Koren. In the Wild

Button Street Press
Koren. In the Wild

Publisher: Button Street Press

Published: 18 October 2018

Age Range: 0+

Dimensions: 21.6 x 21.6 x 1.1 centimeters (0.36 kg)

Writer: Edward Koren

About the AuthorEdward Koren has long been associated with the The New Yorker magazine, where he has published over 1100 cartoons, as well as numerous covers and illustrations. He has also contributed to many other publications, written and illustrated several books for children, and illustrated many more in various genres. Koren has deep roots in both New York City and Vermont, where he lives with his family and has been a member of the Brook eld Volunteer Fire Department for 30 years. In 2007, he received The Vermont Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts, and served a three-year term as Vermont's second Cartoonist Laureate (Vermont is the only state in the nation with a Cartoonist Laureate.) Norman has been a prolific writer in a variety of styles. How Glooskap Outwits the Ice Giants, The owl-scatterer, and Between heaven and earth are written for juvenile audiences. His books on Canadian folklore include The wishing bone cycle (Cree), Who met the ice lynx (Cree), Who-Paddled-Backward-With-Trout (Cree), The girl who dreamed only geese (Inuit) Trickster and the fainting birds (Algonquin), and Northern tales (Eskimo). Northern Tales, translated into Italian and Japanese, was Norman's first book translated into foreign language.[9] In Fond Remembrance of Me is not only an English translation of Noah and the Ark stories as told by a Manitoba Inuit elder, it is also a memoir of the friendship that Norman kindles with Helen Tanizaki, a writer who is translating these same stories into Japanese before her death. Norman describes The Bird Artist, a novel, as his most conservative book structurally, though not psychologically.[8] Time magazine named The Bird Artist one of its Best Five Books for 1994. It also was awarded the New England Booksellers Association Prize in Fiction, and Norman received a Lannan Literary Award for this book.[10] The Bird Artist and The Northern Lights were finalists for the National Book Award. The Northern Lights was completed with assistance from the Whiting Award.[3] He received the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy of American Poets for The Wishing Bone Cycle.[11] In On the trail of a ghost, an article published by National Geographic, Norman writes about Japan's haiku master, Matsuo Basho's 1200-mile walk in 1689, and the journey's epic log, entitled Oku no Hosomichi.[12] His book, My Famous Evening: Nova Scotia Sojourns, Diaries & Preoccupations was published under National Geographic's Directions travel series. It includes a chapter on the Nova Scotia poet Elizabeth Bishop. There are also several early books published in small numbers. These include: The Woe Shirt, Arrives Without Dogs, and Bay of Fundy Journal, amongst others.[9] Teacher In 1999, Norman taught at Middlebury College in Vermont.[13] Norman became Goucher College's Writer in Residence in 2003.[11] In 2006, he was appointed a Marsh professor at University of Vermont.[14] Norman now teaches creative writing in the Masters of Fine Arts program at the University of Maryland, College Park. Around 1977, Ben had decided to go into the food business with his old friend Jerry Greenfield, and in May of the next year, the two men opened Ben & Jerry's Homemade Ice Cream Parlor in Burlington, Vermont. The pair conceived the idea in gym class at Merrick Avenue Middle School. They had initially intended to start a bagel business, but found the equipment costs prohibitive and switched to ice cream instead, choosing Burlington as a location because it was a prominent college town which lacked an ice cream shop.[1] In part, their distinctive style of ice cream was developed to compensate for Ben's anosmia - his loss of smell and near-loss of taste - as Ben kept adding larger and larger chunks to the ice cream to satisfy his need for texture in food.[3] Ben & Jerry's became an instant hit in Burlington, drawing crowds with ice creams that mixed fresh local cream and milk with wild new flavors and large portions of whatever ingredients they felt tasted good on the day of making.[4] Ben resigned as Chief Executive Officer in 1996.[5] Ben has not been actively involved with the company since the Unilever acquisition in 2000, apart from his membership on the advisory board. As Ben & Jerry's gradually grew into a nationwide business and one of the largest ice cream companies in the USA, Cohen turned his new-found wealth and prominence toward a variety of social causes, generally through the Ben & Jerry's Foundation. The Foundation receives 7.5% of all Ben & Jerry's pre-tax profits and distributes funds to organizations such as the Anti Displacement Project. Cohen also oversaw TrueMajority and Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities.[8] He is also vocal in his support of Democratic candidates, including Dennis Kucinich for the U.S. Democratic presidential nomination in 2004 and John Edwards followed by Barack Obama in 2008 and Bernie Sanders for the Democratic Primaries and 2016 Presidential Election.[7][9][10] Cohen debuted a special ice cream flavor called Bernie's Yearning on January 25, 2016 out of support for Sanders. Ben & Jerry's released a statement disavowing connection or support for the product, saying This was created by Ben as a citizen. The company is not involved.[11] In 2012, he helped launch the Stamp Stampede campaign to stamp messages on the nation's currency in support of passing a constitutional amendment to help overturn Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission and reduce the influence of private corporations on politics. On April 18, 2016, Cohen was arrested, with Jerry Greenfield, while at a Democracy Awakening protest in Washington, D.C.