Showing posts with label Evicted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evicted. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Nevermore: Sailing Alone, Coldest Winter, Roger Coleman, London Rain



Reported by Ambrea

Nevermore started off with a pertinent poem by Billy Collins:
“The name of the author is the first to go
Followed obediently by the title, the plot,
The heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel
Which suddenly becomes one you have never read, never even heard of,

As if, one by one, the memories you used to harbor
Decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,
To a little fishing village where there are no phones.”



Our reader checked out Sailing Alone Around the Room, telling her fellow Nevermore members that she thought it was pertinent and she “thought about us [Nevermore].”  She raved about Collins’ collected poems and highly recommended them, saying they were fun and interesting and astonishingly relatable.


Next, Nevermore shared The Coldest Winter:  America and the Korean War by David Halberstam, which delves deep into the Korean War and takes a long, hard look at the political decisions—and miscalculations—that prolonged the conflict.  Our reader noted that Halberstams’ book was incredibly heavy, literally and figuratively.  A monumental book in both its size and scope, The Coldest Winter was an interesting and comprehensive volume on the Korean conflict.  Although our reader was only partially finished with the book, she said it was filled with “a lot of people screwing up and screwing people over.”  Her review of Halberstams’ book lead to a great discussion of the start and the events that defined the Korean War.


Continuing in the vein of nonfiction, Nevermore looked at May God Have Mercy:  A True Story of Crime and Punishment by John C. Tucker.  In 1982, in Buchanan County, Virginia, a young coal miner named Roger Coleman was sentenced to death for the murder of his sister-in-law.  Despite the best efforts of Kitty Behan, a brilliant young lawyer who devoted two years of her life to gathering evidence in Coleman’s defense, Coleman was sentenced to death ten years later—and the shocking truth of the crime revealed.  Our reader said May God Have Mercy was a fascinating book with local ties.  It was both riveting and informative, offering a glimpse into the judicial process and how the handling of evidence has changed over the years.


Next, Nevermore shared London Rain, a Josephine Tey mystery by Nicola Upson.  Josephine Tey is an intrepid writer and an amateur sleuth, who often manages to step into mysteries that are nearly as dramatic as the plays she writes.  This time, Josephine is wrapped up in the murder of Anthony Beresford, Britain’s most venerable newsman, as the coronation of King George looms on the horizon—and war bubbles just beneath the surface of Europe.  Our reader said she didn’t care much for Upson’s novel.  Although she read the entire book, she admitted she only did so with the vain hope it would get better.  Overall, London Rain, while captivating for its portrait of pre-World War II London, was disappointing. (Note: for the uninitiated, the real Josephine Tey was a well-known Golden Age mystery author, best known for A Daughter of Time.)


Last, Nevermore took a look at Evicted:  Poverty and Profit in the American City by Matthew Desmond.   Winner of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction, Evicted is a heart-wrenching expose on the state of poverty in the United States.  For much of the book, Desmond follows the path of eight families in Milwaukee as they struggle to keep a roof over their heads and fight to stay afloat amidst financial devastation.  Our reader said Evicted was a moving depiction of poverty and loss, sadness and tragedy interspersed with real scenes of hope within the home.  “It is overwhelming…[to see] the way their resources were so limited, so stretched,” she said.  She found it to be enlightening, an eye-opening experience, and she highly recommended it to her fellow Nevermore members.

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Nevermore: Eisenhower, Eating Local, Evicted, How the Other Half Lives, The Snowman, Coming Home

Reported by Kristin




Nevermore appreciates history, although not all history books are appreciated.  Three Days in January: Dwight Eisenhower’s Final Mission by Bret Baier may be one of those duds.  Our reader said that he kept waiting for the author to get to the main part of the book, which seemed to be Eisenhower’s “farewell speech” in which he would warn the United States against building up the military industrial complex on the eve of the Cold War.  Baier, the chief political news anchor for Fox, begins with Eisenhower’s childhood, goes slowly through World War II (but somehow skips all mention of D-Day) and even goes up through the 2016 presidential election, yet only dedicates a short section to the “Final Mission” mentioned in the title.


Set in Cornwall in the years before and during World War II, the novel Coming Home by Rosamunde Pilcher was enjoyed by another reader.  With beautiful settings and detailed descriptions of the characters’ actions, this story tells about young Judith Dunbar as she is attending British boarding school while the rest of her family is abroad.  Spanning both the European and Eastern fronts during the war, Pilcher weaves a tale that our reader very much recommends.


Back on this side of the Atlantic, Eating Local in Virginia: From Farm to Family by Phyllis Wilson was passed around and much liked.  The guide lists local eateries which use local ingredients, stores which sell locally grown items, farms which sell directly to the public, and local wineries, divided by region.  Several featured local food producers make this an interesting read.


Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City by Matthew Desmond is a story of extreme poverty in Milwaukee.  Telling the stories of both landlords and tenants, Desmond explores the lives of people trying to scrape by with almost no income due to a variety of circumstances.  As part of his research, Desmond went to live in a trailer park during 2008 and 2009.  Living side by side with desperate people enabled him to tell their stories and promote some ideas of how to break the cycle of crime and poverty, but also showed that there are some individuals and families who might not ever be able to improve their lives.


The same reader also discussed How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York by Jacob A. Riis.  Originally published in 1890, this volume addressed the slums that existed in New York at that time.  Riis made suggestions for helping those families living in horrible conditions.  This is considered a classic work on the disadvantaged living in urban America.  Our reader said that in comparison this made her life seem like a dream.


Lastly, another reader picked up The Snowman by Jo Nesbo.  Midway through the Inspector Harry Hole series, in this installment a young boy named Jonas discovers that his mother has vanished and that the only clue is her pink scarf on a snowman in their yard, a snowman that Harry did not build.  This thriller about a Norwegian serial killer is downright chilling, and as our reader said, “Nobody told me it was a little spicy!”