116 posts categorized "Adoption Books & Movies"

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Open Adoption - May's 'Adoption World' Theme

The_adoption_decision_15_x_2_2This month in Adoption World e-zine, you'll learn some of the typical questions asked of birth parents, adoptive parents, and adoptees who are involved in an open adoption (to start your free subscription, just fill in the form in the post directly above).

You may wish to delve deeper into the issue of open adoption -- or into other critical issues you face before, during, and after the adoption process. Consider pairing up with another person or with a small group to read and discuss The Adoption Decision: 15 Things You Want to Know Before Adopting.

During May, I'm offering a special book club pack:

5 autographed copies for $50
Free Shipping!
(You save $20 off retail price)

10 autographed copies for $90
Free Shipping!
(You save $50 off retail price)

Best-selling author Sandra Glahn calls The Adoption Decision “a kaleidoscope of vignettes, facts, sage wisdom, practical suggestions, and biblical counsel.”

If you wish to bypass PayPal, you can mail a check or money order to:

Laura Christianson
PO Box 1254
Snohomish, WA 98291-1254

Thursday, May 01, 2008

'The Adoption Decision' Contest Winner

Announcing the winner of April's book giveaway contest:

Jen and Kris Howell of Tennessee won an autographed copy of The Adoption Decision: 15 Things You Want to Know Before Adopting.

Their "Spa Evening" was selected as the most innovative adoption fundraiser from the entries submitted.

Jen and Kris have been waiting two years to bring home their daughter from Korea. You can learn more about their active family at their blog: www.nighthowells.blogspot.com.

Congratulations, Jen and Kris! Your book is in the mail.

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More book giveaways coming soon in Adoption World, my free monthly eZine! To subscribe, send a blank email to adoptionworld@aweber.com

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Amazon Exploring Adoption bookstore.

Create your own E-newsletters and e-mail templates

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Adoption Talk on KVI 570 AM This Sunday, April 27

Join me on Seattle's KVI 570 AM talk radio this Sunday, April 27, from 1-2 p.m. Pacific time, when we're going to talk "adoption" for a full hour.

Host Delaina Bochsler and I will be giving out free copies of my books, The Adoption Decision and The Adoption Network every 15 minutes, so please call in for a chance to win!

"Life Talk With Delaina" is a listener call-in show, so you can ask a question about adoption while you're at it (Delaina is an adoptive mom, too). Here are the call-in numbers:

206-421-5757 or 1-888-312-5757

You can listen to the show live online.

I've done many remote radio interviews (aka, over the phone), and this is my first in-studio interview. I'm very excited, and I hope you'll join us!

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Sign up for Adoption World, my free monthly eZine! Just send a blank email to adoptionworld@aweber.com

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Amazon Exploring Adoption bookstore.

Create your own E-newsletters and e-mail templates

Monday, April 21, 2008

'Adoptive Families' Mag Accepts Nominations for 'Favorite Adoption Book'

Adoptive Families magazine is asking readers to nominate their favorite adoption books for their annual "best books" issue. If you're the first person to nominate a book they select to feature, you'll win a special gift from them (they don't say what the gift is).

If you liked my books, I'd appreciate a nomination in the following categories:

1. Most helpful how-to-adopt guides to read as you're deciding on adoption and working through the process:

    The Adoption Decision: 15 Things You Want to Know Before Adopting

2. The special-interest parenting books you think every adoptive parent should read:

    The Adoption Network: Your Guide to Starting a Support System

You can also nominate memoirs, children's books about adoption, and multicultural kids' books.

Submit your nomination by e-mailing letters@adoptivefamilies.com. Just tell them the name of the book, author's name, and why you like the book.

Friday, April 11, 2008

'The Memory Keeper's Daughter' - Sat. on Lifetime

As I was looking over the TV listings, I noticed that "The Memory Keeper's Daughter," a made-for-TV adaptation of Kim Edwards' novel by the same name, will be on Lifetime this Saturday at 9 p.m. The movie stars Dermot Mulroney as Dr. David Henry and Gretchen Nol as Norah.

I reviewed The Memory Keeper's Daughter last year on my blog, so I won't reiterate the plot here. While the novel was sometimes poignant, I commented that "the slow-paced narrative, while thought-provoking, regularly rehashes the same material; I felt as if I was watching an endless film loop replay itself in my mind."

That doesn't bode well for a made-for-TV movie; in fact, the movie review I read noted:

"When a book is so powerful and the characters are so vivid, it can be a letdown to see the book become a movie, as is sometimes the case with the Lifetime version of The Memory Keeper's Daughter."

Apparently, the movie has a "ridiculously pat ending" (as does the book, in my opinion). The highlight of the movie, according to the reviewer, was the fact that actors who have Down syndrome play Phoebe, the infant girl who is sent to live in an orphan asylum when her doctor father discovers "she's a Mongoloid."

So, if you're feeling the need to veg in front of the tube Saturday evening and you don't set your expectations too high, you might consider checking out this movie. As for me, I'm gonna pass. But if you watch it, be sure to write in and tell us what you thought of it.

Source for movie review:
Zap2it, by Jacqueline Cutler
Book Review: The Memory Keeper's Daughter

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Movie Review: 'Juno'

Juno By Blair Buckler
Guest Columnist

The story of Juno MacGuff (Ellen Page) follows a “confidently frank” 16-year-old girl on an emotional nine-month adventure into adulthood. Juno is a quick-witted and distinctively unique individual who walks to her own tune and lives by her own rules.

Her life takes a major turn when she decides to have intercourse with her unassuming friend Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera). Soon after, she decides to take three pregnancy tests to confirm her suspicions that she is in fact pregnant with Bleeker’s baby.

Juno initially considers abortion, but after a visit to the abortion center she has a change of heart and decides to make an adoption plan. She and her best friend, Leah (Olivia Thirlby), set out to find the perfect adoptive parents and discover a couple, Mark & Vanessa, who are seeking to adopt a child.

Juno informs her father and stepmother of the news. Although they are initially wary of her pregnancy, they rally the support behind their daughter. Juno and her father go to meet the couple they found in the Pennysaver ad at their upscale suburban house. Juno immediately strikes up a friendship with the potential adoptive father, Mark, an out-of-work composer who, like Juno, loves rock music and horror films.

Vanessa, the potential adoptive mom, on the other hand, is very wary of Juno at first because a previous birthmom “got cold feet.” As her body is physically changing, Juno goes through a mental change as she struggles with her true feelings for Bleeker, who is clearly in love with her.

As Juno approaches her due date, there is an interesting and unexpected plot twist involving the potential adoptive parents. This causes Juno to reflect on her feelings for Bleeker and the decision she is about to make. I don’t want to spoil the ending so you will just have to see the movie to find out what happens.

Overall, I feel like this movie portrays adoption in a very honest and positive light. Some of the storyline is a bit obscure but I understand it helps to movie tell a story and flow better. Juno opts for a “closed” adoption but still meets the adoptive parents. The only real way it is closed is her choosing not to see her baby after the birth.

As most of us know, closed adoptions do not usually occur this way. The only other part I felt was kind of “off” was the relationship she builds with Mark, the potential adoptive father. She pays him frequent visits, which does not seem very realistic to me.

What is genuine is the array of emotions Juno goes through along her pregnancy journey. Being that she is in high school, she continues to attend even though she is stared at and surely talked about by fellow classmates. She also struggles with her relationship with the birthfather who she initially pushes away before she can decide if she is truly in love with him or not. She also experiences very genuine and real grief at the loss and relinquishment of her baby, which I found very relatable.

This was an incredibly well done movie about adoption. I am always wary of the way adoptions are portrayed by the media, but this movie was something I could honestly relate to. It was witty, smart, and has a heartwarming lesson and storyline.

Regardless of your adoption story, I feel it is something that birthparents can relate to on many different levels and in many different ways. Juno is out on DVD April 15 and has won numerous awards including an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

Juno: Rated PG-13
92 minutes

This article was originally published in BirthMom Buds Bulletin, April 2008
Reprinted with permission from the author

Read more Juno reviews

Sign up for Adoption World, my free monthly eZine! Just send a blank email to adoptionworld@aweber.com

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Amazon Exploring Adoption bookstore.

Friday, January 18, 2008

'Chicken Soup for the Adopted Soul' Coming Soon

Chicken_soup_for_the_adopted_soul_2 I recently learned that a story I submitted to Chicken Soup for the Adopted Soul was selected to be published in the book!

Adopted Soul, the latest installment in the internationally best-selling Chicken Soup series, will be available in bookstores in March. My story, "Open-Door Policy," is an excerpt from my book, The Adoption Decision: 15 Things You Want to Know Before Adopting. The story details the wacky, unconventional way my husband and I and our son's birth mom went about opening our adoption.

I was one of the volunteer readers who rated the top 150 finalists for the Chicken Soup for the Adopted Soul, so I can assure you that this volume will be packed with inspirational stories about all aspects of adoption. It includes stories from birth parents, adopted people, and adoptive parents.

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Exploring Adoption bookstore.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Winners of Adoption Book Giveaway

Fireworks_at_epcot I'm pleased to announce the winners of my December and January book giveaway contests:

Kristen won a two-pack of The Adoption Decision and The Adoption Network for posting comments on the new blogs my company manages: Northwest Flower & Garden Show, San Francisco Flower & Garden Show, and Alderbrook Properties.

Sam, Gracie, and Leigh each won copies of The Adoption Network for listening to and commenting on a radio show I was on in Seattle.

And Heather from Indiana won a 2-pack of my books for critiquing the Exploring Adoption blog. I appreciate all of you who e-mailed and posted suggestions for improving this blog. I'm unveiling a new design today and will be tweaking it in the coming weeks. If you have my blog bookmarked, hit your browser's Refresh button to display the new colors and fonts. Please let me know what you think of the new design.

Congratulations to all the contest winners!

Monday, January 07, 2008

Read Adoption Books Without Buying Them: Visit Paperspine

I'm an avid reader -- in 2007, I read 56 books and in 2006, I inhaled 77 books. I'm a big patron of the library, and I purchase a few must-have books, but my bookcases are overflowing so I try not to buy too many books.

I've often wished for a sort of Netflix for books -- a service where you'd pay a reasonable monthly fee to rent several books at a time. They'd arrive in the mail, just like DVDs, and when you'd finished reading them, you could return them in a postage-paid envelope and eagerly await your next shipment.

Paperspine_logo Dustin Hubbard has come to my rescue. The Issaquah, Washington entrepreneur recently launched Paperspine, a company that carries about 200,000 book titles.

Similar to Netflix, you set up a queue -- a list of the books you want to read organized by priority. Paperspine mails you your books, you read them, and then you ship them back in pre-paid mailing bags.

Paperspine offers four plans:

  1. Light - $9.95/month (plus tax) plus $1.49 shipping per book to receive up to 2 books at a time
  2. Frequent - $14.95/month and free shipping to receive up to 2 books at a time
  3. Avid - $19.95/month and free shipping to receive up to 3 books at a time
  4. Family - $24.95/month and free shipping to receive up to 5 books at a time

I contacted Dustin to ask about Paperspine's adoption books, and he graciously pointed me to the pages on the site where you can find them.

Here's the link to the books I wrote, The Adoption Decision and The Adoption Network.

And here's the link to 92 adoption-related books.

Paperspine is a great resource for those of us in the adoption community, because it's hard to find a wide selection of adoption books in most libraries and bookstores (except for Tapestry Books, which specializes in selling adoption books). People interested in adoption read voraciously on the topic; renting books seems like an affordable way to test-drive a slew of adoption books before deciding which ones deserve a permanent home on your bookshelf.

Paperspine also has a blog on which Dustin recommends books. If they don't carry a book you want to rent, you can request it by emailing feedback@paperspine.com. If you comment on Dustin's blog or email him, please tell him you found Paperspine via my recommendation on the Exploring Adoption Blog (no, I don't get kickbacks for the referral; I just know that owners of startups like to hear how people found out about them). Happy reading!

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Exploring Adoption bookstore.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Adoption Book Reviews & Videos

Book_on_shelf This week, we’re taking a look back at some of my most popular articles from 2007. Today, we focus on reviews of adoption-related books, as well as some videos I’ve posted.

If you’re looking for a great place to find and purchase adoption books, check out Tapestry Books, an online bookstore that specializes in adoption books. Tapestry Books also offers special features just for adoption agencies and organizations.

Adoption Book Reviews

Children’s Books

Welcome Home, Forever Child

…and Baby Makes a Family

I Bet She Called Me Sugar Plum

The Olive Tree

The Garden Wall

Personal Experience Non-Fiction

Bones That Float: A Story of Adopting Cambodia

Saving Levi

Small Town, Big Miracle

How-to

Why Didn’t You Warn Me? (not adoption-related, but great for people who are forming support groups)

Before You Were Mine: Discovering Your Adopted Child’s Lifestory

Novels

The Other Sister by Susan Thompson Underdahl

The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards

Videos and Slideshows

Book Trailer for my new books: The Adoption Decision and The Adoption Network

'Everything to Me' Video Honors Birth Mothers (Mark Schultz)

Mother's Day Slideshow

'When Love Takes You In' by Steven Curtis Chapman

Foster Care Adoption Video from Dave Thomas Foundation

Also in this Year in Review series:

Adoption Statistics from 2007

Financing Adoption – Links to Articles

Celebrity Adoption Gossip

Adopting Children With Down Syndrome

Exploring Adoption Issues

Exploring Adoption Year in Review: Laura’s Favorites

For more news and information about adoption, visit www.laurachristianson.com, and check out my Exploring Adoption bookstore.

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Adoption Blogs

  • A Little Pregnant
    You want blogs? Julie's got blogs for you. Check out her "somewhat haphazard collection of links" to blogs pertaining to infertility, adoption, pregnancy after infertility or loss, and being a parent. You won't be disappointed.
  • About Adoption/Foster Care
    Written by Carrie Craft, this informative blog at about.com offers a variety of interesting tidbits about adoption and foster care.
  • Adopt Taiwan
    By Cindy, a Christian mom-to-be who is waiting to adopt from Taiwan.
  • Adoptees’ Cafe: Devotions for Adopted Persons
    A blog by adoptee, Jody Moreen.
  • Adoption Blog Central
    This directory of adoption blogs contains brief annotations about each.
  • Adoption Family
    Hot links to hundreds of adoption websites, organized by topic.
  • Adoption Log
    This intriguing blog is written by Patrick from the Netherlands.
  • Adoption Options Web Directory & Resources
    Free adoption articles to acquaint people with their options, as well as links to other quality adoption sites.
  • Adoption Share
    An online community where you can share experiences, find answers and purchase resources related to adoption.
  • Adoption Think Tank
    Visit this blog if you’re researching adoption or if you have a burning question and want feedback from top experts in the field. You simply e-mail a question, which is distributed to a panel of adoption professionals and parents. The panelists respond to each question in the Comments area of the post.
  • Adoption.org Blogs
    The comprehensive adoption web site, adoption.org, recommends a few adoption blogs and has a discussion board.
  • AdoptLove
    A couple's journey to adopt a child from Ukraine.
  • Adventures in Daily Living
    Jamie and Suzanne's adventures with their newly-adopted 5-year-old girl and 6-year-old boy from Russia.
  • AfrIndie Mum
    Reflections from a mom who recently adopted a daughter.
  • All Adoption
    A collection of links to helpful adoption sites.
  • And Chloe Makes 6
    By Becky, mother of four, and waiting for #5 to come home from China.
  • Anonymous Daughter
    By an adult adopted person whose biological father contacted her.
  • Big Momma Hollers
    By Cindy Bodie, a 51-year-old happily single mother of 39 kids ages 3-32.
  • Blogging Baby
    A blog about pregnancy, baby care and parenting. Some adoption issues covered. Entertaining and informative -- one of my faves.
  • Catie Come Home
    Verbal snapshots from a family's journey to Guatemala to adopt their daughter.
  • Chronicles of Mommyhood
    Written by an African American mom from Pennsylvania who loves to share stories and resources with other African American families who are seeking to adopt. You can read about their adoption adventure in their first blog: http://cleandsylsjourney.blogspot.com/.
  • Crowned with Laurel
    By Esther, who has experienced two failed adoptions from Russia and is now embarking on adopting from a different country.
  • Do They Have Salsa in China?
    Gotta love the title of this blog! You can probably figure out what it's about.
  • Embracing the Journey to my Daughter and Beyond
    By Billie, who's recording her feelings about adopting her daughter from Taiwan as a gift to her daughter.
  • Families.com Adoption Blog
    A group blog written by an adult adopted person and several adoptive parents.
  • Fat Girl's Guide to Triathalons
    Candid comments about the home study process from a mom who's waiting to adopt.
  • Finding Sweetness
    By Kristin, who's waiting to adopt a baby from Vietnam.
  • Foster Care & Adoption Author's Site
    Okay, it's not a blog; it's Jayne Schooler's author website. Jayne is well-known for supporting, educating and encouraging families formed by birth, adoption or foster care.
  • From Hope to Reality
    The blog of Carolina Hope Christian Adoption Agency. Lots of in depth discussions and interviews about adoption issues.
  • Hand Picked
    Written by a couple who is waiting to adopt a son from Korea.
  • Heartprints
    Sharon Brani, an adoption coach and counselor, offers encouragement and inspiration for adoptive parents.
  • Heidi's Hotline
    Reflections about adoption and about writing from Heidi Saxton, an adoptive mom of two former foster children and editor of a magazine for Catholic "Women of Grace," www.womenofgrace.com.
  • His Heart
    By Erin, a Christian woman who has experienced infertility for 9 of her 11 years of marriage, and is moving towards adoption.
  • His Heart for Orphans
    This ministry of Healing Place Church in Baton Rouge, LA, supports families during their pre-adoption journey.
  • Hydrangeas are pretty
    Pre-adoptive mom Shelli writes this blog about waiting to adopt domestically.
  • International Adoption Stories
    An adoption directory featuring international adoption information and agency advice from Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Guatemala, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam, Haiti, Mexico, Ethiopia and other counties. In addition to stories, the site includes information on adoption costs and financing, medical and health advice, parenting tips and news.
  • It's A Girl!
    The Seyler family writes about raising their special needs daughter adopted from Ukraine.
  • Just Enjoy Him: Ramblings of a Mid-Life Mom
    By Judy, a 45-year-old mom of a 5-year-old son born in Vietnam.
  • Lifemothers.com
    Although it's not a blog, this Web site for birth mothers is excellent. With the belief that a birthmother's role does not end at 'birth,' but continues for life, Lifemothers strives to be a safe haven for all Lifemoms, regardless of age or contact with child.
  • Links to Adoption Sites
    Links to adoption agencies, books, blogs, and personal sites.
  • Martha's Voice on Adoption
    Adoption info and commentary from Martha Osborne, editor of RainbowKids.com International Adoption E-Zine.
  • Mommy Monsters
    Heidi Saxton, columnist for CatholicMom.com, writes smart, refreshing posts about adoptive parenthood (among other things).
  • My Adoption Links
    A self-described "obsessive person collecting adoption links." Organized alphabetically.
  • Neither Here Nor There
    Written by The Passionate Peach, a 30-something reluctant adoptee who has been reunited with her birth family for over two decades.
  • Our Adoption Journey
    By Todd and Kimberly Phillips, who are waiting to adopt a special needs child from China.
  • Our Adoption Journey
    By a couple who is adopting from foster care.
  • Pamela Kruger
    A blog about motherhood, marriage, work, and life in suburbia by a mom who adopted from Kazakhstan.
  • Paradise Preoccupied
    Written by adoption advocate Sandra Hanks Benoiton, this blog is a cool combo of news tidbits and edgy commentary.
  • RainbowKids Blog Community
    Blogs from families who have adopted or are adopting internationally.
  • Red Lights
    Written by Monica, a single mom from Alberta, Canada who adopted a son with Down syndrome. Gorgeous design; interesting read -- don't miss this blog!
  • Red Thread Dads
    Jack Bailey, a dad-to-be who created his blog for to-be-dads, dads who have already adopted, and even those who are contemplating the idea of Chinese adoption. Not updated often, but then, he's probably busy getting ready to bring his daughter home.
  • Research-China.Org
    To educate adoptive parents about Chinese culture, China adoptions and aspects of a child's early life in China.
  • Ryan J Hale
    Ryan is a foster dad who reflects on his upcoming adoption from China. His entries are from a Christian worldview.
  • Stuart & Liz's Adoption Blog
    The highs and lows of one couple's journey through the UK adoption process.
  • The Adoption Choice
    A forum to help pregnant women and teens considering adoption.
  • The Chambers' Adoption Process
    By Brit and Heath, who are waiting to adopt domestically (U.S.)
  • The Chronicles of Munchkinland
    By Jenna, a first/birth mom who is sorting throughthe emotions of placing her firstborn for adoption.
  • The Life of a Texas Mom
    Gwen is a Christian adoptive mom of three who regularly shares bits of her adoption story.
  • The Seventh Diamond
    Kimberley Girvin and her husband prepare for the arrival of their family's seventh member, a daughter from China.
  • Third Mom
    A thoughtful, well-written blog by Margie Perscheid, mom of two Korean teens, wife of 30+ years, and Korean adoption activist.
  • Thirteenth Tribe
    A blind single woman waits to adopt an 18-year-old from foster care.
  • This Woman's Work
    Dawn Friedman, an associate editor at epregnancy magazine, writes this blog about writing, mothering, and writing about mothering. Includes reflections on adoption.
  • Through My Daughter's Eyes
    Nichole educates people about the realities of adopting a child with special needs (her daughter is blind).
  • Ukraine Adoption Journal
    Steven Harper Pizik chronicles his family's journal to adopt two boys from Ukraine.
  • Viva La Colombia
    Chronicles a family's second adoption from Colombia.
  • Writer's Wanderings
    Freelance writer, Karen Robbins, is also an adoptive mom. Her blog contains "musings along life's journey."