Showing posts with label Kline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kline. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Nevermore: Marie Colvin, Dan Rather, Feather Thief, Gilead, The Sum of Us, Slaughterman's Daughter, Rainier Erupts, Exiles

 


 Reported by Jeanne

The Nevermore Book Club opened with a rave review for a movie.  A Private War is a dramatization of the last years of war correspondent Marie Colvin.  Colvin was an American who wrote for The London Times and who covered conflicts around the world.  She lost an eye while reporting in Sri Lanka, but that didn’t prevent her from continuing her career in dangerous situations. Her final assignment was in Syria. Our reviewer couldn’t praise it highly enough.


 

Fittingly, the next entry was a book by Dan Rather, also a news reporter.  What Unites Us: Reflections on Patriotism is divided up by categories, including “Freedom,” “Community,” and “Responsibility,” which are then subdivided under headings such as “Audacity,” “Environment,” and “Service.”  Our reviewer felt that Rather is an excellent writer, praising him for being both succinct and enlightening as well as patriotic.  She singled out his observation that the public has lost a great deal by having the news consist of sound bites instead of in-depth reporting.


 

This was followed by the historical novel The Slaughterman’s Daughter  by Yaniv Iczkovits. Written originally in Hebrew, the novel is set in 1895 in Russia where two Jewish sisters set out to track down the missing husband of the older sister, Mende.  Younger sister Fanny has always been something of a wild child, even training in their father’s profession of being a ritual slaughterman.  This training comes in handy on the journey which comes to involve bandits, the Russian secret police and the czar’s army.  Our reader recommended it highly, saying that it’s different, interesting, and enjoyable.

Rainier Erupts! by Thomas Hopp postulates what would happen if Mt. Rainier were to, well, erupt.  This novel follows several points of view, from scientists trying to predict events to one family struggling to survive.  Hopp presents a vivid picture, made more real to our reader because she has been to the area.  She said this was a good but not great book and added, “If you like a book about things going wrong, you’ll like this book."


 

The title of the Pulitzer Prize winning novel Gilead by Marilynne Robinson refers to the town of Gilead, Iowa where the Reverend John Ames seeks to write an account of his heritage to leave to his young son. Ames is in his seventies, and he knows there isn’t much time left to tell about his father and grandfather, both of whom were also men of God but who certainly did not see eye to eye.  It’s also a meditation on life, faith, and theology, wrapped up in beautiful prose.  “I wasn’t ready for this book before, but I am now,” commented the Nevermore member. She praised the book specifically for its “superb storytelling.”

Up next was the collection of American Short Stories which one of our readers has enjoyed dipping into for something light and refreshing. She particularly recommended “The School” by Donald Barthelme and treated us to a reading of the first few lines.


 

The Exiles by Christina Baker Kline has made the rounds of our readers, all of whom have been drawn into this historical novel which begins in 1840.  The book weaves together the stories of three women: an Aboriginal girl named Mathinna who has been taken away from her mother by a white aristocrat; a Scottish orphan who is caught stealing bread; and a London governess, also accused of stealing.  The latter two are convicted and shipped off to Australia as punishment. Our reviewer said the book was well worth reading and also put in a good word for Kline’s other novels, especially The Orphan Train.



The Feather Thief by Kirk Wallace Johnson is a true story that reads like fiction.  Author Johnson was fly-fishing with a friend when he first heard the story of the American student who stole hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of feathers from a British museum in order to make Victorian fishing flies.  Fascinated, Johnson began to research the story and wrote this incredible account not only of the theft but also about the mania for rare birds that drove some species to extinction or near-extinction.  Our reader found it to be an excellent book, both thrilling and informative.


 

Heather McGhee’s The Sum of Us:  What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together was described as a book that “sometimes makes you so mad and so depressed, but you still think everyone should read it.” The author believes that segregation hurts everyone, both the dominant group and the minority group, and causes the dominant group to become less flexible and compassionate.  Our reader pointed out that while everyone says they want diversity, their actions say something else.  People make choices that are more about their own comfort levels, going for the familiar.

Finally, there was a recommendation for a Netflix offering, “The River Runner.” It’s a documentary about kayaker Scott Lindgren, and our viewer thought it was both powerful and beautiful.

The session ended with a quotation from Bertram Russell: “The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.”

 

Other books mentioned:

Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy

Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs? Big Questions from Tiny Mortals about Death by Caitlin Doughty

Read My Pins by Madeleine Albright

Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom

Shadowlands by William Nicholson

Jack’s Life: The Life Story of C.S. Lewis by Douglas Gresham

Forget the Alamo by Bryan Burrough

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Nevermore: The Burning, When I Fell From the Sky, A Piece of the World, Night Fall

 


Reported by Garry

 

This week Nevermore leaned heavily into non-fiction books, spanning the 1920s to the late 1990s, with a sprinkling of poetry and fiction stirred into the mix.

 

A Piece of the World by Christina Baker Kline was our first reviewed book. This historical fiction is based on the life of Christina Olson, the inspiration for the iconic Andrew Wyeth painting “Christina’s World,” now widely considered one of the foremost paintings of the mid-20th century. Christina Olson lived a very austere life on a dilapidated farm in Maine. Disabled due to a degenerative muscular disease, she nevertheless continued to run the family farm with an iron will and unending fortitude. Refusing to use a wheelchair, Christina crawled to get around town. Wyeth met her when she was in her early 50s, and immediately made himself at home on her farmstead, turning two of the upstairs rooms into his painting studio. Kline takes the bones of the historical record and fills out the inner life. Our reader found this to be a very well written and intriguing novel about the subject of one of the most famous American paintings of all time.

 


Night Fall by Nelson DeMille was up next. This also happens to be a fictionalized re-telling of a true story – the crash of TWA flight 800 off the coast of Rhode Island in 1996. DeMille uses the crash and the many coincidences around it as the skeleton of this taut, fast paced thriller in which Elite Anti-terrorist Task Force Agents John Corey and Kate Mayfield search for clues to the crash and discover a cover-up and corruption reaching to the top levels of the FBI. Our reader liked this book and pointed out that it is a great summer read.

 


When I Fell from the Sky: The True Story of One Woman’s Miraculous Survival by Juliane Koepcke is an autobiographical account of surviving a plane crash.17-year-old Juliane was on a flight from Lima to Pulcallpa in Peru when the plane flew directly into a thunderstorm and was ripped apart. Tumbling from the sky into the jungle below, Juliane was the only survivor out of 92 passengers and crew. Injured and alone, she fought her way through the jungle for an astonishing 11 days with no supplies or medical care. Our reader was amazed by the tenacity and ingenuity shown by a 17-year-old fighting against the odds to survive in an environment that would easily kill her had she not kept her wits about her. Juliane used knowledge learned from her scientist parents to survive in the rough jungle terrain. Our reader says that this true-life story is a real page-turner and highly recommends it.

 


Another true story, but one with much more sinister overtones was The Burning: The Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 by Tim Madigan. On June 1, 1921 a white mob attacked and destroyed the Greenwood division of Tulsa, Oklahoma, then known as Black Wall Street. The official number of dead is 100, but unofficial estimates are as high as 300. The massacre has mostly been erased from the remembered history of the United States, but recently it has been returned to the spotlight with such books as this one by Madigan, as well as a number of investigations. To date, the massacre remains the only time that bombs have been dropped on American citizens on American soil. Our reader was infuriated and saddened by this book, all the more because this part of history was never taught in schools and was hidden for so long. She highly recommends The Burning to anyone who wants to know more about the erased history of the United States.

 

 

Also mentioned:

 

Saint Patrick’s Battalion by James Alexander Thom

The Buses are A Comin’: Memoir of a Freedom Rider by Charles Person and Richard Rooker

The Hiding Place by Paula Munier

The Angel Makers by Jessica Gregson

White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide by Carol Anderson

The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner

To Be Taught, If Fortunate by Becky Chambers

Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest by Suzanne Simard

The Sonnets of Michelangelo Buonarroti by Michelangelo Buonarroti

Reflections in a Clockshop by Nell Maiden

Hostage by Clare Mackintosh

How Stella Learned to Talk: The Groundbreaking Story of the World’s First Talking Dog by Christina Hunger

Cosmic Queries: StarTalk’s Guide to Who We Are, How We Got Here, and Where We’re Going by Neil deGrasse Tyson and James Trefil

Razorblade Tears by S. A. Cosby

Writers:  Their Lives and Works by DK and James Naughtie