Thursday, January 31, 2013

The Paris Wife: Review by Kathy



REVIEW OF PARIS WIFE - Kathy Swanson

I enjoyed this book.  I found it to be an easy read.  I enjoy reading biography-type books.  I find it fascinating to read about the lives of well-known people, especially about those no longer with us.  It was interesting to read about Hemingway but from someone else's perspective that was close to him.  I do realize that this was a novel but I am assuming well-researched.  I appreciated the summary portion at the end to give us that closure piece.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Book # 3 ~ Barbara's Pick: Sutton





I'm going to recommend the book "Sutton" by J.R. Moehringer

It's available in used hardcopy on Amazon for about $16 and Kindle for $10 and of course at the library. It will be available in paperback in May.

I've chosen it because it's set in the 1920-1960 era when our country was going through a lot of financial and social turmoil. Willie Sutton was a notorious bank robber and thought of for some time as a Robin Hood hero. But, the underlying current of the book...which is a fictional account of his life...is what drove him to robbing banks - love of a woman and his desire to win her over. He remained constant in this love all through his adult life.

I really enjoy this author's writing technique and the book draws you in so you want to see what will happen next. This author has written "The Tender Bar" and co-wrote Andre Agassi's biography.

If you've ever heard the derogatory reference to former President Bill Clinton as "Slick Willie" you might like to know that was the nickname given to Willie Sutton because he escaped from the police during his robbing sprees and escapes from 2 (or 3?) prisons. He was quite a character.

I realized the reviews online can provide spoilers so rather than including it in with Barb's recommendation I attached a link to what good reads has to say about
 

The Elegance of the Hedgehog: Review by Shannon



 The Elegance of the Hedgehog

A Review by Shannon

1/27/13



Dear Grandma (and Fellow Family Bookclub Members),

Since I know not everyone has read the book yet, I am keeping my comments more general and don’t have any spoilers in my comments.  I would be very interested to hear thoughts regarding how people felt about the ending of the book.

Historically, I rarely read a book more than once. There have been some notable exceptions where I have overcompensated by re-reading certain books three or more times (All The Kings Men by Robert Penn Warren; Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand; Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin; the Anne of Green Gables and Harry Potter series).  The Elegance of the Hedgehog has not only been added to my slowly growing list of numerously re-read books, it is quickly becoming one of my all time favorites.  First off, I am fascinated on a certain level that it is a translation. How much does the translator’s word choice influence my love of the book? It’s made me curious about how translations work.

Mostly though, I love how the book challenges our pre-conceived notions about people and blows away stereotypes.  It’s made me wonder about people that I meet in everyday life. My work experience as an attorney, particularly as a family law attorney, has taught me that you never really know what is going on in someone’s house just by their appearances, job, education, religion, etc. However, the heroine of Hedgehog (ironically, I struggle to remember her name despite my three readings of the book! – Renee - No one really calls her by her first name) causes me to take a look at the “invisible” people that we see every day: the grocery checker, the garbage person, the mailperson… and wonder what kind of secret life they may have.

Early in the book, Renee is almost found out as the closet intellectual she is after making a literary reference in response to a tenant’s comments to her about Marx.  She then quickly mutters something inane as a cover and then says: "As always, I am saved by the inability of living creatures to believe anything that might cause the walls of their little mental assumptions about me [to fall)]."

Last year, I had an experience where the walls of my own mental assumptions fell and I have been thinking about it ever since.  I was sitting on the packed evening commuter train headed from Chicago back to the suburbs. I was dressed for the business meeting I was returning home from, but was knitting.  I was sitting on the bench seats that lines the upper deck and faced the bench seats across the way.  When the train took off, I noticed that a guy across the aisle was pretty openly looking at me.  He was not your typical commuter - - he had a shaved head, tattoos, combat boots, big black earrings (the kind that look like faux African tribal earrings…I have no idea what they are called, but they leave huge holes in the ears when they are removed) and he was drinking a “tallboy” beer and had a second one in a sack (although a beer on the train does not make you an atypical commuter, not even a tallboy).  Mind you, he is someone I would have hung out with in college, but he did not fit with the crowd on the train at all.  So of course I think, hmm he is checking me out. Almost exactly as the thought crossed my mind, he said, “I’m sorry to bother you, but may I ask why you are using a contrasting yarn when you cast on?” Huh?    He went on to say that he had recently taught himself to knit and had never seen a cast on like that (it’s how you get the stitches on the needle for the first row…).  Well, we ended up having a great chat about knitting and provisional cast on using the “long tail” method.  We were so wrapped up in our conversation that he almost missed his stop and had to make a run for it down the stairs to the first floor of the train.  There was silence after his departure until another guy sitting across from me smiled and said, “Wow”.  I responded, “Who’d have thunk it?”: certainly not me, not until then.

The three main characters in Hedgehog challenge our assumptions about class, race, intelligence, education, and age. I think they are all the more interesting as characters because even though they are not stock characters, Renee and the girl actively work to encourage people to react to them stereotypically, only being recognized for their true selves by each other and by a “foreigner” (who may not be trying to act stereotypically, but is likely perceived in such a way by society). Each time I read the book, I see things that I missed before and find myself underlining yet another passage. To me, Hedgehog is a book that reminds me of how good books can be because I find myself thinking about the book while living my life and about my life, when reading the book.

I hope that you have enjoyed the book and that it has given you food for thought as well.  If you are interested, Muriel Barbery has written another book about one of the other tenants in Renee’s building. It is called, Gourmet Rhapsody.  It’s about the food critic that she mentions offhandedly in Hedgehog.  I think it’s a very good book as well, but not necessarily worthy of multiple re-reads.  Can’t wait for the next selection!

The Elegance of the Hedgehog: Review by Barbara




 
Book Review: THE ELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG by Muriel Barbery
From: Barbara Lechner
1/27/2013


If not for the Anstett Book Club I would have followed my daughter's formula, “If you don't like a book by page 35 'deep-six' it.” It took me to page one hundred and 35 to finally find a comfort zone and not feel I had homework to do. Am I glad I kept persisting ...mostly due to hearing Shannon's recommendation for this book running in my head...there had to be something that made her like this book. And, she was right!

I wanted to go back and re-read the first 135 pages to see why I was so blind to the building blocks to  the author's character and story development. I suspect I am a lazy reader. (sigh!)

The setting of an upper class apartment building inhabited by a host of characters and managed by the story's main character – concierge Renee – was not hard for me to relate to since George and I lived in a similar setting in downtown Milwaukee for 13 years. Our building was different in that it housed a mix of wealthy and “real” working people (like G and me) but there was no loss for a cast of characters and lots of backstory (i.e. the attorney who went to jail for embezzling, the diamond salesman who was robbed in the building, the love affair of two neighbors, the brilliant man who had lost his mind).

The philosophical ruminations of Renee, raised in poverty and a self-taught intelligent woman, and the brilliant pre-teen Paloma a tenant in the building and daughter of wealthy parents, are gems in and of themselves. The women (adult and child) share a friendship and create a safe-haven to be who they are. I believe that Renee, who has hidden her intellect from the tenants discovers that she is not alone in feeling the misfit and even begins to appreciate her uniqueness. She begins to connect to the new tenant Mr. Kakuro and his gift for seeing her for what she is brings happiness to the story and relief for the reader.

I will enjoy going back to favorite ruminations and plan to use them for inspiration in my own life.

Happy reading!

Thursday, January 24, 2013