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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: book reading, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. If you happen to speak Czech . . .

Greetings, Fear Seekers.Because YOU demanded it (well...somebody must have), ENCYCLOPEDIA HORRIFICA is now available in a handsome Czechoslovakian edition.If anyone can reveal whether this is a positi... Read the rest of this post

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2. Read Across America

René Colato Laínez


Read Across America celebrates the birthday of Theodor Seuss Geisel. He was an American writer and cartoonist best known for his classic children's books under the pen name Dr. Seuss, including The Cat in the Hat, Green Eggs and Ham, and How the Grinch Stole Christmas.

During Read Across America Day millions of children and young adults create posters, read books, and listen to authors. Call your local school this March 3, 2008 and be part of this national celebration. Just pick up your favorite book and you will be set to inspire many children in this wonderful day.

You can have your own celebration at home. Go to the public library, check out books, and read them with your children. These are some books that you can check out:

My Name is Gabito/ Me llamo Gabito by Monica Brown
Saturday’s Sancocho by Lelia Torres
Abuelita Full of Life/ Abuelita llena de vida by Amy Costales
Benjamin and the Word/Benjamin y la palabra by Daniel A. Olivas
I love Saturdays and Domingos by Alma Flor Ada
Nana’s Big Surprise/ Nana, ¡Qué Sorpresa! by Amada Irma Perez
Xochitl and the Flowers/ Xóchilt, la niña de las Flores by Jorge Argueta

For more information about Read Across America visit http://www.nea.org/readacross/index.html




This weekend, March 15/16, the University of San Francisco will celebrate Reading the World X. Authors Malin Alegria, Monica Brown, Reyna Grande, René Colato Laínez, Alma Flor Ada, Ashley Bryan, Sarah Ellis, Naomi Shihab Nye, Doris Orgel, Peter Sís, Leslie Tryon, Rita Williams Garcia, Laurence Yep, Jack Zipes and many more will be signing books and talking about multicultural literature.





Come celebrate a new book
by Jorge Argueta



NINGUN SER HUMANO ES INDOCUMENTADO /NO HUMAN BEING IS UNDOCUMENTED


Alfredito Flies Home / Alfredito regresa volando a su casa
Illustrated by Luis Garay
Sunday, March 2nd
Modern Times Bookstore
888 Valencia St.
San Francisco, CA 94110
Ph. 415-282-9246
3 p.m.

Book-signing and refreshments
Both English and the Spanish editions will be available.
With music by Franscisco Herrera

Francisco Herrera has been performing and writing music for children in English and Spanish for over 27 years. He has a regular music class in Spanish at Parque Niños Unidos at 23 and Folsom every Monday at 10 a.m.

“Francisco Herrera’s music brings joy to children of all cultures. Most importantly, his music brings comfort to the hearts of the immigrants.” — Jorge Argueta

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3. Chocolate: A Bittersweet Story of Dark and Light

In this scintillating narrative, acclaimed foodie Mort Rosenblum delves into the complex world of chocolate. From mole poblano — chili-laced gift of the gods, to the contemporary French chocolatiers who produce the palets d'or, bite-sized, gold-flecked bricks of dark chocolate — to the vast empires of Hershey, Godiva, and Valrhona, Rosenblum follows the chocolate trail the world over. He visits cacao plantations, meets with growers, buyers, makers, and tasters, and investigates the dark side of the chocolate trade as well as the enduring appeal of its product.

Yes, our kind is everywhere... I'm a foodie, too. I watch the Food Network like it's porn. Seriously, have you seen Nigella Lawson and Jamie Oliver, watched their nimble fingers, their deft touch as they make the stuff that dreams are made of? Delicious food, subtly prepared, engages all the senses, just like good sex. And like sex, most of us have a particular twist, a certain something that sets us over the edge. My particular kink is chocolate.... smooth, silky, sweet, or slightly bitter. I can take a nibble and slowly let it dissolve on my tongue, and the rush of flavor — flower petal/sugar/dark woods/midnight — overwhelms me.

And I'm not alone either; check out Milt Rosenblum's odyssey with my beloved. But before you do, I want to let you in on the fact that Chocolate is no mere confection. Rosenblum does offer an engaging travelogue featuring the voluptuous substance as the centerpiece.

But it's also a character study of of the people who absolutely live for the perfect cacao high. There's Chloe Doutre-Roussel, the chocolate doyenne, who by force of will, expert knowledge, and her own Gallic brand of sexiness, was able to convince the Brits to augment that waxy brick of theirs with glorious French confiserie. They couldn't resist her blandishments, despite years of proffering that insult as a treat to an unknowing populace.

Then there's Claudio da Principe, whose obsession with growing the best bean and to create a fair trade chocolate finca led him to a South American pilgrimage; an odyssey of intrigue, duplicity and greed worthy of Herzog and Aguirre the Wrath of God. Shot through this confection of a book is also a fascinating micro history of how the Old World "conquered" the "New" World.

Early in the book, which is for me one of the most potent descriptions, Rosenblum pays homage in Oaxaca at the altar of Estela Luna. He lovingly describes her comida casera and her personal domain where she holds court as chef, priestess, and historian, conjuring up mole exquisito and making the point that Mexico was not conquered after all.

And there is the redoubtable Mr. Rosenblum himself, intrepid explorer, traveling the globe for that ultimate high. Ah, such sacrifice in the pursuit of knowledge...

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News You Can Use

La Tremenda herself, Michele Serros, will be reading from her newest novel, Scandalosa.

Sunday, December, 8th 3pm
Borders 8861 Washington Boulevard, Pico Rivera, CA


Gente, get out there and get the book!

Lisa Alvarado

1 Comments on Chocolate: A Bittersweet Story of Dark and Light, last added: 12/8/2007
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