The
world will seem much more gratifying once you eat my delicious, chewy chocolate
cupcake. When stirring a can of pumpkin into my secret mix of chocolate
goodness, you will imagine something coming out of the oven that won’t even
come close to the final product. After cooling from the oven, this scrumptious
cupcake will be transformed as white butter cream frosting is delicately slathered
on top of the most delicious dessert you have ever tasted. If someone were to gaze over your shoulder
while you partook in one of these enticing cupcakes, they would most definitely
drool with envy for this culinary masterpiece.
Inside this cupcake, there is a delightfully appealing surprise of
white-chocolate peanut butter just waiting for your nose to rejoice in its
momentary, but luscious aroma. If you were to devour this incredible cupcake,
you would taste an enchanting mix of fluffy butter cream, rich dark chocolate,
and delightful white-chocolate peanut butter, all rolled into one single
confectionery delight. This mini-cake, black and white as it may be, will bring
a rainbow of sensory delight to your taste buds! Just be careful though, the “Cupcake Monster” is on the lookout
for the best cupcake in the world, so you better eat my cupcake before he does!
A Gathering Days
Book Review
Hannah Messer 2/15/12
A Gathering of
Days
The book, A Gathering of Days, had three main characters:
Catherine, Cassie, and Asa.
Catherine was the girl that the book was about. She was a girl of thirteen who's mother had died when she was five. She had two sisters: Mary-Martha, and Mattie. She, her siblings, and her father lived in an old home in New Hampshire. After a business trip her father had taken, he married a women he met on his business trip.
Cassie was Catherine's best friend. They went to school together, played together, and went to church together. Cassie had three brothers: Asa, David, and little Willie.
Asa was of Cassie's brothers that played with Catherine, too. Cassie was his only sister.
Catherine was the girl that the book was about. She was a girl of thirteen who's mother had died when she was five. She had two sisters: Mary-Martha, and Mattie. She, her siblings, and her father lived in an old home in New Hampshire. After a business trip her father had taken, he married a women he met on his business trip.
Cassie was Catherine's best friend. They went to school together, played together, and went to church together. Cassie had three brothers: Asa, David, and little Willie.
Asa was of Cassie's brothers that played with Catherine, too. Cassie was his only sister.
These three characters lived in New Hampshire. The time
period that the book was recorded in was in the 1830's. Women and girls wore
dresses and bonnets. Men and boys wore pants. Each night, Catherine's father
would read to them the family bible, which was the custom then.
The main thing that Catherine struggled with in the book
was death. After Catherine's mother died, she had to do all the things her
mother used to do, such as making her family meals, mending clothes, cleaning
the house, tucking the younger children in at night, and, she had school to do. When her father re-married, Catherine did not adjust well. Her stepmother
was a good women, but she dressed differently from what the people in
Catherine's town did, she brought loads of new furniture from her old home in,
and spoke slightly different then what Catherine was used to. It was also
challenging for Catherine because her stepmother brought her son with her.
After a time, Catherine began to spend more time with her "new"
family, and it wasn't as hard as she thought it would be to have a
"new' mother and brother. Another conflict was, that, after Catherine went
swimming, in the summer, with Cassie, Cassie began to complain that she was
very cold. When Cassie went home, she fell ill. She was sick for quite some
time, then, she died. Catherine was alone and without a friend, but, soon
afterward, her aunt became pregnant, and was soon to have a child. She asked
Catherine to come and move away to help with the baby. Catherine accepted, and
was able to cope with her sadness more so. That is how the book ended.
Even though this wasn't my favorite book, it was still a good one. The lesson I learned from this book would be that, even though trials come, there will always be hope.
Autograph Line Videos
Here you go! Play these in order. I had to break them up because Blogger couldn't upload the whole thing at once.
Sorry. My Dad took the rest on his phone. here tis:
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