The Late Bloomers' Club by Louise Miller
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Oh how I ached for good things to happen for Nora Huckleberry, the responsible older sister in Louise Miller’s The Late Bloomers’ Club. I strongly wished Nora’s sister Kit would stop looking to Nora to bail her out of foolish predicaments. How I longed to have community like that in Nora’s homey diner in picturesque Guthrie, Vermont. I cared whether the sisters sold their inherited land to a big-box-store developer, and what the developer’s rep Elliott would do. Add to that the tension of Peggy the Cake Lady’s dog Freckles on the loose, and The Late Bloomers’ Club was a real page turner for me.
Novel Writing 101 advice is to keep throwing stuff at your main character and showing how she handles it. Well, Louise Miller throws plenty of adversity at Nora, who turns out to be a heroine well worth cheering for. In addition, Miller adds interest to the story by creating multifaceted characters with unexpected nuances and satisfying epiphanies. I loved reading The Late Bloomers’ Club.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Monday, December 24, 2018
My review of Louis de Bernières' Notwithstanding
Notwithstanding by Louis de Bernières
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Delightful array of loosely interwoven stories of characters populating the British village of Notwithstanding. Some of their quirky situations are lighthearted, some poignant or sad. A master storyteller, author Louis de Bernières captures small moments of life with humor ~ a playful dog that is a menace on the golf course, a young boy’s triumph catching a big fish, budding young love among people confiding in a large spider, a talking rook, crazy-driving nuns, delusions of old soldiers, and the hedging and ditching man unearthing all sorts of garbage. I loved both the writing and the stories.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Delightful array of loosely interwoven stories of characters populating the British village of Notwithstanding. Some of their quirky situations are lighthearted, some poignant or sad. A master storyteller, author Louis de Bernières captures small moments of life with humor ~ a playful dog that is a menace on the golf course, a young boy’s triumph catching a big fish, budding young love among people confiding in a large spider, a talking rook, crazy-driving nuns, delusions of old soldiers, and the hedging and ditching man unearthing all sorts of garbage. I loved both the writing and the stories.
View all my reviews
Friday, November 30, 2018
Joy School by Elizabeth Berg ~ my review
Joy School by Elizabeth Berg
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Honest. Clever. Guileless. Did I mention honest? Joy School's heroine is as winsome as they come. Elizabeth Berg's twelve-year-old Katie is a child so sincerely trying to grow up, get by, do the right thing, be liked, love and be loved, I cannot help but be in her corner. Katie is smart, observant, sensitive, and funny. From her hilarious descriptions of her high school teachers to her desire to know how to kiss when the time comes, this novel entertains. And helps me laugh at what I probably felt at twelve but never articulated nearly as well as Katie does. Joy School also tugs at heartstrings. Katie is lonely and learns who she wants to be through ups and downs of friendships and her first big crush. Elizabeth Berg masterfully crafts all the characters. I enjoyed Joy School more than a decade ago and thoroughly enjoyed it again this time.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Honest. Clever. Guileless. Did I mention honest? Joy School's heroine is as winsome as they come. Elizabeth Berg's twelve-year-old Katie is a child so sincerely trying to grow up, get by, do the right thing, be liked, love and be loved, I cannot help but be in her corner. Katie is smart, observant, sensitive, and funny. From her hilarious descriptions of her high school teachers to her desire to know how to kiss when the time comes, this novel entertains. And helps me laugh at what I probably felt at twelve but never articulated nearly as well as Katie does. Joy School also tugs at heartstrings. Katie is lonely and learns who she wants to be through ups and downs of friendships and her first big crush. Elizabeth Berg masterfully crafts all the characters. I enjoyed Joy School more than a decade ago and thoroughly enjoyed it again this time.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
Jan Karon's Mitford novel, To Be Where You Are ~ my review
To Be Where You Are by Jan Karon
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Fans of Jan Karon’s Mitford series will be pleased to know this 2017 novel, To Be Where You Are, continues the stories. Chapters alternate between Meadowgate Farm with Dooley’s and Lace’s family/veterinary practice and the town itself with Father Tim and the motley Mitford crew. Briefly, Dooley and Lace face financial and artistic challenges in the process of adopting Jack as their own son. Father Tim and townsfolk rally around some who need help with a variety of problems.
When I read a Mitford novel, I appreciate Karon’s light touch with life’s highs and lows. The plot in this novel feels like real life. I hold my breath with the characters’ pains and sorrows, breathe easy with their joys and celebrations, and laugh with their silly human foibles. But I do not wig out over anything, because Karon infuses the plot with an “It is well with my soul” mentality.
Although I feel grounded in a Mitford story’s realness, I also feel challenged. I could appreciate and trust God more in order to approach life’s realities with more thankfulness and certainty that “It is well with my soul.” I could show up with a casserole or cake more often when I know a family is having a hard time. One attraction of a Mitford novel might be that it inspires readers to aspire to make the world a better place, one small kindness at a time.
Just as Dooley and Lace were adopted in previous novels, in this one, they adopt Jack. In To Be Where You Are Karon repeats the adoption concept and describes again what they were adopted out of and into. It’s an apt picture of Jesus’ inviting us to be with Him now and forever just by admitting we are sinners needing to be saved by grace and wanting to be with Him now and forever.
I liked a few sweet moments when a character said to a loved one that all he or she wanted was “to be where you are.” That’s love.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Fans of Jan Karon’s Mitford series will be pleased to know this 2017 novel, To Be Where You Are, continues the stories. Chapters alternate between Meadowgate Farm with Dooley’s and Lace’s family/veterinary practice and the town itself with Father Tim and the motley Mitford crew. Briefly, Dooley and Lace face financial and artistic challenges in the process of adopting Jack as their own son. Father Tim and townsfolk rally around some who need help with a variety of problems.
When I read a Mitford novel, I appreciate Karon’s light touch with life’s highs and lows. The plot in this novel feels like real life. I hold my breath with the characters’ pains and sorrows, breathe easy with their joys and celebrations, and laugh with their silly human foibles. But I do not wig out over anything, because Karon infuses the plot with an “It is well with my soul” mentality.
Although I feel grounded in a Mitford story’s realness, I also feel challenged. I could appreciate and trust God more in order to approach life’s realities with more thankfulness and certainty that “It is well with my soul.” I could show up with a casserole or cake more often when I know a family is having a hard time. One attraction of a Mitford novel might be that it inspires readers to aspire to make the world a better place, one small kindness at a time.
Just as Dooley and Lace were adopted in previous novels, in this one, they adopt Jack. In To Be Where You Are Karon repeats the adoption concept and describes again what they were adopted out of and into. It’s an apt picture of Jesus’ inviting us to be with Him now and forever just by admitting we are sinners needing to be saved by grace and wanting to be with Him now and forever.
I liked a few sweet moments when a character said to a loved one that all he or she wanted was “to be where you are.” That’s love.
View all my reviews
Monday, November 5, 2018
Macaron madness
So, blog post here is pretty similar to my Facebook post
yesterday. My dear friend Connie and I made macarons. After perusing four
recipes, two of which I had tried before, we landed on one from The Daily Herald. It was the winning
recipe after the local cook had experimented twelve times. After doing it
twice, I understood why it took her twelve times to get it right. So after
yesterday, I’ve done it three times, and I can tell you right now, I will not
make it to twelve times. I won’t even aspire to twelve! Macarons are lovely little
delicacies. When savoring one, you know you have had a treat. Macaron making,
however, has variables way beyond me.
Ladurée,
look out! Connie Macaron Komora (yes, she has officially changed her middle
name to Macaron) and I, Jane Ganache Hoppe, will be stiff competition. Well,
maybe not today but someday soon, we will move right next door to your famous bakery
in Paris and give you a run for your money. Granted, Ladurée, you sell 15,000 gorgeous, perfectly domed, exquisitely colored,
36-flavored, luxurious macarons PER DAY, and Connie and I spent four hours TODAY
making 48
lopsided, misshapen, cracked-meringue macarons in both vanilla and chocolate
flavors (count ’em, two), both with a sublime dark chocolate ganache filling
(count it, one flavor).
But you know what, Ladurée, I bet Connie and I had more fun. We laughed when
we accidentally poked holes in the meringue. This happened a lot. We laughed
when the macarons were so bulgy, they rolled around on the plate instead of
sitting flat. Yes, we had a great time. And you know what, our macarons melt in
the mouth, same as yours. Maybe we’ll stay right here and let you have the international
macaron market.
Thanks to my French friend Françoise for giving me the fun macaron tablier et torchon—apron and dish towel—a
few years ago after I went crazy for these cookies in France. Although Parisian bakeries' macarons are more famous, my taste buds favored macarons from Ortholan in Montpellier.
Tuesday, October 9, 2018
Freefall to Fly: A Breathtaking Journey Toward a Life of Meaning
Freefall to Fly: A Breathtaking Journey Toward a Life of Meaning by Rebekah Lyons
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Rebekah Lyons' memoir, Freefall to Fly, contains some nuggets of wisdom for women especially. She asks insightful questions about, for example, where we nurture others but not ourselves to the point where we are unable to dream big for ourselves. Only read this book if you will ponder those important questions. I bookmarked seven of her questions that I want to explore further in order to make some changes. The memoir itself is a quick read, but the pondering will take longer ~ and be worth it.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Rebekah Lyons' memoir, Freefall to Fly, contains some nuggets of wisdom for women especially. She asks insightful questions about, for example, where we nurture others but not ourselves to the point where we are unable to dream big for ourselves. Only read this book if you will ponder those important questions. I bookmarked seven of her questions that I want to explore further in order to make some changes. The memoir itself is a quick read, but the pondering will take longer ~ and be worth it.
View all my reviews
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
My review of Frances Mayes' novel Women in Sunlight
Women in Sunlight by Frances Mayes
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Frances Mayes' novel Women in Sunlight reads like a Tuscany travelogue for middle-aged women. In a way, Women in Sunlight resembles Mayes' 1999 memoir, Bella Tuscany, with the addition of fictional characters who choose a Tuscan adventure at pivotal points in their lives. What Newsday said about Bella Tuscany applies here, too: "A love letter to Italy written in precise and passionate language of near poetic density ..."
One narrator in the story is Kit Raine, an American poet who has lived in Tuscany thirteen years when Camille, Julia, and Susan come from America to rent the house next door rather than move into an over-50 community in the U.S. An unnamed omniscient narrator tells how each woman reinvents, rediscovers, and blossoms among Tuscany's many pleasures. Each emerges from her backstory changed in positive ways.
I get a little confused when the narrator switches, but I can roll with that. Italy's history, art, natural beauty, and cuisine serve as muses for all the women, as well as the men they encounter. As much as I enjoy vicariously traveling to Tuscany, I find its perfection a bit tiresome. Mayes presents everything as glorious. That the women glow in their transformations affirms their courage to step out. That everything about Tuscany glows, however, is a little hard to swallow. Lastly, it seems unlikely to me that every character is as well-versed in Italian history, literature, and art as Mayes is.
That said, one reason I enjoy reading just about anything by Frances Mayes is her knowledge of Italian history, literature, and art. Not to mention cuisine! While reading Women in Sunlight, I often felt I was in over my head in the literature and art history departments. But that's okay; this stretches me. Traveling to Tuscany with Mayes gives a reader an understanding of Italian culture and customs that a mere tourist cannot gain. Yes, Women in Sunlight truly is "A love letter to Italy written in precise and passionate language of near poetic density ..."
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Frances Mayes' novel Women in Sunlight reads like a Tuscany travelogue for middle-aged women. In a way, Women in Sunlight resembles Mayes' 1999 memoir, Bella Tuscany, with the addition of fictional characters who choose a Tuscan adventure at pivotal points in their lives. What Newsday said about Bella Tuscany applies here, too: "A love letter to Italy written in precise and passionate language of near poetic density ..."
One narrator in the story is Kit Raine, an American poet who has lived in Tuscany thirteen years when Camille, Julia, and Susan come from America to rent the house next door rather than move into an over-50 community in the U.S. An unnamed omniscient narrator tells how each woman reinvents, rediscovers, and blossoms among Tuscany's many pleasures. Each emerges from her backstory changed in positive ways.
I get a little confused when the narrator switches, but I can roll with that. Italy's history, art, natural beauty, and cuisine serve as muses for all the women, as well as the men they encounter. As much as I enjoy vicariously traveling to Tuscany, I find its perfection a bit tiresome. Mayes presents everything as glorious. That the women glow in their transformations affirms their courage to step out. That everything about Tuscany glows, however, is a little hard to swallow. Lastly, it seems unlikely to me that every character is as well-versed in Italian history, literature, and art as Mayes is.
That said, one reason I enjoy reading just about anything by Frances Mayes is her knowledge of Italian history, literature, and art. Not to mention cuisine! While reading Women in Sunlight, I often felt I was in over my head in the literature and art history departments. But that's okay; this stretches me. Traveling to Tuscany with Mayes gives a reader an understanding of Italian culture and customs that a mere tourist cannot gain. Yes, Women in Sunlight truly is "A love letter to Italy written in precise and passionate language of near poetic density ..."
View all my reviews
Saturday, September 15, 2018
My review of Little House on the Prairie
Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Charles and Caroline Ingalls take their family, Mary, Laura, and baby Carrie, by covered wagon from the big woods in Wisconsin to the prairie near Independence, Missouri. This second book in Laura Ingalls Wilder's series again shows pioneer resourcefulness and contentment with simple pleasures. This book has the added intrigue of Indians and soldiers and federal government interference. Also interesting to me are instances of neighbors helping neighbors build barns, dig wells, and nurse sickness. Although the family had coins, pioneer economics consisted mostly of bartering services and trading furs for goods like a plow and seeds.
I have mixed emotions about Wilder's portrayal of her parents' strict discipline. On one hand, my stomach knots whenever Laura reminds herself that "children should be seen and not heard." That feels harsh and oppressive to me. On the other hand, my heart is quieted by her tenacious desire to obey out of a visceral understanding of her dependence on her Ma and Pa for protection and provision. This seems like a critical spiritual submission lesson.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Charles and Caroline Ingalls take their family, Mary, Laura, and baby Carrie, by covered wagon from the big woods in Wisconsin to the prairie near Independence, Missouri. This second book in Laura Ingalls Wilder's series again shows pioneer resourcefulness and contentment with simple pleasures. This book has the added intrigue of Indians and soldiers and federal government interference. Also interesting to me are instances of neighbors helping neighbors build barns, dig wells, and nurse sickness. Although the family had coins, pioneer economics consisted mostly of bartering services and trading furs for goods like a plow and seeds.
I have mixed emotions about Wilder's portrayal of her parents' strict discipline. On one hand, my stomach knots whenever Laura reminds herself that "children should be seen and not heard." That feels harsh and oppressive to me. On the other hand, my heart is quieted by her tenacious desire to obey out of a visceral understanding of her dependence on her Ma and Pa for protection and provision. This seems like a critical spiritual submission lesson.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
Sunday, September 9, 2018
Scrapbooks, Unfinished
My recent posts have a retro component. The reason? As we
clear out my parents’ house, we find boxes of papers, photos, letters from the
last century and a quarter. Little by little, we sort through, so I live in
someone else’s past a lot lately. Today I went through a box of what apparently
was going to be a 1994 travel scrapbook. Or maybe my parents compiled the
scrapbook, and these scraps were left over, I don’t know. The latter is more
likely. But the trip was a France tour, so this box held extra interest for me.
High points of Paris, Normandy, and Brittany traced on a
pink photocopied map, the 1994 tour guide’s instructions, my parents’ tour
badges and Paris Visite passes, some unwritten picture postcards, and lots of bilingual
brochures. Since my dad was the one conceiving this scrapbook in his head
during the tour, I found two of every brochure. I’m not sure I can explain his
logic (He thought he was Noah?), but given that in general my dad liked to save
and my mom likes to pitch, I am pretty sure collecting doubles was my dad’s
doing. Another clue is the page headings printed on his dot-matrix printer.
Another clue is the huge number of newspaper clippings on the fiftieth
anniversary of D-Day. Mom and Dad’s tour, which included D-Day beaches and
museums, was about a month before this anniversary. Both my parents served in
World War II, but Dad had a special interest in D-Day.
This project produced a couple of Notes-to-Self :
- Finish my own scrapbooks. My dad probably did finish memorializing this 1994 trip and I’m now just seeing stuff that didn’t make it into the scrapbook. But I have unfinished scrapbook ideas and materials that I feel sad I did not put together.
- Decide on a statute of limitations on travel scrapbooks. If a trip is ??? years ago, and I still haven’t done the book, let it go.
- Do the book. Pitch the leftovers.
- I may have inherited my father’s “presentation gene.” When I approach a farmers’ market display of roses, my mind automatically frames a photo. As I stroll through a museum, my mind classifies lessons and reactions into themes to better explain it to someone. I usually pick up a brochure (just one) to help me remember later. I feel giddy to find some goofy visual like rabbit stickers or a die-cut Renault to put in my scrapbook. I like the idea of presenting my trip in an organized and creative way to show, but especially to treasure the memories.
I wonder sometimes if my father honed his “presentation”
skill during the decades when his antennae were tuned for story problems to
present in the eleven mathematics textbooks he wrote. I can just imagine him
screeching to a halt at a random construction site to note how he could use the
angles of a gabled roof in a geometry illustration.
Me, I have no excuse. I must have inherited this tendency to
present a story, as well as to keep stuff attached to happy memories.
Thursday, August 30, 2018
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
With two little mysteries and two romances, Gabrielle Zevin's novel, The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, is a page-turner. Grieving widower A.J. Fikry owns the only bookstore on an island off New England. His life is on the rocks; he is standoffish to everyone and downright rude to Amelia, a publisher's sales rep who visits the island quarterly. The first little mystery, theft of a valuable book, leads Fikry to befriend police chief Lambiase. The second little mystery, abandonment of two-year-old Maya in his bookstore, comes with multiple questions. As the plot unfolds over ensuing years, the reader is treated to brief commentary on myriad books by book-loving characters.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
With two little mysteries and two romances, Gabrielle Zevin's novel, The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, is a page-turner. Grieving widower A.J. Fikry owns the only bookstore on an island off New England. His life is on the rocks; he is standoffish to everyone and downright rude to Amelia, a publisher's sales rep who visits the island quarterly. The first little mystery, theft of a valuable book, leads Fikry to befriend police chief Lambiase. The second little mystery, abandonment of two-year-old Maya in his bookstore, comes with multiple questions. As the plot unfolds over ensuing years, the reader is treated to brief commentary on myriad books by book-loving characters.
View all my reviews
Sunday, August 19, 2018
Music Spans Generations
“You don’t strike me as someone who would like For King and
Country,” my friend said. “My sixteen-year-old niece loves them.” Implied was that someone fifty-plus years
older than her niece should stick to Lawrence Welk’s ah-one-and-ah-two? Cue
bubbles. Or perhaps would not like soul-thumping music enough to drive two
hundred miles to a rock concert?
No matter, I took it as a compliment. Many people do tend to
favor music from their own generation. I seem to have absorbed my father’s love
for every generation’s music and almost every genre. After retiring from
teaching in 1984, he bought and borrowed hundreds of music cassettes to record
his favorites from each on mix tapes. On his playlists, Keely Smith and Diana
Ross shared the stage with Sam the Sham and Boots Randolph. My dad might have
said, “I have absolutely no musical talent; I just love music.” I could say the
same.
Almost five years after Dad’s passing, we just discovered
the extent of his hobby—about a dozen cases, twenty-four tapes each, of music
cassettes. Before taking them to donate and/or resell, I popped a couple in my
car’s cassette player. As I tooled around that day, memories flooded my car.
Richard Clayderman’s piano stylings of the theme song from Chariots of Fire took me back to friends and feelings from the
early 1980s. More time-traveling reveries with the gentle “Ballade Pour Adeline”
from 1979. And “Memory” from Cats.
A few days after hearing this generation-spanning music, in
an odd coincidence, I finish reading Mitch Albom’s The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto on the day Aretha Franklin dies.
So I go from the book in which famous musicians from many generations and
genres share memories of a dead musician, the fictional, brilliant musician
Frankie Presto. From the 1940s into the 2000s, their paths crossed with
Frankie’s in unusual ways. I close the novel and turn on the TV to see famous
musicians from many generations and genres sharing personal anecdotes and
praises of the exceptionally gifted Aretha Franklin.
By the way, For King and Country gave the expected
high-energy concert. We old folks stood a few feet from the stage the entire
time. I admit that an hour later when I got back to our hotel, my eyes still
spun from all the strobe lights, and oh, I may have been a little deaf. But the
group’s beat still pulsed in my chest, and my face glowed with that pleasure.
Saturday, August 18, 2018
I Blame the Barometer
I forked the last little glob of
tuna salad onto the last little curve of bread crust, then tore sweet orange
slices with my teeth. With a clean plate, save two skinny, naked orange rinds,
I had finished the healthy lunch prepared for us by my mother’s caregiver.
Normally, I’d be satisfied, but today I brought my mother’s silver candy dish
from the living room to the dining table. Mom and I took a few
chocolate-covered almonds, and I would have inhaled all the rest, except just
then my mother commented, “This is the last of my chocolate.” Knowing I’d feel
guilty if I ate the poor woman’s last chocolates, I switched my attention to a
jar of M&Ms. These candies were also getting low, but by some inexplicable
oversight had been at about the same level in the jar for the last three weeks.
I’d be doing Mom a favor if I made more room in the jar for the new M&Ms
I’d buy her next week, wouldn’t I? Haha. After popping half a dozen M&Ms, I
persuaded myself to stop. People sometimes exhibit unusual discontent when
barometric pressure shifts, or so they say, so I blame my rationalization and lack
of self-control on the barometer. Oh no, I’ve sunk to rationalizing my
rationalizations!
Trying to concentrate on the
benefits of a breeze, oppressively humid as it was, I made my way after my
excessively indulgent dessert to the nursing home to visit Dad in the Alzheimer’s
wing. Wheeling him from a common area to his room, I parked and braked his
wheelchair in front of the CD player so that we could listen to his favorite
music. His CD player sits atop a three-drawer nightstand. I snapped fingers and
he rotated wrists to saxophone sounds and trumpet toots. I pointed out the
window to treetops wildly gyrating in the storm brewing outside, and Dad said,
“That’s very happening.” Opening a nightstand drawer, I pulled out a small
plastic container Mom keeps there for him. I offered him its contents—a few
M&Ms, a few Hershey’s Kisses, and a chocolate peanut butter egg left over
from his Easter basket. He plucked out a Kiss, unwrapped it, and popped it in
his mouth.
This is the point when he
normally sits back and never thinks about candy again unless I extend the dish
over to him. Today, however, he seemed to have candy on the brain. He stretched
out his bony arm toward the dish on the nightstand. He couldn’t reach. His
fingers strained and swam in the air toward the dish. I unbraked his wheelchair
so he could roll in to get more chocolate. After he had almost polished off the
chocolates, he rolled in, opened the top drawer and withdrew a jar of licorice
my sister had left him. He started in on fat, black licorice chunks. Then, in
another surprise move, he rolled in and pulled yet another container of
licorice candies from a drawer. By this time, his lips and chin were smeared
black. He pointed his face upward so I could tissue off the smears. After each
foray into a candy dish, he replaced it atop the nightstand and rolled
backward. A few minutes later, he’d ask, “What’s in that?” and point to one of
the three dishes, then roll forward and help himself.
My father has late-stage
Alzheimer’s disease. He remembers hardly anything. Yet today he remembered
where to find his candy cache. Although he has always had a sweet tooth, in
recent years he has been completely passive about satisfying it. I don’t know
what was different about today, but I blame the barometer.
Postscript:
I originally wrote this in a humorous mood in 2013. As I look back on the sweet
tooth history of our whole family in light of recent science that now calls
Alzheimer's Type 3 Diabetes, I realize with soberness that a lifetime sweet
tooth may well not be a laughing matter.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)