Wednesday, April 1, 2020

March 2020 Bookclub News


Colvin in Chechnya in 1999. Photograph: Dmitri Beliakov/Rex



Dear Bookclub,
Unable to attend our March discussion of Lindsey Hilsum's "In Extremis: The Life and Death of the War Correspondent Marie Colvin", I can only relay what was reported:everyone really liked the book and discussion was excellent.

In prepraration for our meeting, Terrie had shared an 8 minute NPR(fabulous) interview of the author with Lulu Garcia Navarro:
https://www.npr.org/2018/11/04/663571722/a-new-biography-of-marie-colvin-eyewitness-to-war
 
And shared by Wanda, the movie, "A Private War" on Amazon Prime. There is also a 2018 documentary, "Under the Wire":
https://www.refinery29.com/en-gb/2019/02/223656/marie-colvin-under-the-wire-bbc-4



Not a tragic accident, Marie's death was ruled to be murder in 2019. A civil suit brought about by Marie's sister, Catherine, is reported on by none other than Lindsey Hilsum in the following "Guardian" article:

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/feb/03/marie-colvin-murder-verdict--risks-journalists-lindsey-hilsum
Marie Colvin and Lindsey Hilsum in Jenin, Palestine, in 2002. Picture: Paul Moorcraft


Hilsum,  after 114 interviews and reading 300 of Colvin’s notebooks and diaries, said the hardest part was knowing when to stop researching and start writing. “It’s a very strange thing to get to know your friend better in death than in life, but that’s what happened, because if she had lived I would never have read her teenage diaries." For more about Hilsum's experience writing the book, please enjoy this "Press Gazaette" interview during her 2018 book launch days:

https://www.pressgazette.co.uk/lindsey-hilsum-anxious-of-adding-to-myth-of-killed-sunday-times-war-reporter-marie-colvin-through-new-book-on-her-life/


Suggestions from Terrie for an upcoming selection:

"When All is Said" Anne Griffin
"The Gifted School" Bruce Holsinger *chosen
"The Mercies" Brian Millwood Hargrave


Up next:


Michele and her parents





Please enjoy this eclectic list of Michele's other writings (many with her husband, Albert Wu) from her website:

https://www.michellekuo.net/other-writings

Safe reading,
LK

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

February 2020 Bookclub News











Dear Bookclub,
Tiring of our current read and feeling sheepish about that, I decided to do a little research into the book. The first google swipe landed me on Jacqueline Woodson's website:

https://www.jacquelinewoodson.com/

(Please, please click on it.)

Back to my lament; "Aha... "brown girl dreaming"! This is a book that has intrigued me for quite some time, given the aclaim. I found it in my library and began a new appreciation for Jacqueline Woodson. She is really one cool writer.

Florence Chadwick

Speaking of cool, The Florence, chosen by Val was a great surprise venue for our February discussion of Jacqueline Woodson's "Red at the Bone". Our new discussion technique was in full force as we rated the novel and gave declarative statements. A great surprise in that Val highly rated the work, keeping us always amazed and guessing at whatever-will-she-come-up-with-next. And she did not disappoint, sharing more incredible stories of her own, validating her vision of appreciation of all the varied characters in Woodson's book. The rest of us, mundane in our experiences and relishing Val's, steadied at a rating of '6', eager for a change of genre.

Val's suggestions for an upcoming read:

"Just Mercy" Bryan Stevenson
"Remembering Shanghai" Isabel Sun Chao and Claire Chao
"The Wives of Los Alamos" Tarashea Nesbit *chosen

Up next:



Enjoy your reading,
LK


Friday, January 24, 2020

December 2019 Bookclub Recap/January 2020 Bookclub News

The organization that is us.




Dear Bookclub,

A much anticipated get-away fired up our sisterhood, as it always does and left us wanting more, as it always does. What a wonderful situation! A first night feast at The Royce Steakhouse, inside the freshly decorated Langham Pasadena, warmed up our spirits and bellies. 

 
 

Braving the cold rain for our Huntington tour (see above), we cheerfully enjoyed our tour guide's delivery - what a brave guy to face the elements and us. Rewarding him with an early dismissal, blazing through galleries, exhibits and the estate, we finally landed at the Rose Garden Tea Room. One of many tables we sat around, we merrily conversed about everything under the sun, including our Christmas read, Samantha Silva's "Mr. Dickens and His Carol".


Pink Christmas a la la la la Langham

New Year!

 Bookclub reality hit hard as our newly determined meeting day of the week,Tuesday arrived and as January 7th seemed so far off when we agreed, there it was. Meeting at Terry's glorious round table, prepared with our newly organized format of ranking our read and delivering a one sentence thought, discussing Ta-Nehisi Coates' novel, "The Water Dancer", Wanda wowed us with her insightful thought:

"The deep unresolved pain of slavery lends to a desire to find an otherworldly path to freedom. Trying to understand the point of power of conduction:"










Trudy's books, (December), considered for an upcoming read:

"The Silent Patient" Alex Michaelides
"The Revisionists" Thomas Mullen
"Reading with Patrick" Michelle Kuo *chosen


Terry's books, (January), considered for an upcoming read:

"The Shadow of the Wind" Carlos Ruiz Zafon
"Bad Blood" John Carryrou
"American Dirt" Jeanine Cummins *chosen

Val's books, (February) to consider for an upcoming read:

"The  Wives of Los Alamos" Tarashea Nesbit
"Remembering Shanghai" Isabel Sun Chao and Claire Chao
"Just Mercy"  Bryan Stevenson


Up next:

Happy reading!
LK
                                                            

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

November 2019 Bookclub News

George Saunders....... and......
Dear Bookclub,

George Saunders - who is this man, creator of "Lincoln in the Bardo"? Of course he graduated from the Colorado School of Mines with a degree in exploration geophysics. That explains not a bit, except that his path as a writer is as unusual as his work. Here in his own very entertaining words:

http://www.georgesaundersbooks.com/about


....Abe......a little resemblance?

Having a most pleasant lunch at Cafe Luna, sitting outside around a polished tree slice table, we were endeared to Lincoln's compassion. The deep pain sets the stage for the his visits to the Bardo and those scenes, seemed to be most easily read and understood. Then came the ugly, the difficult, and the very, very strange. Some of us stopped enjoying, stopped reading. I have a tendency to want to read without much prior investigation so as to have my own experience; that experience is what I love about reading. Pushing through the ugly, difficult and strange led me to the ideas of judgement, birthright and a fantasy of long-dead spirits passing through Lincoln resulting in his refreshed view of the elements of the Civil War. I liked that experience even if I made it up and it was not what Saunders intended.  Now, digging around, enjoying a multitude of internet mishmash, a little clarity has emerged.

From Thomas Mallon's piece, "George Saunders Gets Inside Lincoln's Head" from The New Yorker, February 5, 2017:

"But he also elects to venture into Lincoln’s awareness and perceptions, and, when he does, it’s an all-in enterprise, a physical incursion undertaken not only to extract characterizing thoughts but also to influence them. After Lincoln says, hesitantly, of Willie’s remains, “Absent that spark, this, this lying here, is merely—,” the inserted shade of Hans Vollman orders, “Think it. Go ahead. Allow yourself to think that word.” A tremendous struggle for Willie, one with effects worthy of a Tim Burton movie, still lies ahead—“demonic beings” will soon trap him inside a stubborn carapace—but when his father lets go, accepts the boy’s death and helps to usher his spirit to a real afterlife, the consequences are world-shaping. Vollman and Roger Bevins perceive a Lincoln who now fully understands and embraces suffering, and feels a new bloody-minded determination to win the war."

Full article:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/02/13/george-saunders-gets-inside-lincolns-head


Just for fun, here's a review from the Irish Times:



https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/lincoln-in-the-bardo-review-george-saunders-man-booker-prize-winner-1.2989866


And finally, we need some pictures!

Please read this interesting link from " Abraham Lincoln Online"on the death and funeral of Willie Lincoln:
http://www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lincoln/education/williedeath.htm




The receiving vault (foreground) and the tomb (background)





1865 newspaper illustration of Lincoln burial


Abraham Lincoln's tomb at Oak Ridge Cemetery in July 2005.

Mary Todd Lincoln, three of their four sons, including William, and Abraham Lincoln are all laid to rest in this tomb.

Moving on...
Wanda's suggestions for an upcoming read prompted the all-too-familiar struggle to choose one with the longing to read them all:

"In Extremis" Lindsey Hilsum *chosen
"Rules of Civility" Amor Towles
"This Tender Land" William Kent Krugger
"Indianapolis" Lynn Vincent and Sara Vladic
"The Dutch House" Ann Patchett


Up next:



Festive reading,
LK



Wednesday, October 23, 2019

October 2019 Bookclub News

Thomas, Beal and the girls in Escondido



Dear Bookclub,

Sadly missing our October meeting at to be with Amanda and Lexie for unexpected and positively resolved medical attention, I still look forward to discussing Christopher Tilghman's "Thomas and Beal in the Midi". Later learning that I actually didn't miss much of a discussion as only two of us had finished it, I also discovered shared dubiety about the magnetism of Beal's beauty. Disney-esque:

Tiana from "The Princess and the Frog"


 ...or stunning:




yes, truly beautiful, but would that really be enough? Portrayed as spellbinding, I am not sure exactly why this made me uncomfortable, but it did. Perhaps an underlying implication that cast race and beauty as competitors felt untrue. Need to discuss. And Tilghman does have a lovely wife:

Caroline Preston
https://carolinepreston.com/about-caroline/


Finally, here is a favorable review:
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/christopher-tilghman/thomas-and-beal-in-the-midi/

Trudy's suggestion for an upcoming read:

"Red at the Bone" Jacqueline Woodson *
"Olive Again" Elizabeth Strout
"The Dutch House" Ann Patchett

*chosen

Up next:


 Happy reading!
LK








Thursday, October 3, 2019

September 2019 Recap

TG's essential bar tools




Dear Bookclub,
Happy hour at TG's got our attention- another wonderful way to get together! Enjoying the discussion of Francine Prose's "Peggy Guggenheim" became even easier as Terrie twisted our arms to sip wine (well most of us; I think all of us said 'no' - haha!)

Fascinated by Peggy G's life-story, motives and contributions, the group agreed the read belongs on our virtual shelves of 'something different' - like those 'interesting whites' on the wine list.






"Mrs. Guggenheim, how many husbands have you had?"
"Do you mean mine, or other people's"*

*perhaps this would be more suited to a tequila description  than that of a white wine



Peggy G.








Meanwhile, back at the ranch.....

Happy







Cheers!

Terrie's suggestions for an upcoming read:

"The Water Dancer" Ta-Nehisi Coates *
"This Tender Land" William Kent Krueger
"Red At The Bone" Jacqueline Woodson

*chosen

Our October read:




Christopher Tilghman's "Thomas and Beal in the Midi" has been calling to me since it was delivered to my front porch, with it's very appealing cover. ("The Pink Dress, or View of Castelnau-le-Lez, Hérault, 1864 (oil on canvas). by Jean Frédéric Bazille (1841-70) / Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France.) I even tried to put it on our August calendar by mistake. Last Sunday morning, as I prepared to lash myself to my kitchen to prepare Rosh Hashanah food to take to a dinner that night, I confidently went to download the audible for an enjoyable marathon. Quel désastre! No audible. Who is this guy?? Well.....

From amazon's website:
"Christopher Tilghman, the son of a publishing executive, was born in Boston in 1946. Though he was raised primarily in New England, his life has always revolved around his family's farm on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. His new novel, "The Right-Hand Shore" and its sequel "Mason's Retreat" tell the multigenerational story of a farm on the Eastern Shore modeled after his own. His other books include the novel "Roads of the Heart," and the short story collections, "In a Father's Place," and "The Way People Run." Currently a Professor of English at the University of Virginia, he and his wife, the writer Caroline Preston, divide their time between Charlottesville, VA and Centreville, MD."

I forgive him; I am enjoying the real read. But I have hardly cracked it. Binge reading here I come.

Happy reading!
LK



Sunday, September 8, 2019

September 2019 Bookclub News



 Guess Who?


 





 






Surely they never imagined how important this image would be to our bookclub's deep appreciation of Peggy Guggenheim.




     

  And how grateful we are that no nuns were passing by.


























Dear Bookclub,

Thanks to Trudy for going above and beyond in sharing her research and enthusiasm for our September read, Francine Prose's "Peggy Guggenheim". These images are from Trudy and JT's September 2018 trip to Venice where they visited Peggy's Palazzo. My introduction to the, dare I say, wacky, world of PG's passionate collection and all that entailed, leads me to view this collection of images from Trudy with a magnified intensity. Hardly a collection of art, this is a trail of experiences that are stranger than fiction! Can't wait to discuss with you.


Terrie's suggestions for an upcoming read:



"This Tender Land"  William Kent Krueger

"Red at the Bone" Jacqueline Woodson 
"The Water Dance" Ta-Nehisi Coates 


See you soon!
LK