Posts Tagged travel books

BookSwim Book Rental for Reading on the Go

Here’s a service for avid readers who might be traveling in the United States for a while and who don’t want to lug a bunch of hardcover books on multiple plane trips and back home again: BookSwim, a book-rental-by-mail program.

Modeled after Netflix DVDs you rent by mail, with your BookSwim membership, you browse an online catalog and create a “pool” of books you want to receive (get it – pool, swim). Rank your books according to the ones you want to receive first. The number of books you’ll receive at once depends on the plan you have (ranging from 3 books at time for $23.95/month to 11 for $59.95/month).

Book Swim book rental serviceReturn books at your leisure, with no late fees and no due dates. And you’re never without books. For example, with the 3-books-at-a-time plan I’m sampling, I can return two books while I’m reading the third, so a couple more will be on their way in the interim.

Here’s how it might be helpful for long-term travelers: it’s easy to change the shipping address for your next batch of books. If you know you’re spending a week at Aunt Mary’s lake cabin in August, have books sent there; if you read a couple and are ready for new books for your next vacation stop at a friend’s house in the mountains, change the shipping address to theirs. I’m thinking that RV road-trippers who might be taking an entire summer to explore the United States could use BookSwim to read and return books for several months (if they do have a general agenda and far-flung friends and relatives throughout the country; currently books are only shipped to U.S. addresses).

Sure, e-readers might be most ideal for travelers — given that devices like the Kindle or the Nook mean you only have to carry around one light item, as opposed to multiple books. But, for now, I’m still old-fashioned. I like flipping paper pages.

The Help novelWhat I like most about my temporary BookSwim membership: no long wait for the hottest bestsellers. Currently, Kathryn Stockett’s The Help has a whopping 78 “hold requests” on 8 different copies of the book that my local library owns. If it weren’t for BookSwim, I’d still be waiting to read the (excellent, excellent) book. But instead, I put it on the top of my “pool” a couple weeks ago, and had it (and two other books) in my mailbox six days later (via a UPS/USPS hybrid UPS Mail Innovations I’ve never heard of).

I shouldn’t complain about the short wait to receive books, but once I signed on for my membership and made my list of what I wanted to read, I wanted them now. Alas, I’m used to speedy Netflix mailing — seems to me I put a movie in the mail Monday, and I’ve got a new one on Wednesday — but that’s because Netflix has regional supply centers throughout the U.S. BookSwim rentals are all sent from the Pennsylvania warehouse. (Hmmm. Given my impatience, I wonder if I really would be happiest with an e-reader, where I can download books within minutes!)

But back to BookSwim… besides New York Times fiction bestsellers, there are children’s books (listed by age group), and all sorts of non-fiction categories, from cookbooks to self-help, business to sports. Basically, much of what you’d find in a library — minus audiobooks, reference books and foreign-language titles — is available through BookSwim.

For more details on how the service works — including what happens if you damage a book — read the BookSwim FAQ.

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Would You Rather…? Crazy Question Books for Kids

Last week I covered an educational travel activity workbook for kids. This week, it’s all about having fun. There’s no educational merit here (unless you consider any and all reading to be educational — from the Sunday comics to cereal boxes — and I do).

The Would You Rather…? series of books from Seven Footer Press each contain more than 300 questions designed to promote conversation, entice giggles, and in some instances, bring on a bit of nausea. That is, if you have a weak stomach and two silly kids in the backseat of your car reading questions from the “Doubly Disgusting” and “Gross-Out” editions ($9.95). For example, on our recent multi-state road trip, everyone in the car had to answer:

  • Would you rather have 20-inch nostril hair or 20-inch-long toenails?
  • Would you rather suck in air with the force of a vacuum when yawning or have blow-dryer strength farts?
  • Would you rather lick your friend’s chicken pox or use Tabasco sauce eye drops?
  • Would you rather suck every drop of sweat from the socks of the Dallas Cowboys after a game or eat a sandwich wrap made from shedded snake-skin filled with a mixture of fingernail clippings?

Just typing that last one made my stomach turn. But they’re not all totally nasty questions. Consider these sort-of silly ones:

  • Would you rather have glow-in-the-dark veins or only be able to watch one TV show for the rest of your life: Dora the Explorer.
  • Would you rather be able to fly, but only see in black and white or be able to be invisible, but lose the ability to see and taste?

Scintillating stuff! Who thinks of these questions anyway? Actually, your kids can write their own in the spaces provided at the end of these paperback books. That’s always fun — trying to come up with your own bizarre scenarios.

Plus, each book has funny cartoons illustrating some of the crazy, hypothetical situations presented. One drawing of a kid flying through Burger King (don’t ask) prompted huge belly laughs from my kids. Weeks later, when either of them says “Burger King” in a funny voice, they erupt in laughter.

And frankly, any travel activity that brings on laughs while helping to pass the time on a long car ride gets a huge thumb’s up from me. I’d recommend these two Would You Rather…? books for children any day of the week. Also see the “BFF” version ($9.95) for high-school-age girls, and decidedly grown-up versions, too, like the, er, “Ultimate Sex Edition” ($12.95) which contains “more than 700 ludicrously lustful dilemmas to ponder.”

Browse all options at Seven Footer Press and look for discounts at Amazon.com.

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Klutz Book for Kids: The Slightly Odd United States of America

When it comes to clever activity books for kids, Klutz owns the market, hands down. This upbeat and irreverent publishing company produces all sorts of portable crafts, science kits, drawing pads and puzzles — many of which are great for traveling. (Minus the spiral-bound Bead Rings that comes with a daisy wheel filled with hundreds of seed beads that would not be fun to pick up off the floor of a plane or the backseat of a car.) The travel section of the Klutz website features such goodies as Doodle Faces, The Cootie Catcher Book, The Encyclopedia of Immaturity and Suction Cup Critters.

Klutz bookA new Klutz release this spring is The Slightly Odd United States of America. For ages eight and up, this book includes all sorts of wacky facts about every state in the nation. Each colorful page is dedicated to one state; my favorites are the ones that have the funny state illustrations: a corn-cob Iowa and a Swiss-cheese Wisconsin.

The book is peppered with historic facts (Abraham Lincoln was born in a one-room log cabin near Hodgenville, Kentucky) and off-the-wall information (Blue Earth, Minnesota, is the home of the first ice cream sandwich and Mr. Potato Head is Rhode Island’s official travel ambassador). Trivial, random information reigns supreme in this book — exactly the kind of silly stuff that kids love.

It also includes word searches and scrambles, quizzes and games to keep kids entertained through a multi-state road trip (though I’d love to see even more pages filled with activities). But this book won’t only occupy children in the car; it will teach them about the differences among the states (trust me there’s a whole heck of a lot of random stuff I didn’t know about the U.S.A.) I also see the book being used in our house to help with school research projects down the line.

Buy The Slightly Odd United States of America on the Klutz website for $12.95. On Amazon.com it’s reduced to $9.32.

More travel items for kids:

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Book Review: Step Back from the Baggage Claim

stepbackAuthor Jason Barger spent seven days straight in six different U.S. airports gleaning insight for his book Step Back from the Baggage Claim, in which he purports, “I believe we can change the world” and, “The airport is where it can begin.”

Rather New Age for me, I thought, when I read the blurb about this book that, frankly, sat on my desk gathering dust for a few months. That is, until I actually read the book on my flight yesterday from Denver, Colorado, to Charlotte, North Carolina. Now I’m a believer — and a fan of this inspiring book.

Using airport interactions — at the baggage claim, in the security line, on an airplane — as a metaphor for life experiences, Jason explains how small changes in the way we behave can lead to a new way of looking at how we as a society can be nicer, more thoughtful, more graceful and more compassionate in our everyday lives.

For example, Jason describes the frenzy that is the scene at the baggage claim. As soon as that “obnoxious buzzer” sounds, passengers rush toward the conveyor belt to grab their bags. Wouldn’t it be nifty, say, if travelers rather stood three feet away from the belt, and moved toward their bag to retrieve it as it passed — allowing for more room to actually heft the bag to the floor (and not hit other travelers in the process)? Wouldn’t it be neat if everyone kept an eye out for the single mom who is trying to wrangle three children  and retrieve bags at the same time — or for the elderly gentleman who might need a hand?

Now, apply that to everyday life by “gaining perspective and creating space for others.” Sounds nice, doesn’t it?

How about the mad exodus that occurs as soon as the plane lands and the ding sounds that it’s okay to remove your seatbelt? Everyone stands up (crouched over if they are still in the seat row), gathering loose items and reaching into overhead bins. Still, there’s no where to go, since the flight attendants have not “unarmed doors,” so, as   Jason so eloquently puts it, passengers start “making uncomfortable small talk with the person whose head is now directly below our armpit.”

Jason notes that everyone is rushing to get off the plane… only to hurry to baggage claim where there’s more waiting to be done. He suggests that instead of doing the whole “hurry up and wait” routine, to “practice stillness in the moment.” Rather than racing  through your day, “make a conscious effort to slow down and get out off the business of just doing and into the business of being excellent.”

Ironically, just before I started reading this inspiring book on my flight, I encountered a gentleman who seemingly wanted to cut in front of me while boarding. Two minutes later, he told me he’d had a chillingly traumatic morning. It was a startling example of how I could have/should have unconditionally shown my fellow passenger compassion — rather than reacting so negatively to his wanting to get on the plane quickly.

I thought this book might be hokie and riddled with religious references, since the author is the former director of a church camp. And while he does quote the Bible a couple times, it’s not heavy on the religious rhetoric at all.

I read Step Back from the Baggage Claim during a two-hour flight. I highly recommend it as a travel book, as  it’s especially poignant to think about the airport metaphor while you’re actually in an airport or on a plane — all the better to put into practice some of the lessons about “traveling gracefully.”

This slim, 126-page book would make an excellent gift for any frequent traveler. Buy it for $12 on Amazon.

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A Fun Activity Book for Traveling Kids

julius-activity-bookMy skeptic meter goes on high alert when I see anything featuring the line, “offers children hours of creative fun.” I’ve taken plenty of these promises on faith before a trip only to have said item hold the little one’s interest for about 15 minutes of a four-hour flight.

I’m happy to say this Julius Pop-up Sticker Activity Kit really delivers on that promise, and then some. Six weeks into our two months on the road I suggested that maybe we didn’t need to hold onto this book anymore and my daughter looked like she was going to break into tears.

This 48-page book is based on Paul Frank’s popular Julius character but it’s the thought that went into the design of this activity book that really makes it a winner. There are pages and pages of stickers—always good—but actually something interesting to do with them too. Outfit stickers to dress up the characters, sunglasses for different faces, fish to put under a glass bottom boat drawing, and a band with instruments to put on stage.

Many of these stick-on pictures require a contribution by the artist/owner though: a puzzle to solve, a cupcake to decorate, or maybe a garden to grow. But wait, there’s more! There’s a whole pop-up scene to put together inside of the cover of the whole affair, then you get to use more stickers to decorate the whole beach!

I made the mistake of showing this to my daughter two days before the plane took off and she was practically foaming at the mouth to get to it by the time we left. I expected this interest to soon wane, but it didn’t.

If you’ve got a flight to Australia or Thailand in your family’s future, or a very long cross-country road trip, pick up this book for your imaginative young child. I’d peg the ideal age at somewhere between “reading well” and “not yet jaded.” The Julius Pop-up Sticker Activity Kit lists for $14.95, but you can usually find it discounted by following the links below.

Get it at Amazon.com.

Get it at Overstock.com.

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