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Saturday, October 31, 2009

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link and be entered in LLM Giveaway. Deadline is November 4th. I'll leave this open to readers outside of the US and Canada, but instead of shipping a book, I'll email you a gift card. It's too costly for me to ship beyond Canada. Congratulations, Mary Ann at Great Kids Books. Mary Ann, you may choose any title listed during the month of October or you may choose a children's/YA title from the Prize Bucket at Color Online. Thanks for all you do for our children.

Dreaming In Cuban by Cristina Garcia
72 Hours by Bebe Moore Campbell
A Stone In My Hand by Cathryn Clinton
Woman Hollering Creek by Sandra Cisneros
Sugar by Bernice L. McFadden
River , Cross My Heart by Breena Clarke

Commit to visiting 5 blogs and leaving comments. Drop those links & check out these :

Women Unbound Challenge at WU
Writers Against Racism: Mary Ann Rodman at Amy Bowllan's
Apologies To An Apple book tour at readwritepoem

Monday, October 26, 2009

In My Mailbox

Marcia at the Printed Page hosts Mailbox Monday. It's been a long time since I've participated. This week however I received some adult titles I wanted to share and they don't fit the scope of New Crayons. Received some YA, too.

This week in my mailbox:

From Paperback Swap, I got a fantastic hardcover copy of Fledgling by Octavia E. Butler. We already have a copy in our Prize Bucket for Color Online and this was a trade book. Ari would be pleased to know I'm keeping this for my personal collection. The opening scene is bone-chilling. Primal and violent and dark. This book turns so many mores and beliefs on their head than I think I've ever seen in a single novel.

Received a copy of When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women edited by Gail Collins for review. A comprehensive mix of oral history and Collins's keen research, this is the definitive book about five crucial decades of progress, told with the down-to-earth, amusing, and agenda-free tone this beloved New York Times columnist is known for.


Also received Children of Dust by Ali Eteraz for review. I love memoirs and it seems I'm going to continue my current streak with this genre. a spellbinding portrayal of a life that few Americans can imagine. From his schooling in a madrassa in Pakistan to his teenage years as a Muslim American in the Bible Belt, and back to Pakistan to find a pious Muslim wife, this lyrical, penetrating saga from a brilliant new literary voice captures the heart of our universal quest for identity.



Paper Towns by John Green. I received this as part of Pass-it-On challenge I learned about from Edi at Crazy Quilts.
Paper Towns also alerts us to something that is easy to overlook. I think we all understand that we tend to dehumanize our so-called enemies, and so it’s easier to watch out for that. But it’s harder to watch out for the fact that we can also dehumanize the people we admire or love. By imagining them to be perfect, we are not allowing them any emotions that don’t conform to our mental picture of them. As Quentin says:

And so I could not imagine her as a person who could feel fear, who could feel isolated in a room full of people, who could be shy about her record collection because it was too personal to share. Read Ana's full review.

Thanks to author, L.M. Preston, I received a copy of Explorer X-Alpha.
For most kids, a trip to space camp is a trip of a lifetime, for Aadi it was life altering. After receiving a camp immunization needed for travel to Mars, Aadi finds that the immunization is the catalyst of an insidious experiment. Lucky for him, he was engineered to survive, thrive, and dominate. Without realizing he is being trained to conquer worlds, and manipulated under the guise of a camp, he unfolds the plot too late for a change of fate.

Congratulations, Mrs. O Giveaway Winners!

Congratulations to our BES winners!

Kristi
Ladysilver
Joann
Karen
Edi

There's still time to enter at Color Online. Deadline is October 29th. If you entered here and didn't win, enter at CO.

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link and be entered in LLM Giveaway. Deadline is October 28th. I'll leave this open to readers outside of the US and Canada, but instead of shipping a book, I'll email you a gift card. It's too costly for me to ship beyond Canada. On the fourth Saturday of each month, I'll announce a winner. The winner may choose one of the one of the following books:

Dreaming In Cuban by Cristina Garcia
Masterworks of Latin American Short Fiction
Airman by Colfer
Haiku: Seasons of Japanese Poetry edited by Johanna Brownell
Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez
The Disappearance of Irene Dos Santos by Marget Macarenhas
Woman Hollering Creek by Sandra Cisneros
Into The Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
Sugar by Bernice L. McFadden
Beloved by Toni Morrison

Commit to visiting 5 blogs and leaving comments. Drop those links & check out these :
YALSA 2009: absence of color post at Brown Bookshelf
The Problem Novel at The Englishist
I'm interviewed at Tu Publishing for Teen Read Week

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Six Sentence Saturday

I am following Mr. Maurer's, of Coffee for the Brain, lead. The idea is to talk about what I've read for the week regardless of how many books in six sentences. Love this. Thanks, MM.

First up is Liar by Justine Larbalestier, a book I have been waiting for forever and don't you know that when I finally get it, it's the same week I start a new job and get sick. Check out Zetta Elliott's review and you'll understand why I'm so anxious to read this.


Almost done with a Map of Home by Randa Jarrar. It's a coming of age story but this is not targeted to YA. I'm going to list a potential read for my daughter's homeschooling because it covers so many topics and themes: geography, world culture, history and coming of age. There's a fair amount of swearing, farting, hitting and masturbating so this that would likely be a hard sell for the classroom.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Confession Tuesday

Okay, killer headache. Here's the quick and dirty: Started new job on Monday. Commute on the bus is lovely. Someone else deals with the traffic and the cost of riding is very economical. In my first days, I've met a diverse group of people and that's way cool, and I don't work full-time which is great for my family because it means time for the kidlet.

This week is Teen Read Week. The theme is Beyond Reality. Lots of bloggers participating including Stacey Whitman at Tu Publishing who interviewed me. Flattered she asked. Topic: Fantasy and people of color. Please come by and if you don't mind, leave a comment.

Going back to bed now, hoping I'm clear-headed and alert tomorrow. Oh, last but not least, training is intense and all day looooooong. Limited online access so I'll be playing catch-up in the evenings.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link and be entered in LLM Giveaway. Deadline is October 21th. I'll leave this open to readers outside of the US and Canada, but instead of shipping a book, I'll email you a gift card. It's too costly for me to ship beyond Canada. On the fourth Saturday of each month, I'll announce a winner. The winner may choose one of the one of the following books:

Dreaming In Cuban by Cristina Garcia
Masterworks of Latin American Short Fiction
Airman by Colfer
Haiku: Seasons of Japanese Poetry edited by Johanna Brownell
Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez
The Disappearance of Irene Dos Santos by Marget Macarenhas
Woman Hollering Creek by Sandra Cisneros
Into The Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
Sugar by Bernice L. McFadden
Beloved by Toni Morrison

Commit to visiting 5 blogs and leaving comments. Drop those links & check out these :
Poetry at the Storialist
Testing The Ice at Great Kid Books
Nurturing Creativity in Children at Literacy, families and learning
Writing Out of Culture at Pamela Mordecai
Diversity Roll Call: The Problem Novel at The Englishist

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Other Side of Paradise: Out of The Mouths of Babes

The Other Side of Paradise
Staceyann Chin
2009
Scribner

The Other Side of Paradise written by Staceyann Chin is startling in its clarity, fresh in its narration and the writing is as bold as the young poet, writer, lesbian activist is daily in her tweets or one of her performances. TOSoP is about a young girl who refused to be quiet. She came into the world unexpectedly with lungs much bigger than her premature body should have had.

What I love most about The Other Side of Paradise is the writer’s voice, specifically Staceyann the child’s voice. The voice is authentic. You can’t manufacture this. Some would say the child’s voice is audacious, and it is. In a culture where it is trendy to create in-your-face work, The Other Side of Paradise doesn’t have to scream at you to captivate you. Young Staceyann not knowing how dangerous it is to speak her mind honestly makes you cringe and want to hush the child before she says one more thing that earns her a scolding, a smack and rejection. It’s the cruel reality of being innocent and vulnerable that wallops you upside the head.

This memoir plays out like a daring Indi film. The footage looks like it’s unedited but the rendering is so flawless, you know it’s a carefully crafted work of a real writer. While we get Staceyann as-is there is nothing clumsy or awkward here. This work isn’t burdened with analysis nor is it a sanitized, hindsight-laden trope. Instead we come to know Chin through reliving her experiences and digesting choice reflections of what those experiences mean. Staceyann the child suffers abuse, neglect, abandoment and rejection but she doesn’t carry her victimization around like a child’s tattered blanket. She calls it what it is and does what she can rid herself of it so she can get on with becoming the woman she wants to be.

There are many poignant episodes in this memoir. In all of them, I was so vested that often I was having an internal dialogue with Staceyann: Oh, no, Staceyann, no, not this time. Don’t answer. Don’t tell the truth. Be quiet. Instead of pandering, Chin gives us relief when we need it with organic episodes that say even when life is ugly we find some joy. When the young girl discovers she can pleasure herself, I laughed and ached with her. When her aunt scolds her, when she tells Staceyann that her life is her own fault, and it is Staceyann’s responsibility to avoid being hurt by others, I relived the sting of being shamed and the isolation of knowing there is no one you can cry out to, to protect you, and I know many women who figuratively know the desperation of wrapping yourself tightly in a filthy, disgusting sheet. Ms. Chin’s memoir is a testament that while we may been violated, we do not have to remain victims. We can fight back and win.

I knew little about Ms. Chin’s work or her before reading The Other Side of Paradise. What I discovered was a child I did know. I am glad I took the time to listen, to listen to the child who grew, who dared to not be quiet and who later became the woman who was audacious enough to tell her story. Ms. Chin’s memoir is impressive, provocative, brilliant writing. It is an unflinching look at the other side of Paradise.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Pouty, Perfect Lips

Billie smiled at the poor schmuck sitting at my bar. Of course he flushed redder than the shade on her pouty, perfect lips. Damn, her. Even her smile was indecent. If you saw Billie, you’d understand. She took great pleasure knowing how frustrated guys became around her.

In all fairness, Billie is no siren. She’s just your ungodly, curved in-all-the-right-places gal with hair thick as a mare’s mane and legs almost equally as long. When Billie walks into the room, all men instantly revert to prepubescent boys, clumsy and tongue-tied.

I’m the only one immune to her charms. I grew up with Billie when she was my little brother.


Thom host 3WW. This week's words: frustrate, indecent, understand. Not happy with my title. Any suggestions? Read more entries here.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Confession Tuesday

It's Tuesday and I don't want to confess. I was waiting on a call that didn't come. I feel stumped creatively. Don't worry, this isn't going to be a whine fest but I don't have anything funny, informative or even remotely interesting to share.

Ah, a confession: Tonight I don't want to be online. I want to curl up with a good book and indulge in a reading marathon and later I want to carve out some writing time. I'm going to read a few confessions, and then I'm signing off folks. I need some private time to get my mojo back.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link and be entered in LLM Giveaway. Deadline is October 14th. I'll leave this open to readers outside of the US and Canada, but instead of shipping a book, I'll email you a gift card. It's too costly for me to ship beyond Canada. On the fourth Saturday of each month, I'll announce a winner. The winner may choose one of the one of the following books:

Dreaming In Cuban by Cristina Garcia
The Farming of Bones by Edwidge Danticat
Haiku: Seasons of Japanese Poetry edited by Johanna Brownell
Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez
The Disappearance of Irene Dos Santos by Marget Macarenhas
Woman Hollering Creek by Sandra Cisneros
Into The Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
Autobiography of A Face by Lucy Grealy
Sugar by Bernice L. McFadden
Beloved by Toni Morrison

Commit to visiting 5 blogs and leaving comments. Drop those links & check out these :
Tami reflects on the latest Michelle Obama discovery @ Racialicious
Fall Is Great @ Butterfly Pages
For those who get their information...@ ABB
Interview with Lauren Bjorkman at Cynsations
Fiestas and Festivals at La Bloga
A request for response from the publishing industry at Chasing Ray
Teens and Urban fiction at Teen Voices

Dear FTC: You're Invited to Book Blogging 101

Dear FTC: You're Invited to Book Blogging 101
I had no intention to weigh in about the FTC brouhaha, but after reading multiple posts that raise relevant arguments, I thought I owed you our readers, my take. For more information about the requirements read Colleen at Chasing Ray and read Liz’s response at A chair, A Fireplace& A Tea Cozy.

Most of our book reviews are not new releases sent by publishers. Most of the books I receive for review at Color Online come unsolicited, directly from the author. I don't promise a review rather I tell authors I will make an effort to promote the book (see our review policy). I don't promote any publishers or booksellers on our sidebar and consciously chose not to have any tie-in to sales. Read full article here.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Color Online: CORA Diversity Roll Call: Celebrating Bloggers

CORA Diversity Roll Call: Celebrating Bloggers
1)Write a post highlighting one or more bloggers who are extremely different from you in some way. For example, think about blogger(s) who:
a. Identify with another race and/or ethnicity, religion, cultural background, age, etc. from you
b. Live the farthest from you
c. Have entirely different tastes in books from you (but you love their blog anyway)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Confession Tuesday

It's Wednesday and it's earlier than last week, so let's call this progress. With effort and the moons aligned, I'll actually post Confession Tuesday on Tuesday.

My Internet connection was down for carpenters yesterday. After they left we had to put all our furniture and household stuff back into the apartment. Because they would not move any furniture, we had to empty the place. It took three days to toss, break down and store eight years in storage cages (two didn't belong to us but were empty) and my daughter's room. After we got our two main rooms in working order and had shifted some items to our own cage, my guy broke off a piece of the computer connection line (which he eventually got to work but will need replacing). While struggling to pull the wiring under the carpet, he swore like a sailor. Finally he got all the wiring completed. It had been a full day. We still needed to alter the new runner in our entry way and we had to get dinner so we walked in the rain to the hardware store, picked up a pizza and called it a day.

This morning, I can't find the lid to the coffee pot, I'm sore from all the lifting and bending, and I love the open space and sense of order. After days of struggling to throw things out, I'm glad L fought me on letting crap go. I have boxes to unpack still and I've decided I'm going to continue to toss. Our streamlined and uncluttered rooms, have me feeling de-cluttered, too. If only I could, toss the pounds so easily; speaking of pounds, read an informative article about working out after 40. I'm going back to what I loved doing in my twenties, weight training.

I have more to share but I'm going to hold off a bit. Thanks for sending good vibes.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link and be entered in LLM Giveaway. Deadline is October 7th. I'll leave this open to readers outside of the US and Canada, but instead of shipping a book, I'll email you a gift card. It's too costly for me to ship beyond Canada. On the fourth Saturday of each month, I'll announce a winner. Congratulations, Jessie at 58 inches.
Please choose one of the following books:

Dreaming In Cuban by Cristina Garcia
Hungry Woman in Paris by Josefina Lopez
The Disappearance of Irene Dos Santos by Marget Macarenhas
Woman Hollering Creek by Sandra Cisneros
Into The Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
America by Land by Robert Olmstead
Sugar by Bernice L. McFadden
Beloved by Toni Morrison

Commit to visiting 5 blogs and leaving comments. Check out these links:
Hello Japan: A mini-challenge at In Spring it is the Dawn
An Open Letter to Whoopie Goldberg, Wendy Murphy
What Does Rape Look Like? at A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy
Teaching Comics Update at Afrogeek Mom and Dad
Was it something I said? at Worducopia

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Mrs. O Giveaway

Pleased to announce a Mrs. O Giveaway. Thanks to Hatchette Books, I'm giving away 5 copies of Mrs. O: The Face of Fashion Democracy, a beautifully illustrated volume of images and positive commentary about our First Lady. To enter leave your name and addy in the comments. For extra entries:

+1 if you leave a comment why you want the volume
+2 if you are a librarian, teacher or other educator
+3 if you add Color Online or Black-Eyed Susan's to your blogroll
+3 if you add this link to your blog, twitter, Facebook or MySpace page. Leave link.

Original photographs of Michelle Obama's most iconic looks, along with commentary from fashion experts, top off this tactile visual feast. Woven together with sketches and illustration inspired by the first lady, the book reveals the story of a new era of American fashion.

Deadline to enter is October 25th. Winners will be contacted via email.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Poetry, Literary & Other Nerdy Books to Donate

Friends,

I am a packrat, a book-loving packrat. I have dated literary criticism volumes, history and literary volumes, I'm not likely to read but the used bookstore won't take them and the library says they'll recycle them (I was horrified! A library was saying they would toss old volumes of Contemporary Literary Criticism).

I'm going to list a few here. I need to move these but I can't bare the idea of them being trashed. Please write me if you're interested in any of the following:

Understanding the Holocaust Vol 1 UXL
Voices of the Holocuast Vol 1 UXL
Isabel Allende: Twayne's World Authors Series
Margaret Atwood Revisted:
Twayne's World Authors Series
Modern American Literature Vol 1-2 St. James Press
Poetry Criticism Vol 12 Gale Publishing
Contemporary Literary Criticism (variety of volumes) Gale Publishing
Hispanic American: Genealogical Sourcebook
Literary Masterpieces: The Sound and the Fury Vol 6 Gale Publishing
Black Writers: A Selection of Sketches from Contemporary Authors Gale Group
The Valiant Women of The Vietnam War by Karen Zeinert
Poetry for Students Vol 1 Gale Group
Poetry for Students Vol 6 Gale Group
American Writers IV Scribners