Archive for January, 2011

An evening with Richard A. Singer, author of Eastern Wisdom for Your Soul

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

When: Thursday January 27th, 7:00pm – 9:00pm
Where: Birch Coffee (in the loft Library)
@ The Gershwin Hotel
7 East 27th Street (between Fifth & Madison), New York, NY

Free and open to the Public
Coffee, tea, beer, wine, food are available to purchase from Birch Coffee.

About the author:

Richard Singer is a trained psychotherapist, college instructor, and a seeker of truth. He continuously searches for wisdom to use in his life, as well as helping other human beings in their precious journey. He has studied Eastern Psychology, Buddhist Healing, and Non-Violence at the Doctoral Level; in addition, he has spent years devoted to the study of wisdom recorded throughout history. He seeks to impart this knowledge to the world through his writing. Richard states that, “My books are not only for reading, they are meant to be lived.” Richard has written two meditation books and co-authored an inspirational children’s book.

He has been featured in many magazines, on various radio and television shows including BBC News in London.  His book, Eastern Wisdom for Your Soul, has received positive reviews from the Library Journal, Martha Stewart’s Body and Soul Magazine and many other review forums.

Richard will be leading a discussion on the topic of Mindfulness.  As Richard states in his book, Eastern Wisdom for Your Soul:

Mindfulness is the secret of life. A life lived mindfully is a life filled with peace, tranquility, joy, truth, bliss, ecstasy and compassion. Mindfulness is our direct link to the universe.

We look forward to seeing you on the 27th.

The evening will be co-presented by Dreamriver Press and Strangers Gate Books

Cosponsored by:
Manhattan Valley Radio’s The Urumqi Hour with Iskandar Andrews
The Remembrance Project

Birch Coffee is dedicated to sustainable practices and good living. Coffee, tea, beer, wine and food are available to purchase before and during the event.

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“Son of a Farmer” reviewed in the San Antonio Express-News

Monday, January 10th, 2011

Eric Herm’s book, Son of a Farmer, Child of the Earth, was reviewed in Sunday’s, January 9th, edition of the San Antonio Express-News.  The review is by Ed Conroy.  I’ve enclosed the review below:

“Eric Herm, a fourth generation cotton farmer currently working on the family farm near the West Texas town of Ackerly eloquently offers a cautionary tale in his important first book for those of us who take for granted plentiful, relatively inexpensive food at the supermarket.
He succinctly sums up the message of the first half of his book on Page 15, saying “If we persist in following the model of commercial agriculture, we are destined to fail.”
In three engagingly written and well-researched opening chapters dealing successively with the issues farmers face with seed, soil, rain and water, Herm produces a powerful critique of the problems caused by a model of agriculture increasingly reliant upon genetically modified organisms and pesticides.
He also tells the reader a lot about what the world looks like to a 36-year-old man who got off the farm to get an education in journalism, traveled the world, worked as a sports broadcaster, and decided to return to the farm with a new wife (and now a son), where his father and mother still work and live.
In short, he argues that “commercial agriculture” is slowly ruining vital resources to the point where another American Dust Bowl and other farming disasters — such as the continued collapse of commercial bee colonies — are not inconceivable.
Herm offers a wealth of information about growing practices known as permaculture, alternative ways to deal with insect pests, and rainwater harvesting, together with long lists of related books and websites that open up a multitude of possibilities for farmers and gardeners alike.
Having taken the reader to the point where it appears reasonable to have serious concerns about commercial agriculture, Herm launches into a series of prescriptions for curing what ails not only the farm but American society as a whole.
In his book’s second half, Herm leaves the terra firma he knows so well to tackle questions of money, government and social organization and what he foresees as the inevitable end of a petroleum-based economy.
It is here that some of his prescriptions lack the same kind of fact-based research and historical perspective as his analysis and critique of American agriculture.
Rather than analyzing in depth current federal agricultural policies and offering specific alternatives to them, including incentives for getting more young people involved in farming, Herm provides a 10-point guide to the American farmer that centers on disengaging from the mainstream economy and “getting smaller.”
He doesn’t quite say how to do so without going out of business.
On the other hand, his advocacy for cultivation of hemp (not the psychoactive kind) as a source of energy, food and clothing makes a lot of sense.
One does not have to agree with Eric Herm’s prognostications and prescriptions to see that his analysis of American agriculture’s problems is trenchant and troubling.
We can hope this book will add to the consciousness of the need for good food as the key to good health already being encouraged by
Michael Pollan, Bill McKibben and many other writers — and spark a healthy debate about the future of the American farm.”

Ed Conroy is a San Antonio writer and critic.

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