Did you participate in the summer reading program as a kid? Well, my mom is a librarian so if we hadn’t done it I think my mom would have been shunned from library world. I have really fond memories of having my little booklet and going to the library and getting stickers and then at the end of the summer getting a medal of some sort for completing it. What a sense of accomplishment! I seriously would probably read more if I got a medal after completing a certain number of a books. There is nothing like a little positive reinforcement to motivate me. So even though I am not a teacher or a student anymore and don’t get the traditional summer break I always tend to think of the start of a summer as a time to do some serious reading. Obviously my choice in books these days is influenced by our adoption. I just finished a book by Melissa Fay Green called There Is No Me Without You. I learned a remarkable amount of information about Ethiopian culture, the AIDS crisis, adoption from Ethiopia and most importantly the power of one person to make a difference. That’s a lot to digest, right? But the author tells it all from the perspective of this amazing woman, Haregewoin Teffara. The author finds a way to mix all the facts and statistics with the stories of Mrs. Teffera, who opens her home to orphans. So it reads more like a novel. Even if you aren’t knee deep in the process of adopting from Ethiopia , I think you would enjoy this book. I found a brief review from Booklist that I really think summarizes the book well.
“The horrific numbers behind the AIDS pandemic in Africa , "the most terrible epidemic in human history," have little resonance for most people in the West: "the ridiculous numbers wash over most of us." But this searing account humanizes the statistics through heartbreaking, intimate stories of what it is like for young orphans left alone in Ethiopia . Greene's story focuses on one rescuer, Haregewoin Teferra, who has opened her home and compound in a rickety hillside neighborhood of Addis Ababa and taken in hundreds of the untouchables thrown in the streets and left at her door. She cannot turn them away. Greene tells the stories in unforgettable vignettes of loss, secrecy, panic, stigma, and, sometimes, hope, even as she documents the big picture of "the human landslide," the history and science of epidemiology and transmission, and expresses her fury at the "crimes against humanity" of the multinational drug companies whose expensive patents have denied millions access to the life-saving medicines. Just as moving are the personal stories of international adoptions in the U. S. , including two Ethiopian children taken into Greene's own Atlanta family. The detail of one lost child at a time, who finds love, laughter, comfort, and connection, opens up the universal meaning of family.” Hazel Rochman
10 hours?????! You're gonna hate me, but I really think the longest DVD we watched was 2 hours or less. That's nuts! But hey, you'll both be experts on the subject, and I will have to come to you for help if we go down that journey again.
ReplyDeleteYou'll be proud to know this is Henry's 3rd summer with the library reading program. I think it's awesome that you can start it from when they are babies even! I remember doing the program every single year of my childhood, too. They actually had an adult winter reading program this last year, but I totally think they should have an adult summer one, too. :)
Sadly, I have no recollection of doing a summer reading program, even though I am also a daughter of a librarian, as you know. Your book definitely earns you some stars!!
ReplyDeleteNext book you should read would be Outliers- I don't think you've read it, right? But I could go on for days about that one. Also- "extremely loud and incredibly close" by safran foer is supposed to be awesome.
I love you, miss moo! Sounds like the waiting will begin soon! Allie
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