BK’s Reviews and Reflections

A Blog by Bonnie Kaplan

Archive for the 'Book Review' Category

Finishing the Book Whisperer and Wanting More

Posted by Bonnie on 26th August 2010

Finished and inspired!
I am back Twittering with an National Writing Project community created in the month of July during annual Summer Institutes and at an NWP retreat in Austin, Texas.

As I was twittering around last week, I came to a  conversation about The Book Whisperer by Donalyn Miller.  I clicked around for  a few reviews and downloaded it to my iPad library and started reading last week on my gym’s Ellipse.  Once I began, I couldn’t stop thinking about how I supported my 8th graders as life-long readers  and what I might do now if I had still  a classroom to transform.

I might not have a classroom these days, but I do have a network of teachers to share the book with and what great timing, as teachers return to their schools open to new ideas.

I have The Book Whisperer to recommend.

In the early chapters Donalyn takes us through her initial efforts to pass on her passion for reading to her students through the traditional method of creating a novel unit packet for the whole class for a book she loves.  It bombs!  Donalyn, in shock, returns  to her drawing board, dipping into mentors like Lucy Calkins, Nancy Atwell and gradually lights turn on and slowly she revamps her approach to reading, moving to personal choice and a requirement of 40 books read for the year and as she moves she is willing to take us with her on this powerful journey of discovery.

And why am I not surprised that she is  a Writing Project Teacher Consultant from Texas!

As I finished her book yesterday, I wished we were meeting together to continue the conversation.  What happens next?  How does she move the rest of her school community along with her, if that’s possible? How did her work with the writing project inform her radical movement?

I wonder, who else is reading along with me???

Here’s some of her links:

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/book_whisperer/

http://www.nwp.org/cs/public/print/resource/2507

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Reading Book Whisperer & Remembering

Posted by Bonnie on 24th August 2010

Just recently a Twitter buddy  mentioned the Book Whisperer by Donalyn Miller  and I was interested, very interested.  There’s a lot of good whispering out there, remember the Horse Whisperer, and the Dog Whisperer?  A book whisperer, how perfect.

As I began to read about a  young 6th grade  teacher’s passion for her own reading life and her commitment to share that passion with her students, I was remembering my experience with 8th graders, when I hoped that I might inspire lifelong readers as well.

Donalyn shares her early efforts to create great unit packets for novels she loved.  But she fell on deaf ears until she started reading the works of Nancy Atwell, Lucy Calkins and Ralph Fletcher.

And slowly she took her own stab at reforming her curriculum by moving to personal student reading  to fuel student passions.  Every student was required to read forty books by the end of a school year. Kids reading during lunchtime, on the bus, at home..and everywhere. Reading the early chapters on my gym’s Nordic Track, my time flew as I moved deeper and deeper into Donalyn’s shift.

It’s August and I started remembering what it was like to begin thinking about how a fresh new year with a fresh new group of  8th  graders could be different, better than ever before.   For a moment, I started thinking about how I might have taken Donalyn with me, as I transformed my classroom beyond monthly books of free reading. I remembered reading Randy Bomer during the my first summer with the Hudson Valley Writing Project and taking him along with me into my classroom.

I wasn’t surprised when I discovered that Donalyn was  a Teacher Consultant from the North Star of Texas Writing Project  and that Paul Oh, from the National Writing Project  had written and published an article about her  on the NWP website.

I’m not going back into a classroom in September, but I will share this book with the teachers I know and work with.

Has anyone read The Book Whisperer and been inspired by Donalyn Miller?

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The Jane Austen Book Club

Posted by Bonnie on 9th February 2008

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I finally got to see this one. First time out I was sitting with my own book club and it was lovely logical to see it as a group, but I had a glass of wine before the movie with dinner and I don’t think I saw more than the opening, a bit of the middle and the very end. The book buds loved the film and never let on that I missed it and I didn’t say a word.

The second time we were on a plane coming home from Tucson and again I was psyched. I even stopped the stewardess from making a mistake to show another film instead, the one we tortured through on the way out to Tucson. She gratefully made good on her error and began Jane for me and some disappointed kids. Tuvia didn’t hear too much and I had trouble as well. The tiny screen hung far away from us. It was a waste. Finally, we got to see it when it came out on DVD just this week. It was romantic for me and probably Tuvia as well. He did like it. I did like it. Women and men dealing with their lives and reading books and the conversations merged and blurred the worlds. That’s true of my book club as well. Our lives and our book lives always merge, always ebb and flow.

The women and men were great looking. They had their issues but in the end everyone gets together. All good looking and fulfilled with life and books. Works for me! I love my book club. I love Jane Austen and my Girls Night Out bunch will be willing to read some Jane Austen as well. I can’t wait to get back to Darcey and Elizabeth.

First I need to find some of the music used in the movie. Music that’s what I have to write about. My passion ignited by music.

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Three Cups of Tea: Give the Man a Noble Prize

Posted by Bonnie on 18th January 2008

I just finished the book. I didn’t want to, but I had to move on. What now? I just can’t pack a bag and join on in Pakistan or Afghanistan, but I could visit the website and find a place to send an online donation without much pain. Something, and that’s the answer. Education! As I finished the book, I found my way into the kitchen as Tuvia was watching the Bill Moyers Journal with journalists and historians who were condemning Bush for his kissing up to the Saudis for all the money they’ve been siphoning into their country at out expense. OIL. What has Bush done to move us to alternative fuels? Why would he want to with his “friends” in the Middle East. Are they our friends too?

And what money does Greg Mortenson get from the government? None. He won’t accept money from the government. And does the government care what he’s doing? Damn, I hope some people do.

Education! Education!

About
Greg Mortenson

Greg Mortenson (bio as of October 2007)

Greg Mortenson is the co-founder of nonprofit Central Asia Institute www.ikat.org, Pennies For Peace www.penniesforpeace.org, and co-author of New York Times bestseller ‘Three Cups of Tea’ www.threecupsoftea.com which has been a bestseller for over nine months since its release and was Time Magazine Asia Book of The Year.

Mortenson was born in Minnesota in 1957. He grew up on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania (1958 to 1973). His father, was a founder of Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (KCMC) www.kcmc.ac.tz a 480 bed teaching hospital, and his mother founded the International School Moshi www.ismoshi.org

He served in the U.S. Army in Germany during the Cold War (1977-1979), where he received the Army Commendation Medal, and later graduated from the Univ. of South Dakota (1983), and pursued graduate studies in neurophysiology.

On July 24th, 1992, Mortenson’s younger sister, Christa, died from a massive seizure after a lifelong struggle with epilepsy on the eve of a trip to visit Dysersville, Iowa, where the baseball movie, ‘Field of Dreams’, was filmed.

In 1993, to honor his sister’s memory, Mortenson climbed Pakistan’s K2, the world’s second highest mountain in the Karakoram range.

After K2, while recovering in a local village called Korphe, Mortenson met a group of children sitting in the dirt writing with sticks in the sand, and made a promise to help them build a school.

From that rash promise, grew a remarkable humanitarian campaign, in which Mortenson has dedicated his life to promote education and literacy, especially for girls, in remote, volatile regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

As of 2007, Mortenson has established over 61 schools in rural and often volatile regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan, which provide education to over 25,000 children, including 14,000 girls, where few education opportunities existed before.

His work has not been without difficulty. In 1996, he survived an eight day armed kidnapping in the Northwest Frontier Province NWFP tribal areas of Pakistan, escaped a 2003 firefight with feuding Afghan warlords by hiding for eight hours under putrid animal hides in a truck going to a leather-tanning factory. He has overcome two fatwehs from enraged Islamic mullahs, endured CIA investigations, and also received hate mail and death threats from fellow Americans after 9/11, for helping Muslim children with education.

Mortenson is a living hero to rural communities of Afghanistan and Pakistan, where he has gained the trust of Islamic leaders, military commanders, government officials and tribal chiefs from his tireless effort to champion education, especially for girls.

He is one of few foreigners who has worked extensively for fifteen years (spending over 65 months) in the region now considered the front lines of the war on terror.

His cross-cultural expertise has brought him to speak on Capital Hill, D.C. think tanks, the Pentagon, Dept. of Defense, libraries, outdoor groups, universities, schools, churches, mosques, synagogues, business and civic groups, women’s organizations and more. From March 2006 through 2007, he has visited over 110 cities to talk about his message of peace through education.

NBC newscaster, Tom Brokaw, calls Mortenson, “one ordinary person, with the right combination of character and determination, who is really changing the world”.

Congresswoman Mary Bono (Rep – Cali.) says, “I’ve learned more from Greg Mortenson about the causes of terrorism than I did during all our briefings on Capitol Hill. He is a true hero, whose creativity, courage, and compassion exemplify the true ideals of the American spirit.”

Al Neuharth, founder of USA Today, and the D.C.-based Freedom Forum, says “Mortenson doesn’t just climb mountains. He moves them, and through his courage, he gives hope and has changed the lives of thousands of children in a region of turmoil considered the front lines of the war on terror”.

Mortenson advocates girls’ education as the top priority to promote economic development, peace and prosperity, and says, “you can drop bombs, hand out condoms, build roads, or put in electricity, but until the girls are educated a society won’t change”.

While not overseas half the year, Mortenson, 49, lives in Bozeman, Montana with his wife, Dr. Tara Bishop, a clinical psychologist, and two children.

Book tour, reviews and media on www.threecupsoftea.com

Central Asia Institute website www.ikat.org

Pennies For Peace website www.penniesforpeace.org

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Why I Love the Web 2.0!

Posted by Bonnie on 17th January 2008

I am halfway through my morning routine. The Today Show is on as background music, I’m drinking a cup of coffee, and I have written into the morning on my word count journal.

I move to my bloglines and as usual Kevin has already posted something on his blog. I open it and there’s an entry about The Invention of Hugo Cabret, by Brian Selznick. a book he recommended to me last spring. He was passionate about it and I ordered a copy from Barnes and Noble.

When it arrived, I opened it and started turning the pages and it was truly a unique adventure but somehow, in my chaos at the time, I put it down and gradually, during a spring cleaning I  moved  it to its permanent residence on the middle shelf  in my book case and it’s been living there, untouched ever since.

Just 10 minutes ago, as I began to read Kevin’s post about Hugo Cabret, and its recent award I made my way to the HC website (click below) and found it as wild and imaginative as the book.  From there I discovered  an interview on NPR with Brian Selznick(click below).

As Brian talked about his book I ran to for my copy and as he read from the text,I read along.

It’s right here now and I’m back in it, and it’s all because of Kevin’s early morning post.

Here’s a good example of what would not be right for my new Kindle reader, that’s for sure.

Hugo netted the esteemed Caldecott Medal for 2008.

Hugo Cabret website

The Invention of Hugo Cabret

The NPR interview :

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7114977

Thanks Kevin. Just another reason why I’m hooked on the web 2.0!

Bonnie

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Posted in Book Review, Books, Collaboration | 1 Comment »

3 Cups of Tea on My Kindle

Posted by Bonnie on 30th December 2007

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What a pleasure to be READING with my Kindle, to be reading so effortlessly. It’s a perfect book to break in this device. Greg Mortenson is an unusual guy and from the opening pages of this nonfiction account, I am engrossed in his step-by-step adventure in his unexpected life’s work to build as many schools as he can in the villages of Pakistan Afghanistan to educate the population, especially the young women. I talked about this book yesterday as we were hosting family and as I raved about Greg’s work I was greeted with a more cynical response, “sure, train more suicide bombers.” It took a minute to digest and then I countered with passion.
“No, just the opposite. Instead of bombing them, offer them books and hope and civilization. Educate their women, build bridges.” Silence. That was music to my ears.

Such an interesting guy from missionary parents who took their young children to Tanzania. spontaneously to work with the natives. Greg’s father saw the need for a hospital in his areas and devoted himself to its creation. The apple doesn’t fall far. And there Greg began his passion for climbing, with his father. His mom, also a passionate person, gives birth to a disabled child and Greg devotes a good deal of his life supporting a life for her of normalcy until her abrupt death in her 20′s. That sets Greg off on a tribute climb at K2, right near the first village in Pakistan to get his school. Everything about this book has movie written all over it. Perfect selection to break in my Kindle. Perfect.

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Posted in Book Review, Kindle Update | 3 Comments »