Thursday, October 08, 2009


#49 hypocrite in a pouffy white dress by susan jane gilman. The subtitle reads: tales of growing up groovy and clueless. Gilman tells a funny, sad, bizarre, story of her life growing up an uncool white kid in a tough Puerto Rican neigborhood. Susan makes her own rules for behavior and hasn't a clue as to the consequences. As she struggles to get a life, she exhibits some very demented behaviors along the way. The book is shocking, frantic, and chronicles disfunction. I did enjoy the book and the somewhat happier ever after ending. Gilman definitely has an angel sitting on her shoulder. I''m surprised that she reached adulthood.

Tuesday, October 06, 2009


#48 Inkheart by Cornelia Funke was a fun read. It was a great fantasy intended for youth. I was ask to read the story for a library program. It has very compelling characters and a neat setting with distinct good and evil themes. The story revolves around a main character who can read a story to life. The bad characters are read into the world. The young daughter of the main character helps fight the evil, nasty, will do anything, bad guys. I thought the story went on a little too long, but maybe a young adult would find it interesting and exciting. The fun conclusion is that the book sale at school gave me a free book- Igraine the Brave by Cornelia Funke. How were they to know? I can't wait to read this new book.

Monday, September 14, 2009


# 47 A Guide to Quality, Taste, and Style by Tim Gunn. I love this kind of book. The book tells about finding one's own style, taste, and then buying the best quality possible. I always chuckle at myself since I love black. Now, according to Gunn, I should stick with it instead of fighting the urge to buy clothing other than black. The answer, accessorize with color. Gee, I knew that. And buying the best quality? Well, being an art teacher doesn't require clothing of top quality, just clothing that doesn't show paint and can be cleaned easily. Maybe that's another reason I favor black. Gunn also recommends buying cheap trendy accessories. That makes sense to me. But, I have one up on Gunn, I don't need trendy accessories. I don't need four or five purses. I do like jewelry and have been trying to upgrade with less but nicer earrings. I don't wear many necklaces, so I tend toward bracelets.
I love texture and fabrics, I love cashmere, and I think it would be great to have my hair cut and styled in New York City. Actually, in the end, I have really cut back on buying clothing. That is except for shoes. I have followed Gunn's advice for several years and my closet is pretty bear. It just means I can start over again. Really, the book had some good advice. And, it was a great diversion.

#46 What I thought I Knew by Alice Eve Cohen. After a nasty divorce, Alice is happy. She is raising her adopted daughter, living with a guy she will soon marry, and her career is taking off. Then at forty-four, after experiencing unusual symptoms, she is run through a number of tests, x-rays, prescribed hormone treatments, she is diagnosed with a tumor, but when she has a CAT scan, she finds she is six months pregnant.

This book is full of emotion, indecision, despair, misinformation from the medical world, and understandable depression. With no prenatal care and no insurance coverage, Alice goes back and forth between abortion and adoption. She is confronted with problems concerning the baby's gender and when delivered, the child is diagnosed with Russell-Silver Syndrome. This diagnosis presents a whole new set of problems. Can Alice love this child?

The story is very compelling and I cold clearly understand the moral dilemma Alice faced. Amazingly, it never made me cry. I guess that is because it isn't sentimental or sappy. Man, what an ordeal!

Friday, September 04, 2009


Book # 45 The Red Convertible by Louise Erdrich. Erdrich is one of my favorite authors. If you wish the mood and drama of an Indian reservation, she can produce vivid descriptions. I enjoy her humor and mix of old ways with modern. I have read every book she has written. If you want a snippet of one of her books, read this book. There are new stories and bits of former stories (I knew that when I got the book). But, OMG, this was long and I thought I would never finish. I still love Erdrich and her writing, but I will need to remind myself NOT to read collections or remakes. Didn't I just say this about Jane and Mr. Darcy? At least I didn't count this as two or three books- I'm so far behind in my read 100 books this year!!!

Thursday, July 30, 2009


Book # 44 Cassandra & Jane by Jill Pitkeathley. Since I am an avid Jane Austen fan, I can never get enough of reading about her in novel form. This story is from the viewpoint of her older sister, Cassandra. The story runs true to the ideas Jane proposes in Pride and Prejudice and the other stories Jane wrote. For instance, the fact that women were expected to marry so someone could take care of them. If they were unmarried they were expected to take care of elderly parents, sibling's children, and run households especially when women died so frequently in childbirth. Her writing reflected the status of women. Jane and Cassandra become best friends as both suffer from painful romantic loss and total dependence on relatives. Of course, Jane's career as an author was frowned upon and it was a struggle to get her work published. Cassandra vows to keep her sister's image pristine and burns all correspondence that might be taken as negative. The two sisters share ideas, opinions, and secrets about love, loss, and the general family drama of women in this time period. Nothing too heavy or intellectual, so I really enjoyed this fast read.

Sunday, July 26, 2009


Book #43 Stealing Buddha's Dinner by Bich Minh Nguyen. Growing up in Grand Rapids, Michigan would be difficult for an outsider, but even worse for a Vietnamese refugee. Bich, pronounced Bitch, escapes Vietnam with her father, grandmother, sister, and two uncles. They end up in GR where a community of Vietnamese refugees have settled. Bich guides us through her growing up as an American "wannabe" with all the pain of being an outsider. Much of the memories has to do with food: fast food, food Nori, her grandmother makes, Mexican food her stepmother, Rosa, cooks, food for Tet, food for lunches that would show you were cool at school, and food during her later visit to her family in Vietnam. She craves acceptance and can never get enough to eat. She hoards food, sneaks food, and is torn between each culture's food. This is a memoir of a child who grows up before mixed marriage and racial and ethnic diversity are celebrated. Being a Buddhist in GR would be difficult back in the 80's. I really wonder how accepting the community would be today? This book is a Michigan Reads selection. So, I read it.

Monday, July 20, 2009


Book # 42 Moloka'i by Alan Brennert. Seven year old Rachel wears long dresses and shoes to school to cover up the sores she has developed on her legs and feet. This is revealed when she has a fight with her sister at school. Thus starts her life as a leper. She is taken from her family and a normal childhood in Honolulu, Hawaii and is sent to the Leprosarium on Moloka'i. Her dreams of traveling the world like her father, a merchant seaman, are shattered. She is raised by nuns and has little contact with home because of the stigma and shame leprosy creates for the family. Most lepers live and die on the island where they are subjected to harsh and unjust treatment. Rachel finds love and family with Uncle Pono and gains a new family and community. The story is about life on the island, relationships, and the hardships of suffering from leprosy. Despite the disease, Rachel leads a full life including marriage and a child. The story includes Hawaiian religion and Catholicism, the caring and the superior, and the ups and downs of life in isolation. The story does have a happy ending including a cure for Hansen's disease. This is also a good history lesson on Hawaii and leprosy.

Sunday, July 12, 2009


Book #41 The Help by Kathryn Stockett. This story is about Jackson, Mississippi in the 1960's. Miss Skeeter has come home after attending Ole Miss and wants to be a writer, but her mother is pushing her to marry Constance, the maid who raised her has been sent away, but it has been hushed-up. Aibileen is raising her seventeenth white child and Minny has been accused of stealing and finally lands a job with Miss Celia. Skeeter finds a writing subject when there is a campaign to have black maids use bathrooms outside the household like outhouses or bathrooms built in the garage. These black maids and white, Miss Skeeter, come together to write a book about black women taking care of white children and households. Many secrets are brought to light in this dangerous attempt at the truth . It is the time when Medgar Evers was shot on his door step, Martin Luther King led the march on Washington D. C, and racial violence was widespread in the South. These ladies know they put their jobs and families in peril, but once they start, the story of injustices has to be told.

This is a serious story told with humor. I really enjoyed the tale.

Sunday, July 05, 2009


Book # 40 The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O'Turrell. Three voices dominate this story- Iris, the vintage shop keeper, who is having an affair, her grandmother, Kitty, who is in a nursing home with dementia, and her aunt, Esme, who is recently released from a psychiatric hospital after some sixty years. Out of the blue, Iris finds out she has an aunt and takes on the responsibility of her care. As events unfold, Kitty, gives bits and pieces of the two sisters living in India, moving to Scotland, and going from children to adulthood. We find out why Kitty has never told anyone about Esme, and what Esme remembers or tries to forget about her past. The story has family drama and tragedy and all isn't the way it seems.

This book was well done. It moved along quickly even though thoughts were scattered and fragmented because of Kitty's dementia and Esme's schizophrenia. Family secrets unfold with an unveiling at the end. I don't know if I would consider the ending happy,but the author leaves it to ones imagination. I liked that.

Saturday, July 04, 2009


Book # 39 five things i can't live without by Holly Shumas. Nora quits who job because she isn't emotionally involved. What to do since she only has to make cheap rent because she is moving in with her boyfriend? Well, she writes profiles for clients who aren"t getting too far with internet dateing. The story is about her clients, trying to bring out the best in them, and her own personal relationships. Maybe salsa dancing will put spark back into her love life? Along with her clients, she has to figure out the five things she can't live without.
This book was OK, but would never make much of a place on my favorites reading list. However, the question is a good one to contemplate.

Sunday, June 28, 2009


Book # 38 Mr. Darcy's Diary by Amanda Grange. Who doesn't love the love story of Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet? This was just a new way of reading Pride and Prejudice only from the hero's point of view. Such arrogance, such hypocrisy, such a great story to show English society. It was a fast read and a new twist on an old favorite, so I call it a "summer must-read" for Jane Austin fans.

Friday, June 26, 2009


Book # 37 The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton. The story is based around three women trying to find their identity and dealing with grief. The setting switches back and forth between Australia and England. The author creates many twists and turns, leaves the reader hanging like in a weekly episode of a soap on tv, and even includes a red-herring. The three women are bound to a cottage, a maze, and a secret garden. This story seems to be part Jane Eyre, part Wurthering Heights, part The Secret Garden, and part fairy tales for children.

Even though I enjoyed the book, the book structure became too contrived (each chapter explained what had happened in the previous chapter), and I thought it went on a bit too long. Boy, am I the critic.

Sunday, June 21, 2009


Book #36- Into the Beautiful North by Luis Urrea. All the men have left for the North. Narcos and banditos have taken over a small Mexican town. The mayor, Tia Irma, has sent four teenage girls and Tacho, a gay restaurant owner, on a quest to the United States to bring back seven policemen or soldiers to protect the town. This story includes the journey to the Tijuana border, the horrific attempts to cross the border, the trials and tribulations of being an illegal alien, and the eye-opening realities of kids who know about the US from watching TV and the movies. They are on an honorable mission, but they have no idea what it will entail. The final journey is to Kankakee to find one of the girl's father.

This was a really interesting story with modern details sort of based on "The Magnificient Seven". Most of the stories I have read about Mexico are historical fiction. I had some trouble with the Spanish and lingo ( I took French in college). I really enjoyed the book since it is very different from what I am use to reading. Reviews say his, The Hummingbird's Daughter, was much better. I'll have to find out.

Book # 35 Brooklyn by Colim Toibin. A young, indecisive, Irish girl is overshadowed by a beautiful older sister and has no prospects for marriage. A visiting priest finds her a job with future advancement in the US. She braves the Atlantic crossing and homesickness in Brooklyn and has her worldview changed. Her life is pretty much work and nondescript. Finally, her future is on an upward swing until she must return to Ireland. Back home, she has to make some important decisions. She can almost forget about her life in Brooklyn, but it isn't quite the same in her hometown since she has been away. Will she return?
This book got great reviews on NPR, but I thought it was a little slow.














Monday, June 08, 2009


Book # 35 Shanghai Girls by Lisa See. Very GOOD! May and Pearl are beautiful girls living in Shanghai, 1937, the Paris of Asia, modeling for artists. They are from a wealthy, privileged family. They dress up, cruise the nightlife, defy their parents and basically look down their gorgeous nose at everyone as beneath them. This all changes when their father, a wealthy rickshaw businessman, has to pay off his debts to the Green Gang. The girls are given arranged marriages to young men from the US. The sisters endure the Japanese attack, the horrors of Angel Island, the prejudice and fear of being deported back to China, the Communist hunts, and mega sisterly rivalry, all while trying to assimilate into American culture in Hollywood and Chinatown. The story is brutal and tender. Lisa See is good at spinning a tale and at explaining relationships. The book brings to light the clash of Chinese culture and American history. This is definitely a "woman's story". It reminded me of The Joy Luck Club. I think it will make a great movie

Wednesday, June 03, 2009


Book # 34 The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley. OMG, everything you would ever want to know, in vivid detail, about Iceland- language, mythology, geography, glaciers, Icelandic food and culture. All of this is tied up in Freya writing to her (maybe) cousin. Freya Morris lives in the US with her mother, but every summer goes to a little town in Canada to visit her relatives, ex-Icelanders. She is immersed into a world of Old Country ways. Birdie, her manic depressive aunt, tricks her into going to Iceland looking for her famous poet grandfather's correspondence. This is not the only trick in the book, as Freya tries to find her cousin and herself. The story is dark and cold. You will probably know the ending before the end, but will keep on reading just to make sure. I haven't read much on Iceland, so it was a welcome change.




Sunday, May 24, 2009



Book #33 A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick. This is a book about deception and love. Just when I thought I had figured out Catherine, the mail-order wife, coming on the train to cold, gloomy Wisconsin, I was totally wrong. The only person who seemed honest was Ralph Truitt, the rich husband. The story takes place in northern Wisconsin and Chicago. The characters are locked in their tragic roles and past with seemingly no way out. She wants love and money and plans to kill to get it when she answers the mail-order bride ad. He wants his son and forgiveness and wants her to bring him back. Add in Antonio, the long lost son, Alice the lost sister, and the world around with desperation and despair. The story is dark with emotional and physical pain, passion, and sexual obsessions.

I read and read wondering how it would end. Could the people break from their lies and find the love they so craved? Would all of the lives be wasted? Daphine Merkin, back cover reviewer, said, " Begin reading this novel at your peril, for it will keep you staining to know what happens next until you come to the last, redemptive sentence." I agree. It was a very compelling story.

Friday, May 15, 2009


Book #32 My Enemey's Cradle by Sara Young. Geez, do I read anything besides stories about death, destruction, and war? It sure seems to be my trend. This story was very good. The background is Nazi Germany's Lebensborn maternity homes which encouraged all "racially valuable" women and girls to have as many children as possible. Himmler's goal was to increase the population of the "Master Race". Maternity homes, in occupied countries, were set up where "suitable Aryan" girls pregnant by occupying forces could have their babies. These babies were considered German citizens and were taken to be raised in Nazi homes or institutions. This info is from the author's notes. I had never heard of such a thing.
Anyway, the main character, Cyrla, Jewish, sent to live with her aunt and uncle in Holland, tries to save herself by taking on the identity of her cousin who is pregnant- father, German soldier. Problem: cousin, Anneke was being sent to the Lebensborn. Cyrla has to deal with the pregnancy problem, keeping her identity secret,and her captivity at the Lebensborn. This story has many twists and turns with dispair, lonliness, fear, and tragedy. Luckily, there is a happy ending.

Bring on the foofoo and lighthearted. I'm ready for a little humor.

Saturday, May 09, 2009


Book #31: The Piano Teacher by Janice Y.K. Lee. The setting is Hong Kong just before Japan attacks and takes over the island and after Japan surrenders and the island's social circle's history. Claire, quite nondescript has arrived from England with her new husband and becomes the piano teacher for the daughter of a high society Chinese couple. She becomes involved with Will who has a long history on the island. The story includes Trudy, the Eurasian heiress, her connections with the Japanese leader, her involvement with Will, and her place in Hong Kong's elite society. The story is filled with intrigue, romance, questionable love, separation of East and West, loyalty, cultural differences and social classes, and survival in war. The story details aren't fully uncovered until the final chapters. It took a while for me to get really interested in this book- long descriptions of society parties. But, toward the end, I had to just read and read until I finished.