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Showing posts with label Memoirs and Non-Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memoirs and Non-Fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

"Secret Storms" by Julie Mannix von Zerneck and Kathy Hatfield~Adoption Story & Guest Post

SUMMARY :

A pregnant, upper class nineteen-year-old Philadelphia Main Line debutante is confined, against her will, to a state mental hospital. She spends her pregnancy surrounded by the mentally challenged and the criminally insane. On April 19, 1964, she gives birth to a child, whom she is forced to give up for adoption.

A loving middle-class couple adopts a month-old little girl from Catholic Charities. She is adored and cherished from the very beginning. It is as though she is dropped into the first chapter of a fairy tale—but we all know how fairy tales go.

This is the story of a mother and daughter. Of what it is to give up a child and what it is to be given up. Of what it is to belong, what it is to be a family and what it is to yearn deeply, and to never lose hope—because anything is possible.

In this exquisite memoir, Julie Mannix von Zerneck and Kathy Hatfield recount the stories of their lives. Deliciously strange, surprising and sweetly funny, this tenderly written book takes us on a wild and frightening journey. Written in two distinct and deeply expressive voices, their stories seamlessly meld together in a breathtaking ending.

PARTICULARS OF THIS BOOK :

Published by:  Blue Blazer Productions
Pages:  330
Genre:  Non-fiction/Biography/Memoir
Authors:  Julie Mannix von Zerneck and Kathy Hatfield
Learn more:  http://www.secretstorms.com


ABOUT THE AUTHORS and THEIR STORY :


Picture of Julie (left) and Kathy (right) when they were featured guests on the Katie Couric show
recently.

Here's a link to the show!!!    http://www.katiecouric.com/videos/adoption-reunion





 
Julie Mannix von Zerneck was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. She traveled with her parents, living in Paris, on the isle of Capri and in several boarding schools around the world, before settling down at Sunny Hill Farm at the age of nine. There, she lived with a menagerie of animals, including a cheetah and eagle and her very own baby spider monkey. After attending the Neighborhood Playhouse in NYC, she became an actress on Broadway, had running roles in three soap operas and guest starred on many TV series. She is married to the TV producer, Frank von Zerneck. They have three children and four grandchildren and reside in Toluca Lake, California, where, for 26 wonderful years, they were the owners of Portrait of a Bookstore. She is a lifelong collector of antiques and antiquarian books.
 

 
Kathy Hatfield was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and grew up surrounded by two brothers, twenty-five cousins, and two sets of grandparents in Indialantic, Florida. She attended Florida Atlantic University, after which she worked as a mortgage broker while running her own small business selling men’s neckties. She now teaches World Literature at a high school in Florida where she serves as English department chairman. She and her husband of 25 years live in a quaint beachside community with their two daughters. She is a freelance writer and moderator of the Adoption Reunion Stories Facebook page, which currently has over 2,800 members. She’s a competitive runner and participates in 5k races when she’s not correcting papers.
 
 
 
A VIDEO ABOUT "SECRET STORMS"
 
Can be seen on their website at:   http://www.secretstorms.com
 
 
 
GUEST POST !!!!
 
A Bookish Libraria is proud to bring you this wonderful guest post from Kathy Hatfield regarding her transition experience.  Thank you, Kathy, for sharing your intimate family life with us here.
 
 



"Cut from the Same Cloth"

           

            I’ll admit it;  I’m vain.  Upon discovering that I had a full-blooded sister, whom I had never met, my very first thought was does she look like me?  As an adopted child, I had spent my entire life wishing I looked like someone in my family, wishing I had my mother’s eyes or my father’s thick hair, wishing that -- for once-- someone would say you look just like your mother (or father, or brother, or cousin...).     Five years ago, that wish came true.   At the age of 44, I reunited with my birth mother, who eventually married my birth father and went on to have two more children:  my brother and my sister.  I had grown up with only brothers, and was completely enthralled with the idea of having a sister, who - quite possibly - would look just like me. 

            As it turns out, I had known my sister for decades.  Watched her on TV in the 1980s.  Scheduled my college classes around the soap opera on which she appeared daily.  For two years, she played the role of Lou Swenson, the love interest of  John Stamos, on the wildly popular General Hospital.   And for two years, I had no idea she was my sister. Now, on this side of the adoption reunion, I can’t believe I didn’t see it:  we don’t just look like one another, we also share the same laugh, the same intonation of voice, the same sideways tilt of the head when we speak in earnest.  And after spending time with her, I have also realized the semblance resonating on a much deeper level.  I saw it when she spoke about politics, about literature, about her daughters;  I saw  a passion, a fire in her belly, a glimpse of what made her tick - and understood it immediately.  We, though strangers, had been cut from the same cloth - and I felt the same thing that other biological siblings must feel - an unspoken connection.

            But is that all it takes to be siblings?  Shared features, shared mannerisms, shared passions? Can a sharing of chromosomes supersede years of playing catch in the backyard and fighting over who gets to ride in the front seat?    I had assumed that our genetic bond was the only requisite to be sisters, but I was wrong;  we will never have the shared memories of childhood, which are the links in the chain that fasten us to our families. Yet, what remains is my greatest hope: that we may come to realize that sisterhood is not a destination, but a journey to be shared and enjoyed.  And maybe someday, we too will come to form our own memories in common and redeem what could have been our past. 

Kathy Hatfield




 Kathy far right, Julie next to her in pink jacket.



THE BOOKISH DAME REVIEWS :

Reading this book was a rare experience for me.  I had no idea it would be so engaging.  From the first sentence, I was captivated by the story of Julie and how she was thrown into an asylum for the mad and criminally insane simply because she had become pregnant as a teenager.  This is a book told from the depths of the souls of two amazing women.  One not to be missed!

Julie writes from the heart about her experiences.  I simply could not put her book down.  You can "hear" her voice coming through the pages.  There is not a moment's pretension from this woman, nor is there an ounce of self-pity.  Rare in these circumstances.  Her side of the story of loss and reclamation is pure and true.  I appreciated that honesty from a woman who had suffered the indignities and betrayals she had.

Kathy is buoyant and forgiving.  Her outlook on her adoption, finding her birth family and the fulfilling of her new life is up-lifting.  She sheds a hopeful light on how one can grasp the whole process and build a lasting relationship from what could be the bitter ashes of life.  Kathy is to be admired.  I appreciated her optimism and openness.  Her unconditional love is heartening.

This is a story of love and redemption in the face of some nearly insurmountable odds.  Julie, in particular, faced the cold upbringing of a child passed from links of inconsistent parental love.  It's a wonder she has the well of love she has to draw from given that background! 

I highly recommend this book to readers of all genre.  You'll enjoy the writing style.  It's a fast read because it flows so well.  It's absorbing.  The story may appear to be ordinary in the hearing, but it's extraordinary in the reading.

5 stars                                  Deborah/TheBookishDame

Monday, April 15, 2013

Book Haul...It's HUGE!!! and Diverse

End of March and first of April Book Haul...I'm unbelieveably booked with reviews this month!  And, I'm loving the books sent by publishers and authors.  I'm not going to be giving links this time due to time constraints.  I will link to a couple of them, but can't give all of them.
Here are the titles:

Cliff of the Ruin by Bonnie McKernan~ "There are three good reasons why dashing Civil War hero and New York lawyer William Teague cannot tell artist Ame Kendrick he's in love with her...Three, she just hired him to find the man she doesn't remember marrying...But are Will's war-honed instincts any match for the alluring forces of Irish legend?"

A Study in Revenge by Kieran Shields~  "In the summer of 1893 in Portland, Maine, police detective Archie Lean follows a trail of ashen footprints to the site of a dead body.  The victim is horribly scorched, and ominous occult symbols mark the nearby walls."


Midnight in St. Petersburg by Vanora Bennett~  "During the Russian Revolution, one woman fights for her survival, and for the man she loves."


The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D. by Nichole Bernier~ "Summer vacation on Great Rock Island was supposed to be a restorative time for Kate, who'd lost her close friend Elizabeth in a sudden accident.  But when she inherits a trunk of Elizabeth's journals, Kate discovers a woman far different from the cheerful wife and mother she thought she knew."


Pictures At An Exhibition by Camilla MacPherson~ Was in my last Haul...and I haven't read it, yet.  WWII and London's National Gallery novel.  I better get to this one!!



Roses Have Thorns by Sandra Byrd~"In 1565, Seventeen-year-old Elin Von Snakenborg leaves Sweden on a treacherous journey to England.  Her fiance has fallen in love with her sister and her dowry money has been gambled away, but ahead of her lies an adventure that will take her to the dizzying heights of Tudor power."   (REVIEWING  this one this week!!)  Here's the link to purchase this one:  http://www.amazon.com/Roses-Have-Thorns-Novel-Elizabeth/dp/1439183163/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1366085495&sr=1-1&keywords=roses+have+thorns



The Queen's Rivals by Brandy Purdy~ "As cousins of history's most tempestuous queens, Ladies Jane, Katherine and Mary Grey were born in an age when all of London lived beneath the Tower's menacing shadow.  Tyrannized by Bloody Mary and the Virgin Queen, the sisters feared love was unthinkable--and the scaffold all but unavoidable..."


Death and the Courtesan by Pamela Christie~ "Pamela Christie's sparkling historical mystery goes beyond the modest drawing room of Regency London in the company of the city's most esteemed and scandalous courtesan..."


The Bedlam Detective by Stephen Gallagher~ "From a basement office in London's notorioius Bethlehem Hospital, former policeman and Pinkerton agent Sebastian Becker is sent to interview Sir Owain Lancaster at his country estate.  The wealthy industrialist returned alone from a disastrous scientific adventure in the Amazon, claiming that wild beasts killed his family and colleagues..."


The Truth of All Things by Kieran Shields~ "When Deputy Marshal Archie Lean is called in to investigate a prostitute's murder in Portland Maine, he's surprised to find the body laid out like a pentagram and pinned to the earth with a pitchfork.  He's even more surprised to learn that this death by "sticking" is a traditional method of killing a witch."


Meet Me At the Cupcake Cafe by Jenny Colgan~  "A sweet and satisfying novel of how delilcious it is to discover your dreams."  (With recipes!! Yummy!)


Secret Storms: A Mother and Daughter, Lost then Found by Julie Mannix von Zerneck and Kathy Hatfield~ "Julie:  I was being transferred from the Psychiatric Institute of Philadelphis to a state hospital--a home to people ranging from mentally challenged to the criminally insane.  I was nineteen, blonde with blue eyes, five foot four, 102 pounds, and a Phiadelphia Main Line debutante.  And I was 3 1/2 months pregnant..."


The Raven's Seal by Andrei Baltakmens~ "A Murder.  A Fall from Grace.  A Mysterious Symbol That could be the key to one man's salvation...Set against the urban backdrop of late eighteenth-century England, "The Raven's Seal" unravels a tale of corruption, betrayal, murder, and--ultimately--redemption and love."


Night Terrors by Dennis Palumbo~  "After 20 years spent inside the heads of the nation's worst serial killers, retired FBI profiler Lyle Barnes is falling apart mentally.  Psychologist and trauma expert Daniel Rinaldi thinks he can help Barnes through his terrible night visions.  Barnes, however, is also the target of an unknown assassin whose mounting list of victims paralyzes the city and lands Lyle in protective custody..."


Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend by Matthew Dicks~  "An incredibly captivating novel about the wonder of youth and the importance of friendship, whether real or imagined.  Delightfully compelling reading."  --Booklist


That's the Haul, y'all!!!   I'm reading 3 of them as we speak...


Enjoy your own book hauls.


Hugs,

Deborah/TheBookishDame












Thursday, August 30, 2012

"Cradle My Heart" by Kim Ketola ~ Healing From Abortion

Summary:  Abortion continues to be a hot topic in politics, women's rights, and medical practice. But for the eight to ten million American Christian women who have had one, abortion is a spiritual issue as well, raising questions of life and death, heaven and hell, grief and loss.
Writing from her own experience, Kim Ketola sheds light on one of the darkest and most neglected personal issues of our time: the widespread need for healing and spiritual recovery after abortion. "After abortion brought the worst trouble into my life I had ever known," writes Ketola, "I just couldn't see my way free to believe in God's love." With a compassionate heart, Ketola offers ten true stories of healing promise from the Bible to help women answer the most common spiritual torments they face: Is abortion a sin? Does God hate me? Where can I turn in my shame and distress? How could I ever tell anyone the truth? And more.
Inspired by Romans 6:4—"just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life"—this is a definitive resource to help women see themselves and God anew and—finally—to find spiritual healing.

Particulars of the book:
Publisher:  Kregel Publications
Pages:  224
Genre:  Christian/Spirtual
Author:  Kim Ketola
Find this book on Amazon   or  Barnes & Noble


From the Back Cover :


God's love is not a casualty of abortion

For eight to ten million American Christian women, abortion is not just a political or medical issue--it is a spiritual issue as well. Abortion raises questions of life and death, heaven and hell, grief and loss. You may be asking: Does God hate me? Can I be forgiven? Is it really possible to just start over with God?

Kim Ketola asked these questions as well. In Cradle My Heart, she lays out a compassionate path toward spiritual healing. You will learn how to:
* Face yourself and face God
* Forgive and be forgiven
* Repent and accept God's love
* Grieve and find an end to sorrow

With an understanding and empathetic voice, Kim Ketola exposes the hurt in your heart, reveals the healing in God's heart, and brings the two together to create a whole heart where restoration--and celebration--are possible.
 
 
About Kim Ketola :
 
 

Kim Ketola is a writer and speaker with thirty years' broadcast experience while known as "Kim Jeffries" on CBS' WCCO Radio and Television, and KTIS/Faith Radio Network, and other outlets. Cradle My Heart, Finding God's Love After Abortion (Kregel, 2012) reflects Kim's ministry to help individuals recover from the emotional and spiritual wounds of abortion, and was awarded First Place in the Sonfire Media contest at the 2010 Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference.
Kim has traveled internationally with Ruth Graham and Friends conferences, and she is a frequent media guest addressing pro-life issues on Salem, Moody, Sirius, and other network outlets. Tim Pawlenty appointed Kim as chairperson of the MN Governor's Council on Faith and Community Service Initiatives (2006-2008), and she serves organizations reaching the homeless, the addict, and those in prison. She and her husband, Bruce, make their home in suburban Atlanta.

Visit www.kimketola.com to learn more.


The Dame's Review :

When I was in college in the 1960's, during the age of Aquarius, free love and student uprisings, I had a room-mate who had had an abortion.  It was the first time I was exposed to anyone who had been through the experience.  She almost immediately related the incident and circumstances to me, and said it was the central and most painful thing of her life.  It colored everything she did from that moment on.  She was deeply grieved by it.  And she was profoundly regretful.  I was astounded by the extent to which it had scarred her. Up to that point I had been lead to believe it was an option young women chose to be free of an unwanted "situation" or "problem."

When I was a young mother some 8 years later, I met another young mother who was in turmoil and withdrawn in many ways. She was a friend of mine because of our children's ages and because we lived in the same neighborhood, and because we seemed drawn to each other.  But for several years she debated and tortured me over my faith with a harsh anger that was personal to her and strange to me.  Years later, and after I had moved away, she became a Christian and confessed to me her anger at me at my faith had been because of her guilt over an abortion she had had as a college student, and which she thought God couldn't forgive her for; and, that she couldn't forgive herself for.  Once she got hold of the fact that there was healing and forgiveness in Jesus Christ, she was relieved of her spiritual burdens and believed her unborn child was safe and secure.

There have been numerous other women I've come into contact with during my 60 some years who have suffered this similar grief and guilt.  Some have been able to resolve it through faith, and some have not because they have no faith.  But all have been scarred.

Though I personally have never had an abortion, I can feel the depth of my friends' and loved one's pain.  It is easy to see in their lives.  It is easy to see how it's shaped their lives for good and for worse depending upon how they have resolved it or not.

Kim Ketola's book is one of the few books I've read that simply outlines a way to look at this personal tragedy.  She honestly exposes herself and her own pain.  She kindly shares the gift of her personal grief and struggles, and her resolution through faith in Christ.

I found the particular passages of scripture not only apparent as healing pathways for those who have experienced an abortion, but for those of us who have walked the resulting path with them, or who have struggled with other losses in our lives.  They are up-lifting and speak of Christ's eternal forgiveness and healing powers through faith.

While everything we do and every choice we make results in a mark on our lives for good or for bad, we can rest in the fact that we have a heavenly Father who loves us and is willing to take us as we are.  Kim Ketola's "Cradle My Heart" gives testimony to that, and shows a pathway to healing.

This is a book I would recommend for everyone who is considering an abortion, who  has had one, who knows of those who have, and for those who wonder about the reasons and results of them for some women.  It's a powerful book.

I must add that this is not a politically centered book.  That is not its purpose in text.


Find this book on Amazon or Barnes & Noble


5 stars                Deborah/TheBookishDame

Sunday, August 26, 2012

"Once Upon A Gypsy Moon" by Michael Hurley ~Sailing Alone

"Once Upon A Gypsy Moon" by Michael Hurley
Ragbagger Publishing, 2012
 
Find it on Amazon here: 
http://www.amazon.com/Once-Upon-Gypsy-Moon-Improbable/dp/1455529338/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1346036279&sr=8-1&keywords=once+upon+a+gypsy+moon

Overview:
Michael Hurley watched his world unravel in the wake of infidelity, divorce and failure. In August 2009, he was short of money, out of a job, and seeking to salvage a life that had foundered. Deeply in need of perspective, he took to the open seas in a 32-foot sailboat, Gypsy Moon. The story of his 2-year outward odyssey, deterred by rough weather and mechanical troubles, combines keen observation, poignant thoughts, and deeper introspection with glorious prose.

Once Upon a Gypsy Moon also presents a rare and much-needed point of view on the familiar spiritual-journey narrative. It offers a star-crossed love story wrapped inside a rollicking good sea tale, but it also has something important to say to the reader about relationships, faith and disbelief, life and death, love and marriage, and what really matters


Particulars of the Book :
Genre:  Memoir/Non-Fiction
Pages:  256
Author:  Michael Hurley
Photo of the book cover is not available at this time


Review by Catherine Fahy of A Bookish Libraria:

At times meandering, given to excessive self-reflection and peppered with a few too many preachy sailing analogies, Michael Hurley's memoir of life aboard his 32-foot sloop, The Gypsy Moon, is nevertheless worth reading to the very last page for its dramatic ending.

Because that is where the author is revealed in full — as a man of admirable wisdom and candor. It's no small feat to take to the open ocean alone in a small sailboat, and the end of Hurley's journey with his beloved Gypsy Moon is the stuff of sailors' nightmares.
 
What makes Hurley's seagoing memoir so honest and satisfying is its ability to reveal flaws that may make a reader dislike him (as I did for awhile) then, while documenting his own transformation, also manage to win the reader's heart in the end.
 
Talking about the affair that ended his first marriage, Hurley says he believes strongly in the fallibility of mankind: ". . . every one of us, since the Fall of Man, has been the cheating kind in whatever area of life that holds for him or her the greatest temptation."
 
Equally strong is his conviction in our redemptive qualities when he says that it's important to recognize that we are not defined by our mistakes. "A ship's wake tells you where she has been, not where she is going," he writes, in one of the book's more appealing analogies.
 
With his affair, Hurley lost his friends, his two children's trust and enough of his productivity at work that he was asked to leave the partnership of the law firm where he'd worked for 11 years. A rock bottom moment was finding himself in a laundromat near his rented apartment "next to college kids in backwards baseball caps and flip-flops, with the smell of marijuana wafting down the hall."
 
The one constant in his life, it seems, was his love of sailing, and the promise that one day he'd have enough money to embark on an extended voyage aboard the Gypsy Moon, which he did in August, 2009. The premise for the book is a series of letters he wrote about the voyage for his friends, and while much of the sailing jargon can be confusing for non-sailors, the book is worth reading for the philosophical journey it recounts.
 
Hurley's journey began in Annapolis, after which he bumped in stages down the East Coast until ultimately reaching Florida, where he hoped to make ready for a passage to Nassau (something this writer did with one other person aboard a 25-foot sailboat, following much the same Florida-Caribbean route as Hurley).
For some, the open ocean is an irresistible salve to life's woes, to others it offers some of the most profound moments they'll ever know and celebrates the awesome magnificence and vulnerability of life. For Hurley it was both, and his account of his journey is reflective, entertaining and informative as it unfolds at the same time as his journey of the heart.
 
Not everyone who has fallen from grace is a lucky as Hurley in finding "The One" as relatively quickly as he did. He credits the Gypsy Moon with that when her self-steering vane broke in high winds and seas south of Charleston and he had to turn around for repairs. Back in Raleigh, N.C., where he lived, an on-line dating foray led him to a woman near Charleston, where he would be returning to resume his Bahama-bound voyage once Gypsy Moon's autopilot was fixed.
Leaving Charleston the week before Christmas, 2009, Hurley wrote to Susan that he had "a childlike sense of wonder, awe and excitement" about their future together.
 
Here is where the tone of the book takes a turn from introspective to romantic and adventurous as Hurley tackles some of the more challenging legs that will carry him nearly 2,000 miles southeast. Once away from the East Coast, he encounters the deprivations of life at sea, ill-equipped ports, dangerous shoals and reefs, poor anchorages, disturbing economic disparity and spotty communication, but with Susan sometimes accompanying him he makes it all the way to the Dominican Republic.
 
There, he has to decide whether to head east to cruise the Caribbean or south, 1,000 miles through the Windward Passage between Cuba and Haiti to the Panama Canal and eventually across the Pacific Ocean.
True to character, Hurley takes the path less traveled, or the latter path. And although a series of mishaps and a rogue wave cripple his boat, he emerges a wiser man at the end of the journey — something we can all find inspirational.
 
 
A recommended read by Catherine Fahy, August 26, 2012.
 

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Dr. Atul N. Shah~Allergies, and Awesome You~Believe You Can Get There, Too!

 

Allergies strike children at an alarming rate in our country!
Dr. Atul N. Shah, The Amazing Allergist, has written a new book,
child friendly enough to help young children understand
why they have problems living in a world
that sometimes gives them certain strange
physical reactions!  It also gives them and their parents hope for putting a
stop to those itches, aches, and other life-debilitating symptoms.


Giveaway!  Please enter a giveaway for this book and other very exciting prizes by filling out our Rafflecopter!

Go to this Pump Up Your Books Link for the Rafflecopter and details!





ABOUT DR. ATUL N. SHAH
Atul N. Shah, MD, FACAAI, FAAAAI, is a celebrated author of this AmazingAllergist book series, founder of www.AmazingAllergist.com, and the medical director of www.Center4AsthmaAllergy.com. He is a board certified allergist who has earned an honor of fellowships in both the American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology and the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.
He has personally treated more than 20,000 patients, made a significant impact on more than 100,000 lives as an allergist so far, and earned the nickname “AmazingAllergist” from his patients and peers. His work is rewarded daily with numerous compliments of smiling patients and their families. He has been recognized with various awards, including the America’s Top Physicians’ Award, the Patients’ Choice Award, and the Most Compassionate Physicians’ Award. He believes that every allergic child and individual has a potential to live a great life, allergy-free. His desire to empower allergic individuals translated into this series of books.
Dr. Atul Shah enjoys reading, traveling, and spending time with his family. He calls Long Island, New York, his home, supports various charities, and loves making a difference.
You can visit his website at http://amazingallergist.com.
Visit his Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/AmazingAllergist.
Visit his Twitter page at https://twitter.com/LifeAllergyFree.
Read the article, “Adolescent Allergies: Treat the Misery” at Paramus Post at http://www.paramuspost.com/article.php/20120416185012592!

ABOUT ALLERGIES, AND AWESOME YOU
Allergies, and Awesome You, Believe You Can Get There Too!
“Allergies, and Awesome You” is a part of the AmazingAllergist’s Awesome Series that empowers allergic children to live and lead great lives, allergy-free. It is a by-product of the author’s extensive medical knowledge, vast experiences as an allergy specialist, and the desire to make a difference, one allergic child at a time. This book, through a life story of an allergic child, will empower you and your children.
Take a peek inside the book at http://amazingallergist.com/flip/index.html!
Purchase your copy at http://www.amazon.com/Allergies-Awesome-You-Believe-There/dp/1468536915/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1335289821&sr=8-1. .



Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Please Read ~ "Don't Sing At The Table" by Adriana Trigiani ~ You'll Be Transported

Published by: Harper Collins 
Pages: 224
Genre: Non-Fiction, Memoir

Summary :

From Publishers Weekly~
Fans of novelist Trigiani will be delighted with this guided tour through the author's family history via her grandmothers, Lucia and Viola. She lovingly details the women's lives and recounts the lessons she's learned while offering a fascinating look at U.S. history from the perspective of her Italian-American forebears. Both Lucia and Viola worked hard from an early age, cooking and cleaning among any number of chores, and parlayed their work ethic and expertise into strong careers. Viola started out as a machine operator and, later, co-owned a mill with her husband, while Lucia worked in a factory and then became a seamstress and storefront couturier.
Her grandmothers also took pride in passing along wisdom to others; throughout her life, Trigiani benefited from their guidance regarding everything from marriage to money, creativity to religion. She credits them with telling good stories: "I mimicked their work ethic imagining myself in a factory, layering words like tasks until the work was done. I took away more than life lessons from their stories; I made a career out of it." Here, Trigiani combines family and American history, reflections on lives well-lived, and sound advice to excellent effect, as a legacy to her daughter and a remembrance of two inimitable women.

The Dame's Perspective:

What a treasure of a small book this is. I stayed up into the wee hours of the night because I just couldn't tear myself away from the story of Viola and Lucy and how they operated in the world. To say that Adriana Trigiani benefited from having them as grandmothers is an understatement.

I loved that both grandmothers had a strong interest in some area of dressmaking. Viola in the heart and hard work of factory sewing, and then her own blouse-making business; and Lucy in her devotion to clients and perfection when she became a "storefront couturier." Talented and beautiful women, they understood the value and power behind a women dressed well in perfectly fitted, classic clothing. They also understood that keeping up their skin/beauty routine, social standing and family reputations were tantamount to good life, good health and good self-esteem; among other important things.

It seems Adriana learned so much from them about integrity and self-respect, there's no doubt about that. But, she also learned the value of manners, of going after what you want, of having a purpose in life, of minding your reputation. The specifics of these lessons are ones you'll be delighted to read.

I thought it was delightful and serious at the same time to read Lucy's lessons first on romantic love, then on keeping a marriage strong. Hers is practical wisdom. Her instructions on raising children are some we absolutely could use today. I particularly liked her dictum never to burden a child with adult problems. That lesson alone would change the mental health of so many children in these times.

There is so much to this book. It's humorous, it's character building, it's serious and it's a lesson book on how to live a life with wisdom. What a blessing Adriana Trigiani had in these two lovely women. No wonder she's a bestselling author with fragments of these things to share with her readers.

Those of us who had grandmothers like Viola and Lucy will enjoy reading about them and, possibly, taking a nostalgic trip back to our own childhoods. Those of you who didn't have grandmothers like them will gain something very special in the reading.

5 perfectly heartwarming stars

Deborah/TheBookishDame
This Was A Review Made Possible By: TLC Book Tours ~ Thanks, Lisa and Trish! I loved this book!

Saturday, October 8, 2011

"Last Minute Knitting" by Joelle Hoverson~Now in Ebook format!

Published by:  Open Road Media/Abrams
Pages:  107
Release Date:  September 13, 2011
Now in Ebook format


Overview:

Today's knitters are chic, smart-and busy. Although they love to knit and enjoy making gifts for family and friends, they're constantly faced with the challenge of finding enough time to actually finish what they've started. Last-Minute Knitted Gifts solves this problem. Joelle Hoverson, owner of Purl, the hip knitting supply store in downtown Manhattan, has designed more than 30 fun, fresh, beautiful patterns, most of which can be made in less than ten hours—some in as little as two! Known for her keen sense of color, Hoverson includes instructions for classic gifts like baby booties and bonnets, sweaters, and scarves, plus imaginative options like a cashmere tea cozy, a felted yoga mat bag, floor cushions, and a poncho—surely something for everyone on the gift list. And to make each present extra-special, Hoverson offers easy tips on how to incorporate knitting and other yarn embellishments into the gift wrap.

Perfectly awesome video of Joelle and her work:  Found on Open Road Media at:
http://www.openroadmedia.com/authors/joelle-hoverson.aspx




The Dame's Review :

This is a book radiant with color.  How I would love just to spend a few days in Joelle's shop, wandering around, touching the yarns, pulling colors and learning to knit a couple of her patterns.  The way she's written this particular book gives it not the urgency one might think is needed if you're making a "last minute" gift, but a kind of serenity and assurance that all is well.  So, that makes it just plain entertaining.

Oh, just kill me now, Sleeping Beauty!  I'm going for the sharp needles!
Because time is spent here helping us understand color, color relationships, substitutions of color and yarns; and about which needles will produce the product we hope to achieve.  We get a good idea about felting, fluffing and fancy yarns, along with the basics of knitting from a pattern.  While this book is easy on the eyes of any stage knitter, it's also filled with good, solid information that can be a reference any time.

I have to say that I had a hard time resisting the precious bonnets and cotton caps in this book.  Oh, my, they made me want to call my children and beg for new grandchildren!!  But, the color crunched big kids caps are just as delicious and are perfect for all ages.

The drawstring pouch on the cover of the book is simplicity and beauty in one.  It can be used as a bride's purse, a gift bag, a jewelry pouch and a place to store secret, small treasures or memorabilia.  Joelle suggests stitching it with alpaca and silk, "a soft, luscious drape and a lustrous sheen."  But, I can also see beads, pearls, silk ribbons accessorizing...  Leave it to me to take the simplicity away!

Without putting too fine a point on it, this book is a good little addition to your knitting and crafts collection.  The directions, glossary and darling designs make it a keeper for reference and to "go to" often.

5 multicolored blended stars

Deborah/TheBookishDame

Thursday, September 29, 2011

"Dead Celebrities Cookbook..." by Frank DeCaro~Deathly Hallows Never Tasted So Good!

Title:  Dead Celebrities Cookbook: A Resurrection of Recipes from the More Than 145 Stars of Stage and Screen
Published by: HCI
Pages:  385
Genre:  House & Garden, Cookbooks


Book Summary :

If you've ever fantasized about feasting on Frank Sinatra's Barbecued Lamb, lunching on Lucille Ball's "Chinese-y Thing," diving ever-so-neatly into Joan Crawford's Poached Salmon, or wrapping your lips around Rock Hudson's cannoli – and really, who hasn't? – hold on to your oven mitts!
  
In The Dead Celebrity Cookbook: A Resurrection of Recipes by 150 Stars of Stage and Screen, Frank DeCaro—the flamboyantly funny Sirius XM radio personality best known for his six-and-a-half-year stint as the movie critic on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart—collects hundreds of recipes passed on from legendary stars of stage and screen, proving that before there were celebrity chefs, there were celebrities who fancied themselves chefs.
 
Their all-but-forgotten recipes—rescued from out-of-print cookbooks, musty biographies, vintage magazines, and dusty pamphlets—suggest a style of home entertaining ripe for reexamination if not revival, while reminding intrepid gourmands that, for better or worse, Hollywood doesn't make celebrities (or cooks) like it used to.

Starring
Elizabeth Taylor's Chicken with Avocado and Mushrooms
Farrah Fawcett's Sausage and Peppers
Liberace's Sticky Buns
Bette Davis's Red Flannel Hash
Bea Arthur's Good Morning Mushroom Tomato Toast
Dudley Moore's Crème Brûlée
Gypsy Rose Lee's Portuguese Fish Chowder
John Ritter's Famous Fudge
Andy Warhol's Ghoulish Goulash
Vincent Price's Pepper Steak
Johnny Cash's Old Iron Pot Family-Style Chili
Vivian Vance's Chicken Kiev
Sebastian Cabot's Avocado Surprise
Lawrence Welk's Vegetable Croquettes
Ann Miller's Cheese Soufflé
Jerry Orbach's Trifle
Totie Fields's Fruit Mellow
Irene Ryan's Tipsy Basingstoke
Klaus Nomi's Key Lime Tart
Richard Deacon's Bitter and Booze
Sonny Bono's Spaghetti with Fresh Tomato Sauce


And many others from breakfast to dessert.


Your Dame's Spicey Review:

"The Dead Celebrity Cookbook" makes you wish you were at a banquet of the dead.  Honestly,  Frank DeCaro tells tales of celebrities and shares their secret, homey recipes in such a way that you want to go "down under" with them.  Alas, it's impossible--to most of us!  For cookbook readers everywhere...this is one for your library.

Mr. Decaro is a funny character, and a gifted writer.  His characterizations and talent for focusing on perfect highlights that show us the nature of famous celebrities, brings a certain bubbly brightness to his cookbook.  When you read his quips and synopses of such celebrities as Johnny Carson and Joan Crawford you can't help feeling they are people you could spend time with over dinner. 

Let's talk about the recipes.  Man, oh, man!  There are sooo many to try!  As a Southerner, I have to try Johnny Cash's fried okra.  There are pies galore, lots of fish and casseroles.  Yum!  These celebs knew how to cook and entertain friends;  I suspect the gatherings were like family times.  Interestingly enough, many were health conscious; probably in order to keep those beautiful figures.

Set into categories, such as:  Batman Capers, I Lunch Lucy, and Watching A Detective (Cook), just to mention a few, and to give you an idea of how much fun this cookbook is.  The tidbits of information about cast members of famous shows brings back memories!  I loved being reminded about Dinah Shore, Merv Griffin and others... And, having a Bette Davis recipe is practically like gold for a fan like I am.

When all's said and done, I'd kill (die) for this cookbook.  It's a dance with the dead that will stick with you and will offer friends a ghostly conversation at a dead celebrity-based dinner party.  What fun to know so many details of the actors we grew up watching, believing in and loving.  Here's to Frank DeCaro for bringing us this wonderful book...and here's looking at all our beloved celebrities.

How about a Halloween Dinner Party using this crazy cookbook this year!?  Fabuloso!

5 stars for this cookbook keeper!

Deborah/TheBookishDame

Friday, September 23, 2011

New Orleans Decorating~"Big Easy Style:Creating Rooms You Love to Live In" by Bryan Batt

Published by:  Crown
Release Date:  October 4, 2011
Pre-release Price:  Available
Pages:  208 including photos
Hardcover


Overview :  (Taken from book)

An enchanting space that’s truly unique calls for a sense of humor, whimsy, and an open mind.
From a charmed New Orleans childhood to a successful acting career on Broadway and the award-winning TV show Mad Men to the opening of his popular Big Easy home furnishings boutique, Hazelnut, Bryan Batt has always turned to home design as a creative outlet.

To him, the best rooms are unexpected yet refined and, above all, evoke emotion. He doesn’t think twice about hanging over sized decorations from a Mardi Gras float in an elegant dining room or bringing home vintage etchings of sconces when he was actually shopping for real ones. He believes that a vibrant orange wall can be a neutral backdrop for an antique writing desk and earthy accessories, and that an artist’s whimsical bird’s nest sculpture hung in a lavender entryway couldn’t serve as a better welcome into a cozy abode. New Orleans has taught Bryan so much about how to pull together a space that’s fearless and colorful with plenty of panache. With the city as his muse—its strong roots in history, its celebration of tradition, and, of course, the wild festivities of Mardi Gras—he believes that designing a fabulous, livable home that truly reflects a dweller’s passions need not be intimidating.

Big, Easy Style showcases rooms that make Bryan smile, with pages of rich photography featuring the work of many designers—and plenty of Crescent City interiors—framed by his own entertaining maxims on color, pattern, collecting, living areas, intimate spaces, and more. Explore rooms he’s personally designed and others that inspire him; from an old-world kitchen imported straight from the heart of France to a luxurious Art Deco media room, these homes are enticing and unique, and through their surprising details, completely inviting. 


Decorating your home to reflect your personality and taste takes practice and patience and can be a daunting undertaking, but Bryan proposes that we not worry about making mistakes, that any decision we make is better than no decision at all. With Big, Easy Style, learn how to put aside your hesitation and surrender to the wild side of home design for a big statement that’s easy to achieve.

Let's Meet Bryan!

BRYAN BATT (actor, designer, civic activist, and author) is most recently known for his two-time Screen Actors Guild Award winning performance as “Salvatore Romano” in AMC’s critically acclaimed dramatic series MAD MEN, which has been lauded with awards including Emmys, Golden Globes, the Screen Actors Guild as well as the Peabody awards.

Bryan is also a designer. He and Tom Cianfichi, his partner of 22 years, are the nationally recognized creative forces behind HAZELNUT, a fine gift and home accessories shop in his home town of New Orleans. HAZELNUT has been featured in the NEW YORK TIMES, HOUSE BEAUTIFUL, IN STYLE, FOOD AND WINE, TOWN AND COUNTRY and many more publications.

His debut book, a memoir, or as he calls it, a momoir, “SHE AIN’T HEAVY, SHE’S MY MOTHER,” celebrates his Steel Magnolia / Auntie Mame of a mom and depicts growing up in wildly colorful  New Orleans in the 1970’s. The book has received wonderful notices… “I Loved, Loved, Loved This Book” – Whoopi Goldberg …and was on Janet Maslin’s NY Times top 10 summer read list.

As a Broadway veteran, Bryan’s leading and principal roles include: 2005 revival of LA CAGE AUX FOLLES, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, SUESSICAL THE MUSICAL, SUNSET BLVD, SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL, JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT, STARLIGHT EXPRESS, and CATS. Off Broadway: FORBIDDEN BROADWAY (Drama Desk Nomination). Theatrically, Bryan is most proud of originating the role of DARIUS in the N.Y. and L.A (Drama Logue Award) productions, as well as the film adaptation, of Paul Rudnick’s ground breaking comedy JEFFREY.


A civic activist, Bryan champions many causes including Broadway Cares/ Equity Fights AIDS, Habitat For Humanity, Second Harvest Food Bank, the Human Rights Campaign (Equality and Visibility Awards), the SPCA, The Preservation Resource Center, The Point Foundation, N.O. AIDS Task Force, and Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carré.

His next book is a design book for Clarkson Potter entitled “BIG, EASY STYLE” and will be released October 4th.

Bryan (left, back section of picture!) 




The Dame's Review :

"The Big Easy..." is a beautifully written book in addition to being a book with gorgeous photographs of homes in lush details and sophisticated tastes.  Bryan Batt displays his Renaissance man characteristics not only in acting, it seems, but in writing, decorating and presenting himself as an entertaining man-about-town in New Orleans.  This is a book of many surprises, one that you'll be pleased to reference, and have available for friends and family.

I love 1800's period homes.  Having been an interior designer myself, and having owned a few houses in that time period, I know the joys and the challenges they can present.  Mr. Batt has shown them off and led us through those with panache!  It's a real joy to see and read his excitement over the smallest of details that makes a house a home and a room spectacular.

In terms of learning to decorate for oneself, Bryan gives so many practical examples and easy lessons covering such things as:

~  attention to lighting
~  importance and use of paint, which paint co. he uses, and
    some color choices specifically
~  sophisticated small things that enhance
~  how to use a splash of strong color for taste and drama
~  bars that set a mood and sparkle
~  art to bring a home to life

It was particularly heartening to read how much support Bryan gives to clients and readers of his book in the very common area of decorating fright.  Here, I quote him:
"..never make a decision based on fear; one can never be truly stylish without taking a risk or two." 

Regarding our color education and use in our own home design, he urges us to keep our eyes open in nightclubs for colors, in art galleries, museums, books, and when we travel.  In "Big Easy..."  he also shows the gorgeous home of one of his school friend's, a local New Orleans artist, who employs her own artwork and crafts to fill her house with personality and punch. 

 I loved when he wrote:
"...think of this (your powder room, specifically,) as a perfect chance to express yourself and get your ya-yas out!"

So funny, and so true!   He suggests an antique gold enamel paint, a piece of art inspiration, a theme that can set the tone such as; "The Last Emperor" or "The Secret Garden."  I once had a powder room designed around the small mistress eye paintings that were done for noblemen during the Renaissance to carry with them in secret.  These beautiful eyes, peeking out of knot holes of alabaster, exotic woods, agate and the like gave me a jewelled palette from which to decorate that little room for guests.  It was such fun and I called it my "Little Jewelry Box."

With his homebase of New Orleans, his apparently fabulous decorating shop (it has to be spectacular!) called "Hazelnut," with a nod to his beloved mom; and, including the cultural mix of Mardi Gras...Bryan Batt has shared with us his whole heart and gifts in this special book.

It's visually a treat, it's a happy read, it's helpful and it's a reference for interior decorating.  I would recommend it for everyone who loves their home, who wants to gift a loved one or newlywed, or friend; and a decorating professional looking to build her/his reference library.

5 stars

Deborah/TheBookishDame

*Oh, and one more thing;  I would love to share with you Bryan's delicious recipe for "Tequila Mockingbird II"  his signature drink for parties, but you'll have to get his book to find out for yourself.  Yum--mie!  I've enjoyed mine while reading "Big, Easy Style:  Creating Rooms You Love to Live In"   Hope you get a chance to enjoy!   Cheers, New Orleans style!