Wednesday, August 19, 2020

August 19, 2020 GAMES PEOPLE PLAY

One positive during the pandemic is the resurgence of board games. Believe it or not--Scrabble, Monopoly and a form of Parcheesi called Ludo are still the most popular board games. Do you remember playing

Parcheesi?  I whittled  away several hours trying to win that game. Haven't played it in years though.  I've been playing Scrabble my entire life though and have to admit that I'm a little addicted to Words With Friends. Monopoly always took TOO LONG for me so it wasn't one of my favs BUT I spent huge amounts of time pretending I was Miss Scarlet when I played CLUE--one of my all time favorites. Remember playing Trouble with its "Pop-O-Matic" dice action, Or Sorry, Checkers and Battleship? It's funny--I always thought of Battleship as a boys game. Not sure why but I can still hear the commercial from back in the day--"you sank my battleship." Right now--I'm listening to a couple of teenagers try to play SpongeBob Guess Who!! Ha! They haven't played this game in years. Life is good. 
 Life was also pretty good for the Vignes twins before they ran away in The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett. Stella and Desiree Vignes grew up in a small Southern black community in Mallard, Louisiana.  Although the residents are black, they pride themselves on being very light skinned. Desiree, feeling smothered by the town, talks her identical twin sister into running away to New Orleans when they are sixteen. Starting a new life is difficult, until Stella realizes that she can pass as a white person while applying for a job at a local department store. This realization sets in motion events that separate the twins forever. While Stella disappears to California and life as a white privileged woman, Desiree flees her abusive husband and returns home with a daughter, Jade, who is "dark as tar". After enduring many years of abuse because she is dark, Jade moves to California for college where she unexpectedly runs into her aunt. This story is told through flashbacks and alternating points of view between the 1960s-1990s. It's an interesting read that focuses on race, identity, sisterhood, and how the choices people make-- many times due to circumstances--can shape a life. This moving novel is about 350 pages or 4 mile run that is well worth your time. 


Tuesday, August 11, 2020

August 11, 2020 KNOCKING ON HEAVEN'S DOOR

Confessions of a dysfunctional home owner. Did you know that until last year--NONE of our door knobs
worked correctly?  I'm serious--they turned by wouldn't open.  EVERY  person that came over our house--got stuck in of bathroom. So embarrassing. We were forever rescuing people from the toilet. Crazy. One time we actually forgot that someone was in the COMMODE  and they LITERALLY spent a good hour in there before being let out. That friendship didn't LAST. So then I became a BATHROOM MONITOR. Every time someone used "THE CAN" I would practically stalk them  just to make sure I could help them out of the facilities. Stalking bathrooms IS NOT OKAY Though--I started getting strange looks--and I started worrying that people thought I was a PERVERT--NOT KIDDING. So then  I starting making people sign a disclaimer when then entered our house. I'd have to explain--sometimes to complete strangers--ABOUT OUR DOORKNOB DYSFUNCTION--so that I wouldn't feel responsible for any more bathroom mishaps. Isn't this nuts Yup. 27 longs years. Did I every tell you about my sink woes? That's a story for another day. 
Have you ever heard the story of the runner in red? Many people believe that in 1951,  a woman wearing red ran the Boston Marathon--although it's never been proven. In his novel Runner In Red, Tom Murphy uses this urban legend as a springboard to solve the mystery of the runner in red. Set in 2000,  Murphy mixes Boston Marathon history with fictional characters to create an unforgettable story of a family torn apart by the Marathon of 1971 who find their way back to one another through the millennial marathon. This book explores the history of women's running and the pioneers who opened the door for future runners. It's also a love story and family drama that is a real page turner. It's only about 240 pages-- or a 2 mile run that you will not be able to put down. Enjoy.