I didn’t love this book. Perhaps it’s because this is my 9th year of homeschooling and I’ve already read or heard or learned everything the author lays out in this book. Yes, don’t push early academics. Yes, let them play a lot, especially when they’re little. Yes, read living books as much as possible. Yes, do what works for your family, not for everyone else’s family. Yes, all of life is learning and education. Unfortunately, the author’s tone came off as smug, self-satisfied, and superior to me, which was very off-putting. Different families do school at home different ways during different seasons for many reasons. It irked me how often she told me what HER family did, as if it were the gold standard and all other ways of doing school were inferior. I guess I didn’t realize what I was getting when I grabbed this book; had I know, I would have skipped it. In fact, I did skip whole sections of information that regurgitated the same stuff others have been saying for years and years in books, articles, blog posts, and conferences. Honestly, if you’ve been homeschooling for more than a few years, you’ve probably heard all this before in a more condensed, less grating tone. Save yourself time and money by skipping this book. If you are new to homeschooling, this will probably all seem new and wild and free and worthwhile. And much of it is, but know that life happens, seasons of home schooling call for different approaches, our kids don’t always follow our plans, and you just take it day by day, month by month, and year by year, adjusting what works for your family as you go. Maybe nature outings won’t work for a season for some reason - you are not ruining your child’s childhood or academic success! Textbooks have their place and sometimes they’re useful. A few thrown into the mix from time to time won’t kill your child’s love of learning and curiosity. If read alouds don’t work out for a season, audiobooks are great and you’re not a terrible parent for outsourcing that part of schooling. We have a lot of freedom in our homeschooling - more than I think this book acknowledges - and we need to give ourselves grace to do what the Lord leads us to, even if it doesn’t look like the picture so many of these homeschooling movements paint for us.