Posts tagged friendship

Gift Books for Martha Stewart Living Show – and For You!

We just wrapped.  Betsy and Brian and I – on the Martha Stewart Living show.  Asked to prepare a Gift Book segment, I have so many gorgeous, stimulating books that we didn’t get to them all.  Hence, the list here!

I’ll begin with Non-Fiction…because that’s where we left off on the show.  And, in fact, these are the most perfect of adult books. For the girlfriend with the snappy sense of humor, there’s Thx Thx Thx.  For your friend with the warm heart, there’s Unlikely Friendships - about unusual, feel-good pairings, like the kitten and gorilla, and how they came to be.  Two magnificent books about John F Kennedy – one, through Jackie’s own words.  It’s an historical, first-person view we so seldom get – and it comes with 8 CD’s.  Plus, there’s Chris Matthews’ stunningly different portrait of the president.  Two of the most amazing books in my gift collection focus on cultural icons – one fantasy (Batman), one real (Marilyn Monroe).  Although one might argue that Marilyn Monroe is fantasy, as well as Batman.  Both books are evocative, magnificent art, and a complete treasure.

Adult Non-Fiction:

 

1.     Thx Thx Thx: Thank Goodness for Everything by Leah Dieterich; Andrews McMeel

2.     Unlikely Friendships: 47 Remarkable Stories from the Animal Kingdom by Jennifer Holland; Workman

3.     Jacqueline Kennedy: Historic Conversations on Life with John F Kennedy by Caroline Kennedy; Hyperion AND Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero by Chris Matthews; Simon & Schuster

4.     Marilyn Monroe: Metamorphosis by David Wills and Stephen Schmidt; HarperCollins

5.     The Batman Files by Matthew Manning; Andrews McMee

Another great gift idea is calendars.  And, Pomegranate is my favorite, especially an artist named Susan Seddon Boulet, whose work is mesmerizing – about Shaman and Goddesses.  Another calendar is the Reading Woman Wall Calendar.  Give it, along with one of the books on my list.

And here is the rest of the list – the highlights of our discussion on Martha Stewart Living – are The Third Gift for kids, The Hunger Games Trilogy for YA, Damned by my friend Chuck Palahniuk, and Out of Oz by Gregory Maguire.

Kids:

 

1.     The Third Gift by Linda Sue Park; Clarion Books

2.     The Happy Elf by Harry Connick, Jr w/CD; HarperCollins

3.     Stars by Mary Lyn Ray and Marla Frazee; Simon & Schuster

4.     Three Classic Children’s Stories – Drawings by Edward Gorey, Text by James Donnelly; Pomegranate

5.     The Wizard of Oz: A Scanimation Book by Rufus butler Seder; Workman

 

YA:

1.     The Hugo Movie Companion by Brian Selznick; Scholastic

2.     The Chronicles of Harris Burdick by Chris Van Allsburg; Houghton Mifflin

3.     WonderStruck by Brian Selznick; Scholastic

4.     Dearly Departed by Lia Habel; Del Rey

5.     The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins; Scholastic

 

 Adult Fiction:

  1. The Christmas Wedding by James Patterson; Little, Brown
  2. Damned by Chuck Palahniuk; Doubleday
  3. 11 / 22 / 63 by Stephen King; Simon & Schuster
  4. The Exorcist: 40th Anniversary Edition by William Peter Blatty; HarperCollins
  5. Out of Oz: The Final Volume in the Wicked Years by Gregory Maguire; William Morrow

 

No secret that I love books.  They saved my life when I was a kid.  They led me outside the abusive world I lived in, to know that there was a greater beauty where I could live instead. What these books have in common – while they’re from all genres – is that connection with that greater gorgeousness.  No coincidence that many of the books on my list were sparked by the authors’ insistent dreams.

Enjoy!  And, feel free to comment on any of these books.

Love,

Diana

l

 

Comments (1) »

FOOTLOOSE – It’s Everyone’s Time

 

Footloose – the one with Kevin Bacon – was the first movie my older son ever saw.  He was weeks old at the time.  He smiled and laughed and bounced in the dark theatre.  So did I.

The music – Footloose and Let’s Hear It For the Boys– kicked ass then, and it does now, along with the eight new songs on the soundtrack.  That baby is now 27-years old, and, with a start in life like Footloose, you bet he can dance.

Suffice it to say I have fond memories of the original, but for someone who never sees a movie or reads a book twice, I am delighted with this remake.  I’m easy – give me a fast pace, slices of humor interspersed with tragedy, and dance dance dance.  I’m there.  And, usually, memorizing the choreography so I can dance it when I get the soundtrack.

But I wanted more dance from this new FootlooseMore singing. And, those red boots Ariel wore – oh, yeah, I wanted those, too.

I didn’t miss Kevin Bacon or Lori Singer – the maverick out-of-towner and the preacher’s daughter – from the earlier Footloose, because Kenny Womald as Ren McCormick and Julianne Hough as Ariel, dazzled and crackled.  They demonstrated dimension even while dancing.

And I loved the conversion of Ren’s sidekick. Not talking religion here.  Though, you may recall Footloose is about a big-city boy, Ren, who gets stuck in a small-town where a three-year ban is instituted by the preacher/councilman (Dennis Quaid in the 2011 film) after his only son is killed in a head-on after a booze-fueled dance.  No, we’re talking about the conversion of a slow-talking Southerner to learn how to dance.

Sometimes I wanted Director Craig Brewer to hang onto the scene longer – and more singing and dancing – but, you know what?  I would go see Footloose again.  And, next time bring my firstborn son.

***

Actually, we just came back from Redbox, and noticed the old Footloose on the display.

He said we should see the new Footloose.

I said I did.

Without me?  he asked.

Guess I’m going to see the new Footloose again.

Comments (4) »

Dan Millman, Peaceful Warrior

The Four Purposes of Life: Finding Meaning and Direction in a Changing World

By Dan Millman

starts with

PublishedApril 14, 2011 (Hardcover) H J Kramer

Bookmark and Share
Dan Millman’s life looked spelled out.  A trampoline artist, his next stop was the Olympics.  But, weeks before he was to leave, another life plan intervened – Dan was in a motorcycle accident.  And it shattered his leg in forty places.
The story is told in his Way of the Peaceful Warrior, and adapted into a feature film Peaceful Warrior, starring Nick Nolte.   All that came before our first meeting, when I interviewed Dan about his book Everyday Enlightenment.  It was a good ten years ago, but he remembered me, graciously saying that he had enjoyed that interview.
Despite the rain, Dan had walked to the studio where we met.  The cameramen still fussing with lighting and gear, Dan and I sat on a bench, reconnecting.   There was no hurry to Dan.  No rush.  Just as in his book The Four Purposes of Life, Dan lives in the moment.   That’s the fourth purpose, by the way, a blend of the first three, living in the moment.

The first purpose is learning life’s lessons.  Much like his motorcycle accident derailed his Olympic dreams, life often has grander plans for us.  Dan is a teacher, sweet and humble, admits he doesn’t always get it right, but, well, that’s what life is for, it’s a classroom.  Fortunately, it’s pass/fail, and we get to try again.  Let me rephrase that – life will hit us again, harder each time, till we get the lesson.  The second purpose is finding your career and your calling – which may not be the same thing!  The third purpose is discovering your life path.  You can find that on Dan’s website, it is akin to numerology.  Mine is 35/8.  The three is for expression, the five for freedom, and the eight pertains to recognition.
After editing, the interview will be posted on the Earth2World network – a new venture for me.  It’s video – and I’m open to attracting the perfect sponsors for my show, Conquer the Odds: Pursuing Your Passion.  After the interview, Dan signed my book “for my respected friend, media angel, Diana.”  I may have blushed.

The main takeaway for me?  Just enjoy life – whatever comes at you – and realize that it’s all on purpose.  It’s a faith thing.  One of my lessons.

Leave a comment »

Take a Lesson From Robert Dugoni

Bodily Harm

By Robert Dugoni

Buy on Amazon

Published May 25, 2010 (Hardcover)  Touchstone

Bookmark and Share

Tonight I met with the rest of the committee that put on the 2010 Willamette Writers Conference – and is gearing up for 2011.  Bob Dugoni’s name came up.  And, coincidentally, before I knew we were meeting, I had decided Bob’s show would air today.  Bob Dugoni blew the freakin’ doors off during his speech at the August Willamette Writers conference.  If Bob returns this year – and we hope he will – we will book him a double room for his lectures.  He was so hot, Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (3) »

The Atlas of Love – Playful, Literary, Lovely Book

The Atlas of Love

By Laurie Frankel

Buy on Amazon

Published August 17, 2010 (Hardcover) St. Martin’s Press

Bookmark and Share

Maybe I loved The Atlas of Love because it felt like a friend’s journal I’d picked up and accidentally opened to the first page.  And couldn’t stop reading it until page 35 or so, still standing, and then it was too late.  So I read the whole thing, feeling guilty, as if I’d eaten a carton of Ben and Jerry’s at one sitting.  Not that I’ve ever done that.  But I also felt pleased, because of the light humor laced in with the literary configurations.

Maybe I loved The Atlas of Love because Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (2) »

If You Dream of Being a Writer, Here’s How

Bookmark and Share

The auspicious theme of the Willamette Writers Conference – “the future’s so bright” -  set the bar high.  Nearly 900 attendees showed up this weekend.  Now we can boast of dreams coming true.

The trick falls in networking your way to a deal, to an agent, to the promise that a literary or film person of power will read your work.

And, magic happened.  Read the rest of this entry »

Leave a comment »

If I Stay – A Lovely YA Book for Anyone Who Wonders

If I Stay

By Gayle Forman

Buy on Amazon

Published April 2, 2009 (Hardcover) Dutton, and April 6, 2010 (Paperback) Penguin

Bookmark and Share

I remember the news story on which this novel, If I Stay, was based.  Or at least one very like it.

I have reported on dozens of tragedies during my years as a broadcast journalist.  And, when a cop’s voice quivers during a phone interview as he speaks from the scene.  Or when – in the early days – I could actually report from the scene, and I walked away with the story in my head, and an ache imprinted in my heart. Or when I heard on the scanner snippets of a young person waving a gun at police, and the anguish that followed.  The story stays. Read the rest of this entry »

Leave a comment »

On Writing And Writing Groups

Bookmark and Share

A stack of my manuscripts – four versions – towers close to four-inches above my glass desk.  The sheets of paper bear the brilliant scribblings from four dear friends in my writing group. Dubbed by Jeff Baker of The Oregonian “the hottest writing group in Portland.”

It’s a special night.  Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (2) »

The Gifts of Grief – A Profound Visit with Kris Carlson

Bookmark and Share

Kris Carlson is my newest friend.  I say this with certainty, after spending a few hours together, first at my home, then in studio on-the-air at www.pdx.fm.  Kris tells me that Richard Carlson, her husband, world-famous for his Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff books, used to tell her that we would like each other.

But Richard is gone – he passed suddenly at age 45 on descent into JFK on his book tour a few years ago – of an embolism.  He fell asleep, and never woke up.

Kris said on Open Book with Diana Page Jordan today that she lost the love of her life – and gained her self.  He never woke up.  She had to.

Heartbroken Open tells Kris’s aching journey non-chronologically and beautifully.  Grief – especially from the sudden, unexpected wrenching away of a loved one – must be traveled, not walled up.  Kris says she learned that when you are grieving a loss, you Surrender. Trust. Accept. And, Receive.

If you’ve ever grieved – and we all do – this tough, rewarding, opening path will take you to the most amazing places, places you’ve never imagined possible.

Comments (2) »

If You’ve Ever Had to Say Goodbye Too Soon…

Heartbroken Open: A Memoir Through Loss to Self-Discovery

By Kristine Carlson

Buy on Amazon

April 6, 2010 (Hardcover) HarperOne

Bookmark and Share

Never a good time to say goodbye.  It’s just too damn hard.  But what if you had the perfect family, the perfect life, and your partner was a universally-adored New York Times bestselling author who died at age 45 on descent into JFK airport.

This is Kristine Carlson’s story of healing from a loss that seemed impossible.  Read the rest of this entry »

Leave a comment »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,140 other followers