Showing posts with label pets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pets. Show all posts

31 August 2019

Books Completed Since August 1

Much of this month is devoted to a perennial grade school favorite, Lois Lenski! Found a bunch of her books, including ones I had never read, on archive.org and Kindle Unlimited.

book icon  Journey Into Childhood, Lois Lenski
This is Lenski's autobiography (much of which she fictionalized in her first two books, Skipping Village and A Little Girl of Nineteen Hundred), which includes the backgrounds of how she wrote some of her books (the Davy books, for instance, were inspired by a small boy named Davy, and the Mr. Small books were written for her son). I wish she had talked about how she researched all of them. She did reveal that A'Going to the Westward was inspired by the true experiences of her German ancestors, and that there really was a little girl left behind like Betsy Bartlett!

The first part of the book is rather fun, where she talks about growing up in Ohio, her loving but stern minister father, and the rest of her family. She goes off to study art, and then suddenly she is marrying Arthur Covey, a fellow artist (a muralist) and a widower with two children. This portion of the text seems rather stilted and dry; she uses the old-fashioned reference of referring to her husband as "Mr.Covey" and while I can see that as an older woman not into "kiss and tell" she would not get deeply into her relationship with him, the descriptions of their relationship seems rather loveless. She seems much more taken with her stepchildren Margaret and Laird, and with their child together, Stephen.

book icon  The Outermost House, Henry Beston
This is a nature classic, published originally in 1928. Beston, the owner of a small cottage called the Foc'sle near Easton on Cape Cod, visits the cottage one August, and, instead of leaving after two weeks, he decides to stay the winter. Laying in supplies and wood, Beston settles in for a serene autumn, a wild winter, and the beauty of spring, observing the birds and animals of the shoreline, the fierce nor'easters, the spreading beauty of the night sky, the call of the gulls, the yearly migration of birds, the running of the alewife, the dying of the year and then the birth of the following one. Of wonderful interest is his chronicling of the courageous work of the coast guardsmen who patrolled the beach nightly, and went out to shipwrecks in roiling waves and blinding lightning to remove survivors from the ships.

Beston's beautiful prose is poetic and evocative, bringing to mind the crash of the surf, the mewling of the gulls, the endless swish of the grasses in the ocean breeze. You can smell the salt air and the fish, the tang of his wood fire, the scent of his coffee percolating on the stove. For anyone who wants  to know what it's like to live in close harmony with the sea.

(Alas, the little "outermost house," which survived the frightening storms Beston described, the whirlwind that was the Hurricane of 1938 and many hurricanes thereafter, was felled by the deadly winds and tides of the Blizzard of 1978. It lives on in this book.)

book icon  Underland, Robert MacFarlane
"Underground." It's always been a mysterious word in the English language. Underground can mean a root cellar, but it also calls up visions of caves, of tunnels, of hasty escapes, of the unknown and of mystery.

MacFarlane investigates all these aspects of "underland," from Bronze Age graves in Somerset, England, to an observatory for Dark Matter deep underground (where particles from Dark Matter are best distinguishable) to funghi on the forest floor. He also visits the underground labyrinth of sewers and rooms below Paris, where explorers find new levels all the time and tours exist, the underground Timavo River, caves in Slovenia in which hundreds of victims of the Nazis were interred, a dangerous journey into Norwegian caves to see prehistoric cave paintings, another Norwegian sojourn visiting a traditional fisherman and his wife, a visit to a glacier and a dangerous moulin (a vertical shaft within a glacier) in Greenland, and finally a radioactive materials' burial site in Finland.

I love reading MacFarlane's books. His words in Underland fit the mood he is trying to create: dark, mysterious, primal, evocative of the mood that deep darkness engenders. He makes you chill in the narrow moulin, feel the squeeze of a particularly tight passage in a cave, gape with wonder in the rooms under Paris. I was so sorry when the book was finished.

book icon  The Happy Hollisters at Sea Gull Beach, Jerry West
The Hollister children's Uncle Russ begins their next adventure by writing to them from a place called Sea Gull Beach. He's there making sketches for his cartoon work, but lets the Hollisters know there will be a kite-flying contest there soon and tells them about a pirate ship, the Mystery, supposedly lost in the sands. Then a lighthouse lamp Uncle Russ sends them is accidentally broken, and an emerald falls out!

This is only the beginning of the Hollisters' adventures as the family travels to Sea Gull Beach, where they make a new friend in a girl named Rachel who happens to be the granddaughter of the woman who made the lighthouse. A troublesome boy, Homer, who's like the Hollisters' neighborhood bully Joey Brill, also causes excitement, and the family befriends an old beachcomber named Scowbanger, who's also looking for the Mystery.

As always, the kids go from one breathless adventure to another, finding and then losing clues, competing with Homer, and having enough adventures in one week to last all summer. These books are so much fun to read and the author, Andrew Swenson, a.k.a. Jerry West, kept the usual 1950s sexist boys and girls stuff to a minimum, so the books are still very readable today, although today's kids used to organized activities and helicopter parents may gape at the freedom the Hollister kids have. They may end up wishing they were back in the 1950s!

book icon  We Live in the North, Lois Lenski
Lenski was most known for her regional book series, but she also did a series for younger children, Roundabout America, most of which are comprised of three short stories with a common theme. This volume takes place in Michigan, the first tale about a family of Polish-Americans whose father works in an auto plant in Detroit, the second relates the tale of a widowed woman of Finnish extraction who tries to make extra money as a cherry picker in Traverse City, and the final story is about a Christmas tree farm in Muskegon Heights. Wondering what today's kids would make of the hobby of the kids in the Detroit story: they have founded an animal cemetery where they hold funerals for both wild animals and pets. A subplot concerns the kids' Uncle Eddie, who won't settle down to a job and who's considering changing his name to sound more American. The Johnson kids in the cherry story have various adventures as their mom and their aunt pick cherries that reminds one of Judy's Journey. The last tale is just a year in the life of a Christmas tree farm family, and one of the daughters saving up the money she earns to buy a horse. Cute for the younger kids, but lacks the meat of the regionals.

book icon  Corn-Farm Boy, Lois Lenski
Well, I always wanted to read these when I was at school, so I might as well now that they're online. This is the story of Dick Hoffman, who lives on an Iowa farm where his father grows corn and they raise some cattle but more hogs. Dick is good with animals and is always either raising a runt farm animal or nursing a wild one who is hurt, and he hates when neighbor boy Elmer kills for fun, but what he wants most is to drive the new tractor his Uncle (who is half-partners in the farm with his father) Henry has bought; however, he's still sickly due to a bout with rheumatic fever. The story follows the spring and summer activities of the family, including wearying-sounding chores like getting cockleburrs out of the cornfields and de-tasseling corn (which is what Dick's older sister does during the summer to earn money for clothes). It chronicles all the fun—raising animals, summer picnics, playing with friends—and the trials—a farm injury, Dick's health problems, a little sister lost while playing hide'n'seek—of living on a farm. Not Lenski's most interesting, but definitely all true teaching children what hard labor goes into raising their breakfast foods.

book icon  Coal Camp Girl, Lois Lenski
Of all the Lenski books I have read, this has come the closest to touching me personally.

Christina Wilson and her family live in West Virginia, where her father is a coal miner. The children manage to have fun despite the ugliness of their landscape: the hills of discarded slate everywhere, the dirty air (the kids have to pull Mom's laundry off the clothesline every time a train comes by), Dad coming home black with coal and having to take a bath before he can even eat dinner. Tina would just like to have one of the pit ponies as her own, but her brother constantly gets in trouble trying to sneak into abandoned mines with his friends. They quarrel with one contentious neighbor kid, but otherwise manage to have fun—at least when their daddy is working and they have enough food.

My mom would have been born in and lived her early years in a place like this, only in Ohio. When my maternal grandparents came over from Italy with their young son Tommaso, my grandfather found work as a coal miner, and my uncle Tommy worked in the mine once he was old enough. Mom talked about her father having to wash up in a shed before he could come in the house, since he didn't want to dirty the inside with coal dust. They would have burned coal in their stoves, used scrip at the company store, and mom and her older brothers would have gone barefoot in summer and had to wash their feet before coming inside. What would Mom's life had been like if Grandma had not come down with "coal dust lungs"? Would she have also grown up to marry a coal miner and had her heart in her throat every time the whistle from the mine blared in a long, steady wail, signifying trouble?

Needless to say, among the other troubles the Wilsons endure in the book, there is a mine cave in. I cried at the outcome, thinking of Mom and of Grandpa.

book icon  Flood Friday, Lois Lenski
I grew up on the stories of the granddaddy of all New England hurricanes, the one in 1938, and its destructive 1954 successor, Hurricane Carol, but I had never heard of the horrifying flooding that occurred in Connecticut in August 1955 after not one, but two hurricanes within a week, Connie and Diane, caused rivers to overflow. Sally Graham lives in Farmington, Connecticut, with her family, and when the ground becomes saturated, her neighborhood, then her home, begins to flood. Sally and her friends and neighbors head to a school which is on high ground, and for days they must camp out on the floor, eat communal meals, and hear terrifying stories of homes swept away. Eventually they grow restless and wonder if they'll ever make it back to their homes.

Lenski paints a very realistic view of a natural disaster from a child's point of view, from seeing your home engulfed by water to living for days at close quarters with hundreds of people to returning home to find it filthy with mud. This is an unusual Regional as it deals with an event rather than a way of life.

book icon  Mama Hattie's Girl, Lois Lenski
This is probably the rarest of Lenski's regionals and one I didn't know existed for many years. Lula Bell is an African-American girl living in the south with her mother Imogene, a talented seamstress, and her grandmother, known to everyone in the Hibiscus Street neighborhood as "Mama Hattie." Imogene is tired of living in a small town where everyone knows her business, and longs to be up north with her husband. She's also frustrated with her mother falling for every slick salesman who comes around and buying yet something else "on time," and not taking care of her health (she has high blood pressure and insists on eating fattening foods with lots of salt).

To everyone on Hibiscus Street, "up north" is a wonderful place where good jobs are to be had and people have lots of fine clothes and furniture. So when Imogene finally gets fed up after a neighbor poisons Mama Hattie's plum tree and the local grocer won't give them any more credit, Lula Bell is torn: she wants to go "up north" where living is golden, but is going to miss her grandmother. She soon finds out "up north" is no prize either: the city streets are crowded and full of garbage, the kids in her new neighborhood bully her, and the landlord won't let her family stay with her aunt and uncle.

Lenski states in her introduction that she researched this book among children in both Northern and Southern schools, so I am guessing that the portrait she paints of both African-American experiences are authentic. However, the main problem with this book is that Lula Bell isn't really all that likeable. She brags to her friends on Hibiscus Street about going north, but misses them when she actually goes there. Once she finally finds friends in New Jersey, she's happy—but then when she goes back to Mama Hattie's home for a visit she is critical of everything: her grandma taking in boarders to make ends meet, the shabby old house she grew up in, and even her friends whom she formerly loved, and she snubs a little girl named Myrtle, forgetting how badly she was treated up north. It takes a series of disasters to make her realize how she's been acting. Lenski's leading girl characters are usually strong and speak for themselves, especially the pugnacious Judy Drummond, sometimes to the point of being occasionally rude, but Lula Bell is continually grumpy when things don't go her way. Maybe she was so contentious in order to learn a lesson about getting along with others, or a point is being made that she's not being set a good example by her mother, but it certainly doesn't endear anyone to her.

Really, the hero of this book is Mama Hattie, despite her personal weaknesses (and Imogene's perceived weaknesses of her mother). She's doing her best to keep a household together and provide a loving upbringing for her granddaughter.

book icon  The Holyday Book, Francis X. Weiser
Having procured Weiser's other two holiday books about Christmas and Easter, I thought I might complete the trifecta. The Holyday Book covers all those Christian holidays not covered by the Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany season and by Lent and Eastertide: Sundays themselves, then the church calendar beginning at Pentecost. He also covers (though not a Christian holy day) Thanksgiving, and the holydays of Corpus Christi, Candlemas, All Saints and All Souls, the "Mary holidays" like the Annunciation and Assumption, and also various saints' days by season. Traditional customs all over the world are chronicled, including processions on certain saints' days, fasting, and feasting, and there are also profiles of saints such as St. John,  St. Catherine, St. Andrew, etc. For anyone looking for Catholic celebrations and traditions.

book icon  Joy of Nature, Reader's Digest Books
This is a big oversized volume from Reader's Digest books about enjoying nature. There are a few pages about animals, but most of it involves the earth itself: its climates, land areas (woodlands, deserts, rain forests, etc.), plants, topography, weather. There are chapters about trees, plants, mountains, deserts, tundra, geology, climate change, volcanoes and earthquakes, clouds, bird watching, butterfly study, and more, with multiple colorful photographs, maps, charts, and tables illustrating anything you need to know about the natural world. Each chapter is only two facing pages (crammed with small print), so this is perfect as a coffee table or bathroom book.

book icon  Memory of Water, Brian Eastman/Rebecca Tope
This is the final novelization of one of the stories from Eastman's Rosemary and Thyme mystery television series starring Felicity Kendal and Pam Ferris. Rosemary Boxer and Laura Thyme have been hired to restore an Elizabethan garden at an old country estate. The estate belongs to the Frazer family, but, because of the family setup, while Martin Frazer and his family live there in relative wealth, Martin's estranged cousin Jim lives in a old cottage in a corner of the estate. Rosemary is overlooking the river one morning when, to her horror, she sees Jim Frazer commit suicide by drowning himself. The body is later found, Jim identified and buried—then Rosemary sees the man she thought was Jim in the next town! Is Jim dead or not? And who was the man she saw fall in the river? Does Jim's death have anything to do with one of the convicts who are providing labor to restore the garden?

A humorous subplot has Laura trying to save money by having them camp in a tent on the estate. Rosemary is horrified at first, but comes to like it, while Laura, who was so enthusiastic, begins to hate it.

Tope adds many little details to what we saw on television: Rosemary making an enemy of Martin's boss, a disdainful QC, more scenes with the Frazer sons Toby and Timmy, and more scenes with Martin and his ever-patient wife Suzanne. If you enjoyed the series, you'll probably enjoy the books based upon the episodes.

book icon  Little Sioux Girl, Lois Lenski
This is another entry in Lenski's Roundabout America series for younger readers. Instead of being divided into smaller short stories as in We Live in the North, the entire book is a year in the life of Eva White Bird, a Dakota Sioux girl living at the Standing Rock Reservation with her family. Eva's winter home is in the hills, but during the summer the whole family moves to a small house they own near the river with the rest of the tribe, where the families fish and enjoy the foods of the fields. Eva enjoys being in school during the winter, but looks forward to the summer when she can run wild after completing her chores. However, rising waters cause a flood in the area and the family barely gets out ahead of the water, with many of their possessions missing. Once Christmas rolls around, there are new surprises for Eva and her family.

Again, not as compelling as the regionals, but a good portrait of Native American life in the 1940s.

book icon  St. Nicholas, Scribners (January - December 1880 (September missing)
Alas, I didn't notice years ago when I bought this that September was missing. Good thing there is a scan of it somewhere on Google. Otherwise this collection of "St. Nicholas" marks the first appearance in print of Louisa May Alcott's Jack and Jill. The usual collection of fascinating articles about child-life in 19th century America, with projects for children (usually boys) that would take the breath away from adults today, involving knives, saws, etc. But children in those days were brought up to be self-reliant. The 19th century travel articles are the most fascinating, seeing cultures that are untouched by American merchandising (foreign businesspeople often in American or British dress, but the average Joe in that country still in traditional garb living in traditional homes, alas, with snobbish opinions attached). Humorous but a bit sad to see them still decrying children who are "overscheduled" back then, enticed by societal influences like "big city lights" and alcohol, wondrous to read about great tracts of wilderness unspoilt by civilization.

book icon  Boom Town Boy, Lois Lenski
This has to be the saddest Lenski book I ever read.

The Robinsons live in Oklahoma on a farm that was part of the original Cherokee Strip. Work on the farm is hard, and a drought isn't making it any easier. It's the early 1920s, and oil has been discovered near their property. Grandpa Robinson is sure there is oil on their land as well and options the land to an oil company. Meanwhile, people begin to move into the area to work on the nearby oil wells. A shanty town explodes overnight, then even a town.

The story is told from the point of view of 11-year-old "Orvie" (Orville), and through his eyes we see the placid family farm which his older brother really loves working on and the creek bed where Orvie and his little sister play, sometimes alone and sometimes with their Native American friends on the nearby Reservation. As the oil men and workers move in, the wells despoil the countryside and the peripatetic oil workers strew trash, steal, and bring alcohol into the formerly "dry" countryside, and Orvie even learns the meaning of murder. Around the Robinsons, some of their neighbors "strike it rich," and the new "boom town" of Whizzbang seem exciting to Orvie. But he has hard truths to learn, and so do the members of his family, as the oil boom continues.

The Robinsons live a hard life without electricity or indoor plumbing, but the whole oil boom coming to town is like a trainwreck. Well-meaning wildcatters ruin the peaceful countryside and turn previously happy neighbors into rivals. Thankfully there's a ray of hope at the end.

book icon  My Love Affair With England, Susan Allen Toth
This is the first of three books Toth wrote about traveling in England. She became an Anglophile at an early age, and has retained a love of the country that continues into the present, despite the protestations of her daughter, who doesn't understand what Mom sees in the country. (Of course, as you read, you'll discover Jenny had a very different first experience in England, living as a student with a very odd family.) This is not a tourguide or a biography, but just a series of essays by Toth talking about various memorable visits to "old Blighty," including her first trip in the 1970s with a post airline flight complete with a hot meal, daytripping with the old London A-Z guide, and going to the theatre; a trip where she visited supposedly haunted homes; showing her husband the English countryside she loved for the first time; attending a real sheepdog trial (not watching it on the telly); the story of how she took students to England one year, beset by one problem after the other; walking the myriad walking paths through the countryside, and more. It's her love letter to England, and I truly loved it myself.

book icon  Re-read: The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame
I went to put this Tasha-Tudor-illustrated hardback downstairs, and after reading the Toth book couldn't resist re-reading it first. Willows was another one of those children's classics that I never read as a child, since I preferred books about real animals (Call of the Wild, the Silver Chief books, Big Red and sequels, etc.) even if the animals talked among themselves as in Black Beauty and Beautiful Joe. Of course I'd seen Disney's Ichabod and Mr. Toad, but Toad always got on my nerves.

Well, Toad still gets on my nerves. I'm sure the naughty Toad is someone small children can identify with, but I find him very annoying, and think Rat, Mole, and Badger are very patient in trying to reform him. The only Toad adventure I find tolerable is the first one with the gypsy caravan (until Toad spoils it). My favorite chapters are about Rat and Mole's friendship and adventures, such as when the Water Rat follows the imprudent Mole into the Wild Wood, the lovely "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" story, the temptation of poor Rat by the seafaring rat (O I understand that call of travel!), and my favorite of all, "Dulce Domum," about Rat and Mole's Christmas. The little mouse carolers get me every time.

Best of all are Grahame's lovely descriptions of the countryside, and the darling little English cottage fixings in the animals' burrows. When I read these things I want to grab all my money and go find one, which is ridiculous because they're not owned by poor people anymore and I wouldn't have a tenth of the money I need. But they're sure pretty to read about, and Willows has lyrical, dreamy descriptions of animals, seasons, and nature that make you feel as if you are there. 

book icon  Dead Blow, Lisa Preston
Second in the "horseshoer mystery" story series, featuring Rainy Dale, the daughter of a rancher and a narcissistic actress who has worked through personal problems to become a skilled farrier, and who now lives and works in Oregon, where she's engaged to chef and foodie Guy. In Dead Blow, Rainy is hoping to get a new account at the ranch of Donna Chevigny, who has just become a widow; her husband Cameron (who had a roving eye) died recently after his tractor tilted and then rolled over him, an event originally considered an accident. As she helps Donna get her horses shod, Rainy finds an odd aluminum shoe on the land where Cameron died, and then Donna's goofy dog turns up a riding glove with a human hand in it. Soon a police officer named Melinda Kellan is sniffing outside Rainy and Guy's door, wondering if Rainy was one of Cameron Chevigny's conquests, and if she had anything to do with Cam's death. And then there's the crazy bull, Dragoon, who's on rangeland bordering the ranch. If Cam's death wasn't an accident, how did someone get past the bull?

I still like Rainy and her unorthodox narration and ways, but I have to admit this was not as compelling as the first book, where her history is peeled back little by little to show you why she is as she is. So while I still enjoyed the mystery, there was a little less meat to the characterization. In fact, she seems to have become more "country" since the original book. The mystery is reasonably perplexing, and you get a lot of the feel for ranching people rather than the urban Oregon denizens you usually see in the media, and of course there's Rainy's wry, often amusing commentary, which is a big plus to the narrative.

book icon  About Time: The Unauthorized Guide to Doctor Who, 2008-2009, Series 4, the 2009 Specials, Tat Wood and Dorothy Ail
This covers the rest of David Tennant's tenure as Doctor #10 including the three "gap year" extended episodes, his appearance on the BBC "proms" concert, and even his guest appearance on The Sarah Jane Adventures, from "Partners in Crime" wherein the Doctor is reunited with runaway bride Donna Noble, to "The End of Time." As always, Wood and Ail supply a summary, a cast list and where you've seen the guest performers, the ratings, notes upon filming, and then long, long notes about episode events, inconsistencies, questions, etc. It's the most thorough dissection of Who ever, and each chapter also contains an essay about questions raised by the series and by individual episodes, like "What Constitutes a Fixed Point [in Time]?", "What Happened to UNIT?", "Why Can't Anyone Just Die?",  "What Were the Strangest Online Theories?", and the question that's been on every classic Doctor Who fan's mind for years: "Where's Susan?"

For the devoted Doctor Who fan, perhaps not always, but you definitely have to be interested in the series and know its past and its stories to truly appreciate these books.

book icon  The Secret Life of Movies, Simon Brew
A chill-out summer-read of a book about Easter eggs and other trivia about movie scenes. Was the big shocker in the Star Wars franchise hiding in plain sight? Sure was. In The Winter Soldier, what events did Steve Rogers miss while he was out of circulation? Depends on what country you watched the film in. What films were pioneers in CGI? The results may surprise you. What's the clue to the theme of Inside Out? Watch the physical features of the emotional characters!

There are interesting (and sometimes not so interesting) tidbits like that for films that range from the silent era all the way to Bohemian Rhapsody. Along the way you'll discover the story of a piece of rare artwork that turned up as a set decoration in a family film, what films surreptitiously photographed at places they weren't supposed to, the rather extensive changes a Disney animated film incurred before release, how a popular crime film features a Christ figure, how a spectacular action shot in the early war film Hell's Angels was filmed, and more.

Most of the info is taken from websites, so if you're a movie geek and particularly read many sites that feature this type of info, you'll probably know all these. Otherwise, it's a relaxing way to kill an afternoon.

Note to the publisher: Enjoyed the colorful look of the pages! But the ones with black type on dark purple backgrounds? Uh...no.

book icon  One Giant Leap, Charles Fishman
I missed reading this one in July because James bought it and had to finish it first, so it was at the tail-end of my other reading and I wondered what it might have to say that the other seven nonfiction books about the space program that I read last month didn't.

Surprisingly, I didn't find it all that repetitive. One chapter, for instance, delves into the "fourth crew member" of the Apollo missions, the spacecraft computer. There was nothing like it at that time: other computers were no smaller than refrigerators and took punch cards to program them. The Apollo computer was a new small design about the size of a big suitcase, and it took commands through keys punched and buttons that told the computer whether the operation was a "noun" or a "verb." He devotes another chapter to Bill Tindall, the man who thought of everything that could go wrong and then challenged the software and hardware people to make certain the astronauts could recover from all of those errors, in big long memos known to NASA as "Tindallgrams." Yet another chapter addresses the long debate about how to get to the moon and the final decision to use lunar orbit rendezvous, and a fourth talks about the decision to put the American flag on the moon (an idea very contested back then). But most of all Fishman talks about the "cost" of the space program, and how, based on what was budgeted for other things, it really cost very little and brought some startling developments to technology that we still benefit from today. If you use a cell phone, get satellite television, use a personal computer, depend on GPS, and many other technologies, you are using devices that were born from all the research put in and the technology developed for the moon landing.

Very much worth reading "yet another moon book."

book icon  Where the Lost Dogs Go, Susannah Charleson
In Scent of the Missing, Charleson told us of working with search and rescue dogs, including the training of her own dog Puzzle, a Golden retriever, and in The Possibility Dogs, we learned about her mission to turn shelter rescues into therapy dogs for anxiety sufferers. In this newest book, urged on by her father, Charleson adopts a sick, bedraggled Maltese dog before he's euthanized, and in trying to find little Ace's original owner, she delves into the world of lost pets: how your totally predictable dog may become unpredictable once thrust into unfamiliar situations, strategies for finding lost dogs, and her own stories of searching for, and mostly finding, missing animals.

Along the way, Charleson also tells us the story of her childhood with two parents who were loving of her and raised her to respect and love animals and abused or lost children, but who were both emotionally unstable. They moved house often to get away from debts, her mother suffered from panic attacks, her father was chronically insecure. She parallels her stories of growing up with her search for Ace's past, for it is obvious after a week that he was once a well-loved pet, probably owned by an elderly person, and her present-day dealings with both her parents, now divorced but still fiercely devoted to the saving of stray animals.

There's a nice balance of animal stories, biography, and "how to" in this book that I really enjoyed. A few other reviews said they wished there had not been so much of her past personal stuff and more about lost animals, but I enjoyed understanding what gives Charleson her drive to find the missing, whether human or animal, and see the past events that brought her to her present. Warning: there are many times you will tear up during this book. Have tissues handy.

book icon  Off the Map: The Curious Histories of Place Names, Derek Nelson
I picked up this slim volume at the library book sale because I've always loved maps and dreamed about being a cartographer (among other things) when I was a kid. Place names are fascinating. Some are just plain: Johnstown or Johnston, of course, was founded by someone named John; some are named by where they are (Avonlea = a "lea" is a meadown, so Avonlea is the meadow by the river Avon), and some get very descriptive. Take Dublin, Ireland: its full name is Baile Atha Cliath Dubh Lind or "town on the ford of hurdles on the black water"—the hurdles were wooden boards put in the river to help cattle cross. Some names are even insults! Inuits prefer being called that instead of "Eskimos" because the latter is an Algonquin pejorative for the tribe. The Sioux tribe prefers their own name, "Dakotah," because rival tribes called them "Nadowessioux": "little snakes"! The Mohawks called the Adirondak tribes "Hatirontaks," or "they eat trees," an insult that meant they were terrible hunters.

Nelson relays these facts and more, about explorers giving one place a name which already has another name (or places like the Falkland Islands, which is known as that by the British, but another by the Spanish) and the naming of places yet to be explored. An interesting little volume if you have a hankering for geography or names.

book icon  Saving Jemima: Life and Love with a Hard-Luck Jay, Julie Zickefoose
This book made me cry.

Zickefoose, a licensed bird rehabilitator and artist, had always wanted to raise a baby blue jay. When one was found, dehydrated and near death, under a tree, Zickefoose and her family (husband Bill, daughter Phoebe, and son Liam) pitch in to save the little mite, who has an infection contracted in the egg. Once little Jemima begins getting well, she becomes a part of the family. The Zickefooses allows Jemima to see birds like herself every day, but pretty much raise her like a tame bird rather than trying to deliberately avoid having her tainted by human contact: she interacts with the kids, teases the family dog, flies around rooms and perches on furniture. In return the family learns how really intelligent a blue jay is. But they always raise her with the intention of freeing her to the wild once she learns how to survive outside.

Life isn't always kind to Jemima: she contracts a second illness about the time she's being prepped for going into the wild, and Zickefoose must figure out how to medicate her without throwing off her timeline. One day she turns up bald! But the days are coming closer when Jemima must migrate or prepare to endure a long Ohio winter.

This is a book filled with love without being sloppily sentimental. The Zickefooses obviously adore Jemima, but want her to live a wild life. They all endure trials before their avian charge is free, including the breaking up of Julie and Bill's marriage. On their journey you will learn much about blue jays (and other birds) and their habits, and how one rehabilitates a wild creature. The book is liberally illustrated with photographs as well as Julie's lovely pieces of artwork that begin each chapter. Recommended for any animal lover, but warning that there are bird deaths/having to put sick birds down in the volume.

book icon  To Be a Logger, Lois Lenski
As the book opens, Little Joe wants, as he always had, "calk boots" like his logger dad; as he grows to be twelve and called "Joel," he still wants to be a logger more than anything. His dad begins taking him on the job in the forests of Oregon, where he and his companions work in a National Forest, but are often at odds with the forest rangers—the loggers think they know the forests better than the college-educated men running the tree harvests. The book chronicles Joel's (and his little sister Jinx's) adventures in the Oregon woods, where various experiences make Joel question his plans for the future. And then a disaster happens to his family.

Lenski has always done her best to describe in her books the occupations of the parents of the children who are her protagonists, but I find she almost does too much description in this, the next-to-last of her regional volumes. Some pages are nothing but chronicling how "Big Joe" Bartlett and his fellow workers operate construction equipment. It gets a bit tiresome. Better are the passages where Joel wrestles with his love of nature vs. his love of machinery, and his reaction when a fearsome thing happens to him. Jinx, his mischievous sister, also adds some levity to the story: she runs away from a chore, and does other funny things that liven up the text. The next-to-last chapter is a big commercial for the Forest Service, just like a mid-1960s Lassie episode.

31 July 2012

Books Finished Since July 1

book icon  That's Not in My American History Book, Thomas Ayres
This is a collection of essays about the myths that still surround events in American history despite efforts to quell them, the most obvious being "facts" like the people of Columbus' time not knowing that the world was round, that Charles Lindbergh was the first person to fly the Atlantic, that the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, Paul Revere finished his famous ride, etc. If you're already up-to-date on these "mythconceptions," you'll learn about the original fourteenth state (it wasn't Vermont), an "aeronaut" before the Wright Brothers, an interesting theory about Pocahontas, all about Benedict Arnold and why he might have been driven to becoming a traitor, and more.

Unfortunately reviews have pointed out that several of Ayres' "facts" are untrue, including the story of "Taps," but, as with all historical trivia books, this one should just be a springboard to delve more deeply into a subject rather than taking the statements automatically at face value. This book has merit just for pointing out that there is more to American history than white men making it all happen: many cowboys (and some cavalry troops) were African-American and Native American, there were women who worked behind the scenes in all wars (and they weren't just doing laundry and rolling bandages, etc.).

book icon  The Helene Hanff Omnibus: Underfoot in Show Business, 84 Charing Cross Road, The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street, Apple of My Eye, Q's Legacy, Helene Hanff
More years ago than I would care to remember, a little book became a big best seller, Helene Hanff's 84, Charing Cross road, the epistolary tale of Hanff's friendship with the employees of a London bookshop. She later wrote a sequel in which she finally got to visit England, but, in the way of things, I never got around to buying it. When a friend read Charing Cross for the first time, it reminded me I had never found the sequel. Via Amazon Marketplace, however, I came upon a bargain: both of the books, plus three other of Hanff's books in an omnibus edition. So after refreshing myself in the original, I then finally read the sequel with a grin of delight on my face as Helene meets some of the people she wrote to all those years and got to complete most of her dreams of seeing what was her magical world: literary England. The other books are just as much fun: Underfoot is the tale of how she tried to become a playwright and ended up writing for television; Apple is the story of her odyssey around her home town of New York City with a friend while writing a tour book; and Q's Legacy brings Helene's story full circle. "Q" was Sir Arthur Quiller Couch, whose books on writing and literature Hanff devoured as her own education when she was unable to finish college. It was in looking for the books recommended by "Q" that eventually drove Hanff to correspond with Marks & Co of 84, Charing Cross Road. If you enjoyed her original book, with all of her opinionated commentary, you'll probably love them all. A bonus for Hanff lovers!

Incidentally, the bookseller I bought this omnibus volume from was, you guessed it, English, which I found very fitting!

book icon  Happier at Home, Gretchen Rubin
This is Rubin's sequel to The Happiness Project, which I enjoyed last year despite the annoyed reviews asking "she's rich, why should she be unhappy?" which was the point of the book: Rubin knew she had a good life, but she was still unhappy. Knowing the only person she could change was herself, she was determined to improve her attitude.

This newest book is not as dense as the previous book, but serves as a follow-on to what has already been accomplished. Knowing her home is the most important thing to her, Rubin works on improving her happiness in and with her home starting in September as her children's school year begins and ending in May. Again, Rubin uses what works for her: putting more emphasis on improving communications with her family and her children, making special places in her home (even if they are only small corners), to not procrastinate and even do things that make her unhappy to ensure happiness in the future. Again, Rubin's way is not your own, and by using her rules as suggestions, you can tailor for yourself.

I liked the previous book better, but this has some useful tips as well. The most important one: Be Yourself.

book icon  The Ultimate Dog Lover, edited by Marty Becker
A "Chicken Soup for the Soul"-type volume (even the design is similar) of heartwarming true tales about dogs along with photographs and some training and upbringing tips. I bought mine as a remainder book and for that price it was worthwhile. A nice before-bed book for dog lovers.

book icon  Still Life With Chickens, Catherine Goldhammer
When Goldhammer went through a traumatic divorce, she found she could no longer stay in a family home full of memories. So she bought a small house by the seashore which was definitely a "fixer-upper" (some portions, like the kitchen, required gutting), along with her flamboyant teenage daughter who declared that she wouldn't move unless they could buy some chickens. To appease her daughter and her own guilt about making the child move away from her friends, Goldhammer buys an incubator and raises six chickens from birth, discovering that she gets more solace from caring for the flock than anything else in her life.

Part bucolic memoir and part coping strategy, this is a short, introspective book in the Eat, Pray, Love vein. I enjoyed it while I was reading it, but must admit it's not my usual genre, and I was glad I bought it from a remainder table. YMMV.

book icon  America's Hidden History, Kenneth C. Davis
After penning his bestsellers Don't Know Much about History and Don't Know Much about Geography, Davis completed this more-focused book about events beginning with the colonization of what became the United States through the Constitutional Convention. Subjects include King Philip's War and other conflicts between the Puritans and the Native Americans, George Washington's early career, the story of the first colony in America (not St. Augustine!), the story of Dr. Joseph Warren (whose pivotal role in the Revolutionary War is little remembered today), and more.

Some reviewers seemed disappointed by the fact that this book was not labeled more heavily as being about only the colonial period. The cover is indeed not clear about this, but by reading a description of the book this became understood, so I don't understand what the problem was. I don't read many books about this era and found this quite enjoyable since it doesn't dwell on the usual facts, although I was amused by this unfortunate typo about our first President: "...young George Washington gained entree [sic] into...most powerful families..." Well, I'm glad he was fed!

book icon  Holmes of the Movies, David Stuart Davies
This is an out-of-date, but informative British book about the portrayal of Sherlock Holmes in films, peppered liberally with photographs. It begins with the silent films and spends some time on the three portrayals of Holmes that the author finds the most notable: Arthur Wontner, Basil Rathbone (even if Nigel Bruce had to portray Watson as an ass), and Peter Cushing (despite the fact he was too short to be Holmes). The final film mentioned is the not-yet-premiered The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, which, after my vaguely remembering viewing of the Rathbone movies at a young age, was my true first introduction to the Great Detective. Isn't coincidence fun?

book icon  Rattle His Bones, Carola Dunn
For Daisy Dalrymple, it's just another day at work: she's doing a story on the new exhibition of dinosaur bones at the Museum of Natural History, although this particular outing has a holiday air as she is taking her nephew Derek and her future stepdaughter Belinda Fletcher to see the exhibit. Daisy is in the middle of an interview when a shout of pain interrupts her: one of the more unpleasant members of the staff has been killed, impaled on dinosaur bones.

It's the usual pattern in this eighth Daisy mystery, as she's embroiled directly in the case, to Inspector Alec Fletcher's dismay. The prologue lets us in on another crime in progress at the museum, so the stakes are higher than most. It's also fun to have an opportunity to wander around (even in literary form) inside an old-fashioned museum, not the bright glass-and-metal of the present, but one with polished dark wood display cases with brass trimmings, and envision the day when dinosaur theory was still very new. There's a large cast of characters, so lots of opportunity for red herrings. A nice solid entry in the series.

book icon  All My Patients Have Tales, Jeff Wells, DVM
I've been addicted to veterinarian books since James Herriot appeared upon the scene, so it was a natural that I was going to snap up this one at an opportune financial moment. It's the pleasant story of Wells' training in South Dakota and practice in Colorado, and his work with both large and small animals—and after reading Nick Trout's memoir I was happy to see there wasn't a sign of snark!

I'm not sure what else I can say about this book. It's a nice read that lovers of veterinarian stories and animals will probably enjoy. It offers a good look into the routine, emergencies, and sacrifices of a vet's life. There's some funny sequences with some of the animals—how about a pig named "Bacon" and a cow chase? I guess my "problem" with other vet books besides Herriot's is that he wasn't only telling stories about his practice, but was telling us about a now-vanished way of life and vet practice among the Yorkshire Dales, using now outmoded medicines and creaky transport, and dealing with farmers working in a traditional lifestyle. Somehow our protagonist watching television and driving a pickup truck doesn't have the same poetry. :-)

book icon  The Winter of the Red Snow, Kristiana Gregory
The Stewart family lives near Valley Forge and witnesses the terrible wintering of General George Washington's troops during the Revolutionary War. They help as best they can, offering supplies and assistance, and Abigail and her older sister help their mother do the laundry for Washington and his officers, as well as sewing shirts and knitting scarves and mittens for the soldiers who are perishing with cold and disease.

As always in the "Dear America" series, some of the books work for me and some don't. Winter is not a bad book, and there are some terrible truths that Abigail learns (the executions for deserters, for example, and the fact that not all Tories are demons as the propaganda of the time would have had them believe) that take the story beyond a children's history look at the winter of 1777, but I found the story strangely lifeless. The family and their friends never came truly alive for me.

book icon  97 Orchard: An Edible History of Five Immigrant Families in One New York Tenement, Jane Ziegelman
This is a combination of ethnic history that can't be beat: the story of a Lower East Side New York City tenement house through the five ethnic groups that resided in the building between 1863 and 1935, how they worked and occasionally played, and the foods they ate, and how these foods entered the American way of life, from bagels to spaghetti. 97 Orchard was originally built for a German family in what was then a German neighborhood. It then by turns provided a home to Irish, German Jewish, Russian Jewish, and finally Italian families. Recipes from the era are liberally scattered through the text as Ziegelman examines the changes wrought by time and assimilation. A great read!

Incidentally, 97 Orchard Street is now the New York Tenement Museum.

book icon  The Storm Makers, Jennifer E. Smith
It all starts when Ruby McDuff sees the strange man in the family barn. The McDuffs have living in the country for a year now, so that Ruby's dad can pursue his dream to be an inventor and her Mom an artist. Next her recently moody twin brother Simon shorts out the toaster by just touching it. And then when Ruby confronts the stranger she saw in the barn, he tells her that Simon is a Storm Maker, one of an elite group of people who can manipulate the weather. But a rogue Storm Maker is planning to get his hands on Simon, to take charge of the world's weather his own way.

It's the old story: children help defeat evil, but it's not a bad spin on the genre. Ruby must keep her brother from being used by the twisted Rupert London, helped by her stranger from the barn, Otis Gray, a man with a secret, and Daisy, the town mechanic. There are a lot of Wizard of Oz riffs in the story that work well with the weather theme, and Ruby and Simon have a nice sibling relationship, not nasty enough to be off-putting, but not perfect, cloyingly supportive siblings, either. The Storm Makers are almost plausible enough to be real, and the adults as a whole are not plaster saints, but not totally profane: even the main villain has a tender spot. This would be great for read-aloud.

book icon  The Poisoner's Handbook, Deborah Blum
This is another book that I picked up from a remainder table because it looked interesting, but didn't know if I was going to enjoy, but bought because it was cheap. This book would have been worth full price—it's absolutely fabulous. It's the story of the birth of forensic medicine in New York City starting in 1915 when the city hired its first trained medical examiner, Charles Norris (previously the medical examiner was a political appointee and a drunken sot), through his death in the 1930s when his associates have formed a solid forensic team. Norris worked long into the night to learn to detect poisons even in their minutest quantity and often spent his own money on supplies and equipment. The chapters chronicle different poisons from chloroform to heavy metals, the crimes committed with these poisons, and how Norris and his team learned to detect them.

Possibly the most horrifying passages of this book involve how the Federal Government poisoned any number of people during Prohibition by adding additives like gasoline to liquor to keep people from drinking. As someone whose grandparents still made wine during Prohibition and has heard jokes about "bathtub gin," it's mind-blowing how many people died from drinking tainted alcohol and how the government was culpable. Prohibition did nothing to stop drinking and alcoholism and actually created organized crime as we know it today.

Blum writes easily and informatively about all these subjects. It's all enthralling if occasionally uncomfortable. Don't read this during dinner or if you're sensitive to descriptions of dead or diseased bodies. Super nonfiction for historical or medical fans.

book icon  13 Little Blue Envelopes, Maureen Johnson
I found the premise of this book intriguing: a teenage girl who has lived a mostly sheltered life receives a set of blue envelopes from her recently deceased, free-spirited aunt. The first envelope instructs her to pack a backpack and go to the airport, the first step on a trip to Europe. In the process, Ginny will learn more about life, love and living large.

Well, that was the theory, anyway. As much of a devotee as I am of Auntie Mame and although weekly on his radio show Rick Steves and his guests assure me that Europe isn't dangerous, the idea of sending a rather naive seventeen-year-old girl off to Europe to discover life with nothing but a backpack and an ATM card rather horrifies me. If Ginny had been a more adventurous type maybe I would have felt differently, but she's really rather a dull heroine who basically develops a crush on the first guy she meets in Europe while she's learning about her aunt's interesting life. (Frankly, I would have preferred reading a book about the aunt.) I got the sequel to this book as a free e-book and that relieves me, since I'd like to find out what happened to a certain item that has vanished by book's end, but not enough to pay for another "adventure" of this kind. If this is female adolescent "chick lit," I know why I never read any of it at that age. I much preferred books about the space program!

book icon  The Broken Lands, Kate Milford
This is Milford's exciting prequel to The Boneshaker, taking place chiefly on Coney Island during the era in which the Brooklyn Bridge is being completed. When two evil entities, Walker and Bones, arrive in New York City, it is the crossroads of power situated there that they are setting greedy eyes on. If they can overcome the five guardians of the city, they can turn it over to Jack Hellcoal, the man who once beat the Devil at his own game. Into the mix of Tom Guyot, the African-American man who once defeated Jack, various Coney Island denizens, and real-life journalist/writer Ambrose Bierce come Sam, a young card sharp whose father died working in the cassions of the bridge, and Jin, a Chinese girl apprenticed to a fireworks master. It will take them all, and more, to defeat Walker and Bones

This is an exciting, suspenseful, and sometimes truly scary young adult novel that can be read by all ages with pleasure. Milford paints a vivid portrait of young Coney Island before the arrival of the amusement parks in an era still reeling from Reconstruction and recession, and of the great bridge that will bring changes to both Manhattan and Brooklyn. You come to care about Sam, Jin, and their companions as they protect the city they love in a story that's a little bit Bradbury and a little bit Seven Faces of Dr. Lao. A definite keeper!

31 July 2009

Books Finished Since July 1

• Spring Forward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Saving Time, Michael Downing
As an avowed hater of DST, I picked up this volume hoping it would enlighten me on the logical reasons for the practice. The most I knew before reading this book was that DST was instituted during World War I to extend working time in the war plants, that it was rescinded after the war, then returned for the next. How surprising to find out that the threat of DST came even earlier, that it has been contentious for years, with even communities and buildings disagreeing about it, and that it was once blamed on farmers—when farmers hate the practice. Downing keeps you reeling as the the fight goes back and forth and back again. If you are interested in the history of DST, you might find this interesting.

• The Unscratchables, Cornelius Kane
Max "Crusher" McNash is a hard-bitten veteran police officer whose investigation of what looks like a gangland killing arouses the attention of the FBI due to the crime's improbable suspect. The Feds send philosophical, well-dressed Cassius Lap to investigate. Can McNash trust Lap, since he suspects the agent may have sympathies with the killer? And can he trust himself not to grab Lap in his jaws and shake him like a bull terrier shakes a rat?

Jaws? Of course. In this spoof of pulp detective novels, McNash (a bull terrier) lives in the Kennels, the world of dogs (his boss is a German Shepherd and his partner is a borzoi; one of the perps is a whippet and the victims are Rottweilers) and Lap is a Siamese cat, from the feline refuge of Kathattan. I've never been a fan of crime noir, film or book, and I confess the private eye slang was wearying at first. But as I got absorbed in the plot, the characters, and the spoof of human foibles, I began to enjoy it, especially when a Hannibal Lector-like character was introduced (a cat, of course)--a thoroughly delightful homage! And like all the best "shaggy dog" stories, this one even ends appropriately! If you enjoy offbeat fiction, this one's definitely for you.

• The Blackstone Key, Rose Melikan
I've been reading a good deal of these types of novels lately, ranging from the time of the French Revolution to Victorian times, from the romantic romps of the Pink Carnation to the tales of Liberty Lane, Emily Ashton and Lady Julia Grey and have become very familiar with the spunky, well-educated-for-a-woman-of-the-time protagonist who becomes involved in dark doings. At first glance, Key is of that breed.

But heroine Mary Finch is not. While she is intelligent and shows unexpected strengths, she is more timid than the usual heroines of these books and makes several mistakes right until the end of the story. Her spunk is of a milder sort, and so is the story, which spends its own sweet time meandering to the climax as you get a portrait of 18th century life and the intrigues of French spies in England during the latter part of the Revolution through the Napoleonic Wars through the eyes of a young teacher. I found the characters interesting and enjoyed Mary, Captain Robert Holland, Paul Duprez, and the supporting players on both sides, but the story is very slow-moving. People who favor livelier fare will probably not be satisfied by the novel.

• The Counterfeit Guest, Rose Melikan
Now an heiress and living at her late uncle's estate White Ladies with two of her fellow teachers as chaperones, Mary Finch is asked to undertake a clandestine mission: observe Colonel Crosby-Nash, suspected of being a traitor. Since the colonel is married to Mary's friend Susannah Armitage (cousin to Captain Robert Holland, whose acquaintance Mary made in The Blackstone Key), it is fairly easy for Mary to keep tabs on him, and even receive an invitation to their country house. In the meantime Captain Holland, who has abruptly broken off his growing relationship with Mary, finds himself battling internal conflict in the Army, bred by instigating spies who use suggestion and broadsides to spread their revolutionary aims. Eventually Mary's mission and Holland's will mesh, posing danger for both of them.

Mary has become a bit less naive in this second novel, although she is certainly shyer than similar heroines like Liberty Lane and the "Pink Carnation" ladies, and her spying mission takes a certain nerve--there are several tense moments that are quite breathtaking. Holland, too, sees more action in this second novel, including a foray into preventing an explosive situation, accompanied by his faithful batsman Drake. The suspense builds nicely, but slowly, in the manner of 19th century novels of this genre. If you like nonstop action, this is not the novel for you.

We also learn more about Mary's new life and Holland's past, and that certain "wise" decisions don't always work out that way.

I found this novel thoroughly enjoyable and am looking forward to Melikan's sequel.

• Planet Dog: A Doglopedia, Harry Choron and Sandra Choron
A great bathroom book! All about man's best friend in short bites: movie dogs, literary dogs, dog shows, dog books, people in dog history, dogs in people history, and other lists. Much fun if you are a dog lover.

• Tell Me, Pretty Maiden, Rhys Bowen
After living hand-to-mouth for so long, Irish transplant Molly Murphy has her hands full in turn of the century New York City: she's following one man to see if he is a good marriage prospect, and accepts two other puzzling cases: the disappearance of a rich college boy who has been accused of a heinous murder and the haunting of a Broadway theatre where a slightly long-in-the-tooth actress is making a comeback. If that isn't all, Molly and her beau Daniel, still on suspension from the New York police force, stumble over a nearly frozen young woman in Central Park, clad only in a light dress and dancing slippers, one who can not even utter her own name. As Molly hops from theatre to street to Yale and back again, the facets of each mystery only become more perplexing. A dandy period mystery starring a feisty heroine.

• Rhode Island: A Guide to the Smallest State
What a great history of Rhode Island; I learned more from this volume than I ever did about the history of the state in school. It makes one want to grab the book and go back to see all these sites—that is, if most of them are there any longer. For this is the 1937 WPA guide to the state, a fascinating combination of history, survey, Native American portrait, and Baedeker, with "auto tours" along the main roads...which, of course, were the secondary roads of my own childhood. So many things aren't there anymore: the numerous fabric mills, the ferries that existed before the bridges, and historical buildings destroyed by neglect, time, and progress. The saddest part of this book: a photo of Napatree Point (in a photo insert six pages after page 396). One year later all 22 homes were wiped out in the Hurricane of 1938.

Read the whole book (and see the photo) here.

• Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World, Vicki Myron
In 1988, on a freezing winter night, a small orange kitten was left in the book drop in the Spencer, Iowa, library. Rescued by Vicki Myron and her fellow librarians, Dewey became not only a library fixture, but a minor celebrity after his story was told in magazines like Country.

This is such a good-natured little book about a small farming town and the people who were enriched Dewey's companionship, I hate to say anything negative about it, but it was not as good as Marley and Me or Wesley the Owl or Flyaway. Some understanding of the author's personal life and of the town of Spencer is necessary to the story, but there was almost too much biographical information about Myron herself and not enough stories about the cat. I'm glad I met Dewey, and his human friends, but I can't say I was really overwhelmed by the narrative.

• A Fatal Waltz, Tasha Alexander
I read this one in a whole "gulp." It is the third in Alexander's series about Emily Ashton, a well-bred Victorian lady whose interests also run to Greek antiquities and drinking port rather than sherry after dinner like a "normal" woman of the time. Emily is attending a house party at the request of her best friend Ivy, even though she would rather avoid the owner of the house, the sarcastic, vindictive Lord Fortescue, who would prefer that Emily not marry her fiance Colin Hargreaves. Before the weekend is over, Fortescue is murdered and Ivy's husband Robert accused of the crime. Before the book is over, in her search for justice for Robert, Emily will be threatened by Fortescue's colleague, visit Vienna and become involved with anarchists, and worry over Colin's being reunited with his old lover, now an Austrian countess and still determined to get Colin back despite being married. The suspense builds until one must keep turning the pages or wonder just what happens next.

• Consequences of Sin, Clare Langley-Hawthorne
I'm pretty sure this story was recommended by Dani on "A Work in Progress"; I was lucky enough to find it in the bargain bin in Borders at some point. Ursula Marlow is the privileged daughter of a self-made, now wealthy, factory owner, in England in 1910, but is beginning to break out of the straitlaced role of women in that era: having attended Oxford, instead of preparing for marriage as her father wishes, she is helping in the suffragette movement along with a newfound friend, Winifred Stanford-Jones. Then "Freddie" telephones her early one morning with the horrifying news that her lover, Laura, has been murdered in their bed, after they were seen quarreling at a risque club. Ursula asks her father's adviser, Lord Wrotham, to help defend Winifred, but she has no idea when she does so that she is about to discover an ugly family secret and not only put her reputation in danger, but her life.

I enjoyed this book, even if the lead characters are the usual lovely, intelligent but a bit naive young woman, and the handsome, enigmatic and troubled slightly older man (I mean, honestly, don't any ordinary people ever solve mysteries?). Ursula's upbringing causes her to make errors which may irritate some, but seem natural for the time. It's an easy read, and I'm looking forward to finding the sequel, although it appears to take place mostly in Egypt; I would have preferred pre-war England.

• Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol: The Making of the First Animated Television Christmas Special, Darryl Von Citters
This book is reviewed in July's "Rudolph Day" post in Holiday Harbour.

• A Duty to the Dead, Charles Todd
Bess Crawford, daughter of a British Army officer and a nurse serving aboard the hospital ship Britannic, is invalided home after the ship is torpedoed and her arm is broken. This gives her the chance to fulfill a soldier's dying wish; Arthur Graham's cryptic deathbed message is to be delivered directly--no letters will do--to his brother Jonathan: "Tell Jonathan I lied. I did it for Mother's sake. But it has to be set right." Bess' letter to the family results in an invitation to the Graham home, but to her surprise, there is no reaction when she delivers the message. Jonathan and Mrs. Graham even question if Arthur was in pain or drugged when he said it. But the longer Bess remains in the Graham home, the more questions begin to arise: what did the message mean and why was it so important to Arthur but not to his family? How did Arthur's oldest brother Peregrine become confined to an insane asylum when he was only fourteen? And when Bess is called on to nurse Peregrine through a bout of pneumonia, why isn't he the dimwitted man he has been described to be?

I really enjoyed reading this book and finished it in one long session. Since I have read similar books taking place during or concerning nursing sisters of WWI, most of which have been mentioned here (Anne Perry's WWI mysteries, the Maisie Dobbs stories, Gifts of War), the subject was of interest to me, and I liked this the most except for the Maisie Dobbs novels. Bess is one of the strong women that emerged at the time of the war, no longer willing to be treated as sweet flowers who were rewards to men. If I have one quibble with the book it is that I would have liked more descriptions of Bess and of some of the supporting characters, but perhaps the author did so on purpose so we could imagine Bess as we wanted her to be. Also, a certain amount of coincidence creeps into the story: how convenient that someone should be sick just as Bess was visiting, or the fact that the minister so willingly offers Bess the late vicar's journals to read. However, these small things did nothing to deter my enjoyment of the novel. I will be interested to read more about this character.

• Cesar's Way, Cesar Millan
Millan, the host of The Dog Whisper, explains his dog psychology methods. If you're a dog owner or lover, you will find this quite interesting.

• A Dangerous Affair, Caro Peacock
Liberty Lane, the independent heroine of Peacock's A Foreign Affair, has set herself up as a music teacher to support herself and is living in genteel poverty in an old mews with an older woman as chaperone, and faithful Amos Legge works nearby in a stable caring for horses including Liberty's mare, Esperance. One morning as she is riding "Rancie," she is overtaken by Benjamin Disraeli, who asks her to look into a flamboyant ballerina named Columbine. Liberty reluctantly does so, just as Columbine is murdered and a country girl, Jenny Jarvis, is accused of her murder. To complicate matters, Liberty's best friend, musician Daniel Suter, has fallen deeply in love with Jenny. As always fired against any injustice, Liberty is determined to find Columbine's murderer.

This is a more traditional-type 19th century murder mystery, as opposed to the politically charged conundrum of the first novel, with suspects including Columbine's co-stars, her wealthy gentleman friend, and even her French dresser. In the meantime Liberty faces the loss of her living space, of her beautiful mare, and even her best friend. Due to its more conventional plot, I didn't find this story as compelling as the first, but it was enjoyable nevertheless due to the presence of Liberty and her companions.

• Tears of Pearl, Tasha Alexander
I was so delighted when this fourth installment of the Lady Emily mystery stories turned up as one of the available books in Amazon Vine! I read it the moment it arrived in the mail and was quite taken by the setting: 19th century Constantinople. Alexander describes the area so well that I felt like I was in the bazaars and the different palaces, could smell the spices and see the intricate tilework, and feel the chop of the Bosphorus.

Emily and her new husband, the dashing spy Colin Hargreaves, have no sooner arrived in their honeymoon setting when a young woman from the Sultan's harem is murdered. The girl turns out to be the long-lost daughter of Richard St. Clare, employee at the English embassy. St. Clare, who seems to have ruined his health, and perhaps his sanity, in searching for the girl all these years, is determined to find out who killed her. It becomes Emily's task then, since Colin cannot do so, to infiltrate the harem and see if she was under threat in any way. But she cannot know the political machinations she will need to circumvent and understand to finally solve the mystery.

I felt that the actual perpetrator of the crime was a little obvious and that, at least for me, Emily and Colin's cooing over each other got a bit much (but they were on their honeymoon, after all). I believe I liked the characters in the previous novel a bit more. But the setting and mystery nicely overshadow these slight shortcomings. I can't wait to see what this pair tackles next.

16 November 2008

Books Read Since September 23

• Re-read: Friday, Robert Heinlein
I'm sorry, I like this book. Yeah, Heinlein was obsessed in his later years with sex, especially young, always sexually receptive women, and Friday is definitely that, but I see the story as a young woman looking for a home. Embarked on a series of truly "picaresque" adventures, as my junior-high English teachers would have categorized them, Friday, an "artificial person" raised to think of herself as less than human and a special operative for a mysterious organization run by an elderly man known as "Boss," loses a family but finally gains another as she avoids one danger after the other.

• Cornelia and the Audacious Escapades of the Somerset Sisters, Lesley M.M. Blume
I don't know what to say about this book: the summary, about a girl whose pianist mother overshadows her life and who finds a friend in an elderly neighbor who traveled the world as a young woman sounded delightful. And truly, the story of Cornelia, her feelings of inadequacy next to her mother, her friendship with Virginia Somerset and her awakening sense of self-esteem is delightful. I was less delighted with Virginia's stories—they all seemed to be about four spoiled sisters who went into foreign places where they weren't wanted, although I had to admit the story with two of the sisters' rivalry while taking painting lessons was pretty funny. But for the most part, the sisters' behavior reminded me why so many Europeans label those from the US as "ugly Americans." I guess I'm reading too much into something that's just supposed to be a kids' book.

• Mad for Decades
This is one of two MAD magazine compilations being sold at Barnes & Noble; this is the one with the television and movie spoofs, which includes one of my all-time favorites, "Lizzie the Wonder Dog," a laugh-a-panel spoof of Lassie.

• Deja Demon, Julie Kenner
What's next for Kate Connor, the the supposedly former demon hunter who's now the wife of an respected attorney running for office? She's already adopted a half-crazed elderly demon hunter who helped her when demons invaded her home town, is raising a toddler and a teenage daughter from her previous marriage who knows her profession and who is training at her side, and, oh, yeah, she somehow brought her late husband, whose spirit has been residing in the body of the high school's new gym teacher, back to life, and he naturally wants to be part of his daughter's life. How can Kate fight demons, keep her daughter safe, ignore her love for her ex-husband, and keep her present husband out of the loop—not to mention help make a bunch of Easter baskets for a civic project! Action, tongue-in-cheek dialog, and some interesting relationship questions in this series described as "Buffy the vampire slayer grown up."

• Marley and Me, Josh Grogan
A long time on the bestseller list and now about to be a motion picture, this is the story of the Grogan family and their delightfully loopy golden Labrador, the obedience school dropout. Marley will worm his way into your heart.

• The Adams Chronicles, Jack Shepherd
This is a novelization of the television miniseries, highlighted by numerous engravings, paintings, and documents from the lives of four generations of the Adams family, starting with second President John Adams. I enjoyed it, but it's not light reading.

• The Dance of Time, Michael Judge
This is a short book I picked up on the remainder shelf about the cycle of the year and the holidays and seasonal changes that accompany each month. The prose is lyrical and provides lovely reading, although the information imparted may be a bit thin for some.

• The Tale of Hawthorn House, Susan Wittig Albert
Imagine Beatrix Potter's surprise when she wakes up one morning in the new annex at Hill Top Farm and finds a baby sitting on her doorstep and an elderly woman disappearing over the stone wall! At the same time, young Emily, a servant girl, disappears from her position in order to take a job in London, one less grander than she was led to expect. As care for the child passes on to Dimity Woodcock, the voices of gossip begin spreading in the neighborhood, about Beatrix, Dimity, her brother Captain Woodcock, and the unfortunate Major Kittredge, not to mention baby Flora. In the usual animal subplot, Jemima Puddleduck is wrestling with her attraction to the evil fox who tried to seduce her into a dinner plate. These are charming little whimsical tales; beware if you are a procedurals fan!

• The Daughter of Time, Josephine Tey
This is one of the classics of mystery fiction, and I have to say I quite enjoyed it. Inspector Alan Grant is hospital-bound due to an injury sustained in the line of duty. Bored out of his mind, he is intrigued by the face of a portrait his girlfriend brings him, a sensitive face that turns out to be that of the "murderous" Richard III. With the help of history books and an unassuming American history scholar, Grant sets out to prove who really killed the little princes in the tower. The supporting characters, including Grant's two nurses, are really a plus!

• Death at La Fenice, Donna Leon
This is the first of a series of police procedural mysteries about Commissario Guide Brunetti, who works as a detective in the city of Venice. While he's married to a warm loving wife and has two children, Brunetti's work life is a little more tense: his superior is a rather stupid and very vain and imperious know-it-all. When a famous German conductor is poisoned between acts at a performance at the famed Venice opera house La Fenice, Brunetti's superior is insistent that the crime be solved quickly. But the longer Brunetti investigates the evidence, the more he discovers that the conductor's past was not as exemplary as anyone would like. I had a bit of a struggle to get through this. I enjoyed the characters very much, and the mystery was well-plotted, but I'm just not a police procedural fan.

• A Foreign Affair, Caro Peacock
Just as young princess Victoria inherits the throne from her deceased uncle, a young Englishwoman named Liberty Lane receives a shocking note that her father was killed in a duel in Calais. Knowing that her father abhorred dueling, she travels to Calais to claim the body, only to be swept up in intrigue. Finally Liberty is coerced into "going undercover" as a governess to uncover the activities of Sir Herbert Mandeville. I enjoyed this one a lot, but couldn't help thinking the story was a bit of deja vu, as this is the third novel I've read about pretenders to the throne in two months! My main quibble is that Liberty lives up too much to her name for a 19th century woman...much too much wandering about unescorted, a big no-no for a woman in those days. But I can't help liking a woman who chooses what path she's going to take because of a horse!

• All Shots, Susan Conant
When a mysterious biker shows up on Holly Winter's doorstep looking for Holly Winter, "our" Holly knows he must be looking for the other Holly Winter in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a Holly who loathes dogs. But while "our" Holly is on a mission to find a lost dog, she discovers a murder victim...who's also named Holly Winter. And this Holly looks she might have been involved with something illegal. Frankly, the combination of Hollys make this outing rather confusing.

• The Neandertal Enigma, James Shreeve
Fascinating book about the newest theories about Neandertal man and what happened to them...although much of the book seems to be about feuds between anthropologists and their theories!

25 March 2008

Books Read Since February 27

I seem to have gone through a spate of re-reading before getting back to my stack (which grew in the meantime...LOL).

• Re-read: Especially Dogs, Gladys Taber
My first introduction to Gladys Taber was in this volume which I first found in my junior high school library. I was immediately smitten with Taber's cocker spaniels and Irish setters at her Connecticut home, Stillmeadow. Taber begins her narration with her girlhood setter Timothy and his relationship with her father, only the first amusing touch in this readable dog memoir.

• Re-read: Rose in Bloom, Louisa May Alcott
Having re-read Eight Cousins, could its sequel be far behind? Uncle Alec, Rose, and Phebe, back from two years in Europe in which Phebe took voice lessons, finds the two girls ready to begin their adult lives. Rose chooses to play the butterfly for a while, but is saddened by false friends and troubled by Charlie's new attitude toward her, while Phebe's concert brings her a way to earn a living, but heartache in what could be an inappropriate match. The eight cousins grow up in Alcott style, with a bit of lecturing and some hard lessons.

• Re-read: The Horsemasters, Don Stanford
Tremendously readable book about an American teenager who attends a British "Horsemasters" course in order to get an instructional certificate so she can attend the college of her choice. She finds that caring and riding are harder work that she thought, but not only becomes a good rider, but matures as well. The text sneaks in many facts about horses, riding, and care in whithout being pedantic or boring; the book is a page-turner from beginning to end. Perfect gift for a horse-crazy child who thinks owning a horse is some fairytale vision of galloping in slow motion across flower-strewn fields with no thought to the expense and work needed to keep the animal happy and healthy.

• American Science and Invention: A Pictorial History, Mitchell Wilson
From 1954! Last discussion, predictably, is the atomic bomb. I found the earlier entries more interesting than the modern ones, but that's just me.

• The Encyclopedia of American Radio: An A-Z Guide to Radio from Jack Benny to Howard Stern, Ronald W. Lackman
I have to say I merely skimmed through this, since John Dunning's On the Air is so complete and formidable. The photos are the main draw here.

• Main Street: Best Friends, Ann Martin
Flora and Ruby and their best friends in Camden Falls, Olivia and Nikki, are back in the fourth installment of the Main Street series. Camden Falls' 350th anniversary is approaching and all the girls are involved in preparation for the event, especially Ruby, who is starring in a play her grade is putting on about witch trials that took place in Colonial times. But Olivia is having trouble with the idea that Flora's former best friend, Annika, will be visiting during the celebration: can she ever measure up to Flora's inventive friend? The Main Street books are nice in that they present a child's world without downplaying some of its sadder aspects—an elderly neighbor's wife has Alzheimers and is confined to a rest home; Nikki's dad, who has abandoned the family, is an abusive alcoholic and she lives in fear that he'll return—or realities—Olivia's dad is jobless and her family will be opening a store; a neighbor's son has Down syndrome but is eager to make an adult life for himself.

• The Religion Book, Jim Willis
An A-Z listing of the world's religions, religious figures, events, and philosophies. This could have been quite dull, but Willis' style is informative, concise, and touches of humor are scattered throughout. Enjoyable overview.

• Sara and Eleanor, Jan Pottker
Oh, I so wanted to love this book! I have several books about the Roosevelts (both the Hyde Park clan and the Oyster Bay contingent) and Theodore Roosevelt is by far my favorite president. I did enjoy the story of Sara Delano Roosevelt's background and her interesting childhood (as a little girl, she "shipped to China" on a sailing vessel with her family), not to mention the history of the Delano family and the "color" of some of the historical events, like the visit of King George VI and his wife to the U.S. in the 1930s. I also appreciated a text that did not demonize "Mamá", as Sara Roosevelt has become an antagonist in most texts and media. Eleanor Roosevelt's half of the story, however, reveals nothing new—her sad childhood, her depression and insecurity because of it, her slow rise to independence—and suffers at the expense of the author's efforts to improve Sara Roosevelt's image. In addition to a list of historical errors mentioned in Sylvia Jukes Morris' featured "Washington Post" review on Amazon.com, there is an extremely grievious one: Pottker talks about the events of March 1911, then follows with two paragraphs about the "next month," concerning an oceanic calamity: the sinking of the Titanic! Except the Titanic sank in April *1912*. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy. Does no one edit these books any longer?