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Books for the New Year

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Out with the old and in with the New! Try one of these books, available to request right now.



A New Song Father Tim, longtime Episcopal priest for Mitford (the ‘small town with the big heart’), retires.  He agrees to serve as interim minister of a small church on Whitecap Island, and new challenges and adventures await…  Whitecap has its own unforgettable characters.  In this fifth novel of the beloved series, fans old and new will discover that a trip to Mitford and Whitecap is twice as good for the soul. Christian Fiction/Contemporary Fiction


A New Attitude Marilee Abernathy’s life is a mess!  Everyone in Chickpea, South Carolina, knows of her husband’s affair with the town floozy. And when her dignified farewell goes awry, Marilee decides a better way to cope is a new attitude. Sexy neighbor Sam Brewer couldn’t agree more… Contemporary Romance




The New Father: A Dad’s Guide to the First Year Know a new dad or an about-to-be dad?  This is the closest thing to a “baby instruction manual” there is, addressing child development, juggling work and family, and much more. Illustrated with delightful cartoons that underscore the joys and challenges of parenting, The New Father: A Dad’s Guide to the First Year is an essential sourcebook for every dad. It’s might even give moms some fresh insights as well!  Parenting and Families.


The New Centurions The year is 1960. A class of new police recruits doesn’t have time to learn the ropes. The streets are burning with rage; before they can grow old on this job, they’ll have to fight for their lives.  A stunning, raw, and unforgettable depiction of life behind the thin blue line from ex-cop Joseph Wambaugh. Police Procedurals


2010: Odyssey Two No, it’s not “new”…but it’s timely! Nine years after the disastrous Discovery mission to Jupiter in 2001, a joint U.S.-Soviet expedition sets out to rendezvous with the spacecraft to search the memory banks of the mutinous computer HAL 9000 for clues to what went wrong . . . and what became of Commander Dave Bowman.  Science Fiction

Book Suggestions for the Holidays

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Holiday tales… each one available to request right now!

Skipping Christmas Luther and Nora Krank are fed up with the chaos of Christmas…this year, celebrating seems like too much effort. They decide that just this once, they’ll skip the holidays, and spend their Christmas budget on a Caribbean cruise set to sail on December 25, and happily settle in for a restful holiday season.  But they soon learn that skipping the holidays has consequences they didn’t bargain for…  A modern Christmas classic, Skipping Christmas is a hilarious look at the mayhem and madness that have become ingrained in our holiday tradition.

The Power of Light: Eight Stories for Hanukkah Isaac Bashevis Singer, Nobel Prize- winning author, gives us these eight stories, one for each night of Hanukkah.  Publisher’s Weekly said that this collection “can enrich readers of all faiths, all ages, with its descriptions of the miraculous power of light over evil.” Why not start a tradition in your own family of reading these stories aloud each year?

Christmas Ghosts Can’t get enough ghosts?  If Scrooge’s three ghosts just leave you wanting more hauntings for your holidays, then here are some ghostly tales for you! This collection includes twenty-seven original stories, featuring Mercedes Lackey, John Betancourt, Judith Tarr and other favorites.

It’s Kwanzaa Time! Here’s a Lift-the-Flap book to introduce your littlest ones to this holiday of unity, togetherness, and creativity. For Reading Level ages 4-8.

Santa Baby... Three Christmas tales from three bestselling authors, in one book…Jennifer Crusie‘s shopper grabs the very last hot toy action figure off the shelf, only to find herself plunged into the middle of a real life spy game, in the arms of a sexy secret agent…Lori Foster delivers a steamy office romance of two coworkers with a lot of secrets (and fantasies!) between them planning a Christmas party side by side…Carly Phillips‘ “mistletoe moment” begins when a no-nonsense lawyer intent on seducing her boss meets his twin instead…

Interview with author Bruce Boston

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

A special thanks to author Bruce Boston for taking the time to let us interview him and get to know him a little better.  Bruce was nice enough to send us signed copies of the following books: covers in post below

  1. Pitchblende (dark poetry, Bram Stoker Award winner, Dark Regions, 2003)
  2. The Nightmare Collection (dark poetry, Bram Stoker Award Winner, Dark Regions, 2008)
  3. Flashing the Dark (speculative flash fictions, Sam’s Dot, 2006)
  4. The Guardener’s Tale (sf novel, advance reading copy, Stoker Award finalist and Prometheus Award Nominee, Sam’s Dot, 2007)

And the 4 Random Winners from the comments are!  Janet M. (BookwormMoucha), Jennifer C. (mrscasler), Carla G. (readragon), Shondra W. (shoni).  Thanks again everyone!

Bruce Boston

Author Bruce Boston

Bruce Boston was born in 1943 and attended U.C. Berkeley, in the sixties, where he was active in political protest and psychedelic exploration.  Bruce Boston has written over 40 books, more than 100 short stories and hundreds of poems on speculative fiction.   He describes his work best saying it “stretches from broad humor to literary surrealism, with many stops along the way for science fiction, fantasy, horror, and noir.” Boston has received many awards including the Rhysling Award for speculative poetry a record seven times and the Asimov’s Readers’ Award for poetry a record six times. He has also received a Pushcart Prize for fiction, the Bram Stoker Award for his poetry collections Pitchblende, Shades Fantastic, and The Nightmare Collection, and the first  ever Grandmaster Award of the Science Fiction Poetry Association. His collaborative poem with Robert Frazier, “Return to the Mutant Rain Forest,” received first place in the 2006 Locus Online Poetry Poll for Best All-Time Science Fiction, Fantasy, or Horror Poem.  For more information please visit his website, BruceBoston.com

Your work has been classified as “Speculative Fiction & Poetry”.  What does “Speculative” mean in this context?
Mainstream fiction and poetry deal with the rendering and exploration of the here and now, reality as we know it, internal and external. Speculative writing has more to do with imagination, the world of dreams and the world as it could be. The genres of science fiction, fantasy, and horror, all of which I’ve written, fall under the speculative umbrella. However, the best speculative writing resembles mainstream in that it not only explores imaginary worlds, but in so doing, reflects and comments upon the real world.

You’ve held a lot of different jobs in the past, including computer programmer, gardener and movie projectionist!  Did any of those inform your writing?
All life experience inform one’s writing: love affairs, friendships, failures and successes, books read, movies seen, lands visited, and of course, the jobs one holds.  Though the influence isn’t always a clear and direct one, and often becomes transformed in the process of writing.  For example, I’ve never written about a character who is a gardener, but my science fiction novel The Guardener’s Tale takes place in a future dystopian society that views its citizens as if they were plants in a garden and attempts to nurture and control them to create the perfect garden, the ideal society.  Images of flowers, plants, and weeds occur throughout the book, embodying the themes of the novel.  If I hadn’t worked as a gardener, the book might never have been written, and if it had, would have probably taken a very different direction.

You’ve been writing and publishing for over 45 years.  Do you see any major changes in your work over time?
I think my writing has become more accomplished over the years in terms of mastery of language.  It has also changed stylistically and to some extent in content as my interests as a reader have changed.  When I was younger, I read mostly what is considered literary fiction and poetry, and my writing reflected that.  In the early 1990s I began exploring mysteries and noir, and as a result, I think my writing voice, at least in fiction, has become more populist and less literary, available to more potential readers.

Do you have a favorite work (book, short story, poem), one of which you are particularly proud?

The Guarderner's Tale

I have several.  My poetry collection Pitchblende, assembled by fellow poet and writer Michael Arnzen, is probably my best poetry collection.  It garnered me my first Bram Stoker Award and contains what I consider two of my three best long poems: “Pavane for a Cyber-Princess” and “She Was There for Him the Last Time.”

With regard to fiction, I would single out three books.  My first novel, Stained Glass Rain, a coming-of-age novel set in the drug culture of the 1960s, is an attempted literary tour de force, combining narrative, diary entries, along with poems and stories written by the characters.  Its language is the most dense and poetic of any of my fiction.  The aforementioned sf novel, The Guardener’s Tale is probably my most entertaining and compelling work, rich in adventures and surprising plot twists. And finally, my story collection Masque of Dreams brings together the best of my shorter fiction, including six novelettes and seventeen short stories.

You are married to Marge Simon, also a writer and artist.   How is it living with a fellow writer?
It’s worked out pretty well for us because we have similar aesthetics and tastes.  It has also led to collaborations on poems and short stories that we’ve subsequently sold, but would have never been written if we weren’t living together.  Another advantage of living with a fellow writing whose opinion you respect is that when you are working on a story or poem or have just finished one, there is always someone there to give you feedback and respond to questions about it, all the way from the construction of individual lines and sentences to how well it works as a whole.

You’ve been an active member of PBS for a while.   How did you hear about us?  If you could change one thing about our site what would it be?
Periodically I do an online search on my name to see if anything of interest pops up: raves or pans of my work, websites or foreign publications that have posted or translated and published something of mine without permission, etc.  During one of these searches I came upon comments and a rating on some book of mine, don’t remember which, that had been made on PBS.  I began exploring the site, and soon joined.

I wouldn’t change anything about PBS.  In fact, I’d like to offer my compliments and thanks to your designer.  From the very beginning, I’ve found the site, as opposed to many others, very easy to understand and to navigate.  However, I might add something to PBS — a page listing authors, who are also PBS Members, who would be willing to field questions from other members about their writing.

What’s on your nightstand?
A lamp, a clock, a white noise machine…sometimes a glass of wine or a cup of coffee…but you no doubt mean what books am I currently reading.  I’m usually into several books at once.  Right now I’m reading two unpublished novels by writer friends.  One is a love story about a jazz musician and a Japanese artist set in the forties and fifties.  The other is a contemporary psychological mystery loosely based on Shakespeare’s Othello.  I’m also rereading Pascali’s Island by Barry Unsworth, a tale set in 1908 on a small Greek island that is part of the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

Meet author Claudine Wolk of “It Gets Easier! And Other Lies We Tell New Mothers”

Monday, October 26th, 2009

We’ll have a random drawing including all of those who comment on the post.  Winner will receive a signed copy of “It Gets Easier! And Other Lies We Tell New Mothers“. Can’t think of something to comment on? How about letting us know something you wish someone would have told you before motherhood!  …. Dads you know you have things you wish people had told you as well!   And the winner of the signed copy goes to Antonia S. (werefrog).  Congratulations Antonia & thanks to everyone for participating!

Claudine Wolk

Claudine’s Bio:  Claudine Wolk spent her pre-baby days managing an accounting office.  In accounting there is always an answer.  Numbers don’t avoid the question, tell you to do “what feels right”, or just lie.  When she had her son, Claudine discovered that parenting experts sometimes do! So she set out to uncover the truth about parenting and the secrets that could make life a little easier.

After having three children and learning countless parenting secrets, this Pennsylvania mom decided it was just selfish to keep all these tidbits to herself. So she wrote It Gets Easier! And Other Lies We Tell New Mothers.

What all mothers should know: “In the first two years of life a baby will go through around 4,700 diapers!”

Claudine, can you let us in on the 8 Lies we tell new Mothers?

It gets easier!

1.  Obviously, the first Lie is in the title of my book or It Gets Easier!  Motherhood certainly doesn’t get easier on its own.  New challenges replace old challenges, but there are some things you can do, now, to make motherhood a bit easier.

2. All moms love new motherhood. You’ve finally been introduced to the baby you’ve carried for nine months, all should be bliss, right?  Wrong.  Truth is, many new moms are shocked at the physical and emotional demands of new motherhood. They love their baby, of course, but new motherhood is anything but a pleasurable experience. Finding out that moms are not alone in feeling a bit shell-shocked can go a long way toward enjoying motherhood.

3. Some babies sleep through the night the moment they get home from the hospital.  This is a legend created to insure procreation.  Just the chance that your baby may be the “Wonka Golden Ticket” and sleep through the night on his first day of life and doesn’t, can be disappointing.

4.  Holding a baby can spoil a baby.  Not so. Hold as much as you like.  The trick is to put the baby down drowsy, not completely asleep to help teach him how to get himself to sleep.

5. Mom needs to be with her baby at all times.  Finding a suitable replacement can be the first step toward being the best mom you can be.  Every new mom needs a break from baby or she will overload and burn-out.

6. Only a relative is a suitable caregiver.  No way.  The best babysitters are the one you are not related to.  Sometimes a mom needs to escape without having to explain that she is checking out the latest Eric Bana movie.

7. Breastfeeding is easy.  Breast feeding may be natural but it is not easy for many new moms.  It is, as they say, a learned skill that requires practice and instruction.  Watching another nursing mom can be a great way to learn this skill.  (Just make sure you know her, gawking after a breastfeeding stranger could be a bit creepy.)

8.  Husbands don’t mind if your sex life takes months and months to resume.  Although spouses are certainly understanding in this department, make no mistake, they are anxious to get back in the saddle (don’t be surprised if you want to get back in the saddle, too).  Make sure you talk about it and make a plan to “do it” when your doctor says it’s ok.

Find out more about Claudine by visiting her website: www.Help4NewMoms.com

Scary Book Recommendations for October

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Thrills ‘n’ Chills

Here are some great goosebumpy reads, currently available to request…

Nightmares and Dreamscapes by Stephen King
Nightmares and Dreamscapes. Short stories by the master…Stephen King is your go-to author for wickedly frightening tales!
Sunday at Tiffany's by James Patterson
Sunday at Tiffany’s. Jane is a lonely young girl who takes comfort in her imaginary friend, Michael. On Jane’s ninth birthday he leaves, promising her that she’ll forget him soon. He was there to help her until she was old enough to manage on her own, and now there are other children who need his help. Twenty years later, she is grown and still lonely despite her handsome boyfriend, when she catches a glimpse of a familiar face in a bar–Michael?
My Sweet Audrina by VC Andrews
My Sweet Audrina Audrina Adare wanted so to be as good as her sister. She knew her father could not love her as he loved her sister. Her sister was so special, so perfect — and dead.   Upstairs in the locked room was her sister’s sacred rocking chair, which held the secret of all her sister’s gifts. Now Audrina will rock and rock and claim those gifts, and come face to face with the dangerous, terrifying secret that everyone knows.   Everyone except Audrina.

In the Night Room by Peter Straub
In the Night Room Willy Patrick thinks she is losing her mind; she knows somehow that her daughter is in danger, and she has an overwhelming need to rescue her. But this is impossible, for her daughter is dead.  Timothy Underhill is receiving eerie, fragmented e-mails that he finally realizes are from people he knew in his youth–people now dead.  When Willy and Timothy meet, the frightening parallels tell them that they must join forces to confront the evils surrounding them.
The Dream-Hunter by Sherrilyn Kenyon
The Dream-Hunter …In the ethereal world of dreams, there are champions who fight to protect the dreamer and there are demons who prey on them.  Arik is such a predator, condemned by the gods to live eternity without emotions.  Arik can feel only when he’s in the dreams of others. For thousands of years, he’s drifted through the human unconscious, searching for sensation. Now he’s finally found a dreamer whose vivid mind can fill his emptiness…

Coming soon to the blog: more author interviews and signed book giveaways

Looking for more scary books? Check out one of our next featured authors – Bruce Boston, three time winner of the Bram Stoker Award.
Doctor, Doctor! Interviews with Dr. Bruce Conn (The Curse of Durgan’s Reef) and Dr. Harold Shinitzky (Your Mind: An Owner’s Manual for a Better Life).

The Nightmare CollectionThe Curse of Durgan's Reef by Dr. Bruce ConnYour Mind: An Owners Manual

Interview with Author & PBS Member Hillary DePiano

Monday, September 14th, 2009

We would like to introduce you to a longtime member of PBS & talented author Hillary DePiano.

Hillary DePiano

Author Hillary DePiano

Hillary is a fiction and non-fiction author and blogger best known for her play, The Love of Three Oranges which has been performed in theatres around the world and her novella, The Author. She is an avid vintage toy collector and has authored a guide to both My Little Pony toys and She-Ra: Princess of Power action figures and for Priced Nostalgia Press’s Collector’s Inventory series of price guides. Hillary is also an eBay PowerSeller and Trading Assistant and has extensive experience in the world of buying and selling online. She shares her experiences in publishing, marketing, blogging, buying and selling on sites like eBay, Amazon, Lulu and more through her books, eBooks and her e-commerce blog, The Whine Seller. Hillary writes about writing and her daily life in Unpublishable Pennings, her personal blog. For the most up to the minute information about Hillary DePiano, be sure to follow her on Twitter at @HillaryDePiano.

Fiction
The Author
The Love of Three Oranges: A Play for the Theatre That Takes the Commedia Dell’arte of Carlo Gozzi and Updates It for the New Millennium

Hillary’s fiction work has been honored on several occasions and she has received the following prizes and honors over her career:

  • 2002 C. Willard Smith Award for Creativity in Theatre for writing and directing The Love of Three Oranges
  • Won the 2001 Julia Fonville Smithson Memorial Prize for The Author
  • Won the 2001 West Branch Literary Prize for Fiction for The Author

Non-Fiction Works
The Trading Assistant’s Assistant: How to start a part-time job or full-time consignment drop-off business on eBay
The Seller Ledger: An Auction Organizer for Selling on EBay
The She-Ra Collector’s Inventory: An Unofficial Illustrated Guide to All Princess of Power Toys and Accessories (Includes Price Guide)
The My Little Pony Collector’s Inventory: A Complete Checklist of All US Ponies, Playsets and Accessories from 1981 to 1992

The Author by Hillary DePiano

The Author

How did you find PaperBackSwap?
Oddly enough, it was through Rosie O’Donnell’s blog. A reader asked suggested it as an option for fans of hers that wanted to read her latest book but not pay for it. I was in love the moment I first saw the site. My grandparents are always giving me the books they no longer want and none of them interest me. PBS gave me the opportunity to trade these unwanted books away for stuff I actually wanted to read. I also did a few things to upgrade my library such as trading all my paperback Harry Potter books for the hardcovers. I am in love and I have no idea how I managed before PBS entered my life.

What/who inspired you to start writing?
I am a voracious reader (as I am sure most of us are on Paperbackswap) and I think reading and writing really go hand in hand. The more you read the written word, the more you exercise your imagination and your creativity and writing is a natural outlet for that.

How did you choose the play “The Love of Three Oranges” to modernize?
The story of The Love of Three Oranges is inexorably tied with my newest release, The Author. I wrote The Author while in college and won two awards for it: the  Julia Fonville Smithson Memorial Prize and the West Branch Literary Prize for Fiction. In the meantime, one of my majors was theatre and I had been selected to direct a mainstage production. The Love of Three Oranges was one idea kicked around in play selection committee meetings but I kept rejecting it because we couldn’t find a good version. Every version was very stilted and the jokes were no longer funny. In the end, the committee selected Neil Simon’s Rumors and we all went home for the summer. Then I get a frantic call from the college after I was home telling me that I couldn’t do Rumors and I only had a week to pick a new play.
I read an insane number of plays that week and just got more and more annoyed because I couldn’t find anything I wanted to do on such short notice. Finally, beyond frustrated, I said I would do The Love of Three Oranges on the condition that I be allowed to write my own version. The theatre department agreed to this because, as they said, “You won those awards for that story so you must be able to write.” I appreciated their blind vote of confidence but to this day I am pretty sure none of them have actually read The Author and only let me write Three Oranges based on the fact they’d heard about the awards for The Author but, heck, they were willing to accept that as creative collateral and I took it.

I basically started from scratch when working on my version, trying to keep the spirit of the original piece intact but to make the language and humor more accessible. Long story short (too late, right?) the play was a huge success and I snagged the C. Willard Smith Award for Creativity in Theatre for writing and directing it. What was funny, though, was I never saw it as the start of any writing career. At the time, it was just a means to an end. I couldn’t find the play I wanted to direct so I wrote it myself. Now it has been produced all over the world hundreds of times by students and professional actors alike.

The best part about The Love of Three Oranges has been the number of students around the world who have performed in it and written to me later to tell me how much they loved it. That is worth more than anything else.

The Love of Three Oranges

The Love of Three Oranges

Any plans to re-write/modernize any other plays?
I have often thought of doing Carlo Gozzi’s The Green Bird which reads like a sequel to The Love of Three Oranges but that idea is still on the drawing board. I am currently in the middle of two new novels which are on original ideas but I definitely keep the idea of another rewrite on the back burner for the future.

You have written both fiction (The Love of Three Oranges, The Author) and non-fiction (The She-Ra Collector’s Inventory, The Trading Assistant’s Assistant). Which do you find easier?
Non-fiction is often more appealing because I know where I am going from the start. I like explaining things which is where a book like The Trading Assistant’s Assistant comes from. I have worked as an eBay Trading Assistant for many years with success so in that book I am explaining that business that I am very familiar with from my own experience. The more familiar I am with the subject, the easier it is to write about it. I also keep a daily blog called The Whine Seller (www.thewhineseller.com) that is entirely non-fiction and how-to style posts so I keep in practice with non-fiction writing there.
But in some ways, fiction is more rewarding though it’s often harder work. I may not be able to sit down and tear through hundreds of words at a clip like I can with non-fiction but the reward of knowing that I created an entire fictional word from scratch is its own reward.

Tell us a little about your background?  Where are you from originally, etc.
I am from New Jersey which means that I tawk about shopping the mawll and walk my dawg awll the time. Actually, my Jersey accent is much more in check since college. I went to Bucknell University in Pennsylvania where my accent was mocked out of me. It was actually something of a shock when I got to college to discover that I even had an accent since everyone I knew talked just like me. Now I only have an accent when I get agitated so you better not get my Jersey up!
I currently live with my husband Denville, NJ.

What advice would you give new & upcoming authors?
The best advice I can give is to just sit down and write. So many people get hung up on statistics about how hard it is to get published or be successful and they stop before they have even begun. They never even put pen to paper because they are thinking to themselves, “What’s the use, it won’t get published anyway?” You need to banish those thoughts. While I cannot guarantee that your story will be published, I can guarantee that it won’t be published if you never write it down at all, so get writing!
Another important thing is to know when to take off your author hat. It happens during editing and especially during marketing after a book is published, where an author is so enamored with their work that they cannot make the changes they need to or effectively promote their work. There comes a time when you need to take your author hat off and look at your work with cold objectivity. The means not taking every bad review personally and realizing that the part that you absolutely loved writing may need to be cut from the story to make it read better. You need to be two people: the writer and the writer’s advisor. It can be a real challenge to keep those parts of your separate but it is essential for success.

Lastly, don’t be afraid to give copies of your story away. It kills me when I see authors who make their own parents BUY a copy of their book. The people who you are closest to you are the ones that are going to give you your best reviews and word of mouth. You buy yourself a little more of their goodwill by not making them purchase a copy. Comp your friends and family and it will pay off in word of mouth and free publicity. Also, list a copy of your book on Paperbackswap. As it gets passed around between readers, you win yourself more reviews and word of mouth from every new reader and that can be some very powerful marketing.

School Daze – Check out these great books, currently available to request…

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

The Kalahari Typing School for Men
Mystery… The Kalahari Typing School for Men. The fourth in the delightful No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series, this book features Mma Precious Ramotswe, the head of the agency, content.  She’s in her mid-thirties (“the finest age to be”), she has a house, two adopted children, a fine fiance. But, as always, there are troubles…  Don’t forget the others in the series...
Joy School
Contemporary FictionJoy School. In this luminous novel by bestselling writer Elizabeth Berg, the narrator Katie has relocated to Missouri with her distant, occasionally abusive father, and she feels very much alone: her much-loved mother is dead; she’s not fitting in at her new school. When she accidentally falls through the ice while skating, she meets Jimmy….   Joy School illuminates how the things that hurt the most can sometimes teach us the lessons that really matter.
The Charm School
Thriller …The Charm School. Something very strange — and sinister — is going on in the Russian woods. In a place called Mrs. Ivanova’s Charm School, young KGB agents are being taught by American POW’s how to be model citizens of the USA, in order to infiltrate the United States undetected.  An unsuspecting American tourist stumbles upon this secret… The Charm School is a chilling story of cold war espionage that is relentlessly suspenseful right up to its white-knuckle ending!

Carrie by Stephen King
Horror….Carrie. Yes, we know you’ve seen the movie. But have you read the book?   The story of misunderstood high school girl Carrie White, her extraordinary telekinetic powers, and her violent rampage of revenge is the one that started it all for Stephen King. Practically guaranteed to come with a nightmare!  Horror aficionados really should not miss this one.
So You're Thinking About Homeschooling
Homeschooling…So You’re Thinking About Homeschooling: Fifteen Families Show How You Can Do It.  (Well, and why wouldn’t you, after reading Carrie?!)  Yes, indeed, that IS Blair from The Facts of Life, presenting 15 homeschooling families as examples of how to make homeschooling a reality for your own family.  A nuts-and-bolts approach, dealing with common questions of time management, teaching weaknesses and outside responsibilities, as well as social and sports involvement, learning disabilities and boredom.