Showing posts with label non fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label non fiction. Show all posts

March 21, 2012

Just A Minute by Wess Stafford

Do you remember that one moment (or maybe there were several) that changed your life when you were a child - and shaped part of who you are today?

Just a Minute by Wess Stafford, is a book about those moments and how each of us as adults can influence a child in just one moment, whether for the good or the bad. Children are like clay and so easily molded. As adults, we have the opportunity with every child we have contact with to encourage them or crush them, and it can all be in a small and simple moment.

Just a Minute touches on stories, both good and bad, that show the influence we all have on children. Each story is filled with wisdom and made me think about how I can help to encourage the children around me. Some stories made me cringe, some made me laugh and a few made me cry. But all of them reminded me of my individual influence.

Even if you don't read this book, just take a minute and think of how you can influence any child in your life, even strangers that you haven't met. If you see a mother struggling with her children in the grocery store, try to make that tantrum throwing toddler smile and help the mom. Or if you see a child looking dejected, give him encouragement and tell them that they are worth so much more than they think. Don't tell children that they are dreaming too big, encourage them!

There were parts of Just a Minute that I didn't love because I felt it was over the top, but overall, the message is spectacular and we all need to remember to build the children around us up and to never discourage them from being the best they can be. Every child is smart and beautiful and capable, they just need to be encouraged. I encourage you to take a moment and read the book!


I was given a complementary copy of this book for the purpose of my honest and unbiased opinion. post signature

February 29, 2012

The Social Media Mind by David Amerland

The Social Media Mind dives into the ways that social media has influenced, impacted and changed marketing, businesses and the way we think forever.

Amerland goes into specific detail about how using Google, Twitter and Facebook has made a huge difference in the way businesses are run now.  He talks about how consumers have changed over the years and want to buy from a company that has a face and a story.  Companies that utilize these forms of social media marketing to the highest potential gain the trust and loyalty of their consumers.

He provides interesting tid-bits of the way social media, when used correctly, has helped boost a companies reputation and revenues.  On the same token, when used incorrectly or not at all, how those companies have struggled with image and acceptability.  He uses large companies as examples, such as Gap, Blackberry, Starbucks and Ford.

He includes vital events that have most recently taken place and have changed the way that social media works.  For example, Facebook's last conference, f8, which revealed Facebook's future plans as well as the recent addition of the timeline.  Or Google's effort to match Facebook in the media world with their social networking site, Google+. Or the Occupy Wallstreet movement.  It was interesting to learn the back-story and inside scoop on these events.

However, for all the "interesting tid-bits" that this book contained, the writing was sub-par with lots of rambling.  It was also much too long for this subject and did not really offer any new or "A-Ha" moments that differ from other areas on this subject.  The author also very obviously favors Google over Facebook, and it was annoying to have his biased opinion.  I also fear that this book will no longer be relevant within the next 6 months.  The internet, social media and social networks are changing by the day... in 6 months time, this book will be outdated.

I picked up this book because in the description it boasted on being able to help give practical tools for getting heard.  I have a little personal family blog that I'd like to see grow (shameless plug, I know) and I was looking for more tools on exactly how to do that.  This book did not provide me with anything which would support that.

Who then is this book good for?  People who are interested in learning "tid-bits" behind monster companies such as Google and Facebook.  And small businesses who have not ventured into social media marketing and want to understand why it's so important in today's world.

2 Stars
I received a free copy of this book in return for my honest opinion... this is it. 

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February 28, 2012

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua

If you're not familiar with the title of this book, I'm sure the story will ring a few bells.  It was talked about, gawked at and criticized all over the news upon it's release in early 2011.

In Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, Amy Chua describes the differences between Chinese parenting and "Western" parenting.  And controversial, it definitely is.

Amy is a first generation American who was raised by strict Chinese parents.  She explains how she was brought up to respect her parents, work hard and succeed no matter what.  She married a Jewish American man and together they had two daughters, Sophie and Lulu.  Amy decided that she was going to raise her daughters in the traditional "Chinese" sense, as she was raised.

Although Amy is a Harvard law grad, professor at Yale, published author and distinguished professional, she focused a large portion of her energy and time on her daughter's musical pursuits.  She was determined that each of her daughters would play a musical instrument and excel at it.  But excelling at something takes hours upon hours of tortuous practice, tears and yelling matches.

This book is mostly about music.

Amy makes broad generalizations about "Western" culture and parenting that is often annoying.  Of course, she admits that she's not saying ALL "Western parents" are like this... but still.  The same holds true for her ideas of "Chinese parents"... well, their way is apparently perfect.

As a parent, I took some of what she said as good advice.  For example, she said (and I'm paraphrasing here), that children want to be good at things, but they don't want to work to be good at it.  But they don't realize that in order to be good, it takes hard work, which is not always fun.  This is why parents should override their wishes and do what is best for them.  As a music teacher, I agree.

She also said that she doesn't believe in bribery (although she does go back on that later).  She says that if anything, children should be paying the parents... not the other way around!  Funny to think of it that way... and I agree!

She says that the reason Asian children are always the best in their classes is because it's expected of them.  The parents believe that their child can be the very best and expect nothing less.  When an Asian child brings home an A-, the parents drill over and over and over again until the child has mastered whatever subject began to slip.  It's not that they're born with better brain genes, although some may, but more that their diligent work ethic allows no room for error.

She says that while Asian children are busy mastering an instrument, or drilling math problems for hours on end, Western parents have their kids in pointless activities such as little league or going to play dates and sleepovers.  Asian parents never allow their children to partake in such frivolous and meaningless activities.

One thing that struck me and caused me to think... she said that while Western parents are more concerned with giving their children memorable childhoods that are endearing, fond and magical, Asian parents see childhood as training grounds for adulthood.

Amy's two children are very different from one another.  Sophie is obedient and submissive... the ideal Chinese daughter.  Lulu is headstrong, stubborn and tough... the Chinese mother's nightmare!  Sophie was placed in piano and excelled immediately.  She went on to win many prestigious competitions and had invitations to play at Carnegie Hall and at a museum event abroad.  She and Amy had a bond... a friendship that was easy. Lulu, on the other hand, was forced to play violin.  While she enjoyed the violin, she hated the way her mother made her practice.  It seemed like Amy was shoving that violin bow down Lulu's poor throat!
Did I like the book?  Kind of.  Honestly, while listening to Amy's ideas was interesting, sometimes (ahem, most of the time) she came off as incredibly arrogant and she got under my skin.  She also writes like a professor, not a writer... she uses the same descriptive words throughout, "...by contrast, Western parents..."  And, I don't think she even realizes that she was definitely the villan in her own book!

3 Stars
I listened to the audio version of this book
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February 17, 2012

Lily, Duchess of Marlborough (1854-1909) A Portrait with Husbands by Sally E. Svenson


         This is the biography of (born) Lily Price from her childhood, through her three marriages, and through to her death.  Lily was originally from Troy, New York but spent much of youth in Washington DC.  She married Louis Hamersley and lived in New York City making her way up through high society.  He left her a young, wealthy widow at the age of 28.  In what seemed like a marriage of convenience and arrangement for both parties Lily married the eighth Duke of Marlborough, becoming a Duchess and giving her a foot in the English aristocratic door.  The marriage benefited the Duke due to her money, though it wasn’t so easy to access as there were years of court battles as to her inheritance from her first husband.  It is believed they did grow very fond of eachother, despite the fact that the Duke’s past kept Lily from the level in London society she sought after.  Not long after he also left her a widow, but once again in a not too distant future Lily married for a third time.  Her final marriage to Lord William de la Poer Beresford finally granted her a son.  But as with the others, Lord Beresford also left Lily a widow after several years of marriage.
                The book details much of Lily’s circumstances from prior to birth and beyond her passing.  There is a lot of information concerning her surroundings, but more particularly on her relationships with her husbands and those who became important roles in her life.  Some of these included her sister-in-law Jennie Churchill and her beloved nephew Winston Churchill.  There is also much discussion of her estates both in America and England.
                This is an incredibly well written, extensive research paper.  If you want to know detailed family tree lines and accurate accounts of moneys and estates that passed by and through the Duchess than this is the book for you.  For me, on the other hand, it was incredibly hard to read.  I expected more of a novel and was overwhelmed by facts and details that was just too hard to keep up with.  It did give me a feel for the English aristocracy in the late nineteenth century, but this book just wasn’t my cup of tea.
2 stars
I received a copy of this book for the purpose of review.
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