Saturday, September 21, 2019

Becoming, by Michelle Obama

In a nutshell, Becoming is a remarkable and inspirational story of an extraordinary woman. The book is a coming-of-age story; a love story of a pair of opposites; and a political saga by a woman who was skeptical, if not downright scornful of politics, but who became one of the most popular first ladies in American history.
In telling her story, Michelle takes readers by the hand on an intimate tour of everyday African-American life and ambition, while recounting her rise from modest origins to the closest America has to nobility.
Gracefully written and at times laugh-out-loud funny, she invites readers into her world, chronicling the experiences that have shaped her from her childhood to the White House. 
I particularly liked the titles of the three sections of the book. The first third (Becoming Me), covers her childhood, growing up in lower middle class in southside Chicago, with parents who made their high expectations clear. Despite her family’s challenges and her ‘female blackness’, she managed to go to Princeton, then Harvard Law, and then to work at a prestigious law firm where she met Barack, fell for him and his wanderlust, while Barack was grounded by her traditionalism.
In the second section (Becoming Us), she covers their marriage, marriage counseling, raising two down-to-earth daughters under an unforgiving media glare, winning the 2008 Iowa caucuses, and making it to the White House. But she never takes any of it for granted. On the contrary, her tone is one of wonderment as to how this all happened. Over and over again, from high school to the White House, she asks, “Am I good enough?”
She closes the last third of the book (Becoming More), talking about the stress of being in the spotlight, her desire to make an impact as First Lady, and the opportunity to offer her vision.  She knew that she would be held to a different standard, her every gesture scrutinized. 
Her story is not full of Washington gossip and political score-settling, though she does lay bare her contempt for Trump, who she believes put her family’s safety at risk with his false birther conspiracy theory. 
Becomingis a warm, wise, revelatory and intimate, deeply personal coming-of-age story of a strong-minded girl who grew up to become one of the most powerful and influential black women in America. Her memoir sold more than 1.4 million copies in its first week and quickly became the best-selling book of the year. 
Through it all, her outlook is optimistic, her voice clear, witty, candid and insightful. She talks straight, with an openness and honesty rarely seen. She is gifted in her ability to express her emotions with meticulous attention to details, writing with tremendous insight and sensitivity from beginning to end. I loved it.— Kenn Johnson


Saturday, September 7, 2019

Where the Crawdads Sing, by Delia Owens This

This is an intriguing murder mystery, woven through the painfully beautiful story of
Kya, a young girl abandoned and left to survive on her own in the marshes of North
Carolina.

Kya is no stranger to the beautiful but treacherous marshes. Deserted when she
was just six years old, eventually “Marsh Girl” learns to survive, thrive and find
solace in the beauty of the nature all around her.

Kya, lives in a shack with her dirt-poor family “squeezed together like penned
rabbits”: a caring but worn down and helpless mother, a cruel, abusive father and
four older siblings. One by one they desert Kya, saving themselves from the
frequent, vicious beatings of their father, who is the last to desert her. Her mothers’
leaving is the most heart-breaking and frightening for Kya. “Ma” leaves, letting the
door slam with finality behind her. No good-by. Not even a wave to her 6-year-old
daughter. Finally, Kya is truly alone, except for the beautiful sea gulls who swoop
and dive in to eat the grits she tosses to them each evening.

She becomes a wild child, living completely on her own in the marshes with the
seagulls, snow geese, doves and crows as her only companions. She takes herself
to school, but stays for just one day because of the cruel mocking from her
classmates. So most of what she knows she learned from the creatures with
whom she shares the swap. Nature nurtured, tutored, fed and protected her when
no one else would.

She grew up navigating the family’s motorboat through the marshes and is able to
dock near the small general store where she can buy simple supplies, mostly grits,
which she cooks with scrambled eggs, cornbread, biscuits and sometimes beans
just like her mother fixed.

Kya grows older and develops into a tall, skinny, tanned teenager with hair as black
and “thick as crow wings.” She begins to long for companionship, and thinks “If
anyone would understand loneliness the moon would.” She becomes increasingly
aware of the older boys she sees in town. And they begin to notice her, especially
Chase Andrews, the handsome only son of wealthy parents. She also becomes
good friends with another young man,Tate. Tate loves and becomes protective of
her, especially as he sees the questionable attention Chase pays to Kya. Tate tells
Kya that his father taught him that “A real man is one who cries without shame,
reads poetry with his heart, feels opera in his soul and does what is necessary to
defend a woman.” Kya opens herself to Chase and Tate and to a new life.

And then...the story develops into a murder mystery and a very unpredictable
ending. As my fellow St. Timothy’s Book Club readers and I discussed this book
(which we all loved) - we agreed NOT to discuss the ending until all members had
finished the book. It’s that unpredictable and that well done. So I certainly can’t
disclose, or even hint at it, to you, Blog readers. I’ll just say it’s definitely worth the
wait.

Crawdads is a wonderful, very well-told story with beautiful language and gentle
descriptions of nature woven throughout. And there is wonderful poetry that
appears, often when least expectedly. You might want to pay attention to it. It’s
beautiful, well-written and more important than you might expect.

A word about the author, Delia Owens. She is a wildlife scientist who has coauthored
three international best-selling, award-winning nonfiction books about her
life as a wildlife scientist in Africa. She is much admired and respected for her
extensive writing about nature. She holds a BS in Zoology from the University of
Georgia and a PhD in Animal Behavior for the University of California at Davis. This
is her first fiction book. We hope it is not her last.

About the title “Where the Crawdads Sing”- Kya said her Ma used to encourage
her to explore the marsh. “Go as far as you can, way out yonder where the
crawdads sing.” Google couldn’t help me learn if crawdads really do sing. But I
did learn that they are like small, very tasty lobsters. Maybe it’s better if they don’t
sing. Could ruin our appetite for lobsters—Gail Stilwill

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Next Books

Next Books
Non-Fiction
Books with 1 or more votes (number of votes)
Pilgrim at Tinker's Creek, by Annie Dillard (3)
All the President's Men, by Robert Woodward and Carl Bernstein (2)
Sunday Mornings in Plains, by Jimmy Carter (2)
The Hidden Life of Trees, by Peter Wohlleben (2)
Walk in a Relaxed Manner: Life Lessons from the Camino, by Joyce Rupp (2)
The Last Lectureby Randy Pausch (1)
The World is Flat, by Thomas Friedman (1)


Fiction
Books with 1 or more votes (number of votes)
Sky Bridgeby Laura Pritchett (2)
The Bean Treesby Barbara Kingsolver (2)
Circe, by Madeline Miller (1)
Music for Chameleons, by Truman Capote (1)
The Devotedby Blair Hurley (1)
The Great Alone, by Kristin Hannah (1)
The Orchardist, by Amanda Coplin (1)
Idaho, by Emily Ruskovich 

Books Added
Fiction
A Better Man, by Louise Penny
Brooklyn, by Colm Toibin
Lockdown, by Laurie R. King
The Burgess Boys, by Elizabeth Strout
The Overstory, by Richard Powers

Non-Fiction
Profiles of Courage, by John F. Kennedy
Songs of America, by Jon Meacham and Tim McGraw