Guilty Pleasure Reading …. What’s Yours? You know you have one! (W/giveaway)

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You know the books… the ones you are drawn to but even you are not always exactly sure why.  It may be a long-term addiction… or it could be fairly new… but either a genre, a topic, or certain type of book draws you to it time and again.

 

We may not even care to admit that we like to read them.  In fact… we may overreact if caught reading them or if someone speaks against them…

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Relax.  Sheila says relax.  😉  I have them too.  Mine fall under the category of books that may be defined as dorky…. but I really have found that I like reading about companies…. corporations…  and the people behind them.  I mean I loved the move Social Network (about Facebook).  And I loved reading about Steve Jobs, The Makers of the game Doom, Straight Flush (about the college kids who brought the online poker industry to an all time high, and most recently Creativity Inc about the success of Pixar.  

I think I am drawn to the creative thinking process.  I am so amazed at the brilliant people who come up with things like the IPOD, creating video games, developing winning strategies.  I guess what they all have in common is success.  And if I am honest… I am drawn to it.

 

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On the darker side… I also like to read the occasional true crime.

What does that say about me?  I am not sure I want to know….

What is your guilty pleasure read?  Craft books, how to books, vampires, dystopian, harlequin romances, books about animals…..  Oh my!  Share 🙂

 

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For fun…. (I like fun!) leave a comment with your answer and I will enter you into a giveaway for a $15 Amazon gift card to purchase one of your guilty pleasure books of your choice.  I will email the winner the gift card on Friday of this week.

I can not wait to hear what your guilty pleasure reads are 🙂

 

 

Morning Meanderings…Books, Sun, BEA, and Sunday!

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Happy Sunday!  It looks like it will be a BEAUTIFUL day here in central Minnesota.  Oh…. did I inadvertently mention BEA?

 

I know… I know… I have used this before for the Book Expo Of America (BEA) but… it’s “punny”.  I have too. 😉

The book expo will put me in New York a week from Tuesday and I am super excited!  This will be my 5th year attending.  It is always exciting to meet up with some of the other book bloggers, authors, and publishing houses.  As usual I feel utterly disorganized.. I have not even started planning out my week…

I will talk more about the Expo as the week goes on…

In bookish news… here is what entered my home this week:

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The Girls At The Kingfisher Club by Genevieve Valentine

Shovel Ready by Adam Sternbergh

Think Like A Freak by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner

The Secret Hum Of A Daisy by Tracy Holczer

Those Who Wish Me Dead by Michael Koryta

Season Of The Dragon Fly by Sarah Creech (2 copies)

Don’t Try To Find Me by Holly Brown

 

This is two weeks worth of books as last weekend we were at College Sons graduation.  Looks like I have some good reading ahead… and quite possible in the sun this afternoon!

What are you doing with your Sunday?  Any books today?

 

Weekend Cooking – Literacy and Food

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The bookies Book Club read and review Moloka’i by Alan Brennert this past week.  ,One of things I love about reading for book club is the opportunity to make something I probably never would have tried.  Miloka’i based in the late 1800’s Hawaii.  I made two things for this review, Sweet Potato Casserole and Poi.

For this weeks Weekend Cooking I will post both recipes.

 

Sweet Potato Casserole

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4-5 large sweet potatoes halved

4-5 bananas peeled and sliced into 1/2 inch slices

16 oz. crushed pineapple in own juice

1 cup light brown sugar

1 tsp cinnamon

1 Tablespoon cold butter

2 tsp. salt

1 cup pineapple juice (saved off the crushed pineapple)

1 tsp. Lemon Juice

2 Tablespoons honey

 

Heat over to 350 degrees.  lightly butter bottom of a 9 x 13 pan.  Stir together brown sugar and cinnamon and set aside.

Place the potatoes into a pan of water that covers the potatoes and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat to simmer and cook 15 to 20 minutes until potatoes are tender.  Drain and let steam dry until you are able to touch, then peal the skin off the potatoes, rough chop and place in the 9 x 13 pan. 

Dot with the cold butter over the potatoes. 

Sprinkle the salt over the potatoes.

Arrange the bananas over the potatoes.

Sprinkle evenly with the brown sugar and cinnamon combo.

Top with crushed pineapple.

Whisk together the pineapple juice, lemon juice, and honey until honey is dissolved.  Pour over the top of casserole.

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Cook at 350 degrees for about 40 minutes.

 

*This was pretty tasty.  The banana’s seemed odd but actually complimented the dish.  I thought it would be extremely sweet but it was not over the top.  I would make this again for a unique potluck dish.  ~Sheila

 

 

Poi

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You asked for the recipe… I am giving it but there is really not much to it. 🙂

2 pounds Taro Root (surprisingly I found this at my local grocery store)

water

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Taro

 

Bring taro root to a boil in 2 quarts of water.  Cook for about 40 minutes.  Drain, cool, and peal the root.  Rough chop taro into a bowl.  Blend in blender with 1 cup of water until smooth.  (There are more traditional ways to do this that involve a grass skirt, a smooth rock and a hollowed out piece of wood but I went “new school” and “got ‘er done”!) 🙂

 

A couple things about Poi.  There is one finger, two finger, and three finger poi.  This is because traditionally you scoop it up with your fingers.  The thicker the poi, the less fingers used.  I am happy to say, I made a one finger poi:

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Poi tasted like bland potatoes.  I was surprised when looking on line I could not find any variations of this recipe to jazz it up a bit.  I would have liked to have made three cheese poi, or fully loaded poi with garlic and sour cream and bacon… just saying 😉

And finally why is my poi white when traditionally it is purple?  I have no idea.  I was disappointing as I was looking forward to the bright purple I seen in pictures.  I Googled this question but came up with no answers. 

Literacy Events and Plenty Of Cake

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Happy Saturday!  Really!  The sun is shining in central Minnesota and I think I will actually be able to mow today which I LOVE!  (Mowing = audio time) 😀

If you read my morning post yesterday I listed some bookish things I was doing with my day.  My friend Gail and I went to help out a struggling lending library that was lacking books.  It was a fun little road trip with coffee and scones (thanks Gail!)  The owner had put out an s.o.s. on Facebook and he said the post received over 4,000 hits!  Our community passed the word and he said books had been coming in.  Between Gail and I, I believe we brought them another 40-50 books. 

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The books I gave to the lending library

 

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This is on the side of the lending library that sits outside Zaiser’s in NIsswa.

 

Then yesterday afternoon The Friends Of The Brainerd Public Library were part of a Literacy Award for our Community College where the author Jon Hassler, once taught.  Jon wrote many books from adult fiction and non fiction to children’s stories.  He is most known for Staggerford, which was also Jon’s first book, about a week in the life of a teacher in a fictional small town in Minnesota. His books have been said to be filled with a lot of action or major happenings, but more like the Mittford series by Jan Karon or the Debbie MaComber series.  

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The friends handled the reception of the event with trays of goodies and cake and coffee

 

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This is the 5th Literary Landmark for Minnesota – YAY!  The others are:

  • Boyhood home of Sinclair Lewis, Sauk Centre, Minn. Harry Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) spent his formative years in this home. He was an American novelist, short story writer, and playwright who became the first writer from the United States to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. His works are known for their insightful and critical views of American society and capitalist values, as well as for their strong characterizations of working women. Partners: Minnesota Association of Library Friends, Sinclair Lewis Foundation. Dedicated July 16, 2013.  

  • Betsy’s House, Mankato, Minn. The childhood home of Maud Hart Lovelace was dedicated along with the childhood home of her best friend, Frances “Bick” Kenney. Lovelace’s series of Betsy-Tacy books was based on her and Bick’s adventures growing up in Mankato. Dedicated May 20, 2010. Partner: Betsy-Tacy Society.
     
  • Tacy’s House, Mankato, Minn. The childhood home of Frances “Bick” Kenney was dedicated along with the childhood home of her best friend, Maud Hart Lovelace. Lovelace’s series of Betsy-Tacy books was based on her and Bick’s adventures growing up in Mankato. Dedicated May 20, 2010. Partner: Betsy-Tacy Society.
     
  • 481 Laurel Avenue, the birthplace on September 24, 1896 of novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald, who is internationally renowned for such works as The Great Gatsby, Tender is the Night, and This Side of Paradise. Saint Paul, MN. Dedicated September 24, 2004. Partner: The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library

 

*as seen on the United For Libraries page, Literary Landmarks by State.

 

It was awesome to be a part of this event.  I was there along with a few hard-working Friends of Our Library – Gail, Laura, and Jolene from our Library in Brainerd. 

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I have posted this to Saturday Snapshots.  Pop over and see what other photos are being posted around the world today 🙂

 

Morning Meanderings… Lending Library Road Trip

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Good morning bookish people!  Whaz up?  It is Friday!  FRIDAY!  I feel there should be dancing in the streets – not only is it Friday… but it is a fairly low-key weekend which is awesome… I don’t see another one of those for a while 🙂

 

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This morning my friend and fellow Library Advocate are road tripping to Nisswa Minnesota to support a Lending Library; about a 20 minute drive.  Zaiser’s is a shoe store in Nisswa that has put a lending library outside of the store.  It is a cool one too, made out of a hundred year old tree that had fallen.  Their opportunity is that the books are going out faster than they are coming in.  They put a little blurb on Facebook about this (brilliant idea!) and now Gail and I are taking books there this morning and then having coffee to celebrate. 

So what books did I pull off my shelves for them?

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I chose an assortment of books for kids and adults.  I picked a few favorites I have duplicates of as well as a few that would make good summer reading or hopefully cause a person to want to read more by a certain author.  As you may see in the middle, there is a copy of Summer House and Return to Summer House by Jude Deveroux, two books that speak to me (especially Summer House).

Later today is the Jon Hassler event at the Brainerd College… it is going to be a bookish day 😀

Creativity INC. Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration by Ed Catmull and Amy Wallace

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Ed Catmull, Co-Founder of Pixar Animations (along with Steve Jobs and John Lasseter) tells about creating winning teams and taking your team to the next level.  Ed takes us behind the scenes of Pixar and shares the inner workings of how they created movies (such as Toy Story 2) by trusting in their teams, striving towards excellence every time but also bringing their teams to a point of trust and support that is unheard of in most companies. 

Pixar has been the name to strive for in animated movies due to this attitude by their lead team of being real with the employees, not separating yourself as a leader as “better” or “above” others and making themselves accessible for ideas lie “braintrust” the team that takes each movie as it begins and breaks it down to what they like and what they do not and repeats this process over and over with the creative team. 

From the wins, to the expensive fails, Et Catmull gives advice from his own experiences and shares ideas to build work teams that become as one, and treats them with the respect that creates long-term relationships.

 

 

I read this (listened to it actually) because I love to work on winning teams.  That may sound like a weird thing to say, but it is true.  If you have worked with a group of people for a job or career, you know what I mean.  There are great teams to work with that feel safe to bounce ideas off each other without being shut down and then there are not so great teams that you feel “thumbed over” watched every move – and creativity….

fails.  There is no room for it.

There is a section towards the end where Ed talks about his working relationship for Steve Jobs.  I loved this as Steve Jobs, while clearly having his faults was a brilliant mind.  Ed said Steve would walk into a meeting, listen, and say something like, “I am not a movie maker, but what if….” and whatever he said would be brilliant advice and then he would walk out and let the team work their magic. 

I really enjoyed this listen and this is one I will look for in book format as well.  What Ed describes here with his working relationship with the teams as well as the co-founders of Pixar is the way to find the right people for the job and how to treat them.

 

I believe the best managers acknowledge and make room for what they do not know—not just because humility is a virtue but because until one adopts that mindset, the most striking breakthroughs cannot occur. I believe that managers must loosen the controls, not tighten them. They must accept risk; they must trust the people they work with and strive to clear the path for them; and always, they must pay attention to and engage with anything that creates fear. Moreover, successful leaders embrace the reality that their models may be wrong or incomplete. Only when we admit what we don’t know can we ever hope to learn it.”
Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

“If you give a good idea to a mediocre team, they will screw it up. If you give a mediocre idea to a brilliant team, they will either fix it or throw it away and come up with something better.”
Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

 

“If you aren’t experiencing failure, then you are making a far worse mistake: You are being driven by the desire to avoid it.”  ― Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

 

 

Honestly, I strive for this kind of work environment.  I am a creative person and when I am placed with great teams that share ideas and lift each other up instead of pulling them down- I thrive.  In a way I think I feed off their energy and excitement; it is like fuel to my soul.  I find that when I looking for creative outlets I am drawn to the ones that allow me the most freedom to be who I am and create in ways that will inspire others to join in.  I want the teams I work with to do an amazing job and have fun along the way by doing it. 

Creative minds, people in management or Leadership positions that want to build winning teams, this is a great read for you.

Moloka’i by Alan Brennert (Bookies Book Club Review)

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Small synopsis: Hawaii in the late 1800’s was a beautiful place but a potentially frightening one as well.  With the outbreak of Leprosy everyone was on the look out for anyone who may have this contagious disease.  When little Rachel “Aouli” Kalama found a sore on the back of her leg that would not heal.  She is eventually taken away from her family to live in Kaulapapa, an are off the island of Moloka’i for those with Leprosy.  Here is where Rachel lives her life.

 

 

In May of 2014, 15 of the Bookies Book Club showed up for a review of Moloka’i.  We sampled Hawaiian culture foods and discussed this read of a time in Hawaii most of us were unfamiliar with. 

Using the questions provided int he back of the book, we discussed Leprosy compared to the AIDS scare if the 80’s, and what that must have felt like at the time to those who were in fear for their lives and the lives of their families.  As in Rachel’s case, being taken away from her family had to be devastating on both sides; and Rachel’s diagnosis put a huge label on her family and even though they did not have it themselves they were shunned by their community.

Rachel herself makes for a great protagonist.  Learning at a young age that she was pretty much on her own, she has a strong will, but also a sensible one.  While she may stretch the boarders, she does have a wonderful sense of right and wrong and it shows throughout the storyline.

The Bookies overall enjoyed the book.  A few found it a bit drug out, certainly not a fast read at almost 400 pages, but filled with deep historical facts that made for a good read.

PicMonkey Collage

 

What makes this a good book club read?

Moloka’i does make a good book group discussion due to it’s historical nature.  There is plenty to discuss around the subject of Leprosy and what we can compare that to today.  The characters of this book and how they respond to Rachel is also discussion-worthy.  Once you label a person, how does that change us?  

The questions in the back of the book are great for the discussion.  There is also a section in the back of more detailed facts behind the fiction that makes for interesting follow up.  A group could bring items of Hawaiian culture or information off the websites marked in the back pages to add to this discussion. 

The natural deepness of this read also makes you feel like you read something important.  Deeper reads deepen your book discussions.

 

 

Morning Meanderings…. Bookies Night In! (w/Poi results!)

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Good morning!  Cup number two of coffee here….  deserved though… yesterday was pretty great. 😀

I had yesterday off work to catch up on my house which lacked some attention in the past few weeks.  Then I spent the late afternoon preparing for book club which was to be at my home… Hawaiian Style after reading Moloka’i.  Bookies – true to form brought this book to the next level with food like Chocolate Mochi, Hawaiian roast, Sweet Potato Casserole, seafood salad, pineapple… more on that later.  😉

As I mentioned yesterday I was going to try my hand at Poi; and I did.  It was not purple like I seen in the pictures on-line (still have not figured out why).  Warm, it tasted a little like a sticky potato product.  One of the girls said they heard it was better for you than potatoes. 

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It was not super hard to make but of course I did not sit in the lawn in a grass skirt and pound it with a rock and a board… no, I used my handy blender.  Aloha!

Then the real test was the thickness.  There is one finger, two finger three finger poi, depending on how many fingers it takes for you to scoop it up.  I am proud to say that I made a one finger poi.

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So that’s my night.  I need to get ready for work but watch for the Bookies thoughts on Molokai coming up later today. 😀

Any Poi makers out there?  Why was mine not purple?

Don’t Even Think About It by Sarah Mlynowski

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When a homeroom of New York Sophomores receive their mandatory flu shot they get a little more than a sore arm.  Apparently the batch of the flu vaccine was a little off, and now this group has discovered that they can hear each others thoughts.

Super cool right?

They all know now that Mackenzie cheated on Cooper last summer.  They now all know what people really think of them.  They know now what their teachers are really thinking about while they are taking tests and they know what their parents are thinking about while in their bedrooms.

Ugh.  Maybe not so cool….

Nothing.  NOTHING is a secret anymore.

 

 

Don’t Even Think About It is a fun concept.  What if something that was supposed to keep you healthy… actually had a freaky side effect?  The results as related in this book are sometimes funny, sometimes hurtful, and definitely something that this group had to come terms with as nothing is sacred. 

A fun easy read I think YA readers would enjoy… after all as a teenager, what could be worse than someone knowing everything you think about?  While I personally enjoyed the read, I think Young Adults would probably find this even more entertaining.

Morning Meanderings… Oh Boy! Poi!

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Good morning!  Happiest of Tuesdays to you!  So much AWESOME is going on right now I hardly know where to begin. 😀 

Let’s see… the Her Voice Magazine came out this morning and my report on my friends Sky Diving Experience made the cover.  SQUEEEEE!!!!

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And yesterday afternoon I was offered to speak on a panel at this years Book Expo in New York at the end of this month on “Engaging your Readers, Taking Your Writing To The Next Level”, a subject I am passionate about so I am SUPER Excited!

On Friday of this week our Friends Of The Library group will be a part of a ceremony dedicating a plaque to a Minnesota author Jon Hassler who passed away in 2008, and left an incredible legacy to Central Minnesota.  This plaque will be one of 4 that are in the state of Minnesota so this is quite an honor and we are thrilled to be a part of it.  I will have pictures of the event on this weekends Saturday Snapshot post.

 

And then…. tonight is Book Club!  YAY!!!  We are reviewing Molokai by Alan Brennert which is a fictional story set in Hawaii in the 1890’s and the leprosy outbreak including our main protagonist, an 8-year-old girl.  Our theme of course is Hawaii and I am making a side dish of Hawaiian sweet potato casserole and poi.  Yes… I am trying my hand at poi.

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I will probably not look like this….

the resulting product should look like this:

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Yes I think it looks nasty… this is more for the “yeah we have had poi” experience then my hopes of it tasting good.  I have my bag of taro root and I will be boiling them later today.  Yes, I will document the process. 😀

 

I took the day off of work today.  After the big garage sale two weeks ago now and this last weekends graduation of our son I have been running like crazy.  Today I will work on loving on my house and prepping for tonight with a little audio in between 😀