Winner's Choice Giveaway Kelly Bennett Winner's Choice Giveaway Kelly Bennett

WINNER of the "WINNER-WINNER CHICKEN DINNER" QUARTERLY GIVEAWAY IS . . .

THE GRAND PRIZE WINNER of the Quarterly Giveaway is . . . Fanfare please!

fanfare.jpg

Wait! Before we announce the winner, huge thanks and fishbowl love to all of you who entered this quarter’s Winner’s Choice Giveaway by subscribing to my blog, “Kelly’s Fishbowl,” sending letters & drawing to Norman the Goldfish’s advice column “Ask Norman,” or sharing snapshots of “Activitieson social media.

The good news is you made our fishy hearts flutter with joy. The better news is, there weren’t as many entries as there could have been—did you forget you could enter more than one time each quarter?—so all of you who did enter have a 1-30 chance of winning. Talk about great odds!

In the interest of fairness, we wanted choosing the winner to be completely random random drawing. And in the interest of transparency, we recorded the event. As we know you’re on the edge of your seat, anxiously waiting to find out if you are IT!

Watch the Winner Selection YouTube Video! (Not showing up on your device? Click HERE!

And the winner is: Marina V

Lucky Marina will win dinner with a chicken or her choice of any one of these fabulous prizes:

Quarterly Give-Away Prize List 2021.JPG

To all of you, There’s still next time! Enter now, enter often, even better—have your kids, students, second-cousin on your goldfish’s side enter. There is no limit to how many times you enter—or WIN the Quarterly Winner-Choice Giveaway!

Read More
Inspiration Station Kelly Bennett Inspiration Station Kelly Bennett

What Inspires Me? Digging Through the LOC Stacks

This is a page from the 1893 H.H. Kiffe Catalogue. How did I find it? Joanna Colclough, a Librarian Extraordinaire/Archival Archeologist at the Library of Congress dug it up!

That’s what inspires me: The Library of Congress!

The Library of Congress (LOC) is “the research library that officially serves the United States Congress and is the de facto national library of the United States. It is the oldest federal cultural institution in the country.” -wikipedia

What’s in the Library of Congress?

Copies of every publication in the English language that is deemed significant. Specifically:

via Wikipedia: “The Library of Congress states that its collection fills about 838 miles (1,349 km) of bookshelves and holds more than 167 million items with over 39 million books and other print materials.[5] A 2000 study by information scientists Peter Lyman and Hal Varian suggested that the amount of uncompressed textual data represented by the 26 million books then in the collection was 10 terabytes.[77

What’s especially inspiring is that the Library of Congress is OUR LIBRARY!

Each of us—me and you—can access the library. We can visit it in person—it is an actual library located in Washington D.C. and we are welcome to visit it, browse the collections, see the books and some memorabilia and collection items ourselves.

But, what’s easier is that much of the Library of Congress holdings—especially photographs—is on line! All we have to do is input what you’re looking for in the search box, click and look!

And if, like me, you need lots of extra help finding what you’re looking for, the Library of Congress staff is super helpful.

See for yourself! Click to Visit the Library of Congress!

See you at our library!

I’ve been digging—yep! Elbow deep, digging, but not “in the dirt.” I’ve been digging through the Library of Congress archives in search of baseball minutiae for my forthcoming picture book The House That Ruth Built (Familius 2023). It’s about the opening day game in the original Yankee Stadium and Babe Ruth’s historic first homer in the stadium, but so much more. It’s about the origin of the game, and history—so much history—100 plus plus plus year-old history of the sport and the world as it was back then. For instance, how do you think that April 18th, 1923 game was broadcast?

It wasn’t.

That’s right. No one saw that historic game on TV because there was no TV back then.

No one sat with their ears glued to some huge box radio either, because while radio had been invented—credited to Guglielmo Marconithe in 1894, and the first professional baseball game had been broadcast on the Radio—Aug 5, 1921, Pirates vs Phillies at Forbes Field in Pittsburg— the NY Yankees did not allow their games to be broadcast until the 1923 World Series.

The only people to enjoy that first baseball game played in Yankee Stadium in real time were folks at the actual game. The rest of the world experienced second-hand from sports reporters who shared the play-by-play with fans via telegraph which was then transcribed and printed in newspapers. And where, 100 years and more later, does one find those newspapers?

Kids: Try some Baseball Math!

These pages from the 1893 H.H. Kiffe Catalogue list baseball stuff for sale. If $1 in 1893 is equal in purchasing power to about $32.92 in 2022, how much would one of these baseball hats cost today?


Read More
7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #241-Out of the Mouth of Babe

Batter UP! Today, April 27th is National Babe Ruth Day! A day set aside to honor and remember Babe Ruth, arguably the most famous baseball player of all time, in his 22-season MLB career (1914-1935, with the Red Sox, Yankees, and Braves), Babe Ruth held 56 records for the Yankees, some of which still stand today.

The first Babe Ruth Day was April 27th, 1947, when almost 60,000 fans crowded into Yankee Stadium to fete Babe Ruth. To read more about Babe Ruth and view a clip of his speech that day, click over to BabeRuthCentral, the website maintained by his family, that celebrates all things Babe!

Poetry Challenge #241

Out of the Mouth of Babe

Ninety-nine years ago, prior to the opening day game in the brand spanking new Yankee Stadium, the biggest, grandest, first-ever to be called a baseball stadium, Babe Ruth told reporters:

“I’d give a year of my life if I could hit a home run on opening day of this great new park.” 

And he did! *

Today’s challenge is to write a poem about something you (or some imaginary you) would give anything to do.

Be sure to include what that “anything” is and be specific about exactly what it is you want that badly to do.

After all, if Babe could do it, why can’t you?

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it!

And get ready! The House That Ruth Built, by Kelly Bennett, with illustrations by Susanna Covelli, commemorating the 100th Anniversary of Opening Day at the original Yankee Stadium and Babe Ruth’s first home run in the legendary ballpark, is forthcoming from Familius, Spring 2023!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 2000+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .


Read More