Top Five Wednesday/ National Volunteer Month

As much as I’m stressed, knowing I need to do three posts by the end of the day or I won’t have posts for this week, but I’m still enjoying it, which is what matters. Last January, I posted in the Top Five Wednesday that I’m willing to make prompts, but I never heard back from the previous host, and I didn’t want to overstep. I believe the host for the time being is Stephanie at Books Less Travelled.

April 30th – It’s also National Volunteer Month.
So, for today’s prompt, tell us about some bookish jobs you would love to volunteer for for the day! Want to work as a librarian, at a bookshop, or in a bookish café? Or would you rather volunteer with your favourite bookish character, doing whatever it is they do? Tell us about what they do, and why you’d enjoy volunteering with them for the day.

I’m picking different books for different reasons in my head; it makes sense, let’s see if it makes sense on paper. So, back to my original idea: books about animal rescues/shelters. I think they are the best places to volunteer since animals give the kind of love like no other.

Goodreads Blurb:

Veterinarian and animal lover Kara Ingalls needs a Christmas miracle. Opening the Meow and Furrever Cat Café to find loving homes for adorable, adoptable cats was a dream come true—but with more cats than customers, it’s quickly turning into a nightmare. If Kara can’t figure out some way to get the café out of the red, it won’t last past the holidays.

Marketing guru Ben Reese may be annoyingly smart and frustratingly bossy, but when he hatches a plan to put the café in the “green” by Christmas, Kara realizes that she’d be a fool to turn down his help. And so what if he turns out to be an excellent problem solver and nerdy-hot—he can’t even handle fostering one little kitten. She needs to keep their relationship professional and focus on saving the cafe.

But if Ben and Kara can set aside their differences—and find homes for all the cats by Christmas—they might discover that, by risking their hearts, they’ll have their own purr-fect holiday . . . together.

Goodreads Blurb:

In the spring of 2011, Jon Katz received a phone call that would challenge every idea he ever had about mercy and compassion. An animal control officer had found a neglected donkey on a farm in upstate New York, and she hoped that Jon and his wife, Maria, would be willing to adopt him. Jon wasn’t planning to add another animal to his home on Bedlam Farm, certainly not a very sick donkey. But the moment he saw the wrenching sight of Simon, he felt a powerful connection. Simon touched something very deep inside of him. Jon and Maria decided to take him in.

Simon’s recovery was far from easy. Weak and malnourished, he needed near constant care, but Jon was determined to help him heal. As Simon’s health improved, Jon would feed him by hand, read to him, take him on walks, even confide in him like an old and trusted friend. Then, miraculously, as if in reciprocation, Simon began to reveal to Jon the true meaning of compassion, the ways in which it can transform our lives and inspire us to take great risks.

This radically different perspective on kindness and empathy led Jon to a troubled border collie from Ireland in need of a home, a blind pony who had lived outside in a pasture for fifteen years, and a new farm for him and Maria. In the great tradition of heroes—from Don Quixote to Shrek—who faced the world in the company of their donkeys, Jon came to understand compassion and mercy in a new light, learning to open up “not just to Simon, not just to animals, but to the human experience. To love, to risk, to friendship.”

Goodreads Blurb:

She needs a fresh start. He’s got scars that haven’t healed. With the help of some rescue dogs, they’ll discover that everyone deserves a chance at happiness.

After a year of heartbreak and loss, the only thing keeping Constance afloat is the dog rescue she works at with her sister, Sunny. Desperate for a change, Constance impulsively joins a new gym, even though it seems impossibly hard, and despite the gym’s prickly owner.

Rhett Santos keeps his gym as a refuge for his former-military brothers and to sweat out his own issues. He’s ready to let the funny redhead join, but unprepared for the way she wiggles past his hard-won defenses.

When their dog rescue is threatened, the sisters fight to protect it. And they need all the help they can get. As Rhett and Constance slowly open up to each other, they’ll find that no one is past rescuing; what they need is the right person—or dog—to save them.

Goodreads Blurb:

An inspiring story that shows how dogs can be rescued, and can rescue in return.

With her critically acclaimed, bestselling first book, Scent of the Missing , Susannah Charleson was widely praised for her unique insight into the kinship between humans and dogs, as revealed through her work in canine search and rescue alongside her partner, golden retriever Puzzle.

Now, in The Possibility Dogs , Charleson journeys into the world of psychiatric service, where dogs aid humans with disabilities that may be unseen but are no less felt. This work had a profound effect on Charleson, perhaps because, for her, this journey began as a personal Charleson herself struggled with posttraumatic stress disorder for months after a particularly grisly search. Collaboration with her search dog partner made the surprising difference to her own healing. Inspired by that experience, Charleson learns to identify abandoned dogs with service potential, often plucking them from shelters at the last minute, and to train them for work beside hurting partners, to whom these second-chance dogs bring intelligence, comfort, and hope.
Along the way she comes to see canine potential everywhere, often where she least expects it – from Merlin the chocolate lab puppy with the broken tail once cast away in a garbage bag, who now stabilizes his partner’s panic attacks; to Ollie, the blind and deaf terrier, rescued moments before it was too late, who now soothes anxious children; to Jake Piper, the starving pit bull terrier mix with the wayward ears who is transformed into a working service dog and, who, for Charleson, goes from abandoned to irreplaceable.

Goodreads Blurb:

Laurie Zaleski never aspired to run an animal rescue; that was her mother Annie’s dream. But from girlhood, Laurie was determined to make the dream come true. Thirty years later as a successful businesswoman, she did it, buying a 15-acre farm deep in the Pinelands of South Jersey. She was planning to relocate Annie and her caravan of ragtag rescues—horses and goats, dogs and cats, chickens and pigs—when Annie died, just two weeks before moving day. In her heartbreak, Laurie resolved to make her mother’s dream her own. In 2001, she established the Funny Farm Animal Rescue outside Mays Landing, New Jersey. Today, she carries on Annie’s mission to save abused and neglected animals.

Which ones would you pick up?

Alex

5 thoughts on “Top Five Wednesday/ National Volunteer Month

  1. Hi Alex. Glad you enjoyed today’s prompt. I love your answers, and that you chose animal shelter/rescue related jobs. Your choices and reasons are great, and I agree that would be a wonderful job to get to experience for a day (or longer!).

    I also can’t speak for the original Top 5 Wednesday host, as I haven’t heard from them or seen any sign of them responding to the Goodreads group about posts or taking a break. But if you wanted to come up with May’s prompt ideas, I’m fine with letting others take over or take turns.

    I do agree on not wanting to over-step too. I tried to find an update or message from the original GR member who had been posting the prompts, but haven’t found anything since they posted in December. The regular poster was Charlie, but he hasn’t shared any since December, which was the only reason I threw a few prompt idea out in hopes of keeping the group active since there are still a few of us who were asking and wondering.

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    1. I also want to keep the group active and hope more people will join. Do you have Storygraph because I think more people would join? The idea I had was to combine with national theme days from that month. In May, I was going to do poetry month, but we can still brainstorm some prompt ideas if you want

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