Showing posts with label rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rights. Show all posts

Friday, January 30, 2026

First Lines: January 2026 edition



I would have to say, looking back over the month’s reading, that there is a thread running through most of these six books: patriarchy.  


Dearest Blog Reader, in the likely event that you do not read any of my blathering below, I will ask you now – what’s in your book stack these days?



Book 1

Cordelia

I didn’t know how long I sat cross-legged in the snow, waiting for the dead man crumpled on the ground in front of my building to wake up. 

 

 

Book 2

I’m here because two people broke a promise to God.

 

 

Book 3

Scene - Dr Stockmann’s sitting room.  It is evening.  The room is plainly but neatly appointed and furnished.

 

 

Book 4

At the Window with Binoculars

Standing at her kitchen window, Domenica Macdonald, cultural anthropologist, denizen of Scotland Street, citizen of Edinburgh, lowered the binoculars that for the last fifteen minutes she had trained on the street below.


 

Book 5

This is what happened in Faha over the Christmas of 1962, in what became known in the parish as the time of the child. 


 

Book 6

The Door to Hell

I am lost. The flames in the crater have erased the stars and then drained all the shadows of light.



 


 

The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

A New Lease on Death (The Ruby and Cordelia Mysteries #1)

By Olivia Blacke

325 pages • first pub 2024 

fiction fantasy mystery

Recommended through Mel W’s blog

 

The premise is that one of the detectives has already met her demise.  !  I enjoyed the characters and the setting.  Sometimes the prose was a bit repetitive.  Ends on a big reveal which will obviously require the reading of the next book to resolve.  And that is somewhat annoying, but I would like to read it.


 

Book 2

Separation of Church and Hate: A Sane Person's Guide to Taking Back the Bible from Fundamentalists, Fascists, and Flock-Fleecing Frauds

John Fugelsang

304 pages • first pub 2025

nonfiction politics religion 


Instructive, amusing in parts, and infuriating in others.  I was astonished to hear the Catholic Church’s actual practice on birth control in one place described.  I was already aware of many of the theological interpretations of the Bible verses, but I still found it interesting.  And we all know there is plenty of patriarchy to be found in both fundamentalism and fascism.

 



 

Book 3

An Enemy of the People - the play by Henrik Ibsen

164 pages • first pub 1882.   


Although this play was written in 1882, the issues treated are relevant today.  It was an easy read, and was available to buy for Kindle for very little $ being passed on to J.B., the King of Amazon*.  I read it for book club, and then we are going to see an interpretation of the play next month.  


Themes: environment, male hubris, crowd mentality, economics, family dynamics, reasons for compromising one’s values, the price to pay for not compromising one’s values.


 

Book 4

A Promise of Ankles: (44 Scotland Street #14)

By Alexander McCall Smith

320 pages • first pub 2020

fiction contemporary


I could only get this book from the library on audio.  Curses on my need to read series in order!  I managed to finish, but it was a struggle.  I liked the narrator's voice, and judging by his name, Robert Ian Mackenzie, he seems the perfect choice to narrate a book that is set in Scotland.  I have no idea if he is Scottish.


Includes some amusing plot developments about a human skull and, separately, language dominance.


Re patriarchy:  McCall Smith’s characters often express views about how they feel females or males should live.  It’s maybe not patriarchy per se, but I can’t remember any instance where the characters in the Scotland Street series show wide variance from what I will call traditional societal gender norms.  However, to me, there is an overall feeling of acceptance of others’ differences in his books.  It’s just that the differences portrayed are not too far from “center”.

 

 

Book 5

Time of the Child By Niall Williams

304 pages • first pub 2024

fiction literary

Recommended by Stephen Colbert and S. K.


A story ultimately of hope, in a slow but enjoyable read.  It takes place at Christmas-time in a small town in Ireland in 1962. The characters are quite appealing.  Loads of mentions of tea, but often it’s an offer of tea, only to be refused.  The patriarchy is inherent in the setting (a small Catholic town in 1962); the plot ultimately pushes gently against that patriarchy. 


The prose varies from delicious to a bit convoluted, but it’s mostly lovely.  I recommend it, but it’s best to read during a long snowy winter, with a cup of hot tea at hand and the news turned off.


 

Book 6

Sovietistan - a travel diary of going through former Soviet Republics.  

By Erika Fatland with Kari Dickson (Translator)

470 pages • first pub 2014 

nonfiction history travel


“A good mix of humor and despotism” – Older Daughter


A fascinating description of the Norwegian author’s travels through the five Central Asian countries that used to be part of Russia/ Soviet Union.  Recommend, but best perhaps to read in periodic doses.


This book was highly recommended to me in 2023 by Older Daughter, who read it as part of her project to read books by continent.  I supposedly studied the Soviet Union in grad school, but learned next to nothing about the Central Asian SSRs (I am pretty sure this is my fault, not the school’s fault).  I started reading Sovietistan, gave up, bought the kindle version about 6 months ago*, then stopped again because of other reading assignments (book clubs) and despair at my own country’s descent toward autocracy.  


To encourage me to resume, she said that I should keep reading it because the book is “a good mix of humor and despotism”.  Which it is.  This book works well to read in chunks, with a section for each of the five countries.


That is the same daughter who in December exclaimed enthusiastically, “I finished the dictator book!”  

Me:  “THE dictator book?!”

Older Daughter: “There is a whole genre of books from Central America called the “dictator” genre. The title of the book I read is called I, the Supreme. Or in Spanish, Yo, El Supremo.  From the country of Paraguay.”


I will not be reading Yo, El Supremo anytime soon, but it could be fun to shout that phrase.


While reading Sovietistan I could read about the dictatorships without looking away – at their core, autocrats are ridiculous.  They insist on being called El Supremo. From afar, their narcissism is amusingly appalling.  But for some reason I balked at reading about girls/young women who were kidnapped and forced to marry the man who kidnapped them, often with the permission of the girl’s parents.  I skimmed those sections.  Patriarchy is prominent in these Central Asian countries.  (And, it seems now, plenty of other places too.)  


This book enlightened me on how those former Soviet republics have fared since the dissolution of the USSR.  I did not fact-check the history as presented in the book.  It should be no surprise that there is plenty of environmental disaster.


There is some description of the changing demographics of the countries. Since publication, there have been some changes in leadership for some of the countries.  


- - - - - - - - 

* I despise any of my money going to Amazon but I simply must continue to read, which is easier for me on my kindle.  If I can’t get the kindle version through my library, I might buy it.  Reading helps fight the patriarchy.  In my opinion.









Monday, September 1, 2025

First Lines: August 2025 edition

 I finished 8 books in August, with two long plane rides working to my reading advantage. 

 

 

Book 1

An Abduction

Jean McConville was thirty-eight when she disappeared, and she had spent nearly half her life either pregnant or recovering from childbirth.

 

 

Book 2

As we stepped off the plane at the small airport, the howl of the jet engines deafening and the snowcapped foothills of the Himalayas looming behind us, two old friends embraced.

 

 

Book 3

The Golden Beetle of New Caledonia, 1914

When Margery was ten, she fell in love with a beetle.

 

A beetle, but not the one in the book.

 

Book 4

The Diamond as Big as the Ritz

Q.  I hate to ask you this, but–approximately–how many people do you think you’ve slept with?


 

Book 5

The small, slender woman with apple-red cheeks, greying hair, and shrewd, almost naughty little eyes sat with her face pressed against the cabin window of the BEA Viscount on the morning flight from London to Paris.

 

 

Book 6

Chapter 1: Women’s Rights in Antiquity: The Seed is Planted

4500 BCE to 859 BCE

“Welcome to the history of women’s rights.  Sometimes you have to start at the beginning to understand where you’ve been and where you want to go.”


 

Book 7

Chapter One: It is Important for Children to Learn About Electricity

Mma Ramotswe remembered exactly how it was that the subject of taking a holiday arose. 


 

Book 8

The voice of her new friend, bidding her good night, followed Miss Hannah Mole as she went down the garden path, and the laurel bushes, as she brushed by them, repeated in a whisper, yet with a strange assurance, the persuasive invitation of Mrs. Gibson to come back soon.



Did not finish

Prelude

The conversation took place over dinner in October 1837.  Dusk had likely fallen, and the city’s gas lamps had lit up the central streets of Berlin.




 

The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland

Patrick Radden Keefe

441 pages • first pub 2018

nonfiction, history, politics, true crime


This was a book I could not read at night.  Northern Ireland was a violent place.  The unfolding of the crimes and the trajectory of the major characters was well told.   I thought one big shortcoming of the book was that it did not explain the background of the hatred between Protestants and Catholics in N. Ireland.  That said, I did not want this book to be longer than it was.  The inadequacy of the Good Friday Accords was touched on - I was unaware of that.  I read it for book club, where it engendered a good discussion.


Some of my maternal ancestors were from what became Northern Ireland, most likely from County Tyrone.  I don’t know when they emigrated to the US - likely in the late 1800s.  

 

 

My parents on their honeymoon in Ireland.

Book 2

The Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing World

Desmond Tutu, Dalai Lama XIV, with Douglas Carlton Abrams (Translator)

384 pages • first pub 2016 

nonfiction, philosophy, self help


Good ideas (but I disagree about the nature of suffering). Repetitive.  I didn’t read the last 20%, which was basically more self-helpy, mainly because one of my book clubs might be reading this book next year.  I’ll probably read that part next year.

 

 

Book 3

Miss Benson's Beetle

By Rachel Joyce

352 pages • first pub 2020

fiction, historical.


I read it for book club.  It was sort of thriller-ish, veering from one tragic event to another, but I had been led to believe it was cozy, light lit.  I didn’t really come to appreciate any of the characters.  I suppose most of the scenes were meant to be comic but there was just too much gripping tragedy for me to find amusement.  The author’s first novel, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, is one of my all time favorites, but this one was not for me.

 

 

Book 4

Not My Type: One Woman vs. a President

By E. Jean Carroll

368 pages • first pub 2025

nonfiction, feminism, gender, memoir, politics

 

Oof.  A fast read.  Big trigger warning - rape and sexual assault are described in full detail.  Also, bullying, because, you know, the FFOTUS is an adjudicated rapist and a sexual predator but can’t admit it and has to lash out at other people to cover up what he has done.  The writing style is breezy, chock full of references to high fashion, movies, and literature.  I am not sorry I read this book, but after Miss Benson’s Beetle and this one, I was truly ready for something not thrilling, without any crimes.  


 

Book 5

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris (Mrs. 'Arris #1)

143 pages 

By Paul Gallico.  Electronic edition published 2022.

First published as Flowers for Mrs Harris in Great Britain by Michael Joseph in 1958.

fiction, classics 


Snobby British people look down their noses at the cleaning lady Mrs. Harris.  But she finds congenial types on a lark of a trip to Paris to obtain the dress of her dreams.  


I had to read it on my tablet, which is less preferable than reading on my kindle.  A pleasant diversion from today’s cruel world.

 

Purim celebration, 2014
The Common Household Husband as
The Phantom, and yours truly as Esther, in a
fancy dress and child's costume tiara

 

Book 6

Amazons, Abolitionists, and Activists: A Graphic History of Women’s Fight for Their Rights.

By Mikki Kendall (writer) and A. D’Amico (illustrator)

208 pages • first pub 2019

nonfiction, feminism, graphic, history


This graphic book covers a huge amount of history, and as such is a good overview of the fight we’ve had.  The artwork was well done.  Includes intersectionality, and the fight for LGBTQ+ rights as well.  


One line made me so sad, I almost decided to hand-write an update in the library book: “These are some of the successes of the women’s movement in the ‘70s.  Even though the E.R.A. didn’t pass, women won the right to have an abortion if they wanted one.” (page 152)  The book was published before the right to an abortion was snatched away by the corrupt and patriarchal SCROTUS.  


Page 178 has the sad truth:   “The women’s rights movement still has a lot of work to do.  Although some women–insulated by wealth and privilege–have been able to rise above most of the concerns affecting the majority, it’s a precarious perch that can be toppled as long as some women aren’t equal.  The patriarchy will hold up the exceptions as examples of what can be achieved and blame everyone else for not being as successful.” 

Political pins.  
All of them state the truth.



 

Book 7

The Woman Who Walked in Sunshine (No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency #16)

By Alexander McCall Smith

224 pages • first pub 2015

fiction, mystery


Blessedly familiar characters, lots of tea drinking, and an interesting twist near the end.  

 

 

Book 8

Miss Mole

By E.H. Young

288 pages • first pub 1930

fiction, classics, historical


Less cheerful than I had expected, but there is no violence, blood, or gore.  I was not in the right frame of mind to read this book, starting it when I was nervous about job-related matters, and not able to fully concentrate. The writing style is anti-Hemingway, with giant sentences.  There was quite a bit of irony, although I’m sure I missed more of it than I got.  The novel seemed to be deeply psychological at points.


There is wringing of hands at the breaking of social norms and at not having the latest style of hat to wear.  The main character, Hannah Mole, has the desire but not the resources to break free from all of that, and uses stinging repartee as her main weapon against the patriarchy.  She had been educated “above her station”.  And she is also a vulnerable human with valid feelings and needs.  I read on because I liked the main character, and wanted to find out how the author wraps up the story.  When I was about ¾ of the way through, I discovered E.H. Young was herself quite the rule-breaker and feminist.  I think it is probably a very good book of its time, as a daring commentary on the role of women in 1920s society, but I picked the wrong time to read it.



Did not finish

The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the New Human

Siddhartha Mukherjee

490 pages • first pub 2022

nonfiction science

I enjoyed reading about the people involved in doing the science, but got muddled in reading about the actual science.  I appreciated learning about Rudolf Virchow.  The library snatched it off my kindle before I could finish.