Currently Reading
The English Teacher's Companion by Jim Burke, The Stand by Stephen King, and Journey to the Center of the City by Randy White.
Angela's Ashes
by Frank McCourt

A wonderful book that kept me thinking about the characters, about life, about my life, and about poverty and affluence and what we really need. My mind is still chewing on it. An emotionally stirring book.
Animal Farm
By George Orwell

It's amazing how clear historical events become when they are re-told as a beast fable. This is a re-read, but as with most books, it was much more easy to read, more interesting, and made more sense than it did in high school.
Walking My Dog Jane
From Valdez to Prudhoe Bay Along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
By Ned Rozell
From very early on in our lives in Alaska, people have asked me if I am any relation to Ned Rozell. It is an unusual name, and this book had only been out a few years when we arrived in Alaska. I have had to explain many times (again just yesterday, in fact) that no, I am no relation.
Ned Rozell was searching for something and thought he might find it along the Trans-Alaska pipeline that carries oil from the southern tip of Alaska in Valdez to the far northern tip in Prudhoe Bay. Ostensibly looking for who might live along that corridor and why, he was also looking for something unnamable within himself, and sometimes found that unnamable thing in others. And so he hiked, in one summer, from bottom to top, writing weekly columns for the Fairbanks News Miner along the way.
I found it interesting that Ned seemed to focus on those people he met who demonstrated a spirituality that spoke to Ned on some level. The way he wrote about it seemed to indicate his desire to posses the same kind of faith and spirituality that were dynamic and authentic in others.
I have thought a little about the path itself. It is both remote and wild, but also seems very tethered. I didn’t know, but apparently there is a gravel service road along the pipeline’s entirety, and as long as the pipeline is in sight, there is little chance of getting lost.
So many things have been done, so many roads traveled, I applaud Ned for walking the length of the state in one summer. The tales about the people he met are mostly interesting, but it also drags in places. A number of times it occurred to me that this is something I might have written, and an endeavor I might have undertaken. And by that I mean I’d give the trip and the book both a B-.
Bookshelf of Intent
Today I finally sorted through the boxes of books that have been boxed since we left Abilene. I still don't know where to put them all, but at least I've culled the ones I'm willing to part with, grouped the others according to category, and made the following list of books that I've been dragging around for years with the intention of reading. Now is the time. I'll read these books next so that I can finally make a place for them on the shelf of my life or pass them on down the river. The next books:
Herzog by Saul Bellow (I put it down after the first two chapters.)
Angela’s Ashes by Frank McCourt
The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver (Four chapters into it, I gave it up.)
Journey to the Center of the City by Randy White
The World Made Straight by Ron Rash
A Yellow Raft in Blue Water by Michael Dorris
Ironweed by William Kennedy
Giant by Edna Ferber
The Vengeance Trail of Josey Wales by Forrest Carter
Machine Dreams Jayne Anne Phillips
Suttree by Cormack McCarthy
The Stand by Stephen King
There are a few books that I have resolved to read but for whatever reason I have not read yet. I continue to hold these resolutions, and every time I see these titles on a shelf somewhere I am reminded, with shame, that I haven't crossed them off the list yet.
Moby Dick by Herman Melville
Alaska by James Michener
Coming Into the Country by James McPhee
The Stand by Stephen King
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith
By Anne Lamott

This is no ordinary book about the role of faith in the life of someone living as Jesus taught his disciples to live. The phrase “We’re totally fucked” doesn’t appear in most books on Christian bookstore shelves (I just did a quick internet search for this book on the Family Christian Bookstores catalog, but it was not found, nor were any other Anne Lamott books, which tells me that Christian bookstores probably haven’t changed much in the ten years or so since I last perused one, but that is a subject for another day).
Through a series of essays in which Lamott reflects on episodes from her life, she relates the messy ordinariness, humanity, and holiness, of her daily life. These essays do not seem at first to focus on the life of faith, but looking more closely, Lamott reveals a life thoroughly infused with faith in God, filled with Spirit, and modeled after Jesus. The writing teaches with a experiential, and not didactic, style.
The stories are refreshingly human (in a messy-room, hormonal-imbalance, not-surviving-cancer, finding-joy-and-holiness-in-the-ordinary kind of way). I appreciate her judicious but not gratuitous use of profanity. Far from offensive, it was perfectly descriptive. I once had a poetry professor explain that in poetry, words have fixity, with means that when the right word is used in a line, no other word could possibly be used in its place, not even a synonym. And sometimes, in real life, there is no other word for a situation than shitty.
Leave it to lefty, liberal, menopausal, recovering addict, single mother to leave me feeling convicted about the way I live out my faith in Jesus in my relationships with those around me, and wanting my practice to look more like hers.
“If you want to change the way you feel about a person, change the way you treat them.” -Anne Lamott
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
By David Wroblewski

Edgar was born mute but highly sensitive and intelligent, a combination of traits I found fascinating inNorthern Exposure's Flying Man and McCullers' The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. Edgar is a third generation dog breeder of highly intelligent, expertly trained "next dogs," and all is well until his uncle enters the scene and tries to take what doesn't belong. It made me wish I had a dog like these. A great read to start the summer.
Since finishing, I have found my thoughts returning again and again to the character of Edgar's mother. Not to give too much away, but at the conclusion of the book, she is one character for whom there is no resolution. She does not understand anything that has transpired in the lives of the other characters. She is the center hub for every other spoke in the family (as are most wives and mothers), and she is the one that is left alone, condemned to the rest of her life without any explanation of what has occurred. I think it would be great to read/write another novel that dealt with her story, both during the events of this novel, and her life after the conclusion of the events in this novel.
The Grapes of Wrath
by John Steinbeck

I'm walking through this book again right now as I'm teaching it to my juniors and seniors. I am reminded of what a great book this is, and timely given our current economic situation. It's a sobering tale about how humanity suffers under the inhuman modern world and modern economy, but how humanity ultimately survives through relationships. If you haven't read it yet, you should.
American Education
by Joel Spring

I really like the way this guy thinks. The book is comprehensive, and it defines what is ultra obvious, which is hard to do. And I like his steadily skeptical tone.
Coraline
by Neil Gaiman

This is a young person's book that caught me eye for being written by Neil Gaiman, and I had heard a movie was being made. It was okay. As was the movie.
Policy Studies for Educational Leaders
by Frances Fowler

It took a while for me to warm to this book, but I eventually did. It is certainly thorough, though sometimes a little repetitive. This is the book that defined economic growth as a major American value, and that blew me away. Defining the obvious difficult, and this is what Fowler has done.
Hardball
by Chris Matthews

I loved this book and read it over a few evenings in the cabin by candlelight. This is exactly a manual over how to develop and wield political capitol, complete with illustrations from notable politicians in recent history. Very, very interesting.
The Shack
by Paul Young

I don't know if it really answered those unanswerable questions, but it was certainly an interesting perspective on them. There can be nothing worse than losing a child, and getting inside the pain of a father in that circumstance is hard. A refreshing and attractive look at the Triune God, but approach it as the fiction that it is.
School Leadership that Works
by Robert Marzano, Waters, and McNulty

Marzan (et al.) is one of those big names in education, and righfully so. We should approach all problems with his approach: objectively look at what had been done in the past and see what the research says works best, and then do that. Not always entertaining reading, but always meticulous and evidence based.
Holding Sacred Ground: Essays on Leadership, Courage, and Endurance in Our Schools
by Carl Glickman

I didn't read all of this, but just a few of the included essays. It is on my list (and my shelf) to revisit some day.
Questions of Character: Illuminating the Heart of Leadership Through Literature
by Joseph Badaracco Jr.

Badarraco takes works of serious literature and mines them for lessons in life and leadership. Mildly interesting and somewhat insightful, this is a book I could have written, which doesn't endear it to me.
Integrating Differentiated Instruction + Understanding by Design
by Carol Ann Tomlinson and Jay McTighe

This is a great resource for the classroom teacher that integrates two well known approaches into one whole, as it should be.
Leadership and the New Science
by Margaret Wheatley

Enough people have insisted that this is a great book, that I feel like it must be, but I just didn't get it. It delves deeply into theoretical physics and chaos theory and from these fields draws lessons for leadership. Perhaps I was just trying to read it too late at night, and by candlelight. It reminded me of the first time I saw My Dinner with Andre. I kept nodding off, and every time I woke up I felt like I was in exactly the same place. Maybe I'll try it again someday.
Leadership on the Line
by Ronald Heifetz and Marty Linsky

This is the best book I've read this year. I started reading it with pen in hand, underlining key ideas. Then I was bracketing whole paragraphs, and resisting the temptation to bracket whole pages. Every page is like that. A great work on life and leadership that should be read by everyone who is any capacity of leadership... leaders of schools, business, churches, communities, or even of families. This is highly recommended (by me).
The Power of Their Ideas
by Deborah Meier

Meier presents a very strong defense of the public school system that gets its strength from convincing demonstrations of what a school, a class, and an experience can be.


