2022
August
16
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 16, 2022
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April Austin
Weekly Deputy Editor, Books Editor

Could a fable about a rabbit be an antidote to despair? After reading “Alice’s Farm: A Rabbit’s Tale” by Maryrose Wood, I would answer an emphatic yes. This delightful book, aimed at 8- to 12-year olds, has captured adult readers as well. Alice, an eastern cottontail rabbit, rallies the animals in the forest – even those who would prefer to eat her – to save a family farm from developers. 

“Writing children’s literature is a sneaky side door to writing stories that are animated by hope,” Ms. Wood says in an interview. “I want to offer tales that have the possibility of change; that things actually can get better. And the truth is that many adults appreciate those kinds of stories too.” 

The book is gentle, honest, and poignant. It’s also a primer on how to improve one’s own patch of ground without falling prey to frustration or helplessness. Ms. Wood knows that people feel overwhelmed by what’s happening in the world. The drumbeat of news “makes us think that we are in a race to the bottom, we are facing doom on multiple fronts,” she says. “That’s a tough one, because when we are overwhelmed, it’s paralyzing. And I don’t think paralysis is a useful strategy.”

Alice may harbor doubts about her own effectiveness, but she accepts the challenge of convincing the animals – even the fox and weasel – to work together despite their differences. Most important, Alice finds the single thing all the animals can agree on: They don’t want to lose their home. 

As a model of floppy-eared patience, Alice wriggles her way into your heart. “Isn’t it so often an unlikely hero, some person who steps forward and is willing to speak or to be vulnerable – that we almost instantly respond to them?” Ms. Wood asks. “We respond to true acts of heroism. It’s not feats of strength.”

She continues, “Alice totally embraces her vulnerability. And if you embrace vulnerability with that degree of honesty, I think you get two things out of it. You get compassion, right? But in addition to compassion, I think the other thing it gives you is a kind of rock-solid bravery.”


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President Joe Biden hands the pen he used to sign the Democrats' landmark climate change and health care bill to Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Aug. 16, 2022.
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Legislative text of the Inflation Reduction Act (H.R. 5376), Senate Democrats summaries, and analyses by the Congressional Budget Office, Joint Committee on Taxation, and Tax Foundation

Andre Penner/AP/File
Descendants of U.S. Southerners wearing Confederate-era uniforms pose at a party celebrating the 150th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War in Santa Bárbara d'Oeste, Brazil, on April 26, 2015. For many here and in neighboring Americana, Confederate ancestry, a point of pride, is celebrated at the annual Festa Confederada, or Confederate Festival.

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Nayyab Ali
Nayyab Ali receiving the GALAS International Activist Award in Dublin. Ms. Ali’s work on the front line of transgender advocacy in Pakistan has made her a target of violent crime, but she says trans people like herself "cannot afford to be intimidated."

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A Kenyan woman walks past a mural in Nairobi calling for peace during the Aug. 9 presidential election.

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A message of love

Frank Augstein/AP
A woman with an umbrella and the Elizabeth Tower, which houses the bell known as Big Ben, are reflected in a puddle in London on Aug. 16. The first rain has arrived in London after a long very dry period.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow for a story about how families in Gaza prepare for potential emergencies, such as rocket attacks, when there are few safe places left to go. 

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