29 days of book love…

I stopped. Why bother, I thought, when no one is listening?  It’s frustrating I admit it but do I want to admit defeat?  No.

After that struggle I reassessed; I’m not really writing for anyone else. It’s important for just me. Do I want people to read? Absolutely.  Do I want people to comment?  Absolutely. Yes, please. Say something, tell me what you think.  I love discourse and dialogue.

But even if I’m just talking to myself it’s okay.

So I cam back to book love.  Barbara Kingsolver.  Anyone else love her?
I’ve read almost all of her books.

Here are my favorites in reading order:

1. The Bean Trees (1988): Goodreads wasn’t around but I read this one first and fell in love with the way it was written and the characters.  I kept reading the series as I found them.

2. Prodigal Summer (2000): An amazing character driven tale that takes place in Appalachia.  I loved Lusa because she was struggling with her place in the world. I could relate.

3. The Poisonwood Bible (1998):  Wow.  Ten years after The Bean Trees and this is a big leap up.  A totally different kind of story.  Quite good and I made it through all 546 pages.

4. Animal Vegetable Miracle (2007): She said everything I wanted to hear about food.  Changed the way I thought about meat.  My son was so happy. Local, healthy food and funny stories along the way.

5. The Lacuna (2009): Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Harrison Shepherd jaunt through Mexico and the U.S. during the 1930s. Beautiful and 508 pages.

6. Flight Behavior (2012): Goodreads says it like this “Contemporary American fiction at its finest…” I agree. This story blends interesting characters with an environmental message that made it easily my favorite of all her books.

Thank you Barbara for writing. I love your work.

Om Baby-Green Books Campaign

2010

This is a bright and colorfully-done book with a small, elfin-like, one-eyed creature.  “Hi, My name is Om Baby.  I am an Om Being from a small community called Omville.  I have only one eye because I see the world and all beings as one.”  Om is the Sanskrit word and symbol meaning “all that is.”  The book has a beautiful fluidity to it, with each picture accompanying simple text.

Om Baby is peaceful. 
Om Baby is kind.
Om Baby believes in the power of his  mind.

I like what Horsfield was going for but I wanted more.  Even the youngest reader can understand so much more and I felt she was just touching the surface of this one-eyed beings feeling toward the earth and the world around us. 

I loved this one:

Om Baby eats his greens.

Accompanied by a picture of a green garden, growing carrots, sunflowers, radishes or beets, corn, pumpkins with a sun blazing down.  Om Baby is shown eating his greens-like arugula! 

Check out Shamet Horsfield’s interesting website.  You can sign a petition for peace while you there. She has a good story to tell and as someone on the outside edge myself, I can understand her need to create a book that represents her philosophy. I hope she continues to create, pulling more peaceful ideas into a deeper story. 

This review is part of the Green Books Campaign. Click on Green Books to find the list of 200 books being reviewed by participating bloggers today. 
This review is part of the Green Books campaign. 

    Today 200 bloggers take a stand to support books printed in an eco-friendly manner by simultaneously publishing reviews of 200 books printed on recycled or FSC-certified paper. By turning a spotlight on books printed using eco- friendly paper, we hope to raise the awareness of book buyers and encourage everyone to take the environment into consideration when purchasing books.

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-

A Place for Delta

by Melissa Walker, PhD

(2010)
272 pages, includes glossary and further reading

     Every once in awhile I’m contacted by an editor, or publicist, to read a certain book because it matches my interests. You never really know if the book is going to be a good fit but this one was perfect.   A Place for Delta, sent to me by  Lisa Roe, from Online Publicist, is an environmentally-friendly, pay-attention-to-the-world-around-you, kind of book!   It is a fast read with great details, the first book of a series,  and I love when a series excites kids about reading! 

 Synopsis from Whale Press website:

The first book of the series, A Place for Delta, was published in June 2010, and has already been selected by International Book Awards as winner of the Best Children’s Fiction category. It is a 272-page, smythe-sewn, jacketed hardcover; a middle reader chapter book for 9-12 year-olds. A Place for Delta captivates, inspires, and empowers children. The novel incorporates current environmental concerns into the narrative of one family’s multi-generational adventures. Eleven-year-old Joseph travels to Barrow, Alaska, the most northern town in the United States, to help a group of wildlife biologists care for an orphaned polar bear. Stationed at a research center with his Aunt Kate, Joseph becomes a player in a complex web of mystery, scientific discovery and danger.

    I appreciated how this book merged a great story with such deep scientific facts.  As a non-sciencey-type person I enjoyed learning about the natural environment of both Georgia and Alaska.  The above synopsis mentions the multi-generational structure of the book so you get a feel for how important the link is between our past and our future.  Most of the story focuses on Joseph and his Aunt Kate taking care of Delta, first in the Alaska research center and later at a natural habitat on Joseph’s grandmother’s Georgian farm.  Kate records data for Dr. Yu as he strives to learn more about the polar bear population and how global warming, and the local oil companies, may or may not affect their survival.  He discovers a young polar bear on an ice floe one morning and later they find the mother bear dead.  A mystery unravels as Joseph flies to Barrow, Alaska, to help his aunt care for the baby bear.  Taking care of Delta turns out to be only part of his grand adventure.

   Because my 15-year-old son has traveled to Alaska three times for fishing excursions I kept fact checking with him.  “Would you actually see a moose close to downtown Anchorage?”  and he would answer me (an exchange of conversation occurred-YEAH), filling me in with all sorts of his own details.  Yes, it is possible to run into a moose in Anchorage and he knew of the spot Walker makes reference to in the tale.   I was happy that each time I fact checked he was able to answer in the affirmative and it was a great way for me to hear more about his previous trips.   I love a story that has the details correct-even fiction needs to make sense most of the time.

     Melissa Walker has created a timeless tale using current  issues, interesting cause and effect, problem-solving and makes it all very mysterious.   It also is written in language easy-to-understand so students won’t feel overwhelmed. 

Random Quote:

Inside the toy box, Joseph found a fuzzy wind-up mouse for Delta to chase, a blue ball the size of a canteloupe, and a bag of large foam blocks.  Then he sat down on the floor next to the cub.  For a few minutes, she was still as they looked into each other’s eyes.  Joseph wondered what could be going on in her mind.  All he could do was stare back, almost hypnotized by her gaze.  Slowly Delta moved closer to Joseph.  (97)

Kids will want their own “Delta” to feed and play with, perhaps opening their minds to the real issues facing all Arctic animals.  Highly recommended for middle grade and everyone above, science read-alouds, animal lovers and earth-friendly classrooms.  I look forward to the next book in Walker’s Delta series.  Thank you Lisa for sending me a copy. 


Shop Indie Bookstores