Amelia Peabody?
[email protected]
Hi all,
Has anyone read the Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters? I'm just
starting the most recent one. I've read all of them several times. Ramses
(Peabody's son) is a great example of a true unschooler! Give them try
sometime - you can learn lots about Egyptian history as well as having fun
with them.
**** Kim ****
runs with scissors
Has anyone read the Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters? I'm just
starting the most recent one. I've read all of them several times. Ramses
(Peabody's son) is a great example of a true unschooler! Give them try
sometime - you can learn lots about Egyptian history as well as having fun
with them.
**** Kim ****
runs with scissors
Maria Gorgas
Monkeycoop@... wrote:
I've been lurking in this list for about 1 week now and will post an
intro soon ( I hope ) but I wanted to say her books are the *best* I
love her stuff and he is a true unschooler.
--
Maria, busy with two kiddlets but swears I will post an intro soon.
mama to Gabriela 11/25/96 and Larisa 10/18/99
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Park/7802
mailto:pmgor@...
--
In the sheltered simplicity of the first days after a baby is born, one
sees again the magical closed circle, the miraculous sense of two people
existing only for each other - Anne Morrow Lindbergh
>Hi!
> From: Monkeycoop@...
>
> Hi all,
> Has anyone read the Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters? I'm just
> starting the most recent one. I've read all of them several times. Ramses
> (Peabody's son) is a great example of a true unschooler! Give them try
> sometime - you can learn lots about Egyptian history as well as having fun
> with them.
>
I've been lurking in this list for about 1 week now and will post an
intro soon ( I hope ) but I wanted to say her books are the *best* I
love her stuff and he is a true unschooler.
--
Maria, busy with two kiddlets but swears I will post an intro soon.
mama to Gabriela 11/25/96 and Larisa 10/18/99
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Park/7802
mailto:pmgor@...
--
In the sheltered simplicity of the first days after a baby is born, one
sees again the magical closed circle, the miraculous sense of two people
existing only for each other - Anne Morrow Lindbergh
Campbell & Wyman
What age/reading level is this aimed at?
Brooke
Brooke
>Has anyone read the Amelia Peabody mysteries by Elizabeth Peters? I'm justbrynlee@...
>starting the most recent one. I've read all of them several times. Ramses
>(Peabody's son) is a great example of a true unschooler! Give them try
>sometime - you can learn lots about Egyptian history as well as having fun
>with them.
>
>**** Kim ****
>runs with scissors
>
>
[email protected]
In a message dated 1/28/2000 11:55:07 PM Central Standard Time,
brynlee@... writes:
<< What age/reading level is this aimed at? >>
Well, they are adult books, but I would say any proficient reader of about 12
or so would enjoy them. There's nothing profane that would require them to
be solely for adults.
**** Kim ****
runs with scissors
brynlee@... writes:
<< What age/reading level is this aimed at? >>
Well, they are adult books, but I would say any proficient reader of about 12
or so would enjoy them. There's nothing profane that would require them to
be solely for adults.
**** Kim ****
runs with scissors