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Human Moments

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

One of the many reasons I enjoy reading is that books can be prisms through which I view the world.  Great works of fiction can help me understand and reflect upon any given period of time and circumstance.  A Passage to India by E.M. Forster is an insight into relations between the colonizer and the colonized in British India.  One Hundred Years of Solitude is an intimate portrayal of Colombian family and culture.  So many of the classic novels that we are both required and love to read have found a timeless place on bookshelves all over the world because their themes are universal and, well, timeless.

As I set out to write my second blog, I referred back to what I wrote last week on technological innovation and how it has transformed us as a society, in some ways detrimentally.  Snowballing off of that, I find it striking how many contemporary works of American fiction have started incorporating tech themes into their narratives.  A Visit from the Goon Squad had an entire chapter told via a PowerPoint presentation.  Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon is about how easily identities are swiped over the Internet.  Lisbeth Salander embezzles millions by computer hacking in the Millennium Trilogy.

Perhaps without consciously taking into account my opinion on the insidiousness of technology, one of the best books I read last year was Don DeLillo’s The Angel Esmeralda.  The book, a collection of nine short stories touching upon a multitude of themes, is entirely removed from the tech trends – so much so that reading on an eReader almost detracted from the ambiance of the book.  While it has mostly been excluded from Pulitzer prediction lists and best of short-lists, I hope that it is not left unnoticed.  Each story can be revisited over again, and even the earliest written story is relatable.  The themes of loneliness, isolation, sexuality, intimacy, anger, and youth make for an engaging read.  While no story is alike, a mysterious atmosphere permeates throughout the collection.

My favorite story is “Human Moments in World War III,” a futuristic depiction of two young men in orbit aimlessly (and mindlessly) firing at “targets” on Earth during a cataclysmic period of war.  They have a collection of “human moments” with them in their vessel – photographs, trophies, clothing, etc. to remind them of their past, and probably of their humanity.  Without any sense of time or place the characters rely on their languor to estimate the day of the week.  When they believe to hear a human voice crackle through their transmission, the doubt and confusion they feel is eerie to read.  The thought of human culture being so far removed compared with the isolating experiences of the two boys is so powerful, I thought about the story for hours after despite its mere 15 or odd pages in length.

The book stands out not only in the oeuvre of DeLillo’s work but in the array of books released last year because of the human moments – and I’m not necessarily talking about the one story.  If I am right, and fiction indeed can help us reflect upon and relate to each other, one need not look further than this book.  I promise you, the intimacy is in every paragraph and punctuation mark.  It reminded me how important, frightening, moving, and exhilarating relationships can be at times.   Not to beat a dead horse, but it really is remarkable how different relationships were when we relied not so heavily on technologically supported interaction but on human interaction.

Basically, if I’m ever stuck with a stranger in a spaceship sometime in the future launching missiles into the atmosphere, one of my “human moments” would definitely be this book.

– BB

BEAUstie Boy – Gary Shapiro, You Changed My Life

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

It’s me, the other intern, and the only boy Beaufort has seen for many many internship moons.  It only took a few hours for the past interns, yet seven weeks to the day later here I am also tossing my hat into the blogosphere.  I can blame it on all the amazing project opportunities that have gotten thrown my way but in reality we all know that I have continually failed to come up with a compelling topic and a crafty moniker (which we definitely now know that I have still failed to do…Beaustie Boy? Really?)  Just when I thought, “Aha, I’m ready to write my blog about Pulitzer Book predictions and book lists!” Word Press blacked out before I could say “The Marriage Plot.”

One of the daily tasks that I have been performing for the past month and change is to track marketing updates for most of our authors.  One name that floods into my inbox morning after morning is Gary Shapiro, CEO of CEA (hehe).  For weeks now I have been perusing and filing away news articles Gary has written about SOPA and PIPA, which at first simply had my Spanish speaking mind thinking of soups and pipes.  After about 50 more articles over the course of a month I figured I should know what I was reading about and, evidently, what everyone else was talking about.

The Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect Intellectual Property Act have elicited some strong responses from Senators and Congressmen to bloggers and your everyday Google searcher.  On Wednesday, major websites like Wikipedia and Word Press shut their digital doors.  Google even prompted visitors with a petition to send to Congress.  The day of darkness forced everyone to imagine a world without Internet (or a trip down memory lane to the pre-Apple days).  While most are against intellectual property theft and multimedia piracy, both acts just do not provide enough protection against false accusations with potential for abuse of the legislation to become out of control.  In one of his most recent articles for Fox, Gary even declares victory for the American people, whose collective voice was too resounding to ignore.  Essentially, we all told Congress to put that in their PIPA and smoke it.

Now that most of us are breathing a collective sigh of relief, we undoubtedly have spent some since this bill hit the floor thinking about how the Internet has become a crutch for contemporary society.  Increase of social networking has also increased our desire for anonymity and arguably decreased our interpersonal social networking.  I’m not saying we should regress to the days of carrier pigeons – but remember when we didn’t text?  Remember I invited you to my birthday over the phone instead of a Facebook event?  Now thanks to the Internet, I no longer have to trek down to Tompkins Square Park to check out my books from the library I can just get them online and have them delivered to my Kindle in seconds! Cool, but sad.  The Internet has proven how malleable we are by consistently changing the way we communicate with each other and by the toll it is has taken on many businesses, not just publishing.

For now, the Internet still remains as powerful as the public chooses to make it.  We have avoided possibly catastrophic consequences by preventing SOPA and PIPA.  Instead of wiping our brows and muttering thanks to the Congress gods before moving on to the next best thing, we should start remembering how we survived without the Internet in ye olde days.  I know I still go to the library, still buy physical books, and still call you to invite you to my birthday party.

George may have been a few decades off, but maybe it’s a matter of time until Big Brother really is watching you.

Just a thought, albeit a creepy one.

Your New BEAU: Thank you Johannes Gutenberg

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Hello from your new Beaufort intern! That’s me, Lauren.  A little about me: I just graduated from Colby College (it’s in Maine!) and, of course, I love books. I told my aunt I got an internship in book publishing and she said something to the tune of, “There won’t be a career to be had there soon.” I’m sorry, but the printing-press was possibly the most world-changing innovation this side of the birth of Christ (i.e. the Common Era) and I don’t think a little thing like the inter-webs is going to wipe out the great past-time of print.

Perhaps I underestimate the power of the internet (I do). E-books and kindles and Nooks and such are enjoying great success in the modern age. And if that’s your preference, I stand in no one’s way. I only mean to say that I don’t believe e-books mean the end of print. One might point to such events as the closing of Borders or the downsizing of many print newspapers as evidence of the demise of print. Yes, print has taken a hit, but it is far from gone. Besides, I always wonder about how the ever-growing ether of the internet has given rise to this mass transfer of our whole lives into an intangible sphere, and what happens when the internet just explodes? Where do our whole internet lives go? This is why I love paper. Remember when everyone stocked up on food and supplies in fear of Y2K? That was funny.

Anywho! Print/e-book debate aside, one of my main interests is promoting literacy (thus, my interest in publishing and shaping new books to put on the shelves!). I want everyone to love reading as much as I do! So, here’s an event I just learned about that seems totally awesome! World Book Night! Sounds cool, right? I know. The idea is that on April 23, 2012, across the nation, 50,000 volunteers will be handing out a total of 1 million free books to anyone and everyone that will take them. The volunteers are being called “book givers” and they will be handing out one of 30 popular titles (listed on the website), like print-superheroes mysteriously emerging from the shadows in the night to revive the secret pleasure of falling into a good book. So cool.

 

Until next time,

Your New Beau.

Beau-nafide Bird’s Eye-View: The Common Hours

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

“If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with success unexpected in common hours. ” –Henry David Thoreau

When something comes to an end, one immediately reflects on the beginning.  My Beau-nafide Bird’s-Eye-View concludes today, as does my internship with this collaborative, progressive, and supportive company. I would like to share with you the success I have found here, most usually in the “common hours,” and all the sweeter for that.

Inspiration: Jennifer Pharr Davis and her husband, Brew.  Through Jen’s book Becoming Odyssa, and through the soon-to-be released diary of her record-breaking trek, 46 Days, I was able to learn from Jen’s determination to beat both the female and male thru-hike records on the Appalachian Trail. This resonated with me as a woman, one who is sometimes hesitant to take risks because of the risk of failure. She truly inspired me, and will inspire you, too. She’ll help you not only to go after your dream, but also to take each step with confidence.  But what touched me most was hearing about Brew.  He was her “first mate,” her partner on the trail who carried her supplies and took care of her every mile of the way. This was a growing experience in love. The further south these two traveled, the more they inspired all who knew them:  go after your love in life and go there with all of your heart.

Determination:  Barbara Gordon’s re-released I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can with new cover and preface.  In today’s world, anxiety, depression, wearing oneself thin–they are all experiences which would seem to have obvious, cycle-of-life-type recovery steps.  Barbara was hoping for just that when instead, her doctor wrote her a prescription for disaster.  The reason the aforementioned stressors  have sensible remedies today is due in large part to Barbara’s experience; that is, her experience helped discover the truth about Valium. Its numerous side effects have come to light since her struggle, and it has also prompted people to question the philosophy behind taking a little pill that “promises to solve it all.”  Her determination to scream about this wrong-doing at the top of her lungs made me reflect back on how lucky and blessed my life is.  If she could recover and come back from being, no joke, at rock bottom, then there is absolutely no reason why any of us should give up.

 

Confidence: Debra Beck and My Feet Aren’t Ugly. Think back to when you were a child, an emerging teen now called a “tween,” and fill in this blank: My ________ is so ugly! The point is, we all can fill in that blank; we all had something that, for no rhyme or reason, we hated about ourselves. These type of thoughts lead to low-self esteem and low self-confidence, always hoping that no one would notice an imperfection and make fun because of it. Debra’s life mission is to empower teens to love themselves, and it all stemmed from her childhood hatred of her feet.  Her young adult self-help book opens the doors of communication. It also struck a chord with me, having once been a teacher who taught because I wanted to help children accept their weaknesses, work toward their strengths, and support others who were doing the same. Though my hang-up wasn’t worrying about “ugly” feet, I’d always had anxiety about not living my dream life and feeling that I wouldn’t be able to rest until my life was the way I envisioned it. Until I saw this book, that is. After working extensively with Debra, I realized something: each “common” hour is an “uncommon” one—each is special. (Especially if you’re surrounded by all the people here at Beaufort!)

Admiration:  Susan Biali and the Sabbatical Sisters, Live a Life You Love and Reboot Your Life.  These five ladies practice what they preach, so-to-speak, by rebooting their lives with a sabbatical in order to ultimately live a life they love.  I admire people who take these types of risks: who follow their hearts, who find success in that. And who wanted to come to Beaufort to share their stories.  How can one not admire another being for taking a chance to better themselves, ever? After reading their books and dabbling in email conversations with these ladies, it became evident that they’ve gone after what they want, and they continue to dream up more future successes.

Precision: William B. Bradshaw and The Big Ten of Grammar. For gurus of our English language, when you hold this book and soak in the “there-their-they’re” and “lie vs. lay” chapters word-for-word, it’s like Christmas come early on every page! (Lucky for us, it is the holidays now!) Nevertheless, the Big Ten earned a permanent home on my desk, and whenever a friend or coworker would ask for my “expert editing,” I’d hand them Bradshaw’s publication. Being precise, writing accurately and taking the time to reference the experts really goes a long way.  Dreams tend to be precise, but the journey to achieving them usually is not. The precision of this book translates to being precise in life in order to keep us on track, ever focused on the dreams we hold so close.

Adventure: Margery Gray and Sheldon Harnick and The Outdoor Museum.  This new title, full of images of New York that I had never seen before, completely captured all of us here at Beaufort. From  the angles and beauty of the shots by Margery to the poetic rhymes that Sheldon created for each photo, there was a regular feast to be had for the imagination.  In seeing these, I saw the city in a whole new way, a way that I had to get out there and see for myself.  Last night, a month after my sense of adventure was ignited by this book, my coworker and I turned the corner and nearly tumbled over one of the thousands of possible pictures to be included in the book: “The Grilled Chicken” painted plywood mascot. This seemed bittersweet in that it was one of the photos that we all had never seen in our lives but always wondered about. And then on my last night in the city, we ran right into it. With so many more pictures to find and take myself, Beaufort awakened my sense of adventure in this gorgeous city.

Camaraderie: The Beaufort Team. This past summer, I embarked on pursuing my dreams of a career in publishing by applying anywhere that there was an opening, and Beaufort was the one who called. From being here, I’ve learned exactly how this well-oiled machine works. These titles are precisely picked for its readers, and no detail goes unturned. In pursuing my dream, my unexpected success came in the form of teamwork, working towards everyone’s strengths, and staying on task to get things done. When you are an intern, you are “a person who works as an apprentice or trainee in an occupation or profession to gain practical experience” (so says dictionary.com),  but it also means you are in charge of the running around, of tying up loose ends, of making copies, and sending books out, among other things.  Here, it was not only practical experience:  it was also a humbling, unexpected one.  It’s because of Beaufort, because of their support and their guidance,  that I was able to find my first job in publishing.

 

From the outside looking in, if I could give you one insight into this company, I’d say this: passion. Each book is a milestone, a piece of a dream for both the author and Beaufort, and a piece of success. Here, every person who works with Beaufort will meet success unexpectedly in the “common hours,” and none will ever be the same again.

46 Days

46 Days chronicles the trials, successes, joys, and frustrations of Jennifer Pharr Davis’s record-winning Appalachian Trail thru-hike through the eyes of her husband, Brew Davis. Brew lead her “pit crew,” the group of generous, loving hikers who supported Jen along the way, providing company along the epic trail and as much food as Jen could stomach.

Experience the trek with Jen and Brew as they battle shin splints and a stomach scare that threatens to end the attempt early, encounter wildlife at every turn, and meet the colorful cast of characters that help Jen complete her journey. 46 Days also includes an introduction and afterword by Jennifer with first-hand reflections on her life-changing voyage.

About: Brew Davis, Jennifer Pharr Davis

Paperback: $12.95 (ISBN: 9780825306785)

E-book: $12.95 (ISBN: 978025306167)

Sports & Recreational/Biography

208 pages

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The Outdoor Museum

Margie and Sheldon Harnick record the familiar sights of New York through the eyes of two unique poets. Landmarks transform through their eyes into something new and beautiful, something that will never be seen the same way again, including Central Park, swans in the lakes, mannequins in store windows, the underground maze of subways, the floats of the Macy’s Day Parade, puddles on busy street corners, and New York’s homeless. The marriage of Sheldon’s poetry with Margie’s photographs is an experience unto itself.

About: Margie Harnick, Sheldon Harnick

Hardcover: $29.95 (ISBN: 9780825306754)

Photography/ Travel

128 pages

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Waking the Sleeping Giant

Mainstream America has for too long been the sleeping giant of American politics. As mainstream Americans, we mind our own business, take care of our own responsibilities, and play by the rules. We know that there is no quick path to personal success or to national prosperity. But the ruling class has come to see the mainstream as largely irrelevant as a political force, when we are the backbone that supports the body politic. We work, pay our taxes, and vote. Then we go back to work and hope that those in power will do the right thing. We have trusted the dogs of the political class to guard our lunch, and they have eaten it. Something needs to change. Before we can equip the sleeping giant for the struggle ahead of us, however, we need to wake that sleeping giant. The Awakening Giant exposes liberal techniques and teaches mainstream Americans how to counter them to take back the country that our forebears made great, and to make it great again.

About the Authors:  Timothy C. Daughtry and  Gary R. Casselman 

 

 

 

 

Hardcover: $24.95 (ISBN: 9780825306792)

Ebook: $15.99 (ISBN: 9780825306174)

Paperback: $16.95 (ISBN:9780825307331)

Political Science/ National Government

Pages: 240

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Fatal Embrace

Mark Braverman shows how the Jewish quest for safety and empowerment and the Christian endeavor to atone for centuries of anti-Semitism have combined to suppress the conversations needed to bring about a just and lasting peace in the Holy Land. Fatal Embrace charts Braverman’s journey as an American Jew struggling with the difficult realities of modern Israel. The book vividly describes the spiritual and psychological forces driving the discourse and is a call to action to Americans of all faiths.

About: Mark Braverman

Paperback: $18.95 (ISBN: 9780825306761)

E-book: $18.90 (ISBN: 9780825306136)

Political Science/ Religious History

416 pages

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The Big Ten of Grammar

Have you ever hesitated when choosing between “I” or “me”? Have you had trouble figuring out tricky pronouns like “who” or “whom”? What about those always-troublesome commas–do they go before or after the quotation marks?

If you’re anything like the rest of us, you struggle with these age-old grammatical issues. In this practical and easy-to-understand handbook, Dr. William B. Bradshaw identifies the ten most common errors in English grammar and helps you to recognize and correct these mistakes, enabling you to write and speak with greater clarity in your personal and professional life. The Big Ten of Grammar is the perfect guide for students, teachers, and professionals to use in brushing up on their grammar.

About: Bud Bradshaw

Paperback: $12.95 (ISBN: 9780825306778)

E-book: $12.99 (ISBN: 9780825306143)

Reference/Language Arts

160 pages

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Jennifer Pharr Davis: A Woman Among Men

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Jennifer Pharr Davis did it again! Announced just yesterday, she has been nominated by National Geographic as one of the Top Ten Adventurers, 2012. Jen’s prolific achievement on the Appalachian Trail–she is now the world-record holder of the fastest thru-hike ever on the AT, man or woman–has earned her this impressive recognition. Her story is one of persistence and unmatched inner calm in the face of so many doubting Thomases. Most interestingly, Jen occupies a spot most commonly held by men. Yes, even in the world of adventuring, or perhaps even more so, it is men who usually take the day.  Sweating up peaks, sustaining bruises, and eating massive amounts of food is not very lady-like.

However, there is Jen: against all odds, against all stereotypes, she remains a powerful woman in a male-dominated world. She’s proven through her grueling feat that stamina and  strength are not only for men, but for any who would just reach out and grab them. Jen’s record-breaking hike is a dream dreamed differently; the attainment of what she desired was not informed or shaped or altered by the people (men) who had gone before her. She dreamed without qualifications.

Jen herself puts it best when she says in the National Geographic interview that she “just want[s] women to know that they have the same options as men, whether that’s a thru-hike, a day hike, or a record, or going out for the weekend. . . . I think as it [thru-hiking] continues to evolve, women are going to feel more connected to it now, because they know they have the ability to go out and do something amazing on the trail.”

All of us at Beaufort Books would agree with that. We congratulate Jennifer Pharr Davis on her recognition and hope that her example stands as a reminder to dreamers everywhere that it isn’t what’s happened before that matters, it’s what you decide to do now.

To see the official National Geographic page for JPD, click here:

http://adventure.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/adventurers-of-the-year/2012/jennifer-pharr-davis/

 

To Still a Spinning World: Barbara Gordon’s Gift

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Barbara Gordon’s I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can has been coming to mind a lot lately in this season of impending holidays, impending deadlines. Living in this fast-paced world, a world where material success is the ultimate measure of happiness and where the number of expectations that we’re able to juggle simultaneously is a sign of our strength, it’s easy to get overwhelmed. More importantly, it’s easy to forget that we’re human. It’s easy to forget that  what we’re all in need of is time, that is, space for unmediated growth. Instead, we run and we run and we run, never once questioning what it is we’re chasing and why the race is so important in the first place.

What’s valuable about Dancing, among many other things, is that author Gordon has given herself the chance to slow down and write honestly about this unending web most of us unconsciously allow ourselves to get caught up in. What is this manic motion? What is this constant need to be better, faster, shinier? Why is there never an “enough”? In reflecting on her own struggles with these questions, Gordon gives us all a chance to breathe.

What’s more, Gordon is brave. She confronts something insidious, her very life-orientation, her very way of relating to the world. She dissects and deconstructs everything she’d ever known previously. Gordon’s example invites us all to stop blindly assuming we’re always where we should be, heedlessly consuming the things society tells us we ought, and subconsciously presuming that our life is filling in the way that’s right for each of us. She gives us the inspiration to step back from the dance that is our lives for even just one precious moment and reflect on what it is about dancing that we love most. She encourages us to dance for that, and nothing else.

 

Praise for I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can:

“Spellbinding seems too mild a word.” –Detroit Free Press
“Gordon’s story rings with authenticity.” –Washington Post
“I can hardly remember the last time I stayed up half the night because I couldn’t stop reading. But that’s what happened with I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can.” –Chicago Tribune

I’m Dancing as Fast as I Can, written by Barbara Gordon. Re-released  this month by Moyer Bell, a division of Beaufort Books. Available now in bookstores across the nation.

Where are All the Women Writers? A Reflection

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

The scene is this: A bookshelf, sagging. Rows upon rows of many-colored spines. And each spine’s title recalls specific, special memories…standing on a too-hot beach, confusion and fury all around (The Stranger)…seeing your kid-brother in everything you do (The Catcher in the Rye)…fire-crackering the town clock in an effort to stop yourself from growing up (Farewell Summer). These memories are visceral and overwhelming and all-important.

However, there’s one thing that most people don’t notice when they take inventory of their books: the vast majority of their collection is no doubt comprised of male writers. Writers who have taught us and moved us and shaped us, but males nonetheless. Where are all the women? It is almost eerie to think that so much of our imaginations, both collective and personal,  have been formed in large part by only one half of our species. While I can list scores of writers that have stayed with me, I can count on my hand those that have been written by women: Cather, Oates, Erdrich, (Zadie) Smith. The incredible majority of books that have meant something to me have had male authors (Salinger, Greene, Capote, Wallace, Hardy, Percy, Malamud, Vonnegut, Kesey, Toole, Frazier, Chateaubriand, Bradbury,William Carlos Williams) and I never thought twice about it until this weekend, when the disparity on my shelf jolted me out of my dreamy process of looking lovingly at  books read long-ago.

More importantly, think of all the books that we want to read, that we feel foolish if we haven’t read. They’re The Grapes of Wrath and The Sun Also Rises and Anna Karenina and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and the 1984s of the world. This is our canon, this is our standard, and there are very, very few women who are a part of it.

Perhaps none of this is all that shocking. Men have had so much more time on women, as their voices have never been contested. And the fact that I can name any women writers, all of whom are powerhouses in their own right, is significant and wonderful. However, I do think it is time to peel back what often is an invisible film, time to really look at all of those stories and feelings and voices that we take for granted and which form our subconscious subconsciously. There are whole worlds of description underrepresented on our bookshelves (and this applies to the impoverished as much to the female.) What are we not hearing/seeing/thinking/feeling? During this Banned Book Week,  a week for protecting and promoting that which is precious and endangered, it seems relevant to mention that there is a completely different type of preciousness that is just as worth seeking out and safeguarding: the voice of a woman.

List of My Top 10 Favorite Books by Women: Which Have You Read?
**please note: this list is obviously self-compiled, but this fact arose out of necessity: there are no formal lists that I could find! Truly shocking, truly a reminder of that which we’re not hearing. **

1. The Awakening by Kate Chopin
2. A Widow’s Story by Joyce Carol Oates
3. The Plague of Doves by Louise Erdrich
4. On Beauty by Zadie Smith
5. Bitter in the Mouth by Monique Truong
6. The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
7. The Petty Details of So-and-So’s Life by Camilla Gibb
8. Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays by Zadie Smith
9.  O! Pioneers by Willa Cather
10. A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly

And for a more structural look at why women writers are underrepresented, and general observations on being a woman writer in the U.S., check out this great article by the ever-articulate Elaine Showalter: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/may/09/female-novelists-usa

Beau-na Fide Bird’s-Eye View

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

Think back to your first real, first serious book that you read in school.  You know, the one where there may have been a curse word, or real inequality, or historic acts of cruelty.  What about the first one where there was a real relationship, a first kiss or romantic moment, or even one where it wasn’t in a “perfect setting” and described the trials and tribulations the main characters had to overcome to survive.  Now, close your eyes, and imagine that book and your life having never read it.

Enter disgruntled adults in favor of censorship.  In opposition of taking away readers’ First Amendment rights, Banned Book Week was created in 1982, celebrating those titles and our freedom to choose what we read.

Since the written word became the published story, classics have been consumed by readers internationally, studied and appreciated a million times daily. “On July 21, 1998, the Radcliffe Publishing Course compiled and released its own list of the century’s top 100 novels, at the request of the Modern Library editorial board,” http://www.modernlibrary.com/top-100/radcliffes-rival-100-best-novels-list/.  Now, what if I were to tell you that 50% of the best novels of all times are also banned books?  Below are those from Radcliffe’s 100 list.

1. The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
2. The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger
3. The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck
4. To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
5. The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
6. Ulysses, by James Joyce
7. Beloved, by Toni Morrison
8. The Lord of the Flies, by William Golding
9. 1984, by George Orwell
11. Lolita, by Vladmir Nabokov
12. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck
15. Catch-22, by Joseph Heller
16. Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley
17. Animal Farm, by George Orwell
18. The Sun Also Rises, by Ernest Hemingway
19. As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner
20. A Farewell to Arms, by Ernest Hemingway
23. Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston
24. Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison
25. Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison
26. Gone with the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell

27. Native Son, by Richard Wright

28. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey
29. Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut
30. For Whom the Bell Tolls, by Ernest Hemingway
33. The Call of the Wild, by Jack London
36. Go Tell it on the Mountain, by James Baldwin

38. All the King’s Men, by Robert Penn Warren
40. The Lord of the Rings, by J.R.R. Tolkien
45. The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair
48. Lady Chatterley’s Lover, by D.H. Lawrence
49. A Clockwork Orange, by Anthony Burgess
50. The Awakening, by Kate Chopin
53. In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote
55. The Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie
57. Sophie’s Choice, by William Styron
64. Sons and Lovers, by D.H. Lawrence
66. Cat’s Cradle, by Kurt Vonnegut
67. A Separate Peace, by John Knowles
73. Naked Lunch, by William S. Burroughs
74. Brideshead Revisited, by Evelyn Waugh
75. Women in Love, by D.H. Lawrence
80. The Naked and the Dead, by Norman Mailer
84. Tropic of Cancer, by Henry Miller
88. An American Tragedy, by Theodore Dreiser
97. Rabbit, Run, by John Updike

Additionally, there is Animal Farm by George Orwell, which addresses both historical and political downfalls of the past, which shows readers how the Stalin regime dominated and what SHOULD have been done or seen, or what we are to look out for now in political turmoil.  The Giver by Lois Lowry, describes a utopian society, but at what cost?  The protagonist must choose right from wrong, all while coming of age, and what’s unrealistic about that? My Brother Sam Is Dead by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier, is set during the American Revolution where a boy grows up during the war and has to choose his morals versus his family’s ideals; completely relevant to every generation.

Lois Duncan, Shel Silverstein, Maya Angelou, Margaret Atwood, Ernest Hemingway, Roald Dahl, Toni Morrison, Mark Twain, and even J.K. Rowling and Maurice Sendak.  All some of world’s greatest and strongest minds, all questioned for writing about life in their own way.

In the last twenty years, according to the ALA, it was in the mid-’90s when the banned book bandwagon really gained momentum, challenging nearly 800 titles annually.  However, most recently in 2010, there have been the least amount of challenges since 1990, only 348.  The reason behind the majority of these challenges is sexual content, followed by language, violence, and unsuitability for an age group.  Parents lead this frontier with 6,103 and schools were the top institution at 4,048.  These statistics are logical yet intriguing.

In celebration for our Constitution, let us read all of the wonderful works out there, and this year, there’s a new spin- the Virtual Read Out.  Pick your favorite banned book, find a meaningful passage to you, and hit record.  YouTube has a BBW Channel for you to share the excerpts you chose to read aloud.  For full details, go to www.bannedbooksweek.org and celebrate your  F-READ-OM!

My Feet Aren’t Ugly: A Girl’s Guide to Loving Herself

Do you ever feel bad about yourself or have trouble being yourself while still fitting in? Do you have tough questions you are afraid to ask? In this funny, honest book, teen mentor Debra Beck provides personal stories, quizzes, journaling exercises, and thoughts from teens themselves to help you develop your self-confidence. Learn how to make healthy decisions in the face of peer pressure, have strong relationships with family and friends, and respect and love yourself for who you are. This revised and updated edition also has new chapters on bullying and internet safety.

About the Author: Debra Beck

Paperback: $12.95 (ISBN: 9780825306020)

Ebook: $12.95 (ISBN: 9780825306112)

YA Nonfiction/ Self-Help

Pages: 176

Order Here:

The Beau-na Fide Bird’s-Eye View

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

There is a lot going on in the world today.  The first day of the 2011 school year, National Read a Book Day, Freddie Mercury’s sixty-fifth birthday, Princess Diana’s funeral was fourteen years ago, Magellan circumnavigated the world back in 1522, and back in 1958, comedian and published author Jeff Foxworthy was born.

What does this all mean?  National Read a Book Day is perfect for today.  The US Open’s day and evening sessions were canceled because of unwavering rainfall, and picking up a good read is exactly what most players and fans will now do as a way of staying warm, dry, and relaxed in recovering from the splendid Labor Day Weekend.

As for the Queen musician, Google created a cartoon montage of Freddie Mercury’s iconic look accompanied with a song, and as a whole, it has a Peter Gabriel-meets-Yellow Submarine feel.  Quite catchy and brilliant, actually.  Magellan and Princess Diana, though she was of Wales and he was traveling for Spain, both need no explanation, just simply notoriety that today they were bittersweetly a part of history.

As for Jeff Foxworthy, who is known for his blue-collar comedy, has turned a new leaf by publishing his latest book with us, “Hide!!!”, a hide-and-seek children’s adventure!  This book is a perfect interactive read for parents and children, or a group of young readers to enjoy together.  Foxworthy’s light-heartedness truly captures the interest of all who explore it.

Beyond the bird’s eye view of today, many New Yorkers, New Englanders, and Americans know what is coming up: the ten-year anniversary of 9/11.  As towns finalize their memorials, newspapers and publishers prepare to relive that day in remembrance for those whose lives were forever changed on that picturesque Tuesday morning.