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MamaBloo’s Top Eleven Parenting Books

§ January 29th, 2010 § Filed under Book Reviews, Hints and Tips § Tagged , , , § 1 Comment

This is my last January Top Lists Post.  And, okay, I admit, it’s a doozie.  And it is ironic since I have had the world’s worse week of parenting.  But Fridays are all about books here at MamaBloo… so here we go!

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I own a lot of parenting books.  That doesn’t make me an expert on parenting, but it does make me an expert on Parenting Books —  which is why I needed a top 11 and not a top 10.  I have read a ton, especially on sleep.  When my son was born, he was born without the ability to sleep.  My daughter, on the other hand, sleeps so much we actually called the doctor.  Hey, you get what you get, huh?  Anyway, here are my picks on parenting books.  I will admit, a lot of these books I didn’t finish or am still in the process of reading.  That’s okay, though. Let me know if I missed one that you found especially helpful!

These first three should be required reading.  Seriously.  Well, at least for people like me. If I taught Parenting 101, these would be my texts.

1. Sacred Parenting by Gary L. Thomas.  Freaky good.  But will rock you to the core.  This book basically pulled me apart and put me back together again as it discussed how being a parent is also about our own journey as parents. That we are not out to change our kids, but that they — through God’s divine divine-ness — will change us.  I shook through most of reading this book, and I have to admit, I have not finished it.  I have to be ready to take out a electron-microscope and examine me when I pick up this book.  Not always confortable, but required, I think.

2. The Optimistic Child by Martin E.P. Seligman This book takes a  RESEARCH-based look at the phenomenon and epidemic of depression and entitlement among kids today.  Seligman looks at how accomplishment and learning to deal with failure (when it occurs) actually teaches our kids to view themselves and the world more optimisitcally — no more trophies for just “showing up” to the game!  He looks at depression and at ways to prevent it in our children by looking at their behavior and helping them express themselves.  This book absolutely changed my paradigm of parenting.  It has made me really look hard at how I coach my own children to interact with their failures AND their successes. 

3. Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child by Marc Weissbluth M.D.  This book takes a deep look at the importance of sleep in a baby and child’s life.  Warning, it does support some version of “crying it out” when the babies are young, so if you are anti-cry-it-out you just need to steel yourself for that section.  But don’t throw it away just because of that!  This book goes through why we need sleep, how the lack of sleep affects us, and looks at ways to help kids get the sleep they need.  It is relevant from birth to adolescence.  Best sleep book out there, in my opinion (and I have read over 14 books on sleep… 14….).

These next six are the next “phase” of reading — for when you have time (ha ha.. .when we have time… I am funny…).

4. Touchpoints – Birth to 3 by T. Berry Brazelton M.D. The basic premise in this book is that there are these “touch points” throughout early childhood that are time just before a “rapid growth in any line of development … when, for a  short time, a child’s behvior falls apart.”  This book walks parents through these touchpoints and dicusses what is actually going on and offers good counsel on dealing with this new stage for your child.  I loved this book grounded me as I watched my son grow up through his third year.  It doesn’t really offer anything life-changing, but it kept me rooted in reality as I watched his little mind, body, and emotions grown and change!

5. Why Gender Matters by Leonard Sax M.D.  This was recommended to me by a total feminist, so if it has convinced her, you should sleep soundly with its credibility.  This book takes a look at the emerging science of gender-differences and how boys and girls are just plain DIFFERENT.  This is not news to those of us who have both a boy and a girl in our posse.  This book states that  a lot of these differences are on a physiological level (girls actually hear 10 times better than boys…. not news to most of us…).  I admit I am not all the way through this book, but what I have read has help me rapt as I think about the reprecussions of these changes in how we discipline, educate, and form our kids.

6. Nurture by Nature. by Tierger and Barron-Tieger  This takes the Meyers-Briggs personality test (ya know, ENFP, ISTJ??? ) and puts it into a parenting book.  I have a friend who states that the more kids she had, the more she realized that she had little influence over who they were – -they were just born that way!  This book promotes that idea. It really helped me look at my kids as the unqiue people they are — why one follows rules and the other doesn’t, how one loves stuffed animals and the other doesn’t care and so on.  A nice tool in the arsenol for dealing with them as individuals rather than a pack.

7. How to Say It — Kids and How to Say It — Teens by Richard Heyman Ed.D. Just a little handbook for how to deal with issues that face your kid.    This book tackles topics like BULLEYING and HOMEWORK and JEALOUSLY and CURFEWS and CHORES and on and on. It could almost be a “bathroom reader” as each topic is only 1-2 pages long and offers a down and dirty look at what to say to you kids/teens about these topics.  It both tells you what to say and what NOT to say! 

8.  Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottman.  This one was Dave’s read.  After reading 30+ parenting books, I finally begged and pleased and blackmailed him to read JUST ONE book and report on it.  This was it.  We have read Gottman’s work on healthy marriages and have found him to be very insightful and this book was no different for looking at how to raise emotionally healthy kiddos. He advocates an emotional-coaching type of parenting that no one, NO ONE, can be successful at 100%  (or even 75%) of the time — but it is a good goal! 

9.  Parenting with Love and Logic by Cline and Fay  This book advocates letting children make choices and then letting them learn from the consequences — both positive and negative.  Okay, so this one is a controversial book, I think.  People tend to love it or hate it. I am not really in either camp.  I think there is enough to glean from this book that it worth the read. Here is the thing I love most about this philoshophy, it creates a non-emotional response from the parent.  Intead of yelling and getting all caught up in the heat of the moment, it allows parents to step back and allow the consequences to unfold — giving the child choices that the parent can live with (not an “either or” when the “or” is punishment…). Some people think the book is too harsh.. and I can really really see their point.  But if you read with your own parameters in mind, you can get some good stuff from this one.

These last two are for commiserating and laughing.

10. Operating Instructions by Anne Lammott.  This is just one of my favorite authors in the whole wide world.  This book is a memoir about the first year of raising her son and it will both make you laugh and cringe… because you have been there!  Beware, if you are currently in your first year of raising anyone, this book will NOT be funny to you.  You need time and perspective on the insanity of that first year in order to find the meaning in this book.

11. Sippy Cups Are Not For Chardonnay by Stefanie Wilder-Taylor. Same goes for this book.  Be sure you are out of the infant stage before you pick this one up. But when you do, get ready to laugh your behind off! Off! Gone! If only  it worked for weightloss…

5 Memoirs Worth Reading

§ January 22nd, 2010 § Filed under Book Reviews § Tagged , , , § 4 Comments

Have you ever had a moment when you thought “You couldn’t make this stuff up?” – -that is why I like memoirs.  Real life can be sooo much more interesting and poignant, funnier,  than fiction. About 10 years ago I started reading memoirs and it QUICKLY  became one of my top (if not THE top) favorite genres.  So as part of my January Top Lists.  Here are five memoirs  worth reading –in no particular order.

#1 – Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris.  Okay.  Don’t read this one. LISTEN to it.  David Sedaris is perhaps the funniest memoir-ist alive and he is even funnier if you listen to him read his own writing.  I was listening to part of this book one day while driving through the U-District in Seattle (a place that demands your attention) and I had to pull over into a Burger King parking lot because I could not SEE from all the TEARS of laughter running down my face. 

#2 – A Circle of Quiet by Madeleine L’Engle.  Bragging rights here – I have an autographed copy of this book that my friend Me Ra got for me when she met Ms. L’Engle.   L’Engle just simply knows how to WRITE!  Here she talks about God, writing, family and life.  She is one of my favorite writers and philosophers of all time.

#3 – Traveling Mercies by Anne Lammott.  Really any of Lamott’s memoris are suburb. You could pick up any of her memoirs and be changed.  She is also one of my influences as a writer (and human being).

#4 – The Glass Castle  by Jeannette Wells   – This one hits way too close to home for me.   I had to read with my hand on my stomach.  But, this book is amazingly well-written, compelling, and worth everyone’s time.

#5 – Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert   But, of course…

Honorable Mention:  Refuge by Terry Tempest Williams.  I have not actually gotten past the 1st few pages of this book (only due to trying to find the time to deal with a emotional memoir.).  But it came recommended to me by someone I really trust.  A story of William’s mother’s death parrelled in the lives  of the birds in the marshes of the Great Salt Lake.

MamaBloo’s 10 All time Favorite Books

§ January 15th, 2010 § Filed under Book Reviews § Tagged , § 10 Comments

I could go on and on about the books below – they are like old friends to me.  I would love for YOU to post a comment telling me your favorite book and why.  Here are my top ten:

#10 – Seabiscuit by  Lauren Hillenbrand – I actually cried the ugly cry at the end of this book.  Not because the ending was tragic or heart-wrenching, but because the books was over and I loved Seabiscuit (the horse) just that much… sigh…

#9 – The Red Tent by Anita Diamant - The power of women!  And I don’t say that in a flip way.  Nothing is  more amazing to me than when a group of women get together in harmony with each other.  This book may be about more than that, but it also is all about that.

#8 -A Prayer for Owen Meany by  John Irving -   One critic wrote that this book was a “meditation on literature, history, and God.”  There ya have it.

#7 – The Brothers K  by David James Duncan.  A friend of mine actually PRAYED for these characters when she wasn’t reading.  It’s is just that good.  And if you like baseball ( I do!) this book is even sweeter.

#6 – I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith – Charming!!!  The movie is just a poopie (did I really just say “poopie” ???) version of this amazingly intimate, funny, and delightful book.

#5 – To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee – How could anyone in their right mind not put this on their list.  Atticus?  Jem?  Scout?  But take my advice, DO NOT name your cat after Boo Radley…

#4 – Rebecca by Daphne DeMaurier – A good old-fashioned freaky, shivery mystery.  Don’t read on a cold, stormy night unless you have a nerves of steal. 

#3 – Peace Like a River by Leif Enger- Every syllable in this book is worth reading… every one.  You will feel like the characters are family on about page 2 and the author only draws you in further as you read. Just like family everyone is quirky with warts — but you love the snot out of them, too. And get ready to gasp in utter HOPE at the end of the novel.

#2 – The Lord of The Rings Trilogy by J.R.R. Tolkien - Every Sci Fi/ Fantasy book seems to steal from Tolkien.  He is the ultimate master of good versus evil, the hero’s quest, rich fake-historical fiction, and making you want to live in Middle Earth, if only to meet Legolas the elf!

#1 – Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery - No other book has shaped my outlook as much as this one.  To look at life through the eyes of beauty and adventure, to claim those kindred spirits and bosom friends out there, and to find love in pure simplicity came via the words of one Ms. Anne Shirley.  And, yes, there is a part of us all that wishes we could’ve married Gilbert….

Book Review: The Maze Runner

§ December 18th, 2009 § Filed under Book Reviews § Tagged , , , , , § 2 Comments

Thomas woke up in an elevator.  Pitch black.  No memories.  When the doors finally open he finds himself at the center of a maze – called The Glade -  with dozens of boys staring at him. As Thomas tries to fit in to the community around him and make friends with the other Gladers, he learns that each day runners head out into the maze to find a way out, only to return at night while the maze change its pattern for the next day.  The boys still return each day trying for years to solve an unsolvable puzzle – can you say frustrating?  Furthermore, the walls to the Glade close down each night to protect the boys from the deadly Grievers.

Two days after Thomas’ arrival the only girl who has ever arrived at the maze shows up.  And things change. Now the boys have to find a way out. No matter what.

This is high-concept book with an over-arching consipiracy theme – think The X Files or Lost.   Why are these boys living in a maze?  Why can’t they remember anything about their previous life?  What are the grievers and who put them there?  How do they get out? Throw in dystopia, telepathy, and deadly viruses and, well, I could not put this book down.  It helps that the author ends every single chapter in a nail-biting cliff hanger.  I literally had to ask myself, can I make it until tomorrow to find out what happens. I made a lot of coffee the week I read this book, trying to recover from my late night of reading. The author leaves the reader guessing through most of the book, which can be frustrating at times (and if you follow Lost, you know what I mean – this books has the same feel to it) as you are practically begging for an answer, ANY answer rather than more questions.

And this book is scary.  Perhaps even nightmare scary, but definitely wide-eyed, holy-crap scary.

My one criticism is the characters need some more developing.  As we learn later in the book, these kids are suppose to be the “best of the best”, but even Thomas himself seems a bit whiny and sulky.  But, I chose to put the weak character development aside and just enjoy the action.

This book gets my highest recommendation and it will appeal to both boys and girls 12  years old and up.  The ending of this book actually makes the reader GROWL in complete and utter surprise and disbelief.  Then you will get a DEMAND from your child for the next book in the series – which has not been published yet.

Title: The Maze Runner
Author: James Dashner
Genre: Science Fiction , Dystopia
Age:  12 and up
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