Net Galley Challenge
Monday, May 18, 2015
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Theft of Memory
poetry prompt:
1. " If we couldn't free it, we'd have to cut the line and attach another lure and begin all over" - Jonathan Kozol.
In the lake of literature, are many lures that instead of catching the poems caught 'piece of wood'.
In 'The Theft of Memory: Losing My father. One Day at a Time', author Jonathan Kozol slices the 'journey' of his father's illness which led him to lose his capabilities, join a nursing home, continuously ask his son to take him home. The son takes him home after reassessment of financial condition. Throughout the book, the author walks us through how he went through the decision making process, giving us an insight into what options were available to him, what things did he think of, how did the other caregivers, doctors, his lawyer, mother help him take decisions by bringing up points that he didnt think about. Fitting tribute to a neurologist, this book delves a lot into the author's thought scape.
The blurb says that this book 'is not primarily about a doctor's public life' but it is also about how the doctor's doctor failed him and how in general geriatrics is not treated as well as pediatrics, because it does not have 'future productivity'.
The author went through his father's clinical cases through his notebooks and accounts how he solved many cases. consistent Dementia. I thought it was funny that a spouse should get competitive of her caregiver's attention when she has to share it. The writing is successful at creating an image of his ailing father, genius father.
In 'The Theft of Memory: Losing My father. One Day at a Time', author Jonathan Kozol slices the 'journey' of his father's illness which led him to lose his capabilities, join a nursing home, continuously ask his son to take him home. The son takes him home after reassessment of financial condition. Throughout the book, the author walks us through how he went through the decision making process, giving us an insight into what options were available to him, what things did he think of, how did the other caregivers, doctors, his lawyer, mother help him take decisions by bringing up points that he didnt think about. Fitting tribute to a neurologist, this book delves a lot into the author's thought scape.
The blurb says that this book 'is not primarily about a doctor's public life' but it is also about how the doctor's doctor failed him and how in general geriatrics is not treated as well as pediatrics, because it does not have 'future productivity'.
The author went through his father's clinical cases through his notebooks and accounts how he solved many cases. consistent Dementia. I thought it was funny that a spouse should get competitive of her caregiver's attention when she has to share it. The writing is successful at creating an image of his ailing father, genius father.
The Ignorant Maestro
How Great Leaders Inspire Unpredictable Brilliance.
The wisdom of the ignorant schoolmaster
"An ignorant can teach another ignorant what he does not know himself" - Joesph Jacotot.
Jacques Ranciere
How unconferences unleash innovative ideas
"The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes - ah, that is where the art resides." - Artur Schnabel
On disadvantages of beaming, the author says that "Of stopping on the way for a short espresso, watching people go by, not thinking - at least not being aware of thinking - for a few moments? Give it up? and when on vacation, would you be happy to find your boss beaming up to you for just a short question?" (consistency of technology in a sci-fi)
In one meeting, the author asked the attendees to sing and dance and look at the participants. after a while, the audience didnt want to stop.
"Creativity in all forms of life, from arts to business to domestic situations, depends on our ability to recognize and explore gaps" - Itay Talgam.
Ensign Bickford recognized that they are in lifestyle business to embrace variety of innovations
anti-music
How unconferences unleash innovative ideas
"The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes - ah, that is where the art resides." - Artur Schnabel
On disadvantages of beaming, the author says that "Of stopping on the way for a short espresso, watching people go by, not thinking - at least not being aware of thinking - for a few moments? Give it up? and when on vacation, would you be happy to find your boss beaming up to you for just a short question?" (consistency of technology in a sci-fi)
In one meeting, the author asked the attendees to sing and dance and look at the participants. after a while, the audience didnt want to stop.
"Creativity in all forms of life, from arts to business to domestic situations, depends on our ability to recognize and explore gaps" - Itay Talgam.
Ensign Bickford recognized that they are in lifestyle business to embrace variety of innovations
anti-music
Friday, May 15, 2015
Sterling Silver Mom and Child Diamond Necklace
A very good gift for Mothers Day.
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
The Seven Good years
Up in the air
Interview with Israeli author Etgar keret
Bulgakov
Converso
Goy
The Wire and Jimmy McNulty
requiem for a dream
I have never heard of Etgar Keret before. Its always refreshing to read books from other nations. 'The Seven Good Years' is a collection of flash stories with personal meandering about flight experience (where I began questioning if that fits in the memoir genre, where we want the writing to be about an experience more as a feeling than as a thought). Its a very quick read in the genre of 'I was told there'd be cake' by Sloane Crosley and work by Jane Borden. But there's another side to it, fostered by the author's uprooted past. He is a biblio nomad, who is doing book tours all around the world.
Every page of the book has some unexpected element in it. Right with the beginning interview by Miranda July (We think Alone project where some selected authors are to share an email on a selected topic), where his mom's independent childhood translated to non-over bearing upbringing, you never know whats going to happen next.
When by an error, he is double booked on a plane seat and ask to get off the plane by the flight crew. His reply is ".. If there arent enough seats on the plane, you can get off yourself. I'll serve the food to the passengers."
People either love or hate babies but the author for the purpose of the writing, sees his baby as 'a midget with a cable hanging from his belly button..' and as Chucky from Child's play.
Fictional Book signings for fiction.
War and peace. The local conditions are at unease to imagine peace and feel 'just like in the old days' if war starts.
Some stories have a pattern like the four fingered hand waving at Euro Disney which starts with a man losing his finger trying to reach for his watch that has fallen in a machine. The stories tie back to the beginning.
While looking up the author's works, I found that there is another side to his writing of thought experiments - "Kneller's Happy Campers" novel which inspired Wristcutter's story. In it, every dies by suicide. "Crazy Glue" where everything is glued.
Its hearty to know that finally he gets a house built in Poland, his real homeland.
Monday, May 11, 2015
Clay water brick
"Lawyers are trained to see barriers and help people avoid risk, while entrepreneurs are trained to see possibilities and take smart risks" - Jessica Jackley
'Clay Water Brick: Finding inspiration from Entrepreneurs who do the most with the least' alternates with stories of microlending changing the lives of people, and the lessons author Jessica Jackley, founder of Kiva learns from those entrepreneurs. Those entrepreneurs who have almost nothing to their name but the drive to make brick out of clay and water, to help disabled by iterative design and so on.. shattering the idea of who is or who can be an entrepreneur.
The author understood that she had to 'use the right language .. also to tell stories to move people from a place of ignorance to a place of understanding. ' This is what the book does too, narrating stories to readers and make them see how the microfinancing changes the lives of people with small steps.
The stories make her 'redefine success not as destination but as away of operating and committing to a process of creation ..' From Li the tailor's wisdom of mending clothes from the inside and ripping the seams off and starting afresh for complex fixes, the author learns the lesson that 'understanding the fabric of your organization' is important for its success.
THe readers are also made aware of the legal impediments in crowdfunding. There have been articles if Kiva really has the person to person interaction between the lender and the entrepreneurs who take the loans. Where that debate may settle, the author shows that if you use your passion and stick to your mission, then a huge change is possible for anyone.
'Clay Water Brick: Finding inspiration from Entrepreneurs who do the most with the least' alternates with stories of microlending changing the lives of people, and the lessons author Jessica Jackley, founder of Kiva learns from those entrepreneurs. Those entrepreneurs who have almost nothing to their name but the drive to make brick out of clay and water, to help disabled by iterative design and so on.. shattering the idea of who is or who can be an entrepreneur.
The author understood that she had to 'use the right language .. also to tell stories to move people from a place of ignorance to a place of understanding. ' This is what the book does too, narrating stories to readers and make them see how the microfinancing changes the lives of people with small steps.
The stories make her 'redefine success not as destination but as away of operating and committing to a process of creation ..' From Li the tailor's wisdom of mending clothes from the inside and ripping the seams off and starting afresh for complex fixes, the author learns the lesson that 'understanding the fabric of your organization' is important for its success.
THe readers are also made aware of the legal impediments in crowdfunding. There have been articles if Kiva really has the person to person interaction between the lender and the entrepreneurs who take the loans. Where that debate may settle, the author shows that if you use your passion and stick to your mission, then a huge change is possible for anyone.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Selling Your House
The book runs in a very interesting manner about what months are likely to be well received in terms of home selling. Did you know that your home owners insurance might not be valid if its vacant? Have you heard of transfer tax, discount brokers, listing agreement (which is better - exclusive right to sell, exclusive agency, open listing), FSBO (For sale by owner), broker's tour, seller rent-back.
Should you stage your house?
The book is also interesting because of the numbers. For example, staged houses moved 87% faster.
Should you hire an agent?
89% do. Why not?
With these statistics, you get a good grip of the real market and buyers profile. You will be surprised at the number of contingencies a house sale could face.
Redfin - hybrid model
Poetry in Medicine
"The cry of a door is a pitiable thing." - Thomas James, In Fever.
the only parts of the body the same size at birth as they’ll always be.
Mummy of a lady named
Pathology of colours
Ode on my belly button
Fear of Grays Anatomy
Clarinda Harriss
I'm like a rifle that's a little out of date but very accurate: when I love, there's a strong recoil, back to childhood, and it hurts
Epilepsy petit mal
"the plastic tubing whispers blood through
her flesh, .." - Transfusion, Kate Kimball
more brain mashed because of the probe’s braille path;
The Urine Specimen
Ode on my episiotomy
The Urine Specimen
Ode on my episiotomy
"and the faith of that stranger
who answers when my name is called" - Dennis Nurkse, Things I forget to tell my Doctor
But someone I know is dying- And though one might say glibly, "everyone is," The different pace makes the difference absolute.
But someone I know is dying- And though one might say glibly, "everyone is," The different pace makes the difference absolute.
"When we are sleeping
alone, and we wake, and the walls are breathing
and they are the company we keep" - Florence Weinberger, Getting in Bed With a Man who is sick.
poetry prompt
1. Nude Descending. Write a poem with a title after a painting title or inspired by it.
Friday, May 8, 2015
Excuses
Chicken Biryani rife with spices
tastes good with hot peanut chutney
A spoon of chutney left on the plate
begs for a helping of chicken biryani
Some left rice on the plate
calls for chutney
tastes good with hot peanut chutney
A spoon of chutney left on the plate
begs for a helping of chicken biryani
Some left rice on the plate
calls for chutney
Morning walk
The girl who walked to school yesterday
is late today
I meet her at the corner as opposed
to the dead end
The sophomore who biked yesterday to school
isnt out yet or has left already
The neighbour who dropped her kids yesterday
and said hi
has just entered the community today
Morning walk puts you
in the routine of others
The pole hides the flag
The wind reveals it
is late today
I meet her at the corner as opposed
to the dead end
The sophomore who biked yesterday to school
isnt out yet or has left already
The neighbour who dropped her kids yesterday
and said hi
has just entered the community today
Morning walk puts you
in the routine of others
The pole hides the flag
The wind reveals it
Baby is not in your tummy anymore
Come bathe me
Baby is not in your tummy anymore
Sit with me on the floor
Baby is not in your tummy anymore
Can you lift my scooty over the threshold
This is what my daughter says after her little sis is in her hands.
Once she asked me if the baby will go back into tummy.
Digital nest making for babies - unsubscribing from all groupon and other daily emails that are anyways not used during the first 6 weeks immobility of having a new baby.
Baby is not in your tummy anymore
Sit with me on the floor
Baby is not in your tummy anymore
Can you lift my scooty over the threshold
This is what my daughter says after her little sis is in her hands.
Once she asked me if the baby will go back into tummy.
Digital nest making for babies - unsubscribing from all groupon and other daily emails that are anyways not used during the first 6 weeks immobility of having a new baby.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Poems that make grown men cry
She was deep within herself, like a woman heavy with child
Ithaka
Better by far you should forget and smile Than that you should remember and be sad
Peer Gynt: The Priest's Monologue
while grass and buildings and the somnolent river, who know they are allowed to last forever,
- Not all rivers are allowed to last forever. Our village's river has dried up.
That everything's remade With shovel and spade;
No painting had ever made me cry
The mercury sank in the mouth of the dying day. What instruments we have agree The day of his death was a dark cold day.
"Paternal Love will only use Force in the last resort On those too bumptious to repent."
So many poems about the deaths of animals. Wilbur’s toad, Kinnell’s porcupine, Eberhart’s squirrel,
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