Thursday, December 10, 2009

" Can You Count The Santas?"

Carol has a very big santa collection which fills an entire room.

We got to check them out at our book club meeting last night

We realized that this must have taken years and a lot of funds to

gather all these different ones.

Kathy likes the flying santa There were glass santas, African santas, European Santas, Asian santas
Julie pointing out one with a wooden face

Sarah and Nettie trying to blend in

Sarah found a Colts Santa




I liked this Harley santa.

Here is a flying santa

This Santa made it to the new sun room downstairs


I think that Carol's santas could make a very beautiful
exhibit worthy of any museum. I think Carol must
have had fun collecting them from all over
the world.
Thanks for sharing them and the warmth
of your lovely home with us.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

"The Little Book"

These ladies braved the blustery weather to attend the book club meeting
Carol, Donna, Betsy, Sarah, Julie, Nettie, Nancy and Kathy
The december 9th meeting was held at Carol's house which was
decked out for the season
We were discussing marsha's choice
This is the cover of "The Little Book" that most of us got
This is another cover of "The Little Book" below

The author is Seldon edwards who is an educator, headmaster and novelist.

This is his debut novel which began in 1974 and was published in 2007.

It is a love story that spans 3 generations, a time traveler's delight, and a story

that connects the past, present and the future.

After a Mexican appetizer we had a warm chicken-wild rice-mushroom
casserole accompanied by a pear-pecan salad with rolls.
Dessert was a meringue base with peppermint ice cream
drizzled with chocolate sauce. There was also hot cider
to finish the meal.

The book was read by most of us who enjoyed it thoroughly.
Some of us had difficulty with the time travel and keeping
things in order. Julie suggested that we suspend logic
as time travel is not logical. Most of us loved the historical
look at the turn of the century Vienna when many events
were unfolding. Some of them were Freud's psychology,
the Viennese opera and music scene, anti-semitism, new art and
Mark Twain's visit . I thought the Viennese cafe
scene was exciting. I had visited Vienna
twice and had the fabulous coffee with the tons of
whipped cream in some of those old establishments.
I had also visited the opera house,
I could envision being right there as the old parts
of Europe really have not changed in centuries.
We were relieved that Wheeler was not his grandmother's
real grandchild as we could not accept an incestuous affair.
Kathy thought it would be nice to have met your grandmother
when she was young and vibrant.
We discussed the idea of the Burdens meeting Hitler as
a child and the temptation they had of changing history
and killing Hitler. Donna said she has seen this theme in
other books. No one can kill a child even if they know he
grows up to be a monster. But can you really change
history by knowing the future? You can use future
knowledge like the grandmother did to invest in
the stock market and then pull out before the crash.
That would be nice.

Julie chose "The Straight Man" by Richard Russo
for the next read. It is supposed to be funny.
The date is scheduled for February 10th.
Venue to be announced.


Wednesday, October 28, 2009

October 28th Meeting - The Riker Home








Donna's Table


Frank and Mamah








On October 28th, Wednesday, our club met at Donna Riker's home to discuss "Loving frank" by Nancy Horan. Donna had her table beautifully set in a Fall theme. She served up bountiful portions of white bean chicken chili topped with sour cream and cheeses accompanied by home made corn bread. We finished with a yummy apple chocolate chippy cake slathered with whipped cream. Thanks Donna.


Most of the discussion centered on Mamah Bortwick's character and whether she was a good mother for practically abandoning her children and leaving them to the care of her sister in order to be with Frank Lloyd Wright. Well the price for loving Frank was quite dear as she virtually lost her children and the respect of the community. Was she sacrificing all that for a lustful obsesssive relationship with Frank or was she trying to develop her own personal self at the time when women's rights were just emerging in America? We had to be reminded that this was still "Historical Fiction" and that we should not judge her too readily. The fact still remains that she and her children came to a tragic end in the fire at the hands of the axe murderer. Some clouds hang over Wright as to whether he may have orchestrated that?


Regardless of what Wright was in his personal character which was an ego-maniac,mad visionary, selfish and dishonest we must admit he was a genius who changed the face of architecture. He harmonized nature into his buildings and has left quite a legacy in the field of architecture. Is he any different than most creative people who are always eccentric and certainly not without fault? Julie started another book about the 4 women in his life called "The Women" by T.C. Boyle. She is enjoying it.


Marsha Callahan has chosen our new book which is another historical fiction genre.It is entitled "The Little Book" by Seldon Edwards that has been 30 years in the making.It is about Wheeler Burden of the Boston banking family and it is a generation spanner.I just love those. We have agreed to meet on December 9th. Location and details to be announced. Happy Reading!


I have decided that this blog will serve as a more permanent record of what we are reading and if time permits, I will do a flashback from the past to remind us of other books we have read over the years.

About Our Book Club

Indy's Unique Book Club was founded by Maureen Forrest who
currently resides in Florida. I believe Maureen was inspired by
the book "The Divine Secrets of The Ya Ya Sisterhood" by Rebecca Wells.
This was our very first book.

The plot was about a group of childhood friends
in the South and their life long bond that helped
them cope with the travails of life.
As my ailing memory serves this was in the year
1999 or thereabouts.
So we started our bond of friendship through tennis
initially but now have expanded it by reading.
Members have come and gone and we even had one
who has died of ovarian cancer. May Mary Pogue rest
in peace.

Our format has been very non structured and
that is what makes us unique.
We say what we feel like and everyone has a right to
their opinion. Membership is now limited as our rolls
are burgeoning. Our current members who attend
regularly and these are in alphabetical order because
that is how we choose our books.
Betsy Baltz, Carol Branson, Marsha Callahan,
Julie Champagne, Diana Crews, Nancy Forbush
Nettie Hughes - Secretary, Madeleine Leraris
Susie Mazur, Doug Reichl - (token male),
Donna Riker, Donna Smith, Kathy Willis,
Sarah Witwer and sometimes Jean Ziegler.
We have met at different members' homes if they
have felt like hosting or we meet at local restaurants.
I feel like I have made lifelong friends with all of you and
I look forward to sharing more ideas and hope that we
continue to respect each other's opinions because that
is exactly what they are.