family practice, Morris arrived in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1986 without knowing a soul, but determined to begin a health care ministry for the working poor. He promptly knocked on the doors of St. John’s Methodist Church and Methodist Hospital in Memphis inviting them to help, and then found an old house to refurbish and renovate. By the next year, the Church Health Center opened with one doctor—Dr. Scott Morris—and one nurse. They saw twelve patients the first day and Morris began living his mission to reclaim the Church’s biblical commitment to care for our bodies and spirits.

From the beginning, Morris saw each and every patient as a whole person, knowing that without giving careful attention to both the body and soul the person would not be truly well. So nine years after opening the Church Health Center, he opened its Hope & Healing Wellness Center. Today the Church Health Center has grown to become the largest faith-based clinic in the country of its type having cared for 60,000 patients of record without relying on government funding. The clinic handles more than 36,000 patient visits a year while the wellness center, which moved to its current 80,000-square-foot location on Union Avenue in 2000, serves more than 120,000 member visits each year. Fees are charged on a sliding scale based on income.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Depression is a serious condition—and 40 Days to Better Living: Depression provides clear, manageable steps for people to manage it, through life-changing attitudes and actions. Readers can select one or more elements of the 7-step Model for Healthy Living—Faith, Medical, Movement, Work, Emotional, Family and Friends, and Nutrition—and follow the 40-day plan to improve their lives, just a bit, day by day. With plenty of practical advice, biblical encouragement, and stories of real people who’ve taken the same journey, this book—from the Church Health Center in Memphis, the largest faith-based clinic of its type in the U.S.—may be one of the most important books your customers will read this year.

The 40 Days to Better Living series offers clear, manageable steps to life-changing attitudes and actions in a context of understanding and grace for all people at all points on the journey to optimal health. With plenty of practical advice, spiritual encouragement, and real stories of those who have found a better life, this simple and skillfully crafted book inspires readers to customize their own path to wellness by using the 7-Step Model for Healthy Living as a guide:

· Nutrition: pursuing smarter food choices and eating habits

· Friends and family: giving and receiving support through relationships

· Emotional life: understanding feelings and managing stress to better care for yourself

· Work: appreciating your skills, talents, and gifts

· Movement: discovering ways to enjoy physical activity

· Medical care: partnering with health care providers to optimize medical care

· Faith life: building a relationship with God, neighbors, and self

Along with tips from the Model for Healthy Living, the easy-to-read format features a Morning Reflection and an Evening Wrap-Up as well as a place for documenting plans, progress, and perspectives. Targeted scriptures and prayers that undergird the focus of each day’s message make this compact book an excellent choice for a daily devotional.

Subsequent titles in the Better Living series will be released bi-monthly and address key health topics including hypertension, diabetes, depression, weight management, stress management, aging, and addiction. All promise substantial support to those who are ready for a newer, better way of living—body and spirit.

Product Details:

List Price: $7.99
Paperback: 176 pages
Publisher: Barbour Books (November 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1616262664
ISBN-13: 978-1616262662

AND NOW…THE FIRST FEW PAGES: Click on the images to see them larger:

 

Filed Under: Books, Reviews

The Grace Effect – Book Review & Giveaway

November 15, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

“Simply defined, the ‘grace effect’ is an observable phenomenon—that life is demonstrably better where authentic Christianity flourishes.”

What does Christianity give us beyond televangelists, potlucks, and bad basketball leagues?  Not much, according to the secular Left.  The world, they say, would be a better place without it.




Historian and Christian apologist Larry Taunton has spent much of his career refuting just this sort of thinking, but when he encounters Sasha, a golden-haired orphan girl whose life has been shaped by atheistic theorists, he discovers an unlikely champion for the transforming power of grace.

Through the narrative of Sasha’s redemption, we see the false promises of socialism; the soul-destroying influence of unbelief; and how a society cultivates its own demise when it rejects the ultimate source ofgrace.  We see, in short, the kind of world the atheists would give us: a world without Christianity—cold, pitiless, and graceless.

And yet, as Sasha shows us, it is a world that is not beyond the healing power of “the grace effect.”  Occasionally infuriating, often amusing, but always inspiring, The Grace Effect will have you cheering for the courageous little girl who shamed the academic elitists of our day.

 

The Grace Effect is excellent! It’s hard to imagine living in a grace free world. But that is how people around the world live.

In a study reference on page 34, Christians are the most charitable segment of the population. The same study found that the average evangelical gives almost ten times as much money to nonprofits as the average atheist. That statistic speaks volumes about what a world without Christianity would be like.

Atheists around the world are trying to create a society free from religious influence. It just doesn’t work.  One can just look around at countries with little to no Christian influence to see that. In most cases, it’s the children who suffer the most. Children, the handicapped and the elderly take the brunt of a graceless society.

In The Grace Effect, we see how one family has made a difference in a little girls life. More than made a difference, her life was transformed. From graceless to filled with God’s abundant grace.

The Grace Effect is a must read book!


Here are a few links for The Grace Effect:
The Grace Effect website –  The Grace Effect Facebook Page
The Grace Effect on Twitter –  Buy The Grace Effect on Amazon.com

“Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one or more of the products or
services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would mention it
on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally
and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance
with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the
Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

 



Filed Under: Books, Giveaways, Reviews

College Prep Genius

November 14, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

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As part of The Old Schoolhouse Homeschool Crew, I was sent The College Prep Genius DVD Set to review.

The College Prep Genius covers all three sections of the SAT & PSAT/NMSQT giving the student a plan for success for each question type.

Right now you can get the complete program for $99 (a 25% discount), which includes the DVD and the Second Edition Textbook and Workbook. This newly updated and revised program features an easy-to-use format, bonus material including appendixes of must know math terms,  Latin roots, and prefixes and suffixes, new strategies, more detailed explanations, and a new motivation test.

 

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The SAT is not an IQ test. It is a test of logic and critical thinking. Learning the recurring patterns and hidden schemes of the questions is the key to acing this test. College Prep Genius does an excellent job of preparing the student to get a high score on the SAT.

There was nothing like this back when I was in high school. If there was, the teachers and counselors kept that information to themselves. Back then, you just took the test and accepted whatever score you got. Now that the competition for scholarships has gotten so steep, a high score on the SAT is needed. Colleges often want homeschooled students to have a higher score than public schooled students. So for homeschoolers, their SAT scores can make the difference in getting scholarship money and not being able to go to college.

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I was really impressed with the thoroughness of College Prep Genius. From What is the SAT?, How Do I Practice?, and Taking the Real Test, College Prep Genius has all the information you need. The book, workbook and DVD are all student directed. The student works at their own pace, doing as much of the program as they want. Of course, the more time spent on the program preparing for the SAT, the better.

The book then proceeds to take the student through the 3 sections of the SAT, Critical Reading, Math, and Writing. After going over what is covered in a section, and the scoring requirements, the student works through sample questions with lots of helpful hints along the way. You can also download a homework packet from the website.

The math section goes through all the types of problems that will be on the test, giving strategies to help the student answer the questions quickly and efficiently. And yes, calculators are allowed.

The workbook and DVD set are incredible. The workbook is just like taking the actual test. Right down to filling in the circles. The DVD  covers all 12 lessons in the book and walks the student through all the information and sample problems. I found it to be an excellent help. It will be especially helpful for auditory learners.

 

If your student is thinking about college, College Prep Genius is an awesome resource to help them meet their goals.

 

See what other The Old Schoolhouse Homeschool Crew Members are saying about College Prep Genius.

 

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*Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one or more of the products or services
mentioned above for free in the hope that I would mention it on my blog. Regardless, I
only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers.
I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255:
“Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Saturday on the Farm

November 14, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

Yes, I know it’s Monday. lol  But I didn’t want to miss sharing my Burning Bush with you.

This was at it’s peak, taken last Tuesday. Just absolutely gorgeous! Right now however, almost all the leaves are gone. We’ve had a lot of wind the last few days, and the bush succumbed to the wind.

I really love my Burning Bush!

 

 

Do you still having anything growing or blooming?

 

Here are a few links I found interesting and helpful:

Staple Winter Food video- who knew you could eat acorns?!
Refrigerator Without Power
Mullein
Plantain

 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Saturday on the Farm

What’s For Dinner?

November 14, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

 

Saturday – Sabbath- Make ahead meals- Dinner out for the family on the way to a Chris Tomlin concert. I had homemade baked beans and homemade gluten free chicken strips, both from the freezer. I love freezer cooking!

Sunday – soup & sandwich day – Homemade Chicken & rice soup and grilled cheese sandwiches

Monday – chicken –  Chicken with rice and beans

Tuesday – pizza –  Homemade Pizza, carrot sticks

Wednesday – super simple – leftovers

Thursday – beef – Sloppy Joes, brocolli, carrot sticks

Friday – Sabbath Dinner –  BBQ Chicken with homemade BBQ sauce, oven baked fries, green beans

 

 

For more ideas, visit Menu Plan Monday and Menu Planning Mayhem.

Filed Under: In The Kitchen With Linda

A Sound Among The Trees

November 14, 2011 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

 

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

 

Today’s Wild Card author is:

 

Susan Meissner

 

and the book:

 

A Sound Among the Trees

WaterBrook Press (October 4, 2011)

***Special thanks to Laura Tucker of WaterBrook Press for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Award-winning writer Susan Meissner is a multi-published author, speaker and workshop leader with a background in community journalism. Her novels include The Shape of Mercy, named by Publishers Weekly as one of the Best Books of 2008. She is a pastor’s wife and a mother of four. When she’s not writing, Susan directs the Small Groups and Connection Ministries program at her San Diego church.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

A house shrouded in time. A line of women with a heritage of loss. As a young bride, Susannah Page was rumored to be a Civil War spy for the North, a traitor to her Virginian roots. Her great-granddaughter Adelaide, the current matriarch of Holly Oak, doesn’t believe that Susannah’s ghost haunts the antebellum mansion looking for a pardon, but rather the house itself bears a grudge toward its tragic past.

When Marielle Bishop marries into the family and is transplanted from the arid west to her husband’s home, it isn’t long before she is led to believe that the house she just settled into brings misfortune to the women who live there.

With Adelaide’s richly peppered superstitions and deep family roots at stake, Marielle must sort out the truth about Susannah Page and Holly Oak— and make peace with the sacrifices she has made for love.

 

Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: WaterBrook Press (October 4, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0307458857
ISBN-13: 978-0307458858

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Excerpt

The bride stood in a circle of Virginia sunlight, her narrow heels clicking on Holly Oak’s patio stones as she greeted strangers in the receiving line. Her wedding dress was a simple A-line, strapless, with a gauzy skirt of white that breezed about her knees like lacy curtains at an open window. She had pulled her unveiled brunette curls into a loose arrangement dotted with tiny flowers that she’d kept alive on her flight from Phoenix. Her only jewelry was a white topaz pendant at her throat and the band of platinum on her left ring finger. Tall, slender, and tanned from the famed and relentless Arizona sun, hers was a girl-nextdoor look: pretty but not quite beautiful. Adelaide thought it odd that Marielle held no bouquet.

From the parlor window Adelaide watched as her grandson-in-law, resplendent in a black tuxedo next to his bride, bent toward the guests and greeted them by name, saying, “This is Marielle.” An explanation seemed ready to spring from his lips each time he shook the hand of someone who had known Sara, her deceased granddaughter. His first wife. Carson stood inches from Marielle, touching her elbow every so often, perhaps to assure himself that after four years a widower he had indeed patently and finally moved on from grief.

Smatterings of conversations wafted about on the May breeze and into the parlor as received guests strolled toward trays of sweet tea and champagne. Adelaide heard snippets from her place at the window. Hudson and Brette, her great-grandchildren, had moved away from the snaking line of gray suits and pastel dresses within minutes of the first guests’ arrival and were now studying the flower-festooned gift table under the window ledge, touching the bows, fingering the silvery white wrappings. Above the children, an old oak’s youngest branches shimmied to the tunes a string quartet produced from the gazebo beyond the receiving line.

Adelaide raised a teacup to her lips and sipped the last of its contents, allowing the lemony warmth to linger at the back of her throat. She had spent the better part of the morning readying the garden for Carson and Marielle’s wedding reception, plucking spent geranium blossoms, ordering the catering staff about, and straightening the rented linen tablecloths. She needed to join the party now that it had begun. The Blue-Haired Old Ladies would be wondering where she was.

Her friends had been the first to arrive, coming through the garden gate on the south side of the house at five minutes before the hour. She’d watched as Carson introduced them to Marielle, witnessed how they cocked their necks in blue-headed unison to sweetly scrutinize her grandson-in-law’s new wife, and heard their welcoming remarks through the open window.

Deloris gushed about how lovely Marielle’s wedding dress was and what, pray tell, was the name of that divine purple flower she had in her hair?

Pearl invited Marielle to her bridge club next Tuesday afternoon and asked her if she believed in ghosts.

Maxine asked her how Carson and she had met—though Adelaide had told her weeks ago that Carson met Marielle on the Internet—and why on earth Arizona didn’t like daylight-saving time.

Marielle had smiled, sweet and knowing—like the kindergarten teacher who finds the bluntness of five-year-olds endearing—and answered the many questions.

Mojave asters. She didn’t know how to play bridge. She’d never encountered a ghost so she couldn’t really say but most likely not. She and Carson met online. There’s no need to save what one has an abundance of. Carson had cupped her elbow in his hand, and his thumb caressed the inside of her arm while she spoke.

Adelaide swiftly set the cup down on the table by the window, whisking away the remembered tenderness of that same caress on Sara’s arm.

Carson had every right to remarry.

Sara had been dead for four years.

She turned from the bridal tableau outside and inhaled deeply the gardenia-scented air in the parlor. Unbidden thoughts of her granddaughter sitting with her in that very room gently nudged her. Sara at six cutting out paper dolls. Memorizing multiplication tables at age eight. Sewing brass buttons onto gray wool coats at eleven. Sara reciting a poem for English Lit at sixteen, comparing college acceptance letters at eighteen, sharing a chance letter from her estranged mother at nineteen, showing Adelaide her engagement ring at twenty-four. Coming back home to Holly Oak with Carson when Hudson was born. Nursing Brette in that armchair by the fireplace. Leaning against the door frame and telling Adelaide that she was expecting her third child.

Right there Sara had done those things while Adelaide sat at the long table in the center of the room, empty now but usually awash in yards of stiff Confederate gray, glistening gold braid, and tiny piles of brass buttons—the shining elements of officer reenactment uniforms before they see war.

Adelaide ran her fingers along the table’s polished surface, the warm wood as old as the house itself. Carson had come to her just a few months ago while she sat at that table piecing together a sharpshooter’s forest green jacket. He had taken a chair across from her as Adelaide pinned a collar, and he’d said he needed to tell her something.

He’d met someone.

When she’d said nothing, he added, “It’s been four years, Adelaide.”

“I know how long it’s been.” The pins made a tiny plucking sound as their pointed ends pricked the fabric.

“She lives in Phoenix.”

“You’ve never been to Phoenix.”

“Mimi.” He said the name Sara had given her gently, as a father might. A tender reprimand. He waited until she looked up at him. “I don’t think Sara would want me to live the rest of my life alone. I really don’t. And I don’t think she would want Hudson and Brette not to have a mother.”

“Those children have a mother.”

“You know what I mean. They need to be mothered. I’m gone all day at work. I only have the weekends with them. And you won’t always be here. You’re a wonderful great-grandmother, but they need someone to mother them, Mimi.”

She pulled the pin cushion closer to her and swallowed. “I know they do.”

He leaned forward in his chair. “And I…I miss having someone to share my life with. I miss the companionship. I miss being in love. I miss having someone love me.”

Adelaide smoothed the pieces of the collar. “So. You are in love?”

He had taken a moment to answer. “Yes. I think I am.”

Carson hadn’t brought anyone home to the house, and he hadn’t been on any dates. But he had lately spent many nights after the children were in bed in his study—the old drawing room—with the door closed. When she’d pass by, Adelaide would hear the low bass notes of his voice as he spoke softly into his phone. She knew that gentle sound. She had heard it before, years ago when Sara and Carson would sit in the study and talk about their day. His voice, deep and resonant. Hers, soft and melodic.

“Are you going to marry her?”

Carson had laughed. “Don’t you even want to know her name?”

She had not cared at that moment about a name. The specter of being alone in Holly Oak shoved itself forward in her mind. If he remarried, he’d likely move out and take the children with him. “Are you taking the children? Are you leaving Holly Oak?”

“Adelaide—”

“Will you be leaving?”

Several seconds of silence had hung suspended between them. Carson and Sara had moved into Holly Oak ten years earlier to care for Adelaide after heart surgery and had simply stayed. Ownership of Holly Oak had been Sara’s birthright and was now Hudson and Brette’s future inheritance. Carson stayed on after Sara died because, in her grief, Adelaide asked him to, and in his grief, Carson said yes.

“Will you be leaving?” she asked again.

“Would you want me to leave?” He sounded unsure.

“You would stay?”

Carson had sat back in his chair. “I don’t know if it’s a good idea to take Hudson and Brette out of the only home they’ve known. They’ve already had to deal with more than any kid should.”

“So you would marry this woman and bring her here. To this house.”

Carson had hesitated only a moment. “Yes.”

She knew without asking that they were not talking solely about the effects moving would have on a ten-year-old boy and a six-year-old girl. They were talking about the strange biology of their grief. Sara had been taken from them both, and Holly Oak nurtured their common sorrow in the most kind and savage of ways. Happy memories were one way of keeping someone attached to a house and its people. Grief was the other. Surely Carson knew this. An inner nudging prompted her to consider asking him what his new bride would want.

“What is her name?” she asked instead.

And he answered, “Marielle…”

Excerpted from A Sound Among the Trees by Susan Meissner Copyright © 2011 by Susan Meissner. Excerpted by permission of WaterBrook Press, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

 

MY REVIEW:

A Sound Among the Trees is historical fiction that tells the story of one Virginia family and their house. This family has believed that the house holds a grudge against the women in the family and that their female ancestors are still in the house. It’s not a ghost story, though, it’s a story of  loss and love.

The book is divided into 4 sections, with one being letters written by one of the female ancestors. When I got to this section, I didn’t think I was going to like it. Turns out I did like it. The story is told better by the letters then it would have been had it just been told by on of the main characters.

The women in the family have lost a lot in the past, and now that they have found out the truth about their family and their house, they are reclaiming their lives. No longer living in the past, but moving forward to a future filled with family and love.

Filed Under: Books, Reviews

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For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.

For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.

John 3:16-17 NKJV


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