A "what if" read for people who have thoughts about volunteering and living in another city for the Jesuit or other diverse domestic service programs. The book centers on the interwoven lives of a few women and how they came to be paid or unpaid workers at a diverse primary school. From different backgrounds, life experiences, ages, and religions, they form a tight bond beginning with loving the students. Refugee and immigrant lives are explained so well readers will truly understand what they go through, and some endure unimaginable hardships yet survive. A story from the BBC alerts one of the retired volunteers, Lydia, to the fact that one teaching assistant has something very personal in her background she would rather not reveal, and keeps the secret. She does not reveal the information to anyone until a gathering in the cafeteria and as a witness in court.
A riveting read yet heartwarming book that might inspire actual volunteer participation for the brave at heart.
Highly recommended for those considering working in a diverse environment and teachers who dearly love children, as well as those who would like to understand more about the lives of refugees.
This blog, #TheNewBookReview, is "new" because it eschews #bookbigotry. It lets readers, reviewers, authors, and publishers expand the exposure of their favorite reviews, FREE. Info for submissions is in the "Send Me Your Fav Book Review" circle icon in the right column below. Find resources to help your career using the mini search engine below. #TheNewBookReview is a multi-award-winning blog including a MastersInEnglish.org recommendation.
Sunday, February 20, 2022
The Bridges We Will Build by Kacie LeCompte Renfro Book Review
Friday, February 18, 2022
Lois W. Stern Reviews Write Right by Joy Lynn Goddard
The final section of Write Right, with its chapters on Perfect Punctuation, Parts of Speech, Effective Editing, might appear a bit simplistic for the seasoned writer, but her final chapter offers something of value to them as well. Techniques from alliteration and allusion to symbolism and understatement, are topics even the most seasoned of authors might incorporate into some of their well crafted works, just to give them a bit of extra punch.
It gives me much pleasure to recommend this book to seasoned authors and aspiring newbies alike.
Saturday, February 12, 2022
Ketak Datta Reviews Aussie Magdalalena's Newest Poetry Book "Compact Bone"
A British lifestyle survey report once pointed out a hair-raising issue of wasting food and dumping of excess food in the garbage bins. This is sheer waste of food which is essential for sustenance. In nature, waste of many resources meets our eye very often. While we are in the times of Anthropocene, we should be wary of wasting our valuable resources like water, oil etc. In the very opening poem, Weed Garden, of this section, “ The Age of Waste”, Magdalena Ball wields her powerful pen,
“A patch of weeds left to grow tall”,
Which she decides to annul by walking next morning till …
…” I’ve left the farm
lost my body
with all its false softness
broken to sinuous fibre
too tough to digest.”
Losing the farm to destructive weeds is tantamount to losing a body to the rupture of “sinuous fibres”. in poem after poem of this section, poet Magdalena Ball is warning the civilization to be careful about the threat of extinction it is going to face, with gradual depletion of all its resources:
“Her name is Mud
last of her kind……
Her name
Is the Sixth Mass
Extinction
Glaciers, forest, buildings,
Even humanity is touching low, as civilization is inching towards its extinction, when existence itself is threatened:
“Earth of course is
saturation blue
periwinkle in the morning
sumptuous even when
melting
under the hot weight of
humanity
bearing down.” ("Is Blue an Earth Tone?”)
… “because my feet failed
beneath all that bluster
The poems in this section are fraught with covert meanings and overt explanations:
“Every day is another chance
to die of kindness
the infinite regression of
immortality.” ("Tomorrow’s Box is Quantum”)
Poems like "Shadow Genome” and “Transmission” explore the notion of being ‘transmitted’ into a different form, ‘second life, second soul’ may be. All these ideas are either the influence of Hindu religion or the Buddhist concept of transmogrifying into another soul in another birth.
In the third section, “Chronon”, Ball explores many aspects of time, both as an indivisible unit, and against the hypothetical but still true statement that Time is not continuous. If such continuity of Time is questioned then, Eliot’s tall claim that “Time present and Time Past is contained in Time Future.” A length of Time is frozen in the matrix, it seems. Ball catches Time in all its varied facets and spectra:
“Nothing is lost, not even the moment
Shattered into light pulses, entangled
In the mother tongue, in the morning
leaves a taste on the lips, sharp
breaks through like the crack of a whip
reminds you that time is a construct
you write every minute with breath. [Eastern Whip Bird]
Magdalena Ball might have been influenced by Jorge Luis Borges’s well-renowned essay, “A New Refutation of Time” (Labyrinths), where Borges says, “ I have accumulated transcriptions from the apologists of idealism, I have abounded in their canonical passages, I have been reiterative and explicit, I have censured Schopenhauer[not without ingratitude], so that my reader may begin to penetrate into this unstable world of the mind. A world of evanescent impressions: a world without matter or spirit, neither objective nor subjective; a world without the ideal architecture of space; a world made of time, of the absolute uniform time of the Principia; a tireless labyrinth, a chaos, a dream.”[256]
The last section of this volume, “The River will Wash Us All Down” is both interesting and mindboggling. The poems of this section highlight a desire of the poet to go with the flow yet follow her own course, paving a way for unique forms of understanding. For example, in “ If I could open a space”, she declares of breaking ‘every boundary’, ‘dissolving…every boundary’, taking ‘every burden on my (her) tiny back’ and forgiving ‘ even myself(herself), every ragged mistake/to open this space.’ The Density of Compact Bone is a rare collection of poems to be treasured by poetry-lovers.
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Monday, February 7, 2022
My Octopus Teacher Film 10 Discussion Questions
My Octopus Teacher Film
10 Discussion Questions
I loved the film, My Octopus Teacher. My daughter who has never liked cephalopods so much I could barely mention the title to her didn't watch it. She doesn't know what she is missing, in my opinion. Although there is a lengthy discussion guide online, I wrote ten discussion questions to encourage people to talk about the movie. The site's critical consensus reads: "A heartwarming look at the way a meaningful bond can transcend just about any barrier, this documentary will leave you asking your friends to come and see My Octopus Teacher with you." Living in a pandemic, that left me to watch it alone as no one in my so-called bubble wanted to watch (or discuss) the movie. So, that leaves me to write a blog post. Having watched it months ago, I still feel the impact of what I learned.
2. Did you connect with the protagonist,
the octopus? Did the protagonist have a name? Did she have a memory?
3. What portion of the life of the
octopus did Foster record? What is the usual life expectancy of a cephalopod? How
did you feel when he did not intervene or help at critical moments, like when
the shark attacked or she gave birth?
4. Do you think this movie was part of why
the UK declared some octopuses, crabs, and lobsters as sentient beings in 2001?
5. What is the range of temperatures in a
kelp forest? Why? Describe the self-discipline needed to form a relationship
with the octopus and record the information.
6. How is climate change affecting kelp
seaweed forests? How do kelp forests help climate stability?
7. Why do you think Foster said, “What
she taught me is to feel that you are part of this place. Not a visitor. And
that’s a huge difference.”
8. How did the story show love,
friendship, connection, and hope? Do you think it was a love story?
9. How does cold water stimulate brain
activity? How long did Foster and the filmmakers have to hold their breath?
1 What
is living science, according to the Sea Change Project?
Have you
had a “teacher” in nature? Tell about your experience.
If you have not seen the film, I hope to encourage you to do so. Here is a trailer that might help.
Saturday, February 5, 2022
Bob Freeman Introduces His H2LiftShips Sci-Fi Series
www.amazon.com/dp/B08WHN4PN6 and
ISBNs: 9781644562376 and
9781644563076
Synopsis:
The premise of the stories is to build an Anti-dystopian commerce-based world using the tools already available on this planet and to answer the question, "How do the exhaust plumes of those fantasy ships do nothing downwind from the blast?"
Our spaceships are not rockets, which have huge emission issues. but use a light, explosive gas to move out of Earth's gravity field, wrapped in a colorful balloon shell.
To keep it simple, there are no aliens, monsters, blasters, exploding computers or half-dressed humans. We just have regular sentients making a living in our heliosphere around Sol.
Driven by commerce, sentients bring their cultures, assumptions, and attitudes to the wider heliosphere.
We follow our main characters as they make their way across the heliosphere on the H2LiftShip, the LunaCola. They are:
Graciela Lourdes, female, Homo sapiens
Tangsapor Kewellan Candrey, male, Pongo pygmaeus
Jack San Freedog Jr., male, Canine familiaris
Octopus, male, Octopus sp.
And a host of sentients they meet along the way: Family, pirates, merchants, and the Navy.
Bob Freeman graduated from Humboldt State Univ, California after flunking out of UCLA because he spent too much time in Yosemite. He continued the education scheme by taking four years to complete a two-year Master program studying Anaerobic bacteria digesting Lignin. That effort took so long because he spent too much time in the Trinity Alps.
Forced to work for a living, the author spent eighteen years in the Imperial Valley, as a Public Health Microbiologist/Lab Director, with emphasis on border Tuberculosis and all the other nasties that seem to interact with humans, bats, and dogs (We're talking Rabies).
Freeman also developed a Laboratory Information System software for Public Health Labs, still in use today and wrote innumerable laboratory/software manuals and more recently he is applying much of that experience to writing Science Fiction.
Learn more about him at his website,
linkedin.com/in/freemanbobFriday, January 28, 2022
Reviewer Jack Evans Weighs in on Joy Lynn Goddard's Contemporary Women's Fiction
The Quinte area has enjoyed a generous share of talented and successful writers, both fiction and non-fiction. A name that should be added to that growing list is Joy Lynn Goddard, a Picton-raised girl, who has been making a success with her books in partnership with her husband, Dan Pike. Their latest book, now available, is called “The Keepers,” set in a fictional winery and tourist accommodation operation in Prince Edward County.
Goddard thoroughly paints a cast of characters involved in a gripping story which includes a brutal murder, marital stress and breakup, a troubled teenage boy as a result, illicit drugs and wild beach parties, troubles with neighbours and budding new romances.
Richard, a successful writer, finds he is drying up and abandons his estranged wife to recover in the quietude of a summer let house at the winery. He soon gets involved with single mom Beth, the do-it-yourself and competent owner and her family and neighbours.
Alexandre, Beth’s son, is a diamond in the rough teenager seemingly bent on a troubled life, getting involved with irresponsible friends and wild partyers. When a troublesome neighbour is found murdered in a shed at the winery, Beth quickly becomes the prime suspect and Richard pitches in to help clear her.
Lots of tense moments in this gripping story, with a suitably happy ending, and a recognition of the real problems some people have to face, often alone. This is a book for Adult Fiction fans. Exciting, enjoyable and beautifully portrayed.
More About the Reviewer
Jack Evans is freelance writer and reviewer.
More About the Author
Joy Lynn Goddard teamed up with her husband, Daniel Pike, to write contemporary adult fiction. Both their novels, Moonshadow and The Keepers, have global appeal and won Canada Book Awards. Besides novels, they wrote Buyers, Liars, Sellers and Yellers, a collection of humorous short stories about the real estate industry. Although she is well known for her young adult and junior fiction—starting with the award-winning Daredevils and including Hello, my name is Emily, Charlie's Song, Jazz, When Pigs Fly, and Mrs. Maloney's Garden—her adult novels are attracting wide-ranging attention, each crisscrossing romance, mystery, and suspense genres.
Joy and Dan divide their time between Guelph and Belleville, Ontario, where they spend time with a growing family when not working on their next book.Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Books, Book Reviews and Hens' Teeth
Let’s not have that happen to our books posted here on TheNewBookReview blog.
We all want those FREE Amazon posted reviews, so let's make it easy for the reviewer. Here’s how:
Be ready to select a small section of your book listed here on The Book Review blog - perhaps 25 to 50 pages - just to give the reviewer its flavor. And potential reviewers, don’t be afraid to ask.
I have spent the last few weeks updating my Tales2Inspire books, to make it as easy as pie for potential reviewers to write those reviews. But you can develop some of these same features and have them ready to e-mail to potential reviewers, even if they’re not printed in your book.
For example, I’ve included:
- A brief synopsis of each short story on the Contents pages at the front of each of my Tales2Inspire books. (You can write synopses for chapters or book sections of your book instead.)
- Thoughtful Book Club Discussion questions, at the end of each Tales2Inspire book, targeting the specific stories, so readers can pick and choose those of particular interest to them. (You can write some thought provoking questions now to e-mail to any reviewer from our list who contacts you .)
- Some really great hints for helping your potential reviewers write reviews, without breaking a sweat, (while showing them how to do a bit of self-promotion along the way.) Click here to check them out.
- And don’t forget, there are some rewards just waiting for each reviewer, to heighten your visibility. Click here to see how we honor our reviewers.
It’s a New Year.
Go here to select the genre of your choice, choose a title of interest to you from our treasured book listings, contact that author for a free book, and do your stuff.
And here’s why:
No Hen’s Teeth for us!
As caring, responsible authors, let's each do a little bit to help a fellow author.
Your NewBookReview Coordinator,
Lois W. Stern