Hot Tomato Haiku Contest Winners 2010

The Fools and I had a great time at the Tomato Art Fest this weekend. We sold a whole bunch’a used books from our booth, as well as hundreds of cold bottles of water. But the highlight of the day was announcing the 2010 Hot Tomato Haiku Contest winners and handing out gift certificates and, yes, an iPad!

With over 500 entries from 140 poets, the judges had a very difficult task this year. But they pushed through and crowned the these winners in the following categories:

Basho’s Beefsteak:

out in the garden
red globes like lights on a vine –
Christmas in July

Tiffany Jyang
Alpharetta, GA

Plum Humorous:

Seed savers rejoice
The heirlooms get all the girls
Monsanto be damned

Sarah Gann
Nashville, TN

Formal Champion:

tomatoes plumping
round stakes, midsummer steaks, round
plumping tomatoes

Temple Cone
Annapolis, MD

Stinky Tomato:

Ms. Tomato was
puréed as the driven snow
until she got juiced.

Peggy Landsman
Pompano Beach, FL

Fried Green Tomato:

King of tomatoes!
Beefsteak, wear your crown of leaves.
Mustard is your gold.

Nell Harris
Nashville, TN

Melissa Duke’s Best In Show:

The livin’, easy –
you’re the plump juicy Romas
in my Caprese.

Dana Delworth
Nashville, TN

HUMANKIND Thrift is Ready to Serve

[We sent intrepid explorer Eileen to visit our friends at East Nashville's newest thrift store, HUMANKIND. Here's her report.]

As of last week, all you funky, fashionable Nashvillians, there is a new thrift shop in town. Owned and operated by Ryan and Christina Rado, HUMANKIND Thrift had a supremely successful launch last Wednesday. Located on Gallatin Pike, not far from 5 Points, HUMANKIND is the kind of shop that’s worth the drive if you’re outside of East Nashville and worth stopping in several times a week if you’re in the area. It’s the kind of place you walk in and immediately know you’re going to find great, perfectly one-of-a-kind items that won’t break the fragile piggy bank.

Preparing the shop for its grand opening.

Preparing the shop for its grand opening.

Though it is a small store, HUMANKIND houses an extensive array of vintage and modern apparel, all marvelously trendy and in excellent condition. Tastefully arranged on interspersed display tables and hanging racks, HUMANKIND’s selection of attire is easy and fun to peruse. Say goodbye to the super-thrift store days of prying apart hangers on overstuffed racks in hopes of finding a gem of an item lost in between.

Everything on the racks at HUMANKIND is not only easily accessible but also sports a personality all its own.  In all of 3 minutes I happened across a light-weight beautiful blue, white, and brown flowing floral skirt ideal for summer, a 60’s reminiscent polka-dot top with a stylish loose tie at the neck, and a multi-colored, textured scarf that would be a perfect accent worn as a belt or around the neck. Furthermore, many of the items can be easily dressed up or down, providing the versatility essential to the college student or young professional’s wardrobe.

The Rados

The Rados

Not only this, but the racks are full of brand name clothing for a fraction of brand name price. A chic vertical pink and white striped, cap-sleeved women’s vest was all of $4.50, where it originally must have cost at least $30. Men’s attire is equally fashionable and well priced. A large shelf of trendy jeans in various washes stands against one wall, framed by racks of sturdy T-shirts and classic button-ups.

And as if it couldn’t get any better, HUMANKIND Thrift even offers in-store alterations in case the otherwise flawless item you’ve found needs a little letting-out, bringing-in, or hemming-up.  In short, Humankind is chock-full of wardrobe must-haves for men and women, and not an item in the store is over $20. Not even the pair of vintage white roller skates.

Mission

Even more impressive than HUMANKIND’s selection of attire, however, is its mission. About a year ago, Ryan and Christina Rado began looking for a way to give back to their community and settled on the idea of a thrift shop. HUMANKIND is an entirely non-profit organization, with all the proceeds going toward providing clothing for the children of refugee families in Nashville.

Somali refugees with new clothes.

Somali refugees with new clothes.

Beginning in 2007, the Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools enacted a Standard School Attire dress code for the city schools. Although the specific dress code may vary slightly from school to school, the basic requirements are that students be attired in navy, black, or khaki bottoms (absolutely no jeans), and collared shirts in approved colors which must be fully buttoned and tucked in.

While this basic dress code may do well to better the learning environment as a whole, Christina Rado witnessed firsthand the difficulties such a code can cause for refugee families. As a former elementary school English Language Learners teacher, Christina saw what a struggle it can be for refugee families to settle into new jobs, homes, and schools on top of learning English and adapting to a completely new society. The last thing these families need to worry about is finding appropriate school attire for their children, especially given the intricacies of the SSA requirements.

From this desire to help stemmed the idea that HUMANKIND’s profits go toward providing dress-code appropriate clothing for refugee children. Here’s Ryan and Christina’s vision in their own words:

“We think that kids should go to school in clean, comfortable clothes.  We think that kids should have a choice of what to wear in the morning – something they feel good in, something that improves their level of confidence. We think that families who are new to America and trying to acclimate should not have to stress over finding the right school clothes in the approved colors and styles. HUMANKIND refers to the fact that we are all human – all part of the human race, all with the same basic needs, one of those needs being clothing.”

Just recently, HUMANKIND provided 20 children with full school wardrobes, all completely SSA acceptable, in preparation for their first week of school. The gratitude of the children and families was amazing, Christina said.

Let’s help continue the great mission that the Rados have begun through HUMANKIND. Visit the store at the corner of West Eastland and Gallatin Avenue right across Regions Bank and Aldi. Look for the HUMANKIND Banner on the second floor at #206. Stop in, buy yourself some great new clothes or donate gently used clothes you don’t need anymore. It’s an unbeatable opportunity to grab some great new duds and contribute to the Nashville community at the same time.

Hours:

  • Wednesdays: Noon – 5 pm
  • Thursdays: Noon – 5 pm
  • Fridays: Noon – 5 pm
  • Saturdays: 11 am – 4 pm

Location: 604 Gallatin Avenue #206

Updates:

Hot Tomato Haiku Contest Winners 2009

If you missed the presentation at the Tomato Art Fest this weekend (pictures coming soon), here are the winners of this year’s Hot Tomato Haiku Contest. It was an extraordinarily close race with over 400 entries, but the following haiku stood out among their categories. (Category descriptions are at our Haiku 2009 page.)

Congratulations to our winners and a very special thank-you to our judges–Bonnie Smith, Danielle Alexander, and David Curtis–all of Belmont’s English Dept. If you’d like to sign up to receive an email before next year’s contest, visit our Haiku 2010 page.

Basho’s Beefsteak Winner

by Julie Greenberg

Brandywine fever
finds me circling the garden,
hoping I missed one.

Plum Humorous Winner

by Amy E. Hall

Pastor Bruce Shetta
to marry Tobas Coe and
Miss Mary Nara

Stinky Tomato Winner

by John Cooper

Distant Tomato
You can run but you can’t hide
Time to play ketchup

Fried Green Winner

by Allie McGilberry, 9 years old

Orange, red and yellow,
Thou art a fruit I must eat.
I want to eat thee.

Melissa Duke’s Best in Show

by Gregory O’Loughlin

I trained vines for you
Cages could not hold your wild
Cherokee purple

Juicy Red Honorable Mention

by Libby Neutrino

Red moon over the silent hill
tonight I dream
of a Better Boy

Sneak Peek: Bookstore Beta

Remember that new warehouse space I mentioned in this post?

In that post (and in others) I hinted at a special, super-secret surprise. Well, loyal readers, here it is: BookFool.com is opening a used bookstore in our new space.

It’s called Bookstore Beta and it will probably be the ugliest bookstore in the Southeast. The whole project is a wild experiment in location, branding, and whether East Nashville will support a used bookstore. Hence the name Beta, which denotes an experimental product released to the public before it’s completely finished.

As you can see from this old newsletter (scroll down to Book Fool Looks to Retool), opening a bookstore has long been a dream for Kris. Bookstore Beta will be a space where we can experiment with that dream and see if it has legs. All for a few hundred bucks. We already have the space, the books, and the workers. Why not throw in a couch and some shelves and see what happens?

It ain't much, but it's home!

It ain't much, but it's home!

I put up a quick site using Yola over at BookstoreBeta.com. As you’ll see, we’ve decided to keep it Foolish and be totally honest about this store’s assets and limitations. The location isn’t great, so we’re guessing that only the adventurous will find us. We’re ok with that.

We’re also aware that Bookstore Beta will not represent a premium experience in book buying. We have free coffee brewing, but we have no formal coffee shop. The shelves will be either particle board or homemade. We may not even categorize our inventory!

A used bookstore that’s rough around the edges won’t appeal to everyone, but it appeals to us. Oh, did I mention our incredible prices? Because we have no regular employees, no janitorial staff, and no coffee shop, we don’t have to mark up our inventory to cover those expenses. So we got that goin’ for us, which is nice.

We’ll also buy your used books for a fair price, lend you most any book for a few weeks, and let you hang out all day on our garage sale couches. And for students, if we have a textbook in stock, you can borrow it for use in the store.

Bookstore Beta opens officially in August. More updates to come before then.

2009 Hot Tomato Haiku Contest

How is it possible I haven’t blogged about this yet? Too busy promoting it, I guess!

BookFool.com is now hosting the Hot Tomato Haiku Contest, a part of the burgeoning Tomato Art Fest in East Nashville. This is the second year of the contest, begun in 2008 by Melissa Duke Mooney, who passed away earlier this year. Her husband Neil says her original idea was to bind tomato-related haiku into a tomato-shaped book. When life got busy, however, the project morphed into a haiku contest, which drew hundreds of entries.

We’re thrilled to be sponsoring the contest in Melissa’s honor this year. It’s the perfect mix of Foolishness, literary aspiration, food obsession, and local pride. Oh, and did I mention the grand prize is an iPod Touch? Five category winners will receive gift certificates to local shops, and we’re considering a 6th category for haiku submitted during the festival.

Much more info is available at the Contest page here. This year’s deadline is July 31st. Enter today!

PSST!

Would you do me a huge favor and tell your people about this contest? Post it to Facebook, email it to friends, and/or print the flyer and hang a few up at your work. Anything you can do to get the word out would be most appreciated.

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