Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Vegan: Asian Vegan Recipes for a Dairy Free Raw Vegan Lifestyle by Sam KumaVegan: Asian Vegan Recipes for a Dairy Free Raw Vegan Lifestyle by Sam Kuma


I am always happy to try new vegan cookbooks so when I was offered this ebook, I was happy to accept.  This is my honest review.

First, I feel the need to point out that this is not a “raw” vegan cookbook by any stretch of the imaginations.  So, I dodn’t think the word “raw” belongs in the title!  It is very misleading and anyone who follows a raw vegan diet would be very upset that they paid for a non-raw cookbook!  That said,Bill and I do not follow a raw diet, just vegan.  We both love Asian food, Chinese, Japanese, and Indian, especially! Asian encompasses a lot of the world.  Don’t expect this cookbook to cover it all.  It is mainly Chinese and a bit Japanese.

It’s unusual to see breakfast recipes in an Asian cookbook, so to see them in this cookbook was a unique surprise. I have the same breakfast every morning and like to keep it lite so I didn’t try any of the breakfasts yet.  However, some of the dishes work for lunch, like the Breakfast Wanton Soup.

I made the Salt and Pepper Tofu listed in appetizers but think it would also be a good main dish with some brown rice.  I also made the Hot and Sour Soup.  The two made a nice dinner for the two of us with leftover soup for lunch the next day.  I look forward to trying the Asian Chili Tofu, also in the appetizers section. Another night I made the Tofu Udon.  I used firm tofu instead of the silken tofu because Bill doesn’t like silken tofu. It was good! I also made the Sriacha Fried Rice for another dinner.  I’m a cook who like to make several dishes for one meal unless we have friends over.  We can’t eat as much as we use to and it just takes up too much time.

One of my favorite vegetables in Asian recipes is eggplant so I made the Spicy Eggplant.  The recipe did not specify what variety of eggplant to use so I use Japanese, my favorite kind.  It was delicious! There were a couple Indian inspired recipes but I would have like to have seen more.  I look forward to trying more of the recipes.

4/5

About Sam Kuma


Sam Kuma is passionate about sharing his culinary experience to the world. His work involves modernization of healthy diet plans. He is good at vegan, ketogenic, paleo, dash and several ethnic cuisines. His main focus is to make healthy diets like vegan and ketogenic mainstream by producing delicious, appetizing recipes. In his first two books regarding Vegan recipes, he has produced delicious Vegan Chocolate meals, Vegan Desserts, Vegan Ice Creams, Vegan Burgers and Sandwiches.

Buy Vegan: Asian Vegan Recipes for a Dairy Free Raw Vegan Lifestyle by Sam Kuma


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Six Days in Leningrad Paullina SimonsSix Days in Leningrad Paullina Simons


Six Days in Leningrad is the memoir of the famous author of ‘The Bronze Horseman’ series, Paulina Simons.  It is about the journey behind ‘The Bronze Horseman’. Paulina was born in Russia and soon after she started writing her first story, she traveled from the U.S. to Leningrad with her father to do some research.  (Note: Leningrad is now known as St. Petersburg). 

It had been a quarter of a century since Paulina and her father visited their homeland and it was not what they expected.  They found a city that looked war torn as if it had gone back in time.  They saw buildings in disarray, bombed fields that wouldn’t grow food, and huge families living together in small rooms.  Despite that, they also met up with old family friends that were still as warm and inviting as ever.

 Six Days in Leningrad is the story of Paulina Simons family history and the nation they came from. Though it has a slow start, it is a poignant story and history that reads very much, like a novel. At times I felt like I was there with Paulina and her father, witnessing what has become of her childhood home. 

My grandparents fled from Russia as Jews being persecuted.  They wouldn’t talk about it but I imagine from the few words they did speak, that they were in one of the Jewish ghettos.  I hate to imagine what they went through and know they wanted to protect us from their reality.  I have read quite a bit about Russia and its history.  I don’t feel any kind of tie to it but am curious about it, as I am about many countries and their histories.

4/5

I received a ebook from Edelweiss and this is my honest review.

About Paulina SimonsSix Days in Leningrad Paullina Simons


Paullina Simons was born in Leningrad, USSR, in 1963. At the age of ten her family immigrated to the United States. Growing up in Russia Paullina dreamt of someday becoming a writer. Her dream was put on hold as she learned English and overcame the shock of a new culture. 

After graduating from university and after various jobs including working as a financial journalist and as a translator, Paullina wrote her first novel Tully. Through word of mouth that book was welcomed by readers all over the world. 

She continued with more novels, including Red Leaves, Eleven Hours, The Bronze Horseman, The Bridge to Holy Cross (also known as Tatiana and Alexander), The Summer Garden and The Girl in Times Square (also known as Lily). Many of Paullina’s novels have reached international bestseller lists. 

Apart from her novels, Paullina has also written a cookbook, Tatiana’s Table, which is a collection of recipes, short stories and recollections from her best selling trilogy of novels, The Bronze Horseman, The Bridge to Holy Cross, (also known as Tatiana and Alexander) and The Summer Garden

Hidden Figures by Margot Lee ShetterlyHidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly


Back in the day of the Jim Crow South, NASA was desperate to find mathematicians to work for them. ‘Hidden Figures’ is the true story of the many female African-American mathematicians who worked in the space program.  They were known as “colored computers”.

‘Hidden Figures’ is the story of 5 of them, Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, Christine Darden, and Gloria Champine. Their story is told through interviews, documents, correspondence, etc.

Until I found out about this book, I had no idea that NASA had so many female African American Mathematicians working for them.  Hell, back in the 50’s and 60’s that not only would hav3e been considered “men’s work” but also almost exclusive to white men, especially in the south!  So, when I found out about ‘hidden Figures’ and the history it tells, I jumped to the opportunity to read you.

You may think because it is non-fiction that it is a dry account of what happened but you would be wrong.  Margot Lee Shetterly wrote about both the private and public lives of these women which made it a more personal touch and a riveting read. ‘Hidden Figures’ is truly a hidden gem.  If you like history in general, the space race, women’s history, or African American history, this is a must read!

I received a free print copy of this book.

5/5

About Margot Lee ShetterlyHidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly

Margot Lee Shetterly grew up in Hampton, Virginia, where she knew many of the women in her book Hidden Figures. She is an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow and the recipient of a Virginia Foundation for the Humanities grant for her research on women in computing. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.