Thursday, October 9, 2014

Well, talk about a switch up.  I was asked over the summer to take a position as a libarian's assistant. 

I had been teaching computer for three years and LOVED it (even though it is turning my hair grey).
My husband was stressing about her being alone and not knowing any of the adults at the campus plus she has near severe to severe migraines.  He was worried there would be no one there to help her take care of herself.  Furthermore, how were we going to get here there when I have to be at work at the same time we can start dropping off at her new campus? 

I received a text in June asking if I would be willing to come to the intermediate campus and work in the library.  The librarian oversees three schools in the district and she wanted to make sure she had someone at each campus who could take care of things while she was gone. 

After three days of crying and blubbering I decided to take it.  I knew as soon as I got the text I was going to take it but...I did not want to leave my current job.  It took that long to make my heart understand that this is what our family needed.  I have a very low stress job and I get to see my daughter throughout the day.  I also get to read ! When there are no children and all of the shelves are neat, the turned in books reshelved...I read.  So far I have finished The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, Mockingjay, Mary Poppins, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, HP and the Chamber of Secrets, HP and the Goblet of Fire, HP and the Prisoner of Azkaban, HP and the Order of the Phoenix, and HP and the Half-Blood Prince.  I am on chapter five of HP and the Deathly Hallows.  I have not read all of these at work, I have a LOT of free time at home to craft and read.

All in all...Hated the Hunger Games because of how it made me feel.  Catching Fire was not such a tough read but I still didn't like it.  Mockingjay made me feel like all the happiness that I have ever known had been sucked out of me.  No hope.   Cheery review isn't it? ;)

Mary Poppins was not what I expected.  I have to read the other two Mary Poppins Comes Back and Mary Poppins Opens the Door.  Maybe it will help me make sense of the first one. 

Now for Harry Potter.  I came to these books with the attitude of someone reading these books for information, not for enjoyment.  there has been a certain amount of enjoyment but about the middle of Goblet of fire I decided I would probably not read these books again.  I just was not enthralled with them.  Maybe I am too old (I am 36) and my sense of adventure is limited now.  Either way, I am glad I read them (I understand the Harry Potter jokes now) and I can let the kids know what I think of them. 

I plan on going back and reading the old "classics" we read in school like Oliver Twist, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Wuthering Heights, Shakespeare (love Twelfth Night), Old Yeller, Where the Red Fern Grows (I hate that movie, too many feels).  Wish me luck!  What have you read lately?  Love it? Hated it?