Category Archives: Books: the Good and Bad

Why Michio Kaku Rocks!

While I am not the most science minded person (aka, I suck at math, therefore I am never going to be a scientist), I love Michio Kaku! I am almost done reading his book Physics of the Impossible. This book explores the ideas of science fiction such as: phasers, Death Stars, teleportation and etc. This is book explains that while some of these things may not be possible currently, it doesn’t mean that they can’t happen in the future or not.

This book is great for any sci-fi fan or Fringe fan as well. Michio explains the science behind the principles of each item or thing in such a way that you can understand it, but you don’t feel as though you are being talked down at. He is also humorous, which makes the book all the more enjoyable! What I liked the most about Michio’s book, is that he is not dry. While Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of the Universe is interesting, I found it very dry, unlike Michio.

So make sure to pick up this great science/sci-fi read for yourself or your sci-fi fan!

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What! Two Eat Clean Cookbooks for the price of one?

Yep, you read the headline right. If you are a big Tosca Reno or Clean Eating fan, here’s your chance! Robert Kennedy Publishing is currently having a BOGO deal for the Clean Eating Cookbook & the Eat Clean Diet Cookbook! This is a great gift for someone who is either a fan of Tosca, Oxygen Magazine, or Clean Eating Magazine; or for someone who is curious about the whole Clean Eating thing.

We have been using the Clean Eating Cookbook as a staple in this house, it’s got great recipes that we love and there aren’t any ingredients that we can’t pronounce.Enhanced by Zemanta

To Eat Meat, or Not To Eat Meat: That is the Question

So, I have to admit, I waiver back and forth about eating meat. I’m not the biggest fan of it, infact I really only eat hamburger, turkey, chicken and seafood. But frankly aside from seafood, I could live without eating meat. I will not touch steak and am not the biggest fan of most meat. I have to be honest, when I see a chicken or cow and know that they are going to be eaten, I want to barf, and this is from someone who raised cows! I am not one of those people, however, that will look at someone eating meat and say “You’re eating that?!”, to each their own. And you probably won’t see me sporting a “Meat is Murder” shirt anytime soon either, but it does make me pause. I think part of this is because I don’t think that meat really tastes all that great, especially when you have great alternatives like Morning Star and Boca Burgers that taste just as yummy, if not yummier! I am one of the billions of people that don’t really stop to consider where our food comes from, but once I do, I feel sick. I do have to preface by saying that I do own a hand gun and I don’t care if someone goes hunting, just don’t ask me to eat it!

I recently picked up the book The Kind Diet by Alicia Silverstone (yep, that’s right Cher from Clueless) and I have to admit, it made me really think. While this book is a vegan diet book, and I am not willing to go vegan (yet), I do admire that she is a vegan and she has some really yummy looking recipes in her book. And let’s face it, look at the picture of her! She looks amazing, so obviously this is doing something good for her! I am going to try a few of her recipes and see how it goes. As for my family, I have a feeling that I will endure a bit (okay, a lot) of teasing, but for me, it’s worth it!

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Juicy June Giveaway!

Cover of "Dead in the Family: A Sookie St...

Cover via Amazon

In honor of the upcoming Season Three premiere of HBO‘s True Blood, I will be giving away a copy of Charlaine Harris‘ new novel Dead In The Family to one lucky winner!Just tell me what you love best about either the Sookie Stackhouse novels or the show True Blood and I will pick the best one! You have until June 13th at 4pm EST to enter and one entry per person.

This book picks up after the Faery Wars and the shifters and Weres have made themselves known. The public’s reaction isn’t as kind to them as it was to the vampires. Not only that, but there’s a Faery loose and it’s armed for Sookie! This book was a great follow up to Dead in the Family, which explains where Sookie’s ability to read minds came from and the distant family she never knew she had. Plus with Eric around, you know it’s gonna get good!

So tell me what you love about True Blood or the Sookie Stackhouse novels (try to keep it clean please!) and let me know what you think!

Best Wishes and Enjoy this sneak peak look at Season Three!

Krisy

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Book Review: Vision in White or Vision in Boredom?

Cover of "Vision in White (The Bride Quar...

Cover via Amazon

Nora Robert’s newest series The Bride Quartet’s first book is Vision in White. The main character is Mac, or Mackensie, who is the bridal photographer with some serious mommy issues, as in no boundary mommy issues. While normally, I am not a big reader of Nora Roberts, I found this book to be entertaining and not too slutty in the process. I am not a big fan of “corset rippers” this book was tasteful and interesting. I hope that you enjoy the read, and make sure to check out the other too books, Bed of Roses and Savor the Moment!

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Making you pediatrician your friend, not the enemy during the internet age

Many times as moms, we feel like we might be at odds with our pediatricians. We as moms know our children best and feel that we are the best for them, especially in the internet age, where with a click of a button on sites like WebMD, we can self-diagnose with the best of them (or so we think)! But there is a better way! Want to know how? Jen Klein, author of SheKnows.com Presents — The Mommy Files: Secrets Every New Mom Should Know (that no one else will tell you!) can tell you.

Partnering with Your Child’s Pediatrician in the Internet Age
By Jen Klein,
Author of SheKnows.com Presents — The Mommy Files: Secrets Every New Mom Should Know (that no one else will tell you!)

The relationship with your child’s pediatrician is unique. The pediatrician is not your physician — even though you may call her or him “my” pediatrician — it is your child’s physician. And learning to work well with this medical provider on behalf of an initially non-verbal, non-decision making little being can be a challenge. It can be a wonderful relationship, it can be a challenging relationship, and it can be any variation in between — or even all of the above at various times.

Both you and your child’s pediatrician have the same goal in mind: the ongoing, long-term health and development of your child. Your approach to that may be rather different — but you each need the other. You bring knowledge and details of your child’s day-to-day doings, development, and personality while the pediatrician brings years of education, training, and practice to the exam room. Neither can contribute to appropriate medical decisions without the input of the other. It’s always been thus — but there hasn’t always been the Internet.

To fathom the broad impact of the Internet is impossible, really. It touches so much of our lives, expands our world view, and brings us so much information — but also presents new challenges. How do you know that what you read on the Internet is true? Or valid? Or at all applicable to your situation?

You can see this in microcosm in how this vast network of words and pictures and stories — and the occasional bit of data thrown in — has affected our interactions with medical care providers. We go to the web for medical issues big and small. Sometimes we are right and sometimes we are wrong. We may joke about self-diagnosis on the web, but it’s no joke really. And especially not when our kids are involved. Search engines may return results, give you clues to bigger issues, and start you down a productive path, but they are not an education in and of themselves. The Internet is no substitute for partnership with a medical care provider.

So how do you identify and build that partnership in the Internet age? By focusing on same issue that built the relationship before we carried the Internet on our pocket-sized phones: communication. From strong, clear communication you will build respect and trust with your child’s pediatrician to the benefit of all of you.

While the Internet is an astonishingly useful tool for discovering potential pediatricians for your child, and vetting credentials and experience, nothing beats face-to-face contact. Meeting a potential medical care provider for your child gives you a sense of communication chemistry — on both sides. It’s a first sense of, “Will this person take my child’s health and development seriously? Will she listen to my concerns about my child’s growth and my parenting? Can we work together for my child’s benefit?” Likewise, on the other side, the pediatrician herself similar has questions about you.

Once you have identified a pediatrician, on-going communication with your child’s physician is about more than a preference for phone, email or in person. It’s about your words, your tone, and your body language when you speak to one another, too. Endeavoring to communicate openly and honestly with the pediatrician builds trust in each other and respect for one another. It’s an understanding that the relationship is a partnership for the benefit of your child.

Your child’s continued health, well-being, and development is the shared priority and you come to that shared goal with different skill sets and knowledge bases. Communicating truthfully and openly helps both of you make the best use of what you each bring to the relationship on behalf of your child. You may be communicating on behalf of the patient in this doctor-patient relationship, but your child is the patient — not you — and the doctor is your child’s doctor.

Your child’s physician uses the Internet, too. She or he has a general idea what is out there — the helpful and the less-than-helpful. Physician and Internet are not mutually exclusive: the doctor and the Internet can complement one another, often quite effectively. One can help you understand the other, but only if you are honest with the pediatrician about your efforts and communicate your interests or concerns.

Respect and trust is a two-way street, and it’s built over time. The doctor-patient relationship depends on real-life personal interaction, one that takes into account nuance as much as concrete symptoms and lab tests. This was true before search engine results for obscure symptoms were seconds away, and it will be true even as the Internet develops further. Nothing replaces the human touch, literally and figuratively.

Not everything you read on the Internet — or anywhere, really — is true. Not every circumstance applies to your child. Just as you would think it ridiculous and probably insulting if the doctor were to walk into the exam room and say, “I read on the Internet that mothers who wear blue shirts pay less attention to their children,” statements from unvetted Internet sources can sound just as inane to your child’s pediatrician — and lower that hard-earned communication-based trust. Obviously, “I read on the Internet that . . . ” is never a valid basis for an important medical decision — but asking for help in discerning, clarifying, and understanding what you read online can be a valuable part of your communication and can help build the partnership with the pediatrician.

The Internet is a tremendous tool in our lives, though we are still learning how to harness it to its best effect. Where once there was implicit trust between doctors and patients (or patient’s mothers), the Internet has helped push us toward doubt and distrust — sometimes warranted, though often not. Somewhere in the pendulum swinging between blind faith and rabid skepticism lies the productive middle ground in that ever-shifting sand of a relationship with a medical care provider that is not actually your medical care provider.

© 2010
Jen Klein, author of SheKnows.com Presents — The Mommy Files: Secrets Every New Mom Should Know (that no one else will tell you!)

Author Bio
Jen Klein is a mother of two boys and a girl, the youngest of whom just started kindergarten. After earning a thoroughly useful degree in art history and studio art, she writes technical documentation. But in her primary job as mom, she’s dealt with nearly every parenting scenario imaginable, and appreciated every slobbery toddler kiss along the way. Klein has been a contributor to SheKnows.com for the past two years and writes a weekly parenting column called “Monday Mom Challenge” in addition to regular articles. She lives near Boston, MA.

For more information, please visit www.SheKnows.com.

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Book Review: Now What? by Laura Berman Fortgang

The book Now What?: 90 Days to a New Life Direction by Laura Berman Fortgang is the perfect book, especially in this economy and troubled times when people are literally asking themselves now what?

This book is a 90 Day tour of yourself, what you view are your limits (are they really your limits?) and what you CAN accomplish! This book is broken down into chapter-a-week format, so even if you don’t think you have time to read it, you can find time.

Anyone who is searching for something better needs to read this book! This book prompted me to look at myself and realize that I need to focus on the right priorities in m life, not the wrongs ones. I realized that I missed blogging and many of the things that I had previously enjoyed in my life and I am now focusing on them!

As a psychology major, I really enjoyed that with each chapter, she got down to the root of what we need to fix in our lives and how we can do it. So many people come up with pat answers to fixing problems, but they don’t realize that without getting to the root of the issue, things will not change!

Make sure to pick up a copy today and see your life transformed!

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A truly amazing quote about Capitialism

Arguing with Idiots was published by Simon and...
Image via Wikipedia

I just read this amazing quote from Glen Beck’s book Arguing with Idiots. Beck (2009) stated, “The truth is that capitalism is neither good nor evil, is just is. Capitalism can’t get you a job, a bigger house, or a better retirement – you have to do all of those things for yourself. But what capitalism can do is foster an environment where those with the will to succeed have a better chance of achieving their dreams“(p. 3).

I thought this was poignant and worth sharing.

Beck, G. (2009). Arguing with Idiots. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.

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Twitter = Laughter, who knew?

I just finished one of the funnier books I have ever read! The World According to Twitter by David Pogue. David, a New York Times Personal Tech Columnist tapped into the minds of his 500,000 million Twitter followers for answers to some great and funny questions. Such as, change 1 letter of a familiar title: Star Wart: THe real reason Vader wears a mask.

This book challenges the way that we look at social media and each other. Twitter, like other social media outlets, can receive a bad rap due to people who feel the need to post what they had for lunch. However, this project shows that we can connect and have fun with social media outlets and even learn a thing or two about each other, all in 140 characters or less.

I haven’t had a lot to laugh about lately, so when I poured into this book, I laughed harder than I can remember! I can’t wait to share this great book with friends and family who also need a pick me up.

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Mommywood by Tori Spelling

NEW YORK - MARCH 31: (FILE) Tori Spelling (L) ...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

I recently got a copy of Tori Spelling’s new book, Mommywood by Tori Spelling. So far, I am loving it! I may be hard for some to do, but I feel for Tori. She struggles with what every mom struggles with, especially working moms: finding the balance between work and home. It’s a hard struggle, after my first child, Sophia, I had to go back to work at a large bank, where I was a Branch Manager. That was rough, when I was at work, I thought about home and when I was home, I thought about work. There was a never-ending crazy cycle.

After Sophia was 1 1/2, I was able to quit my job and be a full-time stay at home mom, which I enjoyed. When we moved, I got a part-time job at the local YMCA, which totally works around my life, I work from 4:30am to 7am. I don’t have to worry about childcare and well, I am awake anyways. The job is not stressful and I enjoy it, so I don’t feel like I am constantly in limbo between worlds.

But back to Tori, she is a hilarious author, who is not afraid to tell it like it is. I admire that about her! I especially loved her Halloween party story. I won’t give anything away, but just know that has happened to me too! I also admire that she is not afraid of calling out the broken relationship with her mom, Candi, who in my opinion, is a total nut!

If you like Tori & Dean: Home Sweet Hollywood, then make sure to check out Mommywood and sTori Telling.

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