Reported by Garry
Haven by Emma Donoghue. Set in 7th
century Ireland, this novel tells the tale of Artt, a scholar and priest who
has a dream that tells him to leave the world behind and build a
hermitage/monastery. Sailing down the river Shannon and out into the open
ocean, Artt and his two companions come to the Skellig Islands, eight miles off
the southwest coast of Ireland. Here, Artt and his two companions, one old and
wise, the other young and ingenious, start building their monastery on Skellig
Michael, a brutally harsh, windswept, twin-pinnacled crag in the ocean. Artt is
the leader and Prior of the brotherhood, and demands total obedience to what he
says is God’s will, despite the harshness of their situation. Our reader says
that the descriptions of the day-to-day lives of the three are highly detailed
and pretty graphic as they have to slaughter the sea-birds that call the island
home in order to get food and oil. Fun Fact: Skellig Michael was the setting of
Luke’s Jedi Temple in Star Wars: The Force Awakens. ML
Figures In A Landscape: People and Places is a
collection of essays by Paul Theroux, with the overall theme being on the craft
of writing. Along the way, Theroux takes us surfing with Oliver Sacks, on a
helicopter ride to Neverland with Elizabeth Taylor, and exploring New York with
Robin Williams. Our reader is a fan of Theroux’s writing and has read most of
his published works. She fully recommends this collection, first published in
2018. CD
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by
Carson McCullers has been described as one of the greatest novels of the 20th
century. Written when McCullers was only 23-years-old, this classic novel is
about a deaf-mute man, John Singer, and the people he encounters in the small
Georgia town where he lives, their struggles to connect with one another on a
meaningful level, and their coming to terms with the world. Giving voice to
those who are forgotten, swept away, and sidelined, McCullers shows a depth of
understanding of the human condition far beyond that of a typical 23-year-old.
There was lively discussion about this book in the group, with many of our
members having read it. Highly recommended by all, this novel, first published
in 1940, still resonates deeply today.
WJ
Also discussed:
Cleopatra:
A Life by
Stacy Schiff
Cloud
Cuckoo Land
by Anthony Doerr
The Last
Mile by
David Baldacci
Don
Quixote
by Miguel de Cervantes
All the
Light We Cannot See
by Anthony Doerr
A
Southern Family
by Gail Godwin
Legend in
Green Velvet
by Elizabeth Peters
Selected
Stories
by William Trevor
Being
Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande
Ever by
My Side: A Memoir in Eight Acts Pets by Dr. Nick Trout
So You
Want to Start a Podcast: Finding Your Voice, Telling Your Story, and Building a
Community That Will Listen by Kristen Meinzer
The
Collected Stories
by William Trevor
Sapphira
and the Slave Girl
by Willa Cather
Other
Birds by
Sarah Addison Allen
Flowers
for Algernon
by Daniel Keyes
The Last
Mile by
David Baldacci
The
Lioness
by Chris Bohjalian
Wild
& Furry Animals of the Southern Appalachian Mountains by Lee James Pantas
Road Out
of Winter
by Alison Stine
Funny
Farm: My Unexpected Life with 600 Rescue Animals by Laurie Zaleski
Ducky by Eve Bunting
Ducks
Overboard!: A True Story of Plastic in
Our Oceans
by Markus Motum
Moby-Duck:
The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers,
Oceanographers, Environmentalists, and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in
Search of Them
by Donovan Hohn
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