Wednesday, January 23, 2019

January 2019 Bookclub Newsletter

Close, but not us. Yet.




A young Tara Westover




Dear Bookclub,

Arranged around a corner table at The Barrel Room, our discussion of Tara Westover's "Educated" was an agreeable matching of sentiment and comprehension; well-liked with a good dose of being appalled, having admiration for the successes despite the circumstances, and a dash of skepticism.












  Promising to share the links I'd found regarding the oil business 
and the family's reaction to Tara's book, please enjoy:



Logan Utah's Herald Journal News, February 23, 2018
'Educated' should be read with grain of salt, says family's attorney:
Suggested by Terry for an upcoming read:
 
"A Place for Us"   Fatima Farheen Mirza  *chosen
"Female Persuasion"  Meg Wolitzer
"Whiskey When We're Dry" John Larison

Up next:
Timothy Egan's "Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher" 

Happy reading,
LK



Thursday, December 27, 2018

November/December 2018 Recap


Dear Bookclub,
Our ambitious read month was perfectly balanced with a grand gathering at Palm Springs' Avalon. Now, seemingly so long ago, our post-Thanksgiving, pre-Christmas jaunt elevated our holiday spirits and fortified our bond. Plied with great food and drink, we reconnected, rested, and discussed.












 A bit disappointed in Jenny D. Williams' "The Atlas of Forgotten Places", most in the group felt it dragged and was at times, not an easy read. However the setting and overall attention to Uganda and the Congo were welcomed. Kristin Hannah's "The Great Alone" was well-received and discussion centered on the different characters and how, despite being such obvious caricatures, the harsh Alaskan life delivers those kinds of people exactly. I personally had a hard time not eye-rolling as the ending unfolded yet the tears dropped down my cheeks. How does that kind of emotional hijacking occur even when you know it is coming?! Maddening!



Upcoming suggestions from Val:
"The Library" Susan Orlean *chosen
"On Sunset: A Memoir" Kathryn Harrison
"An American Marriage" Tayari Jones


Upcoming suggestions from Terrie:
"Virgil Wander" Leif Enger
"Where the Crawdads Sing" Delia Owens
"Being Mortal" Atul Gawande *chosen

Up next: Tara Westover's "Educated: A Memoir"



A distortion of reality is how Tara Westover describes her upbringing. She journeys through the pain and the truth that much of her childhood was beautiful despite the grossly abusive scenario.

"How an abused Mormon child read her way into a top university."* Westover's book begins with a statement declaring that it is not necessarily Mormonism that created her situation but that of an extremist:in this case, a fundamentalist Mormon.

*https://www.noted.co.nz/currently/profiles/how-an-abused-mormon-child-read-her-way-into-a-top-university/

And a deeply ingrained upbringing:

Tara sings a Mormon hymn:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlO_QkqQ9cE

Looking forward to our discussion.

Happy New Year reading,
LK

Friday, November 16, 2018

November/December 2018 Bookclub News





Coat of arms for Uganda


Dear Bookclub,

Ambitiously taking on discussion of both the November and December book selections in one fell swoop while on our 'girls' trip*, I decided I'd better sit up and take notice of the task at hand. "The Atlas of Forgotten Places" is described as "A moving, fictionalized account of real-life horrors in Africa" :

 xhttp://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/index.php/bookreview/the-atlas-of-forgotten-places-a-novel

My shallow googling quickly took me to Wikipedia's rundown on Uganda. And Idi Amin. Here is one of his quote's which surprisingly sounds like something that our current leader should say:

Sometimes people mistake the way I talk for what I am thinking.



I am leading us astray from Jenny  D. Williams' work and my task at hand. With Thanksgiving reality looming, I decided to load an audible of "The Atlas of Forgotten Places" only to be stopped short - it doesn't exist. I noticed upon further inspection that reviews of the book were few and a bit obscure. One really caught my attention - that of the Del Mar Times:

https://www.delmartimes.net/art/books/sd-cm-nc-globe-novel-20170622-htmlstory.html

I will read Williams' Atlas and listen to Kristen Hannah's "The Great Alone".







Hannah and her family moving to the Pacific Northwest






Please enjoy Kristin Hannah's February 2018 Newsletter Blog when her book was released:

https://kristinhannah.com/newsletter/february-2018/


Suggestions for upcoming reads:

from Val,
"The Library Book" Susan Orlean
"An American Marriage" Tayari Jones
"On Sunset"  Katheryn Harrison

from  TG.
"Virgil Wander" Leif Enger
"Where the Crawdads Sing" Delia Owens
"being Mortal" Atul Gawande


So looking forward to our upcoming trip!

Happy reading,
LK


*This somehow implies we will just be lounging around eating, drinking, talking, spa-ing, shopping, hiking, talking and talking some more. Oh yes, that's correct.

Monday, October 8, 2018

October 2018 Bookclub News


Alla Dreyvitser/The Washington Post





Dear Bookclub,
Enjoying our lunch at Piacere Mio, we happily caught up with each other and ordered yummy Italian fare before settling down to our book discussion. Jesmyn Ward's "Sing, Unburied, Sing" shook us up with the sad story of one African American family that is unfortunately, very timely and a true characterization of the complicated and ruinous environment that has evolved in Ward's deep South and beyond. Remembering Ginger's comment that she didn't care for this book, I delved into our read, curious about why she felt this way as her likes and dislikes nearly always mirror our taste. Within a few chapters, I understood: this was going nowhere good. That it was not an escape, feel-good work of entertainment was apparent within a few chapters. Necessary to Ward's art is the creation of a piece of literature that responsibly portrays the world she grew up in and still experiences today.

The above illustration for the quote below is from a Washington Post review:

 https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/a-powerful-new-entry-in-the-literature-of-race-in-america/2017/08/29/45cb2008-8b89-11e7-91d5-ab4e4bb76a3a_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.934db592e0a2  

'Looking out to the yard, Jojo thinks, “The branches are full. They are full with ghosts, two or three, all the way up to the top, to the feathered leaves.” '



Jesmyn Ward is interviewed by Jeffrey Brown in the PBS News Hour as her book was chosen as the first "Now Read This" selection. Only a few minutes long, she answers readers' question - all very thoughtfully crafted. I highly recommend watching this as it will enhance your appreciation for both Ward and her book.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEpKy0g9saM

Following this video, is another interview that took place in her home and town - excellent!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5E01GVW6gQ

Hoping this smattering of information will stay with you and give a deeper understanding of Jesmyn Ward, her work  and the plight she chooses to illuminate.

Trudy proposed three suggestions for an upcoming read:

"Imagine Me Gone" Adam Haslett
"An American Marriage" Tayari Jones
"Unsheltered" Barbara Kingsolver *chosen

Up next: 


Happy reading!
LK


Monday, September 3, 2018

September 2018 Bookclub News





Minnie, Anna and Mollie Burkhart
Dear Bookclub,

Our September meeting, so efficiently held at the end of August at the Barrel Room(well truly the Barrel Patio), had us delving into the sad story of the Osage Indians. Agreeing that the story is of great import, appreciating the atrocities and understanding the investigation, we also felt a bit bogged down and occasionally confused by Grann's telling. We are not alone, as Dwight Garner of the New York Times stated in his book review:

"If you taught the artificial brains of supercomputers at IBM Research to write nonfiction prose, and if they got very good at it, they might compose a book like David Grann’s “Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI.”"    He later mentions that this book, "never set its hooks in me" as the previous Grann work,  “The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon” (2009) did.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/12/books/review-killers-of-flower-moon-david-grann.html




A clean short telling in the following PBS link also includes the photos, not seen by me, as I'd listened to the audible version:

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/arts/the-forgotten-murders-of-the-osage-people-for-the-oil-beneath-their-land


 I hastily grabbed three enticing books from my groaning shelves to present for an upcoming selection:

"The Glass of Time" Michael Cox
"Peggy Guggenheim" Francine Prose
"Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher, The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis"
Timothy Egan. *chosen


As an aside, photographs by Edward Curtis and many others are on exhibit at the Annenberg Space for Photography:

https://www.annenbergphotospace.org/exhibits/not-an-ostrich/

I am so disappointed that I just discovered this because the exhibit closes September 9, 2018. But the museum looks intriguing. Please do watch the short video of the exhibit - just a marvelous collection of photographs from the Library of Congress.


Michael A. "Tony" Vaccaro. Architectural Hats, 1960

Unknown Brünnhilde. 1936


Up next: "Sing Unburied, Sing" Jesmyn Ward

Happy reading,
LK

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

August 2018 recap

Bernardo Winery - founded 1889

Dear Bookclub,
An old friend updated, the Bernardo Winery's latest restaurant, The Kitchen, was a welcome retreat for our August meeting. Our hostess could not have been anymore inviting; she recognized 'the power' of our bookclub camaraderie as she shared her enthusiasm for San Diego's One Book program. And speaking of "The Power", what an affecting read. Running the gamut from gushes of loving it to wanting it to be over, we all agreed that it was a unique and important work.


Wanda's suggestions for an upcoming read:

"My Way Home" Michael Gaulden
"Educated: A Memoir" Tara Westover*
"The Electric Woman" Tessa Fontaine


 *chosen

 Curious about One Book, One San Diego? Below are the titles being considered for the next city-selection.  This is more about the process and also has the archives : https://www.kpbs.org/one-book/




Up next: David Grann's "Killers of the Flower Moon", as pictured above, top right. We are so relevant.

Happy reading,
LK

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

August 2018 Bookclub News



***



Dear Bookclub,
Fantasizing about spending 5 days in Aspen, doing nothing but read, actually came to fruition as I felt way less than my 110%, handicapped by altitude sensitivity and a cold.  Truly drained and drugged, 'lounging', i.e., trying to get through the days, I began and finished "The Power" in two dreadful days. I had planned to participate in far more: a bike ride designed for conference spouses, historic tour and fly fishing for the same, shopping in a mecca designed for Lynn Kaufman. Instead, cocooned in a vast suite in Snowmass, I entered Naomi Alderman's fiercely imagined world of power. Devouring the first half or so of Alderman's "The Power", I transitioned to a 'get-this-over-with' mode as discomfort from the pages overpowered, pun intended, any other distress. The parallels to a reversed society are eerie and clever. Looking forward to talking this one inside out and backwards.




...from little NPR blurb:
https://www.npr.org/2017/12/26/573507226/in-the-power-women-develop-a-weapon-that-changes-everything



The girls: Margaret Atwood and Naomi Alderman


***(Hiking around Maroon Bells, above, once I had acclimated, was cleansing - it smelled sooooo good!)



Wanda's suggestions for an upcoming read:

"My Way Home" Michael Gaulden
"Educated: A Memoir" Tara Wetover
"The Electric Woman" Tessa Fontaine

See you tomorrow!
LK