Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Book Review: Kisses From Katie by Katie Davis

Book Title: Kisses From Katie: A Story of Relentless Love and Redemption 
Author: Katie Davis
Publisher: Howard Books
Publish Date: July 1, 2009 



Summary: What would cause an eighteen-year-old senior class president and home-coming queen from Nashville, Tennessee, give up everything to move to Africa? Go against her parent's wishes, hurt her brother, and leave her boyfriend? God. God and His knowledge of what's truly best.
This is Katie's story!

For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: but whosoever will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it.
Luke 9:24

When Katie Davis went on a two week missions trip in Uganda she fell in love. The people. The need. The hope. The desperation.. She felt the need to make a difference. When that two week trip becomes a full year of work in Uganda Katie finds herself in the midst of immense poverty. Children wearing rags, starving, dying. Crying for help. 
But what can one person do against such poverty? Katie Davis found the answer. One small thing at a time. You can't change the world in one day, with one deed, or one person. But you can make small changes, one at a time, and they grow into something bigger.
Katie has founded several programs over the years. She started a sponsorship program that now pays for over 700 children's schooling fees. She feels that schooling can change Africa and it's people for the better. She also founded Amazima ("truth" in the native Luganda language) Ministries International which tries to meet the physical, emotional, and spiritual needs of the Ugandan people. She started the Masese Feeding Outreach which feeds 1,200 children Monday-Friday. This program keeps the children from begging on the streets. Her final program (to the present) is for the women of Masese. She taught them to make jewelry from homemade beads. They sell them to Katie, Katie then sells them through Amazima. These women can now buy food for their children.

Katie is now mother to 13 daughters. They were brought to her one at a time. Each time it was one deed. One day. One selfless act. But those added up and now 13 little girls don't have to worry about where to live, what to eat, or if they will survive another day. They are fed, bathed, and loved.

Violence: Katie describes the suffering she see's in Uganda. She describes the children; with sores, blisters, jiggers (a parasitic insect that burrows itself into the soles of your feet), and protruding stomachs. 
She tells the story of a mother who got her children drunk so they wouldn't feel the pain of hunger.

Sexual Content: When Katie first arrives in Africa for her year long missions trip her father worries about her safety because of the look men gave her or the way they spoke to her. 

Katie talks about her boyfriend. She described the lonely feelings she has. She also talks about the pain she felt when she broke up with him.

My Thoughts: This book was amazing! I was hooked by the intro! Katie's story is captivating. My dream for years has been to move to Africa. When I found this book I was beyond thrilled. My plan is to go to college and get a teaching degree. After that I hope to make my move to Africa. I'm not sure if it will be a few months, a few years, or, well, forever. That's God's decision.

Something Katie mentions in her book really got me thinking. She said that there are about 164 million needy children in the world. There are 21 billion people who say they are Christians. If 8% of those people adopted ONE child, there would be no statistics left! No statistics! Get's ya thinkin, huh?

Final Rating: 5/5

Recommendations: I would recommend this book to anyone! Girls, boys. Men, women. Kids, adults. This book is a must read for any household.

This book may be geared more towards women just because Katie is a woman. Her thoughts and feelings would probably be better understood by a fellow woman. But that doesn't mean guys won't like this book! :)

Book Review: Kisses From Katie by Katie Davis

Book Title: Kisses From Katie: A Story of Relentless Love and Redemption 
Author: Katie Davis
Publisher: Howard Books
Publish Date: July 1, 2009 



Summary: What would cause an eighteen-year-old senior class president and home-coming queen from Nashville, Tennessee, give up everything to move to Africa? Go against her parent's wishes, hurt her brother, and leave her boyfriend? God. God and His knowledge of what's truly best.
This is Katie's story!

For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: but whosoever will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it.
Luke 9:24

When Katie Davis went on a two week missions trip in Uganda she fell in love. The people. The need. The hope. The desperation.. She felt the need to make a difference. When that two week trip becomes a full year of work in Uganda Katie finds herself in the midst of immense poverty. Children wearing rags, starving, dying. Crying for help. 
But what can one person do against such poverty? Katie Davis found the answer. One small thing at a time. You can't change the world in one day, with one deed, or one person. But you can make small changes, one at a time, and they grow into something bigger.
Katie has founded several programs over the years. She started a sponsorship program that now pays for over 700 children's schooling fees. She feels that schooling can change Africa and it's people for the better. She also founded Amazima ("truth" in the native Luganda language) Ministries International which tries to meet the physical, emotional, and spiritual needs of the Ugandan people. She started the Masese Feeding Outreach which feeds 1,200 children Monday-Friday. This program keeps the children from begging on the streets. Her final program (to the present) is for the women of Masese. She taught them to make jewelry from homemade beads. They sell them to Katie, Katie then sells them through Amazima. These women can now buy food for their children.

Katie is now mother to 13 daughters. They were brought to her one at a time. Each time it was one deed. One day. One selfless act. But those added up and now 13 little girls don't have to worry about where to live, what to eat, or if they will survive another day. They are fed, bathed, and loved.

Violence: Katie describes the suffering she see's in Uganda. She describes the children; with sores, blisters, jiggers (a parasitic insect that burrows itself into the soles of your feet), and protruding stomachs. 
She tells the story of a mother who got her children drunk so they wouldn't feel the pain of hunger.

Sexual Content: When Katie first arrives in Africa for her year long missions trip her father worries about her safety because of the look men gave her or the way they spoke to her. 

Katie talks about her boyfriend. She described the lonely feelings she has. She also talks about the pain she felt when she broke up with him.
My Thoughts: This book was amazing! I was hooked by the intro! Katie's story is captivating. My dream for years has been to move to Africa. When I found this book I was beyond thrilled. My plan is to go to college and get a teaching degree. After that I hope to make my move to Africa. I'm not sure if it will be a few months, a few years, or, well, forever. That's God's decision.

Something Katie mentions in her book really got me thinking. She said that there are about 164 million needy children in the world. There are 21 billion people who say they are Christians. If 8% of those people adopted ONE child, there would be no statistics left! No statistics! Get's ya thinkin, huh?

Final Rating: 5/5
Recommendations: I would recommend this book to anyone! Girls, boys. Men, women. Kids, adults. This book is a must read for any household.
This book may be geared more towards women just because Katie is a woman. Her thoughts and feelings would probably be better understood by a fellow woman. But that doesn't mean guys won't like this book! :)

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Book Review: Hatchet by Gary Paulsen

I love survival stories. They amaze me. With a brother and dad who love reading about survival situations and trying out the things they learned, books of that type are often on our family read aloud list.

Hatchet by Gary Paulsen is one of my favorites. It is realistic, easy to read, and a page turner. 

Brian, the main character, is a city boy who is faced with an unexpected challenge. He must beat the odds and survive. After his parents divorce, Brian spends the school year with his mom, summers with his dad. Flying to northern Canada to be with his dad the pilot suffers a severe heart attack and the plane does down. Stranded Brian must survive. He has no food, no shelter, and no way of getting help, all he has is the hatchet his mother gave him.

Hatchet is very well written. The characters are realistic. The setting clear. Paulsen does a good job of giving detail without drowning you with it and dragging the story. There was not a singe time I had a thought of "Get on with the story!" (Which happens a lot to me... I like something to always be going on in a story)

I really enjoyed this book and I would recommend it for all ages!

*I will note that the reason Brian's parents are divorced is that his mom was having an affair with another man.  Brain recalls seeing her kiss the man. Brian's father never knows. The affair doesn't go into much detail.