On the Island

Spotlight on Star in the news

It seems that everyone has been buzzing about Star Island in the past week. In addition to all of the positive remarks we’ve heard from our Shoaler community as copies of the Blue Book began to arrive in mailboxes across the globe, a handful of local newspapers have shared our excitement over the launch of the 2012 conference season.

Thursday’s Spotlight section of the Portsmouth Herald included information about the upcoming tramadol buy no prescription conference season, and if you didn’t snag a paper that day then you can still check out their coverage at SeacoastOnline.com. Over at SeacoastNH.com you can find even more information about upcoming conferences, including highlights of featured speakers and themes.

Conference registration has begun for this season. Some conferences offer discounts to those who register early, so don’t delay; browse the conferences and register today!

Conference Updates

Star Island Corp. announces its 2012 conference season

The Star Island Corp. is excited to announce the launch of its 2012 conference season with themes ranging from the Arab Spring to the secret lives of birds and turtles — among 40 events with speakers as diverse as best-selling authors to lighthouse historians.

Star Island welcomes such notable speakers as Al-Arabiya Washington Bureau Chief Hisham Melhem, best-selling author Anita Shreve, Director of Green Mountain College’s Farm and Food Project Philip Ackerman-Leist, Margaret Fuller biographer Megan Marshall, lighthouse historian Jeremy D’Entremont, and many other guests to this season’s calendar of events.
Read more…

Star Island Corporation

Star Island is all up in social media

If you’re reading this (yay!) then you’ve found one really great spot on the web to get Star Island news and updates. But remember, this isn’t the only spot to get your Star fix when browsing this big ol’ Internet thing.

You use Facebook, Twitter and Google+ — maybe one, maybe all three. So do we!

Cool things are happening over there, too. On our Facebook and Google+ pages, you’ll find conference speaker highlights, polls, updates and neat photos of dogs browsing the Blue Book. Be sure to Like us at facebook.com/StarIslandCorp and on Google+ for maximum newsfeed fun.

You can also get your dose of Star in 140 characters or less on Twitter at twitter.com/StarIslandCorp.

Follow, Like and Circle us on your network of choice. We love hearing from you!

But please, no poking. It’s _sooo_ 2007.

Events

Celebrate your love of Star Island

Join the Star Island community as we embark to officially express our love for our summer home during I Love Star Island 2012.

What do you love about Star Island? From sunsets to the grand march, from rowing to lime rickies, there is plenty for everyone to love about Star Island.

Last year, we asked you to share your Star Island pictures and memories. This year, we want you to say what you love about Star Island. Find out how we’re all showing our love this year at the I Love Star Island event page.

On the Island

And the top-selling books on Star Island in 2011 were…

The 2011 season was one of the best ever for the Star Island Book Store. And the books that Shoalers most chose were — surprise! — about Star Island.

Our top three sellers for 2011 included two books recently reprinted by the Isles of Shoals Association, and a book written by shoalers Donald Cann, Gayle Kadlik and John Galluzzo for the Images of America Series called The Isles of Shoals. The ISA-UU reprints are Moonlight Murder on Smuttynose and The Isles of Shoals in Lore and Legend, both by Lyman Rutledge.

The best-selling children’s book is a new book by Nancy Donovan called Oscar the Herring Gull, with great illustrations of the story of a Star Island gull by Susan Spellman. This book is fun for readers of any age.

The new Shops on Star website has these and other books about the Isles of Shoals, including a just-published reprint of a cookbook from the ’40s called The Isles of Shoals Cookbook, and One Woman’s Work: The Visual Art of Celia Laighton Thaxter.

For the first time, you can buy these books off-season by checking out the new Shops on Star website at www.shopsonstar.com.

Other best-sellers included books by conference speakers, such as The Laws of Simplicity and Redesigning propecia online la Leadership by John Maeda (All Star II), American Grace by Robert Putnam, (Life on a Star I), and The Fabric of Friendship by Joy Carol (Conference of the Laity).

And high on the list of summer favorites:
Unlikely Friendships: 47 remarkable stories from the Animal Kingdom, by Jennifer Holland
Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom, by John O’Donohue
Sabbath: Finding Rest, Renewal, and Delight in our Busy Lives, by Wayne Miller
A Dog’s Purpose, by W. Bruce Cameron
Soul of Rumi, edited by Coleman Barks
Listening Below the Noise: The Transformative Power of Silence, by Annie D. LeClaire
Eating Animals, by Jonathan Safran
Cutting For Stone, by Abraham Verghese
Food Matters: A Guide to Conscious Eating, by Mark Bittman
The Help, by Kathryn Stockett
Animal Vegetable Miracle: A Year of Food Life, by Barbara Kingsolver
This is Your Brain on Music, by Daniel Levitin

The many people who came into the Star Island Book Store over the summer made eclectic choices from our selection, and most often their choices included a book about the Isles of Shoals — a book to carry the magic home.

Thanks to all who contribute to Star Island through purchasing books at the Star Island Book Store and online at shopsonstar.com.

— Linda Leehman, Manager
Star Island Book Store

On the Island

First seasonal application period comes to an end

Thanks to all who have expressed interest in working on Star Island this summer! Our first application period has now ended; however, there will be another opportunity during the summer.

Multiple positions will be available with employment periods starting mid-August through September 16th. You could work with us for two weeks or for several.

The application will be posted by July 4th and candidate selection begins August 3rd. Please consider applying.

Uncategorized

Pelican application deadline extended

This just in! Pelican application deadline extended (slightly) to 9 a.m. Monday, January 23.

Working on Star Island can be extremely rewarding. Indeed, many lives have been positively influenced, and careers determined, by spending a summer working on Star Island. But being a Pelican is more than just getting a job on Star Island – it is about joining a community of interesting, talented, and hard-working individuals.

Apply today!

On the Island

Conference listing for 2012 now available

We certainly hope that you had an amazing time on Star Island in 2011 and hope to see you back for 2012. To help with your planning, we are proud to announce that our 2012 conference listings are now available online. There are some really interesting speakers and themes this year too, so be sure to poke around and see what strikes you.

Do you know anyone who might be interested in attending a conference on Star Island for the first time? Remember to fill out a 10/10 Bring a Friend form to get 10% off both of your bills — and for each new person you bring, that’s an additional 10% off your bill.

You will come back!

On the Island

2012 Blue Book is coming soon

The 2012 conference book is officially off to the printer. Thank you all so much for your photo contributions and a big thanks to the Hathaway family for submitting what became the cover photo.

Keep an eye on your mailbox in the coming weeks!

Uncategorized

Thank you to our 2011 Pelicans

To the 2011 Star Island Pelican Community:

I have to share with you how strange it was to shut down the last generator and walk down to the boat on that cold November afternoon when the season was finally over. Alex took over on November 4. She reports daily owl sightings, Canada geese returning to the front lawn, a couple of generator problems, and a rat population that really does seem to be a little lower than last year.

You can all relate to how odd it felt for me to be back home after such a long spell on the Island. The first few weeks back in America were consumed by our close call with reality television, which has now been put off until maybe next year. We brought six enthusiastic Hollywood producers out there right after Thanksgiving, but the network decided it was too late in the season to put it all together. The income would have been important in these tight budget times, but I have to admit to being somewhat relieved.

I went to a great alternative energy conference at the Island Institute in November where I met island managers from all up and down the Maine Coast. I think we’re starting to get some momentum back into our solar power plan, too.

I’ve already gotten some skiing in, hauled the boat into the shed for the winter, organized all the files that were piling up around my desk, started planning for next season, and stacked most of my firewood. And now it’s almost Christmas.

So, on the day after the Solstice and my last work day of the year, I have a chance to reflect on the whirlwind that started last April, and I want to share some of my thoughts with you who made it so interesting and rewarding.

This was an incredible, enriching year for me, full of growth and challenge, and I want to thank all of you who were a part of making my first season at Star so enjoyable and valuable. You guys rallied around to help me right from the start and I am very grateful. I could start naming names, but I would inevitably leave somebody out, so let me just say thank you to everybody at once. I truly appreciate the help and cooperation and respect you gave me. What makes Star so incredible is the combination of that beautiful isolated, sometimes scary setting, with a group of such amazing people. I feel really fortunate to be part of it. So the word of the day is gratitude. Thank you.

My hopes for next season? More progress on sustainability, more music, more sailing, more laughing, more great work, more conversation, more moderation. I really hope we can all work together to avoid the lapses in judgment and the indiscretions which lead to injuries, terminations, sadness. I hope no one has to leave the Island because they get hurt or depressed or because they broke a basic rule. I hope we can continue to build a stronger and stronger atmosphere of open communication, respect for each other and the place, cooperation, compassion. I believe that a whole community working together presents the best chance to keep everyone safe and happy and sober and growing. What better community than this to prove it?

We will all be challenged once again by a scarcity of resources. I really believe that this challenge is also an opportunity for the Island and us, one which is right in line with important principles that we all share, and part of the long tradition of the Shoals themselves. Sustainability (for the Island and for the world) implies creativity, innovation, resourcefulness, a community working together with common goals, some hard work, and yes, even some sacrifices. The test is worth the taking, and the rewards can be deep and long lasting. I think it is part of the reason we are drawn here.

OK, down off the soap box. I basically just wish everyone the best new year ever.

Jack Farrell
Facilities Superintendent