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Musings – How do you spend your vacation days?

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013

By Mary (kilchurn)

 

 

So what makes you spontaneously take a day off from work?  A big sale at your favorite store? A beautiful day that just begs to be enjoyed?  A friend comes into town unexpectedly?

For me, apparently, it is the release of the latest book by one of my favorite authors.

I’ve had the date March 26th circled on my mental calendar for almost a year.  JR Ward’s latest book in her Black Dagger Brotherhood series, Lover at Last was coming out.  In the preceding weeks, I had joked with co-workers about taking the day off.  Last Thursday, I began to seriously consider it.

I know myself very well, once I start a book, I’m not going to put it down until I’m done.  The Kindle version that I’d pre-ordered would be available at midnight and I knew if I was still awake when it came out, I’d start reading – and not stop.  So Monday afternoon, I peeked my head in my bosses’ office and asked him if he had a problem with me taking Tuesday off.  He looked at me strange and asked why (I have most of my vacation days allocated at the beginning of the year).  I could hear the birds chirping over the bizarre silence as I tried to figure out what to say.  Do I tell him the truth?  Tell him I have an appointment?  I opted for the truth which got me another strange look.  You could see him processing the fact that I wanted to blow a vacation day to read a book.

But it wasn’t just any book!  It was the story I’ve been waiting on pins and needles for – for YEARS!  It was the story I was terrified would never get written!  There was no WAY I could sit at the office on Tuesday and wonder all day at the fate of Blay & Qhuinn!

Luckily, the boss was planning on being in the office on Tuesday, thus any of my projects would be covered so my vacation day was granted!

I went to bed Monday night comforted in the fact that come the morning, I could sit in my recliner and enjoy!  It took me about 8 hours to cover 608 pages and it was SO worth the vacation day.  The story was all I’d hoped it would be.   I laughed, I cried, I raged –Tuesday was possibly the best vacation day I’ve had in years!

PS – Another of my favorite author’s books is going to be released sometime this week, originally scheduled for Saturday – I see another vacation day in my future.

 

Musings, Memories and Miscellany from our MoM’s

Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

NICOLE H. (tinyavenger) was named our Member of the Month in December 2012.

 

I joined PBS on January 24, 2008. A couple co-workers and I were discussing my love for books as I was always reading during lunch. One of the ladies mentioned hearing about PaperBackSwap.com.

I joined after researching and figured I would give it a try for a few months. I had never heard of a site like this one and just knew there had to be a catch. After being with this wonderful site for 5 years my own library has increased. And there is the catch!! You meet lovely people here and get so many great book recommendations that your collection grows.

I began reading new series and books I would never thought to have given a shot to much less probably discovered on my own. When I finally started venturing onto the Discussion Forums I found a whole fun new side to PBS. I love the daily discussions and participating in the games/swaps that I have been a part of so far. So now five years later the one extremely full bookcase I had when I first became a member is still in the living room along with three more upstairs! Thanks to PBS I seem to always have a steady stream of books going in and out. Our postman even once asked my husband what these packages were that I was always getting and sending. When he told him they were books he asked him if I actually read that much!

 

It is so hard for me to pick favorite books because I can not remember a time when I didn’t love reading. When I was a kid I would have to say that some of my favorites were Where the Wild Things Are, Green Eggs and Ham (who didn’t love Dr. Seuss when they were 5!!), Charlotte’s Web, The Indian in the Cupboard, Are You There God? It’s Me Margaret, Eating Ice Cream with a Werewolf and any Nancy Drew book I could get my hands on.

 

 

 

                                       

 

 

 

When I was a freshman in high school we read The Hiding Place, the story of Corrie Ten Boom and her family helping Jewish people escape Nazis during WWII, for a class.
By the time the class was on chapter three I had already finished the book. It is one of the first books that I can remember being brought to tears by.

 

 

 

 

 

As an adult I have read a lot of great books (many thanks to this site) that it is so hard to choose. I think some of my favorites just in the last year have been Beautiful Disaster by Jamie McGuire, Stephen King’s Under the Dome, Ghost Story (Dresden Files #12), Warm Bodies by Isaac Martin, The Next Best Thing by Jennifer Weiner, The Fault in Our Stars by John Green and Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs.

           

 

 

I am one of those people that usually have a couple books going at once and am currently reading J.D. Robb’s Calculated In Death (In Death Series #36) and Don’t Breathe a Word by Jennifer McMahon.

 

 

 

 

My reads currently on deck are Guilty Wives by James Patterson, Tiger’s Curse by Colleen Houck and Paper Towns by John Green.
     

 

I am so glad I was pointed to this site as I have come across some great people and been introduced to so many more books and authors! PBS is one of the first sites I check daily and am always excited for the daily Wish List e-mail to see what other books members are putting on their lists. Helps me keep my Wish List maxed out! Many thanks to the people who make this place amazing!

(Oh and for any of those that may still be wondering, the thing I did on 11/5/12 that people would think I was crazy for….I put up my Christmas tree and decorated it!!)

 

 

Books for Schools 2012 – William E. Russell School

Thursday, January 3rd, 2013

On Friday, December 21, 2012 one of our wonderful Tour Guide Leaders, Robin K. (jubead), volunteered to personally hand out some of the 1,000 books that were donated by our generous members to the William E. Russell School through the  Books for Schools 2012 program.

 

Robin was greeted by Principal Blake, who was very grateful to our PBS members, for the donations that made this possible.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Robin read a book to a second grade class. The book she chose to read was Dora’s Eggs by Julie Sykes. Just one of the wonderful, brand new books that were delivered to the school just in time for Christmas.

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you Robin, and all of our PBS members for donating to William B. Russell School and for putting books in the hands of our children!

 

 

If you know of an elementary school in need, suggest it here so we can consider it for Books for Schools 2013.

 

Food Week – Chuck’s Lasagna Saga

Friday, November 23rd, 2012

 By Gail P. (TinkerPirate)

 

There once was a man named Chuck

Who would cut your hair for a buck

Though he was good

At cooking most food

With lasagna he had no luck

 

 

Grumpy, my dear husband, and I used to have the same barber. His name was Chuck. With a pair of scissors, he was a magician. Get him in the kitchen and – well, I’m getting ahead of myself.

A number of years ago, while having dinner with his father-in-law, Chuck mentioned that he made great lasagna. Well, his father-in-law replied that this was nice, but that he made BETTER lasagna. Chuck gently reminded his father-in-law that he was Italian and that everybody knows that Italians make the BEST lasagna. The father-in-law, being Sicilian, took exception at this. Well, after a number of “does too” – “does nots”, an oven mitt was thrown AND the Annual Lasagna Contest was born.

Great idea! But, who would judge the contest?

Chuck’s wife couldn’t. Her loyalties would be torn between the man who gave her life and the man who gives her love. So, they began to solicit neighbors and friends – but as they described the situation, those very friends and neighbors told Chuck and his father-in-law that they considered themselves to also be great lasagna makers and wanted to enter the fray. Great – now they had a bezillion lasagna makers. What started out as a simple dinner statement turned into the mother of all lasagna contests.

How did Chuck do? Well, the first year, Chuck made his regular lasagna and lost. The second year, he devised a new recipe: he cooked the noodles the day before and marinated them overnight in a “secret sauce”. The resulting lasagna was mooshy because the marinated noodles disintegrated. As you can guess…Chuck did not win…again.

For year three, Chuck developed a different strategy. Knowing that the best part of lasagna was the sauce and cheese, he would eliminate the noodles! He developed another “secret sauce”, threw in bread crumbs, and sought out the perfect cheese. Chuck figured the bread crumbs would soak up the juice from the wonderful sauce and combine with the perfect cheese to form a magnificently textured and flavorful lasagna. WRONG! What he got was a lasagna pan of goop…tasty goop…but goop none the less.

After loss three, Chuck gracefully “retired” from lasagna competition. He decided to just host the parties. And, his father-in-law…he NEVER did enter a single contest!

Now, that I have you all set for the really great lasagna recipe…here it is. How do I know? Well, first of all it’s NOT Chuck’s – it’s MINE and it won the very last Lasagna Contest!

 

Tricolor Lasagna

Serves 12

 

16 ounces lasagna noodles

2 pounds Italian sausage

6 cups spaghetti sauce

1 can black olives – chopped

1 cup pesto sauce

32 ounces ricotta cheese

24 ounces mozzarella cheese – shredded

Pour spaghetti sauce into a heavy bottomed sauce pan and bring to a simmer. Continue to simmer until sauce reduces and is slightly thickened. Brown sausage, drain, and add to thickened spaghetti sauce. Add black olives. Continue to simmer for 30-60 minutes. Blend pesto sauce with half of the ricotta cheese. Blend the remaining ricotta with half of the mozzarella cheese. Prepare the noodles according to the directions on the package.

Spread a small amount of spaghetti sauce/sausage mixture in the bottom of a deep lasagna pan. Cover with lasagna noodles. Spread a layer of spaghetti sauce/sausage mixture on top of noodles (keep 1 cup of sauce mixture in reserve). Sprinkle with 2/3 of remaining mozzarella cheese. Cover with lasagna noodles. Spread ricotta/mozzarella mixture on top of noodles (keep 1 cup of mixture in reserve). Cover with lasagna noodles. Spread layer of pesto/ricotta mixture (keep 1 cup of mixture in reserve). Cover with lasagna noodles. Spread reserved mixtures on top of noodles so it resembles the Italian flag. Sprinkle with remaining mozzarella cheese.

Place in a preheated 375 degree oven and bake until sauce is bubbly and cheese on top is melted and starting to brown (about 50 minutes). Remove from oven and rest for 5 minutes before cutting and serving.

 

 

Pesto Sauce

3 cups fresh basil leaves – washed and dried

8 cloves of garlic – peeled

3 teaspoons pine nuts

1/2 cup parmesan cheese – finely grated

1/3 cup olive oil

Throw basil, garlic, pine nuts, and parmesan cheese into a food processor. Pulse until roughly chopped. Add olive oil. Pulse until solids are well chopped, but mixture is not liquefied.

 

 

Spaghetti sauce

A confession – I used jarred sauce…a combination of 3 cheeses and roasted red pepper…but use whatever you like. Or, you could look for recipes in the following books available on PBS:

 

 


Lasagna: The Art of Layered Cooking
by  Dwayne Ridgaway
 
The Top One Hundred Pasta Sauces
by Diane Seed
 
Monday-to-Friday Pasta (Monday-to-Friday Series)
by  Michele Urvater
 
The Book of Pasta
by Lesley MacKley and Jon Stewart
 
Five-Minute Pasta Sauces
by  Michael Oliver

 

 

 

 

                                                                                
 

 

November is National Adoption Awareness Month

Friday, November 9th, 2012

by Sherrie F. (FosterAdopt)

 

November is National Adoption Awareness Month, and Adoption is something very near and dear to my heart.  You see, all three of my children joined me through the gift of adoption.  J’Shawn, William, and Taleesa were placed with my as my foster children first before being settled into our forever home.  There are many different types of adoption.  From healthy new born infant through a private adoption, to caring for a family member’s child as your own, to opening your home a special needs sibling group from half away around the world.   Regardless of how adoption was a choice for your family, we all share the same calling – that knowing your child is out there waiting for you, and doing the hard work of bringing them home, wherever they may be.

 

As you can Imagine, I am a HUGE advocate of adoption through foster care.   I was a foster parent for 10 years and in that time had over 20 children placed in my home.  Not being a parent before fostering, I can tell you that my life changed in ways I never would have imagined.  Here are my thoughts on fostering/adoption through child protective services:

 

  • People say, “I could never foster because I just couldn’t handle it when the children leave”.   My response is this – As a foster parent your job is to love, care for, meet the children where they’re at, and give them what they need to help them move forward toward safety and permanency.  The hope is that all children will be reunited with their birth families – it is their parent’s right to have them there.  The hope is that when they do return, you’ve helped them become stronger (emotionally, mentally and physically) but most importantly knowing that they are deserving of love, respect and safety – this is the children’s right to expect of their parents.
  • When reuniting with their birth families is not a possibility, it your job as a foster parent to help them work toward permanency, hopefully with you – then if not, with their new adoptive family.  I’ve had a couple of children who became open for adoption and for personal reasons, I chose not to adopt.  Remember that it is also an act of complete love to know that these children deserve the very best home that can meet their needs and to know that you may not be it – it’s not about your needs, but theirs.
  • Please, never hold anger or animosity toward birth parents for the pain and loss that our children have endured.  This is where our children come from, and our children deserve for us to let that anger go and find peace and acceptance with their past so that we can help them build a much stronger future.

 

Lastly, the one thing I hold dear to my heart and I always tell myself is this  – “In order for my family to be created, another was broken apart”-  I don’t say this as though we are not deserving of having a family, rather this helps remind me that what we are given is truly a gift, and that even if I got placement of my child right out of the hospital, he’s lost something too.  This is a grief that as parents we can’t take away for them, but be there for them as they work through it in their time and it their own way.

 

When deciding that adoption through foster care was the route for me, and that I was open to adoption of children of another race or ethnicity, I wanted to read all I could.   All three of my children are African American, and I am Caucasian/Hispanic.

 

Black Baby, White Hands: A View From the Crib by Dr. Jaiya John

I read this book shortly after my oldest son, J’Shawn was placed with me at 19 months and learning that I would be able to adopt him.  This book stayed with me long after I read it, and still touches me deeply.

Dr. John is obviously very well spoken and possesses a gift in the use of the English language – beautiful prose throughout the book. Initially, it was very hard for me to get through the book as Dr John kept pointing out all of the things he had wished his parents had done or not done or did differently, etc, etc. I kept identifying with the adoptive parent (s) and quite frankly vacillated between finding myself lacking as a parent or feeling that Dr. John was unappreciative and unsympathetic towards his parent’s journey into transracial parenting with absolutely no map. However, toward the end of the book, it was obvious that he greatly loved and respected his parents.

It was only after I had read the entire book and was able to reflect that I was able to take from the book that this was HIS story, not the story of his parent’s journey as transracial parents.  This is story of a black boy raised in a white home, with white parents living in a (mostly) white community – his feelings of isolation, lack of identity and struggle to find himself. I guess what this book has helped me realize is – until the world is truly color blind, I won’t raise my son to be.

I’m not going to raise him wearing rose-colored glasses about the world and the people around him. I’d be doing him a disservice if I did. My son is black and I want him to know that and be proud of it. That’s part of who he is.

One of my biggest peeves, is when people tell me say to me” I bet you don’t even notice that he’s black, he’s just your son.” That is absolutely not true. Being black is part of who is he, I don’t love him regardless of whether or not he is black, one of the infinite reasons that I love him because he is.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Adopt A Shelter Dog Month or Why Turtles Get The Tails Wagging

Tuesday, October 30th, 2012

 By Carole (craftnut)

 

This is a very special time for dog lovers and close to my heart.  My husband and I have been involved with rescues for years and we have long ties with Humane Societies.  The stories are sometimes horrific, sometimes heartbreaking, and most of the time they make me want to string up the people responsible, but I promise, no horror stories here.

 

There are ups and downs with rescuing abused and neglected darlings, but the outcome has always been worth it.   We have a soft spot for Welsh Terriers, little black and tan dogs that some people think look like miniature Airedales although the breeds are not related.   Our current Welsh Terrier is a rescue we nicknamed Psychodog.  Her favorite things are her collection of stuffed turtles.  The first one came with her, the rescue counselor gave her the second turtle, and then a friend gave her a huge, yellow one.  Since three constitutes a collection, she began receiving stuffed turtles from other family members (current count 8).  She loves those things, and will walk around carrying them in her mouth, wagging her tail.  Her tail wags so fast at times it is just a blur.  It is part of her morning ritual after breakfast, and again anytime we have been out of the house and come back home.  It is fun to watch her dig through her toy basket to decide which stuffed animals deserve to come out to play.  She has other stuffed toys, but the turtles win most of the time.

 

 

Furkids add so much to our lives.  They love us no matter what.  They wake up happy, wagging a tail just to be near us.  They are there when we need a lift, to lick our faces and make us smile.  Their unfailing loyalty and unconditional admiration is a wondrous thing, spreading joy wherever they go.  Oh, if only our own lives could be so simple and uncomplicated!!

We can learn a lot from dogs.  Some years ago, I found this in a column by Ann Landers, and I still find it to be profound wisdom.

 

“If you can start the day without caffeine,

If you can get going without pep pills,

If you can resist complaining and boring people with your problems,

If you can eat the same food every day and be grateful for it,

If you can understand when your loved ones are too busy to give you any time,

If you can overlook it when something goes wrong through no fault of your own and those you love take it out on you,

If you can take criticism and blame without resentment,

If you can ignore a friend’s limited education and never correct him,

If you can resist treating a rich friend better than a poor friend,

If you can face the world without lies and deceit,

If you can conquer tension without medical help,

If you can relax without liquor,

If you can sleep without the aid of drugs,

If you can say honestly that deep in your heart you have no prejudice against creed, color, religion, or politics,

 

Then, my friends, you are almost as good as your dog.”

 

If you are thinking of adding a furkid to your family, please consider rescuing a forever friend from the local shelter or humane society.  You can save a life today, and the rewards will be worth it.  If you cannot have a dog (or another dog) consider volunteering at a local shelter.  They always need help to clean cages, walk the dogs and just provide much appreciated ear scratches and tummy rubs.

 

97 Ways to Make Your Dog Smile by Jenny Langbehn

 

Dogs Don’t Bite When a Growl Will Do by Matt Weinstein and Luke Barber

 

Merles Door: Lessons from a Freethinking Dog by Ted Kerasote

 

 

Marley and Me: Life and Love with the World’s Worst Dog by John Grogan

 

Amazing Gracie A Dog’s Tale By Dan Dye and Mark Beckloff

 

A Dog Year:  Twelve Months, Four Dogs and Me by John Katz

 

Dog Is My Co-Pilot: Great Writers on the World’s Oldest Friendship
Included are pieces by Lynda Barry, Rick Bass, Maeve Brennan, Margaret Cho, Carolyn Chute, Alice Elliott Dark, Lama Surya Das, Pam Houston, Erica Jong, Tom Junod, Caroline Knapp, Donald McCaig, Nasdijj, Ann Patchett, Michael Paterniti, Charles Siebert, Alexandra Styron, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, and Alice Walker.

 

Rescuing Sprite A Dog Lover’s Story of Joy and Anguish by Mark R. Levin

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Free Book Friday on Saturday Winner!

Sunday, October 14th, 2012

 

 

The Winner of Best Friends Forever by Jennifer Weiner is:

 

 Audrey D. (sunshine82)

 

Congratulations, Audrey . Your book is on the way to you!

Thank you everyone who commented on the Blog!

Note: All the books given away on Free Book Friday are available in the PBS Market. We have thousands of new and new overstock titles available right now, with more added hourly. Some of the prices are amazing – and you can use a PBS credit to make the deal even better!

Remember, every new book purchase supports the club and helps keep membership free!