Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Nevermore: Nomadland, White Chrysanthemum, Country Driving, Fresh Complaint, Gods of Howl Mountain, Queen Victoria's Matchmaking



Reported by Jeanne


This week’s Nevermore opened with Nomadland by Jessica Bruder.  There are a number of Americans, usually older people, who travel the country in search of temporary jobs.  Some are formerly affluent, but shrinking incomes or financial setbacks have made it difficult (if not impossible) to eke out a living.  So they set out in RVs or converted vans to follow the seasonal jobs.  They come from a variety of backgrounds--police, wait staff, teachers—but now they work as campground custodians, warehouse personnel for Amazon, or harvesting produce.  Bruder interviews a number of those folks, exploring the culture they have created.  Our reader found it both eye-opening and fascinating.

White Chrysanthemum by Mary Lynn Bracht is a novel built around two sisters, Hana and Emi, whose lives are forever changed one day in 1943 when Japanese soldiers appear on their Korean island.  Hana sacrifices herself to allow her younger sister to escape and is taken to be a “comfort woman”—that is, a sex slave to the Japanese soldiers.  The book alternates points of view between Emi and Hana.  Our reviewer thought it was an excellent book, but was also frustrated that so much shame was attached to the girls when it wasn’t their fault.  She felt it that they were seen as having no value and she found that very sad.


In 2001, American journalist Peter Hessler acquired a Chinese driver’s license and set out to explore the country by car.  It took him seven years, but resulted in Country Driving, an intriguing book that examines modern Chinese culture during a period of rapid change.  Hessler spent time in several small towns and villages, places that are now disappearing as people move to the cities for work.  He also examines the upheavals created by the growing number of automobiles and increasing industrialization. It’s a wonderful book and comes highly recommended.


Jeffrey Eugenides’ Fresh Complaint is a collection of short fiction enhanced by Eugenides’ strong characterization and fresh approaches to the human condition.  Our reader said that the writing is “different” and that sometimes the stories stop, leaving the reader to supply the ending.  The question is, do you envision the way it should  end or the way you wish it would end? No matter the answer, he felt it was a book everyone could enjoy. However, if you read only one story in the collection, then read the final one.


The Gods of Howl Mountain by Taylor Brown was enjoyed by our next Nevermore member.  The year is 1952, and Rory Cocherty has returned to North Carolina from Korea with injuries to both body and spirit.  He finds employment running moonshine while living with his grandmother, the unforgettable Granny May.  There’s humor as well as drama, and it all ends “as well as it could.”  Our reader was impressed with the strong sense of place, and said the writer knows the area.  This is Brown’s fourth novel, and one reviewer recommended it for readers who enjoy reading Wiley Cash and Ron Rash.


With the new PBS season of “Queen Victoria” airing, our next member decided to read more about the monarch.  She picked up the new book Queen Victoria’s Matchmaking by Deborah Cadbury.  She found it to be a most interesting book, with tidbits of gossip along with fascinating history. Prince Albert had advocated using marriage to strengthen ties and promote peace between the countries of Europe, and his wife took the advice to heart.  Through a series of calculated political marriages, she had descendants in many Royal Houses, and five of her grandchildren were crowned heads of countries.

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