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In this animal centric episode of White Shores Theresa talks to horse whisperer and author, Suzanne Court, about the transformative power of equine therapy and firefighter and dog loving author Hersch Wilson about the ancient soul connection between humans and their dogs and the important lessons beloved animals teach us.To find out more about Suzanne and order Soul Connection with Horses: Healing the Mind and Awakening the Spirit through Equine Assisted Practices, visit:https://www.earthhorse.co.nz/the-bookTo find our more about Hersch and order Dog Lessons: Learning the Important Stuff from Our Best Friends, visit:https://www.herschwilson.com/- Image for this episode sourced from FREEPIKTo find out more about Theresa's bestselling dream, intuition, afterlife, astrology and mystical titles and mission, visit:Www.theresacheung.comYou can contact Theresa via @thetheresacheung on Instagram and her author pages on Facebook and Twitter and you can email her directly at: angeltalk710@aol.comThank you to Cluain Ri for the blissful episode music.White Shores is produced by Matthew Cooper
— “Life is everywhere, and we are connected to it. In the web of life, everything has a purpose and is part of the ecology of the planet. Our dogs help me see all this. It starts with their curiosity, their need to inspect every little thing on a walk and then do it again the next day. Every being has a purpose. Follow a dog or a child, explore a little, ask one question, which leads to another, and then a whole new world appears before you. Children and dogs. On a walk, the most important thing to do is be curious. We walk for all sorts of reasons. We decompress. We count steps. We listen to music. We make lists. If we are not alone, we talk. Yet if we follow our dog's nose, if we spend a bit of time wondering about where that plant, that flower, that mysterious jackrabbit — their head and ears peeking out from a bush — came from, and we do it repeatedly, the biosphere emerges before us as astonishing and interconnected. We walk in a sacred space. Life connected; life dependent. Nothing stands, walks, runs, creeps, swims, slithers, sends out shoots or roots independently. Every living creature has a past, a history that takes it back to those single-cell ancestors four billion years ago. It is the great Oneness.” Valeria interviews Hersch Wilson — He is the author of “Dog Lessons: Learning the Important Stuff from Our Best Friends, Play To Win: Choosing Growth Over Fear in Work and Life, Firefighter Zen: A Field Guide to Thriving in Tough Times and Test of Faith - A Novel of Faith and Murder in the Southwest.” Hersch Wilson has worked (as in jobs he was actually paid for) as a corn pollinator, a ferris wheel operator, a short-order cook, a ballet dancer, an outdoor educator, a soccer coach, a leadership consultant, a pilot, and a writer. The ferris wheel operating was the strangest job. Lots of physics involved. Along the way, he was also a volunteer firefighter-EMT for thirty-three years which culminated in the award-winning book, “Firefighter Zen, A Field Guide for Thriving in Tough Times.“ Most importantly he is the partner of Laurie Wilson, father of two daughters and grandfather of two. For over sixty years he's also been a dog guardian. He has co-written three national business bestsellers with his father, Larry Wilson, including the award-winning, “Play to Win: Choosing Growth Over Fear in Work and in Life”. Hersch attended Colorado College and quit his junior year to follow his passion, dance. He performed in Canada, Switzerland, and the United States. After that career ended, he graduated with a BA in English from the University of Minnesota. Hersch and Laurie live in Santa Fe, New Mexico with their daughter Sully and two rescue dogs, Toby, a Great Pyrenees, and Maisie, a terrier-chihuahua mix. His latest book is “Dog Lessons, Learning the Important Stuff from Our Best Friends.” You can follow on Medium.com (@HerschWilson), on X (Twitter) (@Bravingfires), on Instagram (@herschwilson)and on his website, HerschWilson.com. You can order Hersch's books at your favorite bookstore or wherever books are sold OR you can go to our wonderful book store in Santa Fe — Collected Works — order in person or online! To learn more about Hersch Wilson and his work, please visit: https://www.herschwilson.com/ — This podcast is a quest for well-being, a quest for a meaningful life through the exploration of fundamental truths, enlightening ideas, insights on physical, mental, and spiritual health. The inspiration is Love. The aspiration is to awaken new ways of thinking that can lead us to a new way of being, being well.
Lita Judge is the award-winning author and illustrator of three dozen children's books (!) including Flight School, Penguin Flies Home, Red Sled, Red Hat, Good Morning to Me!, Born in the Wild, Even the Smallest Will Grow, When You Need Wings, as well as her much celebrated, illustrated young adult novel, Mary's Monster. In our conversation, we celebrate her new picture book, Don't Worry, Wuddles (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2023) and also discuss another recent children's book from this year, Dogs: A History of Our Best Friends which launched on April 18, 2023 from Harry N. Abrams. Lita talks about her personal journey from a small island in Alaska to her highly successful career as an author and illustrator. Mel Rosenberg is a professor emeritus of microbiology (Tel Aviv University) who fell in love with children's books as a small child and now writes his own. He is co-founder of Ourboox, a web platform with some 260,000 ebooks that allows anyone to create and share flipbooks comprising text, pictures and videos. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Lita Judge is the award-winning author and illustrator of three dozen children's books (!) including Flight School, Penguin Flies Home, Red Sled, Red Hat, Good Morning to Me!, Born in the Wild, Even the Smallest Will Grow, When You Need Wings, as well as her much celebrated, illustrated young adult novel, Mary's Monster. In our conversation, we celebrate her new picture book, Don't Worry, Wuddles (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2023) and also discuss another recent children's book from this year, Dogs: A History of Our Best Friends which launched on April 18, 2023 from Harry N. Abrams. Lita talks about her personal journey from a small island in Alaska to her highly successful career as an author and illustrator. Mel Rosenberg is a professor emeritus of microbiology (Tel Aviv University) who fell in love with children's books as a small child and now writes his own. He is co-founder of Ourboox, a web platform with some 260,000 ebooks that allows anyone to create and share flipbooks comprising text, pictures and videos. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
New Children's Book Devoted to the History of our Best Friends Host Laura Reeves is joined by world famous children's book author and illustrator Lita Judge to discuss her newest release, “Dogs: A History of Our Best Friends.” Spoiler alert, Laura and Lita share a friendship dating back almost 40 years! [caption id="attachment_12221" align="alignnone" width="529"] A reunion of old friends as host Laura Reeves visits with Lita Judge, author and illustrator of the newly released children's book, "Dogs: A History of Our Best Friends"[/caption] The book is the result of the pandemic providing Judge the time and mental space to focus on a topic she'd wanted to write about for years, she said. “I think the reason I hadn't written it sooner was because it was just a massive amount of research. It covers 40,000 years of the history of dogs,” Judge said. “And there's so much information about: how did we domesticate them, did they self-domesticate, you know, stacks of books to read. And I felt like I had the quiet space to just really dive into this because I knew that this project was going to be a total labor of love. “It's my second longest book that I've done. And I just wanted to do it. Well, when I was going to do it, you know, I got to research medieval times and prehistoric times and what was our relationship to dogs in 1st century China and how did dogs serve in war and what do therapy dogs do? And you know, all this vast amount of information, I knew this really needed a nice chunk of time to devote to it. So the time was right. A life-long dog lover raised by two Chesapeake Bay Retrievers and an Alaskan Malamute, Judge said “the thing I was the most curious about was how did we get from wolf to dog. And that was just so mind blowing. Like, how does that transition happen? And it was so interesting because I had to talk to different scientists and you know, I used to be a geologist and I worked on dinosaur digs. So I knew everybody has an opinion on these questions. The consensus seems to be more and more they self-domesticated and that they have the social skills because they work as pack animals and they understand working together that they were able to make that leap in working with us. “So I think that was the thing I was really fascinated by. The other thing I was blown away with is that dogs were prescribed as treatment as early as the Middle Ages. If you had a stomach-ache, hold a dog. We didn't understand why (then). Now we know it lowers your cortisone, lowers your blood pressure, releases oxytocin. I mean, we know why now, but we didn't understand that why then. And yet we knew it worked. You know, we knew that that relationship with our dogs was that incredible that it's actually healing, and luckily healing for the dog as well.” Listen in to the full episode or watch the interview on our YouTube channel for more insight and special takeaways that apply to the dog world from Lita's journey from shy, withdrawn teenager to world traveler, doing book tours and speaking engagements for thousands and even how she met her husband on a cross-country bicycle trip.
In this episode of The More You Know, we guess the mystery movie star who wanted a no strings attached relationship with Jessica Simpson, we debate if James Gunn will be able to breathe some fresh air into the DCU, and we get carried away with an impromptu snake draft of balloons in pop culture. MENTIONSSubscribe: Note For The Audio returned last Friday! Take the Nepo Baby Quiz: KnoxandJamie.com/nepobabiesExtravagant: MindbenderHow Do We Feel // Jessica Simpson's novella Movie Star | Open Book becoming a tv show | First to deep dive this: @WhatKateFinds | Fact check: Jessica Simpsons makes more money than Mark Wahlberg? | Celebrities You Didn't Know… | Fact check: Pete Wentz's third cousin is Colin Powel? | Helen Mirren dated Liam NeesonCinema Sidepiece // Read Knox's full review of Knock and The Cabin in the latest Yes And (Knox's newsletter) | 80 for Brady | Somebody I Used To Know | Your Place or Mine | Gods and Monsters | Huh: James Gunn calles Ezra Miller's The Flash “one of the greatest superhero movies”What's The Word // (Reminder: how snake drafts work) Balloons in Pop Culture: The Mummy blimp | Up balloons | Pennywise's balloon | Violet Beauregarde | Wedding Crashers balloon animals | Bill Clinton loves a balloon drop | 1937 Pinocchio balloon from The Macy's Day Thanksgiving Parade | Wizard of Oz balloonRed lights: Grammys, Super BowlWell, Actually... // Mark Wahlberg makes more money than Jessica Simpson | Bill Clinton's code name was not Balloon BONUS SEGMENTOur Patreon supporters can get full access to The More You Know news segment every Monday. Become a partner. Our Best Friends of the Show can enjoy our antics live in our monthly AUA's. Watch last night's replay. GREEN LIGHTSJamie: series- Extraordinary (Hulu)Knox: podcast- Shameless Acquisition Target SHOW SPONSORSHello Fresh: Get 65% plus free shipping with code popcast65 at hellofresh.com/popcast65Ritual: Get 10% off during your first month at ritual.com/popcastNextEvo Naturals: Get 20% off $40 or more at nextevo.com/podcast with code POPPair Eyewear: Get 15% off your first purchase at paireyewear.com/popLegacy Box: Exclusive offer- LegacyBox.com/popSubscribe to Episodes: iTunes | Android Subscribe to our Monthly Newsletter: knoxandjamie.com/newsletterShop our Amazon Link: amazon.com/shop/thepopcast | this week's featured itemFollow Us: Instagram | Twitter | FacebookSupport Us: Monthly Donation | One-Time Donation | SwagSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Candid Guys are back! Talking kits, GREYS Anatomy, using medical terms with our athletes and what to do when the athlete walks in 5 minutes before you need to leave!!!! https://www.healthyroster.com/ Our Best Friends https://network.structuralelements.com/a/2147488435/M4Tzcxyf What Kevan Does at his clinic! https://www.medbridgeeducation.com/?a_aid=8179&a_cid= Promo: CANDID https://www.smarttoolsplus.com/ Promo: CANDID10 https://www.masterdryneedling.com/ Promo: GET A MEMBERSHIP TO FIND OUT $75OFF
March 2, 2022--On this episode of "For the Love of Reading:” Tales of Cats and Dogs. Poems, memoirs, and short stories about Our Best Friends, featuring Rudyard Kipling's The Cat That Walked By Himself and Memoirs of Yellow Dog, by O.Henry. Read for you by Linda Pack.
WE ARE OFFICIALLY BACK IN FULL CAPACITY!!! This is a special episode!!! First -- it's our welcome back, been so long episode. It has been a while we know you've missed us, so we decided to make it a LIVESTREAM Available on Facebook & YouTubehttps://fb.watch/5KyskP4bW5/https://youtu.be/cvvaxMcLXwQSecondly & Most Important -- We each have a special guest for the show, OUR BEST FRIENDS... (or at least one of them bc you can have more guys)Get to know a little more about us through the eyes of our friends and see what friendship means to each of us. We play a fun little game of questions. It was so much fun to share this experience with our friends, we are gonna do a Part II HIGHLY MELANATED BUSINESS OF THE WEEK timestamp: 16:50HTTPS://WWW.SILKCCOSMETICS.COMhttps://www.instagram.com/SILKC_COSMETICS
Over The Hump is a mid-week beer and bike mash up: a Beer Thing, a Bike Thing and a Bonus Thing. Cranking out banter and no canned laughter to propel you over the hump and to the weekend. In this episode: UCI World Championships for E Bikes: https://www.bicycling.com/news/a26742867/e-mtb-world-championships/ The Sierra Clunker: https://www.pinkbike.com/news/paul-component-unveils-the-sierra-klunker.html Splash! OTB for Many Riders at NZ Enduro Race: https://www.pinkbike.com/news/video-carnage-on-the-nz-enduro-river-crossing.html Beer for Our Best Friends: https://goodboydogbeer.com/
Intro Hi everyone and welcome to the Books Between Podcast! I believe in the power of books to help us see our world more clearly and to see each other more clearly. My goal is to help you connect kids between 8-12 with those amazing books and share inspiring conversations with the authors and educators who make that magic happen. I’m your host, Corrina Allen - a mom of a 9 and 11 year old, a 5th grade teacher and currently in a battle with Japanese beetles! Argh! My hollyhock has finally bloomed after three years and those buggers and destroying it! A green thumb, I do not have. This is Episode #53 and today I’m discussing more fabulous nonfiction and sharing a conversation with Diane Magras, author of The Mad Wolf’s Daughter! A couple quick announcements for you! The July Middle Grade at Heart Book Club pick is Just Under the Clouds . Where the Watermelons Grow is the read for August and the September pick is The House That Lou Built. And don’t forget that Monday nights are our #MGBookChat Twitter chats with upcoming topics like graphic novels, ending gendered labels of MG books, and the importance of refugee stories. So set a reminder for Mondays at 9pm EST and check out #MGBookChat for conversations and collaboration between educators, librarians, and authors. I’ll warn you though - if you think your TBR stack is bad now… it only gets WORSE after one of those chats! (There are worse vices to have, right?) Book Talk - More Fabulous Nonfiction A couple weeks ago, on episode #51, I started a list of fantastic nonfiction reads with the promise that I would continue the list in the next episode. Well, the conversation with special guest Nikki Mancini was so good that I didn’t want to cut any more and so I bumped this nonfiction book talk to today. So here are more fabulous nonfiction books that you and your middle grade students will love this year! First up is a brand new book called Squidtoons: Exploring Ocean Science with Comics by Garfield Kwan and Dana Song. I love this book for its bright, bold comics that are easy to read and with just the right amount of humor to keep a smile on your face as you learn about cool creatures like the moon jelly, and the narwhal, and seadragons! It reminds me a lot of the Science Comics series (which I mentioned in that last episode) but this one is a tad easier to read with bigger font. So I think the readability on this one could hit a younger audience. I’m really excited to share this one with my class in the fall. Another nonfiction book that bubbled up into my awareness late last school year is Discovering Black America: from the Age of Exploration to the Twenty-first Century by Linda Tarrant-Reid. This books offers 200+ pages of in-depth history from the black sailor who traveled with Columbus to the indentured servants of the colonial era and tragedies of enslaved Africans to the Harlem Renaissance and up to the presidency of Barack Obama. And those stories are set in a greater context of the entire history of the United States. This is a book that is great to read cover to cover but also a helpful resources to have on hand to offer a perspective about a historical topic that might not be covered completely in a traditional history text. For example, there is an entire section on black patriots who fought for independence and the black women in the Women’s Army Corps in the 1940s. Definitely check this one out. Another couple of books that were really popular with my 5th graders - and frankly, with me too, since they were my personal books that I brought in - were the Star Wars Visual Dictionaries. The two I have (so far) are the ones for The Last Jedi and The Force Awakens. These books are must-haves for any Star Wars fans because they let you see in detail all the little things go by so quickly in a movie. Like, everything that’s in Rey’s salvage kit. The names of the Resistance pilots and their backstory. And little surprises like Ben Solo’s calligraphy set. Visual Dictionaries are really fun to explore and DK Publishers does a really incredible job with them. So have a few on hand that appeal to the interests of your kids. Also - if you and your kids have not yet read any of Sarah Albee’s nonfiction books - you all are in for a treat! My daughters and I just read Bugged: How Insects Changed History and were simultaneously enthralled and appalled! From the disturbing fact of where that brilliant red dye comes from to how bugs were a factor in the Louisiana Purchase. It’s a COOL book and can either be read cover to cover or just read the textbox features. Sarah Albee is also the author of the incredible Why’d They Wear That - a gorgeous, glossy book all about fashion through the ages with an introduction by the amazing Tim Gunn. And How They Croaked (about the awful deaths of famous people) and How They Choked (all about the epic fails of the super famous). So if you have readers whose tastes tend a little more toward the dark - those two are great. Albee’s latest book is called Dog Days of History: The Incredible Story of Our Best Friends - featuring, well - stories of dogs through history! A really interesting book that blend forensics with history is Written in Bone: Buried Lives of Jamestown and Colonial Maryland. By Sally M. Walker. It’s a gorgeous full color book showcasing new insights gained about this era based on information scientists have gathered by examined the newly excavated bones of Europeans and Africans from colonial sites in Virginia and Maryland. And again even if kids don’t read this one cover to cover, I think reading and discussing a chapter would really help children understand how our knowledge of history changes over time as we make new discoveries and have better tools to analyze. Another nonfiction book that I keep bumping into online - and was FINALLY able to get at my public library - is Two Truths and Lie by Ammi-Joan Paquette and Laurie Ann Thompson. It’s a clever book that is just begging to be read with a friend - or out loud in the car! Essentially, each chapter is about a topic. Like, Chapter 1 is Crazy Plants and Chapter 6 is Large Animals. And within each chapter are three stories: A, B, and C. Each story is about 3-5 pages long with lots of bold colors and cool fonts and photos. And the reader has to decide which of those three stories is false. The answer key is in the back and it gives a paragraph or so of explanation. This book is called Two Truths and a Lie: It’s Alive so I’m kind of hoping there are more in the series. A book that has recently intrigued my daughters and me is called Survivors: Extraordinary Tales from the Wild and Beyond by David Long with illustrations by Kerry Hyndman. It is a collection of extreme survival stories from all over the world. Some you may have heard of - like Aron Ralston - the climber in Colorado who cut off his own arm to survive. It was made into the movie 127 Hours with James Franco. But others may be unfamiliar - like the story of Poon Lim - the sailor who survived a shipwreck by sucking the blood from a shark. This is definitely not a book for the faint of heart, but for those kids who like shocking stories of people overcoming the most dangerous situations this is the book for them! Another beautiful new nonfiction book is Grand Canyon by Jason Chin. It’s a large format book about the size of a picture book with such detailed and multi-layered artwork. It’s written in a unique way. It’s written in the 2nd person where the narrator takes you on a tour of the canyon as it gives you information. For example, here is a line: “After climbing out of the Inner Gorge, you’ll find yourself on a broad, sun-baked slope.” And as the narrator gives you information about the Grand Canyon, you see in a center spread, illustrations of a father and daughter exploring the canyon and doing what the narrator just said. And around the edges of the main illustration, kind of in a Jan Brett format, are small drawings of the animals and plants found in the canyon, or a cross section of the layers, sketches of the weathering process… it’s really cool! And some of the pages have holes in them to show the fossils and when you turn the page - you just have to see it for yourself! This book is amazing! Okay - I hope this has given you some ideas for new nonfiction books to freshen up your informational section of your library. And if you have a suggestion about a great nonfiction book we should all know about, email me at booksbetween@gmail.com or connect on Twitter at @Books_Between. Diane Magras - Interview Outline Joining me this month for our Middle Grade at Heart interview with Diane Magras is engineer by day and middle grade author by night, Karen Chow. We got an opportunity to sit down together last month to chat about The Mad Wolf’s Daughter. Take a listen… The Mad Wolf’s Daughter CA: For our listeners who haven’t yet read The Mad Wolf’s Daughter, what is this story about? CA: Love the mix of swashbuckling medieval adventure mixed with humor - at times it reminded me a bit of The Princess Bride. What were your inspirations? CA: There seem like there might be elements of fantasy in this book. What genre do you see this book falling in? KC: Drest is very brave throughout the book. Did you take some of her bravery from a historical figure? KC: Drest is mistaken for a boy several times. Is that because of the way she is dressed? Her short hair? Why did you decide to have Drest this way? KC: Did real warriors have a code of ethics? **BONUS SPOILER SECTION: Diane and Karen and I discuss the ending of the novel, and if you’d like to hear that conversation, I moved that part of the recording to after the end credits of today’s episode at the 38:13 mark. Your Writing Life CA: What are you working on now? And will there be a sequel for Drest? Your Reading Life CA: One of the goals of this podcast is to help educators and librarians inspire kids to read more and connect them with amazing books. Did you have a special teacher or librarian in your life who helped you grow into a reader? KC: Do you have book recommendations for people who liked your book? CA: What are you reading now? Links: Diane’s website - https://www.dianemagras.com Diane on Twitter and Instagram Karen’s website - http://www.karenschow.com Karen on Twitter Books & Authors We Chatted About: The Dark is Rising (Susan Cooper) Here Lies Arthur (Philip Reeve) The Hunt for the Mad Wolf’s Daughter (Diane Magras) The Shadow Hunt (Katherine Langrish) The Serpent’s Secret (Sayantani DasGupta) The Jumbies (Tracey Baptiste) Bounders Series (Monica Tesler) The Parker Inheritance (Varian Johnson) Where the World Ends (Geraldine McCaughrean) I loved getting the chance to talk with Diane about her novel. If you are looking for more titles that are similar to The Mad Wolf’s Daughter, she recommends checking out The Book of Boy or The Inquisitor’s Tale. Closing Alright, that wraps up our show this week! If you have a question about how to connect kids between 8-12 to books they’ll love or a suggestion about a topic we should cover, I would love to hear from you. You can email me at booksbetween@gmail.com or message me on Twitter/Instagram at the handle @Books_Between. Books Between is a proud member of the Education Podcast Network. This network features podcasts for educators, created by educators. For more great content visit edupodcastnetwork.com Thank you so much for joining me this week. You can get an outline of interviews and a full transcript of all the other parts of our show at MGBookVillage.org. And, if you are liking the show, please leave us some love on iTunes or Stitcher so others can discover us as well. Thanks and see you soon! Bye!
2018 is The Year of the Dog and it is fitting that one of the most prolific children's author on the planet -- Sarah Albee -- unleashes a must-read book called, "Dog Days of History - The Incredible Story of Our Best Friends." Join Oh Behave show host Arden Moore as she interviews Sarah about some amazing dogs in history and how our canine companions have made this a better planet. Be prepared for some surprises like the special talent Dr. Sigmund Freud's dog Yofi employed on some of his patients, what President Teddy Roosevelt's dog Pete did to the visiting French Ambassador and the small pup given to the then-young Caroline Kennedy in the White House from Soviet President Nikita Khrushchev plus much more. Love dogs? Love history? This show is a must. Tune in today! More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - New York Times best-selling Author Sarah Albee Goes to the Dogs -- In a Historical and Compelling Way on Pet Life Radio
Television Executive, Creator and Author Lisa Erspamer joined Tim in this episode to talk about her recently released book, A Letter to My Cat: Notes to Our Best Friends Tim asked about how she came to write the book, the writing and creating process compared to her work in television, work with animal rescues and Lisa’s love for all things furry. If you love your cat, or any other furry family member,you don’t want to miss this interview on Animal Writes. Questions or Comments? Send them to: tim@petliferadio.com. More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - A Letter to My Cat: Notes to Our Best Friends with Tim Link