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Hooked_on_books
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This is the list every year that really excites me—the nonfiction NBA longlist! As usual, this year‘s list is super topical and I‘m delighted to see it‘s very feminist as well. Again, I‘ve read 2, the El Akkad and the Li, both terrific. Run the Song seems the odd one out for me and I‘m most curious about Motherland, which isn‘t out yet.

Suet624 Thank you for posting. I hadn‘t seen this list yet. 1w
TheBookHippie Oh books to read!!! Yay! 1w
squirrelbrain Sounds like a fab list! (and perfect for you @thebookhippie! 😜) Off to see if I can get any on Libro.fm…. 1w
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squirrelbrain I‘ve only read the El Akkad which, as you say, was great. (edited) 1w
squirrelbrain Motherland is on NetGalley, so I just requested it. 🤞 1w
Hooked_on_books @squirrelbrain I requested For the Sun but figured since Motherland is chunky, I‘ll wait for the audiobook. Some good looking stuff here, though I‘m surprised the new Baldwin biography isn‘t on here. 1w
TheBookHippie @squirrelbrain 🤣🤣🙌🏼🙌🏼 two were in my list already 🙃 1w
squirrelbrain For The Sun isn‘t on UK NG. Yes, I‘m surprised the Baldwin bio isn‘t on there too. 1w
fredthemoose Thank you for posting. Yaaayyy nonfiction picks!!! 1w
kspenmoll Thank you! Checking it out now! 1w
46 likes10 comments
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LitsyEvents
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Repost for @Riveted_Reader_Melissa

And just a reminder #SheSaid of what is coming up in October…and time to start nominating some new books to read again. What‘s on your radar, to read list, caught your eye lately. Please tag them below and I will get a voting 🗳️ group together!

Original post - https://www.litsy.com/web/post/2896864

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peanutnine
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julieclair You always find such interesting books! 2w
33 likes1 comment
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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And just a reminder #SheSaid of what is coming up in October…and time to start nominating some new books to read again. What‘s on your radar, to read list, caught your eye lately. Please tag them below and I will get a voting 🗳️ group together!

Bookwormjillk Thank you! I am terrible at reading these on time, but I usually get to them eventually! 2w
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Bookwormjillk You‘re welcome. And I understand… I have been off all year so far. Not reading on time. I blamed moving in the beginning of the year keeping me busy doing other things and throwing me off my reading pattern. Now I‘m think it‘s too much Doomscrolling 🫠 But whatever it is, I‘m off too and I hope it ends soon. So I thank you all for putting up with an organizer that is later reading our sections about 50% of the time lately. 2w
MallenNC It‘s hard to believe it is time to pick more books already. I will give some thought to what I‘ve been interested in lately. 2w
ncsufoxes Men Who Hate Women by Laura Bates is really good. Saving Five by Amanda Nguyen. (edited) 2w
Liz_M @LitsyEvents (edited) 2w
Riveted_Reader_Melissa This comes out in October… and I think will be talked about by everyone 2w
AllDebooks I would like to revist Wild Swans as Jung Chang is releasing a follow-up memoir. 2w
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @AllDebooks really! I‘d love to re-read Wild Swans too, I did not know she was writing a follow-up 2w
AllDebooks @Riveted_Reader_Melissa published in the UK on 16th September 2025. Fly, Wild Swans: My Mother, Myself and China by Jung Chang – HarperCollins Publishers UK https://share.google/LuOWV66dzCrH5j9Zq 2w
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @AllDebooks Definitely Stacking 2w
LitStephanie Ooh my library had this available! May I join you all for September? 2w
34 likes116 comments
review
booklover3258
On Subbing | Dave Roche
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Panpan

Nah wasn't impressed, lots of repeating throughout the book.

For the rest of my review, visit my Vlog at:

https://youtu.be/1nx7s9NFtyw

Enjoy!

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peanutnine
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July #MonthlyNonfiction2025 reads @julieclair
It was interesting that both of these books discussed the covid pandemic and its affects on the main subject. Serendipitous timing

julieclair Interesting how the pandemic could influence two such completely different topics. But come to think of it, the pandemic probably influenced just about every topic imaginable. 2mo
peanutnine @julieclair so very true. I think I just haven't read much nonfiction that had been written after the pandemic and actually talked about it in such detail. Certainly interesting that I read these two back to back that did 2mo
37 likes2 comments
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julieclair
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Looking forward to seeing everyone‘s August selections for #MonthlyNonfiction2025 !

Lauredhel Not sure yet, but something will come up! 2mo
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peanutnine I'm excited my hold just came in for 2mo
TheAromaofBooks I have not been going a good job posting, but I actually have been keeping up with this challenge!! My 700 book this month is 2mo
MonicaLoves2Read The Devil Behind the Badge is what I plan on reading this Month 2mo
30 likes6 comments
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Rachel.Rencher
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I picked up this book to get some new ideas for the upcoming school year. It has some good advice and tips that I plan to implement, but when I Googled the author to find his Pengiun blog, I found that he was fired from his district for old allegations of sexual misconduct. He started a class action suit against the district for firing teachers who were close to retirement to save on benefits, but that's kind of leaving me with a bad taste now. 😐

Rachel.Rencher Also, he mentions in the book that his elementary age students can call him for homework help after hours, work with him on the weekends, and they call him by his first name. I know this was published 20 years ago, but yikesss. Ugh. Can anyone recommend a good teacher book? I feel like they're all so cheesy, and if I do find a good one, the guy is a damn predator. 😭 2mo
GingerAntics In this day and age, I can get having a virtual classroom chat where questions can be sent to the teacher and the teacher can answer after hours if possible, but only in the school approved system. We used Microsoft teams, so o specifically had a “room” that I called office hours, and I told them they could ask a question whenever and I would answer as soon as I could. I knew the school could see very chat and every word, so I felt okay about it. 2mo
GingerAntics One of my students having my phone number? Man, even students that have graduated don‘t even have that. Weird. I guess if I was working with elementary age kids, I could have a phone just for school that MAYBE parents had, but even that seems a bit much. It‘s better to have the paper trail of emails or chats anyway. That is creepy. 2mo
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CoffeeK8 I‘ll recommend this book! I‘m on the admin side now, but this one helped me be a better teacher by becoming a more focused person at work 2mo
Rachel.Rencher @GingerAntics Yeah, I just felt creepier the more I read it. I'd never give a kid my phone number, but I do answer questions when I see them from school email or Google Classroom only. 2mo
Rachel.Rencher @CoffeeK8 Awesome! Thank you for the recommendation. 🙂 2mo
GingerAntics @Rachel.Rencher exactly! That covers you in case anyone claims anything. The class action may point to him not doing anything illegal or anything, but he did do some shady stuff. 2mo
staci.reads What do you teach? I may have some reason for you if you are secondary. 2mo
Rachel.Rencher @staci.reads I teach 8th grade! 2mo
45 likes9 comments
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tylera_

Chapter 3

This chapter helped me think more about what it looks like to support a whole class of readers. I like how Kittle balances structure and trust. She's paying attention without turning reading into a chore. Tracking page numbers just to check in, not to grade, really stood out. The part about helping students set personal goals also made sense. It's like a way to help them take ownership without making it all about points.

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riley.fulton

I worry about my ability to meet students where they are while also pushing them. It seems contradictory, but necessary. I also think it is important to keep in mind that if I know that a student doesn't like reading that they might not want to be aware of the fact that I'm challenging them but when they realize over time how theire reading habits have changed it will make them feel good.