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Hestia Homeschool for Young Wild Women

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Wednesday, April 20, 2005
Sleeping under th >
Thursday, April 21, 2005
April 2005
Trip to the Cincinnati Zoo today :-)
Bonsai Exhibition
Grassy Run Rendezvous photos!
Rolling on the river:  Mandy's first job interview
Grassy Run Historical Reenactment tomorrow :-)  Men in Kilts...yumm...
This time last year:  The "Mom Voice"
slightly off color joke
Community Service Group for Homeschoolers starting
Loving Thy Neighbor...or not killing your sibling
Marketing Christianity:  Mary was only a virgin....
This time last year....Lusting after Kiefer..this time this year...still lusting after Kiefer
Sweet math Page:  teaching fractions the yummy way
a fun word game (Thanks Becky)
Quiet afternoon at the hestia homeschool pictures
Rats!  We have rats all over the place!!
teenaged girls in trouble over free speech
mockingbirds slaughtered by cats
A year ago:  local murder on the Forensic Files
Upcoming Homeschool Field Day
Homeless Iraqi veterans :  When I came home
Pet Show results. :-)
The weather class at Scyamore park
Fishing down on the Licking River at Big Toe
NHM:  History of the Ohio River
Will Riesenberg
Einstein's theory of space time : Free posters
Suppositories and rectal thermomenters are not sexual abuse
Sex Education:  Butt Floss
Sex Education :  VULVA PUPPETS
Aires the garter snake is fine in the "wild"
Send in the SWAT monkey
Asian Culture Fest
JibJab's Matzah:  Let my Peeps go
article:  Filibustering people of Faith
The Riesenbergs were in an accident!
The New Pope opposes the war in Iraq
"Idaho" (stolen horse) alert:  three week old foal stolen from mother's side
Vulva of the Day:  Sheila-na-gig
Marketing Christ:  Pass the ammo
Sleeping under the stars with a skunk
Book Review:  Forests of The Night
History of the Ohio River class
baby "callipears!"
park class announcement
Hate Speech not punished in Ohio School.....
Put an X next to things you have done (from Sugars journal)
Super Spy Skills:  Cultural Differences in Body Language
Doc is home safe from Iraq!!!
running nekkid at Big Toe on the Licking
More of my wild babies are free!
Learning Through History Newsletter
homeschooling in nature
Joke from Kitty Sue  :-)
Mr. Big Vein
Hanta Virus (carried in wild mouse droppings)
Mousies in the Bread Box
Streakin' through the house
Beautiful Pagan Bedtime Prayer
Why Johnny Lingo paid eight cows for his wife
How to hand tame squirrels
We are no longer to be the Beacon of Hope for the World's persecuted?
dancing naked in the cherry blossoms
Licking skunks, doing Math, Police captains and grief
Marketing Christianity:  Betty Bowers
Saliva tests in children can predict cavities
which website are you?
Grieving is hard work
Keeping the Sabbath
Doing battle with naysayers
DooDoo the Pigeon is free!
Saturday Six
Fourth annual homeschool Prom
Webring help????
more pictures of the baby raccoons:griefwork
identifying human emotions unit study
walking till dark: labeling our feelings
Making choices:  Why I am not a vet or a doctor
death of the baby coon...keeping the skunk...loving the snake...
Worms from eating Sushi  (not)....maggots, though
Dancing Toilet Turd  (very immature)
Borders Book store discount
Very Nice Police Captain called
What I have in my dining room is an Eastern Garter snake(scroll way down)
Missing the babies
Blonde Joke  and a few PG 13 ones
flags at half mast
An injured snake arrives at the Hestia Homeschool and Animal Refuge
Black Elk prayer
Breastfeeding with chimps
Tim Burton Training squirrels to crack nuts
Miss Lilypad the Skunk
Unschool
marketing Christianity:  On a mission from God:  mission accomplished
Numa Numa/American Idol spoof
Baby coon pictures!
social studies for kids newsletter
Beliefnet:  Prayer for a safe pregnancy
Marketing Jesus:  Protecting the Mail
Giant Microbe Stuffed animals
Jupiter, Ebola, and the streaker
Free Garden Kit
The Great Escape :Nova
National Tartan Day
blocking names and TOS
Those Brits:  Arse/Face towel
Lively day
Oh, the drama continues...the Meter Man from hell
The harassment continues. I am becoming less patient
Angry local defenders
Baby Coons and Socialization
4:30 AM feeding
Animal rescue :-)
« April 2005 Archive
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
10:08:00 PM EDT
Feeling Sad

Book Review:  Forests of The Night


 

 

My camera is back from the shop:::::Kas doing her little happy dance, which looks a lot like a plump Snoopy dancing:::now as soon as I can find all the bits and pieces to hook it up to the computer I will have pictures for you!

Today I slept in--until two o'clock. I was, as they say in the hills, plumb tuckered out. Sometimes I need to catch up on my sleep. Fortunately Dave was off work and awake so I could sleep. There are times I wonder if it is my diabetes making me feel so exhausted all the time. I swear I feel tired all the way to my bones.

I just finished reading a very enjoyable library book called "Forests of the Night" by James W. Hall.

It is set in Cherokee, NC, where the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation has its reservation, and , coincidentally, where we went on our vacation in March.

 The story starts with the very touching and heroic tale of Tsali, the Cherokee man who resisted having his home stolen from him during the "removal" of the Trail of Tears Era.  After some Federal soldiers were killed when they tried to drive his family from their home,Tsali and his children hid in the mountains.  Tsali had never killed another human being, but as they drove his family from their home a soldier stabbed his wife in the back with a bayonet. Tsali killed the soldier with an axe. They fled to the mountains and evaded capture by the whites. An all out search was called. After quite a while, a Cherokee man appeared with an message from the Cherokee elders. They told Tsali that if he would surrender his life--and the lives of his sons and daughters--to the United States government, President Jackson said that the rest of the Cherokees would be allowed to stay on their own property.

Tsali surrendered, for the good of his people, and watched as the United States government firing squad shot his sons and daughters to death. Then he was executed.

This is a true story.

The fictional part of the book picks up in modern time.  I enjoyed it a great deal.  The book resists making a lot of stereotypes, and has some thrilling parts in it that makes itdoubly enjoyable. 

 Bookreporter.com - FORESTS OF THE NIGHT by James W. Hall

"Police detective Charlotte Monroe arrives home from a grueling day of tests devised to ascertain her special skills at reading faces and body language, and finds her husband and daughter deep in conversation in the kitchen with a stranger. He looks vaguely familiar, and when she recognizes him as Number Eight on the FBI's most wanted list, she slips into her home office to alert the authorities. While she is on the phone, the man, Jacob Bright Sky Panther, abruptly leaves, and Charlotte soon discovers that her teenaged daughter Gracey has gone missing. The SWAT team is called, the chase is on, and Hall's singular skill at interweaving a dense, complicated plot into a very readable thriller has the reader turning pages...."



Written by hestiahomeschool Blog about this entry
This entry has 6 comments: (Add your own)
  • #6 Comment from wildflower1764 
    4/21/05 5:25 PM Permalink
    I was in Cherokee, NC with my children two years ago and visited the indian villiage there and saw the Trail of Tears. It is a very moving play. And it's not so far away. If you get the chance to go, it would be worth your while. I believe the story of Tsali was mentioned but if not, I've read about it somewhere in between here and there. :)
  • #5 Comment from cw2smom 
    4/21/05 1:55 PM Permalink
    My family is Cherokee, members of the Oklahoma Nation.  My father was so interested in Tsali and often used his name as passwords for his computer.  The book would certainly be of interest to him, and I am so sorry he's not among us to read it now.  I must read it in his stead!  Thanks for sharing this review!  Lisa
  • #4 Comment from ryanagi 
    4/21/05 10:56 AM Permalink
    When people talk about genocide, often Hitler is trotted out as a prime example. Funny how the history books and our government has glossed over our own history and another prime example of genocide.
  • #3 Comment from cherokeedream40 
    4/21/05 10:48 AM Permalink
    ((((Osiyo and Osda Sunalei)))))....My grandmother was from the eastern band of Cherokees in North Carolina.....in fact much of my family remains there still.....I know of this story and yes it is a true story......many do not know of the many bad and unjustice things that happened to my people......In fact Andrew Jackson was a terrible man.....who lied and even killed many Cheorkee People....and other Native Americans, sold their scalps (Men, woman, and even children) also made his horses reigns out of the skins of Indian People......these are just a few things Im sure many people even today do not know about.....and to think I have to see his face on the front of a 20 dollar bill......(sad) dohiya my friend
    .· ´¨¨)) -:¦:-
    ¸.·´ .·´¨¨))
    ((¸¸.·´ ..·´ -:¦:-Tanena-:¦:-
    -:¦:- ((¸¸.·´*

    PS....It is good to read about the true history of Native American indian people......too bad in the schools history books it is still even today the truth is still hidden.
  • #2 Comment from oceanmrc 
    4/21/05 6:10 AM Permalink
    This sounds like a fine book.
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