Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Yellowstone Wolves

Returning the Wild to Yellowstone
By Douglas W. Smith & Gary Ferguson
And
When the Wolves Returned
Restoring Nature’s Balance in Yellowstone
By Dorothy Hinshaw Patent and Photos by Dan Hartman and Cassie Hartman

“Amazingly, a study conducted in 2005 estimated that some two hundred thousand people were seeing wolves in Yellowstone every year, making it hands-down the best place on Earth to observe these animals in the wild. . . . For those who’ve been peering through the spotting scopes, an unforgettable aspect of such encounters is the wolf’s eyes, which can seem to look right through you.”

These books tell the story of the reintroduction of wolves into the wilds of the world’s first national park, Yellowstone.  This park was a part of Ulysses S. Grant’s legacy.  The park was dedicated to the enjoyment of all the people.  Since that time we’ve learned to dedicate it to the natural ecosystem for the plants and wildlife.  Fear, loathing, and ignorance about wolves drove their extinction from the park by the 1930’s.  It took 60 years for wolves to be returned to Yellowstone.

Returning the Wild to Yellowstone was written by an award-winning writer in partnership with the leader of the Yellowstone Wolf Project.  It’s a fascinating study into the harmful impacts to an ecosystem when a piece of it is completely removed.  Chapters are dedicated to the planning and initial release of the wolves, and overviews of how they settled into the park and what the project members observed.  It’s so interesting to read the behaviors of the wolf packs, and the resulting behaviors of the other animals.  Mixed in are heartwarming “Portrait of a Wolf” chapters.  Each of these focus on a different wolf, describing the life and personality of specific wolves that the project team got to know so well.  You’re also treated to some wonderful photography by the project team.

At the end of the first decade of the wolves’ return, there were six successful packs in the park.  “In truth absolutely no one thought this reintroduction would go so well.”  Reading this book will give you an appreciation for the hard work and dedication of the project team, as well as a great respect for the tenacity and perseverance of this beautiful animal, the wolf.


When the Wolves Returned is a short overview of the wolves’ return to Yellowstone.  This is a great book to share with children as well.  It clearly shows how “the balance of nature is always changting.  But when all the pieces of the puzzle are present, the extremes are eliminated.  Today Yellowstone is working its way back to a changing but healthy system, thanks to the wolves’ return.”  The story is told through captions to beautiful, artistic photography by Dan Hartman and Cassie Hartman.  They are a very talented father-daughter photography team who live on the northeast border of the park.  Dan’s work has been published by National Geographic and many other places.  You can see some of his work at www.wildlifealongtherockies.homestead.com

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Capitol Crimes

Murder in the Smithsonian
By Margaret Truman

                The Smithsonian museums are filled with fascinating artifacts, so many displayed and so many hidden in private storage.  On a visit you might encounter moon rocks, the Hope Diamond, a fossilized skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex, ancient mummies, or in this mystery novel you might see a featured artifact that’s used to commit murder.  With all the people who visit the museum, or who attend glittering Smithsonian events, the opportunity for intrigue tugs at the imagination.  And why murder?  Was it a robbery attempt of a priceless antiquity gone wrong?  Or was the victim a target for some sinister reason?  Who better to author this D.C. mystery, than a talented U.S. President’s daughter?

                The police detective called to the scene is under intense pressure to solve this case quickly.  He’s being second guessed by members of the Smithsonian Institution, prominent political figures, the media, and a very distraught victim’s fiancĂ©.  He’s not one to be rushed though.  According to the Smithsonian Institute, their goal is to better predict the future by examining the past.  Just as the museum scientists and librarians scrupulously preserve, catalogue, and organize exhibit artifacts, our detective does the same in gathering his clues, examining this murder to predict how he’ll catch a killer.

                This author cleverly weaves in interesting history and little known facts about the Smithsonian.  Tracking the past of the murder weapon we’re led to London, and then follow the trail to Scotland and an ancient Scottish castle.  By the time we’re back in D.C., the clues are adding up.

                First daughter Margaret Truman was ten years old when her father was elected Senator and served for seven years.  The family split their time between D.C. and Missouri.  She was a college student, majoring in History, when her father was sworn in as Vice President.  Less than three months later, he was President.  A very talented writer, Margaret’s first book was a memoir of her Missouri childhood and her years at the White House.  The New York Herald Tribune's book review section called it "a gracefully written tale of an average American girl drawn by chance into the White House."  She went on to write biographies, and a dozen murder mysteries that came to be known as the Capital Crimes Series.  These murders are scattered all over D.C. in many distinguished places including the White House.  Margaret Truman said, “I love books. I really, really love them. There's something special about bringing people and books together.” 


Thereby hangs a tale . . . .

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Garlic and Sapphires

Ruth Reichl (center) at the
Seattle Public Libraries Literary Lions fundraiser,
surrounded clockwise by volunteers:
Kim Unti, me, and Pam Yates
Garlic and Sapphires
The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise
By Ruth Reichl

I met Ruth Reichl when she generously donated her time at the Seattle Public Library System’s Literary Lions fundraiser Gala as Keynote speaker, and also meeting guests and signing her books for them.  I can tell you, her books were in high demand.  Her fans were delighted to meet and chat with her.  Food is at the heart of her many books.  Great cooking, great cuisine, and people sharing meals together.  She has received 6 James Beard awards. 

This memoir is about the author as the New York Times food critic.  It’s filled with humor along with heartwarming insights, of course incredible descriptions of food, restaurant settings, and also recipes.  A New York Times review was very influential, and had significant impact on a restaurant’s reputation and business.  Restaurant staff would be on the alert to recognize a food critic by her picture, so they could be sure to emphasize their best service and dining.  To avoid detection, Ruth would wear disguises.

She didn’t just go buy a wig and glasses.  It’s so funny to read how she designed and created a full character for each of her disguises, with the help of friends.  She developed a whole back story for each character she became, and the disguise matched the personality she wanted to project.  The clothes, the makeup, the hair were consciously put together, as each character came to life.  Beyond the deliciously funny reactions from friends and family, especially her young son, it was quickly clear that service at some restaurants changed dramatically depending on the disguise and personality the author projected.

It was so interesting to read the stories of her visits to very famous New York restaurants as well as some lesser known.  Her descriptions of the meals she shared with friends and family vividly include all senses, and I could easily imagine myself there with a tantalizing taste on the tongue of restaurant specialties.  After reading about the story behind the review, her New York Times review itself is also included.  There’s so much humor, especially as she establishes herself with her first reviews.  You’ll also see an evolution of her creative reviews, as she comes to deeply appreciate the promise a restaurant needs to deliver as people spend their hard earned money to experience a beautiful, shared event in their lives.  Her honest reviews to guide guests to the restaurants they’ll enjoy had a real importance.

Ruth says, “This book is going to have recipes instead of pictures because I want you to be able to taste what I am talking about.”  Now I’m still cooking and baking my way through the wonderful recipes.


Thereby hangs a tale . . . .

Monday, March 14, 2016

Murder Eclipsed

Dark Nantucket Noon
By Jane Langton

                Katherine, or Kitty as everyone calls her, returns to the island of Nantucket especially to view a spectacular, noon eclipse of the sun.  She flies from her Boston home, time away from teaching, to experience nature’s show in the only place where the entire total eclipse will be visible.  She’s certain she won’t run into her passionate love, Joe Green, or his wife while she’s there.

                Kitty runs far out along the beach, and ends up viewing the dramatic event by a lighthouse on a seemingly deserted spit on Nantucket Sound.  When the daylight returns, the most beautiful woman on the island, Joe’s wife, lies dead in a pool of blood at Kitty’s feet.  Joe and others who were viewing the eclipse from inside the lighthouse run out onto the murder scene.

                Homer Kelly, salt of the earth homicide detective turned Harvard professor, and occasional amateur sleuth, turns up at the jail believing in Kitty’s innocence.  This mystery novel is one of a series featuring Homer Kelly.  During his murder investigation, and defense of this capricious, creative, poet and teacher, Kelly learns a lot about the people living on the island.  He discovers a passion to preserve the precious environment, and also a competing hunger to draw more people and development.

                This author treats us to a very detailed picture of this special place on earth.  Jane Langton is now 93 years old living in Lincoln, Massachusetts.  She was born and raised in Boston.  Her passion for Nantucket shines through in her writing, and also in her wonderful line drawings that are scattered throughout the book.  Langton said she also used her drawing skills to help with the writing itself. “Drawing comes in handy in moments of desperation when a plot refuses to get itself organized,” she said. So early on, she started using a writing technique she calls Plotting with Charts: “I make tiny drawings on Post-it notes and stick them on a long piece of shelf paper. Then, because the glue on the back is forgiving, I can move the episodes around, trying them in different combinations.”

Besides her mystery series, she’s written about a dozen delightful children’s books.  Then, in 1970 she witnessed a solar eclipse in Nantucket, and decided to combine the event with her astronomy studies at Wellesley College in this Homer Kelly novel which came out in 1975.  No wonder her description of the eclipse and its impacts are so fascinating.  If you like discovering beautiful natural environments and animals, if you like meeting interesting characters and suspects, and certainly if you like solving an intriguing cozy mystery that masterfully unfolds, then you’ll want to read a Dark Nantucket Noon.

Thereby hangs a tale . . . .             

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Coins in the Fountain Reflect La Dolce Vita

Coins in the Fountain
A Memoir of Rome
By Judith Works
You’re invited on a Roman holiday.  You’ll linger over each page of this book, savoring the full-flavored descriptions of all that is seen, heard, tasted, and felt.  Just like all holidays, you won’t want this book to end.  Judith is an adventuresome American who eagerly sought the extraordinary experience of working with the United Nations organization in Italy.  Now we’re fortunate that she’s sharing her expatriate and also her traveler experiences with the rest of us.

Often tourists regret not glimpsing more about the culture and people of the countries they travel to.  Here Judith’s tales setting up a household and then a life in Rome treat you to those insights of what it is to be Italian.  The descriptions of all aspects of la dolce vita are enhanced with the author’s delightful, dry humor.  As with life everywhere, there is the good, the bad, and the ugly, and this book holds back nothing from a well-rounded account for the reader.  Narratives of the Italian meals cooked at home, as well as enjoyed in restaurants are featured.  Meals are events.  Words from the beautiful Italian language are sprinkled throughout the book too, delighting the reader.

There are several dimensions to this memoir.  In addition to life in Rome, another interesting aspect is the description of the work done for the United Nations.  The initial work described is with the FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization).  These situations “presented new problems complicated by the mix of nationalities, cultures, work locations, and legal arrangements.  Adding to the tangle, the United Nations has its own laws as well as individual agreements governing its presence.”  Later the author works for the FAO’s even more adventuresome sister food agency, the World Food Programme.  Stories shared in this book about dedicated people assigned all over the world were touching.

All five senses are immersed in the vivid descriptions of the bountiful landmarks in Rome.  With years of residency to draw from, the author presents the places so many of us have only heard of and also many surprises in Rome as well.  But that’s not all!  For you virtual travelers, Judith also shares extensive excursions taken all over Italy.  But it’s not just the sights, sounds, and tastes in Judith’s descriptions; she includes very interesting historical information to explain the background and then relates it to present day.  The writing flows so easily, it is sprezzatura, the art of making the difficult look effortless.

You’ll enjoy this gracious, artistic view of life in Italy, and you can reread it over again without throwing coins in the fountain.  Have your book signed by Judith Works at The Edmonds Bookshop this Saturday.

Thereby hangs a tale . . . .

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Something to Tweet About

Welcome To Subirdia
By John M. Marzluff
The weekend of February 12th, will be the Great Backyard Bird Count.  Every year Participants are asked to count birds for as little as 15 minutes (or as long as they wish) on one or more days of the four-day event and report their sightings online at birdcount.org. Anyone can take part in the Great Backyard Bird Count, from beginning bird watchers to experts, and you can participate from your backyard, or anywhere in the world.  This book is a wonderful complement to that coming attraction.  Its appeal spans bird lovers, and naturalists who are looking for insights into the evolution occurring all around us.

The author’s other name is James W. Ridgeway, Professor of Wildlife Science at the University of Washington.  The many stories, studies, and examples specific to Seattle and many of its named suburbs, including the Edmonds Ferry line are particularly fun for local readers.  Some of his bird studies spans across the United States as well and also reach into many other nations around the world.  The book discusses the fascinating ways that many varieties of birds, and some other background animals, are adapting to the conditions of the increasingly developed world.  We may know that so many of our actions and decisions affect our feathered friends, but this book explains that cause and effect, and also provides practical strategies that can improve the environment for our nature’s neighbors too.  As the author says, “we learn about each bird’s place in the web of life and begin to see ourselves within that web as well.”

The book includes many beautiful sketches depicting the birds and stories discussed throughout the book.  Jack DeLap is the artist.  His illustrations have appeared in a variety of other books and publications as well.  His appreciation for the lives and souls of these little creatures is apparent in every picture.

What I mostly appreciate in this book that the author laces science deftly between the everyday examples and explanations.  I learned so much because he kept my interest alive.  Instead of lecturing at me, this Professor conversed about a topic so obviously dear to his heart.

I’m a bird feeder, and I learned so many interesting things about the birds that my feeder is attracting.  The author shows ways that these creatures are not only adapting, but also evolving.  As the author says, “Evolution is not something that happens only in the abstract eons of geological time.  It is happening right now, in your own backyards.  You are a force, as potent as the glaciers of the last ice age, shaping your feathered neighbors.”  This book gave me hope that with understanding and education that people like the Professor is spreading, nature will prevail.

For those of you looking for something with a little more of the naturalist’s scientific information, yet still enjoyable reading, another book by the same author is Gifts of the Crow.  If you’re especially a crow fan, you’ll really enjoy this exposition into the smart behavior of these birds, and the others in the “corvid” family.

Thereby hangs a tale . . . .

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

He's The Last Policeman

the last policeman.The Last Policeman
By Ben H. Winters

All is not as it appears, right from the start of this novel.  It looks like a suicide, and yet rookie detective Hank Palace isn’t sure of that.  Still, he wonders what the point is to investigate further.  It’s only a feeling he has that it could be murder, and what will it matter when the world is certain to end in six months.  That’s right, the major twist in this novel is asteroid 2011GV which is on a direct heading to earth, and nothing will stop it. The science is undeniable.  The end of the world has been announced.  The only questions left are the date and the precise location.

Life on earth has changed with this asteroid news.  People, including other police officers, are walking off their jobs to pursue their bucket lists and other end of world desperate pursuits.  Is there any reason now for Detective Palace to investigate what by all accounts appears to be suicide?  With the end of the world a certainty, suicide has become sadly epidemic.  Is it really so hard to believe this one?  No one else seems to care, including the dead man’s family.  Is perseverance in this world to do the right thing, despite circumstances, part of human nature?  How important is one man’s death?

It’s a fascinating character study to see questions of motive in this new light, with the asteroid approaching.  The end of the world changes everything from a law enforcement perspective.  The dead man worked in the insurance industry, which is affected in its own way by the world news.  Is there motive there for murder?  Or motive for suicide?  When the detective notifies the man’s family, curious dynamics ensue.

Hank Palace is struggling with his own personal and family issues throughout this novel as well, which brings another dimension to his job and to the chaos around him.  This novel combines the best of detective investigation with philosophical debate and science fiction.

Ben H. Winters is the author of eight novels, including most recently World of Trouble (Quirk), the concluding book in The Last Policeman trilogy.  The Last Policeman was the recipient of the 2012 Edgar Award, and it was also named one of the Best Books of 2012 by Amazon.com and Slate.  As I read, I was working side by side with Detective Palace to uncover clues, follow leads, and to seek meaning in a human life.


Thereby hangs a tale . . . .