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Author: Mem Fox
Favorite Characters: Mrs. Jordan, Mr. Hosking, Mr. Tippett, Miss. Mitchell, and Mr. Drysdale
Wilfrid Gordon McDonald Partridge was a curious little boy who loved the old people that lived right next to him, especially Miss. Nancy. In the story, Gordon finds out that Miss. Nancy has lost her memory. There is a slight problem, though, he doesn't know what a memory is! He asks everyone what a memory is and everyone gives him a different answer.
After everyone's different answers, Gordon goes out to look for Miss. Nancy's memory. Gordon ends up bring a box with a football, a puppet, a medal, a shell, and a warm egg to Miss. Nancy. What does this all have to do with her memory? Find out by reading the book...
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In hand calligraphy on archival paper by master calligrapher Esther Feske, these short, bright sayings become words to relate to in their reference to: Sage Observations, Experience Speaks, Worldly Goods, Hearth and Home, Eating and Drinking, Children, Heart and Soul, Friends and Neighbors, War and Peace, Law and Government, Animal Observations, Wise Advice, and Wry Comments.
Line drawings by Esther Feske illustrate scenes of historic importance in Denmark beginning with the Jelly Stone of 980 A.D. Early writing (runes) on the stone inspired some of the character type-designs used in the book. Other illustrations are: Viking ships, Viking burial grounds, and other scenes drawn from photographs taken by Penfield Publisher Joan Liffring-Zug Bourret during a tour of the Scandinavian countries.
Julie Jensen McDonald, whose ancestry is Danish, says of her selections of proverbs for this book, "'My grandmother used to say' prefaces many of the proverbs in my mind. May you also find what your 'grandmother used to say' and more.
This book is a beautiful addition to personal collections, as well as a thoughtful gift.
"That which is unsaid may be spoken, but the spoken cannot be unsaid."
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Julie Jensen McDonald is noted for her novels about Danish immigrants in America, published by Iowa State University Press. This is her first cookbook.
The cover of this book shows a young woman in Solvang, California in Danish costume. Solvang is a major tourist attraction in America, first settled by the Danes from Iowa. The back cover depicts two charming children in Danish costumes holding a kringle at the O&H Danish Bakery in Racine, Wisconsin. Racine is America's largest Danish community with over 40,000 people of Danish heritage living there.
Recipes come from fabulous Danish cooks in Iowa, California, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Nebraska, all states with Danish populations. Special coverage is given to Dana College in Blair, Nebraska and to Grand View College in Des Moines, Iowa.
The 16 page color section of the book contains photographs of Danish foods, the street scenes and people of Solvang and works by Danish artists such as Christian Petersen at Iowa State University, Ames, and the Mount Rushmore sculpture by Gutzon Borglum.
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Examples of German proverbs:
"We hang minor thieves and tip our hats to major ones."
"Revenge is a meal that must be eaten cold."
"Death is the poor man's doctor."
"He who believes easily is easily deceived."
"Sweet song has betrayed many."
"Remorse is lust's dessert."
"Sweet wine makes sour vinegar."
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Julie Jensen McDonald pieces together the spirit of the Wood family during the demanding and daring times of the 1920s and 30s, capturing the substance that nurtured the talent, resourcefulness, and fierce loyalty demonstrated by Nan Wood Graham until her death in 1990 at the age of ninety-one years. Intriguing and enchanting details, garnered from the vast collection of Grant Wood memorabilia now held by the Davenport Art Museum, and other sources, profile the woman behind the face in American Gothic. Nan tells how she was wooed by her brother into posing for the painting by a promise that no one would recognize her. As the Gothic couple became one of the most celebrated images in art history, she speaks candidly of the joy as well as the vulnerability of "celebrity," including the innumerable parodies which depict a wide range of social conditions.
Joan Liffring-Zug Bourret, Penfield Press publisher, presents a pictorial documentary along with a"Passages in Time" of the Wood family, and rare insights from friends, acquaintances and admirers of Nan and her brother Grant Wood.
Essays by friends and close associates reveal the extent of Nan Wood Graham's devotion to the memory of her brother and to the places where they spent their early years. Personal letters and other commentaries provide a view of her fondness for time and place: early years in Anamosa, Iowa, growing up in Cedar Rapids, the generosity of friends in the Amana Colonies in times of great need, and the support of friends and mentors in the Iowa City and Davenport areas. Nan was often cast as a "fierce guardian of the truths of her brother's life." The Epilogue "Myths About Grant Wood," based on several years of research with Nan and other sources by the late John Zug, presents some truths to dispel many of the myths that often accompany notoriety.
This book adds a dimension to the woman in American Gothic. At age eighty three, Nan said the painting saved her life from being drab. Even though she didn't think the "painted" lady looked anything like her when it was first displayed, she had now decided that: "We look a lot alike. She's really become me."
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The book gives not only a great insight into the lifestyle of the frozen north but also the limits of human emotion.
Scandinavian Proverbs won first place in the trade book division of a contest sponsored by the Chicago Women in Publishing Association.
Julie Jensen McDonald, the author, writes that the hours she spent in libraries to compile the book were "more like picking wild strawberries than serious research."
"That which is loved is always beautiful." -Norwegian
"God did not create hurry." -Finnish
"The twigs are rarely better than the trunk." -Icelandic
"Don't sail out farther than you can row back." -Danish
"A life without love is like a year without summer." -Swedish
Julie Jensen McDonald is the author of ten published books. Her mother's parents emigrated from Denmark in the 1880s, and her father came from Denmark when he was nineteen. Mrs. McDonald is also the author of the Penfield Press book, Definitely Danish: Denmark and Danish Americans.
Calligrapher Esther Faske, M.F.A. graduate of the University of Iowa, designed the book. The proverbs are reproduced in her calligraphic style. She lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
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Julie Jensen McDonald, related by marriage to the great Clan Donald, is the author of more than a dozen published books, including novels, a biography and a volume of regional history. Esther Feske, calligrapher and graphic designer from ALbuquerque, New Mexico, relates to the family of Oglevie and was also the designer for Julie McDonald's prize-winning Scandinavian Proverbs.
This collection-sometimes rueful, other times philosophical, occasionally humorous and always practical- gives an insight to the people and their experience. Throughout this book are the words of Robert Burns, the immortal poet of Ayr, who wrote many a line that sounds like, and has become a proverb. His down-to-earth insights have been passed from generation to generation with the same enduring verity as the proverbs forged in the hearts of the Scots.
We also bravely invited guests. As we plunged the knife into the heart (literally) of the haggis, its compact contours exploded into an amazing amount of what looked like steaming cooked chopped meat. It tasted divine, and there wasn't any left.
It's a good thing this cookbook has plastic-coated pages, because an exploding haggis could really damage a regular book. Of course Scottish cooking isn't just about haggis; there's a lot of salmon and many notable soups. I recommend the Dundee cake recipe. If you want to serve a fruit cake at Christmas that will delight and not disgust your guest, Dundee cake is for you.
Why the Scots can cook and the British cannot remains a mystery. But don't even think of making a haggis at home. One set of instructions I read had you put the lungs into a pot of boiling water and hang the trachea outside the pot, draining into a cup to collect...whatever. Stick with the salmon or cockaleekie and you will be all right.
Scotland is renowned the world over for ingredients culled from deep seas, coastline, moorlands, mountain meadows and streams, lochs, uplands, lowlands, and countryside. The language of the people lends an added gusto to the food. Thus, potatoes are "tatties," turnips are "neeps," and hash browns are "stovies." The author, who collected these recipes on her travels in Scotland, prefaces the work with a "Wee Glossary" of these flavorful terms.
One-hundred-forty pages include over seventy-five recipes for daily fare and festive celebrations. Notes include instructions for Robert Burns Night (January 25), when the "Ploughman Poet's" birth is celebrated by serving up the haggis-a liver-and-heart pudding encased in a sheep's stomach! The more conventional Scottish food represented includes delicious Shepherd's Pie, Scottish Farmhouse Eggs, Chicken Stovies, Baked Salmon Steaks, Drop Scones, Collops, Marmelade, Shortbread, Toffee, and Dundee Cake. Recipes for concoctions of Scottish "spirits" are also included.
McDonald writes that she "fell in love with" the Scottish people and the drama of their lives and surroundings. This volume clearly reflects that enchantment.
Excellent for personal collections, as well as a thoughtful gift and memento.
Used price: $11.50
It's more Danish-American than Danish, though, so if you're looking for a book about Denmark, this is not the one.
That said, it's nice, in its own way. Sweet, charming, full of stories of Midwestern grandmothers and such, as well as stories about Danish-American enclaves in the USA. There are some nice recipes, pretty much all of which are duplicated in the book "Dear Danish Recipes."
I was hoping for more insight into Denmark, but this is really more of a Danish-American immigrant thing. Good for what it is, and there's nothing wrong with that.
Author Julie Jensen McDonald is noted for her novels about Danish immigrants in America as well as for her other Penfield Press titles which include Danish Proverbs and the popular cookbook Delectably Danish: Recipes and Reflections. Information from Julie and other contributors covers this ethnic group's influence on literature, dance, music, business, and various other aspects of society.
Ingred M. Christiansen of Brookline, Massachusetts. contributed articles about Danish Folk Dancing and Danish Folk Arts. Her mother, Marie Elisabeth Valborg Jorgensen at age 91, contributed memories of Christmas celebrations in Denmark in the early 1900s. Ingred is active in Scandinavian-American programs.
The food section includes traditional recipes (with the Danish names) savored by generations, including Racine, Wisconsin's O&H Bakery's famous kringle recipe. Holiday customs include a pattern for the interwoven paper hearts.
Artist Diane Heusinkveld's illustrations cover Danish-American artifacts, sites, events, costumes and people. Among these charming drawings are the Dagmar Cross, the Danish Windmill in Elk Horn, Iowa, "Kristus," Bertal Thorvaldsen's famous statue of Christ, and Gutzon Borglum's "Mount Rushmore" sculpture.
The colorful cover of this book shows two young girls in Danish costume enjoying a festival at Skovsoen, the Danish Village at Concordia Language Villages. The back cover has a picture of the white clapboard Danish Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church that is now part of the Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer in Grand Island, Nebraska.
This is a book concerning America's inheritance of the rich traditions, recipes and culture of the Danish people.