Holidays and reading go hand in hand, not only because books heighten our enjoyment of the celebration, but also because, through stories, we pass along the Truth and the significance of the holiday. This Easter, I hope you’ll take some time to read the account of resurrection found in Scripture first of all. Then, if you still have minutes to invest, here are half a dozen recommendations for your own Easter basket or for someone you love:
Recommended Reads for Easter
With her carefully constructed re-telling of the final weeks of Jesus’ life, Liz Curtis Higgs honors the women who were part of that story in The Women of Easter: Encounter the Savior with Mary of Bethany, Mary of Nazareth, and Mary Magdalene. Rather than lifting her protagonists out of the story one by one with three distinct bios, she considers them in context as they interact with each other, with Jesus, and with other major players within the narrative arc of Scripture.
Liz shares the encouraging truth that even the very first Easter was not a picture perfect affair. No. It was “full of disbelief, fear, and confusion” as even Jesus’ closest disciples struggled to absorb the truth.
Likewise, with our Easter bonnets askew and our Resurrection Sunday dinner menus still up in the air, we are invited to come, by faith, to the empty tomb. We are invited to rejoice, and we have been charged with the privilege of sharing the good news. By faith, we, too, are The Women of Easter.
In a decision that somehow manages to seem both arbitrary and precise, the
Council of Nicaea met in 325 A.D. and determined that Easter would be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon that falls on or after the first day of spring. Easter and spring are also holding hands in Anne Vittur Kennedy’s festive board book, One Spring Lamb.
From sparkly cover to peaceful conclusion, children will enjoy the rollicking rhymes and vivid illustrations. Parents will appreciate the fact that this celebration of the resurrection is also a counting book in which two lilies dance in the breeze, and three little girls and four little boys are all dressed up for Easter Sunday. The fun goes on all the way up to the challenge of finding and counting ten stuffed bunnies in a child’s cozy bedroom, and the stated conclusion that the best Easter gift of all is the joy of knowing that “Jesus lives and loves me so.”
By the way, that adorable spring lamb shows up somewhere in every scene! My grandson was not quite two when I first reviewed One Spring Lamb, but even now, this is one of the books he asks me to read to him when he comes to visit.
Holding hands around a table; a focus on gratitude and shared celebration;
dressed in their Easter best, the Berenstain Bears lead the way into a fun and family-oriented celebration of Resurrection Sunday. Presenting as normal the discipline of church attendance, prayer before a meal, and portraying the beauty of love and respect among extended family, The Berenstain Bears’ Easter Blessings by Mike Berenstain (son of Stan and Jan who began the series in 1962) will come alongside the parents of young children with words and ideas for a meaningful celebration.
All the blessings that we enjoy (and take for granted) come through the hand of the God who orchestrated the miracle of the resurrection. Join the Berenstain Bears in counting and listing Easter blessings. Beginning with the glory of a spring morning and a cozy tree house, they move in ever widening circles to include friends, the church family, and the public servants who care for us and keep us safe. In the weeks leading up to Easter, write them on slips of paper to hang on a spring-branches bouquet, or toss them, one by one, into a festive Easter basket and then read them all during Easter dinner.
What a gift to hold this small board book in one hand and to share it with a tiny lap child, to join the Bear Family as they worship in the Chapel in the Woods, and to be reminded of the greatest Easter blessing of all:
Yes, He is risen! He is risen indeed!
Esther Emery unplugged her life from the Internet in November 2009, and for
one year, she lived a life without email, without a cell phone, and without a debit card. No Google, no on-line shopping, no text messages. She walked away from her blog, an encouraging Facebook community, and any trace of an on-line presence in a leap of Stop-doing-everything-you-know-and-start-doing-everything-you-don’t-know Faith.
What Falls from the Sky: How I Disconnected from the Internet and Reconnected with the God Who Made the Clouds shares this journey in four parts that correlate with four glorious gifts from the sky: snow, rain, sunshine, and fog, but I found her most compelling words were about a celebration of Easter in community. By this, she was introduced to the beauty of “borrowed” power from the crucified and risen Christ and the truth that this is “not theoretical at all.” The vulnerability of Good Friday left Esther defenseless against the claims of Christ upon her life, and she was captured by the forgiveness that conquers fear, the “Jesus of the brokenhearted, the Jesus of the suffering.” Ironically, as her spiritual life came into focus, the material world also became sharper.
I’m sure there will be those who find significance in the juxtaposition of Easter and April Fool’s Day in 2018, but whenever Easter falls on the calendar, I find that my heart is more prepared to celebrate Easter if I spend some time during the Lenten season reading about the two historical events that are central to Christianity: the cross and the empty tomb. What happened? What does it all mean?
A few years ago, I found Scandalous: The Cross and Resurrection of Jesus in which D.A.Carson isolates five theologically stunning concepts based on five scriptural passages that integrate the implications of both crucifixion and resurrection:
I. The Ironies of the Cross — Matthew 27:27-51
Irony, using words that normally mean the opposite of what is actually being said, brings situations into sharp focus, and there were four profound and dramatic ironies at work in the narrative of Jesus’ crucifixion.
II. The Truth of Human Desperation — Romans 3:21-26
In our post-“I’m-O.K.-You’re-O.K” era, this may well be the most inexplicable of all Christian doctrines, for we are a tolerant generation in which “the one wrong thing to say is that somebody else is wrong.” However, the truth is that we are offenders before God and in need of reconciliation which Jesus provided, preserving the justice of God while justifying the ungodly.
III. The Strange Triumph of a Slaughtered Lamb — Revelation 12
In this apocalyptic reenactment of the Christmas story, the Red Dragon rages over the truth that a deliverer has come forth from the Messianic community, and, therefore, his demise is certain. The past 2,000 years of martyrdom and persecution are the thrashing of the doomed dragon’s tail, while, in the meantime, the gospel advances through believers who are bearing witness to Christ, through the blood of the cross, and through the realization that life in Christ “is a call to die to self-interest,” (Revelation 12:11).
IV. A Miracle Full of Surprises — John 11:1-53
The juxtaposition of death and life in Bethany reveals that God is always full of surprises. Jesus’ dealings with the dead man’s sisters is foreshadowed in His response to the disciples when He receives their summons: “This sickness will not end in death,” (11:4). The purpose of the miracle had nothing to do with death or even with life, but instead, God’s glory was put on display. Of course, this is not clear to anyone at the time, and it only becomes clear to us if we take a minute to realize that Jesus’ resurrection of Lazarus put Him in the crosshairs of those who were plotting to remove Him from the scene.
V. Doubting the Resurrection of Jesus — John 20:24-31
After an analysis of six forms of doubt, D.A. Carson enters into the cognitive dissonance that accompanied a crucified messiah. The fallout of that all-important weekend in Jerusalem, at least from the disciples’ viewpoint, was disappointment and despair. Therefore, the second Sunday after the resurrection, Thomas is still determined not to be taken in by rumors of a living Jesus. His utterance of faith, “My Lord and my God!” is part of the “these” that were written so that we who only read of Christ’s resurrection may also believe.
May the outcome of all our ponderings during this season be a stronger belief in the resurrection and a deeper following of our wounded God.
For years I celebrated Easter as if it were a stand-alone holiday, singing “Up from
the Grave He Arose” without giving much thought to the horror of the Dying or the silence of the Dead. Providentially, my early efforts to incarnate and to enliven an invisible God in the hearts of four sweet boys found a way into the obtuse heart of their mother as well. A Glorious Dark: Finding Hope in the Tension between Belief and Experience is a book about believing which confronts the loss and defeat of Friday and the awkward silence of Saturday with Sunday morning resurrection truth. Where memoir meets theological pondering, author A.J. Swoboda’s story winds through his faith journey, with the bonus of startling spotlight quotes which he aims at himself and at all of us who say that we believe. Here’s one of the dozen or more:
“Many envision faith as a kind of hall pass for laziness, excusing them from a life of action, doing, and working hard.”
Ouch and amen.
A Glorious Dark reveals a God who “stand[s] tall” above human history and invites (rather than scorns) the questioning heart. After all, of the thirty-one questions Jesus posed in the Gospels, He answered only three. When God does not break into history to rectify the list of problems set forth in my latest memorandum/prayer, it will be helpful to remember the messy way in which that one weekend in history played out for those who were on the scene. Once again, the life of Jesus will be made manifest, a glorious life emerging from a glorious dark.
Thanks, for reading along and for joining with me in the celebration of all that is ours because of our risen and living Savior!
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. If you should decide to purchase any of the books mentioned in this post,simply click on the title within the text or the images below, and you’ll be taken directly to Amazon. If you decide to buy, I’ll make a small commission at no extra cost to you:
These books were provided by various publishers in exchange for my review. It’s my pleasure to feature them once again here, all in one place for your Easter enjoyment.
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Michele,
I love Liz Curtis Higgs “The Women of Easter”. I love how she puts flesh on the Bible characters we know and don’t know. How she needs prayer right now! I read so many Berenstain Bears books – so glad there are popular children’s books with godly perspectives. Intrigued by “Scandalous”. How true that the “wrong thing to say these days is you are wrong.” May we be more brave in our faith in this era of anything goes. Thanks for the great run down of books.
Blessings,
Bev xx
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Thanks for reading, Bev. There are so many great books available, and it’s hard to narrow the field to fit the allotted time. Liz does need prayer right now as she battles cancer.
And I also have good memories of the Berenstain Bears. Glad they are still available for another generation!
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Reblogged this on The Mimosa Blossom.
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Thank, Michelle! You’re always an encouragement with your heart of hospitality!
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Books and easter. Oh I like that. Much more educational and relaxing than chocolate eggs (that you have yo eat yo protect your children teeth 😜)
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Ha! Dental Parental Intervention! Good strategy!
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Such a beautiful array of books and one for every age! Loved this!
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Can’t wait to introduce the baby grandgirl to the Easter board book!
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This is a substantial, thoughtful Easter basket, Michele … and certainly healthier than what I’d be prone to fill mine with.
Think chocolate.
I’m off to share this with my people on LinkedIn.
Monday blessings to you …
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I’m definitely thinking chocolate at this time of year . . unfortunately.
But it’s fun to share books connected with holidays because they come back every year!
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What Falls from the Sky looks so interesting! I’m not sure I could do that… And anything written by Liz Curtis Higgs has to be good. Thanks for these Easter offerings, Michele. I love that you include kids’ books here.
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It was fun sifting through my reviews of books, and I was surprised to find so many that carried a message of resurrection for this time of year. What Falls from the Sky is not specifically geared to Easter, but it covers a year, and the section she wrote about spring was so challenging to me.
Thanks, Betsy, for reading and for always encouraging.
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I love books and think they are a great item to put in baskets. I love the Bearenstain Bear books. Great list!
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Yes, the Berenstains show up at all the holidays!
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Thanks for all these suggestions for Easter. What a treat to help me focus more on this great season😉👍
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Dear Michele, Oh, you’ve increased my wish list of books exponentially now! It’s too hard to pick just one, but I’ve been wanting to read Esther Emory’s book for a while now, so I think that one will have to be next on my list. May you have a beautiful Palm Sunday week! Here’s to hoping that spring weather will soon find it’s way up north also!
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Whoops, sorry about the hit to your wish list. Mine gets longer all the time, too! 🙂
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I haven’t read a Liz Curtis Higgs book in quite awhile and this one sounds good! Also ‘Scandalous’ sounds like a really interesting read. Thanks for sharing these Easter books. : )
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I loved reviewing Scandalous, and D.A. Carson is an amazing Bible teacher. Of course, Liz is also amazing in a different way. There are so many ways to appreciate the truth!
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I will have to look out for Liz Curtis Higgs’ book! I loved her Women of Christmas. One I have read often in the weeks leading up to Easter was Nancy Guthrie’s Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross: Experiencing the Passion and Power of Easter.
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That sounds really good. I love Nancy Guthrie. Thanks for sharing the recommendation!
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Thanks for sharing about these books, Michele! All of them sound great but I am especially intrigued by Scandalous and What Falls From The Sky.
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Both very good. Tying our reading to a holiday season is such a big help in the process of entering into the celebration. I should have included the book I’m reading right now: The Passion of Jesus Christ: 50 Reasons Jesus Died (by John Piper).
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Those are the two books that jumped out to me. I think I need a few months of reading to read all the books on my reading list.
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Yes, I think we need to declare a reading sabbatical for all of us!
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Okay, so next year The 40 Days of Lent by Susan Chamberlain Shipe will be in this listing.
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I hear she’s just awesome . . .
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She is.
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So many books for season! Thanks for sharing, Michele. Blessings to you.
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Thanks for reading, Boma!
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My children love the Easter Blessing Bearenstain Bears book! THey also like the Parable of the Lily.
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Is Parable of the Lily a Liz Curtis Higgs title?
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It is 🙂
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So many good books. I have had my eye on Liz’s book, The Women of Easter. Her writing style has always been one of my favorites. You also piqued my interest with A Glorious Dark.
I am like you in that Easter is not a stand alone holiday. I take time to walk those footsteps with Jesus every year. I read, Kris Camealy’s book Holey, Wholly, Holy this Lenten season. I might pick your brain about a few of these books as I prepare to write another book.
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Pick away!
(Another book! Hooray!)
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What a list, Michele! I’m not familiar with any of these and you’ve given me much to look up. Thank you especially for the D.A Carson description and walk through. Powerful. I’ve also largely celebrated Easter with “Up from the Grave He Arose” (one of my favorite hymns!) and neglected Good Friday and all that led up to that glorious day. What a blessing we can seek God’s Glory in it all.
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Looking at Scandalous made me want to read some more of Carson’s words.
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You’ve offered us some great choices! Thanks for sharing. I see one that will go into my shopping cart! 🙂
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I’m curious! What will you be reading??
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So many awesome book recommendations!
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So intriguing! Adding What Falls From the Sky to my “list!” And now I know what I want for Easter! Blessings!
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Hope it’s in your Easter basket!
Thanks for reading!
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Michele, these sound like wonderful reads! I’m especially interested in The Women of Easter. It sounds like a fascinating and inspiring topic. Thanks for sharing!
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Liz Curtis Higgs does a great job unpacking the stories of those NT women. So glad to share good reads with friends!
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Women of Easter and Glorious Dark sound fascinating! Thank you so much for the recommendations!
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So happy to share great books–especially at a time of year when we need to be getting our hearts ready to celebrate resurrection!
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I was always a bookworm so my mom often put books in my Easter basket. In fact I can remember that my very first sweet Valley High book came in my Easter basket one year and that started me off reading the whole entire series. Pinned.
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Your mum was a genius!
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Michele, I love the variety of books you’ve shared here! I’ve always loved Berenstain Bears stories. Alas, my boys are beyond these fun tales. The other two books I long to read from your list are The Women of Easter, and The Glorious Dark. I’ve heard about Liz Curtis Higgs’ book, and it intrigued me before, just as it does now.
A Glorious Dark sounds like a great read. Maybe I could persuade my boys to read it too. We each find our way to God and the cross in a unique way. And this book sounds like an encouraging, challenging read.
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Thanks, Jeanne. I miss reading picture books, too. Fortunately, I have a grand boy who loves books. If you do try A.J. Swoboda’s book with your boys, I’d be interested to hear how it goes. I just heard him on a podcast recently because he’s got another book out, and he has such a great way of expressing himself. I can see his style appealing to young men.
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Books are such a joy and a good way to bring new life and worlds into our lives. Good to be reminded of those strong women in the Bible too #TwinklyTuesday
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What’s a great list, I was just trying to find gift ideas for my mother-in-law and this is perfect! #GlobalBlogging
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Glad to help! I used to love buying books for my mother-in-law!
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I put books in my daughters basket! I love the spring lamb. Last year I put in the crippled lamb. We still read it. #heartencourgagement
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I think that’s a Max Lucado story, right? He’s done a great picture book on the feeding of the 5,000 as well. We loved it.
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These all sound like helpful books. I’ve read What Falls from the Sky and loved it, especially since I’ve been able to spend some time with Esther in person. She’s a dear and very wise. Thank you for sharing this list with us at the #LMMLinkup! Blessings to you, dear Michele! xo
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Nice selection of books! Sharing and wishing you a Happy Easter!
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Bette, you are always such an encouragement!
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Happy Easter! I really like Delia Smith’s Easter mediation and usually do those.
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That’s good to know. I’m not familiar with her, but will have to keep my eyes open for it.
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All holidays are sweeter when books are involved. Scandalous and A Glorious Dark intrigue me. Thank you for such insightful summaries! I’m going to look into them.
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Our local book club is reading The Women of Easter for this month and I’m loving it. Thanks for the great post!
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What a fantastic idea for a book club pick!
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Wow!
Michelle I love this Easter basket. Thank you so much for sharing with my blog party visitors.
I very much like the sound of “Scandalous” and the “A Glorious Dark”
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Very challenging reads for any time of year, but especially appropriate for this season.
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Michele, you are such a blessing to me. Your post once again was the most clicked and my favorite on the #LMMLinkup this past week. Thank you for being such a wonderful supporter.
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Woo Hoo! That’s such an encouragement. And, Mary, you are truly an inspiration. Thanks for hanging in there with your ministry to bloggers!
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What a great idea. I’ve always loved to read. I now do reviews for Bethany House, but there is a local store that shares so many Christian books and Bibles at discounted prices. I will stop back and peruse better the ones that you’re sharing.
Peabea from Peabea Scribbles
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I sure miss the days of Christian book stores. Here in my area, book stores of any kind are few and far between. Good to connect with another book lover!
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The Women of Easter looks wonderful!! I think sometimes we hear the story so often we no longer focus on the details. This one from a different perspective will be a good read! Thanks for sharing at the Blogger’s Pit Stop! Can’t wait to see what you link up next week! Roseann from This Autoimmune Life
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This is so true! And it’s helpful to get a woman’s perspective.
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[…] Fill Your Easter Basket with Books […]
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[…] Fill Your Easter Basket with Books […]
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I love the idea of an Easter basket filled with books, Michele! I’m particularly drawn to The Women of Easter. I’m featuring this post at the Hearth and Soul Link Party this week. Thank you so much for sharing it. Hope to see you there! Have a blessed Holy Week!
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So many books to choose from! Thanks for linking up #TwinklyTuesday
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What a great line up! I confess, I’m a big Berenstain Bears fan :).
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What a great list of book. Pinning to my book board. Thank you for linking up with Grace and Truth.
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Thank you, Maree!
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Filling your Easter basket with books what a great idea!! Thanks for sharing it at #WoW Words on Wednesday.
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Thanks for sharing this great list at Booknificent Thursday on Mommynificent.com!
Tina
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Michele, a fine mixture of Easter-related books to feed our needs. We are going to feature your post on the Blogger’s Pit Stop.
Kathleen
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Hooray! That’s such great news. I’ll see you there!
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[…] Fill Your Easter Basket with Books […]
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May you have a blessed Easter, Michele! ♥
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Thanks, Lori!
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[…] been a pleasure this month to focus on resurrection with one post of suggested Easter reading followed by another featuring a collection of poems I’ve written for celebrations of the […]
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