Thursday, July 4, 2024

First Lines: June 2024 edition

Art by Barbara Kruger. At The Broad Museum, Los Angeles



This month my book reading included one children’s book, and two very short works.  I spent the last weekend of the month furiously reading, before impending eye surgery.  Two of this month’s books had the same title (before the subtitle). Much of my reading was an attempt to calm myself.

 

 

Book 1

1991

“It sat silently,hoarding its secrets.”

This particular story begins in the dusky hollows of 1991, remembered as a rotten year through and through by almost everybody living, dead, or unborn.

 

 

Book 2

1.   In Hanover Street.  Watch Out, Pat, Bruce is Back…Or Is He?

Pat saw Bruce at ten o’clock on a Saturday morning, or at least that is when she thought she saw him.

 

 

Book 3

To tell the truth, I don’t think Lizzie would ever have told us her elephant story at all, if Karl had not been called Karl.

 

 

Book 4

It’s difficult to think of a public health crisis more inevitable than the impending end of Roe v. Wade.  And yet, on June 24, 2022, the country was profoundly unprepared.


 

Book 5

Bethany Waites understands there is no going back now.  Time to be brave, and to see how this all plays out.  She weighs the bullet in her hand.

 

 

Book 6

Someone is shouting at my receptionist.

         The angry voice reaches me as I come out of an exam room in the back of my gynecology and family planning clinic in Phoenix, Arizona.

 


Book 7

Once upon a time, there was a ship. A lime-green ship, with taffeta sails, that soared through the flowing seas of silk and satin across the bedsheets.

 

 

Book 8

Act One, Scene 1

The time is early fall, 1977.  The setting is a gypsy cab station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

 

 

Book 9

‘Ah, you ladies!  Always on the spot when there’s something happening!’  The voice belonged to Mr. Mallett, one of our churchwardens, and its roguish tone made me start guiltily, almost as if I had no right to be discovered outside my own front door. 


 

Did not finish

I turn I turn I turn before I lie to sleep and I rise before the Sun.  I sleep inside and sleep outside and have slept in the hollow of a thousand-year-old tree.

 

 


 

The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

The Telling Room: A Tale of Love, Betrayal, Revenge, and the World's Greatest Piece of Cheese, by Michael Paterniti

349 pages • first pub 2013.


This was an interesting book, about cheese but also about humanity.  It was a slow read.  The footnotes are often just as interesting as the main book, but I had to stop reading them in the hopes of actually finishing the book.  The porrĂ³n, a strange flask used to drink wine, was perplexing to me.  Also, bodega does not mean what I thought it meant.

 

 

Book 2

The World According to Bertie (44 Scotland Street series, #4) By Alexander McCall Smith

370 pages • first pub 2007.

Always fun to spend time with the characters on Scotland Street.

  

 

Book 3

An Elephant in the Garden, by Michael Morpurgo

199 pages • first pub 2009

An improbable but engaging story about refugees of the bombing of Dresden, Germany.  I read it for book club - in the summer we pick a few children’s books.  Hooray for children’s lit. 

 

 

Book 4

Undue Burden: Life and Death Decisions in Post-Roe America, by Shefali Luthra.

291 pages of text; with endnotes 368 pages • first pub 2024.

Informative, heartbreaking, and infuriating.   I recommend this book.  The law in the US now treats women as second-class citizens, thanks to six chumps on an unelected court who would like all women to live as if we are in the 18th century.  Who made them god?   Also, they are bald-faced liars, all of whom said that Roe was settled law before they got themselves appointed. 

 

I read a hardback from the library.  I made myself read it fast because, unlike the other library books I borrow that nobody wants to read, so I can keep them for months (no late fees!), I wanted to get this one back into circulation fast.   I could not be more angry.  

 

 

Book 5

The Bullet That Missed (A Thursday Murder Club Mystery #3)

By Richard Osman

413 pages • first pub 2022


Loads of quirky fun, not to mention murder, with our favorite characters at the Old Folks’ Home in England.  This one had some quite wistful moments, as well as amusing ones.  The odd thing is that I had to put this down partway through, because it was too tense for me. Then world events happened, I went back to it, and it seemed all sweetness and light (but with murder).

 

 

Book 6

Undue Burden: A Black, Woman Physician on Being Christian and Pro-Abortion in the Reproductive Justice Movement, by Deshawn Taylor

204 pages • Published 2023.


I found this book excellent and helpful to me in thinking about the onslaught in the US against reproductive rights.  The pro-birth stance is NOT a Christian viewpoint.  Taking away reproductive rights is AGAINST humanity, it is AGAINST providing adequate health care, it is AGAINST everything that Jesus stands for.

 


Book 7

The Bedridden Pirates (a short story) by my younger daughter!

7 pages • written in 2024; unpublished.


A completely charming fantasy about pirates who sail the sheets and engage in a great adventure.

 

 

Book 8

Jitney (The Century Cycle #8), by August Wilson

76 pages • first performed 1982; subsequently revised.  The version I read had a copyright of 2007.


There is a lot to think about here.  It’s a fast read.  I recommend it.

 

 

Book 9

Excellent Women, by Barbara Pym

231 pages • first pub 1952


I did not enjoy this Pym nearly as much as the ones I read several years ago.  Yet this is supposed to be the one that draws most people to Pym.  It is perhaps me, and current real-life events of this week.  I am feeling extremely unsettled.  Reading about people constantly pestering the single woman protagonist that she simply must get married was just annoying to me.  I mean, I liked the main character, the usual self-demeaning single woman in her thirties (or so) that Pym masters so well.  I just wished the other characters would respect her decisions.  HOWEVER, there is plenty of tea drinking, and that is very fine.

 


 

 Did not finish

 The Eyes and the Impossible, by Dave Eggers with Shawn Harris (Illustrator)

250 pages • first pub 2023.  Newbery Award winner, 2024.


Children’s lit about a dog and other animals who patrol a national park.  Oddly, despite it being kids’ lit, it got too tense for me a bit early on – nothing graphic, but I just couldn’t take it at that moment, given the other injustices going on around the world.  I will likely pick it up again at some point.

 

 

Art by Ellen Gallagher.  Seen at The Broad in Los Angeles, 2019.




Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Lo! It Comes With Clouds Descending



Found in the yard after the big storm


For behold, the Lord will bring a great wind with fury.  Her chariots of the storm shall deliver twigs, leaves, and all manner of sticks, spread over the grassy land of your field, and on the way of the driving, not to mention the deck.


The voice of the Lord shall break the cedars of Lebanon and the oaks of Allegheny County.  And you shall mourn the large and small trees that have been shattered and uprooted abroad in the land.  For lo, you shall remember that the mighty oak was once a nut like you.  Be humbled and thankful, therefore, that no large trees have been uprooted at the foot of your house.


You shall reflect with wonder on the geometrical object that fell out of the sky into the front yard, and shall think about calling it “manna”, i.e. “what is it?”   Though the Lord fed the people of old with the substance that fell from heaven, this does not look very much like bread but rather like the linchpin of the roof chamber of a nearby abode.

The underside of the object
found in the yard after the storm.


As Ruth the Moabitess picked up grain in the fields of Boaz, so too shall you pick up sticks in the yard, although, unlike the grain, the sticks cannot be made edible. 


Picking up sticks is vanity and a striving after wind.  And we all know we’ve had enough wind.  For lo, as you bend to pick up this stick, and straighten your 60+-year-old back to standing, you shall see that stick.  Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are able to count them; so shall the number of sticks in your yard be.


And you shall sweat a great sweat as you labor, for lo, these are the days of fiery heat dome.  And your hair shall continually make its way to your mouth, causing you to groan inwardly, knowing that you shall again forget to make a haircut appointment once you go inside.


Be strong, and let your heart take courage, for your husband has texted to say he will provide the evening meal from Giant Iggle.  This is a blessing and a mercy. Thanks be to God.


- The Book of Exertions 4:5-22


But seriously, what is that thing?


Friday, May 31, 2024

First Lines: May 2024 edition



Below are the first lines of the books I finished reading in May.  I have included 2 short stories/novellas.  I’m not usually a fan of the short story genre - they are too sparse for my liking (but ironically the sparseness makes for a great short story).  Maybe these are a bit longer than short stories.

 

 

Book 1

June 1887

I stared down into the open grave and wished that I could summon a tear.

 

 

Book 2

The Vanishing

In April, millions of tiny flowers spread over the blackjack hills and vast prairies in the Osage territory of Oklahoma.

 

 

Book 3

Dear Daughter,

This letter has taken an extraordinary time getting itself together.

 

 

Book 4

I wanted a cupcake.  I was in my late twenties and, all my other ambitions thwarted, I just wanted a cupcake.


 

Book 5

“a great sea A going”

Eight months of the year Hallowell, Maine, was a seaport. 



Novella 1

In a certain Russian ministerial department –

         But it is perhaps better that I do not mention which department it was.  There are in the whole of Russia no persons more sensitive than Government officials.  Each of them believes if he is annoyed in any way, that the whole official class is insulted in his person.

 

 

Novella 2

Though it was still daylight, the hot lamp was shining full-beam over the mahjong table.



 

 

The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

A Curious Beginning (A Veronica Speedwell Mystery Book 1) by Deanna Raybourn

356 pages • first published 2015.

 

Started off slow.  I found the traveling circus section tedious, but then about halfway through it got much more interesting.  Character names are excellent, ex: the vicar’s wife, Mrs Clutterthorpe.  There is some tea drinking, but also other drinking and sometimes those liquid enhancements are combined with tea. 


 

Book 2

Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI, by David Grann.  

316 pages • first published 2017.


I recommend this excellent telling of a huge sad injustice in our country. The writer is an assiduous researcher.  I was especially interested that he followed up the historical story by speaking to the next generations and how the history affected their lives.  I am told the book is much better than the movie.

 

 

Book 3

Letter to My Daughter by Maya Angelou.

166 pages • first published 2008


This book consists of very short essays, some curmudgeonly, some with deep wisdom, from this great American poet.   I started it some weeks ago, and finished it during the “liquids only” (day before) phase of colonoscopy prep.  Strictly speaking, Maya Angelou did not have a daughter; this book is addressed to us, her “thousands of daughters” of kinds.

 

 

Book 4

Congratulations, The Best Is Over! By R. Eric Thomas

240 pages • first published 2023.


Essays.  Quite amusing and yet heartfelt at the same time.  Addresses the pandemic.

 

 

Book 5

A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812 by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.  

464 pages (main text is about 400 pages) • first published 1990.  Pulitzer Prize winner in 1991 in the History category.

 

I was reading this during the throes of colonoscopy prep but had to stop when I was lightheaded from the prep and the book was delving into various gross 18th century medical techniques.  About 10 days later, I resumed reading, but had lost a bit of the thread of Martha Ballard’s story because of the lack of continuity.  I’m glad I was able to finish – I found it fascinating.  More at this link.

 

 

Novella 1

The Overcoat by Nikolai Gogol (a short story)

My edition was published in 2016 by Open Road Integrated Media Inc.  No translator’s name is given.  (I always want to give the translator credit but alas, in this case I cannot.)

49 pages • first published 1842.


Perfect to read during the second and nasty phase of colonoscopy prep.  I’ve read it before, so I didn’t need to concentrate deeply.  Parts of it are tongue-in-cheek, but it is not fluffy; actually rather dark, which fit my circumstances.  I will think about the deeper meanings (which are there) another time.

 


Novella 2

Lust, Caution: The Story by Eileen Chang. Translated by Julia Lovell.  

68 pages • first published 1978.  Translation copyright 2007. 


Recommended by my older daughter - she read it last year in her quest to read one book related to every country in Asia.  An excellent fraught romantic/political tragedy, told in tight prose.  Has been made into a movie by Ang Lee.