Showing posts with label book sparks pr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book sparks pr. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Guest Blog: Blog. E-book. Book? by Karen A. Chase (Bonjour 40: A Paris travel log)

Blog. E-book. Book?
By Karen A. Chase
Author of Bonjour 40: A Paris travel log
(40 years. 40 days. 40 seconds)

I began a blog because I went to Paris for a month. I was turning forty, and to celebrate, I planned my dream trip and away I went. For nearly forty days I kept a daily blog with posts that included one of my photos and something my friends and family could read in about forty seconds. For the first week or so it was fun, but then something happened.

Writing opened my eyes. Suddenly Paris seemed more magical. The food started to look like art. People began to appear like characters in a novel. Streets glistened. My daily posts became not just about how I was seeing Paris, but how all those back home might see it too. I saw it through my friends, my parents, and my partner, Ted, who joined me only for the last ten days. Through my words we described Paris. Through my lens we captured her, and in so doing, Paris deeply captured me.

I never thought I’d have a blog. But once it caught on, once I saw the impact sharing my words had for others and for me, I knew I needed to reach out to more than just friends and family, and maybe through more than just my blog.

Hello Bonjour 40! Compiling longer pieces, I filled in details of Paris and the impact my trip had on me. Paired with my blog entries, my writing resulted in a 25,000-word memoir complete with accompanying photos. It’s allowed so many more to visit the wondrous Paris I experienced, and it’s allowed me the chance to relive my dream trip with each interview and speaking engagement.

One day I hope Bonjour 40 will expand from e-book to print book, complete will full-page images. I wish it if for no other reason than to be able to curl up in a chair in my own reading room, with a book that reminds me, I happily turned forty in Paris. May my words reach readers in their own chairs, and may they seek and find such joy in realizing their own dreams.


About Bonjour 40: A Paris Travel log (40 years, 40 days, 40 seconds) by Karen A. Chase
If Karen A. Chase absolutely had to turn 40, she decided she could do it gracefully in Paris… for nearly 40 days. What began as a blog to communicate with friends and family became a travel journal filled with over a months’ worth of daily details of her Paris adventures, each of which could be read in about 40 seconds. Peppered with Karen’s own photographs, she also weaves in longer stories that reflect upon her experiences with Parisians, travel, food, photography, writing, and love in the City of Lights.



**Tomorrow I will post my review of Bonjour 40: A Paris travel log, which is absolutely delightful and has me ready to travel for my 40th birthday in a few years**




Thursday, November 17, 2011

Book Review: The Man Who Couldn't Eat by Jon Reiner



The Man Who Couldn't Eat by Jon Reiner
Publisher:Gallery
Publish Date: September 6, 2011
Hardcover, 320 pages 
Non-Fiction, Memoir
 ISBN: 978-1439192467






My Review:
I found The Man Who Couldn't Eat to be a raw and heartfelt look at what it feels like to deal with chronic illness and more specifically to deal with an incident that changes your life such as the one that Jon Reiner had in 2009.  Though the book is not all about that one time, it's really built more into a stream of consciousness of his life to this point and then after that point as well.  That was  probably my one complaint.  The jumping back and forth in time confused me in the beginning, but the more I got use to the rhythm of his writing the more I came to expect how he wrote and dealt with the back and forth and found it an interesting way to keep the readers attention.  So what I thought was a a complaint in the beginning, turned into something that held my interest through the book. 

Mr. Reiner has a great sense of humor to have been through all that he has been through, but then again sometimes your sense of humor is the only thing that can keep you going.  His sense of humor comes through in the book, not in a laugh-out-loud way, but in a dry, understated way that I like that doesn't take away from the seriousness of the subject matter.  He did face a life-or-death situation, though I think I would have preferred death if I would have had some of his roommates after surgery (I'm joking, though read about the roommates and you'll understand).  As he explores the life after the surgery and life without food, life adding food back in and then also life with chronic illness and balancing a family, you get a sense for what life is truly like for him.  And in seeing this I think you can get a glimpse into what life is like for a lot of people with chronic illness and this is where I think his book does the most good.  Maybe I say that because I have a chronic illness.  But I really felt it reading the book.  Jon's chronic illness did not just affect him, thought it did affect him the most.  It also affected his wife, his children, his parents and his extended family.  It made it hard for him to keep a job.  It really affected all areas of his life, but he never gave up.  And that is the amazing and wonderful thing.

I think this book is educational, entertaining and inspirational whether you have a chronic illness or not.  I'm sure you know someone who does.  I should probably spout off a statistic here, but I'm lazy and in the middle of my own flare up so I won't. But as you know from drug ads on TV that there are plenty of chronic illnesses to go around.  Not all will land someone in the hospital for surgery, but all will make someone suffer in silence (or as my husband will tell you I don't suffer in silence).  Jon Reiner speaks out about his suffering and in doing so I think he empowers millions of sufferers to say I suffer too, but I will get up today and move forward and make the most of my life.  That is all we can do.  That is all anyone, sick or healthy can do.

Read the book, it has great entertaining anecdotes throughout.  I loved the little stories throughout - the glimpses of childhood, the glimpses of other hospitalizations, the glimpses of his own children and his fears for them.  It all adds up to a book that's about an ordinary man with a horrible disease who chose to write his story and put it out there for us to read about.

My Rating: 4.0/5.0

Make sure to stop back by on Tuesday, November 22nd for an interview with author Jon Reiner.

About the Book:
Imagine a life without food. Not being able to eat or drink a single thing. No hot dog at the ballpark; no ice cold drink on a hot summer day; no birthday cake; nothing.

For three months, James Beard Foundation Award-winning writer, Jon Reiner went without food and drink and chronicled his struggle in, The Man Who Couldn't Eat (September 2011). We're helping Jon prepare a blog tour for October and November and would like to invite you to be part of it.

Based on Reiner's acclaimed Esquire magazine article by the same name, Reiner writes in his book about his obsession with food and what happened when he was denied the taste of it. He'd just returned home with the week's groceries- one of the tasks he enjoyed as a stay-at-home dad- when a near-fatal complication from his chronic battle with Chron's disease left him writhing in pain on the floor. After emergency surgery, Reiner was "sentenced" to receive his nourishment intravenously.

Already struggling with his relationship with his wife and children as a result of coping with his chronic illness, he was also unemployed and facing financial ruin. It was this food deprivation that forced Reiner to reevaluate everything.  A beautifully written chronicle of one man's journey from plenty to deprivation and back again, The Man Who Couldn't Eat will change the way you think about more than just your next meal.

Where to Find the Author: 
Website
Twitter
Facebook






Where to Find the Book:
Amazon
BN.com
IndieBound

FTC Information: I received this book from Book Sparks PR for an honest review.