Friday, December 28, 2018

"Little Bee" by Chris Cleve



On December 12, 2018 we were hosted by Betsy who had her home 
decorated for Christmas.  Sarah, Madeleine, Donna, Kathy, Doug, Carol B. and I attended.
We were welcomed with a cider, cinnamon, and champagne
drink which we enjoyed. We were then treated to soup, salad and quiche whilst
we discussed her book "Little Bee " by Chris Cleave who is a Brit.

Little Bee is an asylum seeking 16 year old Nigerian young girl who is placed in
a British detention center in London where she stays for 2 years. The story is
told from two female points of view and we thought the male author did
a fantastic job of seeing things perfectly from the African young girl as well
as the British lady Sarah who becomes involved with her due to a horrifying experience
whilst vacationing in Nigeria. Little Bee's village is wiped out by "baddies"
and her sister is raped and murdered brutally because of the presence of oil underneath
the village.  Sarah saves Bee's life by cutting off her finger and from that point their
lives become intertwined.

It is indeed a dark story which is so terribly sad, yet it  written in an ironically
humorous way.We all had a chance to pick parts that we found humorous.
We agreed that there may have been some holes in the story but with what
is happening at our own Southern border it was a timely read. Perhaps
it may have shed some light on asylum seekers and given us some pause for
thought on the situation.  

Carol Branson chose the new book entitled, "The Things They Carried"
by Tim O'Brien. We agreed to meet on January 16th. We hope Carol
will host but will send out information closer to the time.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

"A Piece of the World" by Christina Kline Baker



On October 3, 2018 we met at Sarah's home to discuss her book
entitled "A Piece of the World", by Christina Kline Baker.
We had a large group of people including Julie, Madeleine, Doug, Betsy,
Kathy, Carol, Sue, Nancy, Sarah and me.
We were able to fit around Sarah's table where we had a great salad,
bean soup, bread and wine. The setting was perfect for a discussion.
Special thanks to Sarah and Maybelline for having us in their home.

I believe most of us had read the book which is about Andrew Wyeth's relationship
with the subject of his iconic painting entitled "Christina's World."
It was historical fiction that brought into focus the flesh and blood woman 
behind the portrait as she envisioned the life of this woman and her special bond with
with one of our greatest modern artists.
The book transports us to a mid century farmhouse on the coast of Maine where
Christina lives a small life trapped by family duty and her ailing body. It deals with
the injustices of childhood, the aches of adulthood and the regrets of middle age.
The painting shows a lonely woman in a field looking at a lonely house on
top of a hill. The book explores the life of people who lived inside that
house especially the tragic life of Christina who is portrayed in the painting.
She  was a strong, stubborn woman betrayed by her body and the man she loved.  
We thought that the author was very clever and talented to accomplish
this novel inspired by the painting. The house is a museum in Maine and we
thought it might make a good visit if one was in that area.
  Betsy chose a book called "Little Bee" by Chris Cleave about a Nigerian
refugee and her relationship  with a British magazine editor. 
We chose Wednesday November 14th to be the next meeting.


Wednesday, September 5, 2018

"The Immortalists" by Chloe Benjamin










On July 25th we met to discuss Kathy`s book choice
which was "The Immortalists" by Chloe Benjamin.
Julie, Sarah, Kathy, Donna, Madeleine, Betsy, Nancy and I
attended. Kathy provided delicious pizza, which was served with salad and 
Donna's brownies.
This was a different kind of book and a change from the
themes of world war 2 and slavery.
It is set in New York City in 1969 where word has spread of
a traveling psychic who can predict the day of death.
The four Gold children on the cusp of self awareness sneak out
to hear their fortune.
How did knowing the date of their deaths shape the life choices of
the four siblings? Was it destiny or choice, reality or illusion.
The first to die was the youngest boy Simon who heads to San Francisco
searching for love in the promiscuous gay community in the 80's.
Some thought the sex scenes were too overly graphic. Simon contracts AIDS just
as he finds love.
Next to die is dreamy Klara who becomes a Las Vegas magician
obsessed with blurring reality and fantasy. She actually commits suicide.
The Eldest son Daniel seeks security as an Army doctor who decides who
goes to war or not. He goes seeking the fortune teller and is bizarrely
shot by a detective who is investigating Klara's death.
The first three die on the predicted date at a fairly young age.
The eldest daughter Varya throws herself into longevity research, where she
tests the boundary between science and immortality. 
The actual picture on the book cover depicts the "Tree of Life" which is
very symbolic given the subject of the book. The book although it deals with
death has a lot of living going on within it. We are exposed to the bonds
of family and is overall a saga of life.
So the reader has to ask them self the following questions
"Would I want to know the date of my death?"
"How would knowing affect my life going forward?"

Sarah chose "A piece of the World" by Christina Baker Kline  
which is about painter Andrew Wyeth's iconic painting.
A date of Sept 26th was tentatively chosen.  
    

      

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

"Lilac Girls" by Martha Hall Kelly



On June 13, 2018 Donna hosted at her lovely home.
We had a delicious chicken wrapped in pastry and healthy salad
followed by a dreamy coconut  concoction.
We first discussed our book and only 2 had not read it.
Yes another world war 2 novel but all enjoyed it.
Our novelist did major research and only at the end do we
realize that this was based on a true story.
There are 3  main characters. Carolyine Ferriday an ex
Broadway star , New York socialite and charity worker, Kasia Kuzmerick,
a Polish teenager and  Herta Oberheuseer, an ambitious German
doctor. The story is told through these 3 women and goes back and forth 
and initially shows no connection but eventually it all
comes together. Most of us learned about Ravensbruck where many 
inhumane experiments were done by the Nazis and we learned
about the Polish women called rabbits because they hopped
due to the inflicted wounds. We all had a hard time reading
the narrative from the point of view of the German doctor who
inflicted these women. Though the doctor returned to practice after
the Nuremburg trials , we were happy that she finally lost
her license to practice medicine after Caroline's efforts to bring
about justice. 
It was a moving and memorable debut novel.
Kathy chose "The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin for our
next read and a tentative date of July 18th was set. 


Wednesday, May 30, 2018

The Winter in Anna by Reed Karaim




In early May we met to discuss Sue's choice
which was "The Winter in Anna" by Reed Karaim.
This book is an unlikely and trans formative
connection between a young journalist, Eric, and an older woman,
Anna, whose past holds a terrible secret. Sue said she thought
it was a study of a life well lived. It opens with us finding out
along with Eric that Anna has committed suicide by
drinking bleach. Eric then reminisces  about the
winter he spent in North Dakota pre internet days working
as a sport reporter when he meets Anna who also works
at the newspaper. They have a romance which almost was but never
transpires as Anna is a broken woman whose pain and loss renders
her incapable of forging a relationship. She pushes Eric away
and when she dies Eric has to reconcile his memories with what he
has just learned about her. It was a very sad tale indeed.

Donna chose the "Lilac Girls" by Martha Hall Kelly".
This is another World War 11 story about 3 different women.
June 13th was chosen as a tentative date for our next meeting. 

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

"Little Fires Everywhere" by Celeste Ng



Our January meeting was held at my home to discuss
Madeleine's choice "Little Fires Everywhere" which
was written by Celeste Ng published in 2017. Ng grew up in
Shaker Heights a suburb of Cleveland Ohio and the setting for her
second novel. Sarah who is a native of Cleveland guided us through
Shaker Heights which was almost like a character in the book.
The book is about the relationship of two very different families who
commingle and clash,
Madeleine led a great discussion. I believe the central theme was
about motherhood and it's special bond and whether it is forged by blood
or love and better yet by both. The custody battle between the biological
Chinese mother,  Bebe Chow who gave her child up during a time that
she could not cope and the adoptive parents was a major part of
our discussion.
We also delved into Mia's character a somewhat hippie like artist who
never stays in one town very long till she lands in Shaker Heights.
Mia is pitted against Mrs. Richardson who is a strong, meddling solid
resident of perfect Shaker Heights. There are a lot of sub plots in the
novel and it takes us on many twists and turns. All in all a great page
turner and great character development by the author. 
I have had my surgery since and have been taking some narcotics so
I forgot what date we chose for the next book and I have also forgotten
who attended the meeting. So we will just have to choose a date in April
to discuss Sue's choice which is "The Winter in Anna" by Reid Karan. 

Thursday, January 18, 2018

"The Life We Bury" by Alan Eskins


Our December meeting took place at Kathy's home.
We had pizza, Christmas fellowship and a discussion of 
Alan Eskin's debut novel "The Life We Bury".
Thanks to Kathy for providing all the refreshments,
food and a warm fire for our meeting.
Those present were Sue, Kathy, Betsy, Madeleine, Nettie,
Sarah, Doug and Janet.

All who were present had read the book and
admitted to having been taken in immediately by
the mystery and interest never waning through the
twist turns and surprises.
College student Joe has chosen to write  a biographical piece
about a Vietnam veteran, Carl Iverson  convicted of rape and murder who
is now dying of cancer due to exposure of agent orange.
The book touches on many thing such as family relationships,
 autism, abuse, parenting, Vietnam war, wrongful incarceration,
alcoholism, DNA and much more. 
Joe and his neighbor Lila set about proving Joe Iverson's
innocence incurring major personal danger to themselves.
This was a quick read and very good for a 1st novel.
Doug added some good statistical insight of wrongful
incarceration as it relates to veterans and persons of color.
Janet posed some questions based on a reading guide.
The biggest question was the significance of the book title.
We each gave an opinion of which characters were  hiding secrets and
who may have been trying to forget some aspects of their lives.  

Madeleine chose "Little Fires Everywhere" by Celeste Ng for 
our next read and January 25th was set for the next meeting.