Thanks to book club and the library, I
managed to read 8 books (including 2 children’s books and one magazine) in this
short month. Here are the opening lines.
Book 1
Castle Rannoch, Perthshire, Scotland
April 1932
There are two disadvantages to being a minor
royal.
First,
one is expected to behave as befits a member of the ruling family, without
being given the means to do so. One is
expected to kiss babies, open fetes, put in an appearance at Balmoral (suitably
kilted), and carry trains at weddings.
Ordinary means of employment are frowned upon. One is not, for example, allowed to work on the
cosmetics counter at Harrods, as I was about to find out.
When
I venture to point out the unfairness of this, I am reminded of the second item
on my list. Apparently the only
acceptable destiny for a young female member of the house of Windsor is to
marry into another of the royal houses that still seem to litter Europe, even though
there are precious few reigning monarchs these days.
Book 2
PROLOGUE · JULY 1956 Darlington Hall It seems
increasingly likely that I really will undertake the expedition that has been
preoccupying my imagination now for some days. An expedition, I should say,
which I will undertake alone, in the comfort of Mr Farraday’s Ford; an
expedition which, as I foresee it, will take me through much of the finest
countryside of England to the West Country, and may keep me away from
Darlington Hall for as much as five or six days.
Book 3
The man in the brown Harris tweed overcoat –
double-breasted with three small leather-covered buttons on the cuffs – made
his way slowly along the street that led down the spine of Edinburgh.
Book 4
In a dark time, the eye begins to see. – Theodore Roethke, “In a
Dark Time”
I began [writing] this book in a season of
heartbreak – personal and political heartbreak – that soon descended into a
dark night of the soul. It took months
to find my way back to the light and six years to complete the book. But as I fumbled in the dark, the poet
Roethke’s words proved true time and again: my eyes were opened to new
insights, and my heart was opened to new life.
The evidence will, I hope come clear as this book unfolds.
Book 5
The scene is strikingly familiar. At a large American university, a graduate
student stands at the front of a grand lecture hall drawing graphs and
equations on a chalkboard. He may speak
proficient English; he may not. The material is dry and mathematical.
Book 6
A Note from Miss Kelly
Dear Mrs. Peck,
Your son Robert made a rude remark to Miss
Boland, our school nurse. Perhaps it was
not intended to be as coarse as it sounded.
Book 7
What If All Could Thrive?
All of us carry labels applied by
others. The complimentary ones –
“generous,” “funny,” “smart” – are worn with pride. The harsh ones can be lifelong burdens,
indictments we try desperately to outrun.
The
most enduring label, and arguably the most influential, is the first one most
of us got: “It’s a boy!” or “It’s a girl!” Though Sigmund Freud used the word
“anatomy” in his famous axiom, in essence he meant that gender is destiny.
Today
that and other beliefs about gender are shifting rapidly and radically. That’s why we’re devoting this month’s issue
to an exploration of gender – in science, in social systems, and in civilizations
throughout history.
Book 8
Le Mont Saint-Michel
May 1, 1616
Wind, rain, and waves have pounded the rocky
coast of Normandy for thousands of years.
The forces of nature slowly eroded the vast coastal plains to form a
large bay and, in the middle of that bay – apparently oblivious to the
onslaught of nature – remained an impossibly large granite rock.
The Titles and Authors
Book 1
Her Royal Spyness, by Rhys
Bowen. A mystery.
Lady Georgiana Rannoch is a penniless “royal”
from Scotland who is tasked with spying on the Queen’s son – you know, that son, who is scandalously carrying
on with (gasp) an American divorcee. Violation
of social norms, murder, breaking of china, peril, and tea drinking ensue. I enjoyed this cozy mystery - there was
nothing too strenuous about reading it. I will be looking for the next book in
the series.
Book 2
The Remains of the Day by Kazuo
Ishiguro.
I read this for book club - it was my second
time reading it. It is excellent
writing. I would like to see the movie
again. I recall a scene where the
narrator (played by Anthony Hopkins) is ironing a newspaper. As someone who never uses an iron except in
the direst of circumstances, that made an impression on me.
Book 3
Friends, Lovers, Chocolate
(Isabel Dalhousie Mysteries Book 2)
by Alexander McCall Smith.
This author is saving my sanity. I would like to go to Edinburgh.
Book 4
Healing the Heart of Democracy: The Courage to Create a Politics
Worthy of the Human Spirit, by Parker J.
Palmer.
This book deserves to be quoted more
extensively than I am prepared to do here.
But part of me fears that what the book recommends is too little, too
late.
Book 5
Naked Economics: Undressing
the Dismal Science, by Charles Wheelan.
This book covers basic economic concepts,
presented in an easy to read format.
Economics is always political, and you can decide for yourself if you
agree with the way the author presents things.
I thought this was a reasonable overview of some main economic
concepts. Here’s a quote that I think is
relevant for today:
“reasonable
people can disagree sharply over when and how the government should involve
itself in a market economy or what kind of safety net we should offer to those
whom capitalism treats badly. The economic battles of the twenty-first century
will be over how unfettered our markets should be.”
He is right on one thing: people are
disagreeing sharply these days.
Book 6
Soup, by Robert Newton Peck (c 1974,
ages 8-12).
I was underwhelmed. Each chapter is just a vignette – there is no
plot running throughout the book. I finished
it because it was a very short book. Was
this supposed to be designed to lure boys who hated books into reading at least
something?
Book 7
Gender Revolution: Special Issue,
National Geographic magazine, January 2017.
Okay, strictly speaking, this is not a book,
but the whole issue was approximately the length of a short book so I’m
counting it. The articles are excellent
and fascinating and heartbreaking at times.
I recommend that you find a copy and read it.
Book 8
Secrets of Shakespeare’s Grave
(The Letterford Mysteries) by Deron R. Hicks (ages 7-10). I really enjoyed this book. Despite being classified as a book for
younger children (compared to Soup,
Book 6 above) this one had an actual plot and used words like “oblivious.” It was kind of like The Da Vinci Code except much less annoying, with more likeable
characters, and no heresy.
So what’s in your book pile this month, Dear
Reader?
5 comments:
30 years of American history by The New York Times.
Butterball (short story), Brit Bennett
The Warden's Daughter, Jerry Spinelli
The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware
The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles, Katherine Pancol
The Mare, Mary Gaskill
The North Water, Ian McGuire
In the Great Green Room, Amy Gary
And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer, Fredrik Backman
Milk and Honey, Rupi Kaur
Leopard at the Door, Jennifer McVeigh
Mr. Wuffles, David Wiesner
The Nest, Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney
Red River Vol 1, Chie Shinohara
The Whole Town's Talking, Fannie Flagg
The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper, Phaedra Patrick
That was February. Who knows what March will bring?
Well, I'm late to this party, but I've re-read Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, finished CS Lewis's "The Screwtape Letters," am halfway through "Home-Going" by Yaa Gyasi and "Damned" by Chuck palahniuk. I could read and read and read, I have so many good books right now.
I'm even later to the party (but what is new?) so I will try to recall what's been on the nightstand lately:
The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath (Is it strange that I found parts of it quite funny? Am I odd?)
Hand to Mouth, Living in Bootstrap America -- by Linda Tirado
Hillbilly Elegy, by J.D. Vance
The Chaperone, by Laura Moriarty
I'm sure there were more but my memory functions much like a colander these days.
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