Tuesday, October 30, 2012

BOOK REVIEW: "The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society"

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
By Mary Ann Shaffer
and Annie Barrows
Copyright 2008
The Dial Press
Adult Fiction
4.5 Bookmarks

Yes, I know.  This is just about the stupidest book title you've ever seen in your life.  What, you may ask, was I thinking when I picked it up and decided to read it?  Well I'll tell you.  I was thinking that a book with this stupid of a title must have something interesting inside in order to compensate for the ridiculous name (and I was also thinking that I saw this title on the list of "100 books you JUST MUST read" so it must have some redeeming qualities).

This is an unconventionally written tale about a small town on the Channel Island of Guernsey recovering after a five-year occupation during WWII.  The story is written as a series of letters between a writer named Juliet Ashton who survived the war in London, and the residents of Guernsey who formed a literary society, in part to help them pass the time during the occupation, but mostly as a cover-up for when they were caught out after curfew one night by the Germans.  Juliet also pens letters to friends, and the residents of Guernsey write to the friends once Juliet decides to visit the island in person. 

The entire story was beautifully written, and so clever how the authors were able to convey the sentiments of the survivors of the war through the correspondence between the characters.  As a reader, I was able to sympathize with them for what they had been through, but at the same time, was able to see their strength and their readiness to move forward with their lives despite the terrible experiences they had survived.

A very heartwarming story, clever and enjoyable to read.  This would make a GREAT book club book and would be enjoyed by a wide variety of readers.  Truly a great, great story (And yes, I would have given it 5 Bookmarks if it had had a better title). 

 

BOOK REVIEW: "True Believer"

True Believer
By Nicholas Sparks
Copyright 2005
Warner Books
Adult Fiction
3.5 Bookmarks

As I usually do, I enjoyed this book by Nicholas Sparks.  True Believer had a slightly different twist than most of his stories.  Journalist (of sorts) Jeremy Marsh has stumbled across a story about a haunted cemetery in the small town of Boone Creek, North Carolina.  Jeremy makes the trip to see what all the fuss is about and ends up in the middle of a mystery that he decides he wants to solve.

In the meantime, he meets the town librarian Lexie Darnell and thoughts of heading back to the big city start to slip out of his mind.  Lexie, of course, has demons in her past and she isn't sure she wants to let go. 

The love story develops in a fairly typical manner for Sparks and by the time you get to the end of the story you definitely have the "awwwwww" factor that we've all come to expect with these stories. 

I was a little disappointed in the development of some of the characters or this would have gotten a higher ranking.  But I sure do love a good love story. 

BOOK REVIEW: "Slicker"

Slicker
by Lucy Jackson
Copyright 2010
Lazybones Inc, LLC
Adult Fiction
3.5 Bookmarks

Fun book!  Young Desiree Christian-Cohen, a budding writer, decides she needs to get away from her life in New York City.  With recently divorced parents, a recently out-of-the-closet father, and an elderly grandparent being cared for by her mother, she just can't take it anymore.  She closes her eyes and points at a map and ends up a few days later in Honey Creek, Kansas. 

Desiree spends the summer in Honey Creek, inveigling herself into the locale with her charm, wit and just the plain and simple fact that she is a tourist where they've never seen a tourist before.  Desiree falls in love with the country folks, the simple life and a young man who is able to fill the void she didn't even know she had. 

There were some bad moments in the book:  when Desiree's ex-boyfriend shows up and threatens to ruin everything, when one of her new friends shows up at the local diner beaten up by her boyfriend.  But for the most part, it was a light-hearted and fun book to read.  My favorite line in the book was "Don't bother trying to understand someone else's life.  It's one of those things that can't be done."  Simple words from a simple character, but they rang true to Desiree. 

Loved that the title is really calling her a city slicker and has nothing to do with the raincoat on the cover. 



BOOK REVIEW: "She Walks in Beauty"

She Walks in Beauty
By Siri Mitchell
Copyright 2010
Bethany House Publishers
Adult Fiction
3.5 Bookmarks

Although I've always been a fan of historical fiction, I picked up this book not so much for the content but because the title comes from one of my very, very favorite poems ever (yes, I have a secret crush on Lord Byron). 

This is the story of Clara Carter's entry into the social world in turn-of-the-century New York City.  Clara is a smart girl, not interested in the balls, the parties, the afternoons "in".  Instead, she dreams of going to college and making a difference in the world, but her father and aunt have different plans.  So Clara is thrust into the thick of things and is soon paraded in front of various potential suitors.  However, her guardians have made her very aware that only one particular suitor will do. 

Clara resigns herself to her lot in life and actually seems to start enjoying the dancing and dressing up.  Frankly, I was disappointed in her character for not fighting the societal expectations more than she did, but what do I know about what life was like in 1891.  Still, I would have liked her to have a little more spunk.  In the end, she does become a little stronger of a person and does some good. 

Not sure there's much else to say about the plot on this one.  It's a nice little love story with a few entanglements thrown in: a best friend who is trying to woo the same guy, a father who is involved in scandal, etc.  While it was quite an enjoyable read, there were a few details that were disturbing.  Some to do with the practice of corsetting.  Who knew how absolutely awful THAT was!  I will never be jealous of a woman with an 18-inch waist again.

I recommend this if you like Jane Austen or the Brontes.  It's similar in tone and topic.  Not too deep though. 

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

BOOK REVIEW: "Siddhartha"

Siddhartha
By Hermann Hesse
New translation by Susan Bernofsky
Copyright 2006
Random House Publishing
Classic Literature
4.5 Bookmarks

So I thought I would take advantage of being at home today and catch up a little on my blog posts.  I've actually read quite a few books over the past six weeks, so I'll put a few reviews up here today. 

This was a favorite of the books I've read lately.  It is the story of an Indian Brahmin who gives up his life of class and privilege to become a seeker on a spiritual journey.  I'm sure there are some who would read this and compare it to the parables written by Paulo Coelho.  In reality, Siddhartha was written nearly 100 years ago and seemed to me a possible inspiration for some of Coelho's writings.  If you appreciate Coelho's writings, you will enjoy this book as well.

Siddhartha is a young man who one day makes the terrible realization that perhaps the love of his mother and father, and even his best friend Govinda, would not be enough to "forever suffice to gladden him, content him, sate him, fulfill him."  And thus begins Siddhartha's spiritual journey to find the thing that will give him the fulfillment he so desires.

He joins the Samanas, a group of wandering ascetics, who practice strict self discipline to help them on the road to enlightenment.  When he finds that not to be the path to his goal, he leaves the Samanas and finds a road to the merchant class where he lives for many years.  When he discovers that is not the answer either, he finds his way to a ferry station where he lives next to the river and finally finds the answer he is seeking.  It comes down to something so simple, that he can hardly believe it himself once it comes to him.  "....Everything that is appears good to me," he tells his friend Govinda when their paths cross at the end of life.

There were so many wonderful phrases and such descriptive prose in this book.  It was truly enjoyable to read.  At only about 120 short pages, I breezed through it in a short amount of time but did go back and re-read some of my favorite parts.  Highly recommend this one.

BOOK REVIEW: "The Good Psychologist"

The Good Psychologist
By Noam Shpancer
Copyright 2010
Henry Holt & Co, LLC
Adult Fiction
3 Bookmarks

I have always believed that most psychologists are folks who are a little nuts (in a good way, of course) and basically just want to figure themselves out (this is also why I think I would have been a GREAT psychologist).  That theory is fairly evident in this debut novel by Noam Shpancer.  The main character works in a center for the treatment of anxiety where he meets his latest client, a stripper whose anxiety has brought her an inability to get back on stage. 

The psychologist deals with his own strange attraction to the stripper, all the while trying to encourage her to work through her fears.  At the same time, he maintains a strangely obsessive relationship with another psychologist he had met at work and had a brief fling with at a business conference.  He casually relates the fact that this fling ended with a child coming into the world (a child he has never met before), and casually mentions the fact that the other psychologist is married.  It is obvious he has never really dealt with the issues surrounding that little love triangle and, frankly, he doesn't even know how to begin to examine his own role in it all.

In the meantime, the psychologist also teaches a night class and we get some nice diverting "lessons" thrown into the midst of the story.  Add an angry boss (you know, the guy who runs the strip club waiting for his favorite stripper to overcome her anxiety and get her naked butt back on stage), and a lot of interesting self-talk, and it made for a fairly entertaining read.

I don't know that I would read this one twice, but I didn't feel like it was a total waste of time either.  Just a kind of interesting little trip into the psyche of a psychotherapist. 

BOOK REVIEW: "The Chemistry of Joy"

The Chemistry of Joy
By Henry Emmons, M.D.
with Rachel Kranz
Copyright 2006
Fireside Books
Non-fiction
3.5 Bookmarks

Always fighting those depressive demons, when I saw a friend suggest this book to another depression sufferer, I decided to pick it up and see what it was all about.  The book starts out with an interesting premise:  that depression can be lessened by combining western science and eastern philosophies in a sort of multi-pronged approach to treatment. 

I can buy that.  The author spends quite a bit of time talking about brain chemistry and the "how" of depression, along with some of the positives and negatives of traditional treatments.  He then goes into Ayurvedic theory, defining people into air, fire and earth types.  The author explains how the different Ayurvedic types have different needs and respond to different treatments.  I found that I am mostly an "air" type (with a little "fire" thrown in for good measure).  I have cold hands and feet, prefer hot drinks, I sleep lightly and have a restless mind, am prone to anxiety but overly discriminating and compulsive in routine.  Yep, that about sums it up. 

So apparently I need to give myself more down time, create a more consistent schedule and eliminate stress.  LOL.  Wife, mom, Realtor......how likely is that?

I did get a couple of good tips from the book on some meditation exercises, and a reminder to journal my feelings (which I haven't done in a very, very long time).  Plus a chapter called "Strategies of wisdom" which included a paragraph about the importance of having someone in our lives who really knows how to listen. 

The author writes, "When someone listens not with their ears or their thinking mind, but with an open heart and a nonjudging mind, then the soul feels safe to come out and reveal itself....This kind of exchange is a gift for both the speaker and the listener, a relationship that goes beyond the unequal roles of helper and helped....Rather, the exchange is a relationship of two souls, in which 'the god in me meets the god in you' and both parties are the richer for it.  The remarkable thing about such a soul relationship is that whether you are the speaker or the listener, you benefit a great deal." 

Those words struck such a chord in me.  To have that type of a relationship is something to be truly cherished.  That one paragraph alone was worth reading the entire book.