Wednesday, November 9, 2016

November 2016 Recap

Dear Bookclub,
Le Bistro de Louisa gave a pleasant mildly-French cushion to the harsh realities of the very unpleasant-American anvil of day-after-ugly-election for our bookclub's discussion of C.W. Gortner's "Mademoiselle Chanel". Long live the LBD. Agreed that Coco was an extraordinary woman, the novel was enjoyed by all and the peek into the German occupied Paris life was a new view from our literature shelves. I know Coco would NEVER dress up like someone else but here goes:

photo credit: V. Quate




Val recommended three (ok, two; Eleanor was shot down) alluring titles for an upcoming selection:

"Foreign Affairs" Alison Lurie * chosen
"The Light of the World" Elizabeth Alexander
"Loving Eleanor" Susan Wittig Albert


Up next: Our adventure to Dana Point! Ahhhhh - will be such a nice respite.  Blue Lantern Inn, here we come to discuss Alice Thomas Ellis' "The Birds of the Air" and everything else under the sun.

Happy Reading,
LK


Sunday, November 6, 2016

November 2016 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
I confess this past month has been a doozy so when realizing that there was never a recap to our September 28th "October" meeting, I am at at a loss as to what we really discussed. It was a beautiful day on the Veranda, I think I ordered a cheeseburger, Trudy was absent, and we chose Ivan Doig's book for the next upcoming selection.

An early portrait of Coco Chanel, 1910



Moving on, our fast approaching meeting this Wednesday to discuss C.W. Gortner's "Mademoiselle Chanel" is much anticipated by moi! It will be so great to be together. Coco has been an entertaining read as this historical novel narrates the enigma behind the legend. But shocker(!), as described in Holly Sneeringer's April 21, 2015 review of the book in the Washington Independent Review of Books, 

"Mademoiselle Chanel also brings to light the central and quite sad thing about Coco: Despite her professional achievement, despite her vitality and curiosity, she seemed incapable of finding happiness. At the height of her fame, the true joy and inner peace that she desired, that filled her dream life, eluded her."

 http://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/bookreview/mademoiselle-chanel-a-novel

Gortner's sermon on this subject becomes a bit tiresome to me but I still look the other way and am enjoying the book.

Image result for coco chanel 1971
Coco circa 1971

 Happy Reading!
LK



Sunday, September 25, 2016

October(!) 2016 Bookclub Newsletter





Dear Bookclub,
Titles are the window to a book's soul. Distinct: "Barkskins", "A Constellation of Vital Phenomena", "Dr. Zhivago". Unforgettable: "We Need to Talk About Kevin", "The Boys in the Boat", "All the Light You Cannot See", "The Poisonwood Bible".  Descriptive:  "Dead Wake", "The Door", "Little Women".   Unfortunate: "Heat & Light", "Some Luck", "Home Leave", "Art of Power", "Art of the Deal", "Art of Racing in the Rain".

Jennifer Haigh's latest book, "Heat & Light" was labeled to have a "not helpful" title in the NY Times April 28, 2016. Unfortunate.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/28/books/review-with-heat-and-light-jennifer-haigh-drills-below-the-surface.html

I was actually thrilled when I reached the point in the book when the title was revealed; hidden in a school report about the benefits of petroleum being heat and light. Still does not carry the weight of the memories this book will leave with me. This is a truly enjoyable ...... dare I say it..... intelligent soap opera/horror story. Horrific because of the environmental truths and the human weaknesses. Enjoyable because the deft writing brings rich characters to the extremes of emotion, tragedy, consequences.

Hope you are also enjoying it! Look forward to discussing at TG's this Wednesday.

Advance notice of TG's suggestions for an upcoming read:


"Last Bus to Wisdom: A Novel" by Ian Doig
'The Symphathizer: A Novel" by Viet Thanh Nguyen
"Everyone Brave is Forgiven" by Chris Cleve

 Happy reading,
LK

 PS I lived in Export, PA from 1964-1970. A coal mining town long before the suburban neighborhood sprouted kickball, Barbies, swim team, big Catholic families etc. There was always a distant shadow of the history settled into the dingy black dust in our school-girl white socks and the 'taverns' on Main St. with seemingly unemployed flocking. The candy counter at McHughes Variety Store was awesome.


Our school bus drove past an abandoned and much dilapidated version of this daily: 




Shockingly, I just googled 'fracking in Export PA' and got this link to a fracking company... very odd actually. Turns out I could google Rancho Bernardo fracking and get another version of the same thing!

  

Weasels!

PPS: Our little December read(note how little and cute this book is):

Sunday, September 11, 2016

September 2016 Bookclub News




Striking camp in Canada, March 1820


Dear Bookclub,
  Epic"Barkskins" is lingering in a happy place in my mind. Despite the cornerstone of the work being the ravages of man and the destructive progress that propels our existence, Annie Proulx's historic novel was entertaining and educational. Three out of the four of us (the fourth was nearly there!) had finished; that was a discussion unto itself (praise "Audible"). Missing Trudy and Val to the lure of travel abroad, Val's email shared her thoughts;"...interesting but challenging book. Quite long, jumping around with so many characters and historical facts but spot on about the Europeans' part in helping to destroy so much of our forestland." Val's points undisputed, we marveled nonetheless at the entirety of Proulx's undertaking.

"Forest in the Mist" @debbytenquist Basque Country, Spain

If you have not had enough of Proulx, there is an interesting, short blurb on "Fresh Air", emphasizing the variety of human demise in this book:
http://www.npr.org/2016/06/10/481449357/annie-proulx-s-bloody-new-novel-barkskins-is-about-more-than-deforestation

...and an equally short interview about her "By the Book" in a June 26, 2016 NY Times Book Review column:

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/26/books/review/annie-proulx-by-the-book.html?_r=0


"Deep in Earth" by Scott R Adkeart for the upcoming "POEtic Tribute show at the Museum of Edgar Allan Poe

Titles I suggested for a future read:
"Commonwealth" Anne Patchett *chosen
"Faithful:A Novel" Alice Hoffman
"Bettyville" George Hodgman
"How to be Both" Ali Smith
"The Life We Bury" Allen Eskens


Our December read will be "The Birds of the Air" by Alice Thomas Ellis. This is available used on Amazon... please order well ahead of time.

Next up, "Heat and Light" by Jennifer Haigh.

Happy reading,
LK

PS These are the best of our selfies - we had a good time!                   


Saturday, August 27, 2016

An Impromptu August 2016 Meeting


The Future of Reading 1935 *



Dear Bookclub,
Our social need to gather had us flocking to The Barrel Room; the siren call of bookclub squeezing commitments, schedules and tempting some of us to drink a bottle of wine. Sorry that Wanda was not able to jump into the last minute meeting and welcoming TG back into the fold, we did relish our chat: books and otherwise. *Little did futurists realize that the future of reading would be women 'reading' on phones, e-devices, having books read to them via the same and then having to band together to share the experience and plan more!

Terry sweetly complied with my very last minute request to provide suggestions for an upcoming read:

"Go Set a Watchman" Harper Lee
"The Juggler's Children" Carolyn Abraham
"When the Killing's Done" T.C. Boyle *chosen

September's selection, Annie Prouix's "Barkskins", 'an epic, dazzling, violent, magnificently dramatic novel about the taking down of the world’s forests', as characterized by the New York Times is to be discussed on the 7th, approximately 80pp/day away for those of us who have not started it. Yikes!

We are working on December plans. Please ponder suggestions for a December read and share your ideas.

Happy reading,
LK



Thursday, August 4, 2016

Birthday Blog





Dearest Friends,
What an amazing surprise yesterday's 'bookclub' meeting turned out to be! Between the bookends entitled 'bookclub1' and 'bookclub2' reside volumes of the most dear friends ever. My heart and soul are still beaming - thank you Terry for masterminding and hosting the beautiful luncheon and thanks to all for coming and celebrating a very memorable 60th birthday party!






 
 "Dressing it up"......




Terrie G., Lori, and Ginger, we missed you!!

Many thanks for the darling, new addition to my secret garden..... Happy reading!
Still astounded and much love,
LK





 Nestled in the secret shade
impervious to fears of night
the garden girl reads endlessly
imagined scenes take flight.




Tuesday, July 26, 2016

August 2016 Bookclub


candy cigarette


Dear Bookclub,
Sally Mann's "Hold Still" has much to share but I have yet to find any stillness. Riddled with memories and philosophies that both disquiet and harmonize any attempt to relate, Mann's memoir will resonate. I adore it at 45 pages deep. Her description of the effects of photographs on memory struck like lightning as I recalled her 2015 interview with Terry Gross:

http://www.npr.org/2015/05/12/405937803/making-art-out-of-bodies-sally-mann-reflects-on-life-and-photography

scarred tree


 
    

Next Wednesday: Terry's 12:30.....

“I like to make people a little uncomfortable. It encourages them to examine who they are and why they think the way they do.” – Sally Mann


View, read and think,
LK

Larry Mann; "Proud Flesh"

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

July 2016 Recap

Dear Bookclub,
Facing the summer challenge head-on, we convened hours after two of us passed through Lindbergh Field, one of us was still sequestered in Deer Valley, (we missed you TG!), Ginger's schedule a smidge off course, (one day :( ),  and the rest were prepping for other seasonal delights. Cork and Craft, coddling our two hour 'lunch', was a fine backdrop for an enthusiastic exchange on Oliver Sacks.
Lunch a la Oliver*



*(That is a scandium hamburger - {gluten-free}. Actually this is lifted from a very entertaining description of a chemistry party, "A Visit from Oliver Sacks".... really you have to peruse this:
http://www.theodoregray.com/Periodictable/Stories/SacksVisit/index.html
How dull our gatherings are in comparison!)


Also, I wanted to share this lovely article from February 2015 that is Oliver Sacks, in his own words, on his getting cancer. It makes me cry every time I read it:

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/19/opinion/oliver-sacks-on-learning-he-has-terminal-cancer.html?_r=0


Wanda presented three titles for our November selection:

"Mademoiselle Chanel" C.W. Gortner        *chosen

"Eve of a Hundred Midnights: The Star-Crossed Love Story of Two WWI Correspondents and Their Epic Escape Across the Pacific" Bill Lascher

"Missing, Presumed" Susie Steiner


Discussion about December's get-away was broadened (a bit!) to entertaining the idea of venturing to La Jolla. I'd also like to throw out the idea of going to The Huntington or the Mission Inn in Riverside. Any other ideas? Shall we vote?

http://www.missioninn.com/festival-en.html
http://www.huntington.org/

Happy Reading!
LK

Sunday, June 26, 2016

July 2016 Bookclub News





Dear Bookclub,
On the move; I am in Boston, Wanda in Pennsylvania, TG in Utah, TF, Val, and Trudy: where are you? Hope wherever this finds you, you are able to enjoy a good read.... Either "On the Move" or if you have moved on from the Oliver  Sacks' autobiography, some other compelling and entertaining read.

Please enjoy this last interview of Dr. Sacks from Radiolab:
https://www.wnyc.org/radio/#/ondemand/453321


We'll be meeting, per Wanda's choice, at Cork & Craft this Wednesday, 12:30- see you then...


Happy Reading,
LK

On the Move

Related Poem Content Details

The blue jay scuffling in the bushes follows
Some hidden purpose, and the gust of birds
That spurts across the field, the wheeling swallows,
Has nested in the trees and undergrowth.
Seeking their instinct, or their poise, or both,
One moves with an uncertain violence
Under the dust thrown by a baffled sense
Or the dull thunder of approximate words.

On motorcycles, up the road, they come:
Small, black, as flies hanging in heat, the Boys,
Until the distance throws them forth, their hum
Bulges to thunder held by calf and thigh.
In goggles, donned impersonality,
In gleaming jackets trophied with the dust,
They strap in doubt – by hiding it, robust –
And almost hear a meaning in their noise.

Exact conclusion of their hardiness
Has no shape yet, but from known whereabouts
They ride, direction where the tyres press.
They scare a flight of birds across the field:
Much that is natural, to the will must yield.
Men manufacture both machine and soul,
And use what they imperfectly control
To dare a future from the taken routes.

It is a part solution, after all.
One is not necessarily discord
On earth; or damned because, half animal,
One lacks direct instinct, because one wakes
Afloat on movement that divides and breaks.
One joins the movement in a valueless world,
Choosing it, till, both hurler and the hurled,
One moves as well, always toward, toward.

A minute holds them, who have come to go:
The self-defined, astride the created will
They burst away; the towns they travel through
Are home for neither bird nor holiness,
For birds and saints complete their purposes.
At worst, one is in motion; and at best,
Reaching no absolute, in which to rest,
One is always nearer by not keeping still.


Tuesday, June 14, 2016

June 2016 Recap

Dear Bookclub,
Our June rendezvous at the Bernardo Winery's Cafe Merlot, had us occupying a tucked away table on a sunny afternoon and holding court on Anthony Marra's "Constellation" among other topics. Tiptoeing around key aspects of the richly told tale, Terry and I tried not reveal any uncovered developments to Trudy and Val, who had not yet finished. Our Chechnya-knowledge increased thousands of percent and the awe over Marra's talent was undeniable.



Hopefully, when all are done with the read, discussion to be continued.....

Trudy presented three choices, (actually four, I groaned away"A Man Called Ove" - sorry!!!) for October's read:

"When Breath Becomes Air" by Paul Kalanithi

"Heat and Light" by Jennifer Haigh *chosen

"The Gene:An Intimate History" by Siddhartha Mukherjee


Discussion turned towards great books, podcasts, interviews, etc:

"The Sympathizer"- interview with the author Viet Thanh Nguyen:
http://www.npr.org/2015/04/11/398728517/a-dark-funny-and-vietnamese-look-at-the-vietnam-war

Encouragement to listen to "Born with Teeth:A Memoir" by Kate Mulgrew.

"The Hedge" - help! My list just says "The Hedge" and googling is not ringing any memory bells for me. Does anyone remember what this was please?

"Zoo" TV Series on Netflix

"The Life We Bury" by Allen Eskins

Please note that our July meeting will be June 29. Wanda to announce location.

Visiting with Ginger last Wednesday was wonderful! Wish we had taken a picture... we must when she returns in a few short weeks. In the meanwhile, here is Wednesday, who we visited last Wednesday. So many of our Wednesdays are so special!


And my little cousin of Wednesday, nestled into the dining room hutch:




Happy Reading,
LK

Friday, May 20, 2016

June 2016 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
In the spirit of my journey to refreshment at Canyon Ranch, I will be brief about the upcoming June meeting:

Cafe Merlot - Wednesday June 1st at 12:30 -
 discussing Anthony Marra's 
"A Constellation of Vital Phenomena"


Namaste and peaceful reading,
LK

My to-pack  reading pile for the world of unplugged.


Wednesday, May 4, 2016

May 2016 Recap


An earlier translation with illustrations. I want one! Only available from 'these' sellers priced from $335.99 up to $17,436.12. Not kidding. Nate would notice that on the Visa.




Dear Bookclub,
Another day-in-paradise-lunch-on-the-Veranda kept us from delving too deeply into the grimy nooks and crannies of "The Door". Provoking a variety of reactions, the read transported us as readers to a  new territory of communication, understanding and diversity just beyond the shadows of the horrors of Hungary's past. Strangely refreshing, not unanimously liked, the fairytale (Grimm's) quality piquing the imagination of the cinematic possibilities, Szabo's story dense with Emerence as epic, stirred more questions than certainty. That is the both magnetism and repulsion.

The reference about the cosmonaut that I could not recall (Gagarin) was just one example of the bitter views spewed by Emerence; hard to discuss because the admiration for her generous contributions to her circle loomed large in our memories. What a trick! And I meant to ask, what exactly is a christening bowl? The obvious does not seem to fit its use as a vessel for all that food. Hmmm...so many little wonders. Please tell me your ideas.

TG, your wonder about 'the prize' in the book must be autobiographical as you guessed (from Amazon blurb):
Magda Szabo was born in 1917 in Debrecen, Hungary. She began her literary career as a poet. In the 1950s she disappeared from the publishing scene for political reasons and made her living by teaching and translating from French and English. She began writing novels, and in 1978 was awarded the Kossuth Prize, the most prestigious literary award in Hungary. Magda Szabo died in 2007. 


Finally, the empathy evoked by so many of the characters, (remember the Lieutenant Colonel?) has left a little print on my heart which is how I want to remember this little gem.

I erred in posting the link to the trailer for "The Door" in the previous post - now corrected and here it is again:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fU5fgaWhfqQ

Back to our bubble.. Celebrating Val who defies the definition of defying an 'age'. What a treasure in our midst!


Terrie recommended four fantastic books for the upcoming Septmeber selection:

Ivan Doig  "Last Bus to Wisdom"
Curtis Sittenfeld  "Eligible"
Helen Simonson "The Summer Before the War"
Annie Proulx "Barkskins" *chosen

Enlightenment from Trudy about an app for movie management (new to me!): GoWatchIt

https://gowatchit.com/home

Please sign up to request "The Door" and perhaps our nudging will make it available.

Happy reading,
LK 


Monday, May 2, 2016

May 2016 Bookclub News









Dear Bookclub,
"The Door". An innocuous title for a powerful piece of literature. The unassuming "Door" became tightly focused from the incomprehensible Hungarian to a precise English translation that stirs gratitude for such a process. How easily possible to have never heard of Magda Szabo's work without the efforts of Len Rix and the powers that be in the publishing realm. Ali Smith's introduction to the translated English version becomes more appreciated realizing her personal experience with translators and the enormous faith that is needed to permit the process.

Here is a little blurb about Rix:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/08/books/review/translating-in-tongues.html?_r=0

A glimpse into the thoughts of Ali Smith on translations:
http://authors-translators.blogspot.com/2014/11/ali-smith-and-her-translators.html

Searching high and low for the movie... help please! Directed by Ivan Szabo, (no relation) starring Helen Mirren as Emerence:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1194577/

The trailer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fU5fgaWhfqQ

I am not so good at finding movies to stream but it must be out there somewhere??? Anyone able to find it?

Looking forward to being together this Wednesday, 12:30, the Veranda.
Happy reading!
LK

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

April 2016 Recap



   
Dear Bookclub,
 Our April gathering, amidst Val's very splendid garden, (featuring roses beyond content with the El Niño spring), had us wheeling in delight as we settled on her veranda, circling a table beneath a cozy wisteria. Launching on a perfect salad, we caught up and eventually landed on our read.


"Circling the Sun", perhaps more aptly titled "Circling Denys", succeeded in a discussion of the spot-on descriptions of Africa and the lack of likability and character development of the Kenyan colony depicted. Tilting toward the dreaded bodice-ripper, Beryl's infatuation with Denys left us wondering about the inconceivable actions of a maternal abandonment: Beryl's being abandoned, Beryl abandoning her son and the author, Paula McClain's own abandonment: her mother vanished when she was four. How this abandonment leaves a distinct hunger in its wake.




unbelievable blueberry cake
Val, very thoughtfully, had previously emailed us her suggested titles for an upcoming read so we were able to come prepared with our indecision:

"The Rainbow Comes and Goes: A Mother and a Son on Life, Love and Loss"  by Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt

"Margaret The First: A Novel" by  Danielle Dulton

"Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs" by Sally Mann *chosen

Touring the garden
 Next up: "The Door" by Magda Szabo

Happy Reading!
LK





PS: Blueberry Cake recipe (I think this is it??!!)
https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/2014/02/09/lemon-blueberry-layer-cake/