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Twelve monthly themes covering each year. Past years' themes:
2023:
1. A story typically told from male perspective retold by women
2. A book with a season or month in the title
3. A sequel
4. A book where the villain is the narrator
5. A memoir by someone who’s not a celebrity (i.e., someone you never heard of before)
6. A book based on a fairy tale
7. A book from a banned books list
8. A book about an author (fiction or non)
9. A debut boo (i.e., an author’s first work)
10. A book by a popular author you haven’t read yet
11. A book written by a former president (not limited to the U.S., e.g., nelson Mandela – or even president of a company)
12. A book from the Goodreads most anticipate list of 2023 list2022
1. Book with a winter theme
2. Fiction or non-fiction featuring a real woman for Women’s History Month
3. Book with a type of animal in the title
4. Book featuring technology – current or future (e.g., drones, genetic engineering, fitness tracker, social media, insulin pump…)
5. Book that involves time travel
6. Book set in a national park
7. Book that everyone else seems to have read but you haven’t
8. Psychological thriller
9. Book of short stories or poems
10. Books featuring an ethnic group other than your own
11. Book narrated by a child
12. Book featuring a holiday, religious or otherwise2021
1. A book published the year you were born
2. For Black history Month, a book written by a Black author and/or about BLM
3. A book that takes place in a school
4. A book that references obsolete items like typewriters, phone booths, etc.
5. A book written in letter form
6. A Young Adult or children’s book
7. A book with a number in the title
8. A book with a weather term in the title
9. A book about a journey
10. Fiction that has a real-life character
11. A book that you saw mentioned in another book
12. A book translated from another language2020
1. A Pulitzer Prize winner
2. A book related to science (can be fiction)
3. A book about the circus
4. A book set during a war
5. A book about twins
6. A multi-generation saga
7. A play, or a book that was made into a play
8. A book set in Asia
9. A book with a person’s first name in the title
10. A book involving a specific food or drink (as opposed to food in general)
11. A book narrated by an animal
12. A book mentioned on this forum in 20192019
1. A book with a color in the title
2. A book by an author you’ve met (if you haven’t met one, substitute author with the same initials as you)
3. A book written before 1900
4. A book about a famous (infamous) crime or disaster
5. A book that takes place on an island
6. A biography or memoir by a controversial individual
7. A book set in your home town/state (or country/province for our non-US friends)
8. A book that takes place in a single day
9. A book by an author whose name is an English word
10. A book about books
11. A book with an occupation in the title
12. A book written in 1st personAmerica's National Parks Podcast episode: Songs of Joshua Tree (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Nestled between the San Bernardino and Coxcomb Mountains lies the confluence of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts, where the wind rushes through the rocks and valleys. At night it’s the only sound, other than the occasional hoot of an owl and the sound of your own breath. This is the soundtrack of Joshua Tree National Park.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: A Music Mecca (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Joshua Tree National Park in southern California encompasses parts of both the Mojave and Colorado Deserts. This unique ecosystem conjures images of the iconic trees, desert washes, wondrous boulders, rattlesnakes, and cactus blooms. But long before it became a national park (or even a national monument prior to that), this area was home to people, from Native Americans to pioneers – cattlemen, homesteaders, and miners – and where you find people, you find music.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Climate Change and Glacier National Park (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
If you dare, dip your feet into the icy water of St. Mary Lake. The glacier-fed water adds a new twist to the term “refreshing.” It’s one of many sensory experiences at a park that attracts more and more people who want to see the glaciers before they are gone.
Glacier National Park, in northern Montana, is a crown jewel of the United States. Its pristine landscapes draw millions of visitors a year, to see its majestic mountains, jewel-colored waterfalls, carpets of wildflowers, and wildlife ranging from bald eagles to mountain goats and bighorn sheep to grizzly bears. But mostly people come to see the glaciers, these fields of ice that – by definition – move under their own weight, picking up rocks and debris that sometimes stain their brilliant blue hue with a hint of grey.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Symbiotic Species - Prairie Dogs and Burrowing Owls (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Beneath the rolling grasslands of Badlands National Park lies an intricate housing system and social network. Black-tailed prairie dogs pop in and out of their burrows in the prairie dog towns, chattering and gesturing. But amid all the prairie dogs, if you’re a keen observer, you may also notice what appears to be a small owl emerging from the burrows. These species – the black-tailed prairie dog and the burrowing owl - have a unique type of symbiotic relationship, and ultimately may experience a shared demise.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Weir Farm (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
In Connecticut's only National Park Service site visitors have an experience unique in the system — a place to create art, steeped in over 100 years of tradition.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Imprisoned at Fort McHenry (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Right at the end of the outcropping where the Patuxent River meets the Baltimore Harbor sits a star-shaped fort that had been instrumental in the War of 1812, and which led to the writing of our national anthem. But Fort McHenry carries other stories, too, few more striking than its use for imprisoning prominent Southern-leaning citizens of Maryland during the Civil War, including members of the Maryland legislature and journalists.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Roebling's Delaware Aqueduct (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
In the 1800s, the Lackawaxen region of the Upper Delaware River was a bustling area, punctuated by industrial transportation. The canal era provided access to water transport where there was no natural river or lake. John Augustus Roebling, a civil engineer with an innovative approach to suspension bridges, was hired to build four aqueduct bridges that became the basis for modern bridge construction still used today.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Steamtown and Phoebe Snow (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
In the heart of Pennsylvania coal country, trains had their heyday. As freight transportation matured beyond the canals of the early industrial days, railroads became the predominant means of moving goods, including anthracite coal, from the region.
The time: the turn of the twentieth century. The place: the Lackawanna Valley. The woman: a young socialite named Phoebe Snow, whose surname, Snow, conjures up the exact opposite of the black dirt of the steam railroad.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: The Women of Lowell (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
The dizzying thrum of the water-powered textile mills in Lowell, Massachusetts drowns out everything else. It is, in a word, deafening – so much so that the floor of the mill vibrates with intense ferocity.
Set along the Merrimack River, its tributaries, and canals, the city of Lowell had easy access to great quantities of rushing water to power the many mills of the city, which led to its swift success in the early days of the American Industrial Revolution.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller - Conservation on a Grand Scale (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
On a picturesque estate in historic Woodstock, Vermont, carriage roads crosscut the property, through fields, flanked by stands of trees, providing scenic views of the estate, the adjacent farm, and the surrounding area. Historic buildings lie scattered across the estate: the mansion, the carriage barn, the wood barn, the horse shed. This idyllic setting, filled with old hardwood trees, open pastures, stone walls, and covered bridges, is the Marsh Billings Rockefeller National Historical Park.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Teddy Roosevelt's Namesakes - One Man, Many Parks (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
What do a brownstone in the heart of New York City, a site near the Canadian border in Buffalo, a forested island in Washington, D.C., and the sprawling North Dakota Badlands have in common? They are all units of the National Park Service named for Theodore Roosevelt.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: The Failed Goldrush (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Skagway earns its fame in an enthralling story, as the gateway to the Klondike Gold Rush, nearly fifty years after the California Gold Rush of 1849. It’s easy to get caught up in the daydream of the myriad pioneers and adventurers who made their fortune passing through Skagway to the abundant troves of gold waiting in the wilderness beyond. But the story didn’t actually unfold that way.
Today, Skagway is home to the Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park. The Visitor Center resides in one of the restored buildings, right on Broadway, close to the docks. Many of those Wild West buildings are, in fact, part of the park, and the stories of the fortune-seekers – adventurers and scoundrels alike – are housed within their walls.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Hampton - Enslavement and Manumission (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Amidst the rolling hills of Baltimore County, a two-lane road cleaves the sixty-two acres that remain of a former grand estate and plantation that once covered twenty-five thousand acres. The mansion sits on the north side and the remnants of the farm to the south. It’s a storybook picture, set in the middle of what is now a busy suburb of Baltimore. But, as most plantations go — the horrific enslavement of humans mars the earth that helped a new nation prosper.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Glacier Bay - Fisheries and Canneries
The pristine landscape of Alaska’s Glacier Bay stretches as far as the eye can see. Heading out from the serenity of Bartlett Cove, the bay opens into a wide waterway dotted with islands, and flanked by snow-capped mountains that disappear into the clouds, and thick forests of spruce and hemlock, cottonwood, and alder. The bay fills a basin carved out by the Grand Pacific Glacier, which has retreated north over the last two hundred fifty years, leaving behind a frigid bejeweled body of water fringed by a series of tidewater glaciers.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: The Five Senses of Death Valley (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
We often think of visiting national parks as a visual experience, the scenery drawing us in, the spectacular sights, where every moment presents yet another photo opportunity. And certainly this is true, even at Death Valley National Park. Every harshly sculpted desert landscape is a unique vista, a marvel of nature. But the conditions at Death Valley in the summertime remind us that the national parks can be experienced through senses other than sight. We primarily think of parks as something we see, but truly, if we’re experiencing a place fully, we should engage all five senses: sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste. This episode of America’s National Parks podcast is not a story, but rather a sensory journey.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens - an Urban Oasis
Along the Anacostia River, thousands of years ago, a vibrant Native American community thrived, relying on the natural resources of the land and the water that bisected it. Lush foliage, cattails, fish, and wild game made the region self-sustaining for the Nacotchtank people. They understood the importance of balance between using and protecting the resources of these wetlands, which fell into a devastating period of overuse with the arrival of European settlers.
However, in the 1930s, a dredging project on the Anacostia River resulted in the government issuing a notice of condemnation of the land. Helen Fowler fought the action, and eventually persuaded Congress to protect eight acres of water gardens by annexing them to Anacostia Park.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Assateague - Beyond the Ponies
In the stillness of winter, the waves still roll in and out, in and out, slicking the sandy shore of Assateague Island, a narrow thirty seven mile long barrier island which spans both Maryland and Virginia between the Atlantic Ocean and the Sinepuxent Bay. The wind can be sharp this time of year, rustling the sand into small ever changing dunes, and the temperature is nippy. In the cold of the Mid-Atlantic winter, no swimmers sluice through the water, no sunbathers lie on blankets or towels strewn across the shore. The beach stretches as far as the eye can see, an inviting expanse of sand and ocean treasures brought in on the tide.
The famous horses roam the island even in winter, grazing in the tall marsh grasses on the bay side of the island, trotting along the beach, nosing around the trash receptacles in the picnic areas and campgrounds. They are ever present on the island, and the reason that many people visit Assateague, combining a beach camping trip with the novelty of wild horses all around. Drawn by the annual Pony Penning, also known as the Chesapeake Pony Swim, or nostalgia for Marguerite Henry’s beloved book Misty of Chincoteague, throngs of people descend on Assateague Island in the spring and summer. But in the winter, without the crowds and their noise, without the smell of picnics, without all the distractions that high season brings, Assateague offers up a different kind of experience, full of quiet discovery.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Agate Fossil Beds
In the grassy High Plains of Northwest Nebraska, the landscape is punctuated by flat top buttes, and a few isolated landforms reminiscent of the badlands. A layer of sandstone builds the foundation of the area, sitting over a remarkable bonebed.
The grasslands provided good grazing, and James Cook acquired his ranch here, where the wetlands meet the prairie. Unbeknownst to him when he purchased the land, as his cattle grazed on the nodding heads of grain, beneath their feet lay a remarkable history of animals that came before them, the mammals of the Miocene Epoch.
Dinosaur fossils tickle everyone’s imagination – but other, more recent (albeit still ancient) paleontology discoveries give rise to a continuum of long extinct animals indigenous to a region. As much as we tend to think of museums as focusing on dinosaurs, with examples such as the Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton named Sue, which is housed at the Field Museum in Chicago, museums also have extensive displays on the history of the rise of mammals.
Agate Fossil Beds tells the story of a treasure trove of mammal fossils in America’s Midwest.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Natures Open Door - Unlocking Accessible Adventures in National Parks (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Discover the beauty of accessibility at America's National Parks in this episode. From scenic drives and picturesque vistas to innovative adaptive activities, we dive into the wonders of national parks for people with mobility disabilities, families with young children, and anyone seeking less strenuous outdoor experiences. Join us as we explore how the National Park Service is committed to providing equal opportunity and unforgettable adventures for all.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Lesser Known Founding Fathers (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
In this episode of America's National Parks, join host Jason Epperson as we delve into the lesser-known figures of American history and the National Park Service sites dedicated to their lives and contributions. Explore the stories behind the Thomas Stone National Historical Site, Charles Pinckney National Historic Site, Roger Williams National Memorial, George Rogers Clark National Historical Park, and Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve. Discover how these historic sites provide unique insights into the lives of these individuals and the impact they had on the nation. From founding fathers and revolutionary heroes to pirates turned patriots, uncover the lesser-known stories that shaped America and the importance of preserving these sites for future generations.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Two for the Price of One
Arizona conjures up images of desert washes, enormous saguaro cacti with arms stretching to the sky, and endless sunshine regardless of the season. But if you travel north to Flagstaff, the environment changes dramatically. Situated at nearly 7000 feet elevation, Flagstaff is surrounded by Coconino National Forest. The many varieties of evergreen trees in the forest color the area green, even in the winter: spruce, fir, pine, cypress, and juniper – multiple types of each. Snow falls in abundance here, as evidenced by the blizzard of 2023.
From a national park perspective, this area is dominated by the Grand Canyon in many people’s minds. But a plethora of other National Park Service sites fill this part of the state.
Nestled on the outskirts of Flagstaff is a pair of national monuments accessed for a single entrance fee. Located seventeen miles apart, Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument and Wupatki National Monument preserve two vastly different worlds: cinder fields versus limestone and sandstone pueblos.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: The Importance of the Butt (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Set against the backdrop of rolling hills in western Wyoming, Fossil Butte National Monument, like so many other parks, presents a variety of activities. But one exhibit shares the fascinating story of a type of fossil that you probably haven't thought of: Fossilized poop.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Riding the Rails to Nature's Wonders (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
From the allure of the Orient Express to the daily grind of commuter trains, rail travel has always captured our imaginations. But did you know you can journey to some of America's most iconic national parks by train? In this episode, discover how you can combine the romance of the rails with the majesty of Glacier, Denali, the Grand Canyon, and more.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Consumption in Mammoth Cave (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Inside Mammoth Cave, people notice that the air seems surprisingly fresh and that their allergies disappear like magic. Observations such as these have been noted for centuries at least. In 1839, the property was purchased by Dr. John Croghan and entered into a most peculiar situation. While still open for tours, Dr. Croghan devised a plan to use the cave for medical purposes.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: All Lincoln all the Time (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
From birth to death and many intermediate milestones, the National Park Service leads us on an odyssey along the timeline of Lincoln’s life, political career, achievements, and legacy, weaving a ribbon through Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Washington DC, and beyond.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Dinosaurs in Situ (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
In the northeast corner of Utah, the westernmost entrance to Dinosaur National Monument welcomes visitors along the banks of the Green River, the road separated from the water by desert scrub foliage. The Fossil Discovery Trail snakes through the rugged landscape. The trail erupts in the colors and textures of the desert. Don’t be distracted by the scenery to discover the ultimate reward. A far cry from standing in the rotunda of a museum face to face with a dinosaur skeleton too big to miss, here the thrill is in the chase, the chance of finding dinosaur fossils embedded in the rocks.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Vandalism and Capitalism vs Historical Artifacts - Defacement in the NPS (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
The defacement at National Park sites goes beyond graffiti, and each layer peeled back raises more questions about what destruction is vs. what a historical artifact is. Somewhere in between the ancient rock markings from the Native Americans and the brash, purposeful defacement by current-day visitors, lies an entire spectrum that comprises a
a very grey area for interpretation.America's National Parks Podcast episode: Second Only to George Washington (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
George Rogers Clark, the twenty-six-year-old commander of the Kentucky Militia, petitioned Virginia governor Patrick Henry to be allowed to take 500 American troops into Kentucky (already annexed to Virginia) to conquer the Northwest for Virginia, and increase the footprint of the state and its aspiring country. He proposed to claim the key towns and forts for America, on a march to ultimately conquer Fort Detroit. Patrick Henry agreed.
The 500 troops never materialized. Instead, Clark found a mere 130 or so men at his disposal. Young, persistent, bold, and innovative, he was undeterred, never considering the possibility of abandoning his plan, despite floods, starvation, and the constant threat of his scant troops slipping off in the night to scramble for home. Clark and his men accomplished one of the greatest underdog victories by means of deception.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Stiltsville - an Offshore Hideaway at Biscayne National Park (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Set against the backdrop of Miami’s skyline, six structures rise from the turquoise waters of Biscayne Bay. Rugged and isolated, these houses on stilts are an unexpected site in the midst of a national park water world that was designated to preserve the coral reefs, seagrasses, mangrove forests, and other natural features. Cormorants and herons perch on the houses' roofs, railings, and pylons. Dolphins and manatees swim between them.
Together, these six structures are all that remain of Stiltsville's whimsical history, although none are among the original twenty-seven that formed this curiosity in the midst of a national park that is ninety-five percent water.
How did such a village come to exist and what does the future hold for these few relics that remain?
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Poaching in the Everglades (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
An entire food chain lives in the Everglades. But throughout its coexistence with man, the Everglades have been threatened by poachers, who disrupt the delicate balance of this important ecosystem.
America's National Parks Podcast episode: Capitol Reef - Fruit Trees in the Utah Desert (written by Lauren Beth Eisenberg Davis)
Once the only access road to Capitol Reef National Park, Capitol Gorge provides a harsh and beautiful stone causeway that opens up into a world of bizarre and varied stone formations, desert washes both narrow and wide, and the types of plants common in the high desert – stunted trees like pinyon pine and Utah juniper, prickly pear cactus, the brilliant orange of globemallows and striking red of desert paintbrush.
And then a sight that is unfathomable in the desert: the delicate, showy blossoms of fruit trees. The blooming and fruiting trees create a strange and wonderful picture set against the magnificent cliffs and rocks of the high desert.