Lipman-Tweetland

With Barack Obama's victory over Mitt Romney yesterday, Tweet Laureate Elinor Lipman has concluded her own campaign to bring one political poem a day to her Twitter constituency. Today's tweet, number 500, expresses her joy at seeing her chosen Presidential candidate prevail:

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You can read a selection of her tweets, along with commentary and context from the poet, in Tweet Land of Liberty: Irreverent Rhymes from the Political Circus. Ron Charles interviewed her about the project for the Washington Post. My personal favorite Q and its A:

What’s been your favorite response from a reader?

The day that Barney Frank announced that he would not be running again, I got an e-mail from him saying that he was proud to be evoked in the style of Ogden Nash.

The Corner Bookstore offered their gratitude on their Twitter feed:

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Novelist Joan Wickersham (whose book The News From Spain was just published and who helped to celebrate the publication of Tweet Land of Liberty) sent Lipman this celebratory poem:

Dear Elinor, it must be sweet
To wake and not be sworn to tweet,
So bask today. Cavort. Have fun.
You did your job. Your race is won.  

Everyone here at Beacon has had a delightful time working with Elinor and following her verse-a-day project. To her we offer our own poetic thanks:

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Notable Mentions


FaitheistFaitheist: How an Atheist Found Common
Ground with the Religious
by Chris Stedman

The just-released and already much-praised memoir received a starred review in the November 15th issue of Booklist:

“Enter Stedman,
avowed atheist, former Fundamentalist Christian, and current interfaith
activist whose heartfelt and thought-provoking account of his struggle
with God and religion serves as a call to arms for those seeking to bridge
the gap between the religious and the secular… To that end he paints an
intimate and deeply affecting portrait of his own life, one characterized
by the sort of staggering dissonances—gay Christian teen,
religion-degree-seeking atheist—that could cripple a person. But Stedman
is nothing if not determined, and his resulting journey toward personal
reconciliation through service work and interfaith dialogue is inspiring.
Stedman’s story is motivational, his thoughts on interreligious dialogue
insightful, and in this short memoir, he proves himself an activist in the
truest sense and one to watch.” 

The Land Grabbers: The New Fight Over Who
Owns the Earth
by Fred
Pearce

Environmental journalist Fred Pearce wrote a piece for Yale e360 that's been getting lots of attention around the blogosphere. "Why Are Environmentalists Taking Anti-Science Positions?"

On issues ranging from ocean acidification and tipping points in the Arctic to the dangers of nanotechnology, the scientists have always gotten there first — and the environmentalists have followed.

And yet, recently, the environment movement seems to have been turning up on the wrong side of the scientific argument. We have been making claims that simply do not stand up. We are accused of being anti-science — and not without reason. A few, even close friends, have begun to compare this casual contempt for science with the tactics of climate contrarians. [Read the rest here.]

Reactions to the post include:

Huffington Post Oct 31; HuffPo
Cold Air Currents (blog) Oct 22; Cold
Air Currents
Houston Chronicle SciGuy blog Oct
23; Houston
Chronicle
MuckRack Oct 24 includes Twitter
feed of journalists tweeting the link, like Erin Ailworth at the Globe; Muckrack.com
Tomorrow’s Table (blog) Oct 26; Tomorrow's
Table
World.edu on Oct 26; World.edu
OverpopulationAwareness.org on Oct
28; Overpopulation
Awareness
Environmental Health & Safety
News blog Oct 28; EHS
News
Living Green mag Oct 29; Living
Green
Terra.com (Mexico) Oct 29; Terra.com
Science20.com; Science20
Current.com; Current.com

 

Do It Anyway: The New Generation of Activists by Courtney Martin

Courtney Martin and her book Do
It Anyway
were featured in the New York Times Sunday business section
on Oct. 28. 

 

Notable Mentions

The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks by Jeanne Theoharis, Jan. 29,
2013

Starred review in Kirkus Reviews print (Nov 15) and
online (Nov 04): “How Theoharis learned the true nature of this woman is a
story in itself. Parks always stood in the background, never volunteered
information about herself and eschewed fame. There were no letters to consult;
even her autobiography exposed little of the woman’s personality. She hid
her light under a bushel, and it has taken an astute author to find the
real Parks. Even though her refusal to give up her bus seat sparked a
revolution, Rosa Parks was no accidental heroine. She was born to it, and
Theoharis ably shows us how and why.”

Booklist
review Nov 15: “Historian Theoharis offers a complex portrait of a forceful,
determined woman who had long been active before the boycott she inspired and
who had an even longer career in civil rights afterward.”

The $60,000 Dog: My Life With Animals by Lauren Slater, November 20,
2012

More magazine (Nov issue) review, Pam
Houston calls The $60,000 Dog: “assumption-busting,
gut–wrenching, life-affirming.” 

Light Without Fire: The Making of America's First Muslim College by Scott Korb, April 16,
2013

“Will
Islam become an American religion or remain permanently estranged? Will Muslims
in America develop an identity that contributes to their country or one that
emphasizes isolation and opposition? Scott Korb knows just how crucial these
questions are, and in Light Without Fire tells the story of the leaders
and animating ideas behind America’s first Muslim liberal arts college—an
institution seeking to build an American Islam—in all its fits and starts, and
in prose that is both clear and compelling. I for one could not put it down—it
is essential and riveting reading.”

—Eboo
Patel, Founder and President, Interfaith Youth Core, author of Sacred
Ground: Pluralism, Prejudice and the Promise of America

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