Loree Ann

Oh, my, how I loved this darn inchworm. (Perhaps this was the beginning of my fascination with insects?) I came across this photo while searching for pictures of me when my name was still Loree Ann.

Why was I looking for such pictures?

Because my blippety-blurb has just gone live on the TeachingBooks.Net Author Pronunciation Guide website. That’s right, when kids are online trying to find out how to pronounce Jon Scieszka, Jarrett J. Krosoczka, and Deborah Heiligman … they can now find, um, me. (This cracks me up.)

So, if you’ve always wondered how to pronounce my name, or if you’re wondering what happened to the “Ann” bit, or if you’d just like to giggle at my formal recording voice (do I really sound like that?), surf on over and give a listen!

 

What A Girl Wants: Nonfiction!

© Loree Griffin Burns

Colleen Mondor has put up a new post in her “What A Girl Wants” series, and it is a Must Read. The question this month is simple: what books of nonfiction do you wish your seventeen-year-old self could have read? There are some new women nonfiction writers on the panel (Tanya Lee Stone! Pamela S. Turner!) and you should check out what they and the other panelists have to say on the topic. Have a pad and pencil handy.

(And when you do, you’ll know why I have decorated this post with that gnarly beetle up there.)

 

What I’m Up To


© Loree Griffin Burns

1. Not blogging. Clearly.

2. Preparing for a new field adventure, this time with a beetle buster. Details soon.

3. Playing beetle buster at home, in my garden*. They. Will. Not. Win.

4. Slowing life down for the duration of our summer break. This is not as easy as it sounds.

5. Smiling over this.

Hope you’re up to some good stuff, too!

* I took the photograph above in my garden. Lovely looking eggs, no? Sadly, they hatch out maniacal plant-eating potato beetle larvae, so I had no choice but to squish them to bits.

 

Seth Baumgartner’s Love Manifesto

Happy Book Release Day to my friend, Eric Luper!

I was lucky enough to watch SETH BAUMGARTNER’S LOVE MANIFESTO grow from an idea in Eric’s (crazy awesome) brain into an irresistable young adult novel that is generating lotsa buzz in the publishing world.

In celebration of the book’s release, Eric is holding a crazy awesome contest. Entering is simple, winners will be announced daily, and you just might walk away with a signed copy of Eric’s book AND an iPod shuffle. All you have to do is visit Eric’s blog and submit one eensy, weensy haiku.

Go you!

Go Eric!

Go SETH BAUMGARTNER’S LOVE MANIFESTO!

 

© Loree Griffin Burns

June Doings

Rosy Maple Moth
© Loree Griffin Burns

I have a few public appearances this month that I wanted to mention here. Actually, I meant to mention them a week ago, since the first event is tonight. I’m sorry! But if you live near Harvard, Massachusetts or Manchester, Vermont, and are inclined to listen to me babble about bees, please feel free to stop in …

Thursday, June 3 at 6:30pm
Harvard Public Library
4 Pond Road
Harvard, MA
Please join Harvard resident Ellen Harasimowicz and Loree Griffin Burns as they share their new children’s book, The Hive Detectives: Chronicles of a Honey Bee Catastrophe. Loree is also the author of Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion. Loree and Ellen will talk about the bee adventures they experienced while creating the book, show some images from the book, answer questions, and conclude with a book signing.

Sunday, June 6 at 1pm
Hildene – The Lincoln Family Home
1000 Hildene Road
Manchester, Vermont 05254
Author and scientist, Loree Griffin Burns (The Hive Detectives) will lead an interactive program appropriate for ages 8 to adult in the Welcome Center Beckwith Room. It will end at the observation hive and will be followed by a booksigning. Registration is strongly recommended. $3 per person. Members are Free.

 

Mycelium Running

MYCELIUM RUNNING,
How Mushrooms Can Help Save the World
By Paul Stamets
Ten Speed Press, 2005

Category: Nonfiction for Grown-ups

About a month ago, I picked a book that had been sitting on my desk for more than a year, MYCELIUM RUNNING, and finally started reading. Within days, the Deepwater Horizon exploded and oil from below the Earth’s crust began pouring into the Gulf of Mexico. Serendipitous, that, because while my mind has since grappled with the enormity of the disaster in the Gulf—massive amounts of oil and massive amounts of dispersants pouring and shooting into our oceans—I have been saved from complete despair by the calm and practiced thoughts of a mushroom man.

Paul Stamets is a mycologist, a mushroom scientist. He hunts them around the world, cultures them for fun and profit, and slowly, over the course of thirty years, has come to realize that mushrooms—more specifically, the network of cells that grow underground beneath them, called a mycelium—can help us save and restore the planet. How? By filtering contaminants from groundwater (a process called mycofiltration), restoring old growth forests (mycoforestry), cleaning up pollutants, including oil, from the environment (mycoremediation), and controlling insect pests (mycopesticides). In MYCELIUM RUNNING, Stamets explores all these topics, collectively called mycorestoration, and shares convincing experiments that indicate he just might be onto something.

I’ll admit to being unsettled by Stamets’ claim that mushrooms (and their mycelium) are sentient organisms … but I also have to admit to feelings of complete elation when a flush of mushrooms appeared in my front yard after a rainstorm last week (I posted a photo of these lovelies yesterday). I recommend MYCELIUM RUNNING to anyone up for an in-depth look at the world of mushrooms and environmental restoration. If you’d rather a brief overview of Stamets work and ideas, check out:

his TED lecture;
his thoughts on the Gulf oil spill;
and his Fungi Perfecti website.

I’d love to hear what you think. Or see pictures of the mushrooms in your backyard. Or know how YOU are dealing with news from the Gulf …

 

Launching at the Gale Free

© Loree Griffin Burns

Don’t you just love this little one’s enthusiasm? She’s wearing my bee suit and reading my book at the same time!*

Ellen and I hosted our final book launch/library fundraiser last night at the Gale Free Library in Holden, Massachusetts. We shared stories from our years of working on THE HIVE DETECTIVES together, and the audience shared with us their enthusiasm for honey bees, locally grown foods, libraries, and reading. It was an amazing evening, made even more special to me by the presence of my sister, my college physics professor, my garden mentor, old friends, new friends, and so very many of the people who make my life the honey-sweet ride that it is. Thank you all so much for coming … and for helping us to raise $209.62 for one of my favorite community libraries.

And, so, launch season is over. No more bee cookies to bake, no more books to schlep, no more crowds to entice. But that doesn’t mean I am done talking about THE HIVE DETECTIVES. (Sorry, dudes!) I’ve got some people to thank and to spotlight, and I plan to do that here in the coming weeks. So stay tuned.

In the meanwhile, have a Happy Memorial Day!

* Of course, she’s my daughter. But still …

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Hooray for Sara! Hooray for Operation Yes!

More good things happening to good people and their great books …

The Audio Publisher’s Association has chosen OPERATION YES by <a href=http://www.saralewisholmes.com/ target=_blankSara Lewis Holmes as the best 8-12 year-old children’s audiobook of 2010. You can hear a clip of the prize-winning audio, read by Jessica Almasy here. Even if you’ve already read this one, folks, consider listening to it again!

Congratulations, Sara! Nice work, Jessica!