Wednesday, May 29, 2024

The British Booksellers

by Kristy Cambron

Dakota County Library paperback 356 pages plus author's notes

Published: 2024

Genre: adult historical fiction


I enjoyed this book, but was not blown away. I'm a bit surprised that this was chosen for our book club because it's not a Christian book at all. 

 

Main characters Charlotte and Amos are star-crossed lovers. She is an aristocrat and he is a farmer's son. She loves to play cello. He has dreams of owning a book store one day. They share a love of books and have cute little quibbles over Austen vs. Scott. She is destined to marry Will, a wealthy and titled young man.


Moving between the start of WWI and the Blitz of WWII, I'm glad the author kept each of those timelines moving forward (I kept checking the date listed at the start of each section to make sure my brain was following the correct storyline.) There was actually a little part at the start of the story that took place in 1908. Amos was one of my favorite characters.


Glossary: "Ha=ha wall: A low wall with a ditch just in front of it, keeping grazing animals out of more formal gardens while maintaining a view of the surrounding landscape."


I laughed to put a post-it note before the story even began! An Enola Holmes story I read recently mentioned a "Ha-ha wall," and I just thought it was weird and a made-up thing. I was so surprised to see it listed in the glossary of this book! I should give Nancy Springer more credit. To be fair, I listened to it as an audiobook, but still . . . 


Page 78: "The customary invitation for tea had set Charlotte and Mother off to Holt Manor again. Will sometimes appeared in the grand marble entry - and had that day - greeting them with a kiss to his mother's cheek and a wink to Charlotte."


I don't know why the wording of this bothered me so much! I read it at least four times and that disrupted the flow of the story. I had to make sure he kissed HIS mother's cheek and not Charlotte's mother's cheek. Did he completely ignore Charlotte's mother? He greeted his mother and Charlotte and said nothing to the other guest? This stopped my brain a bit.


Page 89: "'Perhaps days like this are exactly why we have books in the world. To remember that not all is lost, even if we find ourselves in the unknown. I like to think we provide a haven for the wanderer. And help him remember he has a place to call home.'"


I share Charlotte's love of books, but I think I'm with Eden in being surprised that she'd go to open a book store right after a bombing event. Charlotte's response to her daughter's expression of concern is great, however.

 

Page 158: "'We all can use a reminder from time to time that what we see and hear each week inside this cathedral is what people are actually living outside these walls. Benevolence, compassion, and love - bombs will never silence them when we put those virtues into action.'"


Yes, Provost Howard! Preach it! Live out the Word of God.


Page 211: "'You carry an emergency book?'" . . . "'Books were as necessary to us as oxygen.'"


I love when Jacob is in the air raid shelter with Eden and he remarks on her emergency supplies! And Eden's response is a version of "of course we do!"


Page 239: " ' Wayfarers and wanderers, and Coventry storytellers of old . . . we bring you The British Booksellers.' Like it? It's our new bulletin name - for all of us."


Okay, first of all, I love finding where the title of the book is really revealed. I assumed the title just referred to Amos and Charlotte and their two book shops. But then I got to this scene and had an "aha" moment. Secondly, I ended up really liking the Land Girls a lot! They added so much to the story! Dale is speaking here. She is such a fun character!


Page 276: "'Then surely you must see whatever plagues us cannot be so bad to lock us away from each other forever. I would play again . . . if my heart had a reason. And I believe if you were to share what tortures yours, then we might meet in the center of this messy, broken world we live in. And find solace in that place. To be known - isn't that all anyone truly wants?'"


Charlotte is talking to Amos here. I just really like this concept. It's good for us to be in community and connection with one another.


Page 322: "'I am curious, Sergeant, why Captain Holt here would seek to save your life instead of his own.'"


There is so much going on in the scene with the snipers, Amos, Will, and Frank during WWI! When Will is speaking in German, it's hard to know what he is communicating. I was suspicious of him. When Frank (key player!) says this, I had to rethink my opinion of Will.


Page 339: "'Alone is a place the human heart was never meant to dwell.'"


Loneliness is hard. I'm so very thankful to have lots of people I love in my life! 


Page 351: "'An artist, I'm told. Goes by name of John Piper?'"


This made me smile! I'm no art historian, but I recognized the name. Then of course, I looked him up. Yep. Pretty famous guy! And I learned that he was especially known for his WWII Coventry paintings!


We had a good discussion of this title at book club. There is so much to like about this story, but we all agreed that it was pretty predictable.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

How to Resist Amazon and Why (updated & expanded): The Fight for Local Economies, Data Privacy, Fair Labor, Independent Bookstores, and a People-Powered Future

by Danny Caine

Hennepin County Library paperback 177 pages plus appendix, acknowledgements, and citations

Published: 2022 (original in 2021)

Genre: non-fiction, antimonopoly

 

This was on a friend's end table and caught my attention. She's a book store owner (Dreary Lane Books in Grand Marais, MN).  I was curious, since I sometimes order from Amazon but dislike what I've heard about Jeff Bezos and how he does business. I didn't want to buy a copy (though I did buy some other books from her shop to give as gifts!), so I got it from the library to read.


Wow! It didn't surprise me that he would be passionate about this topic, but his depth of research (the citations are several pages' worth in small print) and his argumentation are strong. By two-thirds of the way through the book, I was thinking "I got the WHY; tell me HOW!" Very interesting reading. 


Page 15: "Some may try to attribute the explosion of Amazon's reach to Jeff Bezos's business brilliance. However, even if Bezos had a profitable idea at the right time, literal billions in tax breaks and government benefits have helped Amazon rise to the pinnacle it occupies today. . . . In 2018, Amazon made over $11 billion in profits and paid no federal income tax."


That is the kind of thing that makes me want to scream! I don't mind paying taxes so that I have parks, libraries, roads, police, fire departments, etc. But to have someone reap such incredible wealth without paying taxes is just insane! Why would our government offer help to a billionaire and his company instead of helping veterans or fixing the health care crisis in America?


Page 39: "As a bookseller, trust me: not all editions of old books are created equal. For every lovingly assembled Norton or Oxford (or Belt or Valancourt) edition, there are dozens of shitty print-on-demand cash grabs scrambling to rob you of your money through bad algorithms."


There are just too many times people think they're ordering one thing and then what they get is just garbage. His conclusion that "The sloppiness of Amazon's bookstore, and their refusal to fix it, is actively preventing people from protecting and carrying on literary legacies." As a book lover, this makes me so sad.


Page 42: ". . . whatever moral compass Amazon has spins only when bad PR hovers near."


I know companies have making money as their primary goal, but it seems that some companies also try to be good employers or good stewards of the Earth. This line seems to perfectly capture the Amazon ethos.


Page 49: "But I think Amazon is deserving of special scrutiny for a few reasons. Chief among them is this: even if a new worker at Amazon starts at $15 an hour, Jeff Bezoa makes $8,560,000 an hour."


This level of wealth, especially uncoupled from moral direction, appalls me. Think of all the good he could do with that wealth! Make life better for his employees? Choose a cause and fight for it? Hey, Jeff! You can't take it with you. Eternity is a long time.


Page 76: "Because Amazon is so big and gets such a good deal from the USPS, it forces the USPS to raise prices on everyone else. Secondly, Amazon is an undue burden on the USPS because it forces the USPS to deliver only the routes Amazon doesn't want to deliver to itself. When doing so is cheap, Amazon completes last-mile deliveries with their own third-party vans. When it's too expensive, Amazon forces the USPS to take care of it."


I love the USPS! Between Louis DeJoy and Amazon, I'm seeing the impact of their horridness on the organization that should remain strong for all Americans. 


Page 82: "There are three things that concern me about how Amazon has built its private shipping network: first, its desire to usurp a shipping network that's highly regulated and largely unionized with something unsafe and unregulated. Second, I worry about Amazon's constant desire to divorce itself from the consequences of its spread and influence. Seemingly at every turn, Amazon has a way to distance itself from the effects of its dominance. Our delivery van killed your grandma? We're sorry for your loss, but it's not really our delivery van. It's a third party van and the responsibility lies with this small company. Never mind that the company's sole purpose is to deliver Amazon packages or that it was founded with a loan from Amazon, it's still a separate company, see? . . . Third, and perhaps most importantly, when Amazon and other big companies take distribution into their own hands, it's creating a future where small and medium-sized businesses can't compete."


Caine offers specific examples throughout the book that just pile on the awfulness of this company. The grandma getting killed is a true story. (Chicago in 2016, right before Christmas. The driver was found not guilty of murder.)


Page 98: "Former Amazon executive James Thompson echoes many others when he says Amazon 'happen(s) to sell products, but they are a data company.'"

 

Page 99: "Amazon is obsessed with collecting your data. It is not obsessed with protecting it. . . . But it's worth bearing in mind three things we know about Amazon: data is incredibly profitable to them, they are incredibly ruthless in getting what they want, and they are less than careful once they have it."

 

This section was chilling! Louie and I have said that we don't want an Alexa (or Siri) in our home and we have chosen not to get a Ring doorbell. But the extensive reach of Amazon's data-collection is very Orwellian.


Page 140: "Finding legal ways to avoid paying taxes is central to how Amazon does business, and one of their main methods for this evasion is the courting of incentives from local governments."


Reading this makes me wonder how much Shakopee and Scott County gave up to have an Amazon warehouse in my area. I don't want to check. I'm guessing they thought only about bringing economic development to the area and providing job opportunities for residents. 


Page 141: "Until that happens, in Lawrence, Kansas, a bag of chips is taxed at a higher rate than Amazon pays in federal taxes. Only one of those things is worth more than $1 trillion, and it's not the Doritos."


Again, how does our government find this a good option?


Page 163 finally brings me to the HOW part of this book's title! Here are the main points:

1. Shop Local

2. Cancel Your Prime Subscription, or even better, your Amazon account

3. Avoid Amazon-affiliated Brands

4. Instead of Amazon-affiliated brands, use indie-friendly alternatives

5. You don't have to plug your house into Amazon's privacy-invading security network.

6. Advocate

7. Make art about and outside of Amazon

8. Make it known

9. You can't scare me; I'm sticking to the union


I already like the "shop local" - and I try to do this. Actually, I've been trying to shop less in general. Amazon is too convenient and you can get so many different things. But I'm going to try harder to find things locally or figure out how to buy online from whomever actually produces a thing instead of from Amazon.


He makes it sound as though it's a huge hassle to fully delete your Amazon account. It is a convenient way for me to look for things and chuck them in my cart to think about finding or buying later. At some point, I may ditch this system.


Wow! There are a LOT of Amazon-affiliated brands! Most of these are not ones I use. I'm sad to see that Goodreads is an Amazon company, but I never started an account there. 


Caine writes a very interesting and persuasive book. I felt a little sheepish about getting it from the library instead of spending money at an indie bookstore, but Caine says, "Public libraries are one of the last great anti-capitalist spaces. To really resist Amazon and what they represent, form a good and loyal relationship with your public library." Yay for public libraries!!!

 









Wednesday, May 22, 2024

The Levee

by William Kent Krueger

Libby audiobook 4 hours

Read by: JD Jackson

Published: 2023

Genre: Adult Historical Fiction


I didn't enjoy this as much as This Tender Land, but it was interesting to listen to and made me curious to know more. In 1927, the Mississippi River flooded in a dramatic fashion! I was curious about how much of this story was fact and how much was fiction. The author's note at the end (by Krueger himself) was super interesting! 


In the story, "Mobley" is bringing three convicts with him to rescue his brother "Kane" and his daughter Sylvia, along with their servants. Kane has built a levee around his estate, named Ballymore, and refuses to leave. Sylvia won't leave her father and the servants Isaac and Ada won't leave Sylvia.


It took me a bit to be able to tell the convicts apart. Cassidy is the dirty dog who tries to sabotage everything, steal, and escape. Dobbs is the wrongfully convicted man who designed a dam before he went to war. His brother (or brother-in-law?) built it shoddily and skedaddled with the money he saved. When the dam collapsed and people died, Dobbs took the fall for it. Boone is the strong young man who falls in love with Sylvia.


The river is really the main character in this story. It is powerful and not to be "tamed" by mere people. 


It was most interesting to me to listen to Krueger's explanation of how this story came to be. I love that he put it away for twenty years after writing it and then came back to it. The writer's process is fascinating.

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

The Secret Book of Flora Lea

by Patti Callahan Henry

Libby ebook 55 chapters plus author's note, reading guide, etc.

Published: 2023 

Genre: adult historical fiction

 

Set in WWII (1939-1940s) and 1960 London, this is the story of two sisters, Hazel and Flora Lea Linden. Their mother sends them to the British countryside as part of the "Pied Piper" program to remove children from the dangerous bombings in London. While in Binsey near Oxford, they live with Bridie (Bridgette, I think) and her son Harry. Harry and Hazel are teens, while Flora Lea is five at the start of the story.


Hazel tells Flora Lea a fairy tale about Whisperwood as a way to comfort her. It's their private, make believe place to go. But one day while they are by the river, Flora disappears. She is searched for relentlessly, and most assume she has drowned in the river. Hazel vows to never give up searching for her. 


Twenty years later, a manuscript and drawings of Whisperwood show up at the rare book shop where Hazel works. Trying to find out where the story has come from becomes her obsession.


I enjoyed the book for the most part, but it felt a little drawn out. Kelty was probably my favorite character (another evacuee). Sadly, Libby autoreturned this book (there's a waiting list) before I could finish with my highlighted sections! I've requested it again so I can add those at some point, but I want to finish this entry. There WILL be SPOILERS!


I was aware of the historical accuracy of the Pied Piper program during WWII. Some children had positive experiences and some did not, but all were affected by the separation from their parents and homes. 


Liked:

  • Bridie, Harry, Kelty, Wren
  • the love of stories
  • the rare bookstore
  •  all the clues!
  • the happy ending for two couples


Disliked:

  • the Barnaby "romance" - ick, esp. his dad "putting in a word" at Sotheby's
  • Linda (Peggy's mom)
  • how long it took to get to the conclusion! 
  • Hazel taking the manuscript and pictures AND waiting so long to come clean to Edgar


How fortuitous! Only a day after Libby took the book back, it offered a copy to me again. Here are my highlighted sections.


Chapter 4: "She could have ignored the book. She could put the novel and illustrations in Edwin's safe, shaking her head at the odd synchronicity of the fairy tale, attributing its existence to the universal unconscious the Jung espoused, the mystery of imagination."


I love the phrase "the mystery of imagination," but I was dreading the moment when she took the manuscript and illustrations! I just knew she wouldn't be able to resist and that it would bring trouble for her.


Chapter 22: "'You don't have to worry about me!' Hazel said in a voice that sounded sharper than she'd meant it to. It was hard to tell what all her feelings were lately. They came too fast and without names."


Ah, the joys of adolescence. Too many feelings and conflicted emotions. She is falling in love with Harry but is abrasive to keep him away.


Chapter 29: "'Telling stories is one of the greatest powers we possess. It's like a dream you can fill with what you want. And the knight doesn't always have to save the princess; sometimes she saves herself.'"


Bridie was just the person Hazel needed in her life. Her encouragement meant so much! Jesus used stories to teach and explain. Stories have power.


Chapter 38: "'Yes, I do. That is my job. That is all that matters. It matters little if I am happy or I am content. My job is to take care of you.'"


When Hazel tells her mother that she doesn't have to protect her, her mother's response is perfect. How heart-breaking it must have been to send your children away from you to keep them safe!

 

SPOILERS AHEAD! Stop reading if you don't want to know the outcome of the story.


Chapter 47: "A knowing. This was it; this was where Hazel had been headed all along: telling the truth to bring Flora home. The truth was all that had been required in the end."

 

When Hazel finally agrees to talk with Dorothy Bellamy about her missing sister Flora, she has the knowledge before she sees the birthmark. This whole section is amazing and gave me chills!


Chapter 51: "'The children who were sent away, they were forever changed. I've talked to them. I've listened to them. Some believe they completely lost their childhood. Others were so happy that they didn't even want to return home. Some couldn't wait to be reunited with their families. But no matter what, no matter the good or the bad, it altered them forever. The experience reshaped their life."


This reminded me of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society and Eli Ramsey (Eben's grandson). WWII brought so many changes for so many people!


Chapter 52: "'It's about having what is right here, right now, and not squandering what remains.'"


Harry is so right! We can't get BACK something in the past . . . a younger version of ourselves, a certain situation, etc. Live in the moment and don't squander time!


Chapter 54: "With constant chatter, they filled in memory gaps, building the lost structure of their lives: stories the bricks and love the mortar."


I just love that image of bricks and mortar! Hazel, Dot (Flora), and "Mum" are catching up on twenty years of their lives together. 


Chapter 54: "But love wasn't as simple as a word tossed from casual lips."


I'm often guilty of overusing the word "love" and not considering what the word really means. Here, Hazel is confused about her love for both Barnaby and Harry. Romantic love isn't a quandary for me - just my husband, thanks!


Author's Note: ". . . a reminder that we are a myth-making people; it is how we make meaning of the meaningless and sense of the senseless. It is why we tell stories."


Again, I appreciate the power of stories. Part of being human means trying to make sense of things.


Author's Note: "After the declaration in September 1939, over eight hundred thousand children were remarkably evacuated in just four days. In the end, over three and a half million children were relocated. There were extraordinary stories of children finding lovely homes in the country, and there were horrifying stories, too. Not all evacuees were safe. Seventy-seven children were killed when a ship carrying evacuees to Canada was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine."


Wow. That's a lot of children! Crazy to think that they could move so many children in such a short time (800,000+ in four days!). I can see the appeal for an author in doing research for a story.


ENDING SPOILERS:

Imogene (the nurse) woke Flora from her nap by calling to her, causing her fall into the river. Imogene "rescued" Flora because she didn't think her mother deserved her (since she sent her away to live with strangers). She locked Flora in a small room in the church and then gave her to her bereaved sister who lost her little Dorothy Ann Bellamy (who had been about the same age as Flora). Flora told herself the Whisperwood stories to comfort herself and Maria, a visiting nurse, heard the stories. When Maria went back to the U.S., her sister Linda's young daughter Peggy had trouble sleeping after her daddy died in Pearl Harbor. Maria told the Whisperwood stories to Peggy and they "became" Peggy's and Linda's stories after Maria died. Flora, meanwhile, was raised by the lovely Bellamy family as their own little "Dot." As an adult, she wrote stories about missing children.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Finding Dorothy

by Elizabeth Letts

Scott County Library hardcover 340 pages plus afterword, etc.

Published: 2019

Genre: historical fiction


Told from the perspective of Maud Baum (wife of L. Frank Baum), the story bounces between 1939 when The Wizard of Oz is being filmed to the late 1800s when she is growing up, meeting the man she would marry, etc. This is one of those books that had me Googling lots of info! What is true and what is fiction? I now want to read about a dozen more books on everything from Judy Garland to Matilda Gage!


Page 10 - "It pained Maud terribly to think that Frank could be forgotten, and yet, she wasn't entirely surprised. Now, almost twenty years after her husband's death, many people didn't recognize his name, but was there anyone, big or small, who didn't know Dorothy and the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Lion?"


This made me think about mortality and the value of living for Eternal rewards instead of earthly ones. I wonder what my grandmas were little as little girls and as young moms. Part of the reason I value stories is because of this sense that life is fleeting. I sure do miss being able to talk to my mom!


Page 17 - ". . . annoyed that her voice had emerged like a mouse's soft squeak. She cleared her throat. She had never had trouble speaking her mind - but the devil of old age was that sometimes she sounded frail when she didn't feel like it in the least."


I'm not there yet (age-wise, sounding frail), but I know that feeling of my outer expression not matching my inner feeling. It's frustrating, especially if you're trying to communicate something important to you!


Page 22 - "Maud clutched the marble in her sweaty palm, her rawhide marble pouch banging against her wrist as she ran. Now, as always, she longed for the pockets that all the boys had."


Yes! Even nowadays, it's frustrating to have clothes without pockets! If they've been given to me, I just try to make the best of it. (I love free clothing!) But when I'm shopping, pockets are a must-have.


Page 42 - "If she were to have any hope at love, she'd have to find a man who could love her as she was, even though there seemed little likelihood that such a man existed."


Poor Maud! I'm so glad she and L. Frank found one another.


Page 168 - "But Maud had learned some bitter lessons in her life - and perhaps one of the hardest was that you can't always rescue people, no matter how much you want to."


Ooh . . . I struggle with this one! I want so very much to help people, but I can't live their lives FOR them . . . at some point, you have to have boundaries and let them know you love them but they need to be responsible for their own lives.


Page 216 - "'With all of these oohs and ahs, I think we must christen it the Land of Ahs,' Frank said, clearly pleased at the boys' reaction."


I don't know if this is actually how he came up with the Land of Oz, but it makes for a super cool detail in this story!


Page 239 - I'm not going to quote it here, but it made my heart happy when they were living in "Dakota" and the traveling baseball team went to Webster. My dear friend Kathy lives in Webster, South Dakota!!!


Page 251 - "Although Maud loved Frank dearly, right now she wanted to steal a few more quiet moments before heading up to bed, and she hoped that more conversation could wait until the morning. She had never expected to miss those long, peaceful hours she had once spent in the Sage Library . . . "


I can relate to this! Especially when my children were young and I never seemed to have alone time. 


Page 259 has another one of those mentions that tickled my happy bone. It talks about going to the town of LaMoure. I've looked that one up and thought about visiting, since I married a LaMoore and we have a lot of family history in the Dakotas.


Page 285 - "She remembered Matilda telling her not to run away and marry an actor, but it was only now that Maud really understood: the part of Frank that made him an actor was the part that she had fallen in love with, but it was also the part that made him so ill-suited for the things of this world."


Compatibility and marriage are not easy, but they are important! Again, I wondered how much was fact and how much was fiction. Matilda Gage was a suffragist. Maud Gage only went to Cornell one year. Maud and L. Frank Baum lived in "Dakota" for a while. They had four sons. I loved the love story between Maud and L. Frank and spent time online looking for more info!


Page 345 - in the afterword, the author recommends some books that I want to note here (but not request from the library yet! I'm trying to catch up on all my reading!).

Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story by Evan I. Schwartz

The Real Wizard of Oz: The Life and Times of L. Frank Baum by Rebecca Loncraine

L. Frank Baum: Creator of Oz by Katharine M. Rogers

Baum's Road to Oz, edited by Nancy Tystad Koupal


Page 347 - she recommends a book about the making of the movie. This interests me even more than the ones about Baum, but I'm still not going to request it yet.

The Making of the Wizard of Oz by Aljean Harmetz

Saturday, May 11, 2024

This Tender Land

by William Kent Krueger

personal paperback 444 pages plus author's note and discussion questions

Published: 2019

Genre: historical fiction (1932)

ALSO:

Libby audiobook 14+ hours

Read by: Scott Brick

 

I received this book from my daughter-in-law a few years ago. I read it last fall (finally). It's amazing and I have a LOT of post-it notes in it! Recently, I got the audiobook on Libby to enjoy while I drive. It helped refresh my memory, too, so I need to get this blogged. What an amazing, powerful story! I borrowed a copy of Ordinary Grace from my sister, so I'm eager to read that now. This is the first book by this author that I've ever read (and he's a prolific author!).

 

I'm not putting a summary here, but please go find one and read this book! It opens in 1932 in a Minnesota school for Indian childen. Odie O'Banion and his older brother Albert are the only white kids there, having been orphaned when their father was shot to death. I'm not even going to try to avoid spoilers. Just read it. It's amazing.

 

Pg. 17 - "Everyone knew that although Mr. Brickman wore the pants, it was his wife who had the balls."

 

I appreciated a little levity. The Lincoln School and the way the students were treated was horrific. It was nice to laugh a little. Mrs. Brickman definitely earned the moniker "The Black Witch."

 

Page 47 - "The whole point of the sermon, in the end, was that we needed to show our gratitude to Mrs. Brickman and him by not being such pains in the ass. I knew that the selfish way he twisted that beautiful psalm was a load of crap, but I did want to believe that God was my shepherd and that somehow he was leading me through this dark valley of Lincoln School and I shouldn't be afraid."

 

Preaching on the 23rd Psalm and  making it self-serving . . . is not even the worst of the lies they told these children. I was so sad when Odie O'Banion declared that God is a "tornado God" instead of a shepherd.


Page 50 - "If the situation hadn't been so tragic, I'd have found it funny, this heavy white man showing a bunch of Indian kids things that, if white people had never interfered, they would have known how to do almost from birth."

 

I liked the Scout leader Seifert. He truly cared about the kids and wanted to help them. But I agree with Odie's observation here about the irony.

 

Page 51 - ". . . there was one called a bowline that gave me no end of misery. . . . It was a knot favored by sailors, Mr. Seifert had told us, so I finally figured the hell with it. I was never going to sea."


This made me think of my husband and his affection for a bowline knot! But also, kids think, "I'll never . . . " when they honestly don't know what the future will bring! Frustrating.


Page 51 - "'You are every bit as good as any other kids in this country, and don't believe anyone who tells you different. The Scout oath is not a bad code to live by.'"


I'd never heard the oath before. "On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country. To obey the Scout law. To help other people at all times. To keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight." Seifert really was just trying to be a positive influence in these kids' lives. Herman Volz was another fantastic character at the school. But evil like DiMarco and the Black Witch ran terror into these kids' lives.


Page 64 - "Miss Stratton stared where they'd gone and said quietly, 'That tornado took the wrong woman.'"


When sweet Cora Frost is killed by the tornado, Miss Stratton and Odie played a special musical tribute at her funeral. Of course, Mrs. Brickman got angry with them and told them to always clear things like that with her first.

 

Page 79 - "I know it must seem ridiculous that I wept over a rat in much the same way I'd wept for Cora Frost. Love comes in so many forms, and pain is no different."

 

Faria the rat had kept Odie companion in "the quiet room" - an old solitary confinement prison cell. When the rat suddenly died, Odie was heartbroken. I'm pretty sure it was partly because of the cumulative effect of all the sadnesses he'd been experiencing.


Page 73 - "No death is insignificant, and I believe now that no death should be celebrated. But for a moment, just a moment after killing Vincent DiMarco, the man who'd brought only misery into my life and the lives of so many other kids, I felt a kind of elation."


In the next paragraph, Odie realizes that he has just killed a man. That realization changes his self-view and perspective. The impact hits him hard. But I'm so thankful that that monster of a person could no longer sexually assault kids or beat them for misbehaving. What an awful person to be working with kids! I really appreciate how the author wrote this scene.


Page 114 - "Albert and Mose bent hard to their paddles, and I sat in the middle with Emmy, brooding. It seemed to me that no matter what I did, it wasn't good enough for Albert."


I'm not sure why I tagged this. Perhaps because I've often been a "duffer" in a canoe. Or perhaps it was that I can relate to the frustration of trying really hard to do a good thing and being shot down (especially true at PRMS at the end of my career). In this scene, Odie had gotten some old clothes off a clothesline and clipped four dollar bills to the line in payment. He didn't mention to Albert that he'd talked to a little girl who'd seen him do it. 


Page 116/7 - "My earlier resentment had passed, as it always did. Lying on my blanket beside Albert, I was happy to have him for a brother, though I had no intention of telling him so. I didn't always understand him, and I knew that, more often than not, I was a bafflement to him as well, but the heart isn't the logical organ of the body, and I loved my brother deeply and fell asleep in the warmth of his company."

 

Brotherly love doesn't mean you always like that sibling! Sometimes it's the people we're closest to that we are also most frustrated with!


Page 126 - "Everything that's been done to us we carry forever. Most of us do our damnedest to hold on to the good and forget the rest. But somewhere in the vault of our hearts, in a place our brains can't or won't touch, the worst is stored, and the only sure key to it is in our dreams."


Odie is wondering if he should wake Mose from a bad dream. Found in a ditch as a toddler, with his tongue cut out and his dead mother beside him, Mose has become like a brother to Albert, Odie, and little Emmy Frost. Dreams and the subconscious fascinate me.


Page 141 - "I lay in the dark thinking about the bitterness inside the pig scarer and the sadness that was there, too, and I figured they were probably twins joined at the hip. I thought maybe it wasn't love that consumed him but a terrible sense of loss . . . Losing a child, that had to be akin to losing a good part of your heart."

 

I love how Odie is developing some empathy and a greater awareness of other people's pain. He was really tuned in to Billy Redsleeve at Lincoln School, too.

 

Page 165 - "There is a deeper hurt than anything sustained by the body, and it's the wounding of the soul. It's the feeling that you've been abandoned by everyone, even God."


Odie is sensitive to Emmy's crying and not really knowing why she feels so sad.


Page 252 - "Rubes? Is that how you think of the people who come here every night looking for something hopeful? Sid, the world is in great darkness, and for whatever reason, God gave me a light and made me a beacon. It's sacred what I do."


Sister Eve is another delightful character, though I was with Odie when he thought she was a charlatan. Sid brought both good and bad to the Sword of Gideon Healing Crusade.


Page 256 - ". . . Mose and I were putting all our effort into making distance, and I was breathing too hard for words. But I believe our silence was also because, once again, we were grieving loss. It was a feeling that should have been familiar to us by then, but does anyone ever get used to having their heart broken?"


So poignant! Krueger is a fantastic author. This is after Sid leaked the story of Albert surviving the snake bite and the Brickmans showed up to take Emmy. The four "vagabonds" made their escape.


Page 275 - "Its firm white flesh came easily off the bone and tasted far better than any catfish I'd ever eaten. I didn't understand until much later that I'd landed a walleye, a prized catch in Minnesota."


Yes! Our state fish, the walleye. Now I'm hungry for some fish.


Page 287 - "'Would you care to read a passage to end our day? It's what we do in our family. Despite what must seem like desperate circumstances, we don't believe the Lord has deserted us.'"


I love Mother Beal! She's MayBeth Scofield's grandma and she is an icon!


Page 296 - "At the harshness in my voice, she stepped away. But instead of leaving, she took my hand. 'When you don't have anything else to believe in, that's when you need to believe in miracles.'"


Maybeth is a wonderful friend and encourager to Odie.


Page 320 - "When darkness comes over your soul, it doesn't come in light shades; it descends with all the black of a moonless night."

 

I'm so glad that the joy of the LORD is my strength! I don't want to experience darkness overcoming my soul. 


 

Page 328 -

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The opening of chapter 46 reminded me of someone I care about who's struggling with a deep loss and an "all-consuming nothing." 

 

Page 383 -  "A big island called Harriet lay west of the bridge, and above the island's public beach stood a great bathhouse with no bathers anywhere in sight. The Mississippi in those days had become a foul run of sewage, and although the city would eventually grow into a better steward of that precious resource, in 1932 not even the bravest of souls would dare bathe in the water."


I'm so glad we don't just dump our raw sewage into the river any more! I still wouldn't swim in the Mississippi near St. Paul, though. . . 


Page 391 - "The devastating spring floods would remain a constant, however, and in thirty years, the city of Saint Paul would decide, in the best interests of all its citizenry, to raze every building, while those whose lives had been shaped by the Flats could do nothing but stand by and weep as almost every remnant of their history vanished."


Now I want to read a non-fiction book about the river flats in St. Paul! So many books and so little time.


Page 418 - "I hadn't noticed this about Aunt Julia. I was twelve years old and had lived a long while in a rural area where high fashion was anything not made from a seed sack."


Odie's innocence about the women living at Aunt Julia's and the business conducted there . . . was sweet and embarrassing. I love that Julia had crazy good dress-making skills.


Page 426 - "This was too much. 'My mother named me,' I declared. She gazed at me silently. A buzzing began in my head like a swarm of flies going round and round, looking for a way out."


This part of the book, where Odie finally learns some truths about his life, was sad and happy. I love that his given name is Odysseus! How cool.


Page 442 - "My brother had been a hero to me his whole life and he died a hero's death."


The epilogue goes so perfectly with the rest of the book, following up on the lives of Odie and Julia, Albert, Mose, Emmy and Sister Eve, . . . what a great story!


Page 443 - "There are not many left who remember these things. But I believe if you tell a story, it's like sending a nightingale into the air with the hope that its song will never be forgotten."


Comparing stories to nightingales . . . lovely. I love stories. I wish I had recorded more of my mom's stories before she died.


Page 444 - "Our eyes perceive so dimly, and our brains are so easily confused. Far better, I believe, to be like children and open ourselves to every beautiful possibility, for there is nothing our hearts can imagine that is not so."


This made me think of Scriptures about trusting like a child. I love the character of Emmy and her love of all that is good and right.


Other notes:

  • I love the author's note at the end! He is fascinating and I look forward to reading more of his stories.
  • I was so worried that Albert was going to die from that snake bite!
  • Until Odie ran into Jack in St. Paul, I was sure that the graves he had visited were those of his wife and daughter.
  • Mose's character arc was great and I would have liked even more of his perspective.
  • I had forgotten between reading the print book and listening to the audiobook that The Black Witch had murdered Albert's father. And she knew Julia and had been a prostitute in St. Louis as a teenager.


Freestyle

by Gale Galligan

personal paperback 259 pages plus bonus comics

Published: 2022

Genre: YA graphic novel, realistic


I was purposely avoiding the Scholastic Book Fair and the BOGO sale at NPMS. But I went to make sure the adult in charge wasn't getting overwhelmed with middle schoolers and ended up looking at the books and buying FOUR! I'm so weak-willed.


Over the rest of the day subbing, I read this book. A group of friends like to dance and really want to win a competition. The captain (Tess) gets a bit intense and angry with Cory (the narrator) for too much freestyling. 


There's plenty of middle school friend drama, but I really like how the author shared the kids' stories. Frankly, there were too many for me to keep straight, but Tess, Cory, and Sunna (his tutor after his parents get upset about his grades) make up the core of the story.


Initially, Cory and Sunna are like oil and water. But when he sees her doing yoyo tricks, he is amazed and asks her to teach him.


I really like this book and am happy to add it to my graphic novel collection!

Sunday, May 05, 2024

The Berlin Letters

by Katherine Reay

Dakota County Library paperback 347 pages plus author's note, etc.

Published: 2024

Genre: Christian historical fiction


I love this author! Sadly, I didn't get to attend the book club discussion. My grandchildren were more lively than I had anticipated and they were here for an overnight visit . . . 


Luisa Voekler is the main character in this book. Born in Germany but brought to America by her grandparents when she was little, she is working for the CIA. She is a talented code breaker with an "accountant" cover story. She was told that her parents died in a car crash when she was little.


In reality, her mother handed her over the barbed wire to the grandparents who raised her on that fateful August day when the wall was built between East and West Berlin. Weaving between the "modern" 1989 story and the 1960s, Reay does a lovely job of filling out the characters and the storyline. What an interesting book! 


Page 23 - "In a society terribly afraid of the Soviets and the nuclear terror they could rain down on us, people often mistake German for Russian. Americans, on the whole, aren't multilingual and can be a little culturally myopic."


This hurts, but is so true. Not just in the 1960s or 1980s . . . a lot of Americans have the "you should only speak English" mentality. It's a bit embarrassing in a global society.


Page 48 - "Three days later my room was swarmed by ants. Thousands of them. They were everywhere. Oma freaked out and ran screaming from the room. She was reeling, like in the chaos of a massive cyclone. I stood stunned, illuminated by a focused lightning strike. The cake!"


I related to this scene so much! I would be like Oma, freaked out and screaming. I would also be like little Luisa, reluctant to explain that I had hidden a forbidden slice of cake in the floorboards of my bedroom, sneaking a treat for later and forgetting it. This page also made me laugh! Human nature is full of foibles.

 

Page 51 - "From 1949 to today,  (Jeanne's note - 8.13.1961) over three and a half million East Germans came to the Soviet Sector, walked across a line, and disappeared."


How awful that people no longer wanted to live in their homeland and leadership's response was to build a wall to prevent them from going! Three and a half MILLION people in twelve years? That's crazy.


Page 65 - "The mental gyrations I'm conjuring to justify what I'm about to do are extraordinary. Integrity, I shake my head, teeters at the cutting edge of a very slippery slope."


I love her language here! So often if I find myself rationalizing a decision (making excuses to do what I want to do), I realize I need to take a step back and think about WHY I'm trying to make things happen a certain way. Integrity is too important to compromise with situational decision-making.


Page 119 - "It's a family trait . . . We all have secrets."


Typically, I get frustrated with book club characters who could solve problems so much more easily if they were just honest with their loved ones! But in this story, it was easier to see why people kept their secrets. It was nice to have the truth come out, though!


Page 187 - "He lifts his hand as if I'm about to interrupt him, and I realize how often people do that. I barely know this man. Do I give off some sign that I don't let people finish their sentences?"


This was another place where I identified with Luisa, but it makes me sad. I'm not a good listener and I'm too often ready to interrupt and jump in with my own thoughts and ideas. It's something I'm trying to work on!


Page 251 - "A snitch. I remember Oma telling me stories growing up, how the Stasi, despite employing a seemingly countless number of agents, still recruited on average one snitch, one Inoffizielle Mitarbeiter, per eight people. That would mean statistically, sitting in a room with seven friends, you'd be confiding your secrets to a Stasi informant."


This reminded me of Ruta Sepetys' book I Must Betray You (set in Romania). I can't imagine living with the paranoia of wondering who is informing and who can be trusted. How awful!


Page 286 - "Because Andrew was right - the tension in the air is palpable on both sides of the Wall. Eastern Europe feels like it's breaking apart. I suppose I have no way to know if it's the usual tension, but I can't imagine it is. How can one live day by day in this charged, electric, fraught atmosphere?"


This reminded me that people all over the planet are living in dangerous, tense, fraught situations. I think of people right now in Ukraine, Haiti, Gaza, . . . and it's both easy to be thankful to live without this fear and tension and difficult to imagine what I can do to help those who are struggling.


I really liked (and was surprised by) Haris Voelker's character arc. I liked the punk bands aspect toward the end (though I don't like that style of music!). This was well-researched and well-written. Another hit from Reay.