Friday, February 21, 2020

February 21, 2020 GOIN' BY THE BOOK

Spent some time at one of my favorite bookstores this week--R J Julia in Madison. Pretty sure I was meant for the place. The atmosphere was incredible and the BOOK SELLERS REALLY KNEW BOOKS. I can SO picture myself working there and talking BOOKS ALL DAY LONG. I had this great conversation with one of the book sellers. It went something like this.---I told her that I needed a book to get me through February and March. I went on to specify that it had to be as good as A Gentleman In Moscow--with a touch of Dickens--and the romance of--The Art of Healing Heartbeats. Sounds CRAZY RIGHT? But not to her. She understood exactly what I wanted because she's a book aficionado. Came home with a few new books that I can't wait to read. FYI---found out that R J Julia is hosting a book talk with Erik Larson--author of Dead Wake and Devil In The White City in March. He will be discussing his new book The Splendid and the Vile. Check out their website for more details. Spent the last week reading as semi- dense historical novel about the American West in the late 19th century called Inland by Tea Obreht. 
Set in the brutal Arizona Territory, this novel is told from two perspectives. Nora, is a frontierswoman and mother of four, haunted by the death of her daughter. After spending twenty years trying to build a life in this unforgiving land, she questions whether it was really worth the effort. She's lonely, isolated, and most of all thirsty as their water supply has all but dried up. She's also been left  to manage the children, a niece and mother-in-law while her husband  searches for water. After two of her sons go missing, and he husband's return is delayed, she is forced to make many difficult choices. Lurie, the other narrator, is an immigrant who can see the dead. Orphaned at a young age, he becomes an outlaw wanted for murder. He later joins the U.S. Army Camel Corps with a band of colorful characters and travels with the army as they build roads and  settle the West. Lurie and his camel, Burke, are eventually forced to leave the corp because a Marshal is on his tail. These two separate stories become one by the end of the book. The landscape of the West is as much a character in this book as the main characters. I will admit that it took me a while to get into this book, but I did enjoy it and the writing is worth the effort.  It's about 375 pages or a 5 mile run that will leave you rethinking everything you learned in a history book.

Saturday, February 15, 2020

February 15, 2020 GOOD VIBRATIONS

It's been a year. I can't believe it. One year since Michele passed away. I think about her a lot. She continues to be an inspiration to me each and every day. She taught me so many lessons--by example-- about how to be a better person and live a more meaningful life. I've been trying to  live many of the things she taught me so that I can keep her close to my heart. Some of these include:
 Appreciating Family & Friends
Being Kind
Lending a Helping Hand
Remembering--Every day is a GOOD DAY
Living in Positivity
 Smiling
Being Thankful
Taking care --mentally--physically--spiritually
Thanks for everything. Miss you.
 Laurel & Daphne Wolfe should have practiced some of these lessons in Cathleen Schine's new novel The Grammarians. Laurel and Daphne are identical twins born in the 1960's in New York. They are inseparable little red heads obsessed with words whose prized possession is an old Webster Dictionary. The first part of the book is devoted to the girls as children and their quirky, hilarious family. After the girls graduate from college, they move into an apartment in Manhattan and their relationship begins to change. Daphne becomes a copy editor and grammar columnist devoted to standard English while Laurel becomes a poet devoted to bending the English language to meet her needs.  This philosophical difference strains their relationship but add to the mix husbands, children, sibling rivalry, and competition to inherit the Webster Dictionary and the siblings are barely speaking to each other. Find out who inherits the dictionary and if the girls ever talk to each other again when you read this story about what it's like to be an identical twin for yourself. It's about 270 pages or a 3 mile run every Word lover will appreciate.







Friday, February 7, 2020

February 7, 2020 WHY CAN'T WE BE FRIENDS

TGIF. It was a LOOONNNGGGG week. Not sure why it felt that way. I couldn't wait to get home from school today. Just wanted to relax on the couch and STAY HOME. Back IN the day--I had plans EVERY Friday AND Saturday night. AND the bars were open til 3:00 am. Would have NEVER sat home on a Friday Night. Now I welcome staying home. Can't believe I'm saying that--TIMES THEY ARE A-CHANGING.  I'm JUST exhausted by Friday. Can't think another thought or be in charge of anything else. My brain is MUSH. All I've got left--before I forget it-- is a review of Christy Lefteri's International bestseller The Beekeeper of Aleppo.  
Talk about a timely book. The Beekeeper of Aleppo is the story of a young couple who are forced to leave their life in Aleppo after everything they love is destroyed in the Syrian War. Nuri is a beekeeper and his wife Afra is an artist. They have a simple life. He tends to his bees and she sells her paintings at the market on weekends. They refuse to believe that their beloved homeland is being consumed by war until it's almost too late. After Afra is blinded, the couple courageously set out for a new life. They navigate a treacherous journey that stretches through Turkey, Greece and eventually Britain, where they hope to meet up with a cousin. This story humanizes the immigration experience and the desperation people face right now. Lefteri definitely understands the situation as she is the daughter of refugees and she has also volunteered at a center in Athens for displaced citizens. It is a frightening situation. Imagine living your ordinary life--and one day it's taken away.  That's what happens to Nuri and Afra. This beautifully written, heart-wrenching book is about 315 pages or a 4 mile run that should be required reading for all Americans.

Sunday, February 2, 2020

February 2, 2020 COWARD OF THE COUNTY

DEEPLY TROUBLED. Let me get this straight. Edward Boyle was sentenced to ONLY 19 years in prison for the rape and murder a young woman AS WELL AS  the rapes of five other women. ARE YOU KIDDING ME?? IT GETS WORSE. In 1999 he was released only to be arrested again--THIS TIME--for sexually assaulting a 14 year old--where he was sentenced to 5 years in prison. He was then released in 2009 under --STRICT SUPERVISION--and rearrested again after missing sexual offender treatment and going out of range with his GPS tracking device. In 2011-- he encountered other difficulties when prison officials found out he was corresponding with yet  another 14 year old girl????? BELIEVE IT OR NOT--this MANIC was granted --SPECIAL PAROLE--on Friday. HELLO?? Does anyone else see something VERY WRONG HERE?? What about the victims and their families?? Will they ever have closure ?? Something is VERY wrong with the system if this SAD EXCUSE FOR A HUMAN BEING --who has proven over and over again--THAT HE IS A SEXUAL PREDATOR--is let out of prison AGAIN--right here in New London County. Scary stuff. 
If you're looking to get your mind off the things that don't make sense in our world, then check out Amanda Quick's new book Tightrope. 
Set in the 1930's, Amalie Vaughn is a former trapeze artist who decides to reinvent herself in Burning Cove. She purchases an inn that just so happens to be cursed. Shortly after the inn opens, the first guest, Dr. Pickwell, is murdered by his own robot invention. Matthias Jones, rumored to be connected to the mob, is on the trail to discover the truth and locate the cipher machine that was stolen from the murder scene. Sparks fly between Amalie and Matthias after he books a room at the inn and enlists Amalie to help him find the truth. This book has several subplots, interesting characters and more twists and turns than a rollercoaster. It's also filled with mystery, suspense, and romance. At 320 pages--or a 3 mile run--it's a quick read for those times you just want to be entertained. Enjoy.