This crafty bracelet; interweaved gold wire round links and color glass beads. Each bracelet varies slightly with various beads. Each link approx. 1.5 inches in diameter.
"Oh, the summer night
Has a smile of light
And she sits on a sapphire throne."
-Barry Cornwall

I do not know what it is about summer, but something about the warm breezes at night and a steadiness in the air that makes me feel at peace within myself. Sometimes, I sit outside on my apartment patio and get dizzy thinking that I am sitting in my "dream" house, out on the deck, over looking a mossy and moonlit lake. The breeze is coming from an old weeping willow tree in out and to the left. The frogs sing in perfect harmony and the dragonflies flicker about. I cannot wait to spend my summer nights that way, curled up with a good book. So, for today I thought a list of great summer reads would be in order.
(& in no particular order)
THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN by Garth Stein

Preview the book here.
SHE by Saul Williams

She is a fascinating and unique collection of interconnected poems by this multi-talented star — and marks the beginning of an incredible and totally original artistic career.
Letters From The Earth by Mark Twain

THE DOGS OF BABEL by Carolyn Parkhurst

Written with a quiet elegance and a profound knowledge of love’s hidden places, The Dogs of Babel is a novel of astonishing and lasting power—a story of marriage, survival, and devotion that lies too deep for words. *
SUNNYSIDE by Glen David Gold
Sunnyside opens on a winter day in 1916 with the roaring 1920's approaching and so, according to an endnote, “[O]n November 12, 1916, Charlie Chaplin was indeed the subject of mass hysteria in which he was spotted across the country,”. I will also add that this book doesn't necessarily have a plot but does follow Mr. Chaplin through the several mass hysterias that came through times we know of as when when "the Great War" was not the name of a book and when tragedies went from theater to black white film. If the reader reads close enough, there is plenty of history in this book.
Word of the DAY:
deterge • \dih-TURJ\ • verb
to wash off : to cleanse
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