it’s important to me to eat locally and seasonally. Now, as fresh veggies are growing in my garden and in my woods, I am relishing the treats they provide me. I am gathering ramps and fiddleheads from my woods. I am picking rhubarb, sorrel, chives and Good King Henry from my garden.
On April 28th my husband and I got a chance to really enjoy being publishers and it was fun. The Journal Opinion and Bunker Hill Publishing held a book launch at the Happy Hour in Wells River, VT for Nessa Flax’s new book, Voices in the Hills: Collected Ramblings from a Rural Life. There was a good turnout of folks from all walks of Nessa’s very interesting life, clearly there to congratulate her and celebrate the occasion.
CBS News writing about the Cherry Blossom Festival. In attached short video they have an interview with Ann McClellan author of two Cherry Blossom Festival books with BHP.
Voices in the Hills author Nessa Flax reviewed by Anna Super in the Journal Opinion. “I had just returned from the wilds of Manhattan, where lights twinkle near and in the distance. I was momentarily bewildered. I knew there was no city back in the trees. Then my country self kicked in, and I remembered. “Fireflies” by Nessa Flax, from Voices in the Hills.
I love spring. Winter is relatively austere time in the garden so I relish the bounty of spring all the more. Over the years I have tried growing most flowers that will provide color in March, April and May. Below are some of my favorites.
When perusing these pages, readers can’t help but recall the words of Midwest landscape architect/gardeners Ossian Cole Simonds (1855–1931) and Jens Jensen (1860–1951) who introduced and advocated the use of native plants in the landscape. Ellen Sousa has furthered their thoughts in this manual on the importance of creating and maintaining grounds that support nature.
April has been a busy month for most gardeners because it has been warm and sunny. Our flower gardens and trees have woken up early, allowing us to do tasks we might, in other years, put off until May. Here are some jobs I‘ve been working on – and you should be, too.
Imagine this: you walk into your house and everywhere you turn there are vases full of gorgeous, colorful flowers. Light green zinnias on the kitchen counter, pink and white cosmos on the hall table, blue bachelor buttons in a crystal vase on the dining room table. In fact, imagine every flat surface in the house with a vase filled with flowers. You can do that.
Henry approaches growing and caring for both ornamental plants and food plants with totally organic methods. It’s one of the things that I find so useful about the book.
Especially fun for Washington locals is this lushly illustrated story about a butterfly’s travels through the National Gallery of Art. No ordinary insect, Belle was accidentally dislodged from a 17th-century painting in the museum’s collection. As she journeys, she touches on 300 years of art and acquaints kids with the young subjects of such paintings as Vermeer’s Girl with the Red Hat, Goya’s Maria Teresa, complete with her fuzzy pet,
With the advent of eReaders and eBooks, the ultimate demise of traditional books has been predicted by geeks and publishing honchos. Lower cost for consumers and producers is a major factor. Storage is touted as another benefit. Libraries and readers can have thousands of “books” at the touch of a finger. Housing and dusting not required.I hope they’re wrong.
If you live in New England, I’d suggest buying The Green Garden by Ellen Sousa. The official title of Ellen’s book tells the reader exactly what’s inside…The Green Garden: A New England Guide to Planning, Planting and Maintaining the Eco-Friendly Habitat Garden.
Stop Sopa
Best Wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year !! from Carole, Ib and the entire Bunker Hill Publishing staff (L to R – Top Row- Izzy (Accounting), Avery (Sales) and Stella (Copyediting) Middle Row – Ella (Production) Addie (Design), Rylie (Marketing) and Sophie (Editorial) Bottom Row – Brinley (Strategic Planning)
Review of The Green Garden by Ellen Sousa. Reviewed by Maureen Horn, Mass Hort Librarian. What makes a ‘green’ garden? Aren’t all gardens ‘green’ by definition? Ellen Sousa has some strongly held and eloquently stated views that an ‘eco-friendly’ and ‘beneficial’ habitat is essential to our long-term environmental well being. She has written a book that is specific to New England that tells how to create such a garden.
Publishing is now afflicted with a variety of systems entirely inimical to books and the welfare of readers. Rick Santelli may have started the Tea Party with a viral rant though you might be forgiven for expecting much less of this one. It won’t be televised and won’t alter the political landscape but, for what it’s worth though here is one for the road!
#OccupyDartmouth is perhaps the true Vox Clamantis in Deserto to which we should all listen. #OccupyDartmouth is about to go into its seventh week and everything about it has an air of genteel, if deliberately dilapidated, civility. The signs on the grass are polite and their Tweets are sparse and give no account of their daily experience or routine.
Not only are we falling prey to these idiot devices, an apt (no pun intended) description I came across in an article last week, but we are subjecting our kids to them as well.
If writing becomes nothing but a vehicle for making money and publishing is found wanting in its ability to make that money then publishing becomes a circular firing squad and the community dies. If on the other hand judgment is exercised at all levels and content and meaning come before market and money then we will live in a richer world once again.
It is unfortunate that art is often considered okay for kids to spend time on but as we age we are supposed to pursue more serious occupations.
I really had been missing that good feeling one gets when one reaches out, giving and caring about those less fortunate. The basic message of this book was just that, a little boy buys a coat for a classmate who needs one in order to be able to play outside at recess.
My desk is a Mnemonic Device in and of itself. But that is lost on those whose idea of a desk is a platform for a computer. Ok, so only I can use it as others merely see this
I was half way through one of two recent Atlantic Monthly articles by the interesting Jonathan Knee when I realized I wasn’t getting the message. Jeff Jarvis’ blog piece on BuzzMachine had led me there.
Life is a puzzlement and like the King, I could sing (if I had the looks and voice of Yul Brynner!) There are times I almost think/I am not sure of what I absolutely know.
Review of Organic Gardening (Not Just) in the Northeast by author Henry Homeyer from Vermont Country Sampler
Spring and autumn, Spring List and Fall List, Publishers have two seasons not four. Summer and winter are, in a way, seasonal interludes between the other two. Yes books are published every month but the vast majority fall into these two periods.
Brief digital discomfiture with designers and editors under pressure can make one nostalgic for the days of Wraps and Inserts, for those salad days when paste-ups were cumbersome piles of paper hiding that long extinct being The Paste-up Artist
Moving parts is one thing but bricks and mortar are another. Two bookshops are closing in Harvard Square including the once amazing Curious George Store. If it wasn’t true before there must be as many bookshops in Brattleboro, Vermont as in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Ib Bellew has been asked to speak at The New England Publishing Conference on March 25 – 26, 2011 hosted by IPNE. Ib will be talking about “On the Cutting Edge: Trends in Book Publishing”. Here is a bit from his planned talk. “We are all publishers now. What to do? The Gatekeepers have fled [...]
We are excited and proud to present the three titles we have coming out this spring, for all three of them are exemplary books that well illustrate our goal of publishing high-quality, deeply engaging material.
My mother was a lover of poetry and gave me several collections of chestnuts – one of which, “Best-Loved Poems of the American People,” I cherish today, though it’s disintegrating – full of variously amusing, provocative, and inspiring poems.
Call me old-fashioned, but we at Bunker Hill Publishing are what used to be known as a “trade publisher,” a term hardly used today but current a decade or so ago.
Now selling Favor Johnson’s Fruitcake. A sweet spicy holiday treat, a great gift for your neighbors or yourself. Purchase Favor Johnson written by Willem Lange and a fruitcake for a family close to you.
If those folks can be convinced that a few small sacrifices are worth the benefits of having wolves return to the ecosystems they once thrived within, then the battle will be mostly won.
Reading has become a personal affair, a private communion with the between consumer and book. So used are we to this that we no longer think of the book as a technology, much less an engine for the voice.
In my opinion, a, e-book on an e-reader is like eating canned vegetables: lacking in nutrients. Well, maybe notexactly, but all of these e-reader/e-book gizmos excite me just as much as tinned legumes do, and I have avoided consuming them most of my life.
The beauty of Italy has always particularly enchanted me. I have plenty of company, of course; Italy has been a focus for travelers and pilgrims for move than a thousand years.
We are happy to present our Fall Catalog 2010. Please take a moment to look at the wonderful books that will be released during October and November 2010. Click here to download the pdf.
After a number of years working with freelance marketing and public relations firms, Bunker Hill Publishing has decided to move the service in-house
Once inside you can’t stop, you begin to read but you also enjoy being taken on a visual ride that spikes your curiosity to keep turning the pages.