Saturday, February 9, 2008

Coach House's Top Five Valentine Books

Valentine's Day is almost here (five more days, I checked..), and I'm happy to bring you few recommendations of Evan Munday, a publicist from Coach House Books (a Canadian publisher and printer of high-quality innovative fiction and poetry since 1965) on how to celebrate Valentine's day with your loved ones a unique literary way:

We know that day of forced romance is soon upon us, so if you're infatuated with a lover of great Canadian literature, we guarantee you'll be able to woo your Canlit casanova with one of these sigh-worthy Coach House titles:

1.) Pulpy and Midge: Our titular couple spends their evenings ice-dancing, and their lunch breaks talking on a food court pay phone. Will Pulpy and Midge's happy marriage disintegrate when tyrannical office boss Dan and his lascivious wife Beatrice enter their lives?

2.) The City Man: The City Man is a darkly funny romance between a newspaperman just recovering from a breakdown and a member of a Kensington Market pickpocket ring. It'll steal your heart faster than a stall can pinch a poke.

3.) All My Friends Are Superheroes: Shelia Heti (The Middle Stories, Ticknor) said it best: 'This book is like a kiss in the afternoon sun ... I expect this story will replace boxes of chocolates and flowers in courting rituals to come.' The future is now, people.

4.) Age of Arousal: Corsets burst with unbridled desire and petticoats are raised with much relish in this lavish, sexy play set in 1885, after the advent of the suffragettes and the typewriter.

5.) Nellcott Is My Darling: Who hasn't fallen in love with a boy who works at a record store, smokes too many cigarettes and is just wrong for you? That's why we're sure you'll love this novel, which was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award.

Check out these and other Coach House titles, as well as our February events - including David McGimpsey in Toronto, Cara Hedley in Vancouver, a launch for Reel Asian: Asian Canada on Screen and more - at
http://www.chbooks.com.

Thank you Evan for these great recommendations. If you want to get future updates from Evan, you are welcome to join Coach House Books Facebook group.

And if you missed yesterday's post, I remind you that if you are anywhere near Soho Square in London on Valentine's Day, Do The Green Thing invites you to come to be there at 1.30pm and become a part of the world's first Body Warmth Flash Hug.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

February's green thing - use body warmth

We follow 'do the green thing' for a couple of months (check the green thing for November, December and January), and we're always happy to follow their advice. This month we're called to Use Body Warmth (and turn your heating down a bit or off for a bit).

The Green Thing
explains the logic behind it: It’s not an overnight job to stop the planet from overheating, but one way we can help is by not overheating our homes. Heating uses more energy than anything else indoors and creates the most CO2 which is the main cause of climate change. So if you turn your heating down a bit or off for a bit it’s a great way of doing your bit for the planet.

You’ll probably find you’re quite comfortable living at lower temperatures but if you’re chilly, don’t reach for the radiators. Try putting on a jumper. Even better, put on a person. Either way, use some body warmth. However you do it, you'll save nearly half a tonne of CO2 over the year if you keep doing it. However you do it, you'll save nearly half a tonne of CO2 over the year if you keep doing it.

And here's a little visual example how it can be done:




and there's also a special green activity planned for
Valentine's Day:

Come to Soho Square at 1.30pm on Valentine's Day and be part of the world's first Body Warmth Flash Hug.

The plan: turn the heating down or off for a bit in your homes or offices, come to Soho Square at lunchtime, hug some beautiful people (or some of the Green Thing team) then go back to your unheated homes and offices with a huge body warmth boost.

If you're on Facebook then
sign up to the event here.


Enjoy doing your green thing,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Canada's oldest bookstore will be closed in 8 weeks





I'm sorry to bring you gloomy news two days in a row, but this is an important story - Canada's oldest bookstore is about to be closed in 8 weeks.

Cheryl Kaye Tardif reported earlier today in MyNews.in that The Book Room, a bookstore in Halifax, Nova Scotia that was founded in 1839, is expected to clear out inventory and close its doors for the final time at the end of March 2008.

The president of the book room, Charles Burchell explained in a news release the reasons behind this step: "Changing times and market conditions have necessitated our decision. The coming of big-box-bookstores with their large inventory at discount prices; the expansion of books into grocery and drugstores; the ease of ordering books at discount prices over the internet and the dual pricing of books with higher selling prices in Canada than in the United States have made operating a profitable independent bookstore in Canada extremely difficult."

It's very sad to see any bookstore that needs to close its doors, needless to say a 169 years old bookstore, which as Mr. Butchell said became an institution in Nova Scotia. I think that the lesson we can learn here is the urgent need to support local independent bookstores, which are a vital part of any local economy, supporting both cultural life and regional sustainability. We cannot afford to lose more institutions and I truly wish that eventually we won't need to lose this one as well.

You can read the articles and the farewells of readers on the
book room website. Your can also take a look at the store in this video from The Daily News in Halifax:





Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

The gloomy state of rain forests

Edward Harris, Associated Press writer, brings us a gloomy reminder of the state of rain forests around the world, which continues to get worse.

Here are few interesting facts and statistics he brings on the article ('Rain forests fall at 'alarming' rate' from
Yahoo! News):

1. U.N. specialists estimate 60 acres of tropical forest are felled worldwide every minute, up from 50 a generation back. And the fears have changed. This is a deforestation rate of about 13 million hectares (32 million acres) a year.

2. Forest destruction accounts for about 20 percent of manmade emissions, second only to burning of fossil fuels for electricity and heat. Conversely, healthy forests absorb carbon dioxide and store carbon.

3. According to data from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), although South America loses slightly more acreage than Africa, the rate of loss is higher in Africa — almost 1% of African forests gone each year. In 2000-2005, the continent lost 10 million acres a year, including big chunks of forest in Sudan, Zambia and Tanzania, up from 9 million a decade earlier.

4. The Amazon and other South American forests are usually burned for cattle grazing or industrial-scale soybean farming. In Indonesia and elsewhere in southeast Asia, island forests are being cut or burned to make way for giant palm plantations (palm oil is used for food processing, biodiesel, etc.). In Africa, it's individuals hacking out plots for small-scale farming.

You can find many more details in this interesting article. And here's a quote from it that I think summarize the whole situation:

"If we lose forests, we lose the fight against climate change," declared more than 300 scientists, conservation groups, religious leaders and others in an appeal for action at December's climate conference in Bali, Indonesia.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Monday, February 4, 2008

Monday's Green Books Series: Stirring It Up

Today on our Monday's green books series, I have the pleasure of introducing a new book written by one of my role models in the field of green business: Gary Hirshberg, CE-Yo of Stonyfield Farm.

Our book for today is:

Stirring It Up: How to Make Money and Save the World

Author: Gary Hirshberg

Gary Hirshberg is the Chairman, President and CEO (or CE-YO as he calls it) of Stonyfield Farm, the leading manufacturer of all-natural and organic yogurt in the US. For the past 25 years, Gary has overseen Stonyfield Farm's phenomenal growth, from its infancy as a 7-cow organic farming school in 1983 to its current $330 million in annual sales.

In 2001, Stonyfield Farm entered into a partnership with Groupe Danone, and in 2005, Gary was named Managing Director of Stonyfield Europe, a joint venture between the two firms with brands in Ireland, the UK and France with more in development.

In the early days of the company, Gary wore many hats - from yogurt maker to bookkeeper. He even doubled as Director of the Rural Education Center, the small organic farming school from which Stonyfield was spawned. Prior to Stonyfield, Gary served as the Executive Director of The New Alchemy Institute, an ecological institute devoted to organic agriculture, aquaculture and renewable energy systems.

Gary has won numerous awards for corporate and environmental leadership such as the 1999 Global Green USA's Green Cross Millennium Award, inspired by Mikhail S. Gorbachev, for Corporate Environmental Leadership. Gary was named Business NH Magazine's "Business Leader of the Year" and the U.S. Small Business Administration's "NH's 1998 Small Business Person of the Year ".

Publisher:
Hyperion

Published in: January 2008

What it is about (from the
publisher's website): A true force for change, Gary Hirshberg has been at the forefront of movements working for environmental and social transformation for 30 years. From his early days as an educator and activist to his current position as President and CE-Yo of Stonyfield Farm, the world’s largest organic yogurt company, Hirshberg’s positive outlook has inspired thousands of people to recognize their ability to make the world a better place.

In Stirring it Up, Hirshberg calls on individuals to realize their power to effect change in the marketplace – “the power of one” – while proving that environmental commitment makes for a healthier planet and a healthier bottom line. Drawing from his 25 years’ experience growing Stonyfield Farm from a 7-cow start-up, as well as the examples of like-minded companies, such as Newman’s Own, Patagonia, Wal-Mart and Timberland, Hirshberg presents stunning evidence that business not only can save the planet, but is able to simultaneously deliver higher growth and superior profits as well.

Hirshberg illustrates his points with practical information and advice, as well as engaging anecdotes from what he calls ‘the bad old days’ of his yogurt company: how a power outage left him milking cows by hand, how a dumpster fire revealed the need for better packaging, and his camel manure taste test challenge to a local shock jock.

He also describes hands-on grassroots marketing strategies - printing yogurt lids with provocative, politically charged messages, handing out thousands of free samples to subway commuters to thank them for using public transit, and devising the country’s first organic vending machine - explaining how these approaches make a much more powerful impact on consumers than traditional advertising.

Why you should get it:
1. Hirshberg is one of the best teachers to learn from about almost every aspect of green business: vision, leadership, marketing, entrepreneurship, how to successfully compete with 'regular' big companies operating in your field, and more.

One of these interesting lessons is the unique relationship he established with Danone, which bought 80% of Stonyfield Farm, to keep the Stonyfield's original green spirit. Even though Danone own the Stonyfield, they left Hirshberg the control of the board and he also maintains unique programs like Stonyfield's
Profits for the Planet that gives 10% of company profits to organizations "that help protect and restore the environment."

2. The book is eco-friendly - firstly, it is printed on 100% post-consumer waste fiber (both text and jacket) and hence saving 67 trees (way to go!), 28,769 gallons of water, 49 million BTUS, 3,209 pounds of solid waste and 6,322 pounds of greenhouse gases.

Also, Through a partnership with
Native Energy, a privately held energy company, the estimated global warming gas emissions resulting from the production of the book and audio CD are being offset by an investment in a manure digester at the Wanner Family Dairy Farm in Narvon, Pennsylvania.

3. This book is not only about green biz lessons, but also a great story about Hirshberg's 25-year journey with Stonyfield.

What others say on the book:
"Gary Hirshberg has seen the future and it is green! Read how he did it, and follow his every word!" (Laurie David)

"Gary Hirshberg is the real deal. He not only talks sustainability, he does sustainability. Now, in Stirring It Up, he shares with great clarity both his wisdom and his penchant for action. Read and be stirred to take your own action." (Ray C. Anderson, Founder and Chair, Interface, Inc.)

If you want to get to learn more about Hirshberg and the book, you are welcome to listen or read the interview that Joel Makower had with him on
GreenBiz Radio.

Enjoy the book (here's a
list of online sources where you can purchase it), and if you're looking for the full list of green books reviewed and presented on our blog, check out our green books page.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Sunday Times Best Green Companies Awards

The Sunday Times announced on a new green biz competition: The Sunday Times Best Green Companies 2008.

Actually it's a celebration of greenness no less than it is a competition, as the newspaper explains: "We are seeking entries for the inaugural Sunday Times Best Green Companies Awards – a project designed to encourage, acknowledge and publicise businesses and other organisations, which are striving to improve their environmental performance."

The Sunday Times works together with the leading environmental consultancy
Bureau Veritas and data analysts Munro Global in this competition. They developed measures of environmental performance that will be incorporated in a two-part assessment: company survey (70% of the score) and employee survey (30% of the score).

There are five competitions within the overall contest in accordance that vary by size and environmental impact - from large companies of more than 5,000 employees and mid-sized companies of 250-4,999 employees, operating in high environmental impact sectors to Small companies operating in low impact sectors.

The winners will earn not only the prestige of best green companies, but also will be profiled in a dedicated Sunday Times supplement, which will be distributed with 1.3m copies of the paper in the spring next year, and their achievement will also be marked at an awards event.

This is very exciting news to all the green companies out there that fit into one of the 5 categories of the competition (unfortunately,
Eco-Libris is too small for this competition..). Anyone can nominate a company, whether she or he works in this company or not. Just take into consideration that there are some costs involved (500 GBP to 1500 GBP in accordance with the company's size).

Entries are invited NOW. Registration will remain open until February 29. Further information can be found on
the Sunday Times Best Green Companies 2008 page.

Good luck to all the green nominees!
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Eco-Libris is available in two more bookstores

I am happy to announce on two new bookstores that will be offering their customers to balance out books they buy with Eco-Libris at the store: The Muse Book Shop in DeLand, FL (see photo on the left) and Sources of Hope Gifts & Books in Dallas, Texas.

These bookstores join seven other bookstores, where you can already find our stickers and balance out the books you buy on spot, which will result in one new tree planted for every book you buy. The list of bookstores include (by states):

California
East West Bookstore - 324 Castro Street, Mountain View, CA 94041
http://www.eastwest.com

San Francisco State University Bookstore -1650 Holloway Ave. San Francisco, CA 94132 http://www.sfsubookstore.com

Willow Glen Books - 1330 Lincoln Ave. San Jose, CA 95125 http://www.willowglenbooks.com/

Borderland Books - 866 Valencia Street, San Francisco, CA 94110 http://www.borderlands-books.com/

New York
Mary Jane Books - 215 Western Ave. Albany, NY 12203
http://www.maryjanebooks.com

North Carolina
Black Bear Books - 2146 Blowing Rock Rd. Boone, NC 28607
http://www.blackbearbooks.com

Florida
Stetson University Bookstore - 421 N. Woodland Blvd., Unit 8259 DeLand, FL 32723
http://bookstore.stetson.edu

The Muse Book Shop -112 S. Woodland Blvd. DeLand, FL 32720 http://www.themusebookshop.com

Texas
Sources of Hope Gifts & Books -5910 Cedar Springs Road Dallas, Texas 75235
http://www.sourcesofhope.com

You can find more details on the bookstores at our bookstores page. If you're a bookstore owner and you want to get more details on collaborating with Eco-Libris, please email us at: bd [AT] ecolibris [dot] net

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!