Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Book Club



I met my friend Debra when she first came to book club in 1999. We were at the same FIRST meeting of "The Book Club."  Those of you who know me know I love my book club. - And I've blogged about our book club and book clubs in general many times.

 The Book Club
April 2011
Charolette Buller, Diane Goodwin, Debra Blakley, Brenda Cohorn, Pam McCaskey and Charlotte Leiser
Judy Dunn - not shown

Anyway, Debra did a blog on book clubs and I just wanted to let my readers know about it. You can find it HERE.  Check out her writings on Book Clubs.

I remember as a young girl, my mom attended a Home Extension Club. They met every month and had lessons about sewing, cooking, being good mothers, etc. She still keeps up with some of the women she met over the years.

I also remember in 1984 (?) maybe '85, I had the opportunity to sit in on some recordings of Dr. James Dobson. In his wisdom he spoke about some of the differences of men and women and how important it is for women to have friends. (He didn't leave the men out, but I'm not speaking about men right now.) I believe that my mom's extension club was important for the friendships of women. I believe the modern day equivalent of the Home Extension Club is the book club. - or any other club you want to come up with.

Camaraderie is so important for us. Sharing our lives, our struggles, our accomplishments - with women we love and trust. I know that depression is very rampant in women today, some of this may be eliminated with a group of good friends that love you.

Debra's blog is very good. She speaks from years of experience. Read her blog and together with the idea of building a community of friends I urge you to start a book club or invite yourself to one!! 


Monday, June 25, 2012

The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D by Nichole Bernier






I'm always looking for a new book to read. If I find one by a new author - all the better!  I read about The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D. from a Newsletter I've received for years and it is very informational for book clubs. "Reading Group Choices" is the web site that sends the newsletter. You can find it HERE.  This website has so much information about books, it includes synopsis, book club information, free book opportunities. I've received many free books over the years from this web site.

I was interested in the synopsis they offered about this book. It intrigued me so I got it for my Kindle... Never mind that I have stacks - hmmm three relatively short stacks  :) of books for the summer! It did not disappoint.

This is a debut book by Nichole Bernier and just came out this month. 

Synopsis:

"Summer island vacation with her family was supposed to be a restorative time for Kate, who’d lost her close friend Elizabeth in a plane crash. But when she inherits a trunk of Elizabeth's journals, they reveal a woman far different than the cheerful wife and mother Kate thought she knew. The complicated portrait of Elizabeth — her upbringing, her marriage, and journey to motherhood — makes Kate question not just their friendship, but her own deepest beliefs about loyalty and honesty at a moment of uncertainty in her own marriage. When an unfamiliar man’s name appears in the pages, Kate realizes the extent of what she didn’t know about her friend — including where she was really going when she died."
" Before there were blogs, there were journals. And in them we’d write as we really were, not as we wanted to appear. But there comes a day when journals outlive us. And with them, our secrets."
 Not too long ago, I heard a troubled teen say, "My parents have made me the way I am today." I disagreed. I realize we have nature and nurture, but we also have free choice. Each of us can decide what we want to become, who we want to be. The choice is ours. The choice is mine. I must take responsibility for my own actions. As I read Bernier's book I thought of this conversation many times. This is a journaling, a record of not letting a past control your future.

I also realized the "why" of my never wanting to write a journal. I've tried many times. But each time I realized I wasn't truthful or open in my journaling. I was writing what I wanted others to see - with the realization that someday, someone may see what I'm writing. - as part of the synopsis said "... there comes a day when journals outlive us.."  This book will make you think. I looked at myself while reading this book. Some of what I saw, I didn't like. Some was good. 

You know I like to "mark" passages that speak to me. One in this book was Elizabeth speaking of her mother "... why someone would go somewhere else to open up to people for strength and togetherness when her own flesh and blood was right next to her looking for the same thing."  I knew exactly what her mother was searching for. Sometimes it's so much easier to let someone you don't know see all the black, gunky stuff inside of you. Especially mom's, we believe we must be strong for our families. And we do - to some extent, but if we never let our children see our weaknesses, will they grow up struggling with the idea of needing to be perfect?

Another passage I have marked - a married couple, "They looked for a long time at one another and there was nothing awkward in the look... It was a naked look and it was all right there: the waiting and the worry the dwindling communication and the secrecy and the deception.. The anxiety, and the longing for guarantees - against calamity ... when there were none to be had." I remember having these exact feelings. 


The fears many people have as they look at our world. It has gotten so complicated - so "unsafe." Again, how I respond to what's going on around me is my choice. I can make a complicated world even more complicated - or I can create a peaceful attitude all around me.

The characters of the book - their lives were not parallel with mine, no - "ah that happened to me" BUT their thoughts are much the same as mine. Different circumstances, same feelings, same thoughts.

"There is nothing new under the sun..." Ecclesiastes tells us. And the older I get the more I really understand this teaching.

A very well written book. A good story. What makes it so good is that Bernier was able to put the thoughts of so many of us, - women, daughters, mom's, wives -  into a story about two women - two families. 

It's a very good book. As I said before it will give you pause to think. 



Nichole is the author of The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D, a novel inspired by a family friend's healing following the September 11th attacks. She is at work on her second novel, and lives outside of Boston with her husband and five children.
 
*****

 

 

Monday, June 18, 2012

The Year of Pleasures by Elizabeth Berg






I first read a book by Elizabeth Berg several years ago. I really enjoyed it and read another that I didn't like so much. I picked "The Year of Pleasures" up this spring while Randy and I were "shopping" for our book business. I liked this one as much as the first one I read.

Elizabeth Berg said about this book:  

"I've always had a fantasy about reconnecting with old friends, with opening a store such as the one that Betta opens. And I loved the idea writing about pleasure, which is everywhere, even when we're in pain."

Synopsis:
" When Betta Nolan's husband, John, dies, she honors a promise she made to him to sell their house, drive across the country until she finds a town she likes, and move there. This is a novel about starting life over, and purposely enriching that life with the many pleasures, especially the small and free ones, that are always available to us. It also challenges the notion that a widow must or should behave in a certain way; and it shows how love does not die, but rather changes form."
"Betta Nolan is determined to find pleasure in her simple daily routines. Among those who help her in both expected and unexpected ways are the ten-year-old boy next door, three wild women friends from her college days, a twenty-year-old who is struggling to find his place in the world and a man who is ready for love."

I love the way Elizabeth Berg writes. I have so many post-it markers in this book - of things that really spoke to me! Even though I haven't experienced losing a spouse from death, I have lost a spouse after 37 years. When Berg writes "Still, every now and then a quick thrill raced up my spine in the form of a thought: I am my own again. Sorrow that lay pooled inside me gave over to a kind of exhilaration in those moments; the relief was stunning." I was amazed that someone other than me felt an excitement in the horrible sadness that had taken over my life.

Betta Nolan realizes "...Neighbors who seemed nice. A good-priced handyman...Lorraine [a new friend]. Into my looming empty basket, I laid these gifts."  Berg does a wonderful job of showing us that our friends, our circumstances can be "gifts" to us. If we let them and she does it without preaching - without making one feel judged if they aren't ready to find pleasures in life yet. She just gently lays it out there and lets us experience the opportunity of turning bad into good.

When you're hurting what if you find one thing every day - not a "I'm thankful for this or that" or not a "gratitude" journal, not something that happens to you that makes you feel good BUT something you make happen. Something you personally do that brings you happiness every single day. - in a very conscience way. - this message from the book reminds me of the "pay it forward" mindset. - Of the Liberty Mutual commercials! You know, do the right thing. 

Have you heard the tail of the Navajo grandfather talking to his grandson, "Two wolves live inside me. One is the bad wolf, full of greed and laziness, full of anger and jealousy and regret. The other is the good wolf, full of joy and compassion and willingness and a great love for the world. All the time, these wolves are fighting inside me." "But grandfather," the boy said, "Which wolf will win?" The grandfather answered, "The one I feed."  Berg is able to weave this mindset into "The Year of Pleasures."  This book is full of thought provoking wisdom.

Ever since reading "Open House" by Elizabeth Berg so many years ago - I have considered her one of my favorite authors. Check out her website - which lists all of her books HERE.

 From her website:
"I was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on December 2, 1948. Before I became a writer, I was a registered nurse for ten years, and that was my “school” for writing—taking care of patients taught me a lot about human nature, about hope and fear and love and loss and regret and triumph and especially about relationships--all things that I tend to focus on in my work. I worked as a waitress, which is also good training for a writer, and I sang in a rock band which was not good for anything except the money I made. I was a dramatic and dreamy child, given to living more inside my head than outside, something that persists up to today and makes me a terrible dining partner. I was married for over twenty years and am now divorced. I have two daughters and three grandchildren. I live with my excellent dog, Homer, and my cat, Gracie, mostly in Chicago, but sometimes in Boston or Wisconsin."

I highly recommend "The Year of Pleasures"


***** 


 


Wednesday, June 6, 2012

These Foolish Things (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) by Deborah Moggach



I had been looking forward to seeing this movie from the first time I saw an advertisement on TV for it. When it came to Wichita, we went the first day. It was a Friday afternoon and the theater was filled! First time I've been to a movie in Wichita that I've actually felt a bit crowded. (except in "The Hunger Games") And this "crowding" was comfortable because everyone in this movie was "our age"!!  or older! Nothing makes you feel young like going to a movie filled with "older" people!!! Actually - they probably said the same about me. ANYWAY - to get back to my review.

The next week, I bought the book on my Fire and read it.

I LOVED the movie. Some of my very favorite actresses in it. Maggie Smith, Dame Judy Dench, and Penelope Wilton. The book had many more characters than the movie and they combined several together for the movie. - I did have to make a list of the characters in the book to keep them straight. (that would be the age thing again!)

The book was written by Deborah Moggach and titled "These Foolish Things."

Synopsis:  (from Deborah Moggach's website that you can visit HERE. )


"THESE FOOLISH THINGS (Chatto and Windus £12.99)
This is my latest novel. It came about because I’d been thinking a lot about growing older, about what is going to happen to us all. The population is ageing – for the first time the over 50s outnumber the rest of us – and it’s getting older. Where are we all going to live? Care homes are closing, pensions are dwindling, and life expectancy is rising. Then I had a brainwave. We live in a global age – the internet, cheap travel, satellite TV…when it comes to goods and services it hardly matters where we live. “Geography is history.” Our healthcare is sourced from the developing countries; how about turning the tables and outsourcing the elderly? How about setting up retirement homes in developing countries where it’s sunny and labour is cheap? So I created an Indian whizz-kid called Sonny who sets up a retirement home in Bangalore and fills it with Brits."


I loved the movie. It quickly became my favorite! Even over my old standby quotable movie of all time "Steel Magnolias."  


A couple of unforgettable quotes from the movie:
"Everything will be all right in the end. So if it is not all right, then it is not yet the end."   Sonny
Or Maggie Smith as Muriel responding to an orderly:
Orderly: My wife is from Mumbai.

Muriel:  Well don't blame me, you married her!

Often, if I like the book, I won't go to the movie because it usually disappoints. I mean very seldom do flesh and blood actors/actresses meet the expectations I have built with my imagination! But this time, I went about it backwards. The movie first - then the book.

I loved the book, too. It was easy to read and once I got past the reality of  more characters and different ones than the movie I settled back and had a good time. Once I figured out who was who, it was a very enjoyable read. 

Maybe it's because I'm 59, I don't know. I'm not sure I would have enjoyed it as much if I were in my 30's. But I am reaching the age of "what's next". I'm retired and am doing great. Busy, busy busy. But what happens in a few years? I watched as we dealt with my mother-in-law as she suffered with dementia and was living in a care facility. It was never easy.

Of course, we all hope that we won't be in that position, but who knows what will come. 

The book doesn't answer these questions but Moggach does a terrific job of letting her readers see that life does NOT end just because you are over 60 - 70 - 80... It doesn't end just because you may be in a wheel chair. Moggach gives hope - and she's funny. 

The book addresses all that we have a tendency to pretend we don't notice - race,  mortality, sex. Love between older people. Or if we do notice, so many times we look away and pretend we didn't see. The book helps you look at these rites of passage with humor and more importantly understanding. I hope if you read it you will look at "old age" more patiently and wait for it with excitement!


Deborah Moggach has written several books and I plan on reading more from this author. Her children have long since grown up and she lives near Hampstead Heath, England. She also loves biking around London.

I really encourage you to go to her website. Her biography is so good and it seems as if she becomes your friend!! Very personable! I enjoyed her book and I've enjoyed her website. 



I highly recommend the movie
"The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel"

I VERY highly recommend her book
"These Foolish Things"
or can also be found under the title
"The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel"

*****




 

Friday, June 1, 2012

Miss Zukas and the Library Murders by Jo Dereske



I will be the first to admit that had I been looking in a book store for a "cozy" to read - I would never have chosen this book - yep, because of the cover. Not a cover that would have drawn me. But, I purchased it on my kindle fire and didn't see this cover. I am sorry but apparently I DO judge a book by it's cover!


 My virtual cover for my Kindle Fire.
(for some reason this one is much more pleasing to me!)


I like cozies. I don't like romance, but sometimes I want a light read so I turn to the genre of murder! I have several from my favorite authors on my book shelves. I didn't feel like rereading at the time so I googled  "cozies" and found a discussion on a blog about authors of this genre. I made a list of several that I thought I would look up and when I did, I started with Jo Dereske. I enjoyed this first book in her series of 12 books about Miss Helma Zukas, a 30 something librarian in Washington state.

 "Meet Miss Zukas . . . the very proper, exceedingly conscientious, and relentlessly curious local librarian of tiny Bellehaven, Washington—and one heck of an amateur sleuth! The Bellehaven police are baffled when a dead body turns up right in the middle of the library's fiction stacks. But Miss Helma Zukas—who never fails to make note of the slightest deviation from the norm of everyday life—is not willing to let this rather nasty disruption stand. Her precious literary sanctuary has been violated, and if the local law cannot get to the bottom of this case, Miss Zukas certainly intends to—with the help of her not-so-proper best friend, Ruth, a six-foot-tall bohemian artist with a nose for gossip and a penchant for getting into trouble. But their research project is bringing them a little too close to a killer . . . who'd like nothing better than to write Helma and Ruth out of the story completely!"

I really enjoyed this book. It was funny, moved fast, but not too deep and not scarey (which is the point of a good cozy.) I had figured out "whodunit" before the end but it is very well written and entertaining.  I will admit, at first, I kept picturing Miss Zukas as an older women (apparently I also stereotype!) but that picture quickly faded as I continued to read. There is also a good looking, single, police chief in the story. (maybe romance isn't that bad!)

Once I finished book one I purchased book two Miss Zukas and the Island Murders. I enjoyed book two, also. I plan on reading all 12 books.

 


The author, Jo Dereske is the author of 17 published books. She lives in Washington and to find out more about her you can check out her web site HERE


For my friends who like "cozies" I suggest Jo Dereske's series about Miss Zukas. Light reading and very entertaining!

*****