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Supermarket Smarty

I received the following product free in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of the book.

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The Supermarket Smarty is a nifty little reusable grocery list – everything is listed right there in a five-fold, double sided card that is approximately 8.25″ x 4″. It comes with a larger clip magnet so you can clip your list to it and hang on the refrigerator, a dry erase marker and a reusable meal planner card. Inside it has an extra blank side for Notes. It also includes a magnifying “glass” or window in the front of the card to help shoppers read the small print in the ingredient lists on products. There’s even a little pocket inside that coupons could be kept in.

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The grocery list itself is broken down into food groups and product categories. The creator even included healthy tips and a symbol key, as well as W.H.A.T? Whole grain, Healthy Oils, Added Sugars and Trans Fat – Important questions to ask before buying processed food.

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I have found it to be a very useful tool and I really like the healthy emphasis. I usually keep a magnetic pad of paper on my refrigerator so that we can jot down items as our supply runs low or we notice we have run out. This is better because the pages do not peel off and it is reusable. I truly like it.

The Supermarket Smarty costs $12.99 and may be purchased at http://www.supermarketsmarty.com/


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The Children’s Place – Review of New Spring Outfits

Thanks to The Children’s Place for surprising me with their generosity…they sent me three beautiful dressy outfits for three of my children for me to review! The PR rep really caught me by surprise when I opened the box to discover what she sent. My children were very excited and pleased.

I am excited to show you a little video of my little girl twirling in her new dress. Not only is her new dress pink – her favorite color, but it fans out when she spins! The pleasures of being a little girl! She was the most excited of the three children, I must say. Therefore, I just have to share the video first, then the rest…

P.S. Excuse my boxes, as we have been boxing up stuff to give away and pack away! (Blush!)

For our daughter, we received a pink, green and white sun dress called Stylin’ Sunshine Girl – Pleated Dress. It retails for $29.50.

These items washed up really well with minimal shrinkage, but to be on the safe side in the second washing of my daughter’s dress, I hung it dry or at least tumble dried it. The green of the dress will run, as we had that happen when my daughter got chocolate on the front of the dress and we had to soak it. So just be careful not to soak it long.

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The boys received linen dress shirts with a matching knit vest. The first is the Classic ‘n Cool for our youngest son – Argyle Sweater Vest and lavender/purple Linen Shirt. The vest retails for $19.50 and the shirt $16.50.

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Our older son was given the Prepped ‘n Perfect – Argyle Sweater Vest and yellow Linen Shirt. Both retail for the same amount as the smaller size, $19.50 for the vest and $16.50 for the shirt. My older son did find the linen shirt a bit itchy, but was fine with a t-shirt beneath it.

Overall we love these new spring dress clothes!

Visit The Children’s Place Spring Dressy Clothes for more information on their new Spring Dressy Clothes www.childrensplace.com


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Revell Young Adult Book Tour – Out With the in Crowd

I received the following book free in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of the book.

I thought I would be able to let my oldest daughter read this book after me and do her own book review for her blog, but decided that she cannot. While the book is aimed at high schoolers, I don’t think this book represents what should be a typical high school experience for Christian kids.

Years ago it would be an incredibly shameful to show your face in public with an out-of-wedlock pregnancy; today it is the norm. But I question  that it should be for Christians. I don’t think it should be, regardless of what the world around us is doing.

Out With the in Crowd
reminded me of a teen soap opera with the boyfriends, break ups, teen girl meanness and teen pregnancy. It is the second in the series Stephanie Morrill has written about The Reinvention of Skylar Hoyt. Skylar is a teen who is from a seemingly Christian home, but sows some wild oats by partying and drinking. Then an event occurs to get her attention back on God. The whole book is about her struggle to live for Christ when things around her are falling apart.

I don’t know about you, but we are trying to raise our children differently than the world. I realize that Christian teens attending high school are no doubt facing the very things that this book addresses, but that is one of the reasons we are homeschooling.

The book also fails to even mention Scripture verses that could help Skylar focus on truth rather than her own thoughts and circumstances.

Needless to say, I was disappointed in this book. You may or may not agree.

“Available January 2010 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.”


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Book Review – Abigail

I received a free copy of the following book from Revell in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of the book.

I usually like historical fiction, although for the past few years I have tried to limit the amount that I read. I do like the reprieve it gives me from the heavier topics that I have been reading of late. I also enjoy reading fictional accounts of a biblical characters. Reading an author’s perception of what life could have been like, had all the details of the character been revealed in the Bible, makes me think more deeply about the character’s life.

Abigail is the second book in Jill Eileen Smith’s series, The Wives of King David. It is a fictional story about the life of a Biblical woman named Abigail. Abigail was first married to a very foolish man and when he died, she married the future King of Israel, David. This book reveals what it might have been like to be one of King David’s many wives.

Jill Eileen Smith does a very good job of depicting what the life of Abigail could have been, had all the intimate details been shared in the scriptures. I believe that Abigail was a very wise woman and that was the character trait that stood out to David upon his introduction to this woman, who so valiantly saved her household from attack after her husband’s foolish decision to be both disrespectful and inhospitable to David and his men. Smith captured this trait of wisdom, as well as the love Abigail had for the Lord Jehovah and King David, which shows throughout the book in how she lives her life. Abigail may have been the only wife David had that shared his faith.

Overall, I really did enjoy Abigail and would probably read the first in the series, Michal, and any others that follow.

“Available February 2010 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.”


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Revolve 2010

I received a free copy of the following book from Book Sneeze in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of the book.

Revolve

I didn’t realize that Resolve was a Bible until it arrived. I thought it was a magazine for young people, but it is the New Testament with a magazine look and design. It certainly brings our present cultural issues to the forefront and will appeal to the younger audience, although it almost seems sacrilegious. I think I understand the concept – the desire to make the Bible more relevant to the younger generation, but I cannot agree with this approach.

I cannot get excited about a New Testament that contains fashion, makeup and dating advice or that is sprinkled with celebrity news, interviews and mission and Bible tips. It saddens me, to be honest. It saddens me that I have to write a negative review and it saddens me that we, as Christians, think that we need to be like the world to reach out to the world with the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Perhaps it is my age, but my oldest daughter liked what she saw, even though she admitted it was kind of weird. She likened it to the Seventeen magazine, except Revolve has the Bible in it. She hasn’t even read Seventeen, she’s only seen it in stores.

I can see young people just reading the newsy clips and sidebars and completely overlooking the New Testament. Although it may contain relevant content, we, as Christians are called to be different from the rest of the world around us. We are called to be in the world, but not of it. To me, Revolve is just another attempt to be like the world, but it’s seasoned with biblical content. It may be a hit with some, but not with me. Just make a teen magazine, no need to call it a New Testament Bible.

Revolve retails for $16.99, but Christian Book Distributors (CBD) has it for $11.99.


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Poem for Mothers

I have heard of the phrase, “The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world,” but I did not realize that it is a poem, until I read it at the end of Natalie Wickham’s book, Pajama School, which I just reviewed the other day.

I thought I’d share it here as an encouragement for all the moms reading:

The Hand That Rocks The Cradle Is The Hand That Rules The World by William Ross Wallace (1819-1881)

Blessings on the hand of women!
Angels guard its strength and grace,
In the palace, cottage, hovel,
Oh, no matter where the place;
Would that never storms assailed it,
Rainbows ever gently curled;
For the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.

Infancy’s the tender fountain,
Power may with beauty flow,
Mother’s first to guide the streamlets,
From them souls unresting grow–
Grow on for the good or evil,
Sunshine streamed or evil hurled;
For the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.

Woman, how divine your mission
Here upon our natal sod!
Keep, oh, keep the young heart open
Always to the breath of God!
All true trophies of the ages
Are from mother-love impearled;
For the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.

Blessings on the hand of women!
Fathers, sons, and daughters cry,
And the sacred song is mingled
With the worship in the sky —
Mingles where no tempest darkens,
Rainbows evermore are hurled;
For the hand that rocks the cradle
Is the hand that rules the world.


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Kitchen Chat with Margaret McSweeney – Protecting your kids

This was in an email that I received from LiteFuse Publicity:

Haunting and truthful words posted on the website for KlaasKids.

On Friday, February 19th, Margaret McSweeney will interview Marc Klaas, father of Polly Klaas who was kidnapped and murdered in 1993. As a legacy to his daughter, Marc founded KlaasKids Foundation to help stop crimes against children. Please tune in to Kitchen Chat with Margaret McSweeney Friday at 11:00 am CST!

Klaas Kids Foundation“A mile a minute – that is how fast your child can disappear.”

Here is an excerpt from Marc’s journal that is posted online:

“There is nothing that can prepare one for a murder trial. My family sits as the last few hours in Polly’s life are dissected, analyzed, de-constructed, reconstructed, cross-referenced and compartmentalized. The constant assault on our sensibilities by horrible revelations that defy the principles of civilization seem overwhelming much of the time. It is impossible to withstand or rise above the continual dehumanizing facts that are revealed in a constant, monotonous stream of revelation. There is no room for anything but the processing of nightmarish information. The killer laughs throughout the video tape and I want to shout, yet I must sit unflinching and stone-faced for fear of causing a mistrial. Every day my family is drawn into the world of murder, mayhem, rape and deprivation and there is no way out.”

Learn about effective ways to keep your children safe from harm and find out what you can do to help stop crimes against kids. Please tune in and call in with your questions for Marc this Friday 11-12 CST on Kitchen Chat.

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Book Review of Pajama School

I was sent a complimentary copy of Pajama School in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of this book.

Pajama School

Pajama School was written by homeschool graduate Natalie Wickham. It is a book about her journey as a homeschooled girl, daughter and servant of the Lord.

I was encouraged by Natalie’s story, yet in some ways it made me feel inadequate, only because she and her family were extremely involved in the homeschooling community and ministry. That just hasn’t happened for our family, yet anyway.

I believe that Pajama School isn’t just hope for homeschool moms, but for our growing young daughters. I couldn’t help but think of my oldest at different points in Natalie’s journey because Natalie is the oldest child of a larger than normal homeschool family and so is our oldest daughter. Our daughter has already asked to read this book and I will gladly allow her to. However, since she has a “wee” tendency to share what she reads, I asked her to wait until I was finished and wrote my review. I look forward to reading her review of it, as I think it will be inspiring to her; it will be interesting to see if I am right. 🙂

This is definitely a book that Christian parents /  homeschooling families can glean from. Natalie is a testimony to her parents and to the Lord for how He has graciously used her during her years of singleness, under the guidance of her parents. Even if you don’t homeschool, it will allow you to understand what it means to homeschool -from a graduate student’s perspective.

May the Lord bless her as she continues to seek and serve Him in all areas of her life.

More Resources and where to buy Pajama School:
http://www.sibropublishing.com/component/virtuemart/?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage.tpl&product_id=1&category_id=1&vmcchk=1
http://www.pajamaschool.com/blog/


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My Photos of Mayu’s Eyelet Capelet

Here are a couple of photos of my eggplant purple Mayu eyelet capelet. My oldest daughter didn’t want to show her face, so that is why it is covered…guess she doesn’t know yet that I have a photo of the children up online…shhh…;-)

You can see the detail in the hand-knit stitches, again it is extremely well made and I love it!

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Book Review – The Coupon Saving Mom

I was sent a complimentary copy of The Coupon Saving Mom in exchange for writing a review. While I consider it a privilege to receive free products to review, my review is my honest opinion and thoughts of this book.

The Coupon Mom

The Coupon Mom’s Guide to Cutting Your Grocery Bills in Half by Stephanie Nelson is a book I thought that I would learn alot from, but found that my dislike for coupons made it hard to properly apply it to our family. This book is geared more towards someone who is new to coupon shopping and isn’t use to shopping the grocery flyer sales. That’s not to say that experienced frugal shoppers won’t learn anything; they will. It’s just that over the years as our diet has changed and we have tried not to buy convenience foods, I found that most coupons were not conducive to healthy eating. Plus, I always forget coupons and so does my husband, even when I used my coupon folder! Even now, if I find coupons we can use, my husband groans or rolls his eyes. So over the years, as you can see, we’ve developed a dislike of manufacturers’ coupons. We will still use individual store coupons, if we don’t forget.

If you don’t know what kind of shopper you are already, Ms. Nelson provides a quiz to determine what kind of shopper you are and gives you tips on how to get started in using coupons for your grocery shopping, including where to look for coupons and how save money on your grocery bill by implementing her tried and true methods.

Ms. Nelsen shared legitimate websites where you can print off coupons, but again when I visited them, I only found a handful of coupons that could possibly be used by our family. She shares tips on how to save on clipping coupons through the use of your grocery store preferred shopper’s card and how to shop at warehouse clubs, as well as the Super stores, like Super Walmart and drugstores, like CVS and Walgreens whose locations are convenient and prices exorbitant prices, unless you know how to shop wisely.

I believe each of our family’s needs are so individual that each household’s buying habits will probably affect usefulness of coupon use. For example, if a you happend to have a large family a co-op probably provides greater savings because you can buy large quantities for much less than grocery store prices. We shop at Country Life Natural Foods for organic food in bulk and have used Natural Foods in the past as well. I also find the chapter on buying organic food was lacking. She doesn’t even mention buying from local farmers or the healthier alternative of pasture-raised meat, but that is another topic that could fill a whole other blog post. Nevertheless, I still think she has created a wonderful resource that will help many families save money. I just didn’t see how I could save any more money on our grocery bill since we buy alot of organic products and personal personal hygiene items to stay away from chemical ladden products as much as we are able since some of our children have had reactions over the years.

I do plan to require my girls to read this book as part of their school curriculum (we homeschool) so they can glean from the things Ms. Nelson shares because I want them to be prepared for real life and their future situations may be different than mine.

If you need to work on saving money and need a tutoring lesson in shopping frugally, The Coupon Mom is available at any major bookstore and retails for $15.00.

Here are websites Ms. Nelson includes in her book:

http://www.couponmom.com/registration

http://coupons2.smartsource.com/smartsource/index.jsp?Link=WOOX5QMOGEYUM

http://print.coupons.com/couponweb/Offers.aspx?pid=11540&zid=bm91&nid=10&bid=alk0211100227bb8235a4f17216

http://coupons.redplum.com/CouponMom/


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