Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Websites I Wish Still Existed

A laptop sitting on a wooden table. The text reads: “Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge. Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.”

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Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

Several friends walking down the beach together on a foggy day. This shot was taken from far away and behind, so no facial features can be discerned. The Ooze was a Christian message board created by Spencer Burke that existed about 20 years ago when the Internet was quite different from how it is today. It was a gathering place for all sorts of people who were trying to come up with better ways to live out their faith. I met some incredible people there, including my spouse!

Even though I was a Christian back then, I generally avoided the theological discussions that took place there. I was much more interested in finding practical ways to quietly live out my beliefs as someone who had virtually no extra money to spare but who still wanted to help others in whatever ways I could.

While I am very far removed from that world now, I’d love to have a reunion with many of the genuine folks I met there. They were good people.

See also: message boards in general. I wish they would become popular again as I miss the depth of conversation that could be found in them about all sorts of niche topics. It was almost like taking a college course on those subjects.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the Second Half of 2026

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Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Here are the titles I’m looking forward to reading later on this year. It’s once again looking a little sparse, but I’m sure that will change as autumn grows nearer.  I do have a few Top Ten Tuesday bloggers to thank for some of titles on this list as well, so keep an eye out for that.

Book cover for Our Cut Of Salt By Deena Helm. Image on cover shows the title bleeding as the hand of a pale-skinned person peels wallpaper off of a dirty wall.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1.  Our Cut Of Salt By Deena Helm. Tor Nightfire,

Publication Date: September 22

Thank you to Tammy @ Books Bones Buffy for recommending this title earlier this year!

Why I’m Interested: This sounds quite scary. Will it also be a metaphor for the genocide in Palestine? Only time will tell. 

 

Book cover for Building 903 by Lois Lowry. Image on cover shows a drawing of a child standing in the light-filled doorway to a library filled with shadows and books.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Building 903 by Lois Lowry

Thank you to Susan @ Blogging ‘Bout Books for recommending this title a few weeks ago!

Publication Date: September 29

Why I’m Interested: I had no idea Ms. Lowry was still writing books, but now I want to catch up on her work. She was one of my favourite authors as a kid. 

 

Book cover for As You Wake, Break the Shell by Becky Chambers. Image on cover shows two Earths floating through outer space, one green and blue like ours and a second one on top that is purple and pink.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. As You Wake, Break the Shell by Becky Chambers

Publication Date: October 13

Why I’m Interested: I try to read everything Ms. Chambers releases as I love her writing style and vivid imagination. 

 

Book cover for Dead Batteries: A Novel by Kate Maupin. Image on cover shows a flat plain where the sun has just set. The upper half of the sky is grey-blue and the lower half is a mixture of orange, pink, and yellow. It’s beautiful.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.  Dead Batteries: A Novel by Kate Maupin

Publication Date: October 27

Why I’m Interested: I’ve mostly moved on from reading horror and post-apocalyptic stuff, due to our current world being more than frightful enough as is,  but I’m fascinated by the protagonists who apparently find that setting less stressful than life was before a virus wiped out almost all of humanity. 

 

A greyscale book with a heart on the cover.

The cover for this book has not been released yet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5.  Take My Word for It by Levar Burton

Publication Date: November 10

Why I’m Interested: Honestly, I mostly just want to read his chapters about Reading Rainbow and maybe Star Trek: The Next Generation. They were among my favourite shows as a kid! 

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A Review of The Parched Lands

Book cover for The Parched Lands by N.A. Ratnayake. Image on cover is a black and white photo of several people sitting in an airport waiting room. There is not enough light in the room to make out their individual features, just to see the silhouette of their tired, slumped-over bodies against the massive windows behind them. Title: The Parched Lands 

Author: N.A. Ratnayake

Publisher: Self-Published

Publication Date: May 14, 2018

Genres: Science Fiction

Length: About 18 pages.

Source: I received a free copy from the author.

Rating: 4 Stars

Blurb:

Amanthi is a teenage student in a not-so-distant future school system of hyper-testing and top-down control. In this world, creativity is a liability — but Amanthi is not deterred from dreaming. THE PARCHED LANDS delves into the tangled issues of race, tracking, high-stakes testing, and creativity starvation that run through America’s public school systems. This short story was published as a part of Crossed Genres Magazine 2.0, Issue 7: Expectations.

Review:

Knowledge is power.

Amanthi was a brave and likeable protagonist who I wish I could have spent more time with. It takes courage to stand up against a system that one has never lived outside of, especially for a teenager who also wishes to fit in with her peers and reach her academic goals. Some of my favourite scenes involving her were the ones that showed what she was like when she wasn’t trying to remain at the top of her class. While academics are important, they are only one piece of the puzzle that can be used to describe what someone is like, and they cannot be used to explain someone’s heart and soul.

I found myself wishing for more levels of meaning in this short story. The premise was straightforward, and its criticisms of modern educational culture, while completely justified in my opinion, followed that same path. This could have easily been a five-star read for me if the author had dug more deeply into the themes to reach the centre of what is wrong with things like large language models and the incessant focus on testing  at the expense of creativity and lifelong learning in many schools.

Despite this, I did enjoy the world building in this piece. The educational system in this vision of the future was so focused on pushing up grade point averages and test results that it was overlooking the many other ways someone can find success not only in life but also in their personal development. I nodded along as I read the descriptions of the body modifications that students underwent in order to get as much out of them as possible in the classroom. While it was obviously an exaggeration of what actually happens in the classroom, the emotions connected to the commodification of learning were eerily similar in real life and in fiction.

The Parched Lands made me wish for a sequel.

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Have You Ever Attended Your High School Reunion? Why?

A laptop sitting on a wooden table. The text reads: “Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge. Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.”

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

Black and white photo of an empty hallway filled with sunlight in a school.

For illustrative purposes only. This wasn’t my school.

No, I’ve never attended any of my high school reunions and I never will.

Let me explain.

I was homeschooled from preschool through grade 3 and had excellent experiences with that for the most part.

In grades 4 and 5, I attended a wonderfully friendly little school in the western portion of the United States. Had I stayed there, maybe things would have turned out differently.

The summer before I began grade 6, we moved cross-country to a rural part of the midwest because a church there hired my dad as their new pastor. Most of my classmates had been together since kindergarten, if not much earlier in life, and at best the majority of them were not at all interested in welcoming new kids into the fold.

I was bullied for years, mostly emotionally although there were a few minor physical altercations as well. In retrospect, these experiences caused severe depression and social anxiety. Yes, I made a few friends along the way, but no one I kept up with after graduation.

One thing that kept me going was the thought that someday I would never again be legally required to interact with any of the people who made my life miserable for so many years.

My final year of high school only included two classes on campus which was a massive relief. The rest of the time, I was joyfully taking courses at a local college for free thanks for a dual enrolment program my school offered.

I was confused by classmates who grieved the end of high school.  Their experiences were nothing at all like mine.

For me, those years are something I will revisit in the rare blog post but that is all.

I forgive those classmates and genuinely hope they’ve become kind and accepting adults, but I never developed the deep emotional connection to that chapter of my life that I’d need in order to be willing to travel internationally and spend a substantial sum of money just to attend a class reunion. The window of opportunity for that closed many years ago. No thank you.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books on My Summer 2026 To-Read List

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I’m back to my usual short list of seasonal TBR titles. I hope all of them are excellent, and I’ll fill in the rest of my summer selections with mood reads and maybe a few books from some of your lists, too.

 

Book cover for Cat Love: A Novel by Tomás Q. Morín. Image on cover shows a brown and black cat sitting with its black tail curled up around its legs. As your eye moves up its body to its head, the image becomes distorted with about a dozen little boxes with closeup images of cat faces and bodies lying where this cat’s head should be.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1.  Cat Love: A Novel by Tomás Q. Morín

Why I’m Interested: Who would have thought that the cat in Schrödinger’s box could be a narrator. Quite creative.

 

Book cover for In Defense of Sunlight: The Surprising Science of Sun Exposure by Rowan Jacobsen. Image on cover shows a somewhat abstract drawing of bright yellow and pink sun rays shining out from an even brighter yellow centre.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.  In Defense of Sunlight: The Surprising Science of Sun Exposure by Rowan Jacobsen

Why I’m Interested: I enjoy reading nonfiction about new medical studies and discussions about what is actually the healthiest way to live. This does not mean that I’m going to throw my sunscreen out and try to get sunburns or a tan over the summer, of course, but I do think it’s important to keep up with the latest research when possible.

 

Book cover for My Name Was Baby: An Intersex Memoir by Chris M. Arnone. Image on cover shows a drawing of two newborn human footprints against an off-white background. The last word of the title is written in a blue cursive font that looks like it could a name.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.  My Name Was Baby: An Intersex Memoir by Chris M. Arnone 

Publication Date: June 26

Why I’m Interested: I also love learning about all sorts of medical conditions, especially when they are written from the perspective of people living with them. This sounds like it could be quite the educational read.

 

Book cover for Everything Was Beautiful and Nothing Hurt by Ben Reeves. Image on cover shows the sun rising over a night sky that has a sliver of moon in it. Below, three large flowers grow.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.  Everything Was Beautiful and Nothing Hurt by Ben Reeves

Publication Date: July 7

Why I’m Interested: It’s nice when the angel of death is portrayed as a kind and gentle person. I hope the storyline will do this character justice.

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A Review of Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2025

Book cover for Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2025 (Hearth Stories Book 4) by J.C. Pillard, Erin Keating, Amanda Fetters, Alicia Adams, T.R. Steele, Kendra Recht, T.S. Weaver, and Christian Emecheta. Image on cover is a drawing of green leaves still sprouting from the tiny branch they grew on. The leaves are long and thin with rough edges and curl slightly at their ends. They are set against a black background. Title: Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2025 (Hearth Stories Book 4) 

Author: J.C. Pillard, Erin Keating, Amanda Fetters, Alicia Adams, T.R. Steele, Kendra Recht, T.S. Weaver, and Christian Emecheta

Publisher: Heart Stories

Publication Date: June 18, 2025

Genres: Fantasy, Paranormal, LGBTQ+, Romance, Historical

Length: About 110 pages.

Source: I received a free copy from the publisher.

Rating: 5 Stars

Blurb:

Hearth Stories is a speculative fiction magazine focused on cozy fantasy stories. Each issue features a letter from the editor, author bios and interviews, and wonderful stories focused on family, home life, connection, and the natural world.

This issue features the following stories:

A Different Kind of Worship by J.C. Pillard

The Washing Witch by Erin Keating

The Braided Lintel by Amanda Fetters

To the Scribe Who Reads This by Alicia Adams

No More Walls by T.S. Weaver

An Ordinary Love Story by Christian Emecheta

Content Warning: A terminal illness, aging, grief, and death.

Review:

Anything is possible when the forests are filled with the energy and life that summer brings.

In “A Different Kind of Worship,” a minor god named Salix sat at the bedside of his last worshipper, Ruldi. When Ruldi died, so would Salix, but for now they shared the same peaceful existence in a small home together. I adored Salix’s gentle and kind personality and was curious to discover how he would spend his final days. While I can’t discuss the plot twists in this story without sharing spoilers, I can say they were just as beautiful and meaningful as the protagonist was and I finished the final paragraph with a tear gleaming in my eye and a smile on my lips. This would have made an incredible short film!

The first sentence of “Fully Formed” in which the narrator explained that nobody wanted to let Rowan bury his golden apple beetle pupae in their gardens immediately piqued my curiosity. It seemed like such a minor favour to give that I couldn’t imagine saying no to it, but I wanted to learn more. This was an excellent example of how to include world building into a short story that entices the reader to keep going. While I can’t go into much detail about it without sharing spoilers, I can say that the folklore surrounding beetles and apple trees was particularly lovely.

The relationship between Linden and Marna in “An Ordinary Love Story” was sweet and gentle, but what drew me into this chapter of their lives even more deeply was the time they spent learning how to be healers. It was an apprenticeship that lasted about a year and included both herbal and magical remedies. This was the perfect combination of themes in my opinion, especially as their friendship began to evolve into something more than that and they needed to figure out how to break the news to their mentor.

Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2025 was a well-written anthology that made me yearn for summer to begin. 

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Something to Know Before Visiting Canada

A laptop sitting on a wooden table. The text reads: “Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge. Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.”

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

A Canadian Flag flying in the breeze as a few wispy white clouds sail through the blue sky.

I’ve met a few people over the years who believe that all Canadians are bilingual and that you should know at least some French before visiting us, but neither of those things is true.

According to Stats Canada, French is the first language of about 20% of thepopulation, English is the first language of 57% of us, and the other 23% learned another language first. About 18% of Canadians speak both French and English.

If you’re visiting a rural village in Quebec and speaking to a group of elderly people who have lived there for their entire lives, you will probably either need to speak French with them or bring an interpreter with you. The same can be true if you’re going deep into Northern Canada to visit small indigenous or First Nations communities as sometimes the oldest living generations there don’t speak English well (or at all) either from what I have heard, although I know more about the French angle due to how much higher the percentage of French speakers is in southern Ontario as compared to indigenous languages.

The largest cities in all of our provinces and territories are filled with people who speak English fluently and the vast majority of the other rural areas in the rest of Canada can say the same.

It might be their second, third, fourth, etc.  language due to how much immigration we’ve been lucky enough to have, but you should have no problem communicating with most people in big cities if you need directions or other types of assistance.

People who immigrate to Quebec are required to speak French on an A2 proficiency level in order to receive Permanent Residency.

(For anyone who doesn’t know, proficiency levels range from  a low of A1 to a high of C2 from what I understand, so they are basically asking new residents to be able to have short, simple conversations in that language and know enough about it to be able to fill out a form that, say, asks for your name, phone number, and home address. Fluency takes much longer to acquire and is not required).

It is not at all necessary to know French (or Pikanii, Tlingit, or any other non-English language)  in order to have a great vacation here or live in any of the other provinces or territories, though.

Once I become fluent in Spanish, French is next on my list to learn. After that, who knows? Maybe I’ll try one of the many amazing Indigenous languages next.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books I’ve Read Whose Titles Begin With the Letter A

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Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

The original theme for this week was “Bookish Wishes,” but after a few years of sharing general bookish wishes I’m kind of tapped out for creativity in that area.

Instead, I’m going to be joining in the alphabet book trend. I believe that Pam @ Read Bake Create might have been the first person to do this back in 2022, but please let me know if someone else should be credited instead.

Here are ten books I’ve read since 2013 that begin with the letter A.

Book cover or The Atheist Muslim: A Journey from Religion to Reason by Ali. Rizvi. Image on cover is a drawing of pages of a book being torn away and turning into white birds the further they get from the book.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. The Atheist Muslim: A Journey from Religion to Reason by Ali. Rizvi

 

Book cover for Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson. Image on coder shows a drawing of a hunched -over person standing next to a chair against a dirty white wall that has no adornments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson

 

(I was not able to link the cover of this book to this post).

3. The Asshole Survival Guide: How to Deal with People Who Treat You Like Dirt by Robert J. Sutton

 

Book cover for Attached: the New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find and Keep Love by Amir Levine. Image on cover shows two u-shaped orange magnets that have been attached together in a heart shape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and how It Can Help You Find – And Keep – Love by Amir Levine

 

Book cover for American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption by Gabrielle Glaser. Image on cover shows a pair of newborn human footprints against a beige background.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. American Baby: A Mother, a Child, and the Shadow History of Adoption by Gabrielle Glaser

 

Book cover for American Contagions: Epidemics and the Law from Smallpox to Covid-19 by John Fabian Witt. Image on cover shows a drawing of a skull and a pair of angel wings below it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6. American Contagions: Epidemics and the Law from Smallpox to Covid-19 by John Fabian Witt

 

Book cover for The Annals of a Country Doctor by Carl Matlock, MD. Image on cover is a drawing of a red-steepled one-story church. Dusk is beginning and the sky is pink. There are a few large deciduous trees by the church.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7. The Annals of a Country Doctor by Carl Matlock, MD

 

Book cover for Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer. Image on cover shows a green plant winding its way around the title in a manner that feels a little smothering.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8. Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer

 

Book cover for The Autumn Ghost: How the Battle Against a Polio Epidemic Revolutionized Modern Medical Care by Hannah Wunsch. Image on cover is a black and white photo of a doctor and nurse taking care of a sick patient who has a black tube in his mouth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9. The Autumn Ghost: How the Battle Against a Polio Epidemic Revolutionized Modern Medical Care by Hannah Wunsch

 

Book cover for Apis by Liz Boysha. Image on cover shows a drawing of a black woman who has patches of something gold and glowing on her skin. She’s holding her chin up with one hand has she looks thoughtfully and happily off to the viewer’s right. There are blue, purple, and yellow flowers woven into a halo-like object above her head.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10. Apis by Liz Boysha (My review)

 

 

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A Review of Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2024

Book cover for Hearth Stories, Summer Solstice 2024 by Gwendolyn Maia Hicks, River West, Margaret Treanor Frey, Alicia Adams, A. Emery Watkins, Morgan Welch, A. Katherine Black, Nancy J. Hayden, H. A. Titus & Erin Keating. Image on cover is a painting of a woman wearing a bright red dress, a cloak that was a darker shade of red, and a white bonnet. She is standing in the woods and looking down as she pours something into the mossy ground below her. There is a pond or other still body of water right in front of her. Title: Hearth Stories Book Two, Summer Solstice 2024

Authors: Gwendolyn Maia Hicks, River West, Margaret Treanor Frey, Alicia Adams, A. Emery Watkins, Morgan Welch, A. Katherine Black, Nancy J. Hayden, H. A. Titus & Erin Keating

Publisher:Hearth Stories

Publication Date: June 20, 2024

Genres: Fantasy, Romance, LGBTQ+, Historical

Length: about 124 pages

Source: I received a free copy from the publisher.

Rating: 5 Stars

Blurb:

Hearth Stories is a speculative fiction magazine focused on cozy fantasy stories. Each issue features a letter from the editor, author bios and interviews, and wonderful stories focused on family, home life, connection, and the natural world.

This issue features the following stories:

The Heart That Beats Behind the Bones by Gwendolyn Maia Hicks

The Woman with the Bird in Her Skirts by River West

Tome for Tea by Margaret Treanor Frey

You’re Always Welcome Hereby Alicia Adams

Bitter Tea by A. Emery Watkins

Marginalia by Morgan Welch

Outside of Wonderful by A. Katherine

Black Skogul by Nancy J. Hayden

Past Lives and Loaves by H. A. Titus

Green Water, Blue Water by Erin Keating

Content Warning: Brief references to dementia, terminal illness, and death. I will not discuss them in my review.

Review:

The past may be a foreign country in some respects, but that’s not all that it is.

“Bitter Tea” focused on a short conversation about human nature between a frog witch and Pilpa, the local sorcerer. I appreciated the perspectives it shared on what makes someone a good or bad person and how much one should extend themselves to help others who may or may not actually feel gratitude for the assistance. There aren’t always clear cut answers to such questions, but puzzling out various answers to them is a great way to pass the time while drinking a cup of tea. I would have happily read more about these characters!

Figuring how to to recreate a type of bread that nobody had made in generations lead Mara on a short quest in “Past Lives and Loves.” I loved the cozy fantasy elements of this tale, especially since the individual she needed to talk to was part of a species that is not typically treated so warmly in the mainstream fantasy genre. The focus on maintaining longterm friendships was another reason this was so meaningful to me. I’m always on the lookout for more stories that do precisely that, and this was a lovely example of how friendship can enrich a character’s life.

Skogul was a raven attempting to understand human customs in “Black Skogul.” Mingus was the human who had raised Skogul from a chick to a full-fledged adult, but now Mingus was beginning to show signs of mental and physical decline as he aged. It’s difficult to say too much about this story without giving away spoilers, but I loved the way the non-human perspective was written. Skogul described certain scenes quite differently than any human would, so it took a little thought to understand what was happening in them. This was a good thing, though, given who the protagonist was and how important their relationship with Mingus had become to both characters over the years.

I wish I could have talked about all of the stories in this anthology in my review. Every one of them was beautifully written and enriched my imagination.

Hearth Stories Book Two, Summer Solstice 2024 was sweet, gentle, and heartwarming. I can’t recommend it highly enough as Summer Solstice approaches.

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: A Story About My Best Teacher

A laptop sitting on a wooden table. The text reads: “Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge. Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.”

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

Empty rows of desks in a high school classroom. Linda Fetter was my best teacher. She’s almost certainly retired or maybe not even alive anymore based on her age when I first met her and how many years it has been since I graduated high school, therefore I think it’s okay to mention her by name here. I have never seen anything about her online, so I doubt she’ll ever know about this post even if she is still with us.

The first class I took with her was ninth grade Language Arts, and I loved how clearly she explained the grammar lessons she taught to us. She knew just how to use the right metaphors when we weren’t quite getting it.

Our class was the first period of the  day. If we acted too sleepy, she’d have us stand up and do a few jumping jacks to get our blood pumping which I always found amusing.

Later on I took a mandatory speech course as well as two elective courses with her that involved nothing but reading from a pre-selected list of classic novels. The latter were a nice break from the classes I took that had heavy homework loads as all she required of us was that we spend a few minutes reading every night after school. It was so much easier than conjugating irregular Spanish verbs or trying to figure out quadratic equations.

She also added little flourishes to her lessons that I will never forget. For example, she’d play classical music and give us peppermints to suck on during exams because she’d read studies that showed those things improved test scores. (Whether they are still thought to be helpful, I don’t know. She paid attention to the latest academic research of the time, though.)

Sometimes we’d go outside for class at the end of the year when the weather was really nice. That was always a refreshing break from the stuffy classrooms as our school didn’t have air conditioning and it could get rather hot and humid by the beginning of June.

I loved the care and concern she showed for her students and wished she could have taught Language Arts for grades 10, 11, and 12 as well.

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