Blog Facelift

Happy New Year–or so it will be in a couple of hours.

For some time I have tried to think of how to describe this blog, and all I could think of has been “a hodge podge of topics that I care about”.

Tonight, while digging through some old files, the solution came to me. The blog just needed a new title.

When I was in undergraduate school, I took all of my notes on paper. (Yes, I am that old.) I had several notebooks lying around with papers organized just so–and one that was designated for current mish-mash notes that had not been filed yet. It was pink, and it was often the case that I asked someone to “please hand me the pink book”.

And so the title of this mish-mash blog came to be. Welcome to The Pink Book.

Perhaps, now that my mish-mash topics have permission to remain a mish-mash, I will feel a little more free to write more often.

About Sarah Blake LaRose

Sarah Blake LaRose teaches Biblical Hebrew and Greek at Anderson University School of Theology and Christian Ministry in Anderson, Indiana. She is one of three blind academic scholars who received the Jacob Bolotin Award from the National Federation of the Blind in 2016 in recognition of innovative work in the field of access to biblical language texts and tools for people who are blind. In addition to her work as a professor, she provides braille transcription services specializing in ancient languages. Her research interests concern the intersection of disability, poverty, and biblical studies.

About Sarah Blake LaRose

Sarah Blake LaRose teaches Biblical Hebrew and Greek at Anderson University School of Theology and Christian Ministry in Anderson, Indiana. She is one of three blind academic scholars who received the Jacob Bolotin Award from the National Federation of the Blind in 2016 in recognition of innovative work in the field of access to biblical language texts and tools for people who are blind. In addition to her work as a professor, she provides braille transcription services specializing in ancient languages. Her research interests concern the intersection of disability, poverty, and biblical studies.

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