Sunday, January 15, 2012

Jacob Wheeler Guest Post + Giveaway

Jacob Wheeler Guest Post + Giveaway

Jacob Wheeler is Booksnob's Minnesota Author in the Spotlight for January.  His guest post reveals some of the background and inspiration for writing his book Between Light and Shadow. 

Guest Post.
In 2005, while improving my Spanish at a language school in Quetzaltenango, in Guatemala’s western highlands, I found myself falling head over heels in love with that country, its mountains and lakes, its people, their languages and indigenous cultures. The writer, and activist, in me felt drawn in too by Guatemala’s narrative — that of a tragic and bloody modern history, and complicated relationship with my home, the United States.
I wanted to contribute to that story. As I was working toward a Master’s degree in Creative Nonfiction Writing through Goucher College in Baltimore, I wanted to write about Guatemala in the context of its relationship with El Norte. I thought seriously about documenting overland immigration stories — the daring and painful journeys across Mexico to sneak into the United States to work illegally. But that story was already being told.
It so happened that by the middle of last decade, international adoption from Guatemala had exploded. More than 4,000 children per year were heading to baby cribs in America — 1 percent of all children born in Guatemala in 2007 — and, as I write in my book Between Light and Shadow: A Guatemalan Girl’s Journey through Adoption, which the University of Nebraska Press published on April 1, nearly every flight leaving Guatemala City for the United States carried a joyous family with their new adoptee in tow.
Why Guatemala, and not China, Korea or former Soviet countries? Guatemala’s “notary” adoption system was unique, in that it was largely privatized, free of governmental bureaucracy, and facilitated by attorneys in the capital who took steps to ease the adoption process for American parents. The infusion of cash in the system meant shorter waits, and better care during the interim. In short, Guatemala’s adoption system was faster, more efficient, and more tailor-made than anywhere else to the needs and desires of American families.
But that process also birthed allegations of baby buying, coercion of birth mothers, even baby theft. UNICEF, some nonprofits in Guatemala, and certain players within the Guatemalan aristocracy, dragged the issue out of the crib and into the international spotlight. Before it ground to a halt in 2008, foreign adoption became one of the most heated topics of debate within that country, and one that prompted a strong opinion from just about everyone.
All this dizzying political drama, and my desire to write a book that captured people’s lives in both the United States and Guatemala — two threads woven together into one colorful huipil, or traditional Mayan dress — birthed Between Light and Shadow.
When I set out to write a book on “the journey” of Guatemalan adoption, I hoped to tell the story from both ends. I wanted to capture the words of the poor, desperate birth mother who relinquishes her child, as well as those of the American family that embraces that same boy or girl and welcomes him or her into their home, opening up a whole new world of opportunity: airplane trips, iPods, high school proms, even a college education — unfathomable to anyone wandering the dirt paths of an impoverished Guatemalan village — but also identity crises, anger and longing for their roots. In the spirit of the great odyssey, I also wanted to retell the events, both tragic and beautiful in their own right, of how these children lose a mother, a family, a home, everything they have known, and then how the doors of fortune miraculously open the day the child is whisked off to the United States.
Little did I know when I began canvassing Midwestern families who had adopted from Guatemala that I would get to accompany a teenage girl and her adoptive mother on a cataclysmic reunion in February 2006 with the woman who had relinquished her as a mature seven year old. Ellie’s return to Guatemala, equal parts beautiful and tragic, and the way she intimately bonded with her biological brothers — despite language, cultural and national barriers — taught me so much about the unbreakable bond of family.
Writing the chapter about her reunion seemed almost too weighty an undertaking, and yet I felt that Ellie’s joyous experience in lavish Antigua and humbling episode in Guatemala’s desolate southern coast could offer so much to the adoption community, and to literature about international adoption.
What do I hope that adoptees, birth families and adoptive parents take away from this book? Each of you will relate to elements of this story in your own separate way. But what I learned was that this particular adoptee, an interloper between two distinct worlds — past and present, poor and rich, familial and acquired — has something to teach us all about our own humanity.
To enter to win a copy of Between Light and Shadow click the link:  Between Light and Shadow contest
Jacob Wheeler
• Editor/Videographer,
TheUpTake.org
• Glen Arbor Sun, founding editor & publisher, www.GlenArbor.com
• Author, "Between Light and Shadow: A Guatemalan Girl's Journey through Adoption" 
(www.betweenlightandshadow.com)

Thanks Jacob!

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

Paris is the city of love and lights and on the fateful day of July 16, 1942, it became a city of unspeakable horrors.  On July 16th, 1942, Jewish families were forcibly removed from their home by the French police.  The police came for Sarah's family in the middle of the night and Sarah made a decision that would affect generations. She locked her little brother in a cupboard in their bedroom and promised to release him when she got home.  The Jewish families were brought to the Velerdrome d'Hiver, to await transportation to a nearby camp and then many continued to Auschwitz. Sarah was not going home.

Fast forward to 2002, the 60th commemeration of the Jewish roundup.  Julia is assigned to write a news article about the roundup that most French people would rather forget.  As Julia begins investigating the past, she discovers a story that will change her life.  Sarah's story.

In this amazing duel storyline, every other chapter switches narrators from Sarah to Julia.  Half way through the book Sarah's narration ends as Julia tries to solve the mystery of what happened to Sarah.  Julia becomes consumed by Sarah's story and unraveling her husband's family secrets.

Sarah's Key is a compelling historical drama that had me riveted from the first page.  I was also consumed by Sarah's story and was hopeful for a positive outcome.  The personal tragedies that people suffer and overcome are a testament to the resilience of humanity.  Sarah's Key is haunting, compelling, emotional and mesmerizing.  I couldn't tear my eyes or my heart away from this remarkable novel.  Make sure you have a handful of tissue for the ending. 

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Little Princes by Conor Grennan

Little Princes.  One Man's Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal  By Conor Grennan

Little Princes is the name of the orphanage in Nepal where Conor Grennan volunteered in 2004.  Nepal was in the midst of a 10 year long civil war when Conor arrived.  Conor's intention was to stay three months and then spend a year traveling around the world.  The children and the people he met in Nepal changed his life in ways he did not expect and when he left to fulfill his lifelong dream of traveling he vowed to return to the children in a year.  He kept his promise but  Conor was out of money and the war was coming to a dramatic and dangerous conclusion.  Conor flew home to New Jersey but left his heart in Nepal.

Before Grennan returned home he met seven children whom were abandoned by a notorious child trafficker.  They were scared, starving and deprived of human touch and emotion.  All of the children were from the remote village of Humla, located in the mountains in the northeast corner of Nepal.  This part of the country was greatly affected by the civil war and many children were conscripted in the Maoist army.  Desperate parents paid people to bring their children to safety, hoping they would have a better life and an education in Kathmandu.  What the parents didn't know was that their children were being forced to beg, lived in horrible conditions, were starved, beaten, and sometimes sold into slavery. 

Conor arranged for an orphanage to take the seven children but then the war became dangerous and the people from the orphanage couldn't get the children.  They were too late, the children had disappeared.  Conor was very distressed by this news and with his friend Farid, vowed to find these children and set up a permanent home for them.  Thus Grennan begins his nonprofit organization called Next Generation Nepal.  It's mission is to set up a home for trafficked children and try to return them to their parents.

Little Princes had me smiling from the very first page.  I was laughing by page eight when Brennan talks about toilets.  If you have ever traveled you will understand that the toilets of the United States "are the Bentleys of toilets, at the cutting edge of toilet technology and comfort" while the rest of the world's toilet system is quite inadequate.  I know exactly what he means and could definitely relate to being in a country that lacked toilets or knowledge of how the sanitary system should work. Hilarious!

Little Princes is about kids, lots of them, in need of love and encouragement.  Grennan takes the sad and sometimes difficult subject of child trafficking and child slavery and paints a picture of hope for everyone. I laughed and cried and couldn't put the book down.  Little Princes is a journey into the cultural villages and rural life in Nepal where wild monkeys hang on the power lines and cut off your internet connection.  It is where the Buddhist culture meets the Hindu culture and prayer flags fly in the wind. The Nepalese tend to have the same food for dinner every night and buses never come to a complete stop.  In short, Little Princes is a glimpse into another country far away from home and into the complex childhood of children stolen from their parents. 


Little Princes made me smile.

I am an action reader and so I am going to make a small donation to Grennan's nonprofit:
Next Generation Nepal.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Tortured by Caragh O'Brien

Tortured by Caragh O'Brien

Tortured is a bridge story in the Birthmarked series.  It falls between Birthmarked and Prized and explains what happened to Leon.  Do not read this book first as it will spoil the ending of Birthmarked. 
This story comes in Ebook format only and its FREE.

Tortured is told from the point of view of Leon and it details his escape and his determination to find Gaia in the wasteland.  It also explains some of Leon's family dynamics and the torture he suffered under the direction of his father.

Tortured is short at 16 pages but if you are a fan of the series it is an entertaining quick read to keep you involved in the story.  I wish more authors would do this.  Sometimes it is nice to read the story told by a different narrator with a different perspective.

Tortured will forever hold the distinction of being the first ebook I have ever read.  It was a fun way to introduce myself to the world of digital books.  Did I mention that it's free?

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Between Light and Shadow Contest

Contest:  Between Light and Shadow. A Guatemalan Girl's Journey Through Adoption by Jacob Wheeler

January's Hometown Track, Minnesota Author in the Spotlight, Jacob Wheeler is giving away one copy of his nonfiction book to a Booksnob follower who lives in the United States or Canada.

Here is the synopsis from Goodreads:
“An adoption professional once told me, ‘At its best, there is no adoption system as good as Guatemala’s. At its worst, there is none worse.’”—from the foreword by Kevin Kreutner

In Between Light and Shadow veteran journalist Jacob Wheeler puts a human face on the Guatemalan adoption industry, which has exploited, embraced, and sincerely sought to improve the lives of the Central American nation’s poorest children. Fourteen-year-old Ellie, abandoned at age seven and adopted by a middle-class family from Michigan, is at the center of this story. Wheeler re-creates the painful circumstances of Ellie’s abandonment, her adoption and Americanization, her search for her birth mother, and her joyous and haunting return to Guatemala, where she finds her teenage brothers—unleashing a bond that transcends language and national borders.

Between Light and Shadow Contest Rules:
Fill out the form
Leave a comment
Must be a Booksnob follower
U.S./Canada only (publisher rules)
Contest Ends 1/31 at midnight.
Good Luck!!!
 


Friday, January 6, 2012

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

A satisfying conclusion to The Hunger Games Trilogy, Mockingjay takes the reader on a tour of duty in the war between the Thirteen districts and the Capitol.  Katniss becomes the face of the Revolution as she tries to reconcile the evils of war on the people she loves.  Katniss inevitably becomes a pawn in a lethal battle of wills between two giant forces and her personal consequences are devastating. 

Mockingjay is full of surprises, twists and turns that leave the reader shocked and surprised.  I think this is what I like best about The Hunger Games Trilogy is that the storyline of each book leads me on a nail biting adventure I wasn't expecting.  I loved the ending of Mockgingjay and that the author kept the reader guessing until the very end.  There is no way you could predict the ending. 

This is the only trilogy I read in 2011.  I read frantically the last week of the year to complete Mockingjay before 2011 ran out.  If you haven't started this series yet, I would say it is time to jump on the bandwagon. 

Another thing I love about The Hunger Games Trilogy is that is a multi-generational series of books that appeal to a wide variety of people.  My mom and my son have read all three books as well as countless nieces, nephews, teaching colleagues and my book club.  Now the movie versions are beginning in March of 2012 and I will be lined up to see them with my son on opening night.  Forget Twilight, these books are Hot, burning hot, like Katniss, The Girl on Fire!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Reading and Writing goals for 2012

Reading and Writing goals for 2012

This year I have decided to branch out and try something new.  My New Year's resolution is to join a writing group and to write at least one page a day in the novel I have begun.  I would like to blog everyday but that seems impossible with my teaching schedule, my mommy schedule, not to mention my wifely responsibilities.  Life is impossibly busy around here so I intend to post at least 15 times a month.

My reading goals include reading 76 books in 2012.  I have joined 3 reading challenges this year and even created one of my own.  I am looking forward to a great adventure in reading this year.

1.   I plan to read 12 Pulitzer Prize winning books for the Pulitzer Prize challenge that I created.  This is considered the Gold Medal level.  It has always been a goal of mine to read all of the Pulitzer Prize winners in the novel category and so this year I have decided to tackle it.  I hope some of you will join me on this challenge.

2.  I am joining the War Through the Generations challenge on World War One, The Great War.  I plan to read at the wade level which is 4-10 books.  Incidentally my grandma was born on Armistice Day in 1918. 

3.  I decided to try the What's In a Name 5 Challenge.  This one is going to be fun.  You have to try and read according to a category and the name of a book.  A creative challenge I am looking forward to.  I almost have a book done for this challenge already. 

4.  The last reading challenge I am doing is Where Are You Reading? challenge where you try a read a book that takes place in every state in the United States.  I don't really plan to change my reading habits for this but plan to track the places I read about on the google map.  I really read a lot of World Literature so it will be interesting to see the places I visited in my books. 

If you are interested in joining any of these challenges, the buttons in my sidebar link to the hosting website. 

What are your reading and writing goals?  What interesting challenges are you tackling?

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Prized Contest Winners

Prized by Caragh O'Brien contest winners!

I am happy to announce the three winners of a hardcover copy of Hometown Track's Minnesota Author in the Spotlight, Caragh O'Brien's new young adult novel, Prized.

1.  Melora from West Virginia
2.  Jessica from Minnesota (http://jessicagriffith.com/)
3.  Carol from Pennslyvania

All of you have been e-mailed and the books should be mailed out shortly.

Congratulations Everyone and thanks for being a loyal Booksnob follower.

If you didn't win, you can order a copy of Caragh's book from Amazon.  It would make an excellent gift for the teenager in your life.   You can check out Caragh's website at http://www.caraghobrien.com
 

Monday, January 2, 2012

Best 11 books of 2011

The Best 11 Books of 2011

I am proud to say I read 75 books in 2011.  It was an eclectic mix of Young Adult, Historical Fiction, Literature, World Lit, Nonfiction, Memoir and more.  I love to read and enjoy reading across different genres.  I belong to three different book clubs, read and promote local authors, and enjoy reading from a list.  My bookshelves are currently at capacity and I just got an ereader to fill.  So choosing only 11 books to highlight for 2011 was difficult.  The following books I read in 2011, they were not necessarily published in 2011.  Each book was reviewed by me in 2011 and each book cover has a link so you can connect and purchase it off Amazon if you wish.  They are in no particular order.

1.  The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins.   These three books occupied my mind and brought me heart stopping entertainment.  I couldn't stop reading them.  I read at stoplights, in the copy room, the bathroom, and everywhere in between.  My 13 year old son has deemed them his favorites and we are both eagerly awaiting the first movie in March 2012.


2.  The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.  This is an amazing book about the cells of a woman named Henrietta Lacks.  All of us owe a huge debt to this woman who, unbeknownst to her, is responsible for amazing medical advances.  I seriously learned a lot from this book and recommend it often. 

3.  Let The Great World Spin by Colum McCann.  I read this book while on my trip in New York City.  It is about the man who walked between the two towers on a tightrope and about New York and its people, attitudes, neighborhoods and the tragedy of 9/11.  Words cannot describe how good this book is.

4.  Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys.  This story has lived on in my mind.  Sepetys got me to think about a part of World War II that I didn't know about. The Baltic States, of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, were in the middle of two evil giants (USSR and Germany) trying to conquer the innocent people there.  So powerful, moving and utterly beautiful.


5. The Blue Notebook by James A. Levine.  I read this book aloud to one of my ninth grade World Studies classes and it changed my class, from wild and crazy to a group that wanted me to read the whole hour.  This book is about a young girl sold by her father in India into sexual slavery.  It is really realistic of what is happening in India today and I highly recommend it.  We need to help these young girls escape and we must educate ourselves to help them.  This is an important story that everyone should read.

6. Roots by Alex Haley.  I think this should be required reading for every American citizen.  Roots chronicles the journey of Kunta Kinte from free man to captured slave.  Alex Haley researched his family tree and traces his roots through the stories of the people found with the pages of this African American saga.  It is about 900 pages and I spent some of my summer reading it.  It is well worth your time and energy.  Don't forget about the movie either!


7. Crazy by Han Nolan.  This is probably one of the most unique, creative books I read all year.  It is told by 5 different voices inside the head of one young man who believes he is crazy.  The reader also has a voice in the drama.  What more can I say?  It is an awesome book and you need to put in on your radar for a future read.

8. Born Under a Million Shadows by Andrea Busfield.  This book is told from the point of view of a child in Afghanistan after 9/11.  I liked the uniqueness of the story and the fact that it explores many different points of view.  Afghanistan is a complicated place with a complicated history and Busfield incorporates an understanding of the country I didn't have before I read the book.

9. Sugar Changed the World: A story of Magic, Spice, Slavery, Freedom and Science by Marc Aronson.  Another great book that taught me about the power sugar held on the world and how it is really responsible for the massive need for African slaves.  96% of slaves were needed to produce sugar for the world.  Very interesting, informative and entertaining.  I love it when a book teaches me something and this book taught me a lot.

10. The Middle Passage: White Ships/Black Cargo by Tom Feeling.  It took the author 20 years to create the story board and artwork for this amazing book.  It is wordless but speaks volumes.  Utterly Powerful!

11. Reservation Blues by Sherman Alexie.  Alexie is a great writer and if you haven't read any of his books, Reservation Blues is a good place to start.  The story is gritty, full of the blues, music, Native American mysticism, and life.  It is will make you want to sing, cry, laugh and read all of Alexie's books. 


There you have it, the top 11 of 2011. What are the best books you read in 2011? Have you read any of the books on my list?
Have a great 2012!

Sunday, January 1, 2012

January-Hometown Track Author in the Spotlight

January-Hometown Track Author in the Spotlight

Happy New Year!!
Happy January!

This month I am featuring a very interesting author, whom I met at the Minnesota Book Fair.  His name is Jacob Wheeler and he wrote an investigative, special interest book on the adoption process in Guatemala.  Do you know anyone who has adopted kids from Guatemala??  I do and I think this book will prove to be valuable for anyone interested in international adoption and world wide issues.

Jacob's book is:  Between Light and Shadow.  A Guatemalan Girl's Journey Through Adoption.
Here is the synopsis from Goodreads:


Between Light and Shadow: A 
Guatemalan Girl's Journey through Adoption
“An adoption professional once told me, ‘At its best, there is no adoption system as good as Guatemala’s. At its worst, there is none worse.’”—from the foreword by Kevin Kreutner

In Between Light and Shadow veteran journalist Jacob Wheeler puts a human face on the Guatemalan adoption industry, which has exploited, embraced, and sincerely sought to improve the lives of the Central American nation’s poorest children. Fourteen-year-old Ellie, abandoned at age seven and adopted by a middle-class family from Michigan, is at the center of this story. Wheeler re-creates the painful circumstances of Ellie’s abandonment, her adoption and Americanization, her search for her birth mother, and her joyous and haunting return to Guatemala, where she finds her teenage brothers—unleashing a bond that transcends language and national borders. 


In January you can expect a book review of Between Light and Shadow, an author interview, a guest post and a contest.

I hope you have a great start to the New Year.
Looking forward to reading Great books this year!