Top Ten Tuesday: Redeemed Characters
Monday, September 16, 2024
TTT: Redeemed characters
Top Ten Tuesday: Redeemed Characters
Sunday, September 15, 2024
Sunday Salon
Birthday boys, with cats. |
Weather: Rainy, with sun breaks. The weather has turned this week toward more Fall-like temperatures.
- Completed (Click hyperlinks for reviews):
- Killers of a Certain Age by Raybourne, completed Aug. 16th
- Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors by Dev, completed Aug. 18th
- Somehow: Thoughts on Love by Lamott, completed, Aug. 20th
- The Song of Achilles by Miller, completed audiobook, Aug. 27th
- Symphony of Secrets by Slocumb, completed audiobook, Sept. 2nd
- A Bell for Adano by Hersey, completed, Sept. 5th
- A Plague of Doves by Erdrich, completed audiobook Sept 8th, review pending
- Gather by Cadow, completed Sept. 9th, review pending
- Transcendent Kingdom by Gyasi, completed audiobook Sept. 9th, review pending
- Currently reading:
- The Known World by Jones. Print and Audio. The last book in my Pulitzer Project to read all the 21st Century winners. 55% complete.
- Suffering is Never for Nothing by Elliot. Print. An inspirational selection. 50% complete.
- Blogging. In addition to the reviewed linked above:
- TTT: Travel Books -- from Here to There
- Obama Recommends These Books
- Emergency Blog-n-Readathon
- Review: MY BRILLIANT FRIEND
- Review: NORTH WOODS
- Review: THE BERRY PICKERS
- TTT: Literary Orphans
- TTT: Posts that Will Give You the Best Glimpse of Me
- Review: WANDERING STARS
- End of Summer. How'd I do on my summer reading challenges?
- TTT: Food in Books
- TTT: Books That Provided a Much Needed Escape
- Other bookish events:
- SOTH Book Club where we discussed Killers of a Certain Age, Aug. 20th
- RHS Ladies Book Club where we discussed Night Watch, Aug. 28th.
Anyone with cats know this is completely true. |
#BlackJobs pic.twitter.com/MXZqTpEBJb
— 𝓝𝓲𝓴𝓴𝓲 𝓑𝓪𝓻𝓷𝓮𝓼 (@NikkiBarnesFL) September 14, 2024
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Classic review: A BELL FOR ADANO (+Friday56 Sign-in)
Invasion had come to the town of Adano.
Friday56 quote:
The Major worried all day about the the order and wondered what he could do about it. He slept very badly during the night, because of his worry.
Summary: After the Invasion of Sicily in July of 1943, American forces occupied Italian villages deemed necessary for military reasons as they moved further north up the European continent. Major Victor Jopollo is the AMGOT representative (American Military Government of Allied Territories) in a small coastal, Sicilian village, Adano. As the highest ranking officer, he is tasked with assisting the villagers as they shift their thinking from fascism to democracy. One of the tasks he tries to solve is finding a replacement bell for the city's main palazzo. The old bell, which helped direct the activities of the villagers' lives for 700 years, had been confiscated by Mussolini to be melted down and made into weapons.
In a series of closely knitted episodes Mr Hersey presents a dramatic and rapid picture of what Jopollo was up against in his day-to-day task of trying to eradicate the poisonous, black taste of fascism and restore the people of Adano the feeling of self respect they needed to become better citizens. Major Joppolo had a genius for transforming his good intentions into achievements. The tragedy of the story is that he was not permitted to complete his job. (Jerry Mangione, New York Times Book Review, Feb. 6, 1944)
RULES:
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterMonday, September 9, 2024
TTT: Books That Provide a Much-Needed Escape
- In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson. Actually most books by Bryson are quite funny. If you listen to his audiobook, make sure he is the narrator for extra funny points.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. This book, and others in the series, are a scream. They are so funny. Do not even try to take these books seriously.
- A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. Dry, dry, dry humor. I can still repeat lines from this one.
- Less by Andrew Sean Greer. We read this in book club. Everyone else in the club tried to take it seriously and didn't like it. I laughed my way through it and was delighted by it.
- Citizen Vince by Jess Walter. -- I keep finding myself reading this guy and often finding myself laughing at the inane situations his characters get into. I often think "Well, that is the last Jess Walter books I'll read." Then I find myself reading another.
- Born a Crime by Trevor Noah. -- Many comedians write funny memoirs. This is one of the best -- humor with a point.
- Blue Lipstick: Concrete Poems by John Grandits -- if you aren't familiar with the form, concrete poems have a shape to them. The words may form a spiral, form a picture, or bounce back and forth.
- Counting in Dog Years and Other Sassy Math Poems by Betsy Franco -- Lots of children's books are also poetry books. This one delighted me a lot when I read it to my grandson.
- I Hope This Finds You Well: Poems by Kate Baer -- Ms. Baer's poems, erasure poems evolved out of criticisms given to her on her social media accounts. We all deserve a chance to tell our critics off.
- The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman -- I just discovered this series and enjoyed it a lot.
- Symphony of Secrets by Brendan Slocumb -- What's not to love? It is a musical mystery.
- Anything by Agatha Christie
- Strange Planet by Nathan Pyle -- I love his funny aliens interpreting life on Earth.
- Dragon Hoops by Gene Luen Yang -- A biography of the author/artist and the history of basketball. Information can be digested easily.
- The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy -- illustrated and inspirational.
- Brazen: Rebel Ladies Who Rocked the World by Penelope Bagieu -- illustrated miniature biographies in bite sized pieces of information.
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Review: THE SONG OF ACHILLES (+Friday56 Sign In)
My father was a king and the son of kings.
I was at a loss. I knew nothing of how gods were made. I was mortal, only.
"Oscar Wilde said something like:"The Odyssey was written by Homer, or another Greek of the same name." But Oscar Wilde had clearly never met you yet. This is not a question. It is a salute.
The Song of Achilles qualified for the 2024 Big Book Summer Challenge. I completed it before September 2nd and it is 408 pages long. |
RULES:
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterWednesday, September 4, 2024
Review: SYMPHONY OF SECRETS
seamlessly jumps between Bern and Eboni’s present-day pursuit of the truth and Delaney and Josephine’s tragic story from decades before. Although the mystery is taut and the characters engaging, what makes the book sing is how it makes audible the chords that echo between present and past, coming together to create a consonant harmony. The way Josephine, a disenfranchised Black woman, has her innate talent used and abused under the guise of “being helped” by Delaney is a counterpoint to Bern’s slow and demoralizing realization that the foundation sees him as nothing more than a means to an end. Both believe their pure love of music will allow them to soar, and both end up smashing painfully into the glass ceiling of white supremacy (Cole).
Symphony of Secrets has a satisfying, if not improbable, ending. It is followed by an author's note where Slocumb asks his audience to ponder the probability that this kind of thing happened a lot in our past. Black authors, musicians, artists having their works diminished or appropriated by Whites. And now their works are lost forever to time. Perhaps it is still happening today.
Rating: 4.5 stars
At 448 pages in length, Symphony of Secrets was my 6th book read for Big Book Summer Challenge, completed the last day of the challenge, September 2nd. |
Monday, September 2, 2024
TTT: Food in Books
- A memoir about a Korean American girl whose mother dies before she can teach her how to prepare her favorite Korean dishes. She has to rely on her aunts and YouTube videos to learn how to cook.
- A graphic food-oriented memoir. I learned how to cook mushrooms from this book.
- A novel set in a post-apocalyptic time when a father and son spend their last days searching for food. At one point they find a can of coke stuck in a vending machine. It is a rare treat.
- Set on the Korean island of Jeju where women dive in the cold water off the coast for sea creatures which they will sell or eat.
- Set in Vietnam in the past century. There were many moments of deprivation but when food was available it was cooked with care and described in details.
- A food critic, who is dying, shares some of his memories of fantastic meals he's eaten in this novel set in France.
- A Pride and Prejudice retelling which includes a chef who specializes in Indian cuisine and a character who loves his cooking. The descriptions of the food and its prep made me hungry.
- Elizabeth Zott, a chemist in the 1960s, finds herself not only a single mother, but the reluctant star of America’s most beloved cooking show Supper at Six. Elizabeth’s unusual approach to cooking (“combine one tablespoon acetic acid with a pinch of sodium chloride”) proves revolutionary.
- Astronaut Mark Watney is left behind on Mars. He has to grow potatoes to survive. While he waits for them to grow he eats the packaged food left behind.
- In this musical, murder mystery the two protagonists like to search the five boroughs of New York City to find the best slice of pizza.
End of Summer. How'd I do on my challenges?
Thursday, August 29, 2024
Review: WANDERING STARS
Oakland, 2018. Opal Viola Victoria Bear Shield is barely holding her family together after the shooting that nearly took the life of her nephew Orvil. From the moment he awakens in his hospital bed, Orvil begins compulsively googling school shootings on YouTube. He also becomes emotionally reliant on the prescription medications meant to ease his physical trauma. His younger brother, Lony, suffering from PTSD, is struggling to make sense of the carnage he witnessed at the shooting by secretly cutting himself and enacting blood rituals that he hopes will connect him to his Cheyenne heritage. Opal is equally adrift, experimenting with Ceremony and peyote, searching for a way to heal her wounded family (Publisher).
RULES:
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enter