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Sherrie’s Blogs

A blog that explores books and their relevance to our everyday lives, the value of literacy, and what it means to be a curious person.

Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote “Tis the good reader that makes the good book…" I hope that the same is true about good blogs. Thank you good readers.

Long Live the Indies

July 20, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

“When I have a little money, I buy books; and if I have any left, I buy food and clothes.” Desiderius Erasmus When I walk past a bookstore, I feel a tug, something lures me inside. For me, it’s an easy temptation: to peruse the shelves, glean the owner’s or clerk’s latest recommendations, curl up […]

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Bookstore, Indies

Paterfamilias

June 14, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

Books, like life, are filled with good—sometimes even great—fathers. Ditto for the tyrants. For every noble Atticus Finch-like character, there are some real stinkers, the love-to-hate-them kind of Dad, like Larry Cook, a modern-day King Lear, in “A Thousand Acres.”

It is easy to cheer for the good guys and boo the baddies, but what about the in-betweens, those who are neither patient nor prudent, but who are certainly not evil? Often, it is the flawed characters―the quirky, irresponsible, feckless, fickle, irascible, hyperbolic, conflicted, cowardly, and sometimes even absent―who make the most engagingly readable characters.

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Fathers, Reading Garden, Relationships

Grave Lessons

May 25, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

“On Hallowed Ground: The Story of Arlington National Cemetery,” is a rich story of American history and culture told through the lens of Arlington, originally the homestead of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Arlington Cemetery, Cemeteries, graves, graveyards, History

Celebrate Libraries: Great & Small

April 13, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

“I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.” Jorge Luis Borges Several years ago while on a long plane ride, I finished one book and then reached into my bag and pulled out another. The passenger in the next seat asked if I would mind if he asked me a few […]

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Libraries

Read…And Be Dangerous!

March 8, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

March 8 is International Women’s Day, a date that garners a lot of attention on the global stage. In some countries, it is even a national holiday. Ironically, while a fine celebration in name, the honoring is more theory and show than actual practice, especially in places where women are subjected to numerous hardships and […]

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Abuse, Gender equity, Gender inequity, Relationships, Siblings, Twins, Women's Rights

Letters, Leaders and Legacies

February 9, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

Volumes have been published about the lives of U.S. Presidents. Abraham Lincoln’s life alone has inspired more than 15,000 titles. In fact, Ford’s Theatre Center for Education and Leadership once displayed a three-story tower made from 6,800 books written about Lincoln. But, when I think about past presidents, my thoughts quickly shift from books about […]

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Civil Right's Act, Legacies, Letters

Books That Sustain Us

January 5, 2014 by Sherrie Dulworth

Reading alone photo

I love reading. That’s evident in the creation of this blog. Books teach me what I didn’t know, break open my self-imposed boundaries, inspire my next steps, entertain me and enrich my hours. If you’re reading this, you know exactly what I mean. But there’s something else about books we don’t often consider: books sustain us. […]

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Filed Under: Sherrie’s Blogs Tagged With: Authors, Books, Emotional resislency, Reading, Solitude, Sustain

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"Face it.
Curiosity will not cause us to die—
Only lack of it will.”

(from "Curiosity" by poet Alistair Reid)

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