Sunday, December 10, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Michael Noll

Book Your Stocking: December 10

Every day of December, readers are sharing their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. To support publishers, writers, and local bookstores, all books are linked to their publishers or IndieBound.

Please welcome today's reader, Michael Noll.


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Buckskin Cocaine by Erika T. Wurth. A story collection in which every character is involved one way or another in the Native American film industry. If you know that industry well, you'll obviously love this book. But if your knowledge of Indians in film and television consists of old Westerns, Dances with Wolves, and that one actor from The Red Green Show, then this collection will show you something you've never seen. In each story, a different character speaks in voices that are sharp, funny, angry, sad, and utterly captivating.





Tropic of Kansas by Christopher Brown. A novel about everything awful in today's America but set a couple of decades in the future, when everything has gotten worse but the technology has improved. A young woman from the Upper Midwest is working as a government lawyer and gets sent back home to investigate a rebel group that includes her own, sort of, brother. Together they fight through militias, drone strikes, and environmental wastelands using only their wits, some unexpected combat skills, and an underground technological innovation involving TV static.





Witchtown by Cory Putman Oakes. A YA novel about a teenage girl and her mother living in an America in which witches exist and have been confined/segregated to small, walled-off communities. The two go from town to town, scamming and robbing the residents out of their valuables. But then they arrive at the most famous of the towns, Witchtown, and find that things are not as they appear. It's a cool premise, and Oakes has an incredible talent for quickly setting up intriguing character relationships and can't-put-down plots.




The Dog Man series by Dav Pilkey. If you have kids, then you've likely heard of Pilkey, whose Captain Underpants books have sold a bajillion copies and inspired a not-very-good movie this summer. If you care about interesting characters and plots, that's not why you're buying these books. Instead, you're doing it because reading was really easy for you yet, inexplicably, it isn't for your kids. Or, you've got a first-grader who can read pretty well but not well enough to tackle an actual novel or most of the graphic novels out there. So, you need something easy to read, zany in that mind-numbing scatalogical way of little kids, and with pictures that kids love. Plus, the Dog Man books have cleaned up "girls are gross and dumb" misogyny that was under the surface of the Captain Underpants books. As an adult, will you like these books? Probably not. Will your kids? They'll love them.

Any of the picture books by Don Tate. With picture books, I'm hesitant to recommend one because there are so many and it depends upon your kids' taste. But with Don Tate, you can't go wrong with any of them. They're mostly nonfiction, about interesting individuals from history. Tate has long been known as an incredible illustrator, and now he has begun writing his own books.  Recent titles (written and/or illustrated) include Strong as Sandow: How Eugen Sandow Became the Strongest Man on Earth, Whoosh!: Lonnie Johnson's Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions, Poet: The Remarkable Story of George Moses Horton, and The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch.

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Michael Noll,
used with permission
About today's reader: Michael Noll is the author of The Writer's Field Guide to the Craft of Fiction, due out February 27. He's also the editor of Read to Write Stories and Program Director at the Writers’ League of Texas. His short stories have been published in American Short Fiction, Chattahoochee Review, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Indiana Review, and The New Territory, and been nominated for New Stories from the Midwest. His story, “The Tank Yard” was included in the 2016 Best American Mystery Stories anthology. He lives in Austin, TX, with his family.


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Saturday, December 9, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Ira Gardner

Book Your Stocking: December 9

All December, readers of all stripes will share their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. Note on book links: all titles are linked to their publishers or IndieBound, in order to support writers, publishers, and local bookstores. If you are rural and without bookstores, share this post with your librarian or library's Facebook page.

Please welcome today's reader, Ira Gardner.


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Reading Wish-List
  1. Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language Among the Western Apache Paperback by Kevin Basso
  2. Down and Out in Patagonia, Kamchatka, and Timbuktu: Greg Frazier's Round and Round and Round the World Motorcycle Journey
  3. Jupiter Travels: Four Years Around the World on a Triumph by Ted Simon

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Ira Gardner,
used with permission
About today's reader:

Ira Gardner has been a professional photographer since 1989 and is an avid essayist as well. He's currently a member of the Richmond Artist Collective, and teaches photography and Digital Media Production at Spokane Falls Community College. Mountain Intervals and the Stoddard Lecturese encompass his love for travel and poetic imagery. He lives in Spokane, WA. View a selection of his photography at www.iragardner.com.












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Friday, December 8, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Chelsea Martin

Book Your Stocking: December 8

All December, readers of all stripes will share their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. Note on book links: all titles are linked to their publishers or IndieBound, in order to support writers, publishers, and local bookstores. If you are rural and without bookstores, share this post with your librarian or library's Facebook page.

Please welcome today's reader, Chelsea Martin.


Give-List


Boundless, Jillian Tamaki
Present, Leslie Stein
Literally Show Me A Healthy Person, Darcie Wilder
Cosplayers, Dash Shaw
Person/A, Elizabeth Ellen
The Amputee’s Guide to Sex, Jillian Weise
I, Parrot, Deb Olin Unferth and Elizabeth Haidle
We Are Never Meeting in Real Life, Samantha Irby

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Chelsea Martin,
photo used with permission

About today's reader:

Chelsea Martin is the Spokane-based author of five books, including Caca Dolce: Essays from a Lowbrow Life. Her website is jerkethics.com

















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Thursday, December 7, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Marilynn S. Olson

Book Your Stocking: December 7

All December, readers of all stripes will share their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. Note on book links: all titles are linked to their publishers or IndieBound, in order to support writers, publishers, and local bookstores. If you are rural and without bookstores, share this post with your librarian or library's Facebook page.



Please welcome today's reader, Marilynn S. Olson.

Two Thoughts:


Jefferson's Daughters: Three Sisters, White and Black, in Young America.  (Catherine Kerrison)

Akata Warrior. (Nnedi Okorafor)

The second entry is the (just published) second book in a fantasy series set in Southern Nigeria; the first was Akata Witch.  Many of my students have been waiting for this one because I often teach Okorafor, and it has proved a very fruitful classroom book. 

The first is actually coming out at the end of January, I think.  I've been talking to the author about the education of Jefferson's daughters and grand daughters, and it seems to me that I've stumbled into a really rich new field of information.

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Marilynn S. Olson,
used by permission
About today's reader: Marilynn S. Olson, a children’s and young adult literature specialist, is a professor and director of advanced studies in the English department at Texas State University. She is the author of the book Children's Culture and the Avant-Garde: Painting in Paris 1890-1915.










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Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Julia Drescher

Book Your Stocking: December 6

All December, readers of all stripes will share their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. Note on book links: all titles are linked to their publishers or IndieBound, in order to support writers, publishers, and local bookstores. If you are rural and without bookstores, share this post with your librarian or library's Facebook page.

Please welcome today's reader, Julia Drescher.

List



Black and Blur (Fred Moten) (so far, so fucking good!)
Dark Ecology (Timothy Morton)
Lay Ghost (Nathaniel Mackey)
MyOTHER TONGUE (Rosa Alcala)
Winter (Ali Smith)
The Oblivion Seekers (Isabelle Eberhardt)
The Chandelier (Clarice Lispector)
The Passion According to GH (Clarice Lispector)
Elena Ferrante (re-reading Neopolitan novels and The Lost Daughter-which has one of the greatest last sentences!)
This is the Place: Women Writing About Home (Anthology)
Kith (Divya Victor)
Saidiya Hartman (very much waiting for her _Beautiful Lives, Wayward Experiments_)













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Julia Drescher,
photo used with permission
About today's reader: Julia Drescher lives in Colorado where she co-edits the press Further Other Book Works with the poet C.J. Martin. Her work has appeared most recently in ‘Pider, Entropy, Likestarlings, Aspasiology, and Hotel. Her book of poems, Open Epic, is available from Delete Press. 









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Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Kathleen Callum

Book Your Stocking: December 5

Every day of December, readers of all stripes are sharing their reading wish-lists and/or give-lists. Note on book links: titles are linked to their publishers, or to your nearest bookstore. If you are rural and without bookstores, share this post with your librarian or library's Facebook page.

Please welcome today's reader, Kathleen Callum.


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Reading Wish-List

a.k.a To-Do List


Literature, Science Fiction, Mystery

Barkskins (2016) by Annie Proulx 

The Unquiet Grave: A Novel  (2017) by Sharyn McCrumb 

Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward (2017) 


The Sorrow of Archeology by Russell Martin (2005) 

Emergence by C.J. Cherryh

 


 Food/Garden/Agriculture/Health/Ecology/Climate

Seedfolks (2004) by Paul Fleischman

Growing a Revolution: Bringing Our Soil Back to Life (2018) by David Montgomery

Einstein’s Beets (2017) by Alexander Theroux.

The Hidden Half of Nature: The Microbial Roots of Life and Health (2016) by David Montgomery (reread)

A Sanctuary of Trees
(2012) by Gene Logsdon.

Being Salmon: Being Human (2017) by Martin Lee Mueller

Taste: The Story of Britain Through Its Cooking (2007) by Kate Colquhoun

Kiss the Ground: How the Food You Eat Can Reverse Climate Change, Heal Your Body and Ultimately Save Our World
(2018) by Josh Tickell

Nathaniel's Nutmeg: How One Man's Courage Changed the Course of History
(2005) by Giles Milton


Current Events, History and Other Non-Fiction

We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy  (2017) by Ta-Nehisi Coates

Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza, Fourth Edition 4th Edition
by Gloria Anzaldua.

The Wigwams in My Backyard (2017) Rick Will

The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and Their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow's World by Charles C. Mann

Saving Capitalism for the Many, Not the Few by Robert B. Reich



Métis

So Few on Earth: A Labrador Métis Woman Remembers (2010) by Josie Pennys

The Identities of Marie Rose Delorme Smith: Portrait of a Métis Woman, 1861-1960 (2012) by Doris Jeanne

 Métis and the Medicine Line: Creating a Border and Dividing a People (The David J. Weber Series in the New Borderlands History) (2015) by Michel Hogue

The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region,1650-1815 (Studies in North American Indian History) (1991) by Richard White




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Kathleen Callum,
photo used by permission
About today's reader:

Kathleen Callum operates GEOARCH, Inc., a geological and archeological consulting firm, along with her husband Robert Sloma (who also works in Central Washington as a tribal archeologist). Together, they have a talented teenage musician son who goes to Lewis and Clark High School, live in a 1928 bungalow which they are restoring, and garden on their front lawn.

They first moved to Spokane in 2004 when Kathleen was hired by the U.S.D.A. as an archeologist. Kathleen specializes in Anthropocene landscape change and geoarcheology, eastern Washington history and archeology, the history of the Northwest French Métis cultural contact, ethnobotany, and traditional farming methods. She is one of the volunteer WSU Master Gardeners of Spokane, Spokane County Master Composters/Recyclers, President of Spokane Community Gardens, and an advocate of Food Not Lawns.

She gives public talks about community gardens, growing vegetables, how regenerative agriculture restores local economy and fights climate change, or her own personal story of garden therapy after suffering from a stroke. Recently, Kathleen started facilitating a chapter of the Inland Northwest Food Network’s (INWFN’s) “Food For Thought” book club in Spokane. She often randomly reads whatever catches her eye at Auntie’s, on display at libraries, or at book sales. She re-reads favorite authors like Annie Proulx, Sharon McCrumb, Gene Logsdon, Nevada Barr, and C.J. Cherryh until the books are dog-eared and worn.

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