Weekend Update; Library Loot

I had a meeting the other day at the library and because it started 30 minutes after my yoga class and they are right around the corner from each other-it left me about 20 minutes to browse at the library.  Browse quietly at the library by myself, she said with glee. 

I’ve become addicted to the NEW section of nonfiction, but specifically usually  just for cookbooks.  This time though I sort of did a swoop through all the nonfiction section.  I’m not a nonfiction reader, prefering fiction hands-down almost always but for some reason I found a ton of interesting titles this week.

1. The Locavore Way; Discover and Enjoy the Pleasures of Locally Grown Food by Amy Cotler (2009). This one has lots of tidbits and helpful advice.  As I paged through it there was plenty in there I didn’t already know so I had to bring it home.

2. Earth to Table; Seasonal Recipes from an Organic Farm by Jeff Crump and Bettina Schormann (2009).  I love good farm stories and this one has beautiful photos as well. 

3. The Power of Small; Why Little Things Make All the Difference by Linda Kaplan Thaler and Robin Koval (2009).  I liked the pages I read through and thought it might enlighten me a bit.

4. River House; A Memoir by Sarahlee Lawrence (2010).  A dad and his daughter build a cabin together in Oregon.  Proof that I miss my own Dad. 

5. Scout, Atticus and Boo; A Celebration of Fifty Years of To Kill a Mockingbird  by Mary McDonagh Murphy (2010).  This is a collection of interviews from authors and icons…Wally Lamb, Rosanne Cash, Rick Bragg, Tom Brokaw, Scott Turow, Adriana Trigiani and Andrew Young, just to name a few.  I read part of one chapter while standing and was intrigued.  Mockingbird is one of  my all-time favorite reads.

6. Johnny Cash; The Biography by Michael Streissguth (2006).  This wasn’t on the new shelf but on a music display.  We love Cash in our house and I thought Teenage Boy might enjoy this.

7. Legendary Homes of Lake Minnetonka by Bette Jones Hammell w/ photography by Karen Melvin (2010).  When I was a kid we boated on this lake (thanks, Dad) and now my brother lives near the lake.  I recognize some of the landmarks and enjoy reading about the architechture of these beautiful homes.  My mom was here on Saturday and it was nice to look through some of it with her.

Have you read any of these?  Which section of the library do you usually frequent?

While it was strange to not have one fiction book in my stack,  I am just about to finish Moon Over Manifest,  I have to finish The Glass Castle for next Monday’s book club and I have two books to read for my 5th grade book clubs so I guess I’m fiction-full as well.

Happy Reading.
Hope you’ve had a peace-filled weekend.

Weekend Update; fun library picks and the Oscars!!

Groovy Girl and I stopped at one of the two public libraries we are fortunate enough to have in our adjoining small towns.  She plunked herself down with a stack of interesting picture books while I ventured out to look around.  I am always on the search for chapter books to capture her attention.  She is a struggling reader and as of yet hasn’t really finished a chapter book on her own.  One reading teacher told me I’m enabling her by always reading to her but I did this with our other children-the oldest one was already an accomplished reader by the time we met but she still loved listening to stories.  Teenage Boy didn’t take off on reading until his 3rd and 4th grade years so I’m not worried but none-the-less ever the good librarian I seek a perfect reading fit that will send her to a quiet corner to read and marvel. 

We picked Orphan Train Children; Lucy’s Wish by Joan Lowery Nixon, which I thought would appeal to her American Girl love of history and Amber Brown is Not a Crayon by Paula Danzinger, which is a 3rd grade character like herself and filled with fun. 

I brought home only two treasures from the new section: In the Garden with Dr. Carver by Susan Grigsby; a picture book,  and She Looks Just Like You; A Memoir of  (Nonbiological Lesbian) Motherhood.  Groovy Girl actually picked this last one out as we perused the new adult nonfiction.  I’m not a fan of nonfiction and maybe I was looking for cookbooks but G.G. pulled this one out and liked the mother/daughter on the front cover.  She was thrilled that I decided to check it out! 

Tonight we go off to an Oscar party at a friend’s house.  We usually sit home and watch them with our score pads.  My husband is a bit obsessed with watching all the nominees.  Luckily we can get half of them from Netflix.   I hope that Winter’s Bone, The King’s Speech, The Kid’s Are All Right, and Black Swan do well. I liked Inception, 127 Hours and The Social Network also-so many good ones this year.  

I can’t decide if The Illustionist, How to Train Your Dragon or Toy Story 3 should win for best animated movie-I loved all three!   I don’t understand why Julianne Moore wasn’t nominated at all-I thought she should have been in best supporting actress category.  In will all be over within the next couple of hours and I know it is not the Most Important Thing right now but it serves a purpose, just like going to the movies or reading a book for that matter-to escape, for just a little bit.  

Happy Sunday.
and I’m off to the Oscars…

Weekend Cooking with Slow Food

Come To The Table; The Slow Food Way of Living edited by Katrina Heron with a foreward by Alice Waters presented by Slow Food Nation easily caught my eye as I browsed the new nonfiction at the public library.  This book, filled with 12 California farm stories and a section of delicious sounding recipes,  is packed full  of information-all that and sage bits of wisdom from Alice to open the book.  Heaven. 

I’ve enjoyed paging through this book, looking at the earthy photographs of farming people, animals, and the  fruits/vegetables of their labor.  In each section I’ve found pearls of wisdom that I’m taking to heart.  Sometimes it seems when our heart is into something we feel we know all about it.  Reading this book made me realize I have so much more to learn about “organic” and sustainable-living.  In “How-to: Store it/Saving from Scratch”  I read this bit  ” It seems obvious, but people forget: You can save a lot of money if you buy food you can store and use over time.  For example, beans.  Dried beans are far cheaper than the canned ones.”(11)

Reading about the 12 farms was enriching and made me ready to sow some seeds of my own.  I can’t have chickens where I live but we do garden and these stories inspired me to try some new plants, to reach farther in my gardening quest.  I read about Jennifer Greene, a grain specialist, who decided to see how many people one woman could feed…she says about 100.  She grows grains the old-fashioned way in northern California in an idyllic setting.  Now I like King Arthur Flour myself but I can only imagine what it would be like to buy flour from a woman farmer just down the road.  That would truly be cool.  Each farm family has an story worth telling and many have taken over family farms and turned them back to what they were years, and years ago.  Funny that a big handful of people knew that what was once  tradition  would now be new.

At the tail end of the book live many slow food recipes I plan to try over time but not this weekend as Groovy Girl are on our own and we had take- out Chinese last night that did not muster up to what we can make ourselves.  I was just trying not to have to cook after a very long day.  Hmmmph. 

Here is a short list of recipes titles that I’m interested in making:

Paul’s Best Biscuit Recipe (Sweet Home Ranch)
Spearmint-Stuffed Artichokes (Full Belly Farm)
Jennifer’s Chickpea Puree (Windborne Farm)
Battered Fried Zucchini (J & P Organics)
Pastaless Vegetable Lasagna (Tierra Miguel Farm)
Bean and Barley Stew (Redwood Roots Farm)
Eggplant Curry Soup (Vang Family Farm)
Okay, that recipe looks just so easy to type I’m going to share just this one:

Eggplant Curry Stew
2 or 3 Chinese eggplants, thinly sliced
1 T yellow curry paste
1 can coconut milk
3/4 cup sliced bamboo shoots
3/4 pound chicken breast and thigh, cubed in 1/2 pieces
3 or 4 lemon tree leaves or 1 stalk lemongrass can be substituted
Salt to taste
Place all ingredients in a medium saucepan and add cold water to cover. Bring the mixture to a low boil, then simmer until chicken is cooked to your preference. Add salt to taste. This thick stew can be served over rice.
Makes 4 servings(130)
[unless i’ ve recently cooked one of the few organic/local chickens from my freezer i would substitute tofu for chicken]

I’ve never read a recipe for Suckling Pig (Clark Summit Farm) but there is one listed and for dessert, let’s all have California Cloverleaf Farms Organic Cheesecake (Burroughs Family Farm).

Thank you to the library for such a feast of cookbookery!!
This post is linked to Beth Fish Reads Weekend Cooking meme.  Click to her to find a whole slew of other foodie folks blogging about what they’re cooking up.

Look for it at in IndieBound bookstore near you by clicking on the title/link:

Come To The Table; The Slow Food Way of Living

This book counts toward my Foodie’s Reading Challenge.

The Red Umbrella

by  Christina Diaz Gonzalez
2010
272 pages

Every once in a great while my friend Tina and I are able to browse our local library together.  When we do I always leave with a double bag full of books.  She simply walks down the shelves and says “You need to read this one and this one and oh, have you NOT read this one…”  She is an amazing reader, far more prolific than me, and has a knack for picking great books.  On our last library visit she handed me The Red Umbrella and it was the first one I pulled out of the library bag.

Synopsis from the book:

     Cuba 1961: two years after the Communist revolution, Lucía Álvarez still leads a carefree life, dreaming of parties and her first crush. But when the soldiers come to her sleepy Cuban town, everything begins to change. Freedoms are stripped away. Neighbors disappear. Her friends feel like strangers. And her family is being watched.
     As the revolution’s impact becomes more oppressive, Lucía’s parents make the heart-wrenching decision to send her and her little brother to the United States—on their own.
     Suddenly plunked down in Nebraska with well-meaning strangers, Lucía struggles to adapt to a new country, a new language, a new way of life. But what of her old life? Will she ever see her home or her parents again? And if she does, will she still be the same girl?

My thoughts:

I was moved by both parts of this story.  I didn’t know very much about Cuban life before Castro or after and Gonzalez’s  work gave me a look into this history.   I found it interesting how the revolutionaries worked so heavily on Cuban children, especially young adults, to carry out their “for the good of the common people” message.  Learning about Operation Pedro Pan was new and one I was happy to read about.  Thankfully, the U.S. took part in this exodus of children from Cuba to the States.   As Lucia and her brother are sent away  her friend, Ivette, stays in Cuba and attends Castro’s camps to learn how to be a good revolutionary leader.  I liked the balance between Lucia’s Nebraska story and Ivette’s Cuba experience told through her letters.

Once in Nebraska, Lucia and Frankie, while missing their parents, also must cope with how difficult it is to come to this country and be an outsider.  The Baxters are an older couple, living on a farm, in Grand Island, Nebraska-the polar opposite of Cuba, especially in winter.  Luckily, even though it is rough, and they miss their parents, life becomes comfortable with the Baxters.  Lucia and Frankie find friends at school and do well in their new environment. 

Perfect Quote:

I was going to be wearing hand-me-downs.  Used clothing.  I’d never had to do that before.  We always bought the very latest fashions.  Ivette would be mortified to see me wearing these clothes.
I missed her.  I also missed Mama and Papa, my room, my school, everything I’d left behind.  Tears started to form, but I took a deep breath to try to keep them from falling.  I didn’t want to cry anymore.  (156)

Authors often speak of a story emerging, just asking to be written and this is probably  true of Christina Diaz Gonzalez’s story based on recollections from her own family.   I feel richer having read Lucia’s tale and look forward to others by Gonazalez.

Christina Diaz Gonzalez’s blog.
To find it at a local IndieBound store near you, click on the title: The Red Umbrella

Other reviews on The Red Umbrella:

Reading Rants!
Kiss the Book
Semicolon
JuJu at Tales of Whimsy

Dear Janice….Thank you!

I am blesssed in many ways but one thing that sets me apart is my friend, Janice, who comes almost every day to my school library and helps me in the library. She volunteers at our school because her granddaughter is a student.  Long ago all school libraries had an aide, someone who came in to check-out, reshelve, and do extra things around the library.  We live in an age where school districts don’t have the money to have library aides anymore.  I’m so glad to have Janice working with me almost everyday. So many of the massive creative projects I take on wouldn’t be completed without her help.  She cut out all the snowmen shapes so first grade students could make larger-than-life snowpeople. 
 She makes my library dreams a reality!
                                                                                                                                                                                 
  Last week I mentioned I it would be cool to change our holiday evergreen tree, decorated with snowflakes, into a Valentine tree.  Within a few short hours, after reshelving all the books, she transformed that mini-tree into a treat that looks sweet.  She will never let me take her photo so instead I share her creation.  She made all the decorations using a book…of course!  The Valentine Express by the amazing Nancy Elizabeth Wallace.  Check it out!
Thank You Janice for all you do!

2010 Challenge Up-Date and 2011 Challenges-Yes, Let's do it again…

In 2010 I participate in three challenges and finished…drum roll please-none of them.  I could be morose about this or hide it under the proberbial rug but it was my first time participating and I just didn’t accomplish it.  I do have a busy life, two busy children and a husband in overdrive 90% of the time.  Like I tell my children: “oh well, these things happen.” The thing is I am more than willing to try again.  I plan to finish my 2010 challenges while working on the new ones…full circle.  I signed up for this last year at J. Kaye’s blog which is now Home Girl’s book blog.  My stats are here-2010 Reads.  I read 86 books-some fantastic and I’m happy about all of them.  The key is I want, really want to get to 100+ and I’ll keep trying until I do.  I’m awed by people like Janssen (200 books) and Tina (250+)

This year I’ll be logging here with my reading numbers and reviews. 
Find the details here at My Overstuffed Bookshelf

I did this one last year hosted by Diane and also failed miserably but I want to keep going to finish the stack not read and I’ve added some new titles.  What this challenge did for me was to curb my desire to buy books.  I sought other sources-like I’m now a full-fledged member of Paperback Book Swap.  I never have an excess of money so I’ve always been slow to purchase brand-new hardcovers but found it incredibly easy to buy paperbacks or second-hand-I’ve slowed this down cuz my stacks were too tall.  So I’ve gotta keep going with this challenge, making up for unfinished reads. Here are my stats(19 out of 50, so sad, can only go up from here) for this challenge-Reading from my own shelves list.   See my new list tomorrow. 

Home Girl’s Book Blog, formerly J. Kaye’s blog hosted this last year and again I made not a great showing. I’m going to finish the titles on this list but am not signing up for it again. Here are my stats (33/50)-Support your local library challenge.

How did your challenges go this year?  Let me know with a comment.  Happy Reading!

New Books!

Two days ago 10 boxes arrived from Titlewave-my big shipment for the year and it is a little like Christmas here.  I don’t plan to put them out until we come back from holiday but my volunteer, Janice and I have had a blast going through them, reading and stamping and just holding them!! 

Just a short run down of the many titles I now have:

Picture Books

Children Make Terrible Pets by Peter Brown
Disappearing Desmond by Anna Alter ( Abigail Spells is a favorite of mine!)
Thunder Boomer by Shutta Crum (Amazing illustrations by Carol Thompson)
The Enemy; a book about peace by Davide Cali
Guinea Pigs Add Up by Margaret Cuyler
The Travel Game by John Grandits

Mind Your Manners, Alice Roosevelt by Leslie Kimmelman
1 Zany Zoo by Lori Degman (Cheerios New Author contest winner)
Tacky Christmas by Helen  Lester
Shadow by Suzy Lee

Thank You Bear by Greg Foley (winner of the handsome author award*wink*)

Chapter Books

The Magic Thief series by Sarah Prineas
The Night Fairy by Laura Amy Schlitz

The entire Fablehaven series by Brandon Mull (now I can finally finish reading the last two!)
Road to Tater Hill by Edith M. Hemingway
Palace Beautiful by Sarah DeFord Williams
The Problem with the Puddles by Kate Feiffer
The Secret of Zoom by Lynne Jonell
Neil Armstrong is my Uncle and other lies Muscle Man McGinty Told Me by Nan Marino

Nonfiction

The Red Hen by Emberley and Emberley
Do Bees Make Butter by Michael Dahl
Mirror, Mirror by Marilyn Singer
and three new cookbooks for all my little cooking patrons including this one.

I did get a lot of nonfiction but I get less excited about it but these are my top choices-  I know that’s bad as a librarian but I am a fiction fan.

My top two questions now

1. How am I going to get them all home to read and share with Groovy Girl over break?
2. How can I get a holiday extention so I can finish reading all that I want to read over my break?

I am glad we are staying here for the holidays so I can do lots of reading!!

Library Finds

Been to the library.
Have a whole stack to share.

1.  Creamed Tuna Fish & Peas on Toast (2009) by Philip Christian Stead

This one is cute with a great refrain-kids will love to help you repeat it.  Wild Man Jack does not like creamed tuna fish & peas on toast so all week long his sweet children ask him “What will you do if Mama Jane cooks creamed tuna fish and peas on toast?”  and each time he responds with a new reply.  What makes this book really dynamic is the cool layered illustration created by Stead.  Click on the author for his funky website.

2.  Food For Thought; The stories behind the things we eat (2009) by Ken Robbins.
 This is a good resource book with detailed information about apples, oranges, corn, bananas, tomatoes, potatoes pomegranates, grapes and mushrooms.  Each food covers at least 3-4 pages with everything from how to eat it, how it grows and its history.  The information is interesting but seems scattered to me.  About the banana he moves from where bananas grow (Southeast Asia, Africa, India, Central America) to what a Banana republic is (large plantation owner from developed country in charge of poorest pickers), to a discussion about bananas vs. plantains to the healthy benefits of bananas and then jumps to Carmen Miranda becoming Chiquita Banana advertising to slapstick comedy (slipping on a banana peel).   While it was jumpy to  me I think kids will enjoy the variety of topics and how fast moving it reads. 

3.  Our Corner Grocery Store (2009) by Joanne Schartz; illustrated by Laura Beingessner.

This sweet book tells the story of Anna Maria, who helps her grandparents at their store.  Nonno Domenico and Nonna Rosa open the store promptly at eight and Anna Maria helps Nonno arrange the fruit and vegetables in the front wooden racks.  It talks about pricing the produce, the layout of the store and the variety of items they stock.  The lunchtime crowd shows the deli side, with everyone picking their favorite meats and cheeses.  Both peaceful girl and I noticed how important to the grocery store is to the neighborhood and how they all help each other.  This brought back memories of grocery stores of the past but also of city markets I shopped at in Chicago. I can see this book as a great tool for teachers in my school.  Click here for an interview with author and illustrator froom Open Book Toronto.

Reading and writing about these three books has made me hungry.  Time for lunch. 
I hope you check out any of these books at your own library and explore with a child or your own child-like eyes!

Devil on My Heels

Joyce McDonald
(2004)
262 pages
Young Adult

     I have a blogging friend who has read so many, many books that when we go to the library she is really good about going down the stacks and pulling out random books (books you might not otherwise take one look at) and asking (telling) you to read them.  I generally listen until my stack gets too high and she is always right.  The last time we were at the library she told me I just had to read McDonald’s Devil on My Heels and I loved it!!

Fifteen-year-old Dove narrates this historical fiction/coming-of-age tale and her story begins like this:

Lately I have taken to reading poems to dead boys in the Benevolence Baptist Cemetary.  They don’t walk away before I have finished the first sentence, like most of the live boys I know.  When I read to them, their eyes don’t wander to something, or someone, more interesting.  I can pretend these boys are listening.  I can pretend they hear me. (1)

Dove is studying poetry with her English teacher, Ms. Delpheena Poyer and she continues:

On Friday afternoons like this one, right after seventh period.  I head straight for the cemetary.  I like to sit beneath the Austrian pines in the cool shade, reading lines from Tennyson or Wordsworth, listening to the trees making up their own poems.  Soft words in the language of wind and pine needles.   (1) 

     See that’s all on just page one…Dove is a great character, innocent to the ways of the world but savvy enough to know that “live boys” don’t appreciate great poetry.  Her mother passed when she was a four-year-old and she lives with her father on an orange grove in Benevolence, Florida.  Her days are spent hanging out with her friends, going to school and trying to feel older than she is.  It hasn’t been that many years past that she was tearing around the orange grove with Gator, a young African-American grove worker and Chase Tully, a grove owner’s son.   Things are beginning to change for Dove…
    Both Gator and Chase are still important to her and are critical in helping Dove see how the groves provide a working environment one rocky step up from slavery.   It’s a slow realization that things are not as easy going as her life has been in the past as she gets used to the idea that the local KKK group is rearing it’s ugly head again as the workers are blamed for random fires started in several groves.  Delia Washburn, Dove’s housekeeper since the death of her mother, also provides answers to old mysteries involving her dead husband. Inbetween trying to figure out the meaning of all the local fires, Dove tries to put out the fire burning inside her every time Chase looks as her now.  Yep, things have really changed for Dove!   McDonald provides several great twists as Gator, Chase and Dove avoid the KKK and run from those they love in order to save their friendship!  I recommend this book for middle and young adult as well as all adults interested in great writing.  5/5 stars

Other reviews here:

Read this
Maxson Middle School
Joyce McDonald’s website

***counts for 2010 Support Your Library Reading Challenge***

Tomorrow I’ll try to answer all burning questions about my acupuncture appointment!!

    

Trip to the library

I just got back from our local little library and I literaly filled my bags-one library bag and a second one from the used book store attached to our library.  Oh, my!! 
Here’s what I got from the children’s section:
Fantastic Nonfiction

If Stones Could Speak; Unlocking the Secrets of Stonehenge by Marc Aronson
What Can You Do with an Old Red Shoe? (A Green Activity Book About Reuse) by Anna Alter

Picture Books

The Travel Game by John Grandits; illustrated by R.W. Alley
A Pair of Red Clogs by Masako Matsuno; illustrated by Kazue Mizumura

The Knitting of Elizabeth Amelia by Patricia Lee Gauch; illustrated by Barbara Lavallee
Moon Rabbit by Natalie Russell

To The Beach by Thomas Docherty

What a haul of amazingly great books!  My seven-year-old second grader has become such a girl of discovery so I picked a lot of nonfiction.  I also liked to find good nonfiction for my school library and this is a fantastic way to research them before I buy them from Titlewave.  Nonfiction is expensive and it is sometimes difficult to tell how hard the text is without previewing it. 

We will be happily reading tonight!
Congratulations to Kay of My Random Acts of Reading won
my ARC of She’s So Dead to Us by Kieren Scott!!
I’ve begun Fablehaven by Brandon Mull and I love it!!