You know how you feel when you've hit a significant logistical snag and are totally at the mercy of someone else helping you get out of it? And you know how that feeling is compounded by the suspicion that there is a chance that other person won't help out just because they hold ill feelings toward the person in charge of the group with said problem? And you know how frustrating it is to just sit around, hoping that someone steps forward with a solution because you've got nothing?
Yep, so do I. I have stepped up to help lead a group with some interesting personal dynamics. Things that shouldn't matter but do anyway. And the first project that I said I would shepherd through seems to have hit an dead stop over one issue, which I can't do anything to improve upon. All I can do is wait it out.
If you know me personally, you probably already realize that wait it out isn't a place I'm very comfortable in. Prayers for a smooth resolution and a healing of hurt feelings all around would not be misplaced.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Words Have Meaning
I enjoyed this article about Redefining Religious Liberty by Maggie Gallagher, especially the following:
This is totally new in American legal and cultural discourse. Actions are typically protected by liberty interests, not equality interests. Sexual liberty means I have the right to do what I want, not the right to be free from the knowledge that others disagree, or from their choosing to build institutions that teach that my sexual actions are wrong and exclude those who engage in them.
This is totally new in American legal and cultural discourse. Actions are typically protected by liberty interests, not equality interests. Sexual liberty means I have the right to do what I want, not the right to be free from the knowledge that others disagree, or from their choosing to build institutions that teach that my sexual actions are wrong and exclude those who engage in them.
PS. I am so not happy with the latest Explorer update and how it thinks that it knows what I want to do better than I do. The constant updates and remakes remind me of getting into the car and finding that someone has switched the speedometer and the clock (or worse the radio dial).
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Yokosuka Area Blog
I keep having people ask if I've met J- or if I've read her blog. She is rather famous around here as an incredibly adventursome person who blogs regularly about her adventures and misadventures. Finally, I have a link to share. Dollars to Yen.
If you are looking for fun or interesting (they aren't always together) things to do around Yokosuka or the Yokohama/Tokyo area, this is a place to look for ideas. If you're just interested in quirky food or odd customs, you should check it out too. I especially like how she gives details of how to go on various hikes in the area.
If you are looking for fun or interesting (they aren't always together) things to do around Yokosuka or the Yokohama/Tokyo area, this is a place to look for ideas. If you're just interested in quirky food or odd customs, you should check it out too. I especially like how she gives details of how to go on various hikes in the area.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
But What Do You Do?
In the middle of the movie Pretty Woman the climax may well be a conversation where Julia Roberts asks Richard Gere what he does. He explains his business of buying companies, breaking them into profitable pieces and selling them off. But what do you make, she wants to know.
The article The Case for Working With Your Hands by Matthew B. Crawford, a PhD turned motorcycle mechanic takes a look at the tendency to push all students to college and to emphasize the information society rather than work that is generally lumped into the trades (mechanics, plumbing, wiring, building). Well worth reading.
The article The Case for Working With Your Hands by Matthew B. Crawford, a PhD turned motorcycle mechanic takes a look at the tendency to push all students to college and to emphasize the information society rather than work that is generally lumped into the trades (mechanics, plumbing, wiring, building). Well worth reading.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Master and Commander
I tried to read Master and Commander several years ago. I loved the language, but I just couldn't get the book to flow. I think I even gave away my copies of the first couple books before this move. But I was watching the movie a few weeks ago and thought that I should give it another try. So I picked it up at the library.
Wow. I can't really describe how much I've been enjoying it. Not only is the writing terribly good, but the characters are so nicely brought to life. It is far more complex than I remembered. Almost as subtle in its bite as a Jane Austen or Edith Wharton novel. Maybe the problem was that before I was just too close to being in the Navy myself. Now I have enough time and distance for the situations to be familiar without being painful.
I'm looking forward to working my way throught the rest of the series.
BTW, on the subject of books, go read the lovely comment about Hercules, our favorite children's fire book.
Wow. I can't really describe how much I've been enjoying it. Not only is the writing terribly good, but the characters are so nicely brought to life. It is far more complex than I remembered. Almost as subtle in its bite as a Jane Austen or Edith Wharton novel. Maybe the problem was that before I was just too close to being in the Navy myself. Now I have enough time and distance for the situations to be familiar without being painful.
I'm looking forward to working my way throught the rest of the series.
BTW, on the subject of books, go read the lovely comment about Hercules, our favorite children's fire book.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Rosetta Stone Latin
I've posted often enough about Rosetta Stone that google searches about it are one of the prime ways that folks end up at my blog. We've used a ton of languages, for fun and for serious language work. I do realize that the price point makes some people gulp. I compare it to one semester at the college level for one person. I think that there were years when books alone were over $100 in some of my language classes. Of course there are things that Rosetta Stone is weaker at or doesn't teach at all. But having said that, it is still one very sharp tool for your language toolbox.
And with Rosetta Stone, I can have the whole family learning (we have five student listed on our current Level 3 Japanese), we can each be at a slightly different point in our progress or even have entirely different goals. And while I liked the old Student Management Software, the new version 3 is a lot more streamlined. You can pick your language goals and it will sequence lessons for you.
Having said all of that, I would love to get my hands on the new version 3 Rosetta Stone Latin that is being given away at Jeneric Jeneralities. Here is the info on the contest.
=====
Rosetta Stone is the fastest way to learn a language and has been the #1 foreign language curriculum among homeschoolers for a while — and you can WIN the *all new* version 3 Rosetta Stone Homeschool LATIN program… FOR FREE! This is the first year you can get Latin in the brand new Version III update.
This is a $259 program (and believe me it’s worth every penny!)This is a computer based curriculum and Rosetta Stone will also include a headset with microphone, and a supplementary “Audio Companion” CD so you can practice lessons in the car, on the go, or where-ever! Students participate in life-like conversations and actually produce language to advance through the program. Rosetta Stone incorporates listening, reading, grammar, vocabulary and writing along with speaking and pronunciation lessons. For parents, the new Parent Administrative Tools are integrated into the program to allow parents to easily enroll up to ten students in any of 12 predetermined lesson plans, monitor student progress, grade completed work (the program grades the work automatically as the students progress- I love that!), and you can view and print reports for transcripts. Homeschooling a lot of kids at your house? This program is designed to enroll and track up to ten students (five users on two computers) and will work for nearly all ages — from beginning readers up to college students.
To win this most excellent Latin program copy these paragraphs and post them in (or as) your next blog post, and/OR link to the contest from your facebook page and/OR email the information to your homeschool support group – Then go to the original page http://jeneralities.com/ and leave a comment saying that you’ve posted about, or have linked to, the contest. Please make sure the link works to get back to the original contest page when you post. And good luck!
======
Hat tip: Chartwell Academy
And with Rosetta Stone, I can have the whole family learning (we have five student listed on our current Level 3 Japanese), we can each be at a slightly different point in our progress or even have entirely different goals. And while I liked the old Student Management Software, the new version 3 is a lot more streamlined. You can pick your language goals and it will sequence lessons for you.
Having said all of that, I would love to get my hands on the new version 3 Rosetta Stone Latin that is being given away at Jeneric Jeneralities. Here is the info on the contest.
=====
Rosetta Stone is the fastest way to learn a language and has been the #1 foreign language curriculum among homeschoolers for a while — and you can WIN the *all new* version 3 Rosetta Stone Homeschool LATIN program… FOR FREE! This is the first year you can get Latin in the brand new Version III update.
This is a $259 program (and believe me it’s worth every penny!)This is a computer based curriculum and Rosetta Stone will also include a headset with microphone, and a supplementary “Audio Companion” CD so you can practice lessons in the car, on the go, or where-ever! Students participate in life-like conversations and actually produce language to advance through the program. Rosetta Stone incorporates listening, reading, grammar, vocabulary and writing along with speaking and pronunciation lessons. For parents, the new Parent Administrative Tools are integrated into the program to allow parents to easily enroll up to ten students in any of 12 predetermined lesson plans, monitor student progress, grade completed work (the program grades the work automatically as the students progress- I love that!), and you can view and print reports for transcripts. Homeschooling a lot of kids at your house? This program is designed to enroll and track up to ten students (five users on two computers) and will work for nearly all ages — from beginning readers up to college students.
To win this most excellent Latin program copy these paragraphs and post them in (or as) your next blog post, and/OR link to the contest from your facebook page and/OR email the information to your homeschool support group – Then go to the original page http://jeneralities.com/ and leave a comment saying that you’ve posted about, or have linked to, the contest. Please make sure the link works to get back to the original contest page when you post. And good luck!
======
Hat tip: Chartwell Academy
AFN Tokyo
I thought for a while that I wasn't going to be able to get any radio here because the AM/FM spectrum was slightly different than in the US. I'm not sure that I'm getting everything, but I did at least figure out that part of my problem is that I live in a concrete building nestled up against a big hillside.
If I move my radio almost out to the balcony, I can get some reception, including AFN Tokyo, 810 AM. Here is their schedule.
If I move my radio almost out to the balcony, I can get some reception, including AFN Tokyo, 810 AM. Here is their schedule.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Paper Dali
I stumbled upon a site of free printable paper dolls from historic periods. King Arthur, American Revolution, saints, nativity, Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Greek. I think there is lots of fun to be had with these.
Paper Dali paper dolls.
H/T: Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers.
Paper Dali paper dolls.
H/T: Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
If You Liked CPSIA, You'll Love HR 1966
HR 1966, also known as the Megan Meier Cyberbullying Prevention Act, is justified as preventing cyberbullying among minors. But like CPSIA, it casts a much farther reaching net.
Whoever transmits in interstate or foreign commerce any communication, with the intent to coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress to a person, using electronic means to support severe, repeated, and hostile behavior, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.
How many blog posts criticizing a judge or a congressman or a president would you have to post before you caused them emotional distress and were subject to a fine or imprisonment? Have we really come to the point where the only protected speech is that which is uncritical? Is there any speech that couldn't fall into the categories listed in this bill? If we are at all serious about the First Amendment, we have to be first in line to defend the right to say things that we disagree with. Slander and libel are one thing. Hurt feelings are something else entirely.
Whoever transmits in interstate or foreign commerce any communication, with the intent to coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress to a person, using electronic means to support severe, repeated, and hostile behavior, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.
How many blog posts criticizing a judge or a congressman or a president would you have to post before you caused them emotional distress and were subject to a fine or imprisonment? Have we really come to the point where the only protected speech is that which is uncritical? Is there any speech that couldn't fall into the categories listed in this bill? If we are at all serious about the First Amendment, we have to be first in line to defend the right to say things that we disagree with. Slander and libel are one thing. Hurt feelings are something else entirely.
Friday, May 08, 2009
School Textbook Sausage Maker
A few years ago I read the book Losing our Language. It detailed the way that basal readers abridged pieces of literature in order to leave them as predigested goo for the kids to read.
An article at Edutopia gives an insider look at the textbook industry, written from an editor's perspective. You can get a taste of the article at Susan Wise Bauer's blog. Or read the whole thing at Edutopia.
You should never, ever apologize for using "too many books" in your homeschool.
An article at Edutopia gives an insider look at the textbook industry, written from an editor's perspective. You can get a taste of the article at Susan Wise Bauer's blog. Or read the whole thing at Edutopia.
You should never, ever apologize for using "too many books" in your homeschool.
Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Carnival of Homeschooling
Andrea Hermitt is hosting this week's Carnival of Homeschooling at the Atlanta Homeschooling Examiner.
Great Art Project Site
There was a link on one of my email lists to Deep Space Sparkle, a blog by an elementary art teacher. Great projects with a variety of techniques that are modeled on art from famous masters like Van Gogh and modern children's book illustrators like Eric Carle.
Good encouragement to finish sorting out our craft stuff and schedule some of these projects.
Good encouragement to finish sorting out our craft stuff and schedule some of these projects.
It's Pouring
We had a sunny warm weekend, which was nice because there was a festival down at the exchange with several different performers, including olympic fencers and a magician.
But this afternoon it is just pouring down rain. Good day for sitting inside and catching up on read alouds.
But this afternoon it is just pouring down rain. Good day for sitting inside and catching up on read alouds.
Saturday, May 02, 2009
Yes, Your Kids ARE Targets
I was going to open this with some witty remarks, but I think the article speaks for itself.
Heightening the competition among cable television channels for children, Hasbro and Discovery Communications plan to jointly reformat a channel with programs based on G.I. Joe, My Little Pony and other classic toy brands.
If you haven't started to teach your kids that they are being directly targeted, both for their own money and for the family money that they influence, what are you waiting for? The industry certainly doesn't have some minimum age for selling to them.
BTW, I enjoyed the book Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping by Paco Underhill on the topic of how perceived scarcity, short time offers and product packaging and placement make us more likely to buy things. It is probably over the head of kids before high school. But it would be a good first start in arming yourself to point out the sales pitches to your kids.
(Hat Tip: Media Blog on NRO)
Heightening the competition among cable television channels for children, Hasbro and Discovery Communications plan to jointly reformat a channel with programs based on G.I. Joe, My Little Pony and other classic toy brands.
If you haven't started to teach your kids that they are being directly targeted, both for their own money and for the family money that they influence, what are you waiting for? The industry certainly doesn't have some minimum age for selling to them.
BTW, I enjoyed the book Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping by Paco Underhill on the topic of how perceived scarcity, short time offers and product packaging and placement make us more likely to buy things. It is probably over the head of kids before high school. But it would be a good first start in arming yourself to point out the sales pitches to your kids.
(Hat Tip: Media Blog on NRO)
The Relative Size of Big Numbers
You can debate all you want if $100 million is a big number or not. If it is an appropriate spending amount or budget cutting target. But it would sure help if you had a clear image in your head of what 100 million is on the scale of big numbers. Remember a trillion is three times a million, it is a million times a million.
My kids are doing pretty well in math. But above a thousand, I think that numbers like this do start to get pretty fuzzy. I'm thinking of having them try this. Write out the numbers for thousand, million, billion and trillion. It should look something like this.
thousand 1,000
million 1,000,000
billion 1,000,000,000
trillion 1,000,000,000,000
So you can see that each step up in a named amount (thousand, million etc) is a thousand times the previous name. That's because there are place values of ten thousand and hundred thousand in between thousand and million. 1 million doesn't come after 9,999. 1 million comes after 999,999.
Another popular way of illustrating these big numbers is by using heart rate and time. Let's say that your heart beats 80 times a minute. It would beat 1,000 times in 12.5 minutes (about the time it takes to boil macaroni). A million beats at the same rate would take 12,500 minutes (208.3 hours or a little over 8 and a half days).
A billion heartbeats? That is 1,000,000,000 divided by 80. That takes 12,500,000 minutes. Which is 208333 hours. Which is 8,680.5 days (or almost 24 years).
A trillion heartbeats? Before you read on, take a guess. Maybe even jot it down somewhere. So a trillion heartbeats is 1,000,000,000,000 at 80 beats per minute. That would take 12,500,000,000 minutes or 208,333,333 hours or 8680555.5 days or about 23,782 years.
If you're looking for another visual aid on the relative size of big numbers, check out this cool video that puts $100 million in the context of the federal budget. (Hat tip:Media Blog on NRO linking to Megan McArdle blog on The Atlantic.)
My kids are doing pretty well in math. But above a thousand, I think that numbers like this do start to get pretty fuzzy. I'm thinking of having them try this. Write out the numbers for thousand, million, billion and trillion. It should look something like this.
thousand 1,000
million 1,000,000
billion 1,000,000,000
trillion 1,000,000,000,000
So you can see that each step up in a named amount (thousand, million etc) is a thousand times the previous name. That's because there are place values of ten thousand and hundred thousand in between thousand and million. 1 million doesn't come after 9,999. 1 million comes after 999,999.
Another popular way of illustrating these big numbers is by using heart rate and time. Let's say that your heart beats 80 times a minute. It would beat 1,000 times in 12.5 minutes (about the time it takes to boil macaroni). A million beats at the same rate would take 12,500 minutes (208.3 hours or a little over 8 and a half days).
A billion heartbeats? That is 1,000,000,000 divided by 80. That takes 12,500,000 minutes. Which is 208333 hours. Which is 8,680.5 days (or almost 24 years).
A trillion heartbeats? Before you read on, take a guess. Maybe even jot it down somewhere. So a trillion heartbeats is 1,000,000,000,000 at 80 beats per minute. That would take 12,500,000,000 minutes or 208,333,333 hours or 8680555.5 days or about 23,782 years.
If you're looking for another visual aid on the relative size of big numbers, check out this cool video that puts $100 million in the context of the federal budget. (Hat tip:Media Blog on NRO linking to Megan McArdle blog on The Atlantic.)
Friday, May 01, 2009
The Master Puppeteer notes and links
Although the book doesn't state it overtly, I've found references that place The Master Puppeteer within the Famine of Temmei (1783-87), during which 500,000-1 million may have died.
Bunraku puppets, this includes subtitles and translations of explanations from the narrator. This link has a close up of the puppets.
Edo Period Japan and pre-industrialization.
Veritas Press Summer Reading Contest
Last year Veritas Press had a summer reading contest. Here is the info from the email I got from them.
Last year's reading contest was such a success that we decided to do it again. It was fun to see the children excited about reading and cashing in gift certificates for books of their choosing. Encourage your children to be a part of the contest this summer. It begins now and continues through September 15, 2009. Click here to download a reading chart if you would like to track your student's progress. We only ask that you as parents or teachers verify what the children have read, and then after they have met their goals, complete the online entry form. Please encourage them to read good literature, not just look for a book that meets the page count criteria.
Veritas Press Reading Contest Rules
1. Reading Quantity
a. K - 2nd Grade: 40 Easy Readers (ex., Frog and Toad are Friends)
b. 3rd & 4th Grades: 25 books at least 125 pages (ex., The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe)
c. 5th & 6th Grades: 25 books at least 150 pages (ex., Treasure Island)
d. 7th - 12th Grades: 25 books at least 200 pages (ex., The Fellowship of the Ring)
2. Entries must be submitted online by 5:00 PM EDT, September 15, 2009.
3. The first 250 submissions in each age division will be given a $10 gift certificate.
4. A drawing will be held from all submissions and will be announced in the October epistula.
There will be three winners from the drawing.
a. $150 First Prize
b. $100 Second Prize
c. $70 Third Prize
To get you started, check out these summer reading lists: K-2nd, 3rd-6th, 7th-12th.
We are also almost in the season for library summer reading programs. Keep an eye out for those too. Or use the reading charts above to make your own summer reading program. In my experience, it is more about the list getting longer than the actual trinket that the kids might get. So feel free to use book logs and encouragement without the treasure box of incentives (not that I wouldn't find plenty of good books to buy with a gift certificate).
Last year's reading contest was such a success that we decided to do it again. It was fun to see the children excited about reading and cashing in gift certificates for books of their choosing. Encourage your children to be a part of the contest this summer. It begins now and continues through September 15, 2009. Click here to download a reading chart if you would like to track your student's progress. We only ask that you as parents or teachers verify what the children have read, and then after they have met their goals, complete the online entry form. Please encourage them to read good literature, not just look for a book that meets the page count criteria.
Veritas Press Reading Contest Rules
1. Reading Quantity
a. K - 2nd Grade: 40 Easy Readers (ex., Frog and Toad are Friends)
b. 3rd & 4th Grades: 25 books at least 125 pages (ex., The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe)
c. 5th & 6th Grades: 25 books at least 150 pages (ex., Treasure Island)
d. 7th - 12th Grades: 25 books at least 200 pages (ex., The Fellowship of the Ring)
2. Entries must be submitted online by 5:00 PM EDT, September 15, 2009.
3. The first 250 submissions in each age division will be given a $10 gift certificate.
4. A drawing will be held from all submissions and will be announced in the October epistula.
There will be three winners from the drawing.
a. $150 First Prize
b. $100 Second Prize
c. $70 Third Prize
To get you started, check out these summer reading lists: K-2nd, 3rd-6th, 7th-12th.
We are also almost in the season for library summer reading programs. Keep an eye out for those too. Or use the reading charts above to make your own summer reading program. In my experience, it is more about the list getting longer than the actual trinket that the kids might get. So feel free to use book logs and encouragement without the treasure box of incentives (not that I wouldn't find plenty of good books to buy with a gift certificate).
Books Read in 2009
April 2009
Dracula - Bram Stoker. I read this after reading an exchange at National Review comparing the depictions of vampires here with the modern vampire story a la Twilight. It was a far better book than I had anticipated. I was especially surprised to see what a strong character Mina was, since she is often shown in movies as just a pretty morsel for Dracula to prey on. And the way the Dracula was shown as an unmitigated evil that must be fought was refreshing. I think that we are almost so far around the bend in being ironic in our media that the old retellings will have a fresh new life.
The Serpent in the Crown - Elizabeth Peters. An Amelia Peabody mystery.
Shinto: The Kami Way - Dr. Sokyo Ono and William P. Woodward I read this before our trip up to the Hachiman Shrine in Kamakura. A very good intro to a belief system that is difficult for me to shift through.
Homer Price - Robert McCloskey (for Sonlight 1) What a delightful book. I think my favorite was the one about mystery string.
March 2009
Ring of Fire - Eric Flint et al.
A Civil Campaign - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Miles, Mystery & Mayhem - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Mirror Dance - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Diplomatic Immunity - Lois McMaster Bujold.
The Bronze Christ - Yoshiro Nagayo.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J. K. Rowling.
Charlotte's Web - E. B. White
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury.
February 2009
Basic Economics, 3rd Edition - Thomas Sowell.
Black Rednecks, White Liberals - Thomas Sowell.
Serving Homeschooled Teens and Their Parents
In the Shadow of the Sun King - Golden Keyes Parsons.
The Secrets of Mariko: A Year in the Life of a Japanese Woman and Her Family - Elisabeth Bumiller.
Gaudy Night - Dorothy Sayers.
Thrones, Dominations - Dorothy Sayers and Jill Paton Walsh.
January 2009Back on Blossom Street - Debbie Macomber
Twenty Wishes - Debbie Macomber
Busman's Honeymoon - Dorothy Sayers
Whose Body? - Dorothy Sayers
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd - Agatha Christie
Death in the Air - Agatha Christie
Dracula - Bram Stoker. I read this after reading an exchange at National Review comparing the depictions of vampires here with the modern vampire story a la Twilight. It was a far better book than I had anticipated. I was especially surprised to see what a strong character Mina was, since she is often shown in movies as just a pretty morsel for Dracula to prey on. And the way the Dracula was shown as an unmitigated evil that must be fought was refreshing. I think that we are almost so far around the bend in being ironic in our media that the old retellings will have a fresh new life.
The Serpent in the Crown - Elizabeth Peters. An Amelia Peabody mystery.
Shinto: The Kami Way - Dr. Sokyo Ono and William P. Woodward I read this before our trip up to the Hachiman Shrine in Kamakura. A very good intro to a belief system that is difficult for me to shift through.
Homer Price - Robert McCloskey (for Sonlight 1) What a delightful book. I think my favorite was the one about mystery string.
March 2009
Ring of Fire - Eric Flint et al.
A Civil Campaign - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Miles, Mystery & Mayhem - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Mirror Dance - Lois McMaster Bujold.
Diplomatic Immunity - Lois McMaster Bujold.
The Bronze Christ - Yoshiro Nagayo.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J. K. Rowling.
Charlotte's Web - E. B. White
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury.
February 2009
Basic Economics, 3rd Edition - Thomas Sowell.
Black Rednecks, White Liberals - Thomas Sowell.
Serving Homeschooled Teens and Their Parents
In the Shadow of the Sun King - Golden Keyes Parsons.
The Secrets of Mariko: A Year in the Life of a Japanese Woman and Her Family - Elisabeth Bumiller.
Gaudy Night - Dorothy Sayers.
Thrones, Dominations - Dorothy Sayers and Jill Paton Walsh.
January 2009Back on Blossom Street - Debbie Macomber
Twenty Wishes - Debbie Macomber
Busman's Honeymoon - Dorothy Sayers
Whose Body? - Dorothy Sayers
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd - Agatha Christie
Death in the Air - Agatha Christie
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