Sunday, October 26, 2014

Poverty Has a Face


"I have a picture in my mind that stays with me wherever I go,” writes author Caryl M. Stern in her first sentence of the second chapter of her novel.
 Stern follows with a story about her mother and her uncle as Jewish children, being sent to the United States on a ship to escape the horrors of the Nazi regime in Austria. Her deep faith is something Stern draws from to inspire her throughout her novel, and after I read this scene in the book I felt connect to her for the first time even though I don’t share her religion. She tells a story that pains your soul a little bit, seeing these children all alone having to leave everything behind because of the evil racism that destroyed everyone they loved.

All the had was each other, yet they create this image of freedom as they sail away. It’s a freedom you find even yourself wanting to fight for as you read where Stern drives her motivations from.

Caryl M. Stern gives a speech at the first annual UNICEF Women of Compassion Luncheon on February 11,  2011 at a private residence in Los Angeles, California 

Caryl M. Stern is not only an author, but the current President and CEO of the U.S. fund for UNICEF as well as a wife and mother of three sons. She graduated from the State University of New York at Oneonta with a Bachelor’s degree in Studio Art and spent 27 years serving in nonprofit and education work. 
The subject of her book, I Believe in Zero, is a book about putting passion into reality. Every chapter tells individual stories, which, together, give a human face to the reality that world hunger, poverty and disease exist. This book beautifully compels the reader to see his or her role in ending these global issues. It encourages the reader by describing the actions that have been and will continue to decrease the number of people affected by these global issues.

I believe Stern’s eloquently combines the use of ethos, pathos, and logos in her writing to cover a topic that is widely known but often overlooked. She gives a human face to global issues, allowing the reader to connect with the people who are experiencing hunger, poverty or disease. Her personal stories compel people to take actions. Moreover, she describes activities that organizations such as UNICEF have allowed her to be a part of to end these global issues. She gives logical steps people can take in response to this book, and she also has ethical and logical proof that specific actions are being accomplished. The only weakness I discovered through her writing was a religious bias she described that usually motivated everything she did. I think she sometimes crossed the line of respect for all other religions or lack of religion that, universally, people fall fall under.
Overall Stern has excellent writing techniques and personal experience to draw from that motivate readers to take up their role in international aid. She connects with the business leaders, mothers, college and even high school students. Her stories show a broad range of activities she and others have been involved in, and they come from a normal person who developed a passion to change the world.

Team UNICEF student volunteers pose for a photo at third annual Campus Initiative Summit in New York City, New York in October 2011.

I would strongly encourage others to read this book, because you won’t put it down and you won’t be ignorant of the reality of life for people all over the world.
What will you do to believe in Zero? 

ACTION. LOVE. BETRAYAL. Who needs more?

Divergent
Cover of Diverent
Veronica Roth
487 pages
HarperCollins


Action. Love. betrayal. Who needs more?


Veronica Roth
source:http://www.people.com/people/
article/0,,20798669,00.html
Everyone enjoys a good love story now and then, Divergent by Veronica Roth, had just enough of everything to make this an enjoyable read for all audiences. You could say that Roth has a rich future ahead of her seeming that her first novel took off tremendously. Divergent is the first book in a palm sweating and heart-crunching trilogy.
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 When diving into this book I was instantly obsessed with the main character, Beatrice “Tris” Prior because who doesn’t love an insecure and awkward teenage girl. Growing up, the main character was apart of the faction whose morals were selflessness and helping others called Abnegation. The population has a huge gathering to  choose their factions for those who come of age. Tris intentionally separating from her family into a different faction is just the beginning of this drama filled thriller. Throughout the book Tris is trying to figure out whom exactly she is, especially after finding out she does not belong to just one faction. The inner struggle ways heavy on Tris who now is crushing on her gorgeous trainer, Tobias aka Four. Just as Tris is getting comfortable in her new home with new friends and is finally a member of dauntless, disaster hits.


Brimming with plot twists and drama there’s no question why Divergent was made into a movie. The book is so vivid with imagery and detail it’s not hard to see what exactly Roth was trying to portray.

To find out what happens to Tris, Tobias and the future of their city you can buy the trilogy here

To learn more about author, Veronica Roth check out her blog

Want to find out which one of the five factions you belong in? Take this quiz


I Believe in ZERO - Caryl M. Stern

I Believe in ZERO: Learning from the Worlds Children
Caryl M. Stern
272 pages
St. Martin’s Press


Waiting on the world to change
By Kirsten Pagnotta

Carly M. Stern grew up in New York a go-getter. She was always pushing the limit and achieving things she put her mind to. In 2006 she joined the U.S. Fund for UNICEF and shortly after became one of the top dogs in the company. Stern wanted to help raise money and awareness for impoverished countries but what she got out of this job was so much more. Stern traveled to the countries and found the people she met inspirational and the places she visited unacceptable.
 

Macintosh HD:private:var:folders:wz:kz5mg78x0lvd209rp8q90m_nlybwpj:T:TemporaryItems:I_Believe_In_ZERO_cover_207.jpgI Believe in ZERO shares many of Stern’s stories about the journeys she took and the individuals she met that touched her throughout her visits. The first story, which grabs your attention off the bat, is Stern’s first trip to Mozambique. This is when Stern finds out what poverty really is. She tells the stories with so much detail that I can imagine myself there walking the streets with her. This story is what projects the whole book and starts off with in your face details and imagery that gets the reader wanting to learn more about her findings.


This book is an awesome PR tool for UNICEF, due to it’s gutting stories that stab you right in the heart. Stern talks about children who are sick and don’t even have clean water, orphanages in Haiti that are overflowing because of the Earth Quake, along with comparing the life of these children to the life of her own.



Picking up this book will take you straight to the communities where Stern traveled as well as straight to your checkbook to help these children.


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 To buy I Believe in ZERO click here

To learn more information about UNICEF and their mission click here


The Lie

The Lie

Appalling, Yet Intriguing

By: Brianna Hopkins

 

Source: www.amazon.com
Source: www.dallastexasrealstateblog.com
The novel, The Lie, written by Chad Kultgen, is a very interesting story to say the least. Taking place in Dallas, Texas on the Southern Methodist University campus, Kultgen was very blunt to say the least when he described the materialistic and selfish qualities the people of Highland Park and students of this university withheld. 

Kultgen wrote the book with three different narrators, which I found fascinating. It gave me a chance to see three different sides of the social scene at SMU. One side came from a snobby sorority girl who wanted to be engaged to a man with a wealthy family before she even received her degree. The other side was from a young man who got into SMU, not because of how much money his parents had, but because of how smart and driven he was. Finally, the third side was told by the son of the richest man in the Dallas area whom everyone knew about. All three sides gave the audience and me a chance to get the real insight to what was going on within the university’s social scene. 

This novel is filled with a lot of inappropriate humor, which quite frankly, sometimes left me speechless and even sometimes appalled.  Kultgen is a very direct author who is most widely known for his controversial novel, The Average American Male. Even though for many, Kultgen’s books can be very offensive and include humor that may be misleading or hard to understand, but The Lie left me questioning my own values of myself as a woman, and what I can do to personally prevent myself from falling into the category of only wanting certain men for their money. This novel taught me many things that I would have never known before reading.

  

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

"Leviathan Wakes" - Review

by Andrew McDonald
Photo Credit: Orbit Books
            Are you a fan of hard-boiled detectives, fast-paced action, and space zombies? Well, then do I have the book for you.
            Leviathan Wakes is the first in The Expanse trilogy by James S.A. Corey, a pseudonym for the writing team of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck. For those of you interested, this book will soon be a TV series on SyFy, a network known more for their creative spelling than quality original programming, but I have my fingers crossed.
            As for the book itself, it’s an incredibly thrilling ride. Told through the alternating perspectives of Jim Holden, an XO of a mining vessel, and Detective Miller, who is searching for a missing woman, we learn that not all is what it seems in this universe and the two parallel stories begin to converge as they both discover various aspects of a dark conspiracy.
            I have to be honest and say I much preferred Miller’s sections of the book compared to Holden’s, mostly because I thought Miller was simply a more interesting character. It felt as though I was reading an old-school style noir, a la The Maltese Falcon, when reading Miller’s chapters. Which is, like, literary heaven for me – a hard-boiled noir detective in space? It’s hard to make me happier than that.
"I'll knock ya to the moon, see? They got a nice colony up there, I think you'll like it."
Photo Credit: Dr. Macro's High Quality Movie Scans
            But even though I didn’t find Holden nearly as interesting, his chapters get all of the big, blockbuster action sequences, which are intense, thrilling, and extremely fun.
            Overall, I would definitely recommend Leviathan Wakes if you’re a fan of space opera science fiction with smarts to go along with the explosions.

"I Believe in Zero" Review by Brianna Hopkins

I Believe In Zero

By: Brianna Hopkins

Source: www.unicefusa.org
Source: www.internationalwatersafetyday.org
The novel, I Believe in Zero, written by Carolyn M. Stern, is a story that I highly recommend to anyone.  From mission trips to fundraisers, Stern left me completely inspired and wanting to be apart of this great cause.  We live in a world that does not allow certain people to be as fortunate as others and this book really opened my eyes to that.

The author of this novel, Carolyn M. Stern, is the President and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF. UNICEF is a non-profit organization that strives to help make the world a better place for young children. They strive to help prevent violence and trafficking, promote a better educational system and provide support for young children with disabilities.  

I Believe in Zero gave me an opportunity to get complete insight to these situations going on across the world. Stern is an unbelievable writer and her actions have inspired me so incredibly much. Living in the greatest country in the world and going to such a great university to receive an amazing education makes me feel so incredibly fortunate after reading this novel.  The whole point of this story is to achieve the goal of leaving zero children hungry, alone, neglected, or ill. Through Stern’s stories of all her travels and experiences, she is ultimately saving thousands of lives… one novel at a time.


"I Believe in Zero" - Review

by Andrew McDonald

            The opening of Caryl M. Stern’s I Believe in Zero feels like the opening of a TV show you’d find on AMC during their peak Breaking Bad-era. She recounts her experience of meeting Rosa, a new mother in Mozambique, who informs Stern that this child is the “first one that survived.”
            And with that, the book begins.
I Believe in Zero by Caryl M. Stern
Photo Credit: UNICEF
            Stern’s recounting of her time with UNICEF is a powerful, emotional journey that will leave you feeling both cathartic and exhausted by the end of each chapter, which, essentially, function as episodes (going back to my TV show analogy). Stern’s writing is clear and deliberate. She tells her story with relative ease and grace, skimming over details that aren’t as impactful and really drawing the action and emotion when the moment calls for it.
            I keep brining up the similarities between her writing and good TV, because, well, her writing is incredibly cinematic. When she describes a new environment, I not only pictured it in my mind, but I could smell the air, feel the weather and environment. I choked up several times, but none so much as the initial encounter with Rosa, whose story only gets more harrowing the more you read.
"But does she cook meth?...Didn't think so."
Photo Credit: AMC

            Overall, I would definitely recommend I Believe in Zero to anyone who enjoys a cinematic storytelling style of nonfiction. I would never have considered myself a fan of this kind of book before reading it, but, if it’s good, it’s good, and I Believe in Zero has made me a believer.