Wednesday, March 6, 2019

First lines: January-February 2019 edition

Lift every voice and sing


Below are the first lines of the books I finished reading in January and February.  Several of them were books that I read in February, in honor of Black History Month.


Book 1
If I had a dollar for every time I heard someone say, “I am spiritual but not religious,” then I might not be any wiser about what that means – but I would be richer.


Book 2
Yeongdo, Busan, Korea

History has failed us, but no matter.

At the turn of the century, an aging fisherman and his wife decided to take in lodgers for extra money.


Book 3
When I was a child, my ambition was to be pope.  I remember watching the funeral of John XXII and asking my mother, “Who was that man?”


Book 4
In honor of my dear, beloved friend Reb Sholem Aleichem, may God grant you health and prosperity together with your wife and children, and may you have great fulfillment whatever you do and wherever you go.  Amen. Selah!


Book 5
Four young girls busily prepared for their big day.  It was September 15, 1963, the day of the “Youth Day” Sunday service at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, and the girls, along with the other young people of the congregation, would spend the next few hours singing songs, reciting poems, praying, and giving encouraging messages in front of hundreds of beaming parents.


Book 6
A Movement
There’s something moving inside the walls of my body.  It’s tiptoeing across the high arches of my feet, break-dancing on my kneecaps, running figure eights around my hips as if they’re orange cones at recess, skipping up my sides, and climbing up to my shoulders’ peaks before swinging across my chest, back and forth, to a steady beat.


Book 7
The fate of America – or at least of white America, which was the only America that seemed to count – was at stake.  On the autumn evening of Thursday, October 7, 1948, South Carolina governor Strom Thurmond, the segregationist Dixiecrat candidate for president of the United States, addressed a crowd of one thousand inside the University of Virginia’s Cabell Hall in Charlottesville.  The subject at hand:  President Harry S. Truman’s civil rights program, one that included anti-lynching legislation and protections against racial discrimination in hiring.




The titles and authors revealed:


Book 1
An Altar in the World: A Geography of Faith, by Barbara Brown Taylor.  © 2009.
Brown Taylor takes us through a series of spiritual practices, such as The Practice of Paying Attention, The Practice of Wearing Skin, The Practice of Saying No.  I already need to re-read it. 


Book 2
Pachinko, by Min Jin Lee.   © 2017.  
Fictional history of a Korean family living under colonialism in Japan, a topic I know little about.   I read it for book club.  The characters and plot were intriguing and sympathetic.  But when it got to the fourth generation of the family, I was done and wanted the book to end.


Book 3
The Misunderstood Jew: The Church and the Scandal of the Jewish Jesus, by Amy-Jill Levine.  
© 2006.    
My second reading of this book.  The basic point is: don’t set up Judaism to be the foil to prove Christianity virtuous.  Christians must realize the polemic nature of the gospels and other New Testament writings.      


Book 4
Tevye the Dairyman by Sholem Aleichem, Translated from the Yiddish by Aliza Shevrin.  
Sholem Aleichem is the pen name of Sholem Rabinovitch (1859-1916). This translation first published in 2009.  The “Tevye der milkhiker” monologues were written (in Yiddish) in 1894-1910. 

The stories are the basis for “Fiddler on the Roof.”  The stories are not always the same – some quite sad ones have been left out of the musical.   The main purpose of women in this society is to get married.  Tevye’s main goal is to not become emotional like a woman, and he keeps repeating that phrase, which got annoying.  But overall, Tevye is an amusing character.


Book 5
The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism, by Jemar Tisby.  © 2019.   
This book sought to address a particular audience - American Christians - on a difficult topic.  It's an important effort to make.  The book helped me understand the complicity and hypocrisy of early Europeans, in how evangelism in the American colonies was entangled with colonization and paternalism. However, I felt the book was short on concrete examples of racism in the modern church and also short on explaining structural racism.  Yes, we need it spelled out for us, because our definition of racism for years has been that it is an action by one person against another, and it is very hard (for some of us) to see the racism in how a system operates.  An example from the news just yesterday:  Minorities Likely To Receive Less Disaster Aid Than White Americans.  Certainly the American church has been complicit in racism, both in history and today.  The book does offer some ideas on how the church can move forward away from complicity.


Book 6
Calling My Name, by Liara Tamani, © 2017.  Young Adult novel.  
The author is an African-American writer of Young Adult fiction. This was a coming of age story of a girl in Texas making her way through school and church and teen angst.  It seems to portray well the crushing insecurity and budding power of adolescence, and the repercussions of how teens act on that insecurity and power.  There was some portrayal of racism, but mostly the point is made, once again, of how girls and women bear the brunt of the consequences of both male and female actions.


Book 7
The Soul of America:  The Battle for our Better Angels, by Jon Meacham, © 2018.   
Meacham tries to calm our souls by proving that America’s democracy has been through perilous times before and has survived.  He says that what brings us through is ordinary citizens stepping up to protect democracy, and leaders doing the right thing.  Furthermore, US democracy has been far from perfect, and mostly undemocratic for a large portion of its people.  But, I ask, have we ever been in such a time as this, with a fiercely polarized electorate, a kleptocratic autocracy-admiring president, and a complicit Senate who exists simply to rubber-stamp the destruction of democracy envisioned by the Liar-in-Chief?  I was not overwhelmingly convinced that American democracy will pull through.  We have met the enemy of democracy, and it is us.  We have met the savior of democracy and it is us.

“When we are dancing with the angels, the question will be asked, in 2019 what did we do to make sure we kept democracy intact?  Did we stand on the sidelines and say nothing?”  -  U.S. Rep Elijah Cummings, Feb 27, 2019 



As always, I like to hear what you are reading these days.  

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah, your reading is always so thoughtful. And I always take a few notes so I can get some of the books you mention.
I am reading The Poison Squad by Deborah Blum, gross and fascinating history of how the FDA came about.
I read Once Upon a River by Diane Setterfeld for book club--we all LOVED IT. Gorgeous writing, the story was magic and the plots blended together magnificently. The Suspect by Fiona Barton was a real page-turner and made me think what I'd do as a mom in the same situation.
Meet Me at the Museum (forgot the author's name) was sweet. Kinda reminded me of that Major Pettigrew book.

Karen (formerly kcinnova) said...

If you haven't read it in a while (I hadn't read since I was a young teen), I recommend That Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis. It's feeling like these times are upon us once again.