Wednesday, June 29, 2022

The Multiverse and Theology

 The Space Between Worlds

    Space Between the Worlds by Micaiah Johnson does sci-fi well. It embodies several elements of well-crafted sci-fi: speculation--what if we could move between multiverses; social commentary--the divide between the haves and the have-nots, what keeps tyrants in power, nature versus nurture; and psychology--what is our responsibility towards others, are we the same person in every world, and why not? However, the story isn't bogged down by these considerations because it's fast-paced and keeps you guessing. Good stuff. 

How God Became King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels

    I have read other books by N. T. Wright and find him consistently annoying. I get a subtext in his writing that no one but Wright correctly interprets scripture. He alone can see things clearly. However, he is a brilliant man and thoughtful theologian. How God Became King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels by N. T. Wright is thought-provoking in a good way. He challenges western Christianity in several ways. First, recognize there is a unity between the Old Testament and the New Testament. Second, as Christians, we serve a Suffering Savior and are called to suffer as we build God's kingdom on earth. Third, as Christians, our purpose is to live and serve God as a church, not merely waiting to be called to heaven. Finally, and, I'm not sure I fully agree with or understand this, Jesus became king surplanting Caesar.

In writing this review, I drew on these resources:

nt-wrights-how-god-became-king

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDWcvGOBOhU

    Reading theology is an excellent challenge to my critical thinking and spiritual development, but it ain't easy!

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Mystery, Firefighters, and Time-travel

The Paris Apartment

    The Paris Apartment by Lucy Foley is an absorbing, suspenseful mystery. Its storyline felt familiar, and it is, but turned on its head. Instead of a girl missing under a suspicious circumstance that needs to be rescued or avenged: eight-great-books-about-women-who-disappear, it is a missing, older half-brother. Foley writes a scrappy, down-on-her-luck half-sister as the dogged pursuer of truth. The book features a luxury apartment with dubious tenants with dark, twisting backstories. So good!

 Things You Save in a Fire


    I was looking for something bright and breezy, and Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center delivered. Cassie Hanwell is an Austin firefighter who has to relocate to an all-male firehouse in the suburbs of Boston. She reluctantly lives with her estranged mother, who left her dad and Cassie on Cassie's sixteenth birthday. Romance is at the center of this book, but it also vibrates around forgiveness and the life of firefighters. It's caused me to spend time thinking about forgiveness: how and why we do it. I love surprises like this: romance novels that have more to them than girl meets boy.

Sea of Tranquility

    A couple of weeks ago, I read The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel and didn't like it. At All. A former bookstore colleague recommended I read Sea of Tranquility by the same author. With great reluctance, I did. It was mind-bending in the best way. Characters from the TGH appeared in SOT in meaningful, intriguing ways. The two books together tell a strange, time-traveling, alternate universe story. Each book stands separately, but together they resonate beautifully. I find Mandel's characters emotionally distant from the reader even when they are the main character, which is a weakness. Still, the themes she wrestles with are masterfully handled. 

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Turtles, Samarais, and Nuns

 Bomb Shelter: Love, Time, and Other Explosives

      Bomb Shelter: Love, Time, and Other Explosives by Mary Laura Philpott is a book of essays that are vulnerable, funny, and timely. Philpott explores life's difficulties--middle of the night 911 calls, Covid--but instead of sinking under the weight of capricious disasters, I came away feeling hopeful. 

The Samurai's Garden

  The Samurai's Garden by Gail Tsukiyama is the historical fiction pick for my book club. It tells the story of a Chinese young man, Stephen, who contracts tuberculosis and is sent by his family to their summer home on the beach in Japan. It is 1938, and Japan has invaded China. Stephen spends a year with the aloof master gardener and caretaker, Matsu, who has always intimidated him. The plot has many unexpected turns making it a quick read. It describes a time in history I don't know much about. I think because Europe and World War II overshadow what happened in China prewar. Stephen grows in many ways as he faces living in his enemy's country and his friendship with Matsu. I liked the exotic, non-western feel of the book. 

Matrix

  I did not like Matrix by Lauren Groff. The title refers to the Latin form of the word mother. It is a clever title because the main character, Marie's, is a reluctant abbess over an English nunnery, but also alludes to the power of mother figures. My dislike of the book is rooted in its morally superior tone and the avant-garde writing style. It didn't work for me.

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

the life of man [and woman] [is], solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short--Thomas Hobbs

The Glass Hotel

  Emily St. John Mandel is the author of one of my favorite books Station Eleven, so I'm trying to read her backlist. The Glass Hotel is a bleak story of two step-siblings and the far-reaching consequences of poor choices. One review said the book was about how we search for meaning in our lives, but I didn't see it that way. It was more how we try to escape from responsibility for our actions. Mandel is a gifted writer and tells the story on a non-linear fashion shifting in time and perspective and employing magical realism. 

  I found the book difficult to get into because I didn't connect with the main characters (they were unlikable--greedy, and selfish) but was drawn into the well-told story.

Great Circle

  I listened to the Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead. It is considered historical, literary fiction. It has a contemporary message or sensibility regarding LGBTQ and reminded me of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reed. The primary character is Marian Graves, and the main story thread is her life from conception to death to beyond death. Hadley Baxter is an actress who portrays Graves in a movie. Her story weaves in and out of the Grave's narrative--a contemporary contrast of lost parents, neglectful upbringing, and a desire for connection. Shipstead creates a life so genuine that I was surprised to find Marian Graves wasn't an actual person. Great Circle is vibrant with realism and is deeply researched. The writing make me feel I'm experiencing Marian and Hadley's lives as they do. 


I enjoyed the book--it is impressive in its scope and power, but at its core, I found nihilism--the rejection of all moral and religious principles, in the belief that life is meaningless. Marian's struggle to fly and to find freedom felt pointless to me because her solitary life brought nothing to her or others. The star of the book is the writing and not the story.


  Both of the books I read this week are a product of our time in that their main characters are rootless drifters who are incapable of finding or giving hope. They have surrounded me in a miasma of depression. I need a spritely rom-com to clear the air.

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

There Will Be Gushing

You Have a Friend in 10A: Stories

    I think Maggie Shipstead is a sharp writer. She incisively describes characters that pierced me as a reader--not with sadness, but with observations that caused me to examine my own self-centered brokenness. Ouch. You Have a Friend in 10A is the book that follows her best-selling book, Great Circle. I'm on the waitlist for it and am slightly afraid to read it. Will it wreck me?  Shipstead is masterful in her short stories. Of the eight in the book, "The Great Central Pacific Guano Company" and "You Have A Friend In 10A" will roll around my head for a while, not only because of the terrible situations her characters find themselves in, but also because of their responses. It slays the dream that my best self shows up when life is tough.  

I'll Have What She's Having: How Nora Ephron's Three Iconic Films Saved the Romantic Comedy

    I'll Have What She's Having: How Nora Ephron's Three Iconic Films Saved the Romantic Comedy by Erin Carlson was a delightful book. I admire Nora Ephron's achievements as a writer and director and her larger-than-life persona. The three romcoms--When Harry Met Sally, You've Got Mail, and Sleepless in Seatle--are some of my favorite movies. Carlson's book shows how the sausage was made. I thought it would be about Nora Ephron, and it was, but it was also about the production and the actors. I try to be a person who isn't caught up in celebrity culture, but this was a delicious book about movies and actors influential in my life. The hopefulness I possess about love and romance has roots in these movies.  Carlson portrayed the events and people authentically. I enjoyed it a lot.

The Penderwicks at Last (The Penderwicks, #5)

    The Penderwicks at Last by Jeanne Birdsall concludes the five-book series. I love this series so much. It makes me wish my daughters were younger or my granddaughters older so I could enjoy it with them. Each book centers on a different sister going from oldest to youngest. It describes them at eleven or twelve at a momentous--to them--time in their lives. As the final book of the series, it is responsible for giving me, the reader, a window into how their lives develop when the series ends. This is not an easy task, but Birdsall does a masterful job. I had feelings of satisfaction and sadness at the end. I will miss the sisters, but I know they are living fulfilling and vibrant lives in the land of fiction. 

    I'm hoping a streaming service will make it into a series!



Thursday, May 26, 2022

Lots of Ladies

 The Red Tent

    My historical fiction book club is reading The Red Tent by Anita Diamant. It is a fictionalized account of the life of Dinah, daughter of Jacob and sister to the brothers that became the twelve tribes of Israel. Her story is recounted in the Bible in Genesis 34. Diamant's version is captivating as it tells the story of the Dinah's life as she lives in Canaan and Egypt and the clash of cultures and religion. Diament celebrates women, especially in their hidden lives--hidden in history and in the red tent, a women only refuge used during their period. The Red Tent is at odds with the Biblical narrative and is antagonistic to men: the good men were one-dimensional, the evil men were vile, and few men felt accurately or kindly portrayed, but it is a book centered on telling the story of women. I found it a skillfully told story with Dinah as a worthy, dynamic central character, but a book I didn't enjoy. 

The Penderwicks at Point Mouette (The Penderwicks, #3)The Penderwicks in Spring (The Penderwicks, #4)

    This week I spent many solo hours, 20+, driving to visit family and as I sped along I listened to The Red Tent and books three and four in the Penderwick series by Jeanne Birdsall: The Penderwicks at Point Mouette and The Penderwicks in Spring. The adventures of the Penderwick sisters made the miles fly by.  Birdsall creates characters that I rooted for as they encountered first love and new responsibility. There is a fifth book in the series that I'm on hold for and I'm so excited to read it. 

    Sometimes you need a book about children's adventures that don't involve things going horrendously wrong like the world ending, sexual exploitation, or children being murdered. The words I would use to describe these books are hopeful and kind.

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Reading about the Atom Bomb, Cello Music, and Motherless Daughters: Mostly Young Adult Fiction

 Bomb: The Race to Build—and Steal—the World's Most Dangerous Weapon

   Bomb by Steve Sheinkin was a fascinating book about making the atomic bomb. Because it tells the stories of key players, it reads like a spy novel. The events occurred mainly during World War II, but they feel pertinent to today's news. Sheinkin ends the book with this statement:

 “In the end, this is a difficult story to sum up. The making of the atomic bomb is one of history's most amazing examples of teamwork and genius and poise under pressure. But it's also the story of how humans created a weapon capable of wiping our species off the planet. It's a story with no end in sight.

And, like it or not, you're in it.”

    With Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the threat of nuclear war, it felt timely.

Musical Chairs


    Musical Chairs by Amy Poeppel is a lighthearted book about two mid-life musicians at a crossroads. It has a lot to recommend: zany antics, unknown paternity of twins, country houses, Manhattan, eccentric relatives, break-ups, and get-togethers. It is a lively read that was not formulaic. Instead, it felt fresh and fun. Great for summer reading on vacation or just reading.

The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy (The Penderwicks #1)The Penderwicks on Gardam Street (The Penderwicks, #2)

    I have many children in my life, and I want to be a book guru to them all. I also want to give great books for birthdays and Christmas (Are you surprised?πŸ€“). So I'm justifying reading the Young Adult The Penderwicks series by Jeanne Birdsall. It is about a family: a father and four daughters whose mother died several years earlier of cancer. The four sisters are distinctly different, but have a cohesive, caring bond. As I was reading it, I thought it was written in the 1980s and was surprised to learn it was published in 2005. It is a quiet story of family drama--family drama to a 12, 10, 9, and 4-year-old. It reminds me of a modern-day Little Women. They are charming books, and I enjoyed reading them. I will work my way through the entire series ( I think there are five). Thank you, Libby. I understand from my good friend the internet that a movie of the series may be coming sometime in the 2020s. It is well-written and captivating, but my criticism is that it is too happy-slappy and isn't diverse. On the other hand, I think it accurately captures family life from a child's point of view.

 “A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children isn't a good children's story in the slightest.” C. S. Lewis

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Trapped in History Feeling my Feelings

 

    BrenΓ© Brown is a national treasure. I find it difficult to start her books because I know I will be taking a deep look into my dark soul, but when I finish, I consistently find I've learned how to navigate me and my life a little better. 

    I listened to the audiobook read by BrenΓ© Brown and now we are close, personal friends. She has an engaging, warm way of speaking. While reading, she would stop and say let me repeat that vital idea or quote just for you, listener. I may end up buying this book. I try to be selective on books I allow into my house because when they unbury me from the book avalanche that will probably end my life, I want them to be impressed with my book choices! πŸ€“ What moves me to purchase Atlas of the Heart is she refers to many charts and illustrations that I can't access because I borrowed, not purchased the audiobook. Bummer. The information on emotions is worth a second or third read. Brown also has a series called Atlas of the Heart on HBOmax.  

The Cross of Lead (Crispin, #1)

   Crispin: The Cross of Lead by Avi is the May book choice for my historical fiction book club. I read it many years ago and like it, but I didn't enjoy re-reading it. It is a heavily plot-driven book with many surprising twists, but if you already know the twists, it becomes a slow-moving descriptive book about 14th-century Britain being icky and oppressive. I would recommend it for middle school grades. 

    Some books aimed at younger readers are excellent at any age, for example, The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. I love that book.

Master and God 

    Master and God by Lindsey Davis is also historical fiction. I have read and recommended Lindsey Davis's historical mystery series set in Ancient Rome (Marcus Didius Falco and Flavia Albia). Even though this isn't a mystery, it is a suspenseful novel revolving around first century Emporer Domitian. Davis creates the flavor and setting of Rome. The two main characters are a Praetorian guard and an imperial hairdresser who are navigating dangerous times under a tyrant. I was sad when it was over.



Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Hot Summers and Baptism

 One Italian Summer

I have read several books by Rebecca Serle. One Italian Summer, like  In Five Years and The Dinner List involves time and magical realism. Her plots are exciting, and she usually has a moral to what she writes: appreciate what you have, live your life for yourself, and people are complex, so don't judge others. It feels there isn't room for another point of view besides hers, but she does write transfixing, steamy stories. I don't regret reading them, but I also don't seek them out unless someone recommends them. One Italian summer made me want to go to Positano, Italy, because of Serle's lush descriptions of the sun, beaches, and food. Yes, please!

Instructions for a Heatwave

I love Maggie O'Farrell's books, and I've read many of them: Hamnet; I Am, I Am, I Am: Seventeen Brushes with Death, This Must Be the Place, The Hand That First Held Mine. This week I read Instructions for a Heatwave. I hesitate when I start a Maggie O'Farrell book because her writing is piercing in its understanding of humans. Instructions for a Heatwave is historical fiction about an Irish family living in London during a famous heatwave. 

1976_British_Isles_heat_wave 

It is so hot it makes people do crazy things. The story moves between family members who are quirky, hot, and trying to figure out what to do when their husband/father disappears. It pulls the mother, the two oldest siblings, and the self-exiled baby of the family together to solve the mystery of their missing father's past. Secrets boil out, old wounds are enflamed, and tempers flare. It's a terrific read.

Understanding Four Views on Baptism (Counterpoints: Church Life)

   I'm in a theological book club, and this was the book for April. The most valuable part of reading this book was discussing it with my Dear Husband. I didn't change my position (I'm Presbyterian in my beliefs, and we practice infant baptism). Still, it did sharpen my understanding of why I hold to it and what other denominations believe. I didn't feel that the book was coherent or easily readable. Perhaps it was intended for academics, but I think it would have done better to aim at interested lay readers. I don't recommend it.

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Three Books--No Mysteries

    I squeaked in three books this week. Hurrah! If I was going to give a theme to my reads this week, it would be Girl Power, a phrase I dislike because it diminishes women. Shouldn't it be woman power? Perhaps a better theme would be women finding their voice and their power.

Lavinia

    When it comes to science fiction, Ursula K. LeGuin is legendary--not only as a woman writing sci-fi but as a great writer. However, the book Lavinia is more fantasy. She is the final wife of Theseus, as related by Virgil. As a young woman, Lavinia meets when the poet's shade when he is at the edge of death on a ship out at sea, and she is worshipping at a shrine. She asks him about her life to come. He has written her into existence, but has made her a flat, colorless character. LeGuin's book tells Lavinia's side of the story. It reminds me of C.S. Lewis's book Till We Have Faces inspired by the myth of Cupid and Psyche as told by Psyche's older sister. Occasionally, this book is my favorite, and sometimes it is Connie Willis' book To Say Nothing of the Dog

    Lavinia starts slowly, but builds in intensity as Lavinia becomes self-aware and active in her life. She is ruled her entire life by men and creatively makes her way into the life the poet Virgil wrote for her. It might be an extended metaphor for fate versus choice. 


The Lazy Genius Way: Embrace What Matters, Ditch What Doesn't, and Get Stuff Done

    I like self-help books because I want to do life THE BEST WAY POSSIBLE. Several self-help books I've read use the motivation to try harder and do better. The Lazy Genius: Embrace What Matters, Ditch What Doesn't, and Get Stuff Done by Kendra Adachi is the kindest book of this genre I've read. She exposes the two extremes of trying harder against the opposite position of you'll never make it, give up: genius or lazy. I've been to both extremes, and it's not fun or effective. She has thirteen Lazy Genious principles (that's a lot, but they build on each other) and a Magic Question. My daughter, a Family Nurse Practioner (FNP), and the mother of a toddler and twins recommended it to me. I found its blend of philosophy and practical advice helpful and stress-reducing. 

Still Life 

    I finished Still Life by Sarah Winman thirty minutes before writing this post, and I feel that my thoughts are still in Florence, Italy. Winman evokes Florence with beautiful and tactile descriptions that it is hard not to buy a plane ticket immediately. The writing is evocative and lovely; the characters are tangible. Ulysses, a British soldier in World War II, meets Evelyn Skinner, a British art historian in her sixties, towards the end of the war in Italy. She inspires him to look at the world with new eyes.

“Beautiful art opens our eyes to the beauty of the world, Ulysses. It repositions our sight and judgment. Captures forever that which is fleeting.” 
― Sarah Winman, Still Life

    Several women are unconventional for their time--mothers who don't want to be mothers, same-sex attraction, career over family, and in various ways, they own that and its consequences. The book has a prophetic parrot, visionary elders, love, cruelty, tension, food, art, tragedy, and beauty. I think it will win awards.  

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Senior Citizens and Murder

 The Thursday Murder Club (Thursday Murder Club, #1)The Man Who Died Twice (Thursday Murder Club, #2)

  I heard this book recommended on the podcast "What Should I Read Next." This is one of my favorite podcasts. Two-thirds of the books I read I hear about are from Anne Bogel or her guest.  

Side note--I spent many minutes searching the internet to correctly punctuate a podcast series title. I'm not entirely comfortable with quotation marks, I was thinking italicized like a book title, but this is what I understand the internet to say. If you have a better answer, please try and leave a comment. I'm not sure that comments are working even though I've made them available in settings. This is my life with technology: sometimes I rock, sometimes I roll.

Back to the books I read this week. Richard Osman's book The Thursday Murder Club was a five-star read for me. I usually don't give five stars, especially to murder mysteries, but this was an exceptionally good book. The premise is a group of four elderly resident's living in a senior community gather together every Thursday to discuss unsolved murders when in their midst is an actual murder. There is Joyce, the retired flirty, nurturing nurse; Elizabeth, the hardcore former MI-5 (6?) cold war operative; Ron, the tough, but kind labor organizer known as "Red Ron," and Ibrahim, the wise no longer practicing psychiatrist. This book was funny, twisty, and heartwarming without being trite. It is peopled with quirky, distinctive characters and murder. I was guessing who-done-it right up to the very end. 

   I loved the first book so much that I immediately checked out the second one, The Man Who Died Twice. It was as good as the first. There is a third book in the series that I will read once it becomes available on Libby, or I might spend a precious Audible credit to listen. It's that good. I hope it gets made into a series on a streaming service I subscribe to. Fingers crossed.

πŸ‘‘πŸ‘Έ⚔️πŸ€΄πŸ‘‘ Perhaps Too Much Fantasy?

          I am getting wrapped up in Romantasy, and I regret reading Shield of Sparrows  by Devney Perry because it is the first of a trilog...