Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larssen

This book may be a huge best seller, but I did not care for it. The first half was very hard to follow mostly due to the difficult Swedish names! Once I got everyone straight, it was a little interesting, but I am not too big on murder mysteries, especially when sick sexual stuff is involved. I heard one reviewer say the books (there are 3 in the trilogy, I will pass on the last 2) had become popular just because people heard other people were reading them! I agree.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Open - the autobiography of Andre Agassi

I have been an Andre Agassi fan since the 80's, and this was a fascinating look into his life and struggles and life on the tennis circuit. I am still having trouble dealing with his beautiful hair being a wig!

Kid and young adult books

What good books for kids or young adults have you read lately?

Saturday, July 10, 2010

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

This book is set in a small town in Mississippi in 1963 and centers around a book a young white woman wants to write about the experiences of the black maids in her town. It was an interesting book on many levels. I was just a child in the early 60's and we had a maid, if not daily, at least weekly. It was just a part of life. However, we did not have a separate bathroom for the maid, and I don't think my mother neglected my sister and me like the women did in the book. My main criticism of The Help is that the whites seem mainly self -centered and oblivious, while the blacks are all wonderful people. All white people did not mistreat their maids and all black people were not great workers.

That being said, the book really points out the ingrained prejudices and ways of thinking on both sides which were  very true. Although things among the races have improved greatly, some of those attitudes remain today.

The drama and politics of the Women's Club sounded alot like Calhoun! And the references to the clothes and life without air conditioning in the early 60's brought back memories. Finally I could relate to the tall protagonist who did not quite fit in and was always letting her mother down!

Fiction

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Monday, July 5, 2010

March by Geraldine Brooks

As a girl, Little Women was one of my very favorite books. We all know about the trials that Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy and Marme go through during the year covered in the book, but have you ever wondered what was going on with Mr. March during this time? Ms. Brooks has told his story in this wonderfully written historical fiction. She used the journals of Louisa May Alcott's real father, who was friends with Emerson and Thoreau, and was a very liberal minister and abolitionist. Did you ever think that possibly the Marches were part of the Underground Railroad and hid runaway slaves? Or that the reason they are so poor is that Mr. March gave all his money away to John Brown, of the John Brown slave uprising? We also learn in this book that Marme is not the perfect person she is portrayed as, but a real life woman who loves and struggles in her marriage and in her life just as many of us do in 2010! I listened to this book on tape and loved it. Ms.Brooks writes with such detail that I felt I was right there and it is a mature and honest look at how many fighting in the "War Between the States" truly felt about slaves and the war in general. Mr.March (I don't think we ever know his first name, he is referred to as March) struggles with his ideals as he faces the realities of death and fighting and his own inabilities to bring about change.
Historical Fiction

All Over But the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg

One of the joys of having an adult child is when he and I can share books. Adam was assigned this book in a class at UGA on Southern autobiographies. Rick Bragg is my age and grew up not far from here across the border to Alabama. He grew up "poor white trash", with a mean and alcoholic father, but the strength of his mother and extended family, as well as a great writing talent, got him out of the cycle of poverty and eventually as a writer for the NY Times and a Pulitzer Prize winner. His descrptions of life in small town South rang true for many of the people around here. This was a hard book to read at times, but he is a great writer and I feel honestly and lovingly wrote of the struggles of growing up poor and dealing with the demons of his childhood.
Non-fiction