Books for Stay-at-Home Days

Don’t know about you, but I was a serial book monogamist for years. Would never dream of starting a new book until seeing the last one through (even if it stunk) to the very end. But now for some strange reason I usually have 2-3 books going at once. Do you share this habit? And will you share some of your own latest “must-reads” with us?

  

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What Santa Left Under The Christmas Tree :)

Some Purple Wellies,
“Wicked Brown” Wellies,

And The Farm Chicks Cookbook.
A Popcorn Popper For Movie Nights…
And New Games For Game Nights.
For Doing Manly Things…
And More Manly Things…
And For When All Our Chores Are Done.
Merry Christmas from The D’Avanzos
Hope Saint Nick Was Extra Good To All Of You!

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Giving Ideas

Lesley M.M. Blume’s

Let’s Bring Back: An Encyclopedia of Forgotten-Yet-Delightful, Chic, Useful, Curious, and Otherwise Commendable Things from Times Gone By

Check it out in Vanity Fair.

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Do you craft?

Guess we’ll just stay on the fun-books-to-read theme this week while we keep our noses to the ol’ client grindstone. (And if you’re a client who’s reading this, please don’t take offense. It’s just an old expression, really…we still love you.) Anyhow, Amy Sedaris tackles more of life’s tough questions in her book Simple Times: Crafts for Poor People. Whether you’re rich, poor or somewhere in between, this one’s a throwback to days of yore. You can learn, or relearn, about some cool stuff like how to make sausage cookies, how to make a doll-wig doorknob, or even how to create your own crab-claw roach clips.  

Simple Times confronts the hard-hitting craft questions that other books of this genre have refused to even acknowledge: Why should every room look like an attic? What is the quickest way to obtain feathers from a bird? What are the best crafting options for the criminally insane? Why is there a half naked man wearing a short canary robe on page 250? Simple Times does more than answer the tough questions, it also transports us back to a golden time when we wore handmade sweaters, carved our cooking utensils out of bark, and the best people would buy books based on a whim.

P.S. Oh, and in case you missed Amy’s chat with Craig Ferguson:

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More good stuff for the reading list

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