earthgirl

by Jennifer Cowan
(2009)
232 pages

    Earth Girl, while interesting, left me unsure.  When I first picked it up the inside liner intrigued me in that the main character, Sabine is on a going green personal journey but also because there was a statement about getting plastered with plum sauce from a McDonald’s to go bag.   Hmmm.  In the U.S. we don’t get plum sauce with Mickey D’s.  Because it takes place in Toronto-perhaps they do or maybe that’s what they call Ketchup.  This odd little fact stuck in my brain and for some reason this made me check the book out.

    It’s written in very short snippets-good for teens but  felt a little like texting, to me. Sabine shares her thoughts by blogging and we read her rants and the comments, which is an interesting twist.   And unlike Hippie Chick this one gets a little preachy-even though I’m in her corner.  I think it is because she is so new to the whole eco-movement, everything is so like, “OMG, did you know people who make all that cheap stuff earn next to nothing a day…”  I’m not in this age-bracket but I think the book and the character, Sabine serve a very big purpose…to alert teens of these little known facts that many should pay attention to-facts that paint a bigger picture of the world. That fact alone makes this book a should-read.  Maybe if it turned one teen toward a more eco-friendly existence it would be worth it.

    Synopsis:  Sabine, after getting pelted by before-mentioned plum sauce, has an aha-moment of what’s important in the real world.  As she researches and discovers more about the environment, third-world markets, and green living she bores her two best friends, who are way more into purchasing cheap junk froom street vendors.  She does gain a hunky earthy boyfriend who appears to have all the right answers. Vray, the boyfriend, is an interesting character but seemed less than real.  The one character  I adored was Ruby-Sabine’s co-op coworker, who has all kinds of good karma advice.  If I had to play a character in this made-for-tv-movie, I’d want to be Ruby.

Favorite Quote:

“I’m pretty sure Vray is for me,” I sighed. “I think that’s what’s freaking me out.”
“That’s awesome.  I love that feeling.” Ruby said, doing a little twirl in the aisle.  “Better than drugs.  Love’s the elixir of life.  Wish we could bottle it and give it away to everyone in the world.”
“So then I’m not overreacting?”
“I hate that expression,”  she answered emphatically. “You’re not overreacting.  You’re feeling what you’re feeling and it’s totally fine.”   (135)

I love the twirl in the aisle as much as the good advice!  Go Ruby!

     Read EarthGirl by Jennifer Cowan if you are remotely interested in making the earth a better place-or if you have a teenager who needs a push in that direction.  The plum sauce thing still bugs me though…so if you know anything about plum sauce and McDonald’s, enlighten me.

Happy Reading, earthlings.
p.s. Library Reading Challenge
More info:

Shameless Mags interview with Jennifer Cowan-who previously wrote for the tele.
SKPL Teens review
Sabine/Earthgirl’s own blog
 


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Hippie Chick

  On a recent trip to the public library with Tina (books are my thing) we were browsing through the new section.  She oh, so casually handed me a book because the title snapped her attention to me. A book screaming out for me, she says.  Hippie Chick by Joeseph Monninger(2008) is so much more than just a funky, catchy title-it may be the Julie of the Wolves for today. 

Good Reads Synopsis:

15-year-old Lolly (short for Lollipop) Emmerson is a free-spirit, what others call; the hippie child of a hippie woman. Her favorite thing to do is sail her Boston Whaler in the Florida Keys. One night she runs into an underwater obstacle and the boat founders. After Lolly is knocked out and separated from the boat, she realizes that she’s done for and accepts her own fate. That’s when the manatees arrive.



Hippie Chick is the story of a girl who forges a bond with these amazing creatures that defies the facile explanations others try to impose. It is a story of survival and enlightenment.

My thoughts:

   Lolly was an easy character to love and admire.  She’s hippie with out being over the top or preachy.  I especially enjoyed the debate she had with herself about how to stay vegan while foraging for food near a tropical inlet.  She takes her cue from the beautiful manatees and dives under and eats the greens; like a giant underwater salad.  Yum, Yum! 

Random Quote:  The Mugwump picked up speed and finally we began hissing through the water, the chop chucking us under the starboard side of the bow, the wind pushing at my hair.  A tin cup rolled somewhere on the deck, and I puzzled for a second about what it could be.  It didn’t sound important, so I ignored it and looked over the bay.  Harry Boyd’s fishing boat, the Yoda, chugged along to the south, heading to port, and an enormous yacht, a forty-footer at least, forged ahead of me to the north.  The yacht had its running lights going-red, prot; green, starboard-and I used its bow as a navigation point for a minute or two.  (16-17)

   Monninger’s lastest book is Eternal on the Water and he’s written several others-I plan to read more of his collection. 
To purchase this book from an Independent bookstore, click on the cover below.   Other reviews include Reading Junky, and the Peace Corps talks about Hippie Chick too!  I’ve never had the opportunity to swim with the manatees or sail on a regular basis but I would eat greens from the bottom of the sea over bugs!  Hippie Chick was a good fit for me.  **fits the bill for library challenge**


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Eight-Year-Old Whirlwind Weekend

I’m exhausted!  It’s been a memorable weekend celebrating my daughter’s birthday.  I still can’t believe how much she’s grown-really!  I do take time to appreciate the small moments but no matter how much you hold them close they still grow up.  I know 8 is not grown up yet but it seems like yesterday I was holding that tiny thing above.  Happy Birthday to my peaceful sweet girl. 
Thank you to all those who entered my BlogFest Contest and became new followers.  I hope you will visit often and find all sorts of matter to engage your brain.  I will tally all entries and pick a winner-but tonight I have to go to bed.  Yesterday we had six little girls here celebrating, had a beautiful birthday dinner last night with my Mom and today did more celebrating after church.  My evening though has been taken up with lesson planning.  I used to get my plans done for the beginning of the week and see how it went for the rest of the week but now we are required to turn our plans into our principal before Monday.  This takes my lesson planning up a notch and requires more pre-planning on my part.  It’s fine but it does require extra time on my weekend.
But the birthday girl was the main focus of the weekend; not the lesson planning or the BlogFest!  I didn’t blog all weekend which means I didn’t have the chance to enter any of the great giveaways offered on other blogfest sites!!  What with overnight guests and birthday cake making! I didn’t even get to post a food-related post this weekend!
 I love my girl and am so happy to share in her celebration of life!! 
She went from being a 3 # premmie to a human being who put together her party gift bags-in the buff!  She is a free-spirit (where does she get that from, I wonder)

BlogFest 2010

     Way back, oh so many weeks ago when we were still in the heat of the summer, I signed up to participate in Cinnamon’s BlogFest 2010 Big Giveaway.  That was when September loomed far in the future and whoop there it is, smack in my lap-September 10th!

What is BlogFest? (from a Journey of Books)

BlogFest is a massive carnival of giveaways with a great collection of participating blogs. Each blog has a giveaway and the idea is to hop from blog to blog, entering all the giveaways your little heart desires. Hopefully you might even come across a few blogs you might want to bookmark and continue visiting.

My giveaway is a brand-new and unopened copy of Food, Inc,  Michael Pollan’s Food Rules; An Eater’s Manual and a copy of Mrs. Meyer’s Clean Home.  All very green and eco-friendly prizes.

To enter leave a comment on this post including your email address.
For extra entries (leave a separate comment for each entry):


+1 Follow this blog (via Google Friend Connect, RSS Feed, email subscription,etc.)
+1 Follow me on Twitter and Tweet about this giveaway (include @peacefulreader in your tweet)


3 entry maximum. (Not open internationally.)
The next stop on the hop is Inspired by Fiction.  Keep clicking and entering…

                       The deadline for entry is Midnight (Eastern Time) September 12th.

And as if that wasn’t enough great stuff…

Please don’t forget about the massive BlogFest 2010 grand giveaway! Head on over to http://ajourneyofbooks.halfzero.net and click on the Tracking Site link to head to our own exclusive tracking site. Once there you can register with a valid email address (to be used solely for the purpose of contacting the winner). This site will allow you to track your progress through BlogFest 2010! You can log on from anywhere at any time and continue where you left off. The best part is that every blog that you visit and mark off through this tracking site will give you one entry into the massive giveaway! We have a great collection of books, goodies and other swag that is looking for a new home!

Keep it real-

Shiver

(2009)
390 pages
     This is a story about Grace, her two friends, Olivia and Rachel, and a pack of wolves living on the edge of  town.  The summary from the verso page: “ In all the years she has watched the wolves in the woods behind her house, Grace has been particularly drawn to an unusual yellow-eyed wolf who, in his turn, has been watching her with increaseing intensity.”  Intensity, yes, it is all about the intensity!   Told in two person narrative, erratically flipping between Sam and Grace, which artfully presents this well-rounded love story.  Some readers don’t enjoy alternating chapters but I like the duality of it and each person can see the same event differently-it depends on who’s eyes your looking through.
     Grace is a strong female character, raising herself, as her parents keep busy with their own lives. She cooks and makes lovely dinners for her family and eventually for Sam.  I’m always happy when a character has a close connection to food and  I just knew I wanted to share this quiche scene. It illustrates how Stiefvater pulls her characters together over a simple common theme.   Grace and Sam find themselves in a tight spot, needing to talk with Isabel.  They are unsure of whether they can trust her or not and so Grace decides to invite her over to help make dinner~in this way Grace and Sam can judge Isabel’s character while they all work together!  It’s brilliant and I love that Grace’s character turns to cooking in a time of crisis. 
     Grace barely seemed to notice her [ mother] leaving.  She gestured at me.  ‘Isabel, eggs and cheese and milk are in the fridge.  Sam, we need to make plain old piecrusts.  Would you preheat the oven to four-fifty and get us some pans?
     Isabel was staring inside the fridge.  ‘There’s, like, eight thousand kinds of cheese in here.  It all looks the same to me.’
   You do the oven, let Sam get the cheese and stuff.  He knows food,’ Grace said.  She was standing on her tiptoes to get flour out of an overhead cupboard; it stretched her body gorgeously and made me want in the worst way to touch the bare skin exposed on her lower back.  But then she heaved the flour down and I’d missed my chance, so I traded places with Isabel, grabbed some sharp cheddar and eggs and milk, and threw it all on the counter. 
     Grace was already involved with cutting shortening and flour in a bowl by the time I’d finished cracking eggs and whisking in some mayonaise.  The kitchen was suddenly full of activity, as if we were legion. 
     ‘What the hell is this?’ Isabel demanded, staring at a package Grace had handed her. 
     Grace snorted with laughter.  ‘It’s a mushroom.” ….’Saute those in there for a few minutes till they’re nice and yummy.’ 
   “How long?’
     ‘Till they’re yummy.’ I repeated. (262-263)
     Can’t you just feel the pie crust and hear  the butter sizzling, ready for the mushrooms? I can hear Sam whisking the eggs together, everything clicking and snapping into place.  There is something so sexy about couples cooking together-something Stiefvater must know about in her own happy author life.  I wish I wasn’t obligated to share the quote’s page number so you could be surprised when you do come upon this quiche-making moment.  And what is a book, a good story made up of but wonderfully tailored moments shaped and fit perfectly together.  In Shiver, she has created a harmony of words mixed with likeable characters immersed in a odd yet believable story.  I anxious to read Linger, #2 in the Mercy Falls series.  I can’t buy it yet (my reading from my own bookshelves challenge), our public library doesn’t have it so I’m left waiting for more about Sam and Grace. 
    If I cook while I wait I would whip up this  delicious quiche  from Kim’s Easy French Food site.  I should make this for my husband as an anniversary dinner-maybe I can talk him into helping me!!  He’s so cute in an apron!   I also discovered this great stuffed eggplant dish-I adore eggplant.  Eggplant has so much flavor when cooked just right.
Check out other tasty reviews of Shiver-someone  may actually write less about the food obsession and more about the actual love story!   This post is part of Weekend Cooking over at Beth Fish Reads Pop over there and see what else is cooking…
Happy eating and reading!

Vanishing Cultures-Nonfiction Series

  Vanishing Cultures is the series title for seven books by Jan Reynolds and all  with beautiful covers. Each book showcases an indigenous group and highlights their close relationship to their surrounding environment.  With gorgeous photos and easy text these are fantastic books to share with any age child. 

    Frozen Lands begins: “As the sun sets on the edge of the frozen shores of Qumanituaq, a large inlet of Hudson Bay, Kenalogak asks her grandmother for one more story. They hurry to prepare tea before the chill of darkness comes, and Kenalogak’s grandmother begins her tale.” (p. 1-2)  Inuit history is shared as well as day to day life for Kenalogak’s family. They depend on the caribou, their snow dogs and a shared respect with the natural world that helps them  survive. Kenalogak and her brothers learn how to build a new igloo from their father and it only takes the family about an hour to build it. I think kids of all ages would find Kenalogak’s life fascinating in the frozen land of the Canadian Arctic.

    Down Under shares the aborigines Tiwi tribe who live on an island just off the coast of Australia. It begins: “Far down under, the bright sun sets over one of Australia’s tiny islands. Inside a ring of small fires that keep wild animals away at night, a young aboriginal girl named Ampenula whispers to her mother, asking for one more story. She curls up close as her mother begins her tale about their tribe, the Tiwi.” (p1-2) Amprenula talks about dancing your own Dreaming and how it brings her closer to the land. As the tribe travels from place to place they hunt for food in the trees as their ancestors did before them. They catch a bandicoot and a large carpet snake in the book. Kids will love the close up photos of the snake as it is pulled from an old log.

     Both books show children and adults in native clothing, which in the Tiwi tribe (naturally) means less clothing.  While noone is naked per se there are photos of nealy naked children and the backside of a woman wearing just a skirt.  My girl asked honest questions about this as would kids in a school setting-kids in a school setting might giggle a bit about this but it wouldn’t keep me from sharing the story.

    This whole set would make a great addition to any collection but would be especially perfect for a cultural study.  My friend Tina at Books Are My Thing! is posting about two other titles in this series.  Please travel over to her blog to check out what she has to say!  I thought there were only four titles in the series (our public library only had four) but now that I know there are seven I’m anxious to read the other choices.  I loved the connection to the environment each book made a point to share-it is important to realize as we advance our own culture, other cultures would prefer to stay as they have for centuries.  Jan Reynolds reminds us how important it is to respectfully allow them to live in their preferred manner.


Check out this pdf file to use with this series.
I realized while researching this author that she wrote another nonfiction title, Cycle of Rice, Cycle of Life-reviewed here by me.  I found an interview with Reynolds at Lee and Low Books about sustainability.

Book Blogger Hop

It’s Friday and time for the Book Blogger Hop hosted by Jennifer at Crazy-for-Books. 
The question for today is
Do you judge a book by its cover?

Emphatically Yes!  A beautiful cover draws the reader in and will continually keep a hold on you.
For instance while I read Shiver I kept looking back at the cover, even though it’s just some vines and a wolf,  it was
Sam’s and Grace’s world and I felt drawn into it. 

I will read books with less-than-attractive covers because it could still be a fantastic story within-it just makes me disappointed in the art and perhaps expect more from the story. Once I learned that authors have pretty much no say over their cover art, which is was a shocking discovey and complete failure in the balance of the world, I think I judge less.
No matter what though the cover has the opportunity to pull me in and great attention to detail should be paid in representing that story, the one hand-crafted by the author. 

Hop on over to Crazy-for-Books, check out the rules and the hundreds of blogs participating, and hop, hop, hop!

Hippie Chick/Teaser Tuesday

    

“It did not stand to reason that a shark would find you in the first quarter hour you were in the water.  Statistically it would have been a fluke, a crazy ironic coincidence, like lightning burning a Z in Zorro’s shoulder blade, or a boat impaling itself on a rusty engine part.”  (30)
                                                   ~hippie chick by Joseph Monninger

Teaser Tuesday is a bookish weekly meme hosted by MizB. at Should Be Reading.  Anyone can play along.  Just grab your current read and do the following: 

  1. Open to a random page
  2. Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  3. BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (don’t share too much;  You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  4. Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Happy Tuesday! 

A Busy Week in Review

     I’ve been trying to spruce up my blog the last few weeks by changing colors and backgrounds but nothing seemed to fit.  While jogging from one blog to another one day I discovered The Eagle’s Aerial Perspective blog and my eye caught a little blurb about button-making and viola, after lots of magic wand waving, she created a beautiful banner for me!  Doesn’t it look lovely!  Beyond that I’m pretty happy with my white background and varied color scheme as I’m not a fancy girl.  Tell me what you think!

    I finished Shiver last night and loved it-it made me ache for young love and for all those moments I see my husband doing his quirky things that make me so giddy.  For instance recently he’s been needing cheater glasses to read-he hates this-but I ADORE it as he reads next to me at night.  Something about those glasses makes me happy and Shiver brought out tons of good raw emotion.  More on that later when I review it and now I need to find me a copy of Linger-second in the Mercy Falls series.  I still need to write about One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia, which was really good, and several new picture books burning a hole in my library bag. 

    I am reading hippie chick by Joseph Monninger while I wait for teenage son to finish Mockingjay-but I agree with JuJu of Tales of Whimsy who left me a comment acknowledging that starting it means ending it so I’m not racing to read it but am aware of its presence in the bedroom next door, right on the nightstand, sitting closed.  It will call to me soon enough.

    I did make the Cheeca Sauce I posted about yesterday but otherwise did not cook much this weekend.  We had a wedding reception to attend and I had a ton of homework to do after my first week of school.  I’ve finished my lesson plans for the week and some charts for positive behavior-I’m ready to  roll for my second full week of teaching.

     What about you…what made your week exciting?   Mine is having that new banner to enjoy!  Thank you to The Golden Eagle at Eagle’s Aerial Perspective.  Happy Monday everyone…