“In fact, reading is a discipline: like running regularly, or meditating, or taking voice lessons. Any able adult can run across the backyard, but this ability to put one foot in front of another shouldn’t make him think that he can tackle a marathon without serious, time-consuming training. Most of us can manage to sing “Happy Birthday” or the Doxology when called for, but this doesn’t incline us to march down to the local performing arts center and try out for the lead in Aida. Yet because we can read the newspaper or Time or Stephen King without difficulty, we tend to think that we should be able to go directly into Homer or Henry James without any further preparation. And when we stumble, grow confused or weary, we take this as proof of our mental inadequacy: We’ll never be able to read the Great Books. The truth is that the study of literature requires different skills than reading for pleasure. The inability to tackle, unaided, a list of Great Books and stick to the project doesn’t demonstrate mental inadequacy—just a lack of preparation.”
― The Well-Educated Mind: A Guide to the Classical Education You Never Had
― The Well-Educated Mind: A Guide to the Classical Education You Never Had
“Load your bookshelves with the best literature you can find. Hang beautiful, thought-provoking art work around your house. Watch history and science documentaries as well as good movies and television programs. Listen to beautiful music (which, of course, is open to interpretation).”
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
“I think we’ve entered an era of unintended consequences. Technologies designed to liberate the human mind from mundane tasks and enable us to communicate on a personal, global scale have instead been used to disturb our sleep, destroy our productivity, polarize our politics, and drive us into compulsive behavioral patterns that steal our capacity to engage with others socially. And it does all that while making us feel more productive, but actually lowering the quality of our work.”
― You're a Miracle (and a Pain in the Ass): Embracing the Emotions, Habits, and Mystery That Make You You
― You're a Miracle (and a Pain in the Ass): Embracing the Emotions, Habits, and Mystery That Make You You
“Let them once get in touch with Nature, and a habit is formed which will be a source of delight through life. We were all meant to be naturalists, each in his degree, and it is inexcusable to live in a world so full of the marvels of plant and animal life and to care for none of these things.” – Charlotte Mason”
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
“The question is not, — how much does the youth know? When he has finished his education — but how much does he care? And about how many orders of things does he care? In fact, how large is the room in which he finds his feet set? And, therefore, how full is the life he has before him?” ~ Charlotte Mason”
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
― A Literary Education: Adapting Charlotte Mason for Modern Secular Homeschooling
Rachel’s 2025 Year in Books
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