Apollos Academy
Dec. 10, 2006
Books... a love affair

Posted in Misc Musings

A library is not a luxury but one of the necessities of life.

Most homeschoolers, myself included, read this quote from Henry Ward Beecher and say, "Amen!"  Most of us also assume that the library of which Rev. Beecher speaks is the home library. (Regardless of the fact that most of us are well-known to our local public librarians.  A few of us are even fortunate enough to have our own "hold" shelves at our local libraries.)  Books are portals to other worlds, minds, personas, and times.  They provide comfort, escape, conflict, insight, and knowledge.  In a recent interview with Reader's Digest, actor and fellow homeschooler, Will Smith, asserted:

I know how to learn anything I want to learn.  I absolutely know that I could learn to fly the space shuttle because someone else knows how to fly it and they put it in a book.  Give me a book and I do not need somebody to stand up in front of the class. (Will Power, Readers Digest, December 2006)

Does access to books make teachers unnecessary?  In my opinion, quite the contrary.  Such access simply increases the number of teachers to which we have access.  The Scriptures tell us that "where there is no guidance the people fall, but in abundance of counselors there is victory" (Proverbs 11:14).  An overflowing library is a great resource to both homeschool student and homeschool teacher (in our school, the teachers are just more advanced students).  It is this philosophy which causes Frodo and I to nod in agreement and empathy with Cicero who said, "A room without books is like a body without a soul."  It also causes us to have a house that looks like this:

Books in the Kitchen:

 


Books in the Living Room:








Books in the Schoolroom:






Books in the Bathroom:



Books on the Stairs:



Books in the Bedroom:








Books behind Books in the Bedroom:



Books in the Kids' Room:








Books on the Nightstand of the Next Generation:



Obviously, to now steal an oft-quoted line from Erasmus, "When I have a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and clothing."  Want proof?  Just say the phrase "library book sale" in our presence... then get out of the way.

But why read any books?  To gain knowledge, you might say.  To get into a good college... paid for with academic scholarships. Or to get a better job which will allow you achieve a nicer standard of living.  As a Christian, I would have to say that the reason for reading books, for educating one's self under the tutelage of the many counselors embodied in the authors of those books, is to be able to communicate with the Living God through the primary means which He chose to communicate to us, His creation.

He created the world with His words:

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.  The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters. Then God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light.
- Genesis 1:1-3

He carved the words of His Law into stone:

Now the Lord said to Moses, "Come up to Me on the mountain and remain there, and I will give you stone tablets with the law and the commandment which I have written for their instruction."
-Exodus 24:12

He is the Word:

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
-John 1:1

God chose to communicate to us through language.  Therefore, we have an obligation to master language, dialogue, and debate, so that we can understand the Scriptures He has given us and communicate the truths found there to others.  This was clearly understood by the founders of Harvard University who included in their 1642 copy of the student handbook:

Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well: the main end of life and studies is to know God and Jesus Christ, which is eternal life.

So, I implore you, buy books, borrow books, read books, study books, digest books.  Find your place in the Great Conversation.  Dialogue with the Living Word.  Teach your children well.

And don't forget, since we are in the Christmas season and scurrying to buy gifts for our loved ones and trying to find the often elusive answer to the question, "What do you want for Christmas?", I leave you with this:

I would be most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves.

-Anna Quindlen (author of How Reading Changed My Life), "Enough Bookshelves," New York Times, 7 August 1991

So, if you have a little money, buy books; if there is any left over, buy bookshelves... and a cup of chai.

 


Comments

Dec. 11, 2006 - Untitled Comment

Posted by gottsegnet

What a wonderful post! We actually have boxes of books we rotate because we don't have room for them. Each week, the children get a new box of books to peruse (this is just the children's books). We have three large bookshelves in the bedroom, with books double shelved and then more out in the playroom.

Permanent Link


Dec. 11, 2006 - Untitled Comment

Posted by Anonymous

We love books too.. and our favorite pastime is to browse bookstores.. usually ending in a purchase. Favorite gift is a bookstore giftcard! I think you could have taken those photos at my house! What a chore it was to empty our bookshelves into boxes when we had our floors redone.. and then go through tem all when we were all done. And yes, every room in my house has a place for books, and that includes the attic and the basement. Some even find their way into the car. - Judy Aron

Permanent Link


Dec. 11, 2006 - Books

Posted by juliengeorgia

I am in total agree with you concerning books!
I love books!

Julie

Permanent Link


Dec. 12, 2006 - Untitled Comment

Posted by Anonymous

A kindred spirit! My friends joke that they don't have to go to the library when my house is so much closer... and when we don't have enough money to barely get by, I have been known to fish through my bag to find just enough money to buy a book off the back shelf of Half Price books for a dollar. It nourishes my soul more than food. :) My husband thinks it is an obsession. And it is in a good way! I understand perfectly and love your pictures!!
Blessings,
Jennifer of www.memoirsofahomeschooler.blogspot.com

Permanent Link


Our world... our classroom

Recent Posts

A Break and a Break
Carnival of Homeschooling - Week 50
Well, that's encouraging!
Books... a love affair
COH Week 49

Subscribe & Search

Enter your Email


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

Search Apollos Academy powered by FreeFind

Categories

Blogging Banter
Daily Doings
Fun Frivolities
Misc Musings
Quotes
Archives

Affiliates

Firefox 2

Off The Shelf

Frodo
The AutoBiography of Benjamin Franklin
Typee
The Tutor
Freelance Pallbearers
Shepherding A Child's Heart
The Lost Continent: Travels in Small-Town America
The Complete Tightwad Gazette
Primo
The Jungle Books
Magic Treehouse Series
Secondo
Josefina: An American Girl Series
The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
Terzo
Can You See What I See?
I Spy Christmas
Farmer Boy
Quarto
Tonka Big Book of Trucks
Farmer Boy
Thomas the Tank Engine's Big Lift-and-Look Book
Family
The Hobbit
Training Hearts Teaching Minds
Bartholomew's Passage

On The Screen

Family
A Charlie Brown Christmas
Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town
Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer
It's A Wonderful Life
Secrets of the Dead: What Happened to the Hindenburg?
Frosty the Snowman
Babes in Toyland
Grownups
V for Vendetta
Raising Arizona
It Could Happen To You
Team America
The Office: The Complete First Series
Grand Canyon

Out Of The Concert Hall

Iron & Wine: Our Endless Numbered Days
The Chieftans: The Bells of Dublin
Eileen Ivers & Immigrant Soul
U2: Elevation Tour 2001
The Way in a Manger
Bach: Cello Suites Nos. 1, 2 &3

Curriculum

Miquon Math Lab
Rod & Staff Arithmetic 4
Saxon Math 1
Spelling Workout C
Rummy Roots
Veritas Press Bible Cards: Genesis Through Joshua
Rod & Staff English 3
Phonics Museum
Story of the World Vol. 3: Early Modern Times
Veritas Press: Explorers to 1850
Real Science 4 Kids: Chemistry 1
Latin Primer 1
The Violin Book: Book 1

Projects

Cub Scouts
Keepers At Home
MWA Mystery Fiction Writing Contest
Local Spelling Bee

Great Books Reading Partnership

What We Are Reading

Join GBRP

Education Links

Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary & Thesaurus
The Well-Trained Mind
The Well-Educated Mind
Enchanted Learning
Animal Diversity Web

Other Helpful Links

Bible Gateway
IMDb
Hillbilly Housewife
Above Rubies

Companies I Like

Bounce-O-Rama
Pieces of Time
Pieces of Time Store
The Foil Hat, Inc.
Amazon.com
WalMart Downloads

Blogs I Read

Aduladi' Academy
Stepping Heavenward
The Foil Hat, Inc.
Why Homeschool
Mental Multivitamin
The History of the (Whole) World
The Crib Chick
Confessions of a Pioneer Woman
Life in the Two Acre Wood
SHIP Homesteaders

Blog Rings

Miscellany

Home
View my profile
Email Me
My Blog's RSS

Friends

LaMereAcademy
writmm
TRINITYPREPSCHOOL
shanmar
happymainemom
amlp311
homeiscool
mommyto2sweetees

Kristinemomof3


Kathy

Entry 4 of 126
Last Page | Next Page


Get Firefox!