Welcome to DelMio.com
Welcome to DelMio.com, a vibrant online magazine designed to encourage reading by extending the experience of a book beyond the final chapter.
DelMio offers a rich multimedia experience for those who love books - including live discussions, opportunities for libraries to share programming and a place for book lovers to connect online. DelMio is committed to providing readers with credible, well-researched information they can count on for accuracy.
May 10th, 2008 | No Comments »
For centuries, people have sought the “secret formula” to happiness and a meaningful, long life. Now, scientific study has discovered a simple source: giving. Stephen Post, Ph.D., and journalist Jill Neimark have written the book Why Good Things Happen to Good People based on extensive research at universities across the United States. Authors Post and Neimark explore the studies and the people behind them, discovering the astonishingly simple “formula” and tell it in an engaging style.
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May 9th, 2008 | No Comments »
This is not my first blogging effort. There are bits and pieces all over this site and at our old home, and few scattered postings on other, even more obscure blog hosts. But I think I’ll come back to here fairly often. In my quest for book news and between various and sundry editing duties, I find stuff that’s interesting but doesn’t quite fit any of the usual pegs, round or square. That’s stuff I’ll dump on you, the unsuspecting and unfortunate reader of this blog (Yes, all three of you). I think I’ll call it Our Daily Red. I know, the name’s been taken. It’s a decent red wine for everyday dinners. Probably a blog out there too. So sue me. Maybe I could call it Our Daily Sandwich. I dunno. Our Daily Ned?
Dave Wilson is the Grand Poobah of Editorial Content at DelMio.com, a site developed by SunLit Communications LLC. He also is at times janitor, chauffeur, chief cook and bottle washer. Once upon a time he was a metro editor and copy editor at the Akron Beacon Journal.
May 1st, 2008 | No Comments »
Far fewer than the 80 percent of Americans who own slow cookers use them on a regular basis. This book is an attempt to change that. Instead of the usual recipes for slow-cooked roasts and throw-together soups, it is filled with modern and ethnic-inspired recipes – 350 in all – for such dishes as Mexican black beans with pork, Caribbean jerked chicken, polenta, and veal stew with sun-dried tomatoes and rosemary. Award-winning food writer Jane Snow talks about remarkably versatile slow cookers, and shares a recipe for risotto from Not Your Mother’s Slow Cooker Cookbook.
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March 27th, 2008 | 2 Comments »
Ask. Believe. Receive. In The Secret, Rhonda Byrne compiles the words of successful authors, businesspeople, spiritualists and scientists to explain the “Great Secret” woven throughout human history — the law of attraction.
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March 27th, 2008 | No Comments »
Water for Elephants is the story of a Great-Depression-era circus told through the memories of ninety-something-year-old veterinarian, Jacob Jankowski. Sara Gruen’s exhaustive research into the traveling circuses of the 1930s and 40s gives us a rare look into the fascinating, secretive subculture of that era’s big-top performers and roustabouts. Many of the most compelling anecdotes in Gruen’s well-told story are based on actual events.
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March 25th, 2008 | No Comments »
The story of John Bul Dau’s childhood and early adulthood could be summarized by this prophesy: “This will be a black-haired time.” Which means: None of the people in Sudan will live long enough to have gray hair. It’s easy to turn off the news and lose interest in story after story of death and destruction in other parts of the world. We are inundated with images and stories about terrible pain and suffering all the time, and can become somewhat desensitized to it. Reading “God Grew Tired of Us” cuts through any desensitization and brings those feelings of sorrow and happiness, of pain and love, back into focus again.
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March 23rd, 2008 | No Comments »
Some people hibernate and lick their wounds after a difficult divorce. Not author Elizabeth Gilbert, who self-prescribed a year of exotic travel and convinced a publishing house to pay for it with a book advance. The result is Eat, Pray, Love, Gilbert’s journey of self-discovery in Rome (the eating leg of the trip), on an ashram in India (the praying portion) and love (in Bali, where she reconnected with joy).
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March 23rd, 2008 | No Comments »
Living History provides Hillary Clinton with a 566-page opportunity to describe her roller coaster ride as a bright young lawyer and working mother whose husband rose through the ranks of Arkansas state government, only to win two terms in the grand prize of American politics – the presidency. This book gives the reader a detailed, insider’s look at the high-stakes, power-driven world of political warfare. It makes for fascinating reading and more than justifies Hillary’s claim that her life is a work of Living History in progress.
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March 21st, 2008 | No Comments »
John Grogan spun this engaging book from his years with the ill-mannered, psychologically-challenged Marley. Through the touching stories about this needy creature, Grogan shares meaningful observations of life, marriage and fatherhood — not to mention the unconditional love familiar to anyone who has ever befriended a dog. In this exploration, we examine that mysterious bond between dogs and their people.
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March 20th, 2008 | No Comments »
Barring any surprises in the next few months, the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination is between two first-term U.S. senators - Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
In Obama’s “The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream,” the 46-year-old Illinois senator employs a love of American history and law to lay out his vision for how to restore faith in our economic and political systems.
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March 18th, 2008 | No Comments »
For Dr. Jeannette Potts, a Cleveland Clinic specialist in male urology and holistic healer also known as “Dr. Tango,” nothing compares to dance — and one dance in particular. Find your tango, she writes, and you’ll discover your bliss. In her very approachable book, she guides and encourages readers to find their own tango — danceable or otherwise.
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