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The Literary Life Podcast

Episode 209: “Best of” Series – The Literary Life of Emily Raible, Ep. 56

The Literary Life Podcast

Angelina Stanford

Education, Selfeducation, Classicaleducation, Reading, Literature, Homeschool, Arts, Books, Charlottemason, Homeeducation, Homeschooling

4.61.1K Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2024

⏱️ 92 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Welcome to another episode in our “Best of The Literary Life” podcast series. Today on The Literary Life Podcast, our hosts Angelina and Cindy chat with “superfan” Emily Raible about her own literary life. Emily is a homeschool mom, an avid reader, birdwatcher, baker and probably Angelina’s most loyal student. In telling the story of her reading life, Emily talks about her childhood and how she was not a reader as a young person. She shares how she finally started getting interested in reading through Janette Oke and Hardy Boys books. Then she tells about borrowing books from a local family’s home library and starting to fall in love with true classics.

After getting married to an avid reader, Emily started going through her husband’s own library during her long hours at home alone. Even after she became of lover of reading, Emily still didn’t define herself as a real reader. Emily shares her journey to becoming a homeschooling parent, how she learned about Charlotte Mason and classical education, and her first time meeting Angelina and Cindy. They continue the conversation expanding on the feast of ideas, what it means to be a “reader,” and how we learn and enter into the literary world throughout our lives.

If you are listening to this on the day it drops, there is still time to grab a spot for Thomas Banks and Anne Phillips’ webinar on Herodotus taking place today January 30, 2024. Head over to HouseofHumaneLetters.com/webinars where you can sign up! Of course, you can also purchase the recordings to tune in after the webinar is released.

If you missed the 2020 Back to School Conference with Karen Glass, you can still purchase the recording at MorningTimeforMoms.com.

Also, our Sixth Annual Literary Life Online Conference is coming up in April 2024. The theme is “Dispelling the Myth of Modernity” with keynote speaker Jason Baxter. You can learn more and register now at HouseofHumaneLetters.com.

Commonplace Quotes:

But the object of my school is to show how many extraordinary things even a lazy and ordinary man may see, if he can spur himself to the single activity of seeing.

G. K. Chesterton

Time can be both a threat and a friend to hope. Injustice, for example, has to be tediously dismantled, not exploded. This is often infuriating, but it is true.

Makoto Fujimura

The poet is traditionally a blind man, but the Christian poet, and story-teller as well, is like the blind man whom Christ touched, who looked then and saw men as if they were trees but walking. This is the beginning of vision, and it is an invitation to deeper and stranger visions than we shall have to learn to accept if we are to realize a truly Christian literature.

Flannery O’Connor

Armies in the Fire

by Robert Louis Stevenson

The lamps now glitter down the street;
Faintly sound the falling feet;
And the blue even slowly falls
About the garden trees and walls.

Now in the falling of the gloom
The red fire paints the empty room:
And warmly on the roof it looks,
And flickers on the back of books.

Armies march by tower and spire
Of cities blazing, in the fire;—
Till as I gaze with staring eyes,
The armies fall, the lustre dies.

Then once again the glow returns;
Again the phantom city burns;
And down the red-hot valley, lo!
The phantom armies marching go!

Blinking embers, tell me true
Where are those armies marching to,
And what the burning city is
That crumbles in your furnaces!

Book List:

Tremendous Trifles by G. K. Chesterton

Culture Care by Makoto Fujimura

Rascal by Sterling North

Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

Poppy Ott by Leo Edwards

Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare

The Once and Future King by T. H. White

The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkein

The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan

Agatha Christie

James Patterson

Tom Clancy

Harry Potter series

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

Mansfield Park by Jane Austen

Howards End by E. M. Forster

The Divine Comedy by Dante (trans. by Dorothy Sayers)

Illiad and Odyssey by Homer

Dorothy L. Sayers

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf

Why Should Businessmen Read Great Literature? by Vigen Guroian

The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy

Arabian Nights

Are Women Human? by Dorothy Sayers

Confessions by Augustine

Beatrix Potter Treasury

Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

Babe the Gallant Pig by Dick King-Smith

Brambly Hedge by Jill Barklem

Support The Literary Life:

Become a patron of The Literary Life podcast as part of the “Friends and Fellows Community” on Patreon, and get some amazing bonus content! Thanks for your support!

Connect with Us:

You can find Angelina and Thomas at HouseofHumaneLetters.com, on Instagram @angelinastanford, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ANGStanford/

Find Cindy at morningtimeformoms.com, on Instagram @cindyordoamoris and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/CindyRollinsWriter. Check out Cindy’s own Patreon page also!

Follow The Literary Life on Instagram, and jump into our private Facebook group, The Literary Life Discussion Group, and let’s get the book talk going! http://bit.ly/literarylifeFB

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Literary Life Podcast.

0:03.0

We've grown quite significantly since our debut in 2019,

0:07.0

and we've had many requests to highlight older episodes that new listeners may have missed,

0:12.0

as well as revisit listener favorites.

0:15.3

To honor that request, I present to you this episode of the Best of the Literary Life

0:20.3

podcast. This is not just another book chat podcast.

0:26.0

Lifelong reader Cindy Rollins joins teachers Angelina Stanford and Thomas Banks

0:31.0

for an ongoing conversation about the skill and art to

0:33.0

Stanford and Thomas Banks for an ongoing conversation about the skill and art of reading well.

0:36.0

Explore the lost intellectual tradition

0:39.0

and discover how to fully enter into the great works of literature. Learn what books mean while delighting

0:46.2

in the sheer joy of imagination. Each week we will rescue a story from the ivory tower and bring it to your couch, your

0:55.0

kitchen, and your commute. The literary life is for everyone because in the words

1:00.2

of Stratford Caldecott to be enchanted by story is to be granted a deeper insight into reality.

1:07.0

Join us for an ever unfolding discussion of how stories will save the world. This is the Literary Life Podcast. Hello. Hello, my name is Thomas Banks, and I wanted to tell you today about an event that is coming up later in January at the end of the month on Tuesday January 30th

1:46.7

Dr. Anne Phillips and myself will be hosting a webinar about the great Greek historian Herodotus, the father of history or as he's sometimes known the father of lies.

2:01.0

And we are going to be talking about why it is that he holds both of these titles and why it is that

2:10.0

history has its own muse.

2:14.0

Cleo, if you know your myth, is one of the nine muses who superintends history and inspires those who write it.

2:22.0

And talking about Herodotus, we want to explore the idea that history

2:29.7

is more of an art properly than a science.

2:34.0

We also want to open up the great panorama

...

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