The lazy days of summer and the snowy days of winter, when a bad storm has arrived, are two times when it is absolutely necessary to have a good book to read. Or two or three. Other things claim the spare moments in spring and autumn, when reading ca
The lazy days of summer and the snowy days of winter, when a bad storm has arrived, are two times when it is absolutely necessary to have a good book to read. Or two or three. Other things claim the spare moments in spring and autumn, when reading can be during a few hours here and there â but summer and winter times need a good book.
I cannot pass by a bookstore, or a book sale of any kind, or a tag sale where there might be a few books to browse through. And I rarely find the will power to not buy something â a book I donât need or that looks like it might be interesting. So it wasnât unusual for the slim little book to catch my attention at a recent sale of books I came upon. Something about the volume said quality. Something about the two branches of a tree or shrub caught my fancy. The title beckoned to me and I bought it. It has been near my chair in the reading corner for a couple of weeks, until the past weekend. I picked it up and leafed through it and after reading about five pages I thought, âThank goodness I bought this book.â
So it was that I settled back and with great appreciation of the style, the rhythm of it and the lovely story, I began to read it!
The Inland Island by Josephine W. Johnson kept me up very late that first night. No wonder the author won a Pulitzer Prize for her first novel Now in November in 1934! This book takes you through a year of nature; of descriptions that are pleasing and as real as if the reader was there. She speaks of the âwinter cold begins to deepen and tightenâ â âthe juncos who never fed off the ground before came to the bird feederâ â and âa visit to a cold, snow-covered favorite rock in the pasture.â
There is much more about nature â finding the jewelweed plants; the teasel growing as high as her head; a hummingbird that zooms and sizzles among the flowers. July is hot and humid.
The pages that tell of December are more solemn and pensive. A big snow arrives falling âslowly in soft, descending clusters like fairy snowballs.â This is a book which I deliberately read one chapter â one month, at a time, slowly and with enjoyment. I am certain it is probably out of print, but if you ever see it at a book sale, buy it and keep it on the nightstand by your bed, and read it one chapter at a time! It was published by Simon and Schuster.
Wendy and Megan and Michael came down Sunday to help me do a large grocery shopping trip. We went up to the Agway store in Woodbury so I could buy yet another hummingbird feeder.
I had bought a new one in April â a little larger, but the same style I have had for several years. Time after time, the âhummersâ have come â checked it out and flown away. I washed it carefully, put new syrup in it, and waited. Same thing. I was very much disappointed; this is one of summerâs pleasures, to watch these tiny birds. So, I bought a new one, a little different shape, and Wendy filled it with syrup I had already made. Two hours later, the hummingbirds came to have supper! A very small one and one quite large. They have been here all day today, too. Iâm anxious to hear whether the hummingbirds in Harwinton would use it!
A call from Laurie in Vermont sounded as if her garden is planted and there are more kinds of birds than ever at her place this year, including rose-breasted gross beaks, and a towhee out in the edge of the woods. I hope I will be able to go up to see some autumn in Vermont!
Last weekâs quote was by Oliver Wendell Holmes.
Who said, âHousekeeping ainât no jokeâ?