Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Mrs. Everything by Jennifer Weiner

I wanted to like this book more than I did.  It was on a lot of "best" lists for 2019. But the characters were just not drawn as deeply as I would have liked. Maybe it's a result of just having read Olive Again. Elizabeth Strout knows how to depict characters who are not in the least bit "stereotypical." They are unpredictable, complex human beings; you don't know quite what they are going to do or say.  In Mrs Everything, I felt that the characters were too predictable. I liked them all and had empathy but they were just not rich and distinct personalities for me. There were great issues brought to light in this book, for sure. So I commend Jennifer Weiner, who has a huge readership, for bringing these issues to so many readers.
Here is the Kirkus Review:
Jo and Bethie Kaufman may be sisters, but they don’t have much else in common. As young girls in the 1950s, Jo is a tomboy who’s uninterested in clothes while Bethie is the “pretty one” who loves to dress up. When their father dies unexpectedly, the Kaufman daughters and their mother, Sarah, suddenly have to learn how to take care of themselves at a time when women have few options. Jo, who realizes early on that she’s attracted to girls, knows that it will be difficult for her to ever truly be herself in a world that doesn’t understand her. Meanwhile, Bethie struggles with her appearance, using food to handle her difficult emotions. The names Jo and Beth aren’t all that Weiner (Hungry Heart, 2016, etc.) borrows from Little Women; she also uses a similar episodic structure to showcase important moments of the sisters’ lives as she follows them from girlhood to old age. They experience the civil rights movement, protests, sexual assault, drugs, sex, and marriage, all while dealing with their own personal demons. Although men are present in both women's lives, female relationships take center stage. Jo and Bethie are defined not by their relationships with husbands or boyfriends, but by their complex and challenging relationships with their mother, daughters, friends, lovers, and, ultimately, each other. Weiner resists giving either sister an easy, tidy ending; their sorrows are the kind that many women, especially those of their generation, have had to face. The story ends as Hillary Clinton runs for president, a poignant reminder of both the strides women have made since the 1950s and the barriers that still hold them back.
An ambitious look at how women’s roles have changed—and stayed the same—over the last 70 years.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Olive Again by Elizabeth Strout

Another beautiful book by Strout.  I think I first read her with Amy and Isabel, a book I want to revisit.  It will be interesting to see how her talent has grown and changed.
We read this for Book Club (#1 Club) and everyone was so enamored with Olive and with the book. We had great conversations about the characters, the stories and so much more.
Highly recommended!

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

The Body in Question by Jill Climent

Really enjoyed this book - a page turner for sure.

The place: central Florida. The situation: a sensational murder trial involving a rich, white teenage girl - a twin - on trial for the horrific murder of her toddler brother, and the sequestered jury deciding her fate.  Two of the jurors sequestered (she, Juror C-2; he, F-17), holed up at the Econo-Lodge off I-75. As the shocking and numbing details of the crime and its surrounding facts are revealed during a string of days and seemingly endless court hours, the nights, playing out in a series of court-financed meals Hannah and Graham fall into a furtive affair, keeping their oath, as jurors, never to discuss the trial. During deliberations the lovers learn they are on opposing sides of the case and realize that their fellow jurors are wise to their affair. After the trial's end, as Hannah returns home to her much older, now, suddenly, frail husband (they married when she was 24; he, 58) an exploding media fury involving the case catches them all up in a frenzy of public outrage at a jury that seems to have convicted the wrong twin, and a judge who has received an anonymous handwritten letter about a series of sexual encounters ("I feel it is my duty as a juror and a citizen to report that two of my fellow jurors had sexual contact on more than seven occasions during our nights at the motel..."), calling into question their respective verdicts, and announcing she is releasing the jurors' names to the media. Hannah's "one last dalliance before she is too old" takes on profoundly personal and moral consequences, as the novel moves to its affecting, powerful and surprising conclusion.

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

The World that We Knew by Alice Hoffman

I read this book in less than a week.....I had to because it was a 7-day book, but I also enjoyed it and wanted to dive in and be absorbed by a Hoffman book. Have not read one in a while. This did not disappoint!
From GoodReads:

In Berlin, at the time when the world changed, Hanni Kohn knows she must send her twelve-year-old daughter away to save her from the Nazi regime. She finds her way to a renowned rabbi, but it’s his daughter, Ettie, who offers hope of salvation when she creates a mystical Jewish creature, a rare and unusual golem, who is sworn to protect Lea. Once Ava is brought to life, she and Lea and Ettie become eternally entwined, their paths fated to cross, their fortunes linked.

Lea and Ava travel from Paris, where Lea meets her soulmate, to a convent in western France known for its silver roses; from a school in a mountaintop village where three thousand Jews were saved. Meanwhile, Ettie is in hiding, waiting to become the fighter she’s destined to be.

What does it mean to lose your mother? How much can one person sacrifice for love? In a world where evil can be found at every turn, we meet remarkable characters that take us on a stunning journey of loss and resistance, the fantastical and the mortal, in a place where all roads lead past the Angel of Death and love is never ending.

Saturday, November 30, 2019

🌟 The Dutch House by Ann Patchett

Just read this for my 2nd book club and really enjoyed it.  It's a bit different for Patchett, I think and I heard her interviewed on the radio and heard her discuss how she hasn't done "evil or bad characters."  So that was a goal for this book.
Here's the opener for the NPR review:
Patchett's eighth novel is a paradise lost tale dusted with a sprinkling of Cinderella, The Little Princess and Hansel and Gretel. Two siblings, Maeve and Danny Conroy, bond tightly after their mother leaves home when they're 10 and 3. Home is the eponymous Dutch House, a 1922 mansion outside Philadelphia that their father, Cyril, a real estate mogul, bought fully furnished in an estate sale as a surprise for his wife in 1946, when Maeve was 5. The house, built by a Dutch couple who made their fortune in cigarettes, is grand, with an ornate dining room ceiling, six bedrooms on the second floor, and a ballroom on the third floor. His wife, Elna, hates it, aesthetically and ethically. After she flees, ostensibly to India to devote herself to the poor, her family suffers, as if "they had all become characters in the worst part of a fairy tale," Patchett writes.

Monday, November 11, 2019

The House of Broken Angels by Luis Alberto Urrea

This is a very different kind of book for me....so I am glad that my book club chose it.  I really enjoyed it.  This is a family saga about a Mexican-American family - BIG family, and their relationaships, struggles, successes and more. Here, from Westchester Library System, is a great summary:
"In his final days, beloved and ailing patriarch Miguel Angel de La Cruz, affectionately called Big Angel, has summoned his entire clan for one last legendary birthday party. But as the party approaches, his mother, nearly one hundred, dies, transforming the weekend into a farewell doubleheader. Among the guests is Big Angel's half brother, known as Little Angel, who must reckon with the truth that although he shares a father with his siblings, he has not, as a half gringo, shared a life. Across two bittersweet days in their San Diego neighborhood, the revelers mingle among the palm trees and cacti, celebrating the lives of Big Angel and his mother, and recounting the many inspiring tales that have passed into family lore, the acts both ordinary and heroic that brought these citizens to a fraught and sublime country and allowed them to flourish in the land they have come to call home"--

Friday, November 1, 2019

The Need by Helen Phillips

"Motherhood Is Scary and Crazy and Darkly Comic. So Is This Novel About It." This is the headline title of the NY Times book review about this book and it nails it - right on.
It's a really interesting book - half sci-fi, half horror, but in the end, it's apart a woman's quest to find herself. She has fantasies and nightmares and can't figure out what's real and what's imagined. But her life seems to be unraveling.
The issues are issues that I imagine many working moms deal with, but they deal better than Molly. But who knows? How many are terrorized by these conflicting feelings?
It's powerful and strange and not like many books I have read. I really recommend it. But it's not "light."
The Times review points out that readers who are NOT moms, or parents, may not get it and may have no sympathy for Molly. I get that.....but they should try to read it and understand it