Friday, May 28, 2021

Ghost Boys

by Jewell Parker Rhodes

Scott County Library, hard cover 208 pages

Published: 2018

Genre: Y/A realistic fiction 


This book was good, but not nearly as powerful as Angie Thomas' The Hate U Give.' That said, it's intended for a younger audience. In that regard, it's plenty powerful.


Twelve-year-old Jerome is shot in the back by a white police officer. His ghost tries to make sense of what happened to him and why the officer's twelve-year-old daughter Sarah can see and talk with his ghost self. He also encounters the ghost of Emmett Till and many other "ghost boys." The story is a quick read that touches on many of the issues our society is dealing with today. It also is a touching look at grief.


Page 38 - "Our school gets all kinds of poor. There's a little bit poor, more poor, then poorer than poor. My family's a little bit poor as long as both my parents work. Carlos's family might be worse."


Jerome is a quiet kid, a good kid. He's learned how to best avoid the bullies and get through the day with his head down. When Carlos comes to school, Jerome inadvertently becomes his friend. The interactions between these two boys was my favorite part of the story.


Page 90 - "Being poor is real. Our church has a food pantry, emergency dollars for winter heating. Last year when Ma's appendix broke, when her sick leave was gone, we got bread, peanut butter, and applesauce. Does Pop know Officer Moore gets paid for not working? For killing me? I want to kick something, scream, break down. But what's the use?"


There are no easy answers for racial inequality, poverty, . . . .life and it's challenges. But this really resonated with me. I have more than enough - food, clothing, security, stuff. How am I trying to make a positive difference in this world with all my resources?


Page 135 - "I worry Ma and Pop will get used to trying not to feel. So used to it, one day they won't feel anything anymore. That'd be worse than me dying."


So heart-wrenching to think about the reality of this! Sometimes a response to intense emotional pain and trauma is to numb yourself . . . sometimes with the use of chemicals . . . and this is a reality for some people, regardless of color or social class. It makes me sad.


Page 147 - "I understand now. Everything isn't all about me."


Jerome has been watching and interacting as a ghost, but finally understands his "purpose" a little better after realizing that before him were other boys killed by white people. And there were ghost boys from before Emmett Till was killed. And this is bigger than him. And things need to change.


Page 178 - "In 2015, over one thousand unarmed black people were killed. It's awful."


I know people who will argue this issue and defend the police 100%. I know police work is incredibly hard and dangerous. I know that it's easy to be an arm-chair critic and judge. But the overwhelming evidence indicates that there's a serious problem here. Again, I think Angie Thomas' book is more dramatic in pointing these issues out, but I love that this book is available for a younger audience.


Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Sacred Marriage: What If God Designed Marriage to Make Us Holy More than to Make Us Happy?

by Gary Thomas

Scott County Library paperback 268 pages plus index and notes

Published: 2000

Genre: Non-fiction, Christian faith, marriage


Pastor Jamie recommended this book and I'm really glad I read it! It's one that I would seriously consider buying . . . but I'm really trying to get rid of stuff and not buy more! I have a *lot* of post-its sticking out so this will be long. I'm going to go back to putting book material first and any commentary from me after.


Page 21 - "If you want to be free to serve Jesus, there's no question - stay single. Marriage takes a lot of time. But if you want to become more like Jesus, I can't imagine any better thing to do than to get married. Being married forces you to face some character issues you'd never have to face otherwise."

 

Yes! Iron sharpens iron. A successful marriage involves a lot of refining! 

 

Page 35 - "According to pollster George Barna, self-described 'born-again' Christians have a higher rate of divorce than nonbelievers (twenty-seven percent to twenty-three percent). THose who adopt the label 'fundamentalist Christian' have the highest divorce rate of all (thirty percent). We can't carry a message well if we don't live it first."

 

Ouch! Divorce makes me so sad, but to know that people who identify as Christians have an even higher divorce rate is even worse.

 

Page 42 - "Yes, this spouse might be difficult to love at times, but that's what marriage is for - to teach us how to love. Allow your marriage relationship to stretch your love and to enlarge your capacity for love - to teach you to be a Christian."

 

That should be our hallmark! Love. "You will be known by your love."

 

Page 54 - "This chapter deals with the discipline of showing respect, particularly to your spouse. The sad truth is that comparatively few Christians think of giving respect as a command or spiritual discipline. We are obsessed with being respected, but rarely consider our own obligation to respect others."


That last part really struck me. We definitely want to get respect, but don't think as much about being respectful of others. Guilty!


Page 63 - "Giving respect to others brings light and life into our lives. It leads us in the end to respect the God who created all of us and shapes us as He sees fit. It is an essential discipline, and marriage provides daily opportunities for us to grow in this area."


I vividly remember seeing and hearing both my mom and Betty being really disrespectful to their husbands . . . I know it was partly borne of frustration, but I remember thinking, "I don't ever want to treat Louie like that." Sometimes I am rude to him, but I try really hard to show him respect.


Page 74 - "Paul urges us to pray continually (1 Thessalonians 5:17). This puts prayer on a far higher plan than mere intercession. It marks prayer as the heart of our devotion, the constant awareness of God's presence, our consistent submission to His will, and our frequent expressions of adoration and praise."


This idea has been cropping up more and more for me. To be in constant communication with the Lord is something I'm working on. I need Your help, Holy Spirit!


Page 97 - "Use the revelation of your sin as a means to grow in the foundational Christian virtue of humility, leading you to confession and renouncement. Then go the next step and adopt the positive virtue that corresponds to the sin you are renouncing. If you've used women in the past, practice serving your wife. If you've been quick to ridicule your husband, practice giving him encouragement and praise."


"Humility" is the word I chose to guide me this school year. Less of me, more of Jesus. I like how Thomas takes the reader from personal sin to confession to changing behaviors and attitudes. God is good!


Page 114-5:  "If you're reading this after you've gone through a divorce, you serve no one - least of all God - by becoming fixated on something you can't now undo. That's what forgiveness and grace are for - a fresh start, a new beginning."


I've been seriously considering "grace" for my next year's word. Grace is powerful when you really understand what it is that Jesus has done for us.


Page 120-1: As I read the section titled "Shared Sufferings," I was overwhelmed by the power of stories. This is the story of Leslie and Tim and their broken marriage. It made me think of Jes and her first marriage. It made me sad AND encouraged that God can help us through ANY ugly thing we deal with in this life. 


Page 123 - "What really happened was that by remaining faithful to an unfaithful husband, Leslie demonstrated the truth of a God who remains faithful to an unfaithful people. Her father had heard the gospel many times, but it wasn't until he saw it displayed in Leslie's life that he wanted it for himself."


Wow! I didn't expect her difficult experience to bear such fruit! For her dad to come to faith in Christ because of how she handled her husband's unfaithfulness is just amazing. Praise God!


Page 125 - "Tell your (marital) story. Tel lit to your kids, your friends, your brothers and sisters, but especially to each other. The more your story is implanted in your brain, the more it serves as a hedge against the myriad forces that seek to destroy your marriage. Make your story so familiar that it becomes part of the fabric of your being. It should become a legend that is shared through the generations as you grow a family tree that defies all odds and boasts marriage after marriage of stability, strength, and longevity."


This is actually a quote from Jerry Jenkins. I'm trying to remember which of his books / studies I've read, but it's not coming to me right now. I love the power of story!


Page 129 - "Jesus promised us that everyone will be seasoned with fire, and every sacrifice will be seasoned with salt (see Mark 9:49, NKJV). The desire for ease, comfort, and stress-free living is an indirect desire to remain an "unseasoned," immature Christian. Struggle makes us stronger; it builds us up and deepens our faith."


This was a tiny bit "ouch" for me . . . I struggle with just wanting to be comfortable, yet I know that God hates a lukewarm believer. This is a prayer point for me!


Page 143 - "Think about this line: 'Sorrow also played its part in setting me free.' So often today sorrow is something that is to be avoided at all costs. Sorrow is the enemy, the persecutor, the fearful emotion. If there is sorrow in our marriage, we must leave our marriage, for how could anyone suggest that I remain in an unhappy marriage? While few of us would (or even should) have the courage to willingly choose sorrow, when we find ourselves in it, if we quieted our souls down - if we learned to float in it rather than thrash about like a drowning emotional victim - we might find, as Anne did, that it can be used to set us free."


Just like the point from before, this is challenging to me. I have to say that I am glad that Louie and I face the challenges (and sorrow) together rather than letting them draw us apart. I need to deepen my faith in *all* circumstances! I scanned pages 162-3 because they deal with the issue of conflict so well!

















Page 170 - "But true forgiveness is a process, not an event. It is rarely the case that we are able to forgive 'one time' and the matter is settled. Far more often, we must relinquish our bitterness a dozen times or more, continually choosing to release the offender from our judgment."


Yes! I sometimes struggle with true forgiveness, wanting to snatch back the position of judging. This book was so filled with sound advice and clear insight.


Page 182 - "Significance is found in giving your life away, not in selfishly trying to find personal happiness."


Yet it has taken me decades to get to the point where I understand this and am trying to live it . . . I'm so glad that God is patient with me!


Page 188 - "The important thing to remember is that service is a spiritual discipline we owe to God, and it can only be lived out as it is applied to others. I learned long ago that God has called me to serve him through people, regardless of whether those people are 'worthy' of being served. . . . God is always worthy of being obeyed and served, so when I act out of obedience to him, the person who receives my service doesn't have to be deserving - they're benefiting from what I owe God."


This whole section on "The Worthy" is excellent! 


Page 203 - "Common sense tells us that sex is necessary for the human race to continue - ... - but religious apprehension makes us think that the 'most holy' amongst us will somehow shun its pleasure. This, tragically, would mean that only the least holy would actually raise children - which doesn't bode well for the faith of the next generation.


Thomas actually addresses a lot of aspects of sex within marriage. And he addresses how people can have misconceptions about sex, faith, and what the Bible tells us to do. He does a nice job on this topic.


Page 224 - "The fact is, God is worthy of infinite celebration. Jesus said at one point that if the crowds had not broken forth in praise, the very stones would have cried out (see Luke 19:40). God forbid that we would get shown up by a bunch of rocks!"


Amen! I love to celebrate and sing a joyful noise!


Page 229 - "The great Christian writers of the past stressed the importance of living in constant awareness of God's presence. Those who have advanced in the Christian life have learned to develop almost a mystical memory that keeps them attuned to the fact that God is always with them, always ready to whisper his words of challenge, encouragement, affirmation, and loving rebuke. He is always watching, always caring, always hearing."

Yes! I want to develop a constant awareness of God's presence in my life.


Page 230 - "How can we, as married saints, use the daily rush of activities and the seeming chaos of family life as a reminder of God's presence?"


I love that Louie and I are more and more often praying together and building one another up in our faith. That just wasn't the case thirty years ago.


Page 231 - "Notice that Jesus says 'where two or three come together in my name . . . ' The family that will enjoy Jesus' presence as a customary part of their union is a family that is joined precisely because husband and wife want to invite Jesus into the deeper parts of their marriage. They are not coming together in order to escape loneliness, more favorably pool their financial resources, or merely gain an outlet for sexual desire. Above all these other reasons, they have joined themselves to each other as a way to live out and deepen their faith in God."


I am so incredibly grateful that I get to be married to Louie!


Page 234 - "The other side of communication is learning to listen, and it is this area where I often struggle mightily. I'm often lost in my own thoughts . . . "


Guilty! I really, really, really need to work on listening more. 


Page 242 - ". . . building a family together isn't a side avocation. It takes enormous energy, concentration, and self-denial."


So true! It's worth it, though! I'm glad I don't need to "do life" without my partner.


Page 261 - "Few things have been sadder to me than reading Donald Trump's three autobiographies. Don't ask me why I've read all of them - I'm not sure myself! - but by the end of the third, you see a clear picture of a man who blindly pursued his financial dreams and lost the intimacy that could make such dreams meaningful."


When you love money and fame more than human beings . . . 


Page 266 - "I've been wrong about so many things in my marriage. There have been moments of betrayal, apathy, unkindness, selfishness - but marriage is a long walk. We can start out a little slowly, even occasionally lose our way, and still salvage a most meaningful journey."

 

This book was a very worthwhile read! It's one that could very well become my "go-to" book to add to wedding gifts. . . 


Monday, May 24, 2021

The Key to Everything

by Valerie Fraser Luesse

Carver County Library paperback 332 pages

Published: 2020

Genre: Christian historical fiction


Even though I got the book a week before book club, I only started reading it the day before . . . and had 70 pages left when I went to the discussion. Enjoyable book, pretty lightweight read. Set shortly after WWII, this is 15 y.o. Peyton Cabot's story. He is almost too wonderful to be true. Thoughtful, kind, respectful, insightful . . . he was an unusual protagonist - nearly flawless!


One of my favorite threads in the story involved Peyton's interactions with young Bonnie and Jasper. When they initially meet in the hospital, this conversation melted my heart.

"I'm sorry - am I being nosy?" (Peyton)

"It's okay," Bonnie said, smiling at him. "I think you got a good heart."

"How can you tell?"

"Because when people's got black hearts, it shows in their eyes. There ain't no light in 'em cause there ain't no light inside. You got lots o' light."

Honestly, I've met people whose eyes gave me the chills. A little later, they have another moment that also struck me.

"It's not a handout," Peyton said. "It's a thank-you for keeping me comp'ny. I woulda had to eat all by myself if you and Jasper hadn't come along. Sure is lonesome to eat by yourself."

"It sure it." She stared solemnly at Peyton. "How come you done all this for us?"

He thought about it for a second. "Because everybody oughta help everybody else when they can. You'd help me if I needed it, wouldn't you?"

Bonnie slowly nodded. "I sure would. Things just ain't never been where I could help nobody."

"You're helping your mama right now by takin' care o' Jasper. And you helped Jasper when you asked me to share my pie."

"I guess I did," Bonnie said with a big grin. (Pgs 62-63)


Aunt Gert was one of my absolute favorite characters in this book! Her wisdom, sense of humor, and kindness were radiant. When she and Peyton are talking about the truth of his grandparents, her comments on Cajuns made me smile.

"You are one hundred percent one o' the Cabots. You just don't have any o' that crazy Kelly blood from Celia's side o' the family, which is all to the good, if you want my opinion. And somewhere in Louisiana, you've got some family you never even met. Prob'ly Cajun. You feel particularly musical all of a sudden?"

Peyton laughed and kicked off his sneakers so he could shove his feet into the cool sand like Aunt Gert. "No, ma'am." 

"Well, that's too bad. Maybe we'll find out you can cook. Louisiana people can cook like nobody's business." (pg. 97)


Peyton meets so many interesting people on his bike ride to Key West. When he's having lemonade with Matilda, she makes a sweet observation.

"You been loved, Peyton. I can tell. It just shows in a person. You coulda been off havin' all kinda adventures, but here you are takin' the time to talk to a old lady in her kitchen."

Peyton pointed a finger at her and grinned. "You bribed me with lemonade." (pg. 172)


I'm not sure why I marked this, except that it made me stop and think for a bit.

Peyton was about to experience his second stay on a military base - a place where he was starting to feel very much at home. . . . . There seemed to be a sense of shared pride and purpose. Most of all, Peyton was drawn to the clarity of military life - the certainty of knowing exactly what you were supposed to do and how you were supposed to do it. (pg. 238)


I don't want to write a long explanation or put this in context, but when Peyton was catching Lisa up on all his adventures, he said this.

". . . to the two children from the hospital, Bonnie and Jasper, who had lingered with him - more like something he wasn't supposed to forget than something he wanted to remember." (pg. 253)


Grief. It can be so incredibly difficult to deal with and work through. Kate shares.

"I don't know how to do this, Aunt Gert - how to get to a place where I can carry Marshall with me without crying all the time." (pg. 274)


I love Peyton's response when Lisa says, "Nothing scares you, does it?"

He frowned as he thought about her question. "It's not that I don't get scared. I just try not to let being scared stop me from doing whatever I've made up my mind to do." (pg. 297)


Back to Bonnie. I love that kid!

"You sure got a bunch o' love in you, Peyton." Bonnie said with a sigh. "It's a wonder it don't spill out all over the place and make a big ol' mess." (pg. 313)


I love how the epilogue brings us up to date with all the characters. Bonnie's comments on Jasper's choices (and even more - Peyton's response) were a great way to wrap the story up.

Bonnie sighed and looked him square in the eyes. "He's in a commune in California. There. Now you know. He's a full-on hippie. And he's protesting the war."

"Is he happy?"

"Yes."

"Is he safe out there?"

"Yes."

"Well, if he's happy and safe, that's all that matters. Why didn't you tell me before?"

"You mean why didn't I tell an Air Force colonel that the boy he rescued is a hippie and a war protestor?"

"He served his hitch. Did his duty. He's got a right to feel how he feels about the war. Everybody's different, Bonnie. Serving in Korea made me want to be in the military for life. I guess Vietnam made Jasper never want to go near it again." (pg. 329)


This was a lovely, albeit lightweight book. The book club discussion followed suit.




Sunday, May 09, 2021

One for the Murphys

by Linda Mullaly Hunt

Scott County Library paperback 224 pages

Published: 2012

Genre: YA realistic fiction

 

I'm confident I've read this book before, but I don't find it in my blog. I remember it catching my eye when I worked at Pioneer Ridge Middle School. I read this before I read Fish in a Tree! This is Hunt's debut novel and it is amazing! Again, I cried like a baby, even though I'd read it before!

 

Carly Connors is heading into foster care after her mother's new husband beat her badly enough for her and her mother to be hospitalized. The Murphys are caring for a foster child for the first time. Julie and her fire fighter husband have three boys.

 

Page 83 - I love how responsible and caring Carly is, especially when there's an emergency with little Michael Eric.


I walk over to the bed and I kneel down. Except for asking God to help me pass tests or keep my mother happy, I think this is the first day I've ever really prayed. 'Dear God, I know that I don't pray much, and I know that sometimes you probably wonder why you made me at all, but you did your best work with Michael Eric.' I look at the ceiling. 'You really did. Please. Please bring him home. Amen.' 


Page 108 - I love when Daniel shares with Carly his love of playing basketball and his fears of disappointing his father by not liking baseball. I also love how she sees that their family isn't one-dimensional.


I am shocked he told me this. I'm even more shocked that the Murphys aren't perfect after all.

 

Page  138 - The idea of "self-fulfilling prophecy" can be a negative or a positive. I wish I were consistently a mom, teacher, and friend like Mrs. Murphy.


Most of the time, it wasn't like my mother told me I was anything - good or bad. But when Mrs. Murphy tells me I'm smart, I am. When she tells me I'm funny, I am. When she tells me how thoughtful I am, I become that way. I swear, if she told me I was a duck, I'd be checking in my high tops for webbed feet.


Page 167 - My heart aches for kids who have parents who don't value them. Carly's mom is a tough cookie and she has not been especially tender toward Carly.


It's not like I'd expect her to stay home at night or join the PTA. I mean, all I want her to do is look at me the way Mrs. Murphy looks at her kids. Like I'm the best thing ever. Like she loves me more than anyone else.


Page 181 - I love how Carly and Mrs. Murphy talk about Shel Silverstein's book The Giving Tree. Although Mrs. Murphy's explanation of what unconditional love is makes total sense, I have long agreed with Carly's perspective!


"It just seems like a book about a selfish jerk and a sucker."


Page 187 - I really like that Carly has some positive and happy memories of times with her mother. Overall, this scene made me frustrated with her mom, but I'm glad Carly could find some positives.


I think of how my mother made mustaches for me out of whipped cream. How we'd eat frozen pizza and watch reruns. How, when I was much younger, she'd talk in funny cartoon voices when I was scared of the dark. I remember that in good times, she could make my stomach ache from laughing.


Page 190 - I love that Carly can reflect on her conversation with Mr. Murphy about getting people out of a burning building and make an application to her own life.


I also think that maybe I'm not supposed to be able to save my mother. Maybe I'm supposed to save myself first.


Page 204 - I enjoy seeing where the title comes from . . . and this is it! It's beautifully written. Carly is saying goodbye to Mrs. Murphy as she is heading back to her mother's care.


I think of my mom and then of Mrs. Murphy. How she's both strong and gentle; the two, twisted together like soft-serve ice cream. I wish hard that there could be two of me. One for my mother.

And one for the Murphys.


I am seriously tempted to buy this and Hunt's other books. She is an amazing author who creates believable and likeable characters.

 

<Above posted 5.9.2021. Below added 8.18.2023.>

 

Since I can listen to audiobooks at work and I love this author, I listened on Libby. Reading was by Nora Hunter and she did a fantastic job. Even though I've read this book twice before (and I completely trust the author's judgment about her story!), I felt disappointed that she went back to her mother. Part of me wanted a "happy ever after" with the Murphy's. Oh! And I love that she "hung" the little bully up by his overall straps. Grin.


The word play was cool. Silent and Listen share the same letters. Remove one letter from Friends to get Fiends. Dennis backwards is Sinned (step dad). CITGO = See it go.



The Shakespeare Stealer

by Gary Blackwood

personal copy paperback 216 pages

Published: 1998

Genre: YA historical fiction


I love that the main character is called Widge, short for Pigwidgeon. He spent birth to age seven in an orphanage, then ages 7-14 with Dr. Bright. Dr. Bright taught him "charactery," a coded language system developed by the doctor. Widge was sent to different churches to record sermons which Dr. Bright later preached as his own. At age 14, the Falconer bought Widge's services from Dr. Bright on behalf of Mr. Bass.


The bulk of the story is about Widge's attempts to copy Shakespeare's newest play, Hamlet. Fearful of disappointing his master, he spends more and more time with the acting company where he finds his first true home. Sander, Nick, Julia(n), and others help him to find a new place to live where he actually belongs. 


I've seen this book in middle school media centers for twenty years and now I've finally read it! I enjoyed it, but don't plan to read others in the series.