It is never a good idea to feed your dog leftover turkey.
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Blog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Chicano families come in all colors, sizes, shapes and tendencies. My own is scattered across Texas and the West, with my one daughter finishing school in Syracuse, NY. My wife's siblings and their families are usually who I spend holidays with. In some ways they're typical of the heights and breadth of where some Chicanos have "arrived" in this society, with successful careers and the accompanying foibles of American families.
Coming from a poorer background, I'm still amazed each year by the seeming opulence in their Xmas gift giving. NFL, Nike, Nikon, Macey's, and Bratz owe much of their bottom line to what appears under this family tree; there's no evidence of economic crises or recession to be found.
I wonder how many of them have multiple credit cards and how many of those are maxed out, how many have ARMs about to reset to usury levels, how many are too few paychecks close to bankruptcy. Worse, I wonder how many would take failures of the U.S. economy personally, and blame themselves for a layoff, cutback or an employer going under. At least like in many Chicano families, they have a tradition of harboring potentially homeless family members.
And as in many families, each year a prayer is uttered at the Thanksgiving meal, inevitably thanking God, Jesus and religion for their bounty. It always bothers me--not just as an unbeliever--that they relinquish their accomplishments to an institution that's historically profited from Chicano-Mexican faith, while they likewise endure the burdensome repercussions of that faith in the form of denying girls, even women, the right of choice.
Anyway, this year I penned the piece below, to read at the family dinner. I wasn't able to include something about the Iraq War, the volunteer soldiers whose lives, minds and bodies are being ruined at the same time millions of Iraqis pay the price of the U.S. invasion. Nor did I say anything about the millions, if not billions, of people who justifiably hate us for what we've allowed loose on the world.
I don't say these words were overwhelmingly well received, although several thanked me for them. I share them here as an after-Thanksgiving thought, in the hopes it'll inspire others to come up with their own, more appropriate, messages for holiday "prayers" in these times.
When you've got a good-paying job, it's easy to think Thanksgiving is about getting ready to spend way too much money on material things to overflow the space under the Xmas tree.
When you're sitting in a house that's warm and inviting, it's comfortable to think Thanksgiving is about being grateful for a fancy TV or new video game.
When you've got the cash to eat in restaurants and drink in bars whenever you want, it's simple to think Thanksgiving is about how special you are to deserve all of this.
And when you have a good car that gets you to work every day, it's exciting to think Thanksgiving is about wondering how soon you can get an even fancier new one.
I don't know if Thanksgiving is about being grateful we're not one of the hungry, unemployed, homeless, unlucky children or adults who have to walk the icy streets to school or work. It's probably not just about remembering those poor souls for one minute and feeling a little sorry for them.

Maybe Thanksgiving is about thanking our parents, wives, husbands and kids for giving us the sense to take care of our bodies, to keep ourselves from getting into debt and going into bankruptcy, to keep us from loving special things more than special people, to keep us from becoming addicts or drunks, and to keep ourselves safe on the road and in our daily lives. That way, we're here next year--safe, healthy, comfortable, and at peace--to give even more thanks for whatever Thanksgiving is about.
Rudy Ch. Garcia

Blog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: office, UK, Blogs, A-Featured, rebecca, turkey, eating, thanksgiving, mate, confess, explained, Add a tag
While Rebecca is off eating turkey and doing whatever it is you Americans do at Thanksgiving - and I confess to having had no idea what Thanksgiving was until my American office-mate explained it to me yesterday - I have been left in charge of link love. Never having been one to shirk a challenge I am taking you on a tour of my favourite UK reads of the week. Tally ho, old chaps, etc.
In the week that Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh celebrated their Diamond wedding anniversary, I had my heart cockles warmed by this interview with the UK’s oldest newly-weds. He is 93, while she is a bright young thing of 85. (more…)

Blog: Summer Friend (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Thanksgiving, Tina Fey, Jimmy Stewart, Mean Girls, Black Friday, Rear Window, Add a tag
Don't look for me at the mall. I will not be there.
Green Thursday is not a Gore-inspired phrase--it describes me yesterday. I was sick! I never made it to the Thanksgiving table, which was out of town. Sleep was the balm that soothed, and I awoke just in time to catch MY FAVORITE HITCHCOCK MOVIE, Rear Window.
It's been years since I've seen that film. Who knew Jimmy could be such a charming rogue? The only thing I didn't like, which I hadn't noticed before, was when Grace Kelly's character was being thrashed by Raymond Burr and she calls out "Jeff!" "Jeff," and instead of returning her shout, LB Jeffries (Jimmy Stewart) backs his wheelchair to hide in the darkness. I know his leg is broken and all, but I would have liked to see him make some kind of attempt to help her, maybe shout back and fall out of the wheelchair as he tries to get up. (I know he called the police, but that was before the thrashing began.) BTW, the cast on his left leg supposedly jumps to his right leg halfway through the movie. I never caught the switch.
Then I watched Mean Girls. Tina Fey is such a good writer and I like how loyal she is to all her SNL comrades. One thing I noticed about Mean Girls is that even though it's a contemporary film (2004), technology played no part in it. Nobody was texting. Nobody was emailing. Nobody was using cell phones. Surely one compromising picture would have been snapped via cell phone in all that meanness. (There were two three-way calls, but I wouldn't call that new technology.)
I have to conclude that Ms. Fey left technology out on purpose. Perhaps she did so to prevent the movie from becoming dated--technology moves faster than fashion. Maybe viewers are more lifted out by old-fashioned technology than they are by plaid pants.
How much technology is safe to include if you want your story to have a long shelf life? That's a hard question. Even texting lingo has changed over the years. What's your opinion?

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: weekend, leftovers, monday, holiday, A-Featured, Leisure, thanksgiving, recover, distraction, friends, enjoy, oupblog, turkey, Add a tag
The OUPblog and Link Love are taking the day off to recover from Thanksgiving. Enjoy your leftovers and be sure to come back Monday, we know you will need distraction after the holiday weekend!

Blog: Monday Artday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: The National Writing for Children Center (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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We hope everyone had a happy Thanksgiving!

Blog: SusanWrites (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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If I were to make a list it would be like so many others I've had the joy in reading this morning, thankfulness for good friends and loving families, good health and laughter, and books that tell stories that touch our hearts.
I will say simply, thank you to all my cyberfriends.
Some of you I have had the pleasure to meet, some are still waiting to walk through my world. I don't get out around people in real life very often (save the day job and there are no writers there) and I have come to depend on the kindness of all of you to let me share in your worlds while you share in mine.
Thank you for listening to me whine and cheering with my accomplishments. Thank you for buying my books, reading my books and then sharing them with others.
For all the words written and all the stories waiting to unfold, thank you.

Blog: Miss Erin (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: quotes, thanksgiving, Add a tag
"The Pilgrims made seven times more graves than huts. No Americans have been more impoverished than these who, nevertheless, set aside a day of thanksgiving." ~H.U. Westermayer
"If the only prayer you said in your whole life was, 'thank you,' that would suffice." ~Meister Eckhart
"We can only be said to be alive in those moments when our hearts are conscious of our treasures." ~Thornton Wilder
"We give thanks for unknown blessings already on their way. " ~Unknown
More quotes here.

Blog: doodles and noodles (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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1. Family All of it - my immediate family of husband, three kids, and a dog; my extended family I grew up in, and my husband's extended family who have made me one of their own. It's hard to say something about all of them that's not trite or too general, but here are some of the specific things about them I'm thankful for. I love how my immediate family routinely laughs so hard at the dinner table that we not only have to worry about milk coming out of someone's nose but the occasional spaghetti noodle - which the dog will be happy to eat if it ends up on the floor; I am grateful that my growing-up family never tires of huge annual gatherings at the beach (and grateful that my parents continue to fund these vacations), complete with ritual toad-catching and crab-chasing; and I'm thankful that my husband's family always makes up songs with hilarious lyrics to celebrate special occasions, and especially grateful that they let me sing along with everyone despite my severe tone deafness and complete ignorance of tempo.
2. Friends Having moved a bazillion times over the years and also having lots of friends who have moved (and now having internet-found friends), I'm lucky to have friends wherever I go, and less fortunately, some places I don't go but wish I could. Like my family, I know my friends will do kind things like ooh and ahh kindly over my latest book project (and even buy copies for gifts, even if they have to kind of stretch to pinpoint an appropriate recipient). And when I get a bad haircut, my friends don't say things like, "Oh well, it'll grow out again someday," but more tactful things like, "Doesn't the part look nice!"
3. Child #2 has almost finished his college applications And I'll be really, really grateful when they're well and truly done.
4. Affording college tuition So far at least. Child #3 should probably lie awake worrying a little...
5. Living the creative life How lucky to be working as a writer, illustrator, and kid-advice person! It doesn't get any better than this! (Well, the money part could get better, especially from the points of view of my husband, who would dearly love to be a house husband/amateur athlete and child #3 who doesn't want to lie awake worrying about her college fund.) And some people think it would be better if I didn't live the creative life all over the kitchen table and in big piles in their bedroom that they'd like to use when they come home from college for vacations.
6. That this past year I had one book published, finished one that will be out next year, and got a contract for another And that one's nearing completion. I hope.
7. The disgusting growth on the dog's leg that I've been ignoring for months isn't cancer Phew. The guilt was going to be pretty unbearable.
8. Gas prices that have risen enough that it's cheaper to fly child #1 home from college for breaks like this than to drive 9 hours each direction to fetch him.
9. Dark chocolate is good for you. And so is red wine. Now we just have to work on Fritos.
10. That the world is so full of good books, good people, and the internet, which I'm addicted to.
11. That ending a sentence with a preposition isn't as sinful as it used to be.
12. That this list could be in the 100s or more before I ran out of things to be grateful for, and I had to cheat by 2 even to wrap this up.
Thank you to all the people who have given me so much to be grateful for this past year. I hope I can repay you - and find a way to pay things forward too, in the years to come.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

Blog: Here in the Bonny Glen (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Photos, Thanksgiving, Add a tag

Blog: Farm School (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: holidays, thanks, Thanksgiving, Add a tag
and O. Henry: There is one day that is ours. There is one day when all we Americans who are not self-made go back to the old home to eat saleratus biscuits and marvel how much nearer to the porch the old pump looks than it used to. Bless the day. President Roosevelt gives it to us. We hear some talk of the Puritans, but don't just remember who they were. Bet we can lick 'em, anyhow, if they try

Blog: Cachibachis (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Thanksgiving, Backyard trees and leaves, Add a tag

Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: holidays, childrens books, Thanksgiving, books of the month, accion de gracias, Add a tag
René Colato Laínez
This Thursday let's thanks for all the wonderful things we have. Say "Thank you" and "Gracias" and remember to smile.
Check these wonderful books in your local public library.Gracias, the Thanksgiving turkey by Joy Cowley. Illustrated by Joe Cepeda.
Trouble ensues when Papa gets Miguel a turkey to fatten up for Thanksgiving and Miguel develops an attachment to it.¿Pavo para la Cena de Gracias? ¡No, gracias! por Alma Flor Ada. Ilustrado por Vivi Escriva.
When the turkey overhears a conversation about how fat and tasty he will be on Thanksgiving, he loses his own appetite. He meets a young spider who sets out to find a way to save the turkey.Molly y los peregrinos por Barbara Cohen. Illustrado por Michael J. Deraney. Traducido por María A. Fiol.
Told to make a doll like a pilgrim for the Thanksgiving display at school, Molly's Jewish mother dresses the doll as she herself dressed before leaving Russia to seek religious freedom--much to Molly's embarrassment.How many days to America?: a Thanksgiving story by Eve Bunting. Illustrated by Beth Peck.
Refugees from a Caribbean island embark on a dangerous boat trip to America where they have a special reason to celebrate Thanksgiving.I know an old lady who swallowed a pie by Alison Jackson. Illustrated by Judith Byron Schachner.
A new twist on the cumulative folk song, this time involving a ravenous Thanksgiving Day guest.The very first Thanksgiving Day by Rhonda Gowler Greene. Illustrated by Susan Graber.
Rhyming verses trace the events leading up to the first Thanksgiving Day.The perfect Thanksgiving by Eileen Spinelli. Illustrated by JoAnn Adinolfi.
Two families--one that is perfect and one that is far from it--celebrate Thanksgiving in their own loving ways.This is the turkey by Abby Levine. Illustrated by Paige Billin-Frye.
Describes in rhyme the activities of a young boy and his extended family as they share a special Thanksgiving.

Blog: Simply Simplistic (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: autumn, thanksgiving, Add a tag
Over the River
(Thanksgiving Day)
Over the river and through the wood
To Grandmother's house we go.
The horse knows the way
To carry the sleigh
Through white and drifted snow.
Over the river and through the wood
Oh, how the wind does blow!
It stings the toes
And bites the nose,
As over the ground we go.
Over the river and through the wood
To have a first-rate play.
Hear the bells ring,
Ting-a-ling-ling!
Hurrah forThanksgiving Day!
Over the river and through the wood,
Trot fast, my dapple gray!
Spring over the ground
Like a hunting hound,
For this is Thanksgiving Day.
Over the river and through the wood,
And straight through the barnyard gate.
We seem to go
Extremely slow~
It is so hard to wait!
Over the river and through the wood~
Now Grandmother's cap I spy!
Hurrah for fun!
Is the pudding done?
Hurrah for the pumpkin pie!
By Linda Maria Child

Blog: Simply Simplistic (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: autumn, thanksgiving, Add a tag
Song of the Pilgrims
By Nancy Sue Krenrich
Across the rolling, wind-swept sea
For months we've sailed along,
I see a land that's new to me
Against the blue horizon.
Oh, beautiful land of freedom born,
I've come across the sea
To reap your fruits and build my home,
And make my people free.
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Blog: Picture Book Junkies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Done with the veggies, bring on the pie! Happy Thanksgiving!
May your stuffing be tasty
May your turkey plump,
May your potatoes and gravy
Have nary a lump.
May your yams be delicious
And your pies take the prize,
And may your Thanksgiving dinner
Stay off your thighs!
—Anonymous
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Blog: Read Write Believe (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Gratitude, Believe, Thanksgiving, Add a tag
HipWriterMama has a whole meal planned for you. Not only did she write an incredibly thoughtful post herself, but she's also linked to a buffet of riches from other bloggers. Go on, you're invited...
The only thing I could add to her menu is an article from the Washington Post. (You'll have to do a quick registration to view it, but in my humble opinion, the Post has so many great online resources that it's worth it, as I blogged about here.) The article is titled "Give Thanks. It's Good For You." I think the "Grade Yourself on Gratitude" quiz that accompanies the article is a bit obvious, like if you pick "I don't think I've gotten all the good things that I deserve in life" don't you know that you're gonna take a hit in the gratitude rankings?
But the part of the article that I found most interesting was this: "The greater your appreciation for beauty, the greater your gratitude." I know this is true for me, that the days I'm in tune with the immense, almost soul-searing beauty of the world, I'm the most grateful for the chance to be a part of it.
This is why I think it's so important for kids to have art, and books, and walks in the woods. Beauty has a way of both healing wounds and inspiring more beauty. Beauty isn't a pretty face; it's the recognition that we are made to respond to life with thanksgiving.
I just decorated my apple pie for tomorrow with tiny pastry stars. It's a trick I learned from my daughter. It looks beautiful, and I plan to be grateful for every bite.
***See you in a few days. I'm taking a mini blog break. Happy Thanksgiving!
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Blog: Picture Book Junkies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Monday Artday (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Summer Friend (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Andrew Smith, editor of the Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink has written a piece for us which helps us truly understand the origins of Thanksgiving. Despite its solemn origins we hope you have a truly wonderful (and apple pie filled) holiday.
Every American knows the story of the First Thanksgiving: Seeking religious freedom, the Pilgrims established a colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Native Americans taught them how to plant corn and hunt. When the crops were harvested, the Indians joined the Pilgrims at the First Thanksgiving by jointly gobbling up turkeys, saucing cranberries, mashing corn, and squashing pumpkins to make pies. It was such a memorable event that Americans have honored this day ever since, or so goes the story.
No one would be more surprised at this modern day story than would the Pilgrims. (more…)
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Blog: Picture Book Junkies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Here is an oldie-but-goodie which I hope you enjoy! It's the perfect piece to share for this week's theme of Thanksgiving. I wish you all a fun and feast-filled week!

Blog: Blog from the Windowsill (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reviews, poetry, Thanksgiving, Add a tag
Thanksgiving Poems selected by Myra Cohn Livingston. Illustrated by Stephen Gammell. Holiday House, 1985 (0-8234-0570-2)
This title is out of print, which doesn't surprise me too much, because the illustrations have not worn well. But there are such wonderful poems here, many of which were commissioned especially for this book, that it's worth it to search out a copy.
Thanksgiving Poems covers many aspects of Thanksgiving, excluding historical/political controversy. There are harvest poems from an Osage and a Navajo Indian, a selection from the Bible ("Make a Joyful Noise Onto the Lord") and comic poems about overeating from poets like X. J. Kennedy and Jane Yolen. I was most captivated by the poems that concentrate on joy and gratitude, such as the lyrical wordplay of the poem "Giving Thanks Giving Thanks" by Eve Merriam; this is the second paragraph:
giving thanks giving thanks
for cows and cowslips
eggs and eggplants
stars and starlings
dogs and dogwood
And I was blown away by the simple beauty and sincerity of a poem of thanksgiving by Emanuel di Pasquale, which begins:
I pull a baby crab
off a seaweed-rich rock
and let it run on my hands,
and I see God. I see God
in millions of lights
dancing in the sea and air.
It's a shame that the illustrations, largely black & white drawings with splotches of muted, unattractive colors, have lost so much freshness, seeming tired and dated. I would so love to see this otherwise superb collection reillustrated; even a fresh printing might revitalize it. (4 & up)
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Uh oh. That doesn't sound good!
Hey- I've tagged you for a meme:
http://art-words-life.blogspot.com/
Hi Jennifer! Thanks!