Facebook Inspired Chicklit on the Bookhabit Show
Friday, May 1st, 2009![]() |

Reunion, J.L. Penn’s first novel, was inspired by reconnecting with her childhood crush on the Facebook social media site. It got her thinking. How many people reconnect with old flames through social media sites? How many end up having an affair through the reconnections?
The infatuation never created any sort of union at school or in adulthood, and both the author and the crush are now happily married – to other partners, and with children. But the line of thinking brought back all the torment and angst suffered as a teenager: the unrequited passion distraction that obsesses teenage years. This helped shape some of the anxiety that Jess, the protagonist in Reunion, finds herself navigating through as she evaluates her marriage and daydreams about a life with the fascination of her high school years.
Who does Jess end up choosing? This uber-contemporary novel has all the addictive qualities of Facebook. Read Reunion here and listen to Jenn discussing her book here.
Reunion is available on www.bookhabit.com (more…)









Adopting a child from a foreign country is for the big hearted, not for the fainthearted. Cathy Bonnstetter and her family adopted four and a half year old Alex from Romania after a long process dealing with agencies and bureaucracy. More than once they thought about giving up on the idea Cathy had had since she was in her teens. That the family did not give up is in some part due to the welcoming and generous nature of her 3 biological children, who convinced her that they had to keep on fighting to bring Alex to the United States and become a part of their loving family.
Malcolm Aitken in his essay, Hitler, the Jews and the Ballot Box, provides an analysis of the campaign by the Nazis leading up to the 1932 Reichstag election. Aitken says, The consensus varies about when and to what extent the Germans started supporting Nazi anti-Semitic persecution and murder of Jews, but it was widely accepted that the Nazis did not come into power in a country that was as viciously anti-Semitic as they were. Daniel J Goldhagen, in his 1996 book “Hitler’s Willing Executioners” instead said this hatred of Jews existed pre Hitler’s ascent and that the holocaust was ultimately an expression of popular anti Semitism among ordinary Germans.
A conversation with John Francis is interspersed with relevant rhyme in a delightfully silly and engaging way. Some of John’s poetry is of the more serious and dark persuasion, but it is the more childish rhymes that bring him most joy. John talks with Clare Tanner on the Bookhabit Show and divulges that he talks to his cat and rabbit for invaluable editorial advice!

Every culture has tales of hidden or mythical creatures, legends that grow beyond the size of the creatures they portray. Bigfoot, The Loch Ness Monster – stories are passed down through the generations, and youngsters grow up with imaginings of darkness cloaking monsters ready to pounce at any moment.
Water is integral to life and woven into our history through every tale ever told. Garry Law traces New Zealand history through his book, Abundance and Constraint: A Short History Of Water Use In New Zealand. As a water engineer, he has worked in most aspects of the modern dilemmas around water; ownership, allocation, supply, treatment, energy creation. Garry says it’s surprising how far back in history these conflicts go in our settlement, history, and law.



