Showing posts with label Biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biography. Show all posts

Healing Rhinos and Other Souls



For nearly fifty years Walter Eschenburg lived and worked as a pioneering wildlife vet in the South African bushveld with its many animals and a host of weird and wonderful people. After a childhood spent in a German castle during the Second World War, a harrowing escape from the Russian army and a sequence of bold moves and fortunate circumstances, it is here, against the backdrop of the harsh but beautiful landscapes of the Waterberg, that Walter comes into his own and develops into a seasoned vet. He encounters charging rhinos, tame buffalo, irate cows and angry giraffes; he deals with snakes and warthogs, amorous elephants, cats, dogs and donkeys. He treats his patients with compassion and kindness, and his clients with large doses of humor. Read more here:
 

If You Ask Me: (And of Course You Won't)

Book Review
If You Ask Me: (And of Course You Won't), by Betty White. Betty White delivers a hilarious, slyly profound take on love, life, celebrity, and everything in between. Drawing from a lifetime of lessons learned, seven-time Emmy winner Betty White's wit and wisdom take center stage as she tackles topics like friendship, romantic love, aging, television, fans, love for animals, and the brave new world of celebrity. If You Ask Me mixes her thoughtful observations with humorous stories from a seven- decade career in Hollywood. Longtime fans and new fans alike will relish Betty's candid take on everything from her rumored crush on Robert Redford (true) to her beauty regimen ("I have no idea what color my hair is and I never intend to find out") to the Facebook campaign that helped persuade her to host Saturday Night Live despite her having declined the hosting job three times already.

Featuring all-new material, with a focus on the past fifteen years of her life, If You Ask Me is funny, sweet, and to the point-just like Betty White.

Betty White's award-winning career in television and film has spanned an impressive seven decades and has included iconic roles on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Golden Girls. Widely recognized for her lifelong work for animal welfare, she lives in Brentwood, California, with her golden retriever, Pontiac. Click here for more information or to order.

All That Is Bitter & Sweet: A Memoir

Book Review
All That Is Bitter & Sweet: A Memoir, by Ashley Judd. Ashley Judd is an award-winning film and stage actor known for her roles in both box-office hits and art-house gems, and the daughter and sister of country-music royalty. In 2002, drawing on a deep well of empathy, she found her true calling: as a humanitarian and advocate for those suffering in neglected parts of the world.

Asked why she was opting out of a successful career, walking away while she was one of the highest-paid women in Hollywood, Ashley herself could not provide an answer. She simply knew that after her first trip to the notorious brothels, slums, and hospices of southeast Asia, her own life depended on advocating on behalf of the vulnerable. Promising each new sister, “I will never forget you,” Ashley began writing extraordinary diaries—on which this memoir is based—expanding her capacity to relate to, and to share with a global audience, stories of survival and resilience.

Along the way, Ashley realized that the coping strategies she had developed to deal with her own emotional pain, stemming from childhood abandonment, were no longer working. Seeking in-patient treatment in 2006 for the grief that had nearly killed her, Ashley found not only her own recovery and an enriched faith but an expanded kit of spiritual tools that energized and advanced her feminist social justice work.

Now, in this deeply moving and unforgettable memoir, Ashley Judd describes her odyssey, as a left-behind lost child attains international prominence as a fiercely dedicated advocate. Her story ranges from anger to forgiveness, isolation to interdependence, depression to activism. In telling it, she resoundingly answers the ineffable question about the relationship between healing oneself and service to others. Click here for more information or to order.



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The Captain: The Journey of Derek Jeter

Book Review
The Captain: The Journey of Derek Jeter, by Ian O'Connor. Every spring, Little Leaguers across the country mimic his stance and squabble over the right to wear his number, 2, the next number to be retired by the world’s most famous ball team. Derek Jeter is their hero. He walks in the footsteps of Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, and Mantle, and someday his shadow will loom just as large. Yet he has never been the best player in baseball. In fact, he hasn’t always been the best player on his team. But his intangible grace and Jordanesque ability to play big in the biggest of postseason moments make him the face of the modern Yankee dynasty, and of America’s game.

In The Captain, best-selling author Ian O’Connor draws on extensive reporting and unique access to Jeter that has spanned some fifteen years to reveal how a biracial kid from Michigan became New York’s most beloved sports figure and the enduring symbol of the steroid-free athlete. O’Connor takes us behind the scenes of a legendary baseball life and career, from Jeter’s early struggles in the minor leagues, when homesickness and errors in the field threatened a stillborn career, to his heady days as a Yankee superstar and prince of the city who squired some of the world’s most beautiful women, to his tense battles with former best friend A-Rod. We also witness Jeter struggling to come to terms with his declining skills and the declining favor of the only organization he ever wanted to play for, leading to a contentious contract negotiation with the Yankees that left people wondering if Jeter might end his career in a uniform without pinstripes.

Derek Jeter’s march toward the Hall of Fame has been dignified and certain, but behind that leadership and hero’s grace there are hidden struggles and complexities that have never been explored, until now. As Jeter closes in on 3,000 hits, a number no Yankee has ever touched, The Captain offers an incisive, exhilarating, and revealing new look at one of the game’s greatest players in the gloaming of his career.

Ian O'Connor is a nationally acclaimed sports columnist, three times named the number-one columnist in America in his circulation category by the Associated Press sports editors. Currently he writes for ESPNNewYork.com and hosts a radio show for 1050 ESPN in New York. He is the author of Arnie & Jack, a New York Times bestseller, and The Jump: Sebastian Telfair and the High-Stakes Business of High-School Ball. Click here for more information or to order.

Mayor Jim

By Patrick Simons
History
After having shot and killed his brother-in-law, James Dahlman thought it prudent to leave Texas. Traveling with his partner, Bennett Irwin, the pair reached the Newman ranch in western Nebraska in March of 1878. Using the name Jim Murray, Dahlman secured employment as a line rider on the Newman spread where his partner's brother, Billie, was foreman. Having been selected as Texas State riding champion at the age of seventeen, and being an expert with the lariat, Mr. Dahlman was a well qualified cowboy.

Not long after Dahlmans' arrival, western Nebraska was struck by a fierce spring blizzard. The storm drove thousands of Newman cattle into the dreaded Sandhill country, a region then considered dangerous and deadly. Billie Irwin, with Newman's approval, hand selected a team of cowboys, including Dahlman, to scout the Sandhills and recover what cattle they could. Over the next few weeks they discovered not only the lost Newman stock, but hundreds of additional fat, healthy, cattle. Some of the unbranded mavericks were thought to be up to four years old. The cowboy's returned to the ranch headquarters trailing over eight thousand head. Following this experience, rather than trying to keep cattle out the Sandhills, the hills became a place to move cattle into for winter. Today, the Nebraska Sandhills are one of America's most productive range lands.

Dahlmans' killing of his brother-in-law was later ruled self defense and, hearing of this, 'Jim Murray' returned to his rightful name of James C. Dahlman. In 1884 Dahlman married a school teacher named Hattie Abbott and the couple settled in the frontier town of Chadron. It was in Chadron, Dahlman had his first exposure to politics. Over the next twelve years, he would be elected city councilman, Dawes County sheriff, and mayor of Chadron. During his tenure as mayor, he became acquainted with an ambitious young lawyer from Lincoln, William Jennings Bryan. In 1896, Dahlman would deliver the speech at the Democratic national convention, nominating Bryan as a candidate for President of the United States. Bryon and Dahlman remained friends for many years until the issue of prohibition drove them apart.

Jim Dahlmans' life on the frontier led to several other remarkable friendships. W.F. Cody would become a life long friend. His official duties as Dawes County sheriff brought Dahlman into contact with many prominent Native Americans including Sitting Bull, Red Cloud, and Spotted Tail. In the aftermath of the Wounded Knee massacre, Dahlman met a young Lt. John Pershing who also became his life long friend.

Mr. and Mrs. Dahlman left Chadron for Omaha in 1896, where James had accepted a position with the Livestock Exchange. Omaha, in the 1890's, had the well deserved reputation for being a raucous, wide open city, controlled by the political machine of a gambler named Tom Dennison. Dennison's third ward 'sporting district' was notorious, even by the standards of the day. Dennison operated gambling parlors, saloons and brothels. It is believed Dennison had as many as twenty-five hundred prostitutes in his employ. Since virtually all Dennison's activities fell outside the law, his survival depended on the cooperation of politicians and law enforcement. His third ward could be counted on to deliver the votes necessary to either elect or remove any public official.

The Dennison machine faced a formidable test when, in 1906, the reformist candidate Erastus Benson launched an aggressive campaign against the political establishment. Benson had the strong backing of the Omaha religious community and posed the first serious threat to the machine in years. Dennison's principle ally in Omaha politics was Edward Rosewater, publisher of the Omaha Daily Bee. Rosewater, being a man of considerable political ambition in his own right, had formed an unholy alliance with Dennison. Each man used the other to his advantage. Although both Rosewater and Dennison were Republicans they settled on the strategy of running the Democrat Dahlman against Benson. Dahlman won easily. James C. Dahlman, raised on a cattle ranch in DeWitt County Texas, would be mayor of Omaha for twenty of the next twenty-three years.

It was during this period that Dahlmans' friendship with Bryan began to fray. Bryan was a strong proponent of prohibition, while Dahlman turned a blind eye to Dennison's third ward. When 'The Great Commoner' failed to support Dahlman in his bid for governor in 1910, his defeat was assured. James Dahlman had a mixed record as mayor of Omaha. Positive achievements include getting the state legislature to grant Omaha 'strong city' status, thus giving the city vastly more control over its own affairs. Under the leadership of Dahlman, the water and gas works were acquired from private interests and brought under city control, forming Metropolitan Utilities District, which survives to this day.

The most dramatic event to occur during Dahlmans' tenure as mayor was the Easter Sunday tornado of 1913. Over one hundred people perished in the storm and property damage ran into the millions. Dahlman was roundly criticized for his actions which included refusing all federal aid as well as private donations which poured in from around the country. Dahlmans' response to the tornado, in combination with the reformist movement sweeping the country, led to his being defeated for reelection in 1919. This set the stage for the most dramatic event of all during the Dahlman years. Jim Dahlman may have been out of office but, he was still very much a part of the story.

The reformist Republican, Edward Parsons Smith succeeded Dahlman, promising to clean up the city. Mayor Smith had Tom Dennison squarely in his sights. Finding themselves on the defensive, Dennison and Rosewater fought back. In the years following World War I, large numbers of African Americans began settling in Omaha. The meat packing industry employed hundreds of black men as strike breakers. The Omaha meat packing industry, in the early part of the twentieth century, was as brutal an industrial setting as ever existed in the United States. This was the situation Dennison, operating through Rosewater's Daily Bee, chose to exploit. Every local racial incident, as well as those all across the country, were sensationalized in the Bee. Other Omaha papers paid little, or no, attention to these stories. A grand jury would later rule that elements of the Dennison organization staged many of the 'assaults' featured in the Daily Bee. The drum beat of inflammatory rhetoric that continued in the Bee all through the summer of 1919, came to a horrific conclusion in September, when a young black man named Willie Brown was accused of assaulting a white girl.

About 2:00 p.m. on the afternoon of September 28th, a crowd began gathering in South Omaha. It is believed this crowd may have exceeded fifteen thousand at its peak. As the afternoon wore on, fueled by alcohol, hate and the Bee, the mob began surging toward downtown, demanding Willie Brown be turned over. City Hall was surrounded and set ablaze by a brick throwing mob. At one point mayor Smith, having been accused of shooting and killing one of the rioters, was himself seized by the mob. Only the heroism of city's detective burea kept the mayor from being lynched. Edward Brown was evacuated to Ford hospital where he hovered between life and death for several days before beginning a slow recovery. Willie Brown was less fortunate. It remains unclear exactly how Brown fell into the hands of the mob. Some witnesses said that other black prisoners pushed Brown from the roof, where they had been evacuated to escape the flames. In any event, Willie Brown was shot, hung, and his body burned by the mob. Although martial law was never officially declared, it was only through the intervention of federal troops, summoned from nearby Forts Omaha and Crook, that order was restored. Major General Leonard Wood, commander of the central military district, arrived in Omaha the following day and, effectively, took control of the city.

There was no solid evidence that an assault ever occurred, and no evidence linking Willie Brown to the crime. Willie Brown was laid to rest in Omaha's Potters Field. No member of the Dennison organization was ever charged with a crime although some were known to have fled the city. One witness to the carnage at city hall was fourteen year old Henry Fonda. Fonda and his father watched the riot and lynching unfold from an upper story window of the elder Fonda's printing plant. The events of September 28th 1919 would haunt the great actor for the rest of his life. Tom Dennison would go on to partner with Al Capone in Chicago and Tom Pendergast in Kansas City to control the Midwest liquor trade during prohibition. Dennison died in an automobile crash in California at the age of seventy-five. Edward Smith never recovered, emotionally or politically, from the lingering effects of the race riot. In 1921 James Dahlman was again elected mayor of Omaha, a position he would hold until his death in 1930.

It is tempting to dismiss Dahlman as having been merely a tool, an unwitting individual, used by political forces that did not have the public good in mind. There is no evidence, however, that James Dahlman ever benefited financially from his association with Dennison and Rosewater. Jim Dahlman died a poor man. So poor, in fact, his wife could scarcely afford to bury him. When they became aware of the Dahlman family's financial state, fifteen Omaha funeral directors donated their services. More than seventy-five thousand people filed past his coffin as it lay in state in the rebuilt city hall. It was said at the time that no man ever had more genuine friends than Jim Dahlman. His, was a truly extraordinary life.

An epilog to the Dahlman story concerns his grandsons, John and James Collett. Both brothers graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy. After John Collett was killed in the early days of WWII, the U.S. Navy commissioned the destroyer, USS Collett, in his honor. The first commanding officer of the USS Collett was James Dahlman Collett. Grandpa Jim would have been very proud indeed.

Photo source: Douglas County Historical Society

By Patrick Simons. "Photographer and free lance philisopher."



Bird Cloud: A Memoir

Book Review
Bird Cloud: A Memoir, by Annie Proulx. "Bird Cloud” is the name Annie Proulx gave to 640 acres of Wyoming wetlands and prairie and four-hundred-foot cliffs plunging down to the North Platte River. On the day she first visited, a cloud in the shape of a bird hung in the evening sky. Proulx also saw pelicans, bald eagles, golden eagles, great blue herons, ravens, scores of bluebirds, harriers, kestrels, elk, deer and a dozen antelope. She fell in love with the land, then owned by the Nature Conservancy, and she knew what she wanted to build on it—a house in harmony with her work, her appetites and her character, a library surrounded by bedrooms and a kitchen.

Proulx’s first work of nonfiction in more than twenty years, Bird Cloud is the story of designing and constructing that house—with its solar panels, Japanese soak tub, concrete floor and elk horn handles on kitchen cabinets. It is also an enthralling natural history and archaeology of the region—inhabited for millennia by Ute, Arapaho and Shoshone Indians— and a family history, going back to nineteenth-century Mississippi riverboat captains and Canadian settlers.

Proulx, a writer with extraordinary powers of observation and compassion, here turns her lens on herself. We understand how she came to be living in a house surrounded by wilderness, with shelves for thousands of books and long worktables on which to heap manuscripts, research materials and maps, and how she came to be one of the great American writers of her time. Bird Cloud is magnificent.

Annie Proulx is the author of eight books, including the novel The Shipping News and the story collection Close Range. Her many honors include a Pulitzer Prize, a National Book Award, the Irish Times International Fiction Prize, and a PEN/Faulkner award. Her story “Brokeback Mountain,” which originally appeared in The New Yorker, was made into an Academy Award-winning film. Her most recent book is Fine Just the Way It Is. She lives in Wyoming. Click here for more information or to order.


Lucky Ears: The True Story of Ben Kuroki, World War II Hero

Book Review
Lucky Ears: The True Story of Ben Kuroki, World War II Hero, by Jean A. Lukesh. Much has been told about Ben Kuroki, the Nebraska native who became a Japanese-American war hero after surviving 58 bomber missions in World War II. A biography was written in 1946 and a PBS documentary came out in 2007. Former Grand Island teacher and librarian Jean A. Lukesh has carried out more research and has held in-depth interviews with the now 93-year-old Nebraska hero, uncovering interesting facts about the man. One interesting fact Kuroki revealed during interviews is that he was born with small holes near the tops of his ears, hence the book title. Kuroki's father saw this as a very auspicious sign that revealed his son would be very lucky and live quite long, both of which have come true.

KurokiWritten for readers in grades 4-7, this new book is the result of those interviews and research. A good portion of the book deals with the racism Kuroki had to deal with as a Japanese American in the U.S. Military. Kuroki flew bombing raids against both Germany and Japan, a total of 58 missions which exceeded the requirement limits. He survived all those missions without so much as a scratch yet he suffered abuse at the hands of his fellow soldiers, including a knife attack by a fellow squadron member. Since his retirement, Kuroki has devoted his life working to end racial intolerence, which he calls his "59th mission." The book is a very readable tribute to a great Nebraska hero. Click here for more information or to order.

Nikkei Farmer on the Nebraska Plains: A Memoir

Book Review
Nikkei Farmer on the Nebraska Plains: A Memoir, Reverend Hisanori Kano, edited by Tai Kreidler. Japanese-born Hisanori Kano came to the United States in 1916 with the blessings of his influential family, the sponsorship of William Jennings Bryan, and a fervent commitment to master and apply the best of American agricultural practices on the Nebraska Plains. Forgoing an assured career in politics, the military, or business in his homeland, Kan entered the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and worked his way through as a farm laborer. Along with his dedication to farming, he brought a strong Christian faith that would lead to his ordination as an Episcopal minister and sustain him and his family through his internment during World War II.

Undertaken in 1967, after half a century in his adoptive land, Father Kano's memoir reveals how he adapted to an ever-changing American culture and landscape. According himself only modest standing among the Issei--other first-generation Japanese immigrants he was honored to call his countrymen--Father Kano elucidates in a voice as eloquent as it is polite a sorely underrepresented aspect of diversity and rural life on the North American Plains.

Born in Kagoshima, Japan, in 1889, at the height of Japan's westernization, the young Hisanori Kano was driven by twin passions, his desire to help sustain Japan's emigration program and his cultural reverence for farming. Editor Tai Kreidler, archivist for Texas Tech University's Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, descends from a Kagoshima family. Click here for more information or to order.

The Orphan Who Became a Culinary King

Food
By Maya Martinez

History is filled with "rags to riches" stories. Tales of people who rose to the top of their chosen field by sheer determination, perserverance, and, of course, luck. Stories so unblieveable, you'd imagine they were a senario for a hollywood movie.

Such a story is the life and times of Antonin Careme. Who, from humble beginnings, with no resources other than his own talent, became the greatest chef of his time. And revolutionized French Cuisine.

He was abandoned on a doorstep at the height of the French Revolution. Though seemingly without prospects or hope, Antonin Careme would grow up to be called "The King of Chefs and "The Chef to Kings."

Careme's incredible good fortune, some might say "destiny", began with the doorstep on which he landed. It belonged to a Monsieur Sylvain Bailly, a famous patissier, with a shop near the Palais Royal, who gave the nine year old Careme bed and board in exchange for general kitchen work. More than just a kind soul, Sylvain Bailly, was in, fact, Careme's first mentor. Encouraging his young helper to advance and learn.

This combination of encouragement and Careme's talent, culminated in the opening of Careme's own pastry shop - at the ripe old age of eighteen. On his own, Antonin Careme was "on a roll". Owing to the fact that pastry, particularly innovative creations, were Paris' flavour of the moment.

And Careme's creations were innovation on steroids. In fact, Careme was essentially a sculptor, using icing sugar, nougat and marizan as his materials. Inspired by architecture and famous monuments, Careme created and re-created pyramids, helmets, and waterfalls. Never intending that that they should be actually be eaten.

Happily Parisian Society was "eating up" Careme. He was truly the "Big Man on Campus." And, his campus to boot! Clearly the teen-age Careme was the toast of Paris. Whether or not that was the height of his ambition, is open to speculation. No matter. Young Antonin was about to have, as the saying goes - "greatness thrust upon him."

Careme's talent and accomplishments had come to the attention of the man who would become his second, last, and most influential mentor. Prince Tallyrand. The consummate diplomat who survived all that era's political upheavals. Tallyrand was, or at least considered himself to be, a gourmet. He invited Careme to be his Chef. On the condition that he prepare a year's worth of menu's without repeating himself. Dare I say - "a piece of cake" for Monsieur C?

His association with Tallyrand elevated Careme to the highest strata of European Society and Royalty. After Napolean met his Waterloo, Careme decamped for England, where he cooked for the Prince Regent. Later to become King George the Fourth. His culinary carousel continued with an invitation to St. Petersburg.(The one in Russia folks.) Although, for whatever reason, he never actually got to cook for the Tsar.(Preparing for the next revolution?) So - back to Paris. Firing up his stove for banker J.M. Rothschild.

Without a doubt - Antonin Careme was the first "Celebrity chef." But it is his contributions to the art of French Cuisine that has (justly) earned him the title : "King of Chefs."

Here they are:

1.His book on pastry - Le Patissier Royal Parisien.

Only the third book of that time to be devoted exclusively to the patissier's art. And the first one to have extensive engraved plates. Careme's designs for these engravings resemble more elaborate architectural constructions, than pictures of food.

2.His book on Cuisine - L'art de la Cuisine Francaise au XIXe siecle. Here he extends his wild, wacky, weird, and way out imagination to the preparation and presentation of meat, poulty and seafood.

But, he also did some more serious stuff - like giving future chefs the ability to create an almost unlimited variety of dishes by utilizing a series of basic prepartions Careme developed. He also classified all sauces into groups, based on four main sauces.

Additionally...

Careme is credited with ending the practice of serving all the dishes at once("Service a la Francaise"), and replacing it with the one we know today. ("Service a la Russe") Where the grub arrives in the order on the menu. Careme also gets a "tip o' the hat" for inventing it. The chef's hat(toque) that is.

Sorry to say - no happy ending for Antonin Careme. After blazing across the culinary heavens, rubbing shoulders with the high and the mighty of nineteenth century Europe, and leaving an enduring legacy - he joined his pal La Varenne at that big stove in the sky - at the tender age of forty eight.

Maya Martinez has a passion for all things French. She shares her interests and discoveries in a variety of media. More "Treasures of France" can be found at frenchgourmet.