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1. Review of the Day: The Griffin and the Dinosaur by Marc Aronson with Adrienne Mayor

GriffinDinosaur 254x300 Review of the Day: The Griffin and the Dinosaur by Marc Aronson with Adrienne MayorThe Griffin and the Dinosaur: How Adrienne Mayor Discovered a Fascinating Link Between Myth and Science
By Marc Aronson with Adrienne Mayor
Illustrated by Chris Muller
National Geographic
$18.99
ISBN: 978-1-4263-1108-6
Ages 9-12
On shelves April 8th.

I remember back in 2007 when the American Museum of Natural History in NYC premiered a show called “Mythic Creatures”. It made a fair amount of press and with good reason. It’s not every day you see full-scale models of mythical creatures presented in a serious museum setting. The show got some nice write-ups but though I listened to the explanations of why it was going on, I didn’t quite catch the whole point. To me it just sort of sounded like a cheap ploy to lure more patrons into the museum’s exhibits. A bit of the old P.T Barnum, albeit with a classier imprimatur. Years passed and I forgot about the show right up until the publication of The Griffin and the Dinosaur. As I read the book, memories of the show came back to me, as did my complete and utter misunderstanding of what it had been trying to accomplish. Fortunately, I am happy to report that once in a while in this life a gal gets a second chance. With Marc Aronson and Adrienne Mayor’s hard work, now I have a book before me that clarifies the true connection between the prehistoric and the mythical. Focused through a single woman’s obsessive search, this book comes off as both a riveting historical mystery as well as a wonderful example of how a person’s passions might take them places they never imagined they might travel. The future isn’t written in stone but it might just be written in bones.

It was kind of a goofy idea. The sort of thing a person might consider off-handedly then forget about five minutes later. But for Adrienne Mayor, the idea stuck. It was simple too. You see, after doing lots of research at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Ms. Mayor noticed a strange pattern. Reading texts by ancient Greeks she noticed that when they discussed creatures like griffins they always sounded like they knew about these animals firsthand. Is it possible that these creatures were conjured up after the Greeks found some ancient bones of one kind of another? Not a natural born scholar, Adrienne always considered herself more of an artist than anything else. Still, this question about the griffin’s origins intrigued her. What she could not have expected was how her search would take her from Greece to Samos to The Museum of the Rockies to distant China. Infinitely interesting, illustrated with multiple photographs, sketches, ancient images and contemporary illustrations, Mayor not only shows where our ancestors got their seemingly goofy ideas, but gives these people a form of credit and respect that is certainly their due.

Every Marc Aronson book is different. Generalizing is not something you can really do when you discuss him as an author. I have found in the past that some of his books ran a bit on the long and lengthy side, but beyond that there aren’t any real connecting threads between one project and another. Yet if I found Mr. Aronson to be a bit more loquacious at times than he needed to be, no such objection could possibly be leveled at The Griffin and the Dinosaur. Coming in at a svelte 48 pages, a number normally associated with slightly longer picture books, Aronson wastes no time getting to the meat of the matter. Turn to the first page and there’s Adrienne, age six. Four pages later she’s studying in Athens while her fiancé works on his ancient Greek fortress research. Aronson cuts to the chase, helped in large part by his interviews with Adrienne. The result is a well-rounded portrait of a single woman going against the odds to prove something both interesting and odd. It’s research presented to kids as adventure in a format they’re going to actually WANT to read. How rare is that?

GriffinDinosaur2 300x155 Review of the Day: The Griffin and the Dinosaur by Marc Aronson with Adrienne MayorI know that one reviewer of this book was dismayed by an interpretation of Marc Aronson’s message here that says that people who closely observe the world around them are just as good as professional scholars in the field. For the record, I do not happen to agree that that is what Aronson is saying. I think it far more likely that Aronson is displaying the need for balance. You can sit behind dusty tomes all day long with your professional degree hanging up upon a wall, but if you don’t go out and try new ideas and speak to new people and even do a bit of exploring (of one kind or another) then you cannot be surprised when a woman like Ms. Mayor goes about making a fabulous, hitherto unknown (or unproved) discovery. By the same token, the person who observes the world around them closely but never picks up a book or does even rudimentary research is going to completely miss the potential connections out there that could justify their work. Mayor exhibited both a willingness to learn and a sharp-eyed curiosity that was willing to question. In an era when so much research is beholden to outside interests, it does the heart good to read a book about a woman who set out to discover what many might have considered impossible to prove.

The extra details turn out to be just as enchanting. The entire history of the Scythians and how they might have been an inspiration for some of the Amazon women tales out there is captivating. Even more so their gold, as well as the discovery of Megalopolis. And then there’s that amazing look at mammoth skulls and how they might have inspired the stories of the Cyclops. It all got me to thinking about the role of myths in the world and their beginnings. Maybe a kid will read this book and begin to wonder what the roots of other great myths might be. Will they start poring over Hindi and Norse myths, looking for clues to the past? Or will they simply get a better sense of one of the big themes of the book: that ancient people had reasons for making up the stories that they did. For me, that was a moral well worth taking away from the story. We have a tendency to look down our nose at our ancient ancestors, but as this book shows, these people had their reasons for thinking the way that they did. We should never be so egotistical as to believe that we are the first people to find the bones of long extinct creatures and to make up reasons for their existence.

As for the art, for the most part it’s okay but artist Chris Muller gets off to a shaky start. His presence in the book makes a lot of sense. I could completely understand the need to ratchet up the kid-friendly elements of the story, of course. If you name your book The Griffin and the Dinosaur then you better bloody well have a couple griffins in there (to say nothing of the dinosaurs). In fact, when Muller is working on the mythical, he is at his best. The cover, for example, is striking, as are his images of an Amazon fighting a griffin or a sleeping griffin protecting its nest. Where it all breaks down is when he has to deal with reality. The publication page says that the paintings were made with “traditional media – pencil and watercolors – and digital painting.” Traditional media is fine with me, but the digital painting proves to be occasionally painful. For example, a preliminary image of young Adrienne dowsing above the skeleton of a dinosaur is baffling partly because I couldn’t find any mentions of dowsing in the text and partly because the CGI cloud cover contrasts horribly with the drawn Adrienne. It feels like a cheap image in an otherwise classy book. Happily, it is the only moment when I felt that way. Other images in the book border or plunge right into the fantastical, and that’s appropriate for the moments they tend to illustrate.

This is the Possession by A.S. Byatt of children’s literature. An honest-to-goodness historical mystery complete with an early hypothesis, a likable heroine, multiple dead ends, and at the end? GOLD! Literally. It succeeds at doing many things at once, but never runs too long or bores the reader with its findings. Mayor is a likable and ultimately unintimidating subject for kids to follow. For those children obsessed with myths and legends, this might be the ideal way to transition them gently from the world of the fantastical into one of research and exploration. For Percy Jackson lovers everywhere.

On shelves April 8th.

Source: Final copy sent from publicist for review.

Like This? Then Try:

Professional Reviews: Kirkus

Misc:

  • The American Museum of Natural History offers their own summary of the griffin/dinosaur connection.

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2. J. Edgar Hoover VS. Amelia McBride

Hi all! Well it's been a long time since we rock and rolled yea!!!! Been a long time, been a long, lonely, lonely time (Nod of the head to Led Zep). Summer has been tough and somethings popped up that prevented me from posting as much as I would like. But it looks like were back in business again!!!!!!! So without further adieu, here we go:

Master Of Deceit :  J. Edgar Hoover and America in the Age of Lies by Marc Aronson - Wow I have to tell you it's been awhile sense I've read a Non-Fiction book, but this one made the time worth the wait. This book not only takes a close look at a man that has been vilified by many, and perhaps justifiably so, but also shows us a side of Hoover that is not full of phony and overblown baloney that has been perpetrated on him for years. Was he a troubled man? Yes almost certainly. Did he do things that were morally ambiguous? Yes, but because he believed he was protecting America. This book tells us Hoover's story with all his short comings and deceitful manipulation of America and Americans through his leadership of the FBI. It also shows a real human being, that while you may not very well like, is just as human and flawed as you or me. It also shows the bigger picture of the times and other individuals whom had roles to play in events that occurred that have all been blamed on Hoover (rightfully or wrongly). The things that were going on that were outside the realm of Hoover's control in the USA and the world will astound you and make you rethink American History (much of it not that dated) and what you have been told and what is fact. There are some heavy and big things presented in this book that will have you turning page after page. A really fascinating and interesting book that I recommend for those ages 11 and up.


The Amelia Rules Graphic Novel Series by Jimmy Gownley - This Graphic Novel Series, with its 8th instalment coming out soon, is truly a wonderful collection of work. The GNs center around Amelia McBride whose parent's are divorced and she and her Mom move to a small town where her Mom's sister Tanner (the ultimate in cool without trying to be, mysterious rock star) lives. She feels her world has been turned upside down as she starts a new school and has to make new friends along with dealing with the divorce and move. She does make new friends in Reggie (a true life non-super-hero with no powers and the ability to bungle any situation he encounters), her friend/enemy Rhonda, the super cool Pajamaman and the supper silly Joan. Their is GASP (The Gathering of Awesome Super Pals) organized by Reggie that everyone is forced to become a member. Their despicable enemies the  Park View Terrace Ninjas are always a constant threat (at least in Reggie's mind). What makes this GN Series so special is that it covers serious issues that kids face along with the really funny stuff, the sad stuff, the happy stuff and much more. Highly recommended for ages 8 and up.

Also, check it out:





Talk to you later me amigos!!!

Peace out,
Bill

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3. Pick-Up Game edited by Marc Aronson and Charles R. Smith Jr.

It’s not just basketball games that go down at The Cage, the fenced-in court on West 4th Street in New York City. In Pick-Up Game: A Full Day of Full Court, nine short stories introduce a handful of players and spectators there on one July day.

I’m calling Charles R. Smith the point guard in Pick-Up Game, since it’s his photographs and poems that lead in to the stories that comprise the book. Told in different voices, from different perspectives, each story picks up where the previous story leaves off. As co-editor Marc Aronson writes in the Afterword, “We chose the setting and the date and gave each author a time slot. Each author knew who was on the court because we didn’t let an author write a new story until the previous one was done. Each writer came on the court knowing who was playing, who had won, but ready to tell his or her own story.” (p. 164)

As a whole, Pick-Up Game is a dynamic collection–some of the stories are funny, some are poignant, but all have strong voices and are written with verve. Smith’s poems, written in various formats, celebrate the game and serve as a sort of introduction to the following story; I particularly love “My Boys” (p. 35-36). The cast of characters is diverse, both in terms of skin color and life experiences. Many appear in multiple stories, which provides additional flair. It’s fun for readers, and also a bit fascinating to see the different sides of characters like Caesar, first introduced in Willie Perdomo’s “Mira Mira,” but who pops up in several other stories.

If there is a drawback to this format, it’s that some of the stories were so strong, so interesting that I wanted to keep reading about some of the characters. Like KaySaan, from Bruce Brooks’ “Laws of Motion,” a 6′ 10″ self-described nerd from a basketball-loving family who doesn’t know anything about basketball himself. Or Cochise, the Mohawk ironworker in Joseph Bruchac’s “Head Game.” And, though he never tells his own story, Waco.

Besides Perdomo, Brooks, and Bruchac, the rest of Pick-Up Game’s list of authors consists of Walter Dean Myers, Sharon G. Flake, Robert Burleigh, Rita Williams-Garcia, Adam Rapp, and Robert Lipsyte. The contributors, the short length of the book (160 pages, excluding the Afterword and biographical information about the authors), and the energy of the stories make this an especially good choice for reluctant readers and basketball fans in general. For folks who aren’t basketball fans, while most of the stories are from the perspective of hardcore players and fans, a handful of stories, like Flake’s “Virgins are Lucky” and Rapp’s “Just Shane,” are not.

Book source: public library.

Cross-posted at Guys Lit Wire.


Filed under: Fiction, Reviews 2 Comments on Pick-Up Game edited by Marc Aronson and Charles R. Smith Jr., last added: 3/30/2011
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4. Jane Addams Children’s Book Award 56th Annual Award Ceremony

The Jane Addams Peace Association and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom are pleased to announce that the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award 56th Annual Award Ceremony will be held on Friday, October 16th at 2:30 PM at the 777 United Nations Plaza (2nd Floor) in New York City, NY. This event is free and open to all. Reservations are not needed.

Join us for a memorable afternoon of award presentation and responses by authors and illustrators. Come meet and talk with the honored guests, including Award winner Margarita Engle and honorees Anne Laurel Carter, Lucía González, Lulu Delacre, Scott Reynolds Nelson, and Marc Aronson. Enjoy a reception and an opportunity for book signing after formal presentation of the awards. All the award books will be available for purchase.

The Award Winners:

Planting the Trees of Kenya: The Story of Wangari Maathai written and illustrated by Claire A. Nivola is the winner in the Books for Younger Children Category.

The Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba’s Struggle for Freedom by Margarita Engle is the winner in the Books for Older Children Category.

The Honor Books:

Books for Younger Children:

The Storyteller’s Candle/La velita de los cuentos written by Lucía González and illustrated by Lulu Delacre

Silent Music: A Story of Baghdad written and illustrated by James Rumford

Books for Older Children:

The Shepherd’s Granddaughter by Anne Laurel Carter

Ain’t Nothing But a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry by Scott Reynolds Nelson with Marc Aronson

For additional information about the Jane Addams Children’s Book Awards and a complete list of books honored since 1953, click here.

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5. Ain't Nothing But a Man- Cybils Finalist

Ain't Nothing but a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry

Author: Scott Reynolds Nelson with Marc Aronson
Publisher: National Geographic Children's Books (December 26, 2007)
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Hardcover: 64 pages

If you dream of being a historian, tracking down sources, looking for new evidence, or just solving mysteries and puzzles then this is the book for you! John Henry, the man in the famous song, has been seen as a hero by many different kinds of people. Scott Reynolds Nelson wanted to know if there was a real John Henry! Did he really compete with a steam drill, and did he die doing so? Nelson carefully lays out for us his search to find the answers to these questions. What's interesting is that Nelson didn’t start out looking for John Henry. He was looking for historical research on men who had worked on the railroad. He discovered that some 40,000 men, the largest railroad workforce in the South, were hardly mentioned in the history books. But why? The one song he used as his main piece of research was the song about John Henry which would lead him on a mission to discover the real John Henry.

Nelson has said, "I hope other kids will learn from this book that history is something you do, not just something you read." And Nelson has proved just that. This book makes history a fun scavenger hunt, using clues to find answers, and uncovering secret messages. The more you read, you won't want to put this book down. As a nonfiction writer, I found this book very interesting! I love research and uncovering new things, so to follow along with Nelson on his journey to put this puzzle together was fascinating. There are more goodies in the back of the book- Nelson suggests "How to Be a Historian" and offers a model of what all historians do.

Read these other great reviews...
Carol Wilcox at Carol's Corner
Jill Tullo at the Well Read Child


Hop over to Anastasia Suen's picture book of the day blog for the Nonfiction Monday roundup!

2 Comments on Ain't Nothing But a Man- Cybils Finalist, last added: 2/3/2009
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6. Marc Aronson's Unsettled


SHOW NOTES:

Marc Aronson is an editor, a publisher, and an author of historical nonfiction for young people. He writes the "Nonfiction Matters" column in School Library Journal, and also hosts the Nonfiction Matters blog on the SLJ website. I met up with Marc at the 2008 School Library Journal Leadership Summit in Hollywood, Florida to talk about his latest and perhaps most controversial book, Unsettled: The Problem of Loving Israel. We had such an interesting conversation that I hardly edited the recording at all. I hope you'll find meeting Marc as fascinating as I did. Please feel free to join our conversation by posting comments here on The Book of Life website.

As an added bonus, scroll down to see a video created by Amy Bowllan of School Library Journal's Bowllan's Blog, showing highlights of Marc Aronson's visit to her own school to discuss his books.


AUDIO:

Click the play button on this flash player to listen to the podcast now:

Or click MP3 File to start your computer's media player.

VIDEO:



CREDITS:

Our background music is provided by The Freilachmakers Klezmer String Band.

Books and CD's mentioned on the show may be borrowed from the Feldman Children's Library at Congregation B'nai Israel. Browse our online catalog to reserve books, post a review, or just to look around!

Your feedback is appreciated! Please write to [email protected]!

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7. Trisha’s May roundup


in which I only read one YA novel. Two, if you count manga, since I did read Yakitate!! Japan vol. 10 (and is it just me, or did anyone else really want to try Azuma’s kamaboko bread?). All the other books I read were non-fiction and adult fiction. The rest of the month I spent watching sports on TV while I was sick and repeatedly listening to Bon Iver (to say I love For Emma, Forever Ago would be an understatement), Frightened Rabbit, and Santogold, with some Gutter Twins thrown in.

cover of The Juliet Club by Suzanne HarperThe Juliet Club by Suzanne Harper
The plot didn’t sound that interesting to me, but I decided to give it a try after realizing it was by the same author as The Secret Life of Sparrow Delaney. Kate wins a Shakespeare essay contest, enabling her to spend part of her summer in Verona studying Shakespeare. There are only five other teens in the program, the two other American essay winners and three Italian teens, and their professor feels that answering letters that teens have written to Juliet (as in Romeo and Juliet) would be a better way of studying the play than, you know, actually studying the play. A predictable, if enjoyable, book that reads a lot faster than its 400+ page length may initially lead you to believe.

A History Beyond Black and White by Marc AronsonRace: A History Beyond Black and White by Marc Aronson
I read this at the beginning of the month the night before it was due, so here’s what I can remember: Aronson attempts to explain the origins of the concept of race and how racism emerged from it. He definitely takes a historiographical view, with practically no psychological or anthropological perspective (okay, as someone who majored in psychology and anthropology, I’m biased), but I appreciated how he discussed his reasons for this early on in the book. While Aronson never convinced me of the relationship between anti-Semitism and racism, I still found his discussions of anti-Semitism extremely interesting. And I highly recommend this book. It covers an important topic in a conversational way, includes lots of pictures, and is meticulously footnoted (and the footnotes include Aronson’s thoughts on the works he’s citing and recommendations of which books are suitable for teens).

cover of The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam by Ann-Marie FlemingThe Magical Life of Long Tack Sam by Ann-Marie Fleming
I first learned of this book from Chasing Ray. I think it was the Chinese magician bit that initially drew my interest, but once I started reading, I was hooked. Ann-Marie Fleming discovers an old 16 mm film of her great-grandfather, Long Tack Sam. To Fleming’s amazement, she discovers Long Tack Sam was a famous magician. At a magic collector’s convention, she meets magicians who had seen Long Tack Sam perform, who had performed with him. As she puts it, “I didn’t know anything about that world, and suddenly, I’m introduced to all these magicians, who want to help me find the history of my great-grandfather, and their own history before it slips away.”

Fleming turned her search for information about Long Tack Sam into a documentary film. Using illustrations, photographs, and what I assume are stills from the documentary, she’s created a funny, fascinating, and touching memoir. More than just a compelling investigation into life of Long Tack Sam, it’s also a thoughtful examination of family and race. I rarely read memoirs, but really enjoyed this. Between the graphic format and the themes of family and identity running through the book, it will definitely appeal to teens. I don’t have a copy of it in my library yet, but I’m planning on buying one. I have a feeling it’d get lost on the shelves since it’s cataloged with books on magic in the 793s, but it has so much appeal to both adults and teens (it would be excellent for booktalking) that you would just need to briefly talk it up to people to get it into the hands of readers.

The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein
Definitely not a teen book, but readable and accessible enough for teens interested in the topic, including those who may have read Klein’s article in Rolling Stone. Klein’s thesis is that free market capitalism has used, and sometimes created, disasters to take advantage of shocked populations who would otherwise oppose the loss of land, public services and utilities, and nationalized industries to privatization. Hence Klein’s term “disaster capitalism.” Powerful and provoking stuff. I think the paperback is coming out this month, and I might just have to get a copy of it for myself because I didn’t have the time to reread it like I wanted to. (I was on the waiting list for months for this.)

Another Thing to Fall by Laura Lippman
I was originally going to write about this with my April roundup, even though I read it in May, because of Yrsa Sigurdadóttir’s Last Rituals, which I read in April. But that roundup started to get really long, so I cut the adult books. Anyway, a TV show that will air on basic cable is being produced in Baltimore. Tess is asked to watch the lead actress when the actress is not on set because of pranks that have occurred and, later, the murder of a producer’s assistant. I said last year that part of what makes Lippman so great is that she is so consistently good. I think if almost any other author had written this, I would have said it’s a really good book, but as it is, I consider it an average (though better than a lot of what else is out there) Tess book. Judging by reviews at online bookstores, I’m in the minority who thinks What the Dead Know was better than Another Thing to Fall. Though I do hope we see Mrs. Blossom in future books.

The reason I was going to write about it last month is that Yrsa Sigurdadóttir has written five children’s books, and in Publishers Weekly, Lippman said, “I sometimes think that I’m just a YA writer who lost my way.” She should totally write a YA book! I can’t be the only person who would read it. And teenage characters are an important part of a lot of her books already.

Nightkeepers by Jessica Andersen
I believe this is Andersen’s first single title, which makes it even more impressive. It’s long, but doesn’t feel padded. There’s a lot of plot and backstory, but it wasn’t overwhelming. It’s the first in a series, so while Andersen obviously lays the groundwork for future books in terms of the overarching plot, as far as the supporting characters go, there was not much sequel-baiting. And if I didn’t completely buy into Strike and Leah’s relationship (at least, not enough for Strike to risk such, well, apocalyptic catastrophe for it), I still finished the book exhilarated and feeling more excited about a romance novel than I’ve been in a while. I’ve already recommended this to a romance-reading library patron, which is something I never do. You know, because of that have not been very excited about any romance in ages thing. Now I just have to wait until NEXT YEAR! for the next book.

The Lost Duke of Wyndham by Julia Quinn
The thing about me and Julia Quinn is that, while I haven’t read all of her books and while I do tend to like the ones I’ve read, I never seem to like them as much as everyone else. So although I did enjoy The Lost Duke of Wyndham and felt that it was, in a way, her most mature book yet (though the most recent of her books I’ve read are Hyacinth’s and Colin/Penelope’s, so I could be wrong), I never moved beyond liking into really liking, or more, the book. Yes, Jack was charming. And, yes, Grace was admirable. But I found Thomas the most interesting. This is not so much a criticism of JQ’s writing as it is Thomas’ situation intriguing me. After all, Jack is not the first missing nobleman to be found, nor the first charming highwayman. But I can’t recall reading a romance about a displaced Duke before, especially one who was so prominent a part of a previous book.

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8. TALKING AND WRITING ABOUT RACE: Now, More Than Ever

http://booktv.org/program.aspx?ProgramId=9067&SectionName=&PlayMedia=No

Noted YA Author Marc Aronson will be featured on BOOKTV.ORG at 7:00 PM, Sunday night, March 23rd, 2008. (BookTV airs on on the weekends over your C-SPAN 2 cable channel.) Aronson addresses the history of race relations in his book RACE: A HISTORY BEYOND BLACK AND WHITE. This talk was taped at the Brooklyn Public Library on February 27th, 2008. (There may be a brick or two with my name on it in libraries in my home town branches. I believe that over the years, I accrued enough late fines to be considered an investor in the infrastructure.)



Aronson tells us: "I wrote this book to make sense of race and racism now by tracing out their long history. This is a book about deep, disturbing, and personal feelings. And yet it is also about people and events hundreds, even thousands of years ago. As you'll see, I think the two are connected. Race is our modern way of handling emotions that go back to the very beginning of human evolution. That is one reason why race is so hard for us to deal with: in one way race seems as current as science, in another it taps our oldest fears." For more, please see: http://www.marcaronson.com/archives/2007/04/race_a_history.html

Without injecting personal politics into this blog entry, it goes without saying the issue of race is something that is both timely, timeless, and critical to our survival as a community of mankind.

We should be better than what we are.
We can be better than what we are.

And yes, our words matter. Words DO move mountains. Big and small.
A speech can change a life.
Think "I Have A Dream."
Words on paper, written by someone who loves words, like you, like me. And yet those words moved a nation and changed a nation. Never underestimate the gift that comes from your fingertips!


Here's something to think about.
A strange confluence of historic events:
King's I HAVE A DREAM speech: Washington, DC, August 28th, 1963.
The last day of the Democratic National Convention: Denver, Colorado,
AUGUST 28th, 2008 (See http://www.denverconvention2008.com/ )
Someone will accept the nomination of the Democratic Party on August 28th, 2008, 45 years to the day since I HAVE A DREAM entered our nation's collective conscience.

The dream goes on. For better and for worse.



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9. The Rise and Fall of the First Internet

Donald Ritchie, author of Reporting from Washington: The History of the Washington Press Corps, Our Constitution, and The Congress of the United States: A Student Companion, has been Associate Historian of the United States Senate for more than three decades. This past weekend Ritchie spoke at the AEJMC conference (Association of Educators of Journalism and Mass Communications), and has been kind enough to share his opening remarks with us.  His comments make me wonder what will follow the internet.  Any thoughts?

The Internet as a medium for news reporting is still in its foundling stage, and we can only imagine how it will develop over the long run, or what its intended and unintended consequences might be. A past technology, however, offers some historical clues about its trajectory. Now as obsolete as smoke signals, the telegraph provided the first means of electronic communications and facilitated the news industry for a century and a half. Beyond providing speed, the telegraph changed the way news was reported and the definition of legitimate news reporting. (more…)

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