Monday, March 10, 2025

The 4 Hour Workweek

By Tim Ferriss

Libby eBook

Published: 2007, with updates and offshoots

Genre: non-fiction


I only got through about 10% of this book before it auto-returned. I did not find it interesting or worthwhile. My pastor has mentioned it several times, which is why I checked it out at all. I'm a curious person! Typically, I would push through and finish a book to appease my curiosity but not this time. 


I don't think I'll get it again. I looked at some of the info he has online. I'm just at a different point in life and don't find value in this book. I'm curious to ask my pastor what about it appealed to him!

Thursday, March 06, 2025

Patina

Track series Book 2

By: Jason Reynolds

paperback free shelf 233 pages

Published: 2017

Genre: YA realistic fiction



Reynolds is such a good author! I like book 1 Ghost better, but Patina's story was worth reading. She runs partly because her mother lost her feet, then legs due to diabetes. She and her sister Maddy live with their aunt ("Momly") and uncle Tony. She also starts learning to run relays in this book.


I like Reynolds' dedication "For those who've been passed the baton too young." 

 

I love that the story opened with what happened at Ghost's race! Now I want to read the rest of the series. 


Patina is such a loving big sister. She braids Maddy's hair every week.

 

Page 8:  "I picked up the can of beads and shook them in her ear like one of them Spanish shaker things."


The language choices are jarring at times, but seem authentic to the character. I love that she gets Maddy to sit still for their braiding sessions. And she uses ninety red beads, which fall out as the week goes on.


Page 22: "Lord, please bless them with some soap. Some perfume. Anything. Make a miracle happen, or What have I done to deserve this? Father, why hath thou forsaken me?"


This made me laugh. Her mom makes the girls attend church with her each week. Patina describes the Thomases, their pew mates, as "smelling like they just puked up mothballs" as she prays for them.


Page 30: "The other thing about these girls is that it seems like they ain't never been told they can't do nothing. Never. I mean, they be wearing full faces of makeup and everything. Do you know what my mother would do if she saw me with my whole face made up for school like I was about to go on some kinda fashion photo shoot or something? She'd probably try to run over me with that wheelchair."


Again, the language choices challenge this teacher. But the observation that some girls (and boys) act as though they can do whatever they want to do rings true.


Page 36: "After school I never waste time at my locker. I scurry down to the end of the main corridor, eyes darting from forward to floor, through the mess of hair flippers, the wrath-letes (kids who feel like it's a sport to make everyone's life miserable), the know-it-alls, the know-nothins, the hush-hushes (super quiet, super shy), the YMBCs (You Might be Cuckoo) . . . "


She goes on, but I found her description of the different cliques to be interesting. I did make a note on a later page though with "YMBC?" . . . because I had forgotten that it stood for goth-type kids.


Page 85: "Like his dramatic voice is gonna make the poem any less wack. But hot sauce on cardboard is still cardboard."


She's talking about her English teacher, Mr. Winston, reading "The Charge of the Light Brigade" in a theatrical manner. The last comment made me laugh.


Page 166: "These things that I hadn't really thought about because Momly always just . . . did them. Which I also never . . . really . . . thought about."

 

Patina's realization that her aunt had been doing so many things for everyone in the household shows how this already mature girl is still growing up. The car accident that kept Momly in hospital, then home, affected everyone.

 

Page 203: "Let them know that I ain't gonna be buffing the floor by myself anymore. That I ain't no junk. . . . Maybe math actually was good for something. Somehow convincing yourself to stand up to hair flippers . . . "

 

I like that Patina found an inner strength and rose above the pettiness of the other girls. This story ends with a question about the end of the race. On to book three!




Wednesday, March 05, 2025

The Greek Gods

By: Bernard Evslin, Dorothy Evslin, &  Ned Hoopes

Illustrated by William Hunter

NPMS discard paperback 116 pages

Published: 1966

Genre: Greek mythology


I've had this book for ages and finally decided to read it. I don't think I'll keep it in my collection, but it was interesting to remember some of the myths I had learned about long ago. I liked the info at the back (afterword and word origins) that made good connections between these stories and words in modern day usage.


I don't think I have favorite stories . . . or even characters. I just find it interesting how stories were created to explain natural phenomena.

Sunday, March 02, 2025

All We Thought We Knew

By: Michelle Shocklee

Hennepin County Library hardcover 346 pages plus author's note, acknowledgements, and discussion questions

Published: 2024

Genre: Christian historical fiction


Our book club discussed this last Monday and I am far behind on blogging! I liked this book, but not nearly as much as the other Shocklee title we read and discussed in 2023 (Count the Night by Stars).


This story has Mattie Taylor in the 1960s, opposed to the Vietnam War and estranged from her family after her brother's death in that war. In the 1940s, we have Ava Delaney (it's quickly apparent that she is Mattie's mom) who is a young war widow after her husband Richard was killed at Pearl Harbor.


There were some mysteries, but the book was mostly clear about where the storylines were heading. Mattie (Martha) was pretty unsufferable in her know-it-all attitude and inflexibility to others' perspectives (not just about the war). Ultimately, though, there were enough interesting characters and details to make it a worthwhile read. We had a great discussion at book club.


Page 11: "The remembrance brought a soul-crushing hollowness with it. A deep void I'd endured since the day the telegram arrived, telling us my brother was never coming home. Nothing I'd tried the past year filled it. Drugs and free love masked it for a while. Yoga and Buddhist meditations hinted at peace, but the emptiness was always there. Dark. Dangerous. Pulling me toward a quick end to the pain."


So many people try to cover, hide, escape their emotional pain. Find Jesus! I think of the bumper sticker that says "No Jesus, No peace. Know Jesus, Know peace."


Page 17: "Most of the residents in the tenement were like him - foreigners hoping to improve their lot in life in America, the land of opportunity."


Gunther's story broke my heart. I think it hit me even harder seeing what is happening in America right now. Trump and his followers have that same "us vs. them" mentality about foreigners. I don't think our country is in a better place than in the 1940s regarding immigrants striving for a better life.


Page 22: "Any shred of hope Gunther had held on to since his arrest melted away as he looked across the dark water to the small patch of land where he'd taken his first steps onto American soil."


I cried here. He came to America to get away from the Nazi regime and to study to become a doctor. But because of his country of origin, he was arrested and punished.

 

Page 24: "The world continued to spin, and life went on, even if I wasn't ready to face it."

 

It's weird how during a trauma, you realize that other people are just going about their business and living their lives. You feel as though surely the world has stopped, but it's just your own situation.

 

Page 47: Despite the devastation in my life and in the world around me, I didn't want darkness and despair to win. Hope didn't make any promises, but it offered a glimpse of happiness, the kind I hadn't known in a very long time."

 

Ava is applying for a job at the base in Tennessee. Being a young widow was bad enough, but having a hostile mother-in-law was just too much. I liked her as a character.

 

Page  92: I'm not going to quote here. I was just so irritated by Mattie's selfish refusal to consider any opinion other than her own. Her insistence that if her dad really loved her mother, he would do anything and everything to fight the cancer is tone deaf. She wasn't considering what the challenges and pain would be for her mother; she just wanted to save the day and her mother's life. Although I can understand that desire, her selfish refusal to consider her parents' perspective was very immature.


Page 114: "If it were up to me, I'd keep the two of you right here on the farm with me and Dad forever, but I know I can't. That's where trust comes in. I've had to learn to trust that you're in God's hands, and that you'll make good choices according to the things we've taught you. I'll pray for Mark every single day, just as I'll be praying for you while you're in Nashville. But I have to let you both go."


Ava was a wise mom. Of course she wanted to protect Mark from the war and every other danger! She wanted to protect both her children. But she had to let them grow up and make their own decisions.


Page 135: "'Mattie, there comes a time when we have to accept that life and death are not in our hands. We in the medical profession do our best, but we aren't God. If I thought the doctors in Nashville could save your mom, I would've taken her there myself. The best thing you can do now is spend time with her and make her as comfortable as possible.'"


Dr. Monahan was wonderful. I'm glad Mattie finally started listening to someone instead of her own voice.


Page 161: "'You're not a horrible person.' His mouth quirked. 'A bit temperamental and overly sensitive, but not horrible.'" 


I loved Nash! He was my favorite character in the 1960s portion of the book. It was nice to have a little comic relief.


Page 185: When Mattie met Fred and started to show some compassion and awareness of other people's experiences and pain . . . it was a relief. I feel as though meeting the injured and depressed soldier was a turning point for her.


Page 227: "'I read an article in a medical journal not long ago about a doctor in Canada who started a therapeutic horseback riding program. If memory serves, his first patient was a woman who is quadriplegic.'"


Yay! I forget sometimes that things were quite different in the 1960s than they are now! This made me want to read about the history of these programs. It also made me think of Laurie Baer's His Haven Ranch. So cool!


Page 249: "Like many people in America, my mother-in-law and housemate passed judgement on thousands of people without knowing anything about them other than they were considered enemies of the United States."


Ugh. Again, just so sad. There are still many people like this.


Page 266: "I didn't know what just happened, but it felt monumental. Like a shift in the galaxy or something. Dad was a man of few words, so to hear him say he was proud of me - especially coming on the heels of his soul-wrenching reminder that I'd abandoned Mama when she needed me the most - completely caught me off guard."


I was so glad that Mattie and her dad were able to connect over the horses and helping wounded veterans.


Page 291: Ava finally confesses her big secret about who fathered Mattie and Mark. It was frustrating that it was such a huge, life-altering secret that was pretty apparent from early on in the book.


Page 292: "With nothing beyond dreary weather, barren landscape, and long boring hours to look forward to day after day, an escape through a good book was much appreciated."


I love that Gunther was able to read and appreciate books, and especially that Ava had given him her copy of a romance novel - I honestly don't remember if it was Pride and Prejudice or another similar title.


Page 306: "'You tried that once.' There was no judgement in his voice. Only compassion and honesty. 'Sometimes we can't run away from the hard things in life.'"


I loved Nash!


Page 316: I cried when Dr. Sonnenberg died. He had been such a wonderful mentor to Gunther. Lost dreams, lost lives.



Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Assistant to the Villain

By: Hannah Nicole Maehrer

Libby audiobook 14 hours

Read by: Em Eldridge

Published: 2023

Genre: Fantasy adventure romance

 

I found this book by looking for available audiobooks in Libby. Book #2 in this series was available, so I looked for book #1. I checked it out and listened. There were things that were intriguing and I was hooked before the book started driving me crazy. Sadly, I pushed through to the end of the book to find out what happened.

 

The reader didn't really do it for me. I sped it up to 1.25x, then 1.3x  because I couldn't stand listening to her. (A friend said she listens to books at 1.8x speed in Audible! I don't like listening to chipmunk-sounding voices, so 1.3 was fast enough.)

 

I liked the line ". . . tragedy did that to a family - isolated them." It seems like such a sad truth. Sometimes when tragedy visits a family or a person, we just don't know how to respond and so we say / do nothing.

 

The more the book went on, the more irritated I was by the overwrought language and emotions. It was a crummy romance novel with too many irritating plot points. "Just kiss and move on!" 


Evangeline (Evie) runs into the Villain (aka Trystan Maverine). Looking up the spelling of his name, I learned that this was a TikTok thing before becoming a book . . . ugh. Literature it is not.


Some of the fantasy elements of the story drew me in, but what good is magic if you can't really use it? Evie's dad's betrayal was the nail in the coffin for me . . . no way do I want to read book two to find out what happens.

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Madly, Deeply: the Diaries of Alan Rickman

By: Alan Rickman

Foreward by: Emma Thompson

Libby audiobook 29:28 hours

Read by: Steven Crossley (foreward read by Bonnie Wright, editor's prologue by Alfred Enouch, afterword written and read by Rima Horton, Rickman's wife) 

Published: 2022

Genre: autobiography, memoir


From 1993 to 2016 (when he died), these diary entries are at times like a stream-of-consciousness to-do list and at other times, deeply moving. I wonder what he would think if he knew his private diaries would be published after his passing!


There were SO.many.names. Some of them I recognized; others were unfamiliar. He interacted with a lot of people and seemed to be most impressed with famous musicians. I wonder what it would be like to be written about in someone's diary and have it be published . . . I certainly hope Daniel Radcliffe has read this book!


What is "WAWA?" There were some names and details that flew right over my head. The narrator interjected at points to explain or clarify, but one of the hazards of listening to an audiobook vs. reading the print version is "missing" some of the text. I also want to get the print version to see photos! It must have photos.


Natasha who died in 2009 . . . who was she? Why was she important to Rickman? Ruby . . . just a friend? Seemed like a daughter or niece. 


It made me smile that after Harry Potter #2, he said, "No more Harry Potter!" and then went on to do all the rest that Snape was in.


Iraq War, Bush as "irrelevant," Rumsfeld and Cheney as the real power . . . his political observations for both the UK and the USA were interesting.


I want to watch so many things! Mesmer, Winter Guest, Die Hard 2 and 3 (how does he appear in movies after his character died in the first one?), . . . 


1994 Great Britain, John Smith, what was this about? I just went to Wikipedia to read up. Very interesting . . . and a tragic, untimely death.


He had so many issues with the places he lived - electrical, plumbing, etc. And he traveled SO MUCH! He was constantly flying to Toronto, LA, NYC, South Africa, Dublin, etc. and then back home again. 


<Above published 2.20.2025. Below added 3.02.2025.>


I got the print book from the Hennepin County Library (hardcover 441 pages plus appendix - diary entries from 1974-1982, afterword by his wife Rima Horton, and index).


I got this mainly to look at photographs. There were some and I enjoyed looking at them, but I wish there had been more!


I was stunned by the lovely illustrations in some of his journals! He was a very talented artist. 


I liked the look of his writing, but it's not the easiest to read. I'm glad someone took the time to type it up. Time to return this to the library and move on!



Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Ghost (Track book 1)

By: Jason Reynolds

Scott County Library hardcover 181 pages

Published: 2016

Genre: YA realistic fiction


My oh my! It's been too long since I read a book by Mr. Reynolds. He is an amazing author! I had gotten a free paperback copy of Patina last summer, but I knew it was book two in a series and I don't like to read books out of order. So I finally just requested this from the library so I could move on with the book sitting on my shelf!


Because this is written for middle school readers, has short chapters and can be considered a "quick read," it's easy to forget the power in his stories.


Castle "Ghost" Cranshaw vividly recalls the night his father pulled a gun on him and his mother. Since then, it has just been the two of them - mom works hard to keep them housed and fed. Ghost has more anger in him than he can deal with and always regrets causing his mom disappointment when the anger comes out.


I loved this book. I even cried!


Page 9: "But I always had this feeling that if I could just get on, I'd be the next LeBron. But I never wanted to be the next . . . whoever the most famous runner is. I never even thought about it."


This made me smile, but also think about how our culture creates heroes out of certain types of people. Nobody knows the name of the firefighter who has saved the most lives . . . but we all know who Kanye West is. (Ghost does go on to figure out that Usain Bolt is the fastest man alive.)


Page 31: "Then I was asleep for ten hours. I'm grumpy when I don't get at least eight. Some people would say I'm grumpy even when I do, but they don't know nothing . . . "


This also made me smile. Sleep is so valuable! I don't often get 8-10 hours of it, but I definitely suffer when I don't get enough.


Page 65: "I could feel the altercation-ness creeping up in my chest like a new kind of lightning. The black was turning red again, and I really wasn't trying to be a repeat offender of the bully beat-down."


Reading this helps me think about students who always seem to be in trouble . . . perhaps they're trying really hard to control their feelings and actions. Perhaps they're dealing with something that would tip me over the edge. How do we teach kids the best way to process deep feelings rather than resorting to violence? (I also like the inventiveness of words like "altercation-ness" - since Ghost has been warned to avoid any more altercations.)


Page 95: ". . . and cases of Worcestershire sauce (war-sess-ter-shyer . . . worst-tester-shier . . . gotta be a world record holder for hardest word) and moved them to the stockroom."


Ghost loves reading the Guinness Book of World Records, so that theme comes up a lot. I completely agree on how hard it is to properly say that word! I call it "W sauce" and Louie laughs at me.


Page 149: ". . . I'd planned on telling her that Coach got them for me, and then hope and pray that she never thanked him. When I think about it now, that was the stupidest idea ever."


I was thankful that Coach figured out what Ghost had done. I was so glad Ghost had not been able to compound the problem with more lying and hiding. The confession in the athletic store was hard, but so very necessary for him as a character. I did love that he was actually trying to protect his mom and not compound her stress - either in terms of financial or parenting. He did some wrong things for understandable reasons.


Page 179: "Sunny cheering, an orange slice in his mouth, the peel like a bright mouthpiece."


That brought back images from childhood! How fun to wear an orange peel as an artificial smile.


The book ended without us knowing the outcome of the race! I don't know if I like that or not. Did Ghost win? Lu? One of the other runners? It's a pretty brilliant way to close the story. This would be a wonderful book club book. I'm ready to read book two!