EntreLeadership, Dave Ramsey


EntreLeadership, Dave Ramsey

I am into the way Dave Ramsey does things, I have gone through Financial Peace University which has really helped us get rid of a lot of debt, and we are still working on it. I love listening to podcasts on the Ramsey Network. So when I found this book at the thrift store, I just had to get it. It is full of insight on how to be a leader in business, especially your own business, how to treat your coworkers, and the outlooks and perspectives you should have in order to make your business run well and succeed. 

I am an entrepreneur. I left my job last year, not because I wanted to, but my boss put some unethical choices in my lap and I wouldn't be able to live with myself if I did what he wanted...and he retaliated when I objected, by taking away almost all of my hours unless I complied. So I took the weekend to think about it and pray for wisdom, and then wrote a long, respectful, but to the point resignation letter stating why I couldn't work for him anymore. And then I treated the side hustle I have had for the last 20 years like a full time job and I have done alright. Now, I don't have anyone working for me, but that doesn't mean I can't learn some wisdom from this book. I have been in some kind of leadership position most of my adult life, so I have always felt it was important to understand how to lead, whether you are taking the reigns or assisting someone else.

So many things in here, I kept saying, YES! This is so true! This is great! And others were situations I haven't had to be in, but I gained wisdom from learning about how Dave and others handled them.

This is truly a good one to read for anyone who might lead in some point, whether as a parent, a spouse, a Sunday School teacher, an entrepreneur, whatever. 

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

 

Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World, Joanna Weaver


Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World, Joanna Weaver

This book is a gentle reminder to slow down and be in the moment, and take time to build relationships with those around us instead of getting lost in the busy-ness of all the tasks we take upon ourselves to do. 
I don't think I really learned anything new reading this, but sometimes it's good to just take a look at ourselves and bring balance back into our lives. I know I am a very task oriented person, and I can very easily put tasks before relationships. This leaves me exhausted, frustrated, and resentful, but I am the one doing it to myself. It's always beneficial to take a little time to just sit at the feet of Jesus, spend a little time alone with Him and in the Word, and just be.

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

 

The Synthetic Man, Theodore Sturgeon


The Synthetic Man, Theodore Sturgeon

This was a Bookcrossing book that was given to me for my Little Free Library, but I decided to read it first. Vintage sci-fi can be fun to read, and this was an interesting read...can't say I have ever read anything quite like it. Written originally in 1950 under the title "The Dreaming Jewels," this is the story of a young man who is abused as a child by his adopted father and runs away and joins a carnival, where he is taken under the wings of the carnival freaks who work there. He is not like other boys, something about him is just plain different, for example, three of his fingers get cut off, and they grow back. He eats ants sometimes. And he doesn't realize it, but he can make himself look like the sister of one of the carnival freaks, and keep himself from growing into an adult. He doesn't know where he came from, or who he really is, but the woman watching over him has an idea of where he came from, but in order to protect him from the head of the circus, she hides this from him until she no longer can. 


I finished this book in about two days, it was a fun story, written at a time when authors were trying their best to think outside the box, and well, this one is definitely outside the box!


 

The German Heiress, Anika Scott


The German Heiress, Anika Scott

This is the first novel by author and journalist Anika Scott, and is about post-war Germany. I have read books about the holocaust, and I have read books that happen during the war, but I feel we never hear alot about right after World War II. 

This is the story of a previously wealthy German woman, Clara, who helped her powerful father run his iron factory. During WWII ,it was taken over by Nazis, and her family had to decide whether to do what the Nazis wanted, or suffer the consequences; so they, on the surface, complied with the Nazis. However, Clara did her best to make things easier for the prisoners being used as laborers, even through life was brutal for them. However, after the war, she and her father were considered war criminals. Her father was put in a prison camp, but she escaped and took on a secret identity, and hid for a year. In that time she met a suitor, and decided to flee after he proposed and she discovered he was a doctor who experimented on children in the prison camps during the war. She didn't know it but she had been watched, and was now being chased by Allied agents, who wanted to bring her in for questioning. 

While running from the Allies, she uncovers some terrible secrets about her family and her best friend, and finds help, and a friend, in an ex-Nazi soldier.

This book explores post war Germany from the side of the Germans who survived it, and how they had to move forward in a world that, for them, had been completely devastated. 

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

 

The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane, by Lisa See


The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane, Lisa See

Here is another lovely story by one of my favorite authors. This is the story between mothers and daughters, starting out in a remote Akha village in China in the 80's. It is about a young woman who falls in love and gets pregnant outside of marriage, and in her village, that means that her child must be killed at birth. However, instead of killing her daughter, her mother takes her to a sacred part of the forest where the women of her family cultivate the ancient tea trees in order to secretly give birth, then she treks across the mountain to the nearest city to take her daughter to an orphanage.  

Later, the man she loves returns and they marry, and she tells him of their daughter, and so they go to retrieve her, but find that she has been adopted by Americans. Her heart is with her daughter, always longing for her, but she must move on with her live, through tragedies and major changes.

Meanwhile, her daughter, adoped to a loving family, with only an antique tea cake on her person to give any clue to her identity, goes through her own struggles in America, and becomes obsessed with learning about the tea cake and her identity. She ends up learning much about the Pu'er tea made in China, and being intellectually gifted, pursues learning about the chemical and medicinal properties.

This tea cake ties them together, will it bring them together as well? 

I really enjoyed this book. It was different from her other stories, in that we learned about the Akha villages and how different they are from mainstream China. I also learned about the tea trade and how lucrative it has been historically. Not being a tea drinker, I have known nothing about tea, so I felt this gave me a bit of education on that as well.

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

 

Unveiled, by Cherry Mosteshar


Unveiled, Cherry Mosteshar

This is the autobiography of Cherry Mosteshar, a successful journalist and ghost writer, currently based in Great Britain. She is Iranian by birth, but grew up in Great Britain in her formative years. She went back to Iran as an adult and as a journalist, and lived through Hell. She was used to having liberties and rights in Great Britain, but was forced to cover up in Iran under Muslim rule, as well as live under obedience to the men around her. She tells about many of her family members and other people she knew and the things they went through, so much difficult and tragic stuff, it's hard to wrap one's mind around it, because I do not live in a country where you are constantly interrogated and guilty until proven innocent, you must pay bribes to go anywhere, do anything, be seen by doctors, get any kind of assistance at all....you are constantly watched and neighbors will report you for anything that might be a perceived infraction of moral or political law.
She tells of her courtship to a man named Muhammad, how he started out mild mannered and once engaged, turned into a lazy, abusive, evil monster, and she learned after marriage that he was still married to his first wife, making Cherry the second wife. He raped her, he beat her, and he lived off her money. There was no way she could divorce him according to their law, unless he consented, which he never did. She eventually went back to Great Britain and she refused to go back to Iran in the end, although he still would not divorce her. 

We in the United States are so fortunate we have rights and for the most part, those rights are protected. Any woman under Muslim law loses her rights and must live according to what her husband, father, brother, or son decides. She must have permission from her husband to travel, even. She is seen as inferior, and no matter what she does, she is looked at as a whore if she is not covered from head to toe. 

I am so thankful for my life, and I was so thankful that the author was able to escape the terrible marriage she was in and escape her home country in the end. I hope she was able to find peace and healing. I was not able to find out a lot about her, looking her up, but she is a ghost writer and has written many books in collaboration with others.

 

The Day of the Triffids, John Wyndham


 The Day of the Triffids, John Wyndham

I received this vintage paperback book in a BookCrossing bookbox sent by Dad-i-Libri to refill by Little Free Library. I set it aside to read first before releasing it. I think this is probably considered a classic, written by the author of the book that was turned in to the movie The Village of the Damned. It is about a mysterious, possibly genetically modified  and intelligent plant that begins attacking and killing humans after a worldwide catastrophic event leaves the majority of mankind blind. This is the story of some of the survivors and how they survived, but I feel it's more an exploration by the author of how society would regroup itself and rebuild if some event were to disable or kill most of the human race. He gives a few different types of factions that form, including looting and fending for oneself, dictatorships, and social experiments with farming and polygamy, and others with a focus on propriety and retaining sexual purity and monogamy. 

I have to say, I did find the 1960s  movie version and I watched it halfway through reading the book, and the movie is loosely based on the book, with a bit of artistic license, as it seems most movies based on books during that time kind of spun it into their own thing. There is also a newer movie but I wasn't able to stream it.

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Sons, Pearl S. Buck

Sons, Pearl S. Buck Sons is the second book in the House of Earth trilogy by Pearl S. Buck. The first book is about a Chinese man who works ...