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Archive for the ‘WORD Book of the WEEK’ Category

TODAY Was A Good Day

In Animals and Pets, Art, Books, BulldogNation, Cartoons, Childrens' Literacy, K-12 Education, ThatOne WORD, Thats' Life, WORD Book of the WEEK on May 24, 2010 at 6:53 PM

I had the day off today.

So I organized my email, worked on my blog, and posted updates to the NATION on my Twitter.

I found out my anipal Gisele’s not feelin’ so good, so here’s a little somethin’ I hope will cheer her up:

Then I got caught up on my stories:

I was gonna read a book, but the ending kinda got spoiled for me:

So, as usual I went outside and enjoyed a little association:

Afterwards, I listened to some music by One of my favorite anibands:

I gotta say, it was a good day.

Goodwill Energies I project towards each and every one of you each and every day!

“And there came to be evening and there came to be morning…”

That’s life today!

*photo Creds:
1. Underwater bulldog pix came from: http://bit.ly/3F0D5f
2. Defaced Marley&Me pix came from @Miss_Cakehead ‘s blog
3. Final That’s Life Today pix of Marley bulldog watchin’ That on TV courtesy @DolceGisele

kCiao!

The Buskers and Woofstock and ME!

In Animals and Pets, Books, BulldogNation, bulldogs, Children's Literacy, K-12 Education, Non-profit Charities, Pet Ambassador, Popular Culture, Television, Thats' Life, Tv Show Theme Songs, Volunteering, WORD Book of the WEEK, Writers and Writing on April 12, 2010 at 4:55 PM

Then on Saturday we drove down to San Diego for a day at Woofstock, an annual Festival for Dogs & People. The event took place at San Diego’s beautiful Balboa Park with all proceeds going to benefit Canine Companions for Independence.

Scripps Encinitas Pet Ambassador Volunteer Program animals and staff were on hand as well to support CCI and help educate and inform the public about the program at Scripps.

With Michaele Bookstore and Colleague

The 1960’s themed festival featured live music, munchies and lots of opportunity to shop for unique pet products. There were exciting demonstrations of Disc Dogs, Flyball, Canine Freestyle and of a  Leash Your Fitness boot camp workout for People and their dogs.

I saw working dogs in action. I got to play at the K9 Playground! We didn’t wear 60’s threads or compete in the Grooviest 60’s Costume contest or fish for prizes in the fun zone for kids, but we’re definitely going to do all That next year for sure! To help raise even more money, there was a silent auction of fun pet products!

Then there was the walk for Peace, Love, and Walk ‘n Roll (approx. 1.3 miles) to benefit Canine Companions for Independence (CCI). CCI is a national non-profit organization that enhances the quality of life for people with disabilities by providing highly trained assistance dogs and ongoing support to ensure quality partnerships.

The Walk registration fee included a cool WOOFSTOCK tie dye t-shirt, free Festival admission and a SWAG bag filled with great surprises! The walk preceded the WOOFSTOCK Festival and began at 9:00AM. We missed the walk (pout).  Oh well.  Next year.

This year, Walk registrants had the opportunity to raise funds for CCI and be rewarded based on donations collected. The top fundraiser will receive a beautiful portrait of their dog by artist Deirdre O’Byrne along with a copy of “A Big Little Life” signed by Dean Koontz! Walk registrants also qualified for a free pass to Disneyland® presented by Disney VolunTears, a corporate sponsor this year.

After That, it was on to Seaport Village for the Spring Busker Festival. Boy did I have a lot to learn, like What’s a busker? Well, a busker is a person who entertains people in public places while asking for money. Now you know what a busker is. In New York, we just call them street performers.  These artists and entertainers came to San Diego from all over the country to dazzle us with their unique, often even bizarre, talents.

Me. And Mango...

Mango and Dango

Email: mangoanddango@yahoo.com

Take Mango and Dango for instance. I met Mango (Megan Fontaine) as she was carrying her hoola hoop of FIRE preparing to set up for the performance. She laid eyes on me and I was immediately showered with goodwill energy. We both just happened to arrive at the performance site at the same time. For me it was love at first sight.

The Calypso Tumblers Rock!! are on Facebook

Mango and Dango are two high energy performance artists who pride themselves on their creative rapport with audiences. Specializing in circus and performance art, Mango and Dango combine old school circus techniques with creative character work, contemporary movement and energetic physical comedy. And she hoolas with a ring of fire.

We enjoyed the high energy tumbling antics of  the Calypso Tumblers. Are they tumblers, latter day break dancers or gymnasts with hijinks? Check out the video by clicking on the photo here and decide for yourself.

Last but not least, we got to visit with Jimmy Talksalot just moments after his amusing magic show That he taylored toward the kids in the audience, even enlisting a couple of them to help out with the act. For some reason, while I was scrolling through his blog, the theme to Gary Shandling’s Show kept looping about in my head. *It’s OK to indulge your inner weird, Kids.* Jimmy Talksalot— Not just a children’s clown show.

What a fun, fun, fun, exhausting, fun day I had in San Diego over the weekend.  If your entire weekend was only half as interesting as mine was on Saturday alone, then I would have to say you were fortunate, indeed.

Goodwill Energies I direct
Toward each and every one of you
Each and every day
Hangin’ wit da big dogs…

At Woofstock!

❝And there came to be evening and there came to be morning…❞

That's life today!

Like It’s Your Birthday

In Books, Children's Literacy, History, K-12 Education, Popular Culture, WORD Book of the WEEK, Writers and Writing on February 19, 2010 at 3:20 PM

Today is Gigi’s eleventh birthday!  Happy birthday, Gigi! Young Gigi is the daughter of one of my followers on Twitter.

When She turned eleven on April 5, 1968, Lyndon Baines Johnson was President,  The Monkees and Batman were popular on TV and Barbra Streisand and Katherine Hepburn tied for the best actress Oscar at the 41st Annual Academy Awards.

The Temptations’ Cloud Nine was a hit on the R&B charts, our troops were fighting in Viet Nam, resistance to the Black struggle for Civil Rights sparked violence on American soil and on April 4th, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. had been assassinated. It was an eleventh birthday She would never forget.

Eleven marks a special milestone for many young girls but for Rachel her eleventh birthday became one she would never forget.

Many years ago, She discovered this little gem among a collection of short stories by Mexican writer Sandra Cisneros. The book is Woman Hollering Creek and this is Rachel’s story:

❝Eleven❞

What they don’t understand about birthdays and what they never tell you is that when you’re eleven, you’re also ten, and nine, and eight, and seven, and six, and five, and four, and three, and two, and one. And when you wake up on your eleventh birthday you expect to feel eleven, but you don’t. You open your eyes and everything’s just like yesterday, only it’s today. And you don’t feel eleven at all. You feel like you’re still ten. And you are—underneath the year that makes you eleven.
Like some days you might say something stupid, and that’s the part of you that’s still ten. Or maybe some days you might need to sit on your mama’s lap because you’re scared, and that’s the part of you that’s five. And maybe one day when you’re all grown up maybe you will need to cry like if you’re three, and that’s okay. That’s what I tell Mama when she’s sad and needs to cry. Maybe she’s feeling three.
Because the way you grow old is kind of like an onion or like the rings inside a tree trunk or like my little wooden dolls that fit one inside the other, each year inside the next one. That’s how being eleven years old is.
You don’t feel eleven. Not right away. It takes a few days, weeks even, sometimes even months before you say Eleven when they ask you. And you don’t feel smart eleven, not until you’re almost twelve. That’s the way it is.
Only today I wish I didn’t have only eleven years rattling inside me like pennies in a tin Band-Aid box. Today I wish I was one hundred and two instead of eleven because if I was one hundred and two I’d have known what to say when Mrs. Price put the red sweater on my desk. I would’ve known how to tell her it wasn’t mine instead of just sitting there with that look on my face and nothing coming out of my mouth.
“Whose is this?” Mrs. Price says, and she holds the red sweater up in the air for all the class to see. “Whose? It’s been sitting in the coatroom for a month.”
“Not mine,” says everybody, “Not me.”
“It has to belong to somebody,” Mrs. Price keeps saying, but nobody can remember. It’s an ugly sweater with red plastic buttons and a collar and sleeves all stretched out like you could use it for a jump rope. It’s maybe a thousand years old and even if it belonged to me I wouldn’t say so.
Maybe because I’m skinny, maybe because she doesn’t like me, that stupid Sylvia Saldivar says, “I think it belongs to Rachel.” An ugly sweater like that all raggedy and old, but Mrs. Price believes her. Mrs Price takes the sweater and puts it right on my desk, but when I open my mouth nothing comes out.
“That’s not, I don’t, you’re not . . . Not mine.” I finally say in a little voice that was maybe me when I was four.
“Of course it’s yours,” Mrs. Price says. “I remember you wearing it once.” Because she’s older and the teacher, she’s right and I’m not.
Not mine, not mine, not mine, but Mrs. Price is already turning to page thirty-two, and math problem number four. I don’t know why but all of a sudden I’m feeling sick inside, like the part of me that’s three wants to come out of my eyes, only I squeeze them shut tight and bite down on my teeth real hard and try to remember today I am eleven, eleven. Mama is making a cake for me for tonight, and when Papa comes home everybody will sing Happy birthday, happy birthday to you.
But when the sick feeling goes away and I open my eyes, the red sweater’s still sitting there like a big red mountain. I move the red sweater to the corner of my desk with my ruler. I move my pencil and books and eraser as far from it as possible. I even move my chair a little to the right. Not mine, not mine, not mine.
In my head I’m thinking how long till lunchtime, how long till I can take the red sweater and throw it over the schoolyard fence, or leave it hanging on a parking meter, or bunch it up into a little ball and toss it in the alley. Except when math period ends Mrs. Price says loud and in front of everybody, “Now, Rachel, that’s enough,” because she sees I’ve shoved the red sweater to the tippy-tip corner of my desk and it’s hanging all over the edge like a waterfall, but I don’t care.
“Rachel,” Mrs. Price says. She says it like she’s getting mad. “You put that sweater on right now and no more nonsense.”
“But it’s not—”
“Now!” Mrs. Price says.
This is when I wish I wasn’t eleven because all the years inside of me—ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, and one—are pushing at the back of my eyes when I put one arm through one sleeve of the sweater that smells like cottage cheese, and then the other arm through the other and stand there with my arms apart like if the sweater hurts me and it does, all itchy and full of germs that aren’t even mine.
That’s when everything I’ve been holding in since this morning, since when Mrs. Price put the sweater on my desk, finally lets go, and all of a sudden I’m crying in front of everybody. I wish I was invisible but I’m not. I’m eleven and it’s my birthday today and I’m crying like I’m three in front of everybody. I put my head down on the desk and bury my face in my stupid clown-sweater arms. My face all hot and spit coming out of my mouth because I can’t stop the little animal noises from coming out of me until there aren’t any more tears left in my eyes, and it’s just my body shaking like when you have the hiccups, and my whole head hurts like when you drink milk too fast.
But the worst part is right before the bell rings for lunch. That stupid Phyllis Lopez, who is even dumber than Sylvia Saldivar, says she remembers the red sweater is hers! I take it off right away and give it to her, only Mrs. Price pretends like everything’s okay.
Today I’m eleven. There’s a cake Mama’s making for tonight and when Papa comes home from work we’ll eat it. There’ll be candles and presents and everybody will sing Happy birthday, happy birthday to you, Rachel, only it’s too late.
I’m eleven today. I’m eleven, ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, and one, but I wish I was one hundred and two. I wish I was anything but eleven, because I want today to be far away already, far away like a runaway balloon, like a tiny O in the sky, so tiny, tiny you have to close your eyes to see it.
Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories, by Sandra Cisneros
Vintage; 1st Vintage Contemporaries Ed edition, New York City, NY
ISBN: 0679738568 — trade paperback
Goodwill Energies I direct
Toward each and every one of you
Each and every day.
“And there came to be evening and there came to be morning”
That’s life today.

WORD About ROTTEN RALPH

In Books, bulldogs, Cats, Children's Literacy, Forgiveness, K-12 Education, Love, ThatOne WORD, WORD Book of the WEEK, Writers and Writing on November 13, 2009 at 7:38 PM

Reading RocketsNow here’s something you can ask your mom and dad to get you for Christmas and I gare-ron-TEE they’ll move heaven and earth to get it for you.  What’s that, you ask? A few good books.

Last month I raved about The Most Beautiful Place In The World by Ann Cameron.  I hope you all got a chance to read That. This month, it’s all about the cat. And not just any cat. A big, red, fat cat named Ralph.

Meet Ralph, I'm Ralphthe often curmudgeonly, always incorrigible, mischievous cat who has been misbehaving his way through children’s hearts (and Hers) and eight picture books (plus four early readers) since he was created by author Jack Gantos in 1976.

Ralph lives with his long-suffering owner, Sarah, a young girl, wise beyond her years. Even when he’s been at his rottenest, Sarah loves him unconditionally. She may get exasperated with Ralph, but she always patiently helps him to see the error of his ways. She never gives up on Ralph and she’s always ready to forgive. Young Sarah is a good friend. That’s the kind of friend we should all try hard to be.

I know you’ll come to love Ralph as much as Sarah does. WORD dogWhen you’re ready to read Rotten Ralph, I’m ready to lie down and listen. Collect all the books in the Rotten Ralph series. This can be a fun project the whole family will enjoy.

Goodwill Energies I direct
Toward each and every one of you
Each and every day!

Rotten Ralph Eugene Public Library

“And there came to be evening and there came to be morning”

That's life today!

Vocabulary WORD:
curmudgeonly
incorrigible
mischievous
misbehaving
Exasperated
long-suffering
unconditional

Find out more about Jack Gantos and the illustrator of  the Rotten Ralph books, Nicole Rubel.

Read the latest Rotten Ralph: Click on the book below and read Rotten Ralph now!Read Rotten Ralph Now!

The Most Beautiful Place In The World

In Animals and Pets, Books, Children's Literacy, English bulldogs, K-12 Education, WORD Book of the WEEK, Writers and Writing on October 13, 2009 at 1:39 PM

Duke Ellington and Count Basie– Two musicians who knew how to make music speak volumes with just a few choice notes. Not like me. I am neither succinct nor economical with words, but I appreciate those who are. That’s why my favorite book is a little 58 page trade gem called The Most Beautiful Place in the World by Ann Cameron. I love, love, love, this story and for you moms and dads out there, it’s a must-have addition to your read-aloud library. This is a book the whole family will cherish and enjoy for years and years to come.

It’s not a recent best seller. It’s just one of those reads you find yourself revisiting time and time again. The beauty lies in the quiet yet economical way the story unfolds, like a signature Count Basie arrangement– big flourishes punctuated by a series of select notes played with the Count’s pointer finger on the piano at the end. You will experience all the notes in The Most Beautiful Place in the World.

Juan lives in an impoverished city in Guatemala, ironically surrounded by beauty, flora and fauna. At seven, he’s been abandoned by his father, and his teenaged mother selfishly chooses life with Mr. Better-Than-Nothing over parenting and providing for her son, leaving Juan with her own mother, a world weary woman wholly preoccupied with keeping food on the table and a roof over hers, Juan’s, and all the others of her children and grandchildren’s heads.

Grandma’s a hardworking woman. She gets up early each day to make and sell arroz con leche, a sweet rice pudding concoction served like a thick hot shake, while Juan obediently toils alongside her, silently envying the fresh-faced, neatly dressed boys and girls he observes daily walking past his rickety shoe-shine stand on their way to school.

With no role models, radio or TV to plant the seed of desire to read and write, Juan intuitively dreams of going to school. He keeps his covetous desire to himself and keeps hope alive, teaching himself how to read.

Finally, Juan is compelled to reveal his secret desire to his grandmother and her response to the revelation is both surprising and heartwarming. You don’t always have to leave home, have a load of cash or even escape poverty to find yourself in the most beautiful place in the world.

Without any judgmental moralization or manipulative sentimentality, The Most Beautiful Place in the World is a quiet celebration of acceptance of the present while cultivating a vision for opportunity in the future. It also showcases the respect, love and loyalty Juan maintains for his grandmother and her dignified encouragement and support of his modest ambition to go to school.

I’d love to hear you read The Most Beautiful Place In The World.

WORD dog

“And there came to be evening and there came to be morning”