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Off the Record by Peter MansbridgeOff the Record by Peter Mansbridge

Description Off the Record by Peter Mansbridge

Peter Mansbridge invites us to walk the beat with him in this entertaining and revealing look into his life and career, from his early broadcasting days in the remote northern Manitoba community of Churchill to the fast-paced news desk of CBC’s flagship show, The National, where he reported on stories from around the world.

Today, Peter Mansbridge is often recognized for his distinctive deep voice, which calmly delivered the news for over fifty years. But ironically, he never considered becoming a broadcaster. In some ways, though, Peter was prepared for a life as a newscaster from an early age. Every night around the dinner table, his family would debate the news of the day, from Cold War scandals and Vietnam to Elvis Presley and the Beatles.

So in 1968, when by chance a CBC radio manager in Churchill, Manitoba, offered him a spot hosting the local late night music program, Peter embraced the opportunity. Without a teacher, he tuned into broadcasts from across Canada, the US, and the UK to learn the basic skills of a journalist and he eventually parlayed his position into his first news job. Less than twenty years later, he became the chief correspondent and anchor of The National.

With humour and heart, Peter shares never-before-told stories from his distinguished career, including reporting on the fall of the Berlin Wall and the horror of 9/11, walking the beaches of Normandy with Tom Brokaw, and talking with Canadian prime ministers from John Diefenbaker to Justin Trudeau. But it’s far from all serious. Peter also writes about finding the “cure” for baldness in China and landing the role of Peter Moosebridge in Disney’s Zootopia. From the first (and only) time he was late to broadcast to his poignant interview with the late Gord Downie, these are the moments that have stuck with him.

After years of interviewing others, Peter turns the lens on himself and takes us behind the scenes of his life on the frontlines of journalism as he reflects on the toll of being in the spotlight, the importance of diversity in the newsroom, the role of the media then and now, and the responsibilities we all bear as citizens in an increasingly global world. 

My Thoughts Description Off the Record by Peter Mansbridge

I moved to Canada from the U.S.A. in January 1993.  First on a work visa, then as a landed Immigrant, and eventually became a citizen. I first learned about Canadian politics from Peter Mansbridge, CBC News Chief Correspondent and anchor of The National on CBC.  His news style/personality, felt like a personal welcome to Canada, even though I have never had the opportunity to meet him in person.

I was so sad when he retired. So, when I was invited to read his new book, ‘Off The Record’, I jumped at the chance.  In it, he recounts his start in Churchill, Manitoba to his leap to The National.  Through his stories, he introduced me to Knowlton Nash, who was the anchor of The National before Mansbridge.

He wrote about our past prime ministers.  Being interested in politics, I had read about them but he shared antidotes that I did not know which made them even more human to me.  He wrote about some of our national treasures like Jann Arden.

He recounted his coverage of the Berlin Wall coming down and 9/11.  In turns he had me laughing and crying with his serious stories and the fun he had, such as the time he was asked to play the role of Peter Moosebridge in the Disney movie, ‘Zootopia’. LOL! There was his poignant interview with Gord Downie before he passed away.  I saw that interview and he made me cry again, as he recounted it.

To me, Peter Mansbridge is a national treasure! To me, he is the Canadian equivalent to Walter Cronkite. He also wrote about Cronkite and other U.S. anchors. This is a book that I am sure I will revisit.  I am sure Mr. Mansbridge has many more stories to tell and I hope he writes another book.  I will definitely read it! Perhaps covid will not be an issue and he will tour with the next book and stop in Vancouver so, I can see him in person and get his books signed.  Even that very brief interaction would mean so much to me!

Thank you, Peter Mansbridge, for welcoming me to Canada and teaching me about the many facets of the Canadian Way! I give ‘Off The Record’ 5 out of 5 stars!

About Peter Mansbridge

Peter Mansbridge is one of Canada’s most respected journalists. He is the former chief correspondent for CBC News; anchor of The National, CBC’s flagship nightly newscast where he worked for thirty years reporting on national and international news stories; and host of Mansbridge One on One. He has received over a dozen national awards for broadcast excellence, including a lifetime achievement award from the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television.

He is a distinguished fellow of the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy at the University of Toronto and the former two-term Chancellor of Mount Allison University. In 2008, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada—the country’s highest civilian honour—and in 2012 he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal.

He is the author of the instant #1 national bestseller Extraordinary Canadians and also the national bestseller Peter Mansbridge One on One: Favourite Conversations and the Stories Behind Them. He lives in Stratford, Ontario. Follow him on Twitter @PeterMansbridge, visit him at ThePeterMansbridge.com, or listen to his daily podcast, The Bridge, with Sirius XM Canada.

 Yes Again by Sallie WeissingerYes, Again:(Mis)adventures of a Wishful Thinker by Sallie H. Weissinger

Publisher:  She Writes Press, (October 26, 2021)
Category: Memoir, Grief, Loss, Romance, Dating
Tour dates: October-November, 2021
ISBN: 978-1647423155
Available in Print and ebook, 224 pages
Yes, Again

Description Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


In this laughter-through-tears memoir, Sallie H. Weissinger, a late-in-life widow, recounts the highs and lows of navigating the tricky online dating world of the 2000s. Interwoven throughout her adventures in search of a new relationship are stories from her childhood as a military brat, her southern heritage, her various marriages, and the volunteer work in Central and South America that helped her keep moving forward through it all.

Weissinger keeps her sense of humor as she meets men who lie, men who try to extort money, and men with unsavory pasts. When she experiences even more loss, her search for a partner becomes less important, but—with the help of friends and dogs—she perseveres and, ultimately, develops her own approach to meeting “HIM.” Blending the deeply serious and the lighthearted, Yes Again shows us that good things happen when we open up our minds and hearts.

My Thoughts Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


Sallie H. Weissinger divorced her first husband and then found the love of her life, Matt through the personal adds.  However, 24 years later, Matt dies of cancer and she is devastated.  She actually suffers several losses over just a 4-year span.  As she picks up the pieces of her life and learns to cope with loss, after some time, she wants to find another life partner.

She is in her 70’s and there are no longer personal ads in newspapers. In ‘Yes’ Again’, she shares her experience navigating dating websites.  She does this honestly and with a lot of humor.  Fed up with online dating sights she decides to try something new, she creates herself, she named PASTRAMI. It is an acronym for the traits she wants in a partner, for example;  physically fit, adventurous, spiritual, traveler, etc… She then enlists the help of her friends to find men that fit the mold and even offers a $5000 reward to the charities of match makers choice if she stays with the man for one year. She even enlisted assistance to set up a PASTRAMI website.

After going out with men that sounded promising but didn’t work out, she was about to give up but then a friend told her about a guy, Bart that lost his wife about a year before.  It was practically love at first sight for both Sallie and Bart.

In this heartfelt memoir, we learn the details about all of Sallie’s losses and heartaches and how she overcame the obstacles they formed.  I think many people who suffer the kind of loss she did, give up on life and just go through the motions. Instead, Sallie throughs herself into life with traveling, volunteering, and eventually dating. Especially for a woman in her seventies, she is an inspiration.  We can all learn a lot from her.

The thought of loosing my husband, now of 25 years, is my worst nightmare.  If it were to happen, I will certainly need to read this book again to get reinspired.  ‘Yes, Again’ gets all 5 stars from me!

I received the eBook from Net Galley for my honest review.

About Sallie H. Weissinger


Remove term: Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger

(c) COURTNEY FLAVIN

Sallie H. Weissinger is a native of New Orleans and was raised as a military brat away from the South (Germany, New Mexico, Ohio, Japan, and Michigan). Every summer, she and her family returned to visit her mother’s relatives in New Orleans and her father’s family in a small Alabama town. She has lived most of her life in the Bay Area and also in New Orleans. These days, “home” includes not only New Orleans and Berkeley, but also Portland, Oregon, where she lives most of the time with her husband, Bart McMullan, a retired internal medicine doctor and health care executive, and their three dogs.

A retired executive herself, she now teaches Spanish and does medical interpreting for non-profit organizations in Central America and the Dominican Republic. Weissinger is a passionate member of the Berkeley Rotary Club and has served on the boards of Berkeley Rotary, the Aurora Theatre in Berkeley, and the East Bay (formerly Oakland) SPCA.

Website: https://www.yesagainmemoir.com/

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 Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger

 Yes Again by Sallie WeissingerYes, Again:(Mis)adventures of a Wishful Thinker by Sallie H. Weissinger

Publisher:  She Writes Press, (October 26, 2021)
Category: Memoir, Grief, Loss, Romance, Dating
Tour dates: October-November, 2021
ISBN: 978-1647423155
Available in Print and ebook, 224 pages
Yes, Again

Description Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


In this laughter-through-tears memoir, Sallie H. Weissinger, a late-in-life widow, recounts the highs and lows of navigating the tricky online dating world of the 2000s. Interwoven throughout her adventures in search of a new relationship are stories from her childhood as a military brat, her southern heritage, her various marriages, and the volunteer work in Central and South America that helped her keep moving forward through it all.

Weissinger keeps her sense of humor as she meets men who lie, men who try to extort money, and men with unsavory pasts. When she experiences even more loss, her search for a partner becomes less important, but—with the help of friends and dogs—she perseveres and, ultimately, develops her own approach to meeting “HIM.” Blending the deeply serious and the lighthearted, Yes Again shows us that good things happen when we open up our minds and hearts.

Advance Praise Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


“A funny, touching, and ultimately uplifting story of a woman searching for love and purpose.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Weissinger celebrates her 75th birthday in Yes, Again by taking the reader on a tour of her big heart and where that heart has taken her. This glorious story of a life lived in love is the perfect read because it’s hilarious, honest and full of hope. We are all lovers, or we wish we were and Sallie shows us how: never give up, occasionally give in and don’t stop believing. Brava!”-Adriana Trigiani, Bestselling author of
Tony’s Wife 

“If you like to read memoirs, you won’t be disappointed in Sallie H. Weissinger’s Yes, Again. I really loved it….it was a pleasure to read a book written by a woman who didn’t let age get in the way of seeking love and living life fully.  While she may not have realized it when writing, Sallie provided a life lesson for those of us of a certain age: There’s no reason not to take charge of our lives and make things happen. Whether it’s looking for love, reaching personal and professional goals, or living on purpose every day, women can disrupt aging and rise to life’s challenges.”—Camille Goscickivitalaging4women.com

“After reading Sallie’s soulful book, I have to say this gifted writer got the love she wanted the old-fashioned way . . . she earned it!”-Lacy J. Dalton, singer and songwriter

“Linearity works for many things; however, in Sallie H. Weissinger’s potent book (and even more potent life) she shows us how tapping into grace can be a tangible way of entering into mystery, meaning, and direction. By recounting times of staggering loss, loneliness, self-doubt, perseverance, and openness to the ineffable, Sallie demonstrates how the journey of life can be a glorious pathway for those with a bit of daring!”-Bill Say, MA, life coach, Process Work Diplomate, and instructor at CIIS, JFK University, and the Wright Institute

Interview With Sallie H. Weissinger

Hi Sallie, thanks so much for agreeing to this interview! 

TR: Please tell us something about ‘Yes, Again’ that is not in the book.

SHW:  Writing a memoir is a draconian exercise in deciding what to present to the reader and what to dump.  A lot didn’t make it into the book, and each time I cut something, I threw a bit of myself away.  One tough decision was not to write about growing up in Munich in post World War II-Germany, amid the bombed-out buildings and street rubble. Four decades after we returned to the states, I called my mother one weekend to recount a dream I’d had about playing with a little girl with one arm that resembled a sausage.  I asked if that had happened or if I had made it up.  “That was Erika,” Mom said.  “The lower part of her arm was blown off by a bomb.”  Our conversation brought back more memories, including one of a little boy who’d lost both eyes. By the time I was five, I’d learned to identify with innocent people who’d endured hardships I couldn’t fathom and resolved to do what I could to help them.  In my book, though, I skimmed over these childhood memories and most of my first marriage to focus on my 1978 meeting with husband-to-be Matt and events after that. 

Another difference, as I answer my rephrased version of your original question, is this:  If I had written Yes, Again earlier, there would be less of my family’s and my dirty laundry in several early chapters.   It wouldn’t have been as honest or as genuine.  And there would have been no internal voices called “Sweet Pea” and “Steve.”  

TR: Where did you get the inspiration for your book cover?

SHW:  When we were pre-teens, my friends and I used to blow on dandelions after they turned from yellow to white.  I’d close my eyes and make a wish, blowing hard on the white feathery seeds and scattering as many as possible.  The legend was that, if you blew all the seeds off, like blowing out all the candles on your birthday cake, your wish would come true.  But I never thought I had to blow all the seeds away. I thought if just one seed floated off in the right direction, my wish would come true.  That’s why I wanted the cover to show the one light-infused seed floating into the air, flying off the page and up into the blue sky. 

My She Writes Press project manager and the designer asked me for ideas about what I wanted my cover to convey.  First, I suggested an open window looking out on a field.  Next, we tried versions of a dark house with one lit window that signified hope.  No versions of those two concepts got us “there.” That was when I remembered wishing on dandelions.  My patient designer went to work on a new round of graphics, incorporating the vision of ascending, hope-filled dandelion seeds.  It was fun and rewarding, but not easy.  I thanked her for hanging in there with me.  I’d like to thank her again. 

TR: How long did it take you to write this book from concept to fruition?

SHW: It seems like it took forever.  I’d say it was a total of four years, but in the beginning, I didn’t necessarily intend to write for publication.  I was keeping a journal that turned into a personal memoir that turned into a book.  It helped to have two close friends who were impressive editors – they encouraged me to publish it because they believed my writing contained helpful life lessons about working through dark days.  Then, many amusing episodes occurred that warranted sharing with readers.  That mixture of the painful with the humorous – and the ultimate outcome – were not possible without the passage of time. 

TR: Seasoned writers usually have a routine.  Can you tell us about yours and how it developed?

SHW:  I’ve always been interested in knowing what routines established writers follow.  Everyone I’ve read about writes in the morning.  Ernest Hemingway, Haruki Murakami, Kurt Vonnegut, Maya Angelou, Stephen King, Barbara Kingsolver, Susan Sontag, and Alice Munro all wrote or write in the morning. Serious writers don’t answer the phone or pick up emails till they’ve completed their writing; they screen out distractions, leaving errands, appointments, chores, phone calls, visits with friends, book reading, and exercising for the afternoon. They set and meet their goals to ensure they write every day for a certain number of hours.  Often, they have a quota for a specific number of pages or words.  They sit down at the same time each morning and follow a fixed regimen (for example, taking a 15-minute break every two hours).  Stephen King writes six pages a day; Maya Angelou rented a hotel room without a phone, so she couldn’t be interrupted.

I tried to establish that type of routine but never could.  Too many other things seemed to demand my attention.  The phone rang, or a neighbor knocked on the door.  I couldn’t ignore the pile of emails in my inbox or the voicemails and texts on my phone. I had morning meetings I couldn’t blow off.  My girlfriend could only go to the gym at nine a.m.  Interruptions were frequent, and it was hard to get on track. Even worse were the days I couldn’t write at all because I was antsy, distracted, or despondent.  On the other hand, I had days I wrote from mid-morning till midnight or even later, forgetting to eat dinner because I was on a roll and going with the flow.  I stopped only to walk the dogs and then went back to the keyboard.  I don’t suggest doing it the way I did. 

TR: What is your favorite scene in the book? Why?

SHW: If I answer this question, I will give away a part of the book 1don’t want to reveal to people who might buy it.  I’ll say I especially like Chapters 15 and 16 and the Epilogue.  I love the scene in Chapter 15 about the Portland airport and the one in Chapter 16 about the chickens.  These scenes and the entire chapters were fun to write. They wrote themselves.    

TR: You wrote about online dating and some of the dates you went on that made me laugh so hard it brought tears to my eyes.  Can you share one of those stories with my readers?

SHW: You may be thinking of a first encounter at a coffee shop in Berkeley – I’d gotten there early and was sitting down, sipping a cappuccino when my prospect showed up.  His profile indicated the likelihood of meeting an interesting, intelligent man, and our phone call had been promising.  We arranged to meet on University Avenue, near campus.  When he entered the coffee shop, I saw he had a donut-shaped cushion in his hand.  We recognized one another from our photos, and he approached my table.  Mr. Online Prospect placed the inflated ring on the chair next to me before going to the counter to order coffee.  When he returned, he kicked off the conversation by telling me he’d had a hemorrhoid operation the week before.  He positioned himself carefully on the cushion to minimize the pain, wincing occasionally.  I watched him move around uncomfortably during the entire time we sat together, managing to make polite small talk and hold back any signs of amusement.  I felt bad that he was experiencing discomfort but wondered why we hadn’t postponed our coffee date. Did he think sharing details of his hemorrhoidectomy with a potential partner was the way to pave the road to romance? There were other laugh-worthy anecdotes, but this one takes the cake.

TR: Where does your passion for Spanish come from?

SHW: When my father was stationed with the Air Force in Tokyo, and I was attending a military dependents’ school, my seventh-grade social studies teacher taught us from a textbook with chapters about children our age who lived all around the world- Russia, China, Africa, France, Australia, Iceland, and many more countries.  Our textbook presented the children and their families in a cultural and geographical context.  We learned what their parents did for a living, what their homes (in some cases, tents and yurts) looked like, how they studied, what they did for fun, and what they ate.  I loved that entire semester. There was a little girl who lived in Mexico City, the former pre-Columbian capital, Tenochtitlan; a Quechua boy in Cuzco who described visiting Machu Picchu; and an Argentinian boy whose gaucho father took the family for a one-day outing to Buenos Aires.  Each child in our books had a name and a distinct personality, but for some reason Mexico City with the floating gardens of Xochimilco, Peru with its Inca ruins, and the cosmopolitan city of Buenos Aires seemed to me the most exotic, enticing places in the world – even more than Japan, where our family took weekend excursions to see intricately carved, painted temples and shrines.  When I started high school, I chose to study Spanish because of my vivid seventh-grade memories.  In college, I majored in Spanish (and minored in French), went to the University of Madrid and lived in a Spanish dorm for a year, and went on to graduate school in Comparative Literature in Berkeley, studying Spanish, French, and English.  I taught Spanish in my twenties and have visited Spain many times since then.  For more than two decades when I worked in human resources and public affairs at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, I had minimal opportunity to use the language, other than reading Spanish authors and going to movies in Spanish.  But I knew I’d get back to it.  When I retired, I started doing medical interpreting in Central and South America and the Dominican Republic and writing and translating medical manuals.  Covid has brought that to a halt, at least temporarily.  But it hasn’t stifled my passion for it. 


About Sallie H. Weissinger


Remove term: Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger

(c) COURTNEY FLAVIN

Sallie H. Weissinger is a native of New Orleans and was raised as a military brat away from the South (Germany, New Mexico, Ohio, Japan, and Michigan). Every summer, she and her family returned to visit her mother’s relatives in New Orleans and her father’s family in a small Alabama town. She has lived most of her life in the Bay Area and also in New Orleans. These days, “home” includes not only New Orleans and Berkeley, but also Portland, Oregon, where she lives most of the time with her husband, Bart McMullan, a retired internal medicine doctor and health care executive, and their three dogs.

A retired executive herself, she now teaches Spanish and does medical interpreting for non-profit organizations in Central America and the Dominican Republic. Weissinger is a passionate member of the Berkeley Rotary Club and has served on the boards of Berkeley Rotary, the Aurora Theatre in Berkeley, and the East Bay (formerly Oakland) SPCA.

Website: https://www.yesagainmemoir.com/

Pre-Order Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


Amazon
BarnesandNoble
Indiebound

Giveaway Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger


This giveaway is for 3 print copies, 1 per winner and ends on November 6, 2021, 12 midnight, pacific time.  Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Follow Yes, Again by Sallie H. Weissinger, Tour


Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Oct 4 Kick Off & Interview

Lu Ann Rockin’ Book Reviews Oct 5 Review & Guest Post

Karen T. Goodreads Oct 6 Review

Hope M. Goodreads Oct 7 Review

Andrew K. Amazon Oct 12 Review

Just Another Reader Oct 15 Review

Betty Toots Book Reviews Oct 18 Review & Guest Post

Laura DLC. Amazon Oct 19 Review

Martha M. Amazon Oct 20 Review

Laura Lee Celtic Lady’s Reviews Oct 26 Guest Review & Excerpt

Sal Bound 4 Escape Oct 27 Guest Review

Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Oct 28 Review

Bee Book Pleasures Oct 29 Review & Interview

Gud Reader Goodreads Nov 1

Linda Lu All Things Jill-Elizabeth  Nov 3 Guest Review

Amy Locks Hooks, and Books Nov 5 Review

 Yes Again by Sallie Weissinger