In fact, this principle has its own Web site.
Archive for December, 2008
Books are great gifts
Friday, December 12th, 2008Christmas!
Friday, December 12th, 2008










Today’s “One for the Books” column is filled with books for many ages and tastes, all with a Christmas theme.
An Irish Country Christmas (Irish Country Books)
The Paper Bag Christmas
The Spy Who Came For Christmas
The Christmas Pearl
Kissing Christmas Goodbye (Agatha Raisin Mysteries, No. 18)
The Christmas Cookie Killer: A Fresh-Baked Mystery
The Chocolate Snowman Murders (Chocoholic Mysteries, No.
White Christmas Pie
Let It Snow: Three Holiday Stories
Christmas Cookies: Bite-Size Holiday Lessons
It’s Christmas! (I Can Read Book 3)
News about Chris Finan
Thursday, December 11th, 2008From Shelf Awareness:
“Congratulations to Chris Finan,
president of the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression and outgoing chair of the National Coalition Against Censorship, who has been elected 2009 chair of the Media Coalition, which is dedicated to ‘defending the First Amendment rights of publishers, booksellers and librarians, recording, motion picture and video games producers, and recording, video and video game retailers in the United States.’ Earlier in his career, Finan worked at the Media Coalition as a staff member. He’s also the author of From the Palmer Raids to the Patriot Act: A History of the Fight for Free Speech in America and Alfred E. Smith: The Happy Warrior.”
Chris is the son
of the late Joe Finan,
the popular WNIR radio personality
who lived in Kent.
Spiritual books for Christmas
Thursday, December 11th, 2008The National Catholic Reporter looks at books for Christmas on religion and spirituality.
Speakaboos
Thursday, December 11th, 2008
Here’s something for people with kids to check out: www.Speakaboos.com — “a publisher of exceptional digital content for children.” Here’s the PR:
The Web site has “released its holiday classics library, featuring storybook videos of well-known holiday stories read by celebrities, as well as holiday songs and e-cards. All storybook titles are available for immediate viewing on Speakaboos.com for free, and may be downloaded for offline viewing. Additionally, the complete Speakaboos digital library is now available via iTunes.com and Rhapsody.com, making it easier than ever for parents to download educational and entertaining content for their children to their computer, mobile device or DVD.
“Currently in beta, Speakaboos already offers over 35 titles such as Arthur, Goldilocks, The Ugly Duckling, Old McDonald and Aesop’s Fables with audio provided by talented actors and musicians such as Kevin Bacon, Nick Cannon, Kelly Ripa, Marcia Gay Harden, Harry Shearer and Chazz Palminteri. At least 15 percent of Speakaboos’ revenue is contributed directly to the National Education Association (NEA) to support children’s literacy and The Creative Coalition (TCC).
“The titles released just in time for the holidays include stories such as A Christmas Carol read by James Eckhouse, The Fir Tree read by Phil Brock; holiday songs such as “12 Days of Christmas,” “Deck The Halls,” “Hanukkah, Oh Hanukkah,” “In The Bleak Midwinter,” “Jingle Bells,” “Rock of Ages,” “The Dreidel Song,” “We Wish You A Merry Christmas;” and e-cards for Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa.
“Speakaboos provides a safe, fun and educational online destination for children and parents alike. For children, each story is accompanied by educational activities, games and contests that they can play alongside their parents. Parents and teachers enjoy story guides, lesson plans based on national education standards, community content and resources that reinforce the educational lessons at home and in the classroom.
“The entire Speakaboos library is available for viewing online for free on Speakaboos.com and available for download on the website at $0.99. Select titles that are combined into albums are available for the price of $8.99 per album. All Speakaboos audio tracks are also now available on iTunes.com and Rhapsody.com.”
Atlantic’s top books for the year
Wednesday, December 10th, 2008Oscar Wilde
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008“Either that wallpaper goes or I do.”
— last words of Oscar Wilde
NYT Top 10
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008
The New York Times
has picked its 10 Best Books of 2008.
I haven’t yet decided
what books will make my top 10.
Have you?
A ‘thicket of words’
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008
What's that -- in the dark, over there in the corner? Let's shine a light on that and take a look at it.
In the New York Times,Timothy Egan questions the need for Joe the Plumber and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to be writing books, in a brilliant article titled “Typing Without a Clue.” Here’s part of it:
The unlicensed pipe fitter known as Joe the Plumber is out with a book this month, just as the last seconds on his 15 minutes are slipping away. I have a question for Joe: Do you want me to fix your leaky toilet?
I didn’t think so. And I don’t want you writing books. Not when too many good novelists remain unpublished. Not when too many extraordinary histories remain unread. Not when too many riveting memoirs are kicked back at authors after 10 years of toil. Not when voices in Iran, North Korea or China struggle to get past a censor’s gate.
Joe, a k a Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, was no good as a citizen, having failed to pay his full share of taxes, no good as a plumber, not being fully credentialed, and not even any good as a faux American icon. Who could forget poor John McCain at his most befuddled, calling out for his working-class surrogate on a day when Joe stiffed him.
With a résumé full of failure, he now thinks he can join the profession of Mark Twain, George Orwell and Joan Didion.
Next up may be Sarah Palin, who is said to be worth nearly $7 million if she can place her thoughts between covers. Publishers: with all the grim news of layoffs and staff cuts at the venerable houses of American letters, can we set some ground rules for these hard times? Anyone who abuses the English language on such a regular basis should not be paid to put words in print.
Here’s Palin’s response, after Matt Lauer asked her when she knew the election was lost: “I had great faith that, you know, perhaps when that voter entered that voting booth and closed that curtain that what would kick in for them was, perhaps, a bold step that would have to be taken in casting a vote for us, but having to put a lot of faith in that commitment we tried to articulate that we were the true change agent that would progress this nation.”
I have no idea what she said in that thicket of words.
Most of the writers I know work every day, in obscurity and close to poverty, trying to say one thing well and true. Day in, day out, they labor to find their voice, to learn their trade, to understand nuance and pace. And then, facing a sea of rejections, they hear about something like Barbara Bush’s dog getting a book deal.
Writing is hard, even for the best wordsmiths. Ernest Hemingway said the most frightening thing he ever encountered was “a blank sheet of paper.” And Winston Churchill called the act of writing a book “a horrible, exhaustive struggle, like a long bout of painful illness.”
. . . If Joe really wants to write, he should keep his day job and spend his evenings reading Rick Reilly’s sports columns, Peggy Noonan’s speeches, or Jess Walter’s fiction. He should open Dostoevsky or Norman Maclean — for osmosis, if nothing else. He should study Frank McCourt on teaching or Annie Dillard on writing. The idea that someone who stumbled into a sound bite can be published, and charge $24.95 for said words, makes so many real writers think the world is unfair.
. . . For the others — you friends of celebrities penning cookbooks, you train wrecks just out of rehab, you politicians with an agent but no talent — stop soaking up precious advance money. I know: publishers say they print garbage so that real literature, which seldom makes any money, can find its way into print. True, to a point. But some of them print garbage so they can buy more garbage.
There was a time when I wanted to be like Sting, the singer, belting out, “Roxanne …” I guess that’s why we have karaoke, for fantasy night. If only there was such a thing for failed plumbers, politicians or celebrities who think they can write.
Odetta
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008Odetta died this week.
You may not know that name, but for a folk-music fan like me, this is heart-breaking news. Odetta’s remarkable voice hit a deep, resounding note for me, and that sound has been an important part of my life since the 1960s.
There are many tributes to her on the Web, including a really nice one from Rashod D. Ollison at the Baltimore Sun.
Books: ‘Practical, easy to handle, economical’
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008In The Guardian, Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio, winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Literature, has nice things to say about books:
The 2008 Nobel laureate JMG le Clézio looked to the wider world in his Nobel lecture last night, warning of the dangers of information poverty and calling for publishers to increase their efforts to put books in the hands of people around the world.
Speaking at the Swedish Academy, the 68-year-old French writer defended globalisation and hailed the internet’s ability to “forestall conflicts,” suggesting the web could even, perhaps, have put a stop to Hitler, through “ridicule.”
But the novelist, who has travelled widely in Thailand, Mexico, Panama, Africa and South America and now lives mainly in New Mexico, poured scorn on the idea that the internet could transform the lives of people around the world on its own.
“To provide nearly everyone on the planet with a liquid crystal display is utopian,” he said. “Are we not, therefore, in the process of creating a new elite, of drawing a new line to divide the world between those who have access to communication and knowledge, and those who are left out?”
For Le Clézio, the book, despite its old-fashioned appearance, remains the best tool for disseminating information to the furthest corners of the planet.
“It is practical, easy to handle, economical,” he said. “It does not require any particular technological prowess, and keeps well in any climate.”
Publishers must support literary translation and act creatively so that books are no longer an inaccessible luxury for many, he said.
“Joint publication with developing countries, the establishment of funds for lending libraries and mobile libraries, and, overall, greater attention to requests from and works in so-called minority languages — which are often clearly in the majority — would enable literature to continue to be this wonderful tool for self-knowledge, for the discovery of others, and for listening to the concert of humankind, in all the rich variety of its themes and modulations.”
He dedicated his prize to a Central American storyteller named Elvira, whom he heard in the forest 30 years ago, and who taught him that literature can exist “even when it [has been] worn away by convention and compromise, even if writers [are] incapable of changing the world.” Le Clézio is due to receive his medal at a ceremony in Stockholm on Wednesday.
My thanks to Shelf Awareness for highlighting this quote today.
William C. Morris Award
Monday, December 8th, 2008
CHICAGO —The Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), a division of the American Library Association (ALA), today announced the five finalists for the inaugural William C. Morris Award, which honors a book written by a first-time author for young adults.
These are the finalists:
- A Curse Dark as Gold by Elizabeth C. Bunce, published by Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic;
- Graceling by Kristin Cashore, published by Harcourt/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt;
- Absolute Brightness by James Lecesne, published by HarperTeen/Laura Geringer Books;
- Madapple by Christina Meldrum, published by Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books; and
- Me, the Missing, and the Dead by Jenny Valentine, published by HarperTeen
No loss for words
Friday, December 5th, 2008
Today’s Record-Courier carries this photo by Lisa Scalfaro. It’s of Jacob Neely, a third-grader at Southeast Intermediate School, who’s looking at the new dictionary he received from the Ravenna Rotary Club, which gave each third-grader a free dictionary this week.
What a great program!
Or maybe I’m just jealous.
Where’s my new dictionary?!
The country’s agricultural dilemma
Thursday, December 4th, 2008On last week’s “Bill Moyers Journal,” Bill interviewed food expert Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma and In Defense of Food. Bill referred to Pollan’s open letter to the president-elect, or the “Farmer In Chief,” that appeared in the New York Times recently. Pollan was both fascinating and charming. (Of course, I’m a farmer’s daughter — things agricultural are inherently interesting to me. ) All these are worth checking out.
The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto
Baby’s first book!
Thursday, December 4th, 2008
Today’s Record-Courier has a story about Target Corporation’s recent grant to the Robinson Memorial Hospital Foundation in support of the Robinson Reads program.
The grant promotes child literacy, and, because of it, all newborns will receive their first book. How exciting! Thank you, Target.
‘Beetle the Bard’
Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Most excellent news! J.K. Rowling’s latest book, The Tales of Beetle the Bard, goes on sale today. Proceeds will go to a children’s charity. The five tales were mentioned in the Harry Potter books.
It comes in two editions:
The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Standard Edition
The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Collector’s Edition (Offered Exclusively by Amazon)
Sky blue pink
Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008OK. So I was driving in to work this morning and the sunrise was SOOOO beautiful that I actually applauded. “Well done!” I said to the sky. There it was — my favorite color combination — sky blue and pink — not unlike a Maxfield Parrish print. (This is NOT a photo of the phenomenon; who has a camera when you need one?) It was a wonderful way to start the day.
Here’s how you replicate it: You take the sky blue crayon from your Crayola Big Box, and draw horizontal streaks across a sheet of white paper. Then you take the pink, or fuchsia if you have it, and fill in wherever the blue didn’t go. Voilà! Sky blue pink. But of course, you have to fill the sky with it. And the pink is really much more glow-y kind of. But still — you’ll feel like applauding. Trust me.
‘Seize the moment.’
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008‘When the last tree is cut’
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008
“When the last tree is cut,
When the last river is emptied,
When the last fish is caught,
Only then will Man realize that he can not eat money.”
— seen on a roadside sign in Bhutan
NYT: Notable books
Monday, December 1st, 2008
The New York Times
has come out with its annual
“100 Notable Books of 2008.”
‘It’s Not About the Money’
Monday, December 1st, 2008

“See what happens if you let the mind be just as it is, without indulgence or resistance. Look truthfully and with a humble curiosity, and see what you find. Without the perspective that this simple practice brings, you will be forever caught up in wanting and never have enough, perhaps literally and certainly emotionally.”
— From . . .
It’s Not About the Money: Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance





