Here are five things worth sharing this month:

1. Reading: I recently finished the middle grade historical novel, Brother’s Keeper, by Julie Lee. It’s about two North Korean kids who flee their part of the country for Busan in South Korea to escape the war between the north and south. They have to walk hundreds of miles in the winter. The book is heart-breaking and beautiful and haunting. Don’t miss it!

2. Reading: I absolutely LOVED Natalie Lloyd’s latest book, Hummingbird, about a girl with brittle bone disease who convinces her parents she wants to go to public school so she can find her forever best friend. You will fall in love with the main character, Olive, who is full of positivity and joy kabooms and love for her fellow students. It was sweet and heartbreaking and funny and so lovely; my kids are getting tired of hearing me talk about it. This is the first book of Lloyd’s I’ve read, but now I also have her books, The Key to ExtraordinaryA Snicker of Magic, and the Problim Children series on my to-be-read list! 

3. Watching: Lately I’ve been watching through My Next Guest Needs No Introduction, with David Letterman. I find the guests (so far I’ve watched Barack Obama, George Clooney, Malala Yousafzai, Jay-Z, Tina Fey, and Howard Stern) to be SO inspirational. There’s always some nugget of truth I can take and apply to my own life. And David Letterman is the perfect host. Check it out if you want to be inspired! 

4. Reading: If you’re looking for a delightful young adult read, look no further than Carolyn Mackler’s The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things. It’s funny, it’s fun, it deals with deep topics, and it’s pitched perfectly for young adult readers. It was published several years ago, but Mackler republished it in 2018, along with the release of the sequel, The Universe is Expanding, and So Am I, which I’m reading right now (and it’s just as good as the first one). Mackler has written a collection of other books, all of which are now on my TBR list, because I love her work so much. 

5. Reading: While on vacation with my family, I sped through Ethan Kross’s The Voice in Our Head, Why It Matters, and How to Harness It. What an eye-opening book. We all live our lives with a voice in our heads (sometimes multiple voices, and for some of us those voices are VERY loud and not all that nice). Kross provides scientific and situational evidence about this voice and how we can use it to our advantage. I found it enlightening and encouraging.