Monday, February 12, 2018

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, 2016

Image result for underground railroad whiteheadBeautifully written book about the brutality of slavery.  Cora escapes the Randall cotton plantation & the brutality of Terrence Randall, risking her life.

Through the help of safe houses provided by the Underground Railroad, Cora & Caesar travel up North where there are free blacks.  She is not able to escape the brutality, whether she escapes North or West.

It is shockingly appalling and sad the public displays of torture inflicted on slaves & blacks in general.  The violence extended to any whites who assisted escaped slaves.

Slave catcher was a profession.

The book depicts an actual underground railroad, which I never knew existed, but after researching realized that it did not exist but a metaphor for what did happen in the 1850s.

This novel piqued my interest while highlighting my ignorance of our country's history and what happened during such a barbaric time.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, 2017

Image result for little fires everywhereLittle Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, 2017

A bit slow going in the beginning with the introduction of so many characters, but really picked up and then couldn't stop reading until I finished. 

Takes place in Shaker Heights, OH where a typical mid western couple (met in college, married & moved back to the wife's home town) for the mother Elena Richardson to raise four children: Lexie, Trip, Moody & Izzy.

Diversity present in that Lexie has an African-American boyfriend & Mia Warren, a tenant of Richardson's, works in a Chinese restaurants & befriends the staff. 

I appreciated the attorney Ed Lim's character, with him having grown up in the 'white' world of the midwest & representing Bebe in the custody battle against Elena's childhood friend, Linda McCollough.

Ng captures sibling rivalries, adult friendships, a mother not able to stop herself & the microcosm that is the midwest.  She also captures the broken working class families of the East coast when a daughter will sacrifice anything for her art.

Friday, January 5, 2018

Eleanor Oliphant is completely fine by Gail Honeyman, 2017

Such an original book & enjoyable book.  Funny, touching & warm.  Eleanor Oliphant is literally & figuratively a character.

She accidentally & reluctantly develops a friendship with a co-worker who brings her out of her routine and obsession with a local musician.

Filled with wry observations about what are considered 'normal' behaviors, Eleanor's point of view is truly unique.

Read this during my Italian vacation & was as much a treat as all the delicious pasta, charcuterie & fresh vegetables I feasted on.

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Fall

Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts, 2003
Cover artAn odyssey through India.  Semi-autobiographic story of Roberts, an Australian who breaks out of prison & feels to Mumbai.  He talks about the people, how they are full of smiles and warmth, love of dancing and celebration.  Generous, good-hearted people.

The narrator goes by Lindsay, the name on the stolen passport, which is shortened to Lin in India.  Lin embraces the friendship of hustler-guide Prabakar and is invited to Prabakar's home village hours from Mumbai where he learns Marathi, the local language foreigners rarely learn.

Part of Lin's adventures include living in the infamous Mumbai slums, spending time in prison, joining the Abdel Khader Khan Mafia, pursuing the love of American Karla Saaranen & embarking on a mission to deliver arms to Afghanistan.

Written while Roberts was serving time in prison, the story includes many insights on human characteristics and philosophical discussions, which to be honest, I found a bit tedious.  Regardless, the novel is magnificent.

Cover artFully Alive: Using the Lessons of the Amazon to Live Your Mission in Business And Life by Tyler Gage, 2017
Fascinating story of how a young college student Tyler Gage wanted to bring guayusa tea to the western world.  A staple of Amazonian tribes, guayusa is a natural caffeinated tea with a pleasing taste.

After graduating college, Gage and fellow Brown student Dan MacCombie move to Ecuador to start working on manufacturing guayusa to eventually use in energy drinks, a $3.2B marketing in 2008.  The work these two do to start up the business in Ecaudor is incredible, not counting the work that must be done in the States to produce the end product.

A good general business primer, Gage discusses the need to listen to experts, swallow your pride, continuously prune & weed your team, focus on customers & know your numbers.

Although Gage was almost fired by Runa's Board of Directors, he did manage to stay on and make the transition from starting a company to the very different job of managing an established company.  Factoring in providing a livelihood of the Amazonian Kichwa tribe of Ecaudor, Runa is a pretty amazing story.

Fully Alive provides insight into the spiritual rituals of the Amazonian tribes, balancing the focus on profits and revenue with mindfulness and social responsibility.

Cover artMrs. Fletcher by Tom Perrotta, 2017
I often find male authors lacking in capturing a woman's voice, and Tom Perrotta is no exception.  Although Mrs. Fletcher was very readable, I did not buy into the choices Eve Fletcher made.  A single mom whose only son Brendan has started college, Eve is left with an empty house.

She takes a class on gender, taught by transgender teacher Margo Fairchild.  She agrees to meet her employee Amanda for a drink outside of work.  None of these decisions seem odd, but the habit Eve embarks on & the wild night that ensues after having her classmates, including her son's high school classmate Julian, over for drinks do not ring true to me.

While Eve adjusts to her empty house, Brendan is also having difficulties adjusting to college life.  In high school, Brendan was the popular, cocky, superficial lacrosse player.  In college, Brendan's jock behavior is no longer acceptable and while his roommate Zach outgrows the behavior, Brendan struggles to do so.







Three Sisters, Three Queens by Phillippa Gregory, 2016

Yet another 16th Century royal page-turner, Three Sisters is told from the viewpoint of Margaret Tudor, Henvy VIII's older sister.  Filled with political maneuverings, wars and constant plotting for the gain of power, the Tudors were not a boring family.

Image result for three sisters three queensBetrothed to James II, King of Scotland, Margaret's union establishes peace along the English-Scottish border.  At the Tudor court, Katharine of Aragon lives in penury as the widow of Arthur.  Her father refuses to support her until Arthur's father, Henry VII pays her dowry.

With Henry VII's death, Margaret's brother Henry VIII becomes the King of England and marries Katharine of Aragon, making her Queen.  Katharine is restored to her proper place in the royal court & the two queens now focus on producing an heir for their respective thrones.

During Henry's reign, he attacks France, who has a treaty with Scotland, thus going to war with Scotland.  During Henry's siege of France, James II sees an opportunity to claim English lands given the lack of men remaining in England.

With Katharine Queen Regent during Henry's absence, she leads a decisive and brutal victory over James and his men.  She even orders the head of James, her brother-in-law, leaving Margaret a widow.

Margaret is seduced by a Scottish lord, Archibald Douglas, and marries him without approval from the Scottish lords.  Margaret writes to her brother & Katharine to send men and reinforcements, but none are provided. 

With no defense against the Scottish lords who turn on her, she is forced to flee to England.  She returns to Scotland to be with her son, but she and her son remain siege under the Douglas clan.  The Scottish lords who do rise to defend her are slaughtered by the Douglas clan.

Henry's and Margaret's younger sister is a renowned beauty betrothed to Charles of Castille, the grandson of Louis XII, King of France.  Before Charles becomes of age, his grandfather becomes a window and sends his men to the Scottish court to discuss a possible union between Scotland and France.

As Margaret considers the proposal and the powers he would have, she discovers that her brother Henry has been making arrangements and betroths Mary to the much older Louis XII to unite England and France.

With Mary's marriage, she becomes Queen of France.  The three sisters had all successfully ascended the throne, a remarkable political feat.

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

End of Summer Books

Image result for glass castle book images

The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, 2005
Amazing story of extreme poverty (growing up without indoor plumbing) & chaos (an alcoholic father) mixed with adventures (dreams of building a Glass Castle) & unconditional love (the sibling bond between Jeannette, Brian & Lori).

The ups & downs that are captured with Jeannette's magical yet destructive childhood are honestly & simply told in this gripping memoir.  So many unbelievable moments where Rex & Rose Mary Walls inadvertently abused their children.

That the Walls children were able to escape is due to the love of reading that was instilled in the children, and the support of a concerned adult, that encouraged them to do well in school & that they could achieve things even if they scavenged the school restroom garbage for lunch.



Image result for how to start a fire lisa lutz imagesHow to Start a Fire by Lisa Lutz, 2015
Story of college friends Kate Smirnoff, Anna Furry & George Leoni.

The story jumps around chronologically so was tough to follow, but set up some twists.

Kate has been mysteriously traveling the country looking to give away her inheritance.  Anna is now a paralegal despite her MD.  George is onto her third husband & child, constantly in need of a man to love her.

The friends have fallen out over an incident when all three lived together & an intruder attempted to force himself onto George.

We realize that the event triggers Kate's road trip & that although everyone blames Anna for the incident, there is more to it.

Engaging vignettes revolving around no-nonsense, straight talker Kate with no greater ambition than being a barista; privileged Anna who will never shake her childhood demons or the cold, distant manner her parents treat her & her brother Colin; and gorgeous park ranger George who becomes addicted to men.


  Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis (Digital Book)Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis by J.D. Vance

More academic than The Glass Castle, Hillbilly Elegy describes J.D.'s (or J-Dot's) upbringing in economically depraved Ohio and family reunions in Appalachian Kentucky.

Unstable families, violence & addiction plague the community.  Vance sees friends checking out of good paying jobs because they are tired of getting up so early.

The mentality is not that they can make something of themselves through education and hard work, but rather that the world is stacked against them.

These people do not realize that if they attended college out of state versus community college, the tuition would most likely be lower due to financial aid.  These people do not realize there is another life besides the vicious cycle of broken families and poverty prevalent in small communities left bereft when mines & factories closed.

When Vance does enter the Ivy Leagues (Yale for law school), the cultural shock is significant.  He describes things he never realized growing up in small town Ohio.  From social etiquette 'norms' such as wearing a suit to an interview and that fizzy water is not water that has gone 'bad' and to be spit out at a restaurant to life altering truths such as job prospects are not the same as the town he grew up in and that elite colleges have more to offer than just bragging rights.

Similar to my experience where my family rarely ate out & when we did, it was at a Chinese restaurant, I went on a date in college where I ordered a burger & the waiter asked how I would like it.  Having only eater hamburgers of the McDonald's variety, I did not know how to answer this question.

Image result for spellman files
The Spellman Files by Lisa Lutz, 2007
Picked up this book because of How to Start a Fire & the hilarious, sarcastic heroine Kate.  Spellman files centers around Isabel Spellman, whose parents are detectives & proprietors of Spellman Investigations.

Based in San Francesco, Izzy lives with her parents, younger sister Rae & alcoholic Uncle Ray.  Her older brother David is an attorney.

The family spies on each other & Izzy is unable to draw the line between investigating people and her personal life, leaving to many failed relationships.

When she becomes too intensely involved & investigates a cold case that her parents had been hired for decades ago, her family starts tailing her to reign her in.

Quirky and humorous, the Spellman Files is the start to a series of Spellman books that I am not compelled to read, but may pick up at some point.


Sunday, September 10, 2017

Summer 2017

Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton: Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocery by John Jung, 2008

Image result for Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton: Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocery
Fascinating and well researched stories of the first Chinese immigrants who migrated to the Mississippi delta to build a better life for themselves.  Initially working as sharecroppers, the Chinese moved into the more prestigious work of owning grocery stores.

This opportunity opened up to the Chinese as slavery ended requiring African Americans to purchase goods that they previously received from a commissary.  While white merchants refused to serve African Americans, the Chinese willingly stepped in.

Although they were not in the fields, Chinese grocers worked long hours from early in the morning to late at night, constantly stocking the shop & serving customers.  Grocers lived in the back of the store and the store became not only their livelihood but also their homes and where they raised their children.

To help run or open new stores, men would send for family members (or acquaintances) from China to join them.  This started a network of Chinese emigrating to the States from the Toisan region of China, where my parents are from.  It's fascinating to think how a handful of adventurous & industrious Chinese laid the foundation for the regional emigration to the United States.  How happenstance affected so many lives.

As store owners and merchants, Chinese were accorded a better social status than African Americans, but still faced discrimination.  In theaters, when they did take time off to see a move, struggled to determine whether they were to sit in the Negro or White Only seating.

Church became an entree into White society, which meant acceptance, including their children being allowed to attend the White only school, which was superior to the segregated Negro schools.

The story is fascinating as my father lived in Arkansas & worked in a grocery owned by his cousin.  The store ended up not being successful so my Dad moved north to Boston where there were jobs available.  Reading about the experience of Chinese grocers in the Mississippi delta was fascinating as I imagined how my life would have changed if my Dad's family had become successful in building a store in the South.

Image result for The gilded years : a novelThe Gilded Years: A Novel by Karin Tanabe, 2016 - Fascinating, the concept of 'passing' that existed where mixed race people passed as a white person to gain access to the privileges allowed Caucasians and denied Negros.

Historic fiction centers around Anita Hemmings, daughter of mulatto parents who is very light skinned and able to pass as a white woman so that she can attend Vassar College, which has not started admitting Negro students.

The discrimination she must endure and pain of not being able to openly interact with her family, who would expose that she has Negro blood in her.

Hemmings would marry another light mixed race doctor and pass for white to further progress his career.  Their children would grow up unaware of their Negro heritage.  A bit like the Americans but sadly, just a couple trying to take advantage of basic opportunities, not defeat another country in war.


Image result for the nix nathan hillThe Nix by Nathan Hill, 2016
An epic novel filled with vivid stories from growing up in a small town to having your life literally consumed by video games to the camaraderie and dangers of fighting in Iraq.

The story of Faye Andresen-Anderson & her son Samuel Andresen-Anderson start with a curse, or nisee, the Norwegian word Faye's dad uses to describe it.

Samuel's childhood is haunted by the mother who left him and his father.  He befriends Bishop and falls in love with his twin Bethany.

As an adult, Samuel remains an unfinished man, finding success with a story depicting his childhood friends's dark secret, leading to a college teaching job.

Unfilled & lost, Samuel spends his nights playing Elfscape.  After reconnecting with his mother after over two decades and not receiving any answers, Samuel reaches out to his Elfscape friends to meet in real life, breaking a cardinal rule.

Pwnage, a legendary elf player, answers the calls and meets up with Samuel, where he imparts advice gleaned from his hours/days playing video games.  Determine if a situation is an Enemy, Obstacle, Puzzle, or Trap and plan next steps accordingly.

Samuel decides he has a puzzle to solve as he needs to find out what happened to her mother when she was a college student in Chicago during the anti-Vietnam protests.  Bewildered by her fellow free-spirited students, Faye does not fit in with the other students.  She is befriended by an outspoken & free woman Alice, who introduces her to Sebastian, who publishes an anti-establishment paper.

Events spiral a bit unbelievably with Office Charles Brown, but the stories along the way are engaging and vivid.  Having always loved covers (judging books by them despite the age old adage), the cover for the Nix had me looking at it in appreciate quite a few times after I had finished the novel.