Monday, January 10, 2011

new to read, to listen, to see anew



love it when i am excited about my reading list:

housekeeping by marilynne robinson
the devil's teeth
by susan casey

a visit from the goon squad by jennifer egan
i know you're out there
by michael beaumier

freedom by jonathan franzen
by nightfall by michael cunningham

and got some new (to me) music from the library—the latest the national album.

i say it again: the public library is where it's at.

since i have no new photos to post, i'm posting the above stamp i made over a year ago for an illustrator class assignment (stamps about a social/political issue). at the time, i didn't like my stamp compared to my classmates' stamps, which were much more technically advanced. but i found it printed out at stamp size recently, and now i think it's pretty cute. i wouldn't mind getting it on an envelope.

my seed saving US stamp rant:

This stamp commemorates and encourages seed saving and trading. Seeds connect us to our heritage and to an unbroken chain of people who have saved seeds over hundreds, and sometimes thousands, of years. Immigrants from all over the world have brought their countries’ seeds with them to the United States, preserving and integrating a vital part of their cultures into the greater American culture.

Seeds that have been selected and saved over generations possess an invaluable genetic heritage and are often specifically adapted to the region in which they have been sown. Multinational agrochemical corporations are attempting to control seed supply worldwide, buying out smaller seed companies, dropping the regionally-adapted seeds and instead selling and distributing a select number genetically modified hybrid seeds and patented seeds, rendering the saving of their seeds useless and/or illegal and significantly diminishing the genetic diversity of seeds. By protecting seed diversity through the free saving and exchange of seeds, we honor those before us and protect ourselves, our culture(s), our future and life on earth.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I love your stamp.
ma

kusink said...

Me too! Love it! I could easily picture that on an envelope. And I would like it :)

Kerstin Svendsen said...

tackar mamma o karin. :-)

Sharolyn said...

I love libraries too! New to the area so have been meaning to join my local one. Such an amazing resource. Have been reading "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" lately - have you read that one? I'm with you on buying locally and seed-saving too. :)