Monday, June 14, 2010

An Evening in Old Hawaii honors Wai-nani, High Chiefess of Hawaii




Wai-nani, High Chiefess of Hawaii is to be an honored guest at the 7th annual Luau of Na Hula O Wahine.

You are invited to enjoy authentic hula and song along with a delicious Hawaiian meal.



The stories of creation, of great loves, and honored chiefs are handed down in kahiko, the art of hula done in time honored ways. Kumu, Deborah Doody, embodies the spirit of old Hawaii. She sings the chants with a powerful voice and keeps the drum beat solid for young dancers who carry on the sacred dance of the Hawaiians designed to pull mana, or spiritual power, from the heavens. Modern adaptations of the hula will also be performed.

Saturday, June 26, 2010 at Covenant Presbyterian Church 6323 W 80th St (corner of 80th and Sepulveda ) 1pm - 4pm. Doors open at 12pm. Suggested donation $12.00 children under 8 are free. Price includes a buffet lunch and show, door prizes, and a raffle will be held for a flat screen color TV. Tickets may be purchased in advance or at the door.

For more information contact Mary Tricerri at marytrice(@)yahoo dot com. Join us for an afternoon of food, Hula, and fun and great Aloha

Friday, June 11, 2010

One Writer’s Journey interviews Linda Ballou, author of Wai-nani and Lost Angel Walkabout



Linda’s novels Wai-nani, High Chiefess of Hawaii, Her Epic Journey and Lost Angel Walkabout stay with you long after you finish reading them. Linda talks about the heroine in Wai-nani and how she came up with the idea for the book and the research behind it.

Writing Wai-nani was by far the most difficult thing I have ever done, but completing her epic journey remains my proudest achievement.

Read more of Linda’s interview at One Writer’s Journey.

Order your copy of these amazing books at http://www.lindaballouauthor.com/ . There is an About Linda page. On Wai-nani’s media page there are radio interviews, a first chapter and reviews. If you purchase the books on her site you will enjoy free shipping. There are numerous reviews on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and all major online distribution sites. Wai-nani is also on Amazon’s Kindle Reader and will soon be available on the IPAD.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Praise for Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler's Tales

Book Review by Bonnie Neely, Editor at Real Travel Adventures

Lost Angel Walkabout by Linda Ballou is one of the most beautifully written travel books I have ever read. Linda tells her personal experiences of her many travels in different continents and environs. She is well-known as a top adventure travel writer, and her tales of her intrepid soul's search for beauty in the wilds and her ability to rouse physically to any demands of the setting will thrill the reader. She increased my desire to become more physically fit so that I could do some of the things she is daring and fit enough to do. She grew up in Alaska and has always loved horses. Her travel tales about returning to that wonderful environ and her experiences in many different places which involved riding horses are so beautifully inspiring. Linda also leads walkabouts in Los Angeles. I highly recommend her book as a treasure you will want to read, and then to re-read aloud to anyone who might want to listen. Her use of words is very commanding and her descriptions so vivid you will feel you have traveled alongside her and seen all the beauty of the surroundings which she so deeply appreciates. This is a MUST READ

Review by Bonnie Neely, Editor at Real Travel Adventures

Purchase copies of this book at Linda Ballou

View the Media Page for this book Lost Angel Walkabout

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Authors Story "Irish Mist" included in anthology of Why We Ride!

I am proud that my short story "Irish Mist" is included in this anthology of Why We Ride with a forward by Jane Smiley. Why We Ride is available at Amazon

About the Book:

Women and their horses—a symbiotic relationship based on trust, camaraderie, friendship, and love. Why we Ride presents the stories of 27 women who ride, sharing their emotions about and accounts of the most important animals in their lives-horses!

About Linda Ballou:

Linda is travel writer and the author of Wai-nani, High Chiefess of Hawaii, Her Epic Journey and Lost Angel Walkabout. You can find Linda and order her books here

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Hot Tip from the Spirit Well


If you want to lose the crowds on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon try the
unmarked trail to Shoshone Point. An easy one-mile march through a cooling pine forest takes you to steps that lead to a pinnicle that juts out over the canyon.
Here you can watch cloud play admire Vishnu with the sound of nothing but wind voices and the rush of birds in flight.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Happy Earth Day Mom


Photo by Steve Agrella
“When one tugs at a single thing in nature, one finds it attached to the rest of the world.”
John Muir



On this earth day let us give thanks to our over-burdened mother. Let us breathe deeply of the perfume of her blossoms and allow our eyes to be bathed in her unending beauty. Let us refresh and restore our spirits by soaking in the splendor of vast panoramas and marveling at the infinite variety of her creations. Let our muscles warmed by the sun be cooled with a scintillating breeze after the exertion of a walk on her shores, or a climb to her mountain tops. Let our gaze go the velvet skies sparkling with pricks of light ruled by a glowing orb. Let us give thanks for the abundance rained down upon us by our good, generous and restorative mother. Let us think today about how we might ease her cares, protect her from industrial scars and gashes and gluttonous appetites for more. And let us say a prayer of thanks to our mother and think of ways that we might lift the heavy load we have placed upon her shoulders bending beneath the weight of our demands.

In the name of the Great Mother Earth
www.lindaballouauthor.com

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

#2 of my list of things you must do before you can't!


Hike up Soldiers Pass Trail at sunrise or sunset to the top of Brim’s Mesa. Once aloft you will see what Sedona, Arizona is all about. Sandstone hoodoos, buttes, mesas and cathedral like buttresses float on a purple horizon. Stay here long enough and you might find yourself thanking the Great Spirit for these wonderfully imaginative creations.
Heading for the spirit well to drink deeply again next week!

Monday, April 5, 2010

Pound of Prevention

Gutsy Women: Travel Tips and Wisdom for the Road (Travelers' Tales) Gutsy Women: Travel Tips and Wisdom for the Road by Marybeth Bond


My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is an indispensable handbook full of information that can save you time, trouble and maybe even your life. Women make up the largest segment of the traveling population and many of them are choosing to travel alone. When I was a student for a summer session in England I walked the streets of London cloaked in a red riding hood cape that covered me from head to toe. This might seem a bit over the top, but I truly did not want to be raped, mugged or noticed by would be Romeos. Marybeth Bond doesn’t suggest you go to these lengths but does give practical nuts and bolts tips on how to protect yourself on the road. Not just from predators, but from you own carelessness that can land you into a very uncomfortable place. She says this book is about more than travel. “It is about risk-taking, living, feeling, and learning, and loving.” In the “Travelers Tales” tradition, this little book is well worth the price of admission.
www.lindaballouauthor.com
Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler’s Tales


View all my reviews >>

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Dare to care about our planet



Review: The Clouded Leopard-A Book of Travels by Wade Davis

It is rare that a scientific-minded individual can write with the engaging fluidity of creative non-fiction author, but Wade Davis strides both worlds effortlessly. It never occurred to me that an ethnobotany could be so riveting. Wade Davis takes you to his homeland Canada, to the heights of Peru and the depths of the Amazon basin, to Haiti and Tibet in pursuit of the secrets of plants and how mankind has used them over the centuries. The accounts in this book of travels reveal mysterious practices of the shamans in Amazon, the horrid outcome of human intervention in nature’s plan, and the importance of our connection to the land. You will learn, you will smile and you will wonder why this author has not received more popular acclaim. The message is clear. We are living in an ecological disaster. It is our responsibility to understand and reclaim the natural order of things, but the medium is one of pure entertainment. A must read if you dare to care about our planet.
www.lindaballouauthor.com
Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler’s Tales