Showing posts with label Books I'm Carrying Around. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books I'm Carrying Around. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2016

Books I'm Carrying Around: Citizens Creek, The Abundant Community


It's Friday! * Can you hear my off-pitch singing of the happiness of the end of a long week? *  If the book fairies love me, at the end of the day I will settle down on my comfy couch with a nice, chilly glass of eggnog with these books for my #weekendread.

Citizens Creek by Lalita Tademy - Author of Red River and Cane River. Yes, her books have a southern river theme and they are all about family. Citizens Creek centers around the story of a slave family that is owned by Creek Indians. I know - who knew that was a thing, Indians owning slaves.  Cow Tom, the father of the family, speaks English and several Indian tribe languages and serves as a translator for the Indian Chief. It is the early 1800s and Cow Tom is sent to serve as a representative of the Creek tribe as a translator for the American government, during Removal of the Indian tribes from Florida and the southern states to the western Indian territories.
  - Update: my review of the book, posted on Goodreads

The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families & Neighborhoods by John McKnight & Peter Block. From the inside jacket: Each neighborhood has people with the gifts and talents needed to provide for our prosperity and peace of mind - this book offers practical ways to discover them. I feel like I'm in school again and this is assigned reading. One of my PTA-friends suggested we read this in preparation for a neighborhood book talk coming up. Because I admire her commitment to the community and trust her selection of books, it made it to my list.

The theme for this #PiddlinReads selections: community and the talents of the people in them.

What are you reading? Let me know in the comments, on Facebook or on Twitter #PiddlinReads

Friday, July 31, 2015

Packing the Perfect Vacation Read

What book will I read next?

Such is the angst of the avid reader packing for vacation. Because there is definitely a book (or two or three) going into the totebag or suitcase. For this finite time, for this limited stuff I can carry period, the choice of book is a weighty one.
 
What makes a good book to pack for vacation?
Of course, the invention of the iPad and e-readers has made the decision a less stressful one. You can carry all hundred of your books with you without an added suitcase.  But if you are like me – you’ve got to take a physical book, too.  Why? Sand, water, spilled drinks.

On a beach vacation, I’m taking my book to the beach. And I might even sit in the pool or at the edge of the water while reading. And that lazy river ride? Perfect (even if everyone else is looking at me like “what – is that a real book on a water ride?”)

Here’s my criteria for that real book that’s going in the suitcase.
  • Must be paperback. It’s a weight thing.
  • Got to be good. The frustration of taking a book that by chapter two I know I’m not going to like. Then what? Finish it? Leave it behind? And what do I do in the meantime?  Friend recommendations are a good choice. Sometimes a re-read of the classics is a good option, too.
  • Okay to lose and/or mess up a little bit. See my comments above about sand, water, spilled drinks.   There’s many times I’ve woken from a sun-induced nap to find my book covered in sand or a victim of high-tide.  Add to that, general vacation distractedness.
  • Doesn’t require too much concentration. Beach read usually means light and happy, that’s how I’ve described my own novel, Life in Spades.  But I’ll take a not so light book, too. I read Little Bee on the beach and while reading a particular scene (you know if you read it) wiggled my fingers in the sand.  I also was reading Ghana Must Go on the beach when I happened to be on the beach chapter in that book, and a wedding party showed up (in real life, it was a different gathering in the book.) 

Then what do you do with the book when you are done? Take it back home, leave it at your hotel?  I've stayed at some resorts with a library, where you can borrow and leave books. The library in Ocean City, Maryland also has a system that allows you to borrow books without needing a library card or donate books when you're ready to go home.  Some people leave their books in a public place, with the hopes that someone else will pick it up and enjoy it. A program like BookCrossing can help track your book's travels.  I haven't tried this, but considered it; sounds like it could be interesting. It reminds me of the Flat Stanley project from elementary school (am I showing my age?)

We’ve got a couple more weeks of summer vacation. A few more lazy afternoons at the pool. I'm hoping to get in at least a few more sand-filled, water-logged, rum-soaked books before it's all over.


What are you reading on vacation?

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Friday, November 21, 2014

Youth Financial Literacy & Entrepreneurship: Watching Seeds Grow


When we consider education, we focus on our children being well-read, able to figure out the area of a triangle, knowing who won the Civil War, and knowing what Ag stands for on a periodic table.  We provide little formal education on how to make money and what to do with that money once you have it.  But as a former business education teacher and a parent, I’d argue that financial literacy is just as important to our children’s success.  Or least, for us to successfully get them out of our house as functional, independent adults (the whole goal of parenthood, right?)

What I learned about money (at least before I went to college and actually majored in finance) was from my parents, with money earned through part-time jobs and allowance.  As a teenager, I babysat.  Many of my girlfriends did the same; the guys cut grass and shoveled snow.  We told people we were available to do the work, decided the fee, did the work, collected payment, and figured out what to do with all that money.  We didn’t think about it then, but these tasks are the essentials of being an entrepreneur.  I’ve reviewed the same steps with my little group who are involved in one of the largest youth business operations around – my Girl Scout troop and their cookies.



Watching Seeds Grow is a guide about entrepreneurship for young people written by son and father, Keith Greer and Peter Greer (President & CEO of HOPE International), which offers simple, easy-to-understand lessons for youth about financial management.

The book opens with a few stories of youthful entrepreneurship, starting with Keith’s (the son) haphazard beginning in business, selling beans in a Rwandan market when he came across a few handfuls of leftover beans.  The stories highlight product-related businesses (beans, candles, tacos, donuts), but children should also be reminded that service-related endeavors, such as tutoring, shoveling snow, and painting friends’ nails, also require the same steps.

The second part of the book lists for parents ten steps of entrepreneurship.  Even for the child who has no interest in running their own business, they are important lessons which can be scaled to the appropriate age: understanding finance and the concepts of hard work, ownership, investment, and generosity.

For instance, Step 2: Start a Savings Account.  For the youngest child, the parent can begin this lesson with a simple bank at home – a jar, a plastic piggy bank, an envelope – and the discussion of putting away a little bit of whatever money the child gets for birthdays or holidays or A’s on the report card to save for the future.  Perhaps start with a tangible goal, like a particular toy or activity that’s relatively expensive, but reasonable.  As the child gets older, you can discuss more about short-term (that new iPhone) and long-term (college) savings goals.  Additionally, as the child gets older, parents can introduce them to the process of putting their money in the bank and earning interest (even if it is just a little bit), and then later the concept of investing (Greer’s Step 6).

An interesting parenting issue which Greer includes in the discussion on teaching children the value of hard work, is the debate about allowance.  Should allowance be tied to chores or other required activities or should it be given, no strings attached?  Greer suggests that by relating allowance to chores, parents teach children the concept of working for their money. Parents might even offer the opportunity to do additional chores to make a few more dollars.

The last section of the book is worksheets for the child who is considering their own business, even as simple as their own lemonade stand.  Applying the ten steps of entrepreneurship, the worksheets lead the child and parent through developing a business concept, considering expenses and setting a price, planning marketing and promotions, and selling the product.

Watching Seeds Grow is an easy-to-read guide which breaks down information about financial management into tangible, actionable steps for the young entrepreneur, the kid working a part-time job, or the kid getting an allowance for taking out the trash.

Peter and Keith Greer, Authors of Watching Seeds Grow

A complimentary copy of Watching Seeds Grow was provided for review; all opinions and comments are my own.


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Friday, October 31, 2014

Books I'm Carrying Around: The Legacy by Necole Ryse


I’ve got a guest book reviewer typing for me today.  Necole Ryse sent us a copy of her debut novel, The Legacy, in response to a previous post about the need for more diverse books, especially for the teen readers.  My daughter read it in about two days.  Now, maybe I'll finally get to read it.

The Legacy, by Necole Ryse
The Legacy follows nineteen-year-old Raevyn Jones as she transitions from her home in Maryland to the Black Ivy League School, Benjamin Wallace Fitzgerald University. A school filled with rich, privileged, dedicated, legacy students, none of which Raevyn is. Raevyn must learn how to blend in with these students in order to escape her past.
At BW Fitz, Raevyn must learn how to act like a legacy (the child of an alum), which at the school is a big deal. She also begins to uncover her family’s past and how, after going to such a prestigious school, her father ends up working a construction job in Maryland. After making some friends (and frenemies), Raevyn finally begins to feel as if she fits in when she begins to receive threatening phone calls and messages and realizes that someone wants her to leave BW Fitz.
One thing that I really loved about this book is that there were characters that I can really relate to and that was pretty exciting. It was fun to have characters whom I could relate to, I could understand some of their problems - especially ones pertaining specifically to being an intelligent Black girl, and hair (oh, the struggle!) Besides the girls, the boys in the book made me fall in love two dozen times. Ryse describes all of the characters amazingly and gives them each very individual and real personalities.
The plot of the story has so many twists and turns and keeps the reader very interested, and the cliffhanger at the end is sooooo suspenseful. I CAN’T WAIT FOR THE NEXT ONE!!!


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Thursday, June 5, 2014

Books I'm Carrying Around: The Rosie Project & Baking Cakes in Kigali

I'm working on my summer reading lists!  The busy-ness of the school year will slow down just a little bit, my school-related activities will come off the calendar and I anticipate more than a couple lazy days by the pool or laying in the grass with a good book and a glass of sweet tea. This by the way, is pretty much how I picture retirement when I get to the point.

Here's a few books I've kicked off my summer reading with - from my "read" and "reading" piles.

The Rosie Project (Don Tillman #1)The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was looking for a light, fun, chick-lit-maybe type of book for the weekend- and this was it!  Don Tillman is a genetic scientist in search of love and a wife, and develops a multi-page questionnaire to find the perfect woman. He also has to go through a few face-to-face dates to verify the data, which he's not so crazy about. He comes upon Rosie in his search, but she has a project of her own - a genetic puzzle that Tillman grabs enthusiastically.  And off they go.

Mix in that Tillman is on the Aspergers spectrum somewhere (I don't know that I would've figured that out on my own, not being that familiar with Aspergers, but there's some hints in the book) and Rosie is the social butterfly.  They're both kinda funny, with some serious moments, and make for a fun read.

And - if you're on Twitter - so is @ProfDonTillman!


Baking Cakes in KigaliBaking Cakes in Kigali by Gaile Parkin


After my recent run of books relating to slavery and a discussion with a friend about how "all" books by African writers deal with some aspect of civil unrest, colonization, or slavery from the other side of the ocean, I needed an African book that didn't deal with racial and cultural strife.  (Though, I have to say that the exception has been Ghana Must Go - not exactly a light read, but it at least was not about war.)  I admittedly picked up Baking Cakes in Kigali based on the title - I mean, "baking cakes" - it's got to be somewhat light, right?  Will it matter that the author, Gaile Parkin, is a white woman born and raised in Zambia?  Does race matter in the subject of the book, whether it can be serious or light?  Don't know yet. I'll tell you when I finish the book.


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Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Book I'm Carrying Around: Ghana Must Go

I'm excited that I've managed to finish a few books lately, despite it being a busy few months. But I think my short trips have actually helped me squeeze in some reading time.

While taking my Girl Scout troop on our beach camping trip, I finished up my bookclub pick, Ghana Must Go.  It was too cold for me - and any sensible person - to get in the water in September, but I did get in the kayak. I drew the line at running into the water for a swim only fit for polar bears and pre-teen Cadettes.  Instead, I sat in the sand and read, with one eye on my shivering scouts. And, like a kid, I read in my sleeping bag by flashlight after lights out.


Ghana Must GoGhana Must Go by Taiye Selasi
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

From page 1 we know that Kweku Sai has died. The remainder of the book is the story of why he has died in this house in Ghana, and, as his son wonders, how a master surgeon can let himself die, not calling for help, because surely, he knows he's dying.  We find out what has happened to the family through the separate views of his first wife, who lives alone; his oldest son, now also a surgeon who has married a colleague but not told his family; his twin son and daughter, who were once inseparable, but now distant physically and emotionally form each other; and youngest daughter, who is trying to find her own identity apart from being "the baby."

Taiye Selasi wove a beautiful story of how things can come apart even when everyone thinks they are doing the best that they can and has intentions of doing good for the rest of the family. I enjoyed her use of language - it's hard to describe how well she made use of the ellipsis (...) and still conveyed meaning that you understood.

We selected this for bookclub and it jumpstarted a lot of, ahem, let's say, discussion.


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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

ebooks vs. real pages

I'm still stuck between e-books and real books.  For all the convenience, portability, and, of course, no storage space of ebooks, I still like the feel of paper, of dog-earring pages, and flipping back to recall whether I remembered the story right.  Ebooks are good for the books that are good reads, but not real keepers that I feel I need to store on my shelves forever.  But real books are so much easier to lend or share with a friend.  And what else am I going to do with all these bookmarks and name plate stickers?

On our recent family vacation, I carried along a copy of Helen Oyeyemi's Mr. Fox on my iPad, along with a dozen or so other books, and two paperback books in my suitcase.  I generally don't like reading two books at a time, I get easily confused about which character and plot line belonged to which story, but I do make the rare exception.  In this case, I read my ebook while on the plane.  Then I switched to the paperback when I got out to the pool and the beach.

Why this distinction?  Take a look at my paperback - a true "beach read".
It survived a couple rides on the lazy river tube ride at the hotel and a couple days lounging on the beach.  The pages are wrinkled with pool water and interlaced with sand and salt.  Can you imagine what this would do to my iPad?

My daughter, on the other hand, is obviously, a better keeper of e-books.  That's all she carried - plane, beach, pool, dinner, laying in the bed.

My husband, the tech-y, is sure that eventually I will forego the real books and read everything on a nook or Kindle.  Has this man not noticed that I still have a film SLR camera on the shelf?

Saturday, July 7, 2012

The Book I'm Carrying Around: Gone Girl


Gone GirlGone Girl by Gillian Flynn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ever thought of killing someone?  Think you could get away with it?  Probably not, because you probably aren't patient enough and you would let your emotions get involved.  Either you'd move impulsively because they made you mad or you would change your mind because you realized you loved the person afterall.  To really get away with it, you have to have a plan, be patient, and ignore all your emotions.  Otherwise, like most criminals, you'll mess it up and get caught.

I don't read suspense thrillers/crime dramas too often - and I don't know why because I am such a "CSI" addict.  I didn't know what this was about or what to expect, other than that some girl was missing, which I figured out from the title, but once I got to about page 2, I was hooked.

* No spoilers here; in fact, I could tell you exactly what happened and you would still need to read the book to believe me that that's what happened.  But I won't, so continue.... *

We open on Nick and Amy's fifth wedding anniversary (with the traditional gift of "wood") and quickly realize that their marriage, like most marriages, is a mix of love, sacrifice, and compromise.  Unlike (or like?) most marriages, there's also a bit of bitterness and betrayal.  When Nick is called home from his bar, which he co-owns with his twin sister, Margo, and has been financed by his wife, he finds his cat wandering outside his open front door and his wife gone.  The police come, the in-laws are called in, he confides in his sister, all kinds of folks from both Nick and Amy's past are visited.  And of course, I am, as always, as everyone is, sure that the husband did it - its just a question of "how" and "why"?

And its the "how" and "why" that kept this book constantly in my hands - at the pool, waiting for the kids, laying out on the hammock, late at night.  And wondering, if I could ever pull off such a feat.  (Not that I would, but when you watch a crime show, don't you wonder whether you could get away with it?)

There are so many plot twists and revelations, that I constantly was turning back to previous pages to see if I had read a detail correctly the first time or exclaiming "ohhhh, that's what he/she meant" or "oh, sugar! how'd he/she do that?!"  It got to the point, I didn't even know whose side I was on in this marriage debacle.  By the time I figured out what was going on, the story took off in another direction and took me with it.

Great story, great characters.  I'm off to find one of Gillian Flynn's previous books, I feel like I've been left out of a great secret.


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Friday, October 7, 2011

The Book I'm Carrying Around...Silver Sparrow, The Tiger's Wife

Every now and then, I hit a patch where I can really move through a book or two, usually vacation or when I'm sick.  Other times, I'm sludging through, chapter by chapter because the only time I read is while sitting in the car waiting for some child to finish doing something (I'm either reading or crocheting).  So by some alignment of the stars, I've had some down time and am on book number 2 for the week.  And since I have friends who will fire me an email as they are packing for vacation, asking for any suggestions of good books, I figure every now and then I'll drop them here (and there's no spoilers, I hate when people tell me the ending).

I just finished Tayari Jones' Silver Sparrow.   Chaurrise and Dana are half-sisters - same father, two different mothers, only about a year apart.  BUT Dana and her mother are the only ones that know that, other than, of course, the father and his not-really-adopted-brother.  They all live within the same general area in South Atlanta and as you do in life, have overlapping friends and acquaintances and sometimes pass each other in the stores.  Without knowing it, Chaurrise's life decisions have some affect on Dana's because their father has to keep the two lives as separate as possible.  So when its time to select magnet high schools, a summer job at Six Flags or college, Dana gets frustrated and annoyed that she either gets second choice, or at least has to wait to be the second to choose.  They do, of course, meet up face to face - it wouldn't be too much excitement if they didn't.  I'm left wondering, was the meeting planned and purposeful?  Were the results what were expected or genuinely accidental?  And then, I go back to the beginning of the story and wonder - why did Dana's mom (the second wife, although Dana is the older daughter) decide to marry James in the first place when she knew he was already married?  Interesting premise, that goes a few steps beyond the regular mistress and outside child storylines.

Besides the book, here's an article I like on her blog about an important lesson she learned from a typewriter repairman - Is Fear Keeping You From Doing What You Love?

The book I'm reading now is The Tiger's Wife by Tea Obreht.  I'm not sure where its going yet because I have this habit of briefly skimming the first one or two paragraphs of the brief description, if reading it at all, for fear that it will give away too much of the story.  So, yes, I choose my books by their cover.  On the cover of this one, there's a tiger - tiger's are exciting and its a pretty cover.  And I seem to like books about people's wives, like Time Traveler's Wife, so it seemed like a good combination.  I'm only a couple chapters in and so far - Natalia, a young doctor in some war-torn countryside (which I would probably know where if I read the back cover) is on a medical journey to deliver immunization shots to an orphanage when she gets a call from her grandmother telling her that her grandfather has died of some unknown sickness in a city they've never heard of and had no idea that he was going there.  However, Natalia does know that he had cancer and was hiding it from her mother and grandmother.  Foreign lands, mysterious death, sad old ladies - its off to a good start.  And the writing is beautiful - wonderful language, surprising humour, great storytelling.

Its a relatively slow weekend around here, so maybe I'll figure out where Natalia is and how her grandfather died by the end of it.