Sunday Salon: Books Read in February, 2011

The Sunday Salon.com

Bible:
Proverbs

Children’s and Young Adult Fiction:
Epitaph Road by David Patneaude. Semicolon review here.
Dirt Road Home by Watt Key.
Harmonic Feedback by Tara Kelly.
Amy and Roger’s Epic Detour by Morgan Matson. Semicolon review here.
The Ink Garden of Brother Theophane by C.M. Millen. Semicolon review here.
Nothing To Fear by Jackie French Koller. Semicolon review here.

Adult Fiction:
Certain Women by Madeleine L’Engle. Re-read for Faith ‘N Fiction Roundtable. Semicolon thoughts here.
Baking Cakes in Kigali by Gaile Parkin.
Listen by Rene Gutteridge. Semicolon review here.
Imaginary Jesus by Matt Mikalatos.
Blackout by Connie Willis. Semicolon review and recommendation here.
All Clear by Connie Willis.

Nonfiction:
Blood River: A Journey to Africa’s Broken Heart by Tim Butcher. Semicolon review here.
Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand. Semicolon review here.
W.F. Matthews: Lost Battalion Survivor by Travis Monday. Semicolon review here.
Obama Prayer by Charles M. Garriott. Semicolon review here.
The Unheard: A Memoir of Deafness and Africa by Josh Swiller.
Bold Spirit Helga Estby’s Forgotten Walk Across Victorian America by Linda Lawrence Hunt. Semicolon review here.
Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton.

Best Fiction: Blackout and All Clear by Connie Willis.

Best Nonfiction Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand.

I would suggest that you run, not walk, to the nearest bookstore, better yet, order on Amazon, any one of the three “best” above and read it. You will be glad you did. And no one paid me for that endorsement.

Saturday Review of Books: March 5, 2011

“Everything in the world exists to end up in a book.”~Stephane Mallarme

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week of a book you were reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. the Ink Slinger (The White Company)
2. Semicolon (Certain Women)
3. Semicolon (Ink Garden of Brother Theophane)
4. Semicolon (Nothing To Fear)
5. Semicolon (Bold Spirit)
6. Collateral Bloggage (What the Night Knows)
7. Collateral Bloggage (Gregor and the Marks of Secret)
8. Lemme Library (Horton Halfpott)
9. Fresh Ink Books (The Typist)
10. Marg (Tiny Sunbirds, Far Away)
11. Cindy Swanson@Cindy’s Book Club
12. Beth@Weavings (The Pen Commandments)
13. Donovan @ Where Peen Meets Paper (Why Business Matters to God)
14. Colloquium (Katie Up and Down the Hall)
15. Colloquium (A View from the Back Pew)
16. Colloquium (You Don’t Love This Man)
17. Lazygal (Amelia Lost)
18. Lazygal (Noah Barleycorn Runs Away)
19. Lazygal (The Friendship Doll)
20. Lazygal (Jasper Jones)
21. Lazygal (A Tale of Two Castles)
22. Lazygal (Family)
23. BookBelle (A Red Herring Without Mustard)
24. Janet (Alone Together by Sherry Turkle)
25. SFP (The Far Cry & Queen Eleanor and Fair Rosamund
26. Yvann (The House on Mango Street)
27. Alice@Supratentorial(Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother)
28. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Hitty: Her First Hundred Years)
29. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (One Crazy Summer)
30. Beckie@ByTheBook (A Trail of Ink)
31. Beckie@ByTheBook (The Perfect Fool)
32. Beckie@ByTheBook (Jane Austen Mysteries)
33. Between the Stacks (Illyria)
34. Word Lily (Messenger of Truth)
35. Word Lily (Certain Women)
36. 5 Minutes for Books (Kings of Colorado)
37. 5 Min for Books (Prince of Tides)
38. 5 Min for Books (Tugg & Teeny, w/giveaway)
39. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Watch Out For The Chicken Feet In Your Soup)
40. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (Merry Merry FIBruary
41. 5 Min for Books (The Promises She Keeps)
42. Heather @ Books For Breakfast (The Man Who Lost His Head)
43. 5 Min for Books (Cinderella Ate My Daughter)
44. Girl Detective (Carter Beats the Devil)
45. jama’s alphabet soup (Noodle and Lou)
46. Hope(A Rose for Mrs. Miniver)
47. S. Krishna (Never Look Away)
48. S. Krishna (Hard Magic)
49. S. Krishna (The Tudor Secret)
50. S. Krishna (Learning to Swim)
51. S. Krishna (To a Mountain in Tibet)
52. S. Krishna (The Lake of Dreams)
53. S. Krishna (Suits: A Woman on Wall Street)
54. Reading to Know (North Avenue Irregulars)
55. Reading to Know (The Crossing)
56. Reading to Know (The Bible Story Handbook)
57. Home With Purpose (Discovering Jesus)
58. Nicola (Tegami Bachi: Letter Bee, Vol. 4 by Hiroyuki Asada)
59. Nicola (Animal Hospital – A DK Reader)
60. Nicola (Trackers Book 2 by Patrick Carman)
61. Nicola (Irredeemable Vol. 5 by Mark Waid)
62. Nicola (The Hollow People by Brian Keaney)
63. Nicola (Incorruptible, Vol. 3 by Mark Waid)
64. Nicola (Swift’s Gulliver retold by Martin Jenkins. illus. by Chris. Riddell)
65. Melissa @ The Betty and Boo Chronicles (Tinkers)
66. Kathryn @ Suitable for Mixed Company (Holy Subversion)
67. Carol in Oregon (Hans Brinker)
68. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (Escape from Church, Inc.)
69. Zee @ Notes from the North (Underbara dagar framför oss)
70. Zee @ Notes from the North (Rainbow Valley)
71. Zee @ Notes from the North (Rilla of Ingleside)
72. Amber Stults (Muslim Women Reformers)
73. Benjie @ Book ‘Em Benj-O (The Next Christians)
74. Library Hospital (Mrs. Tim Flies Home)
75. Woman of the House
76. Diary of an Eccentric (The Jane Austen Handbook)
77. Gina @ Bookscount (Ghandi’s Goat)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Pied Beauty by Gerard Manley Hopkins

Pied Beauty
by Gerard Manley Hopkins

Glory be to God for dappled things—
  For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;
    For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;
Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;
  Landscape plotted and pieced— fold, fallow, and plough;
    And áll trádes, their gear and tackle and trim.

All things counter, original, spare, strange;
  Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)
    With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;
He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change:
        Praise him.

Megan at Homeschooling on the Run: “Here is my all-time favorite GMH poem – it smacks of glorious springtime, and happy abandon in the warming climes of creation.”
Kelly Fineman at Writing and Ruminating: “What I like about the second stanza is its ambiguity: is Manley telling all those things that are freckled, fickle, etc. to praise God, or is he praising God for having made them? The stanza reads well both ways, and I rather think that was on purpose.” (Kelly has a good discussion of the poem. You should read it if you’re interested in poetry in general or in Mr. Hopkins in particular.

Bold Spirit by Linda Lawrence Hunt

Bold Spirit: Helga Estby’s Forgotten Walk Across VIctorian America by Linda Lawrence Hunt.

Lost, or nearly lost, stories of ordinary heroes seems to be one theme of my reading lately, as I just finished this book about a woman who walked with her oldest daughter, Clara, across the United States in 1896 for the purpose of winning a $10,000 wager in order to pay off her family’s back taxes and delinquent mortgage.

It’s a story that is both inspiring and sad. Helga Estby and Clara walked all the way from Spokane, Washington to New York City, an accomplishment that would prove daunting to most men and most women nowadays. Helga’s neighbors thought she was crazy and thought the journey she planned would be not only impossible but also a betrayal of her role as the mother of nine children. Helga’s youngest child was only two years old when her mother set out across America in pursuit of her own American dream. Her stated goal was to earn the money to save her family’s farm and homestead. Her anonymous sponsor’s objective was either to advertise women’s clothing or to prove that women were strong and hardy enough to undertake such a arduous trek across a continent. Perhaps both.

Unfortunately for Helga and her family, the walk across America that was to solve all of the family’s financial woes was completed, but the anonymous wagerer was a welsher. Helga and Clara did not get any money for their courageous and formidable achievement, and while they were absent from home circumstances caused the children left behind to become angry and resentful toward their mother and her undertaking. In fact, they became so filled with rancor over Helga’s absence during a crisis in the family’s history that the children convinced their mother never to speak of her attempt to walk across the country. And after Helga’s death, two of her grown children burned all of her written stories about her walk. The story of Helga and Clara Estby and their walk across America was nearly lost to posterity.

However, Linda Hunt heard about the two women and their remarkable journey in a paper written by a young descendant of Helga Estby for the Washington State History Day Contest. She then began to research the story, talking to Helga’s granddaughter and finding old newspaper articles that told about the women as they traveled and shared their stories with reporters in the various towns they passed through. Ms. Hunt did remarkable work herself in piecing together this story of two brave women who could have been forgotten had it not been for the memories of a few people who knew them and the hard work of a historian.

What are the stories in your family that are in danger of being lost and/or forgotten? Save them in a scrapbook or a photo album or a blog or even a book. Or tell them here to us. I may start posting myself after Easter about family stories I want to save.

Nothing To Fear by Jackie French Koller

My American History class has reached the era of the Great Depression, the 1930’s, and we’re reading Nothing To Fear by Jackie Koller. This read is going much better than the last book they were asked to read, Christy by Catherine Marshall. Christy is one of my favorite novels, but had I known when I wrote the syllabus that I would have a class of nine fourteen-fifteen year old boys, I might have chosen a different book to exemplify the early twentieth century.

Back to Nothing To Fear. All of the boys were enthusiastic about this one. It’s the story of a boy, Danny Garvey, who lives with his Irish American family—father, mother, and little sister Maureen–in a tenement apartment in New York City in 1932. Like all of the men in Danny’s neighborhood, Danny father is out of work and feeling desperate about providing for his family. Danny’s mother does laundry and ironing from her home for Miss Emily’s Hotel for Young Women. Danny shines shoes to make a few extra pennies.

But when Danny gets in with the wrong crowd and a window gets broken at old man Weissman’s store, Danny learns just how important his good name is to his father and eventually through the course of events, Danny also learns to value his own name and reputation.

Some bad stuff happens in this book, but it ends on a note of hope and perseverance. Danny and his mother trust in God and President Roosevelt to get them through the Depression, a trust somewhat misplaced in my opinion, but it’s true to the era and matches the stories that I’ve heard from people who lived during the 1930’s. Danny and his mom and all their neighbors are ecstatic when Roosevelt is elected, and even though, again realistically, the election of Roosevelt does nothing to improve the Garveys’ lives, they still cling to the hope that FDR will do something to end the Depression and return the country to prosperity. It reminds me of people nowadays who still maintain that President Obama will get our economy going again, except that I don’t think we’re as desperate as people were during the Great Depression. Therefore, we have a little room to see clearly that Obama is not our rescuer. FDR was any port in a storm and too much of a last chance for people to give up on him, even when he didn’t/couldn’t deliver.

I would recommend Nothing To Fear for boys ages 12-16 who are studying the Depression era in history or who just enjoy history and historical fiction. A few other recommended fiction books set in the same time period for children and young adults:

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor. Cassie Logan lives with her family in rural Mississippi and experiences the family closeness and racial tensions of the 1930’s time period.

I like these Dear America diaries:
Christmas After All: The Great Depression Diary of Minnie Swift. Indianapolis, IN, 1932 by Kathryn Lasky.
Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: The Diary of Bess Brennan, The Perkins School for the Blind, 1932 by Barry Denenburg.
Survival in the Storm: The Dust Bowl Diary of Grace Edwards, Dalhart, Texas, 1935 by Katelyn Janke.

Year Down Yonder by Richard Peck. Winner of the 2001 Newbery Medal. Fifteen year old Mary Alice is sent downstate to live with Grandma Dowdel while her Ma and Pa stay in Chicago to work.
Bud, not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis. Bud, not Buddy, Caldwell is an orphan who thinks he might just have a dad, Herman E. Calloway, bass player for the Dusky Devastators of the Depression. Will he find Calloway, and is Calloway really his father?
Moon Over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool is the story of a girl, twelve year old Abilene Tucker, whose father, Gideon, is a hobo. Abilene and her dad have been riding the rails together for as long as she can remember, but now (summer, 1936) Gideon has sent Abilene to live with an old friend of his in Manifest, Kansas while Gideon takes a job on the railroad back in Iowa. 2010 Newbery Award winner. Semicolon review here.
Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher. For older teens and adults. Semicolon review here.
William S. and the Great Escape by Zilpha Keatley Snyder. William escapes his abusive home along with his little sister and brother, but can the three fugitives find a place to call home in a time when home is hard to find? Semicolon review here.
Turtle in Paradise by Jenifer L. Holm. Semicolon review here. Take one eleven year girl named Turtle with eyes as “gray as soot” who sees things exactly as they are. Plunk her down in Key West, Florida with her Aunt Minnie the Diaper Gang and a bunch of Conch (adj. native or resident of the Florida Keys) relatives and Conch cousins with nicknames like Pork Chop and Too Bad and Slow Poke.

St. David’s Day

The patron saint of Wales is Saint David, or Sant Dewi as the Welsh call him. He lived in the sixth century and became the Archbishop of Wales. He was particularly fond of bread, vegetables, and water, drinking nothing but water for most of his life. He is also associated with water because it is said that a spring of water came bubbling up where he walked at significant times and places during his life. I’m interested in Saint David partly because some of my ancestors came from Wales.
The Welsh celebrate Saint David’s Day with leeks (remember Fluellen in Shakespeare’s Henry V?) and daffodils, male voice choirs, and harp concerts. If you would like to celebrate this Welsh holiday with your children, the website below has coloring pages, craft projects, a recipe for leek soup, and more information on David’s life.
St. David’s Day Activities for Kids
St. David died in about 589, and his last words were recorded as:

“Be joyful, and keep your faith and your creed. Do the little things that you have seen me do and heard about. I will walk the path that our fathers have trod before us.”

‘Do the little things’ (‘Gwnewch y pethau bychain’) is today a very well-known phrase in Welsh. It reminds me of Elisabeth Elliot’s admonition to “do the next thing.” Either way it seems to me to be a good motto. Sometimes it’s all I can do– to do the next little thing that needs to be done, and sometimes it’s enough. Happy St. David’s Day!

The Ink Garden of Brother Theophane by C.M. Millen

The 2011 winner of the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award is: The Ink Garden of Brother Theophane by C.M. Millen, illustrated by Andrea Wisnewski (Charlesbridge, 2010). “This annual award goes to the best book of children’s poetry published in the United States in the preceding year. It is co-sponsored with Lee Bennett Hopkins himself along with the University Libraries, the Pennsylvania Center for the Book, and additional sponsor, Pennsylvania School Librarians Association.”

What a lovely book celebrating the art and the poetry of the humble medieval monks who gave us beautiful illuminated manuscripts of the Bible and other Christian texts and also scribbled little bits of phlosophy and poetry in the margins and on spare bits of parchment. Mr. Millen has taken these monkish poems and used them as inspiration for a story poem about a monk named Brother Theophane who “would stop with his copying chore to write all about the beauty outdoors” and who “tended his field, harvesting plants for the colors they yield.”

Andrea Wisnewski is a gardener herself, and it shows in her illustrations which combine a love for nature and for colorful illumination with a Celtic medieval feel to it. I could spend a great deal of time looking at the illuminated lettering and the vines and plants entwined through the margins of the pictures. Books like this one are what convince me that the ebook revolution has a ways yet to go before it will be an improvement on the old-fashioned picture book. Whoever invented the book with pages did a fine thing.

The Ink Garden of Brother Theophane would be a good addition to any homeschool study of the Middle Ages and a brilliant entryway into discussion of Irish monks, monastery life, manuscript illumination, and medieval poetry. Also in the back of the book are these links to ehlpful websites that could extend the study:

To learn how to make your own hawthorn bark ink.
To experiment with extracting colors from plants.
To learn how illuminated manuscripts were made.

Sunday Salon: Fascinations for the Month of February

The Sunday Salon.com


Author Laura Hillenbrand (Seabiscuit and Unbroken) has had her own challenges as she continues to write best-selling nonfiction and deal with a debilitating disease.
A Sudden Illness: How My Life Changed by Laura Hillenbrand.
Laura Hillenbrand releases new book while fighting chronic fatigue syndrome by Monica Hesse.

C.K. Dexter Haven, you are so much more attractive and intelligent than anyone who’s decorating the screen these days. “Cary Grant’s frothy delights leave us pondering the dramatic shift in our understanding of marriage, divorce, vows and the idea of anything being permanent.” Divorce Granted by Joseph Susanka.

John Piper recommends ten books for Black History Month. I happen to think that if they’re good books, they’re good to read any month, not just during February which happens to have been designated Black History Month.

Did you see my article on YA fiction from 2010 at Chuck Colson’s The Point online magazine? I’m rather pleased with the way it turned out and the books I was able to recommend.

Circumscribed by Noel deVries, on living a small but brave life.

I’ve been studying Proverbs, rather sporadically, during the month of February. I printed out this study guide, and it’s been helpful. However, the best thing I’ve done is just to read through the proverbs in the book of Proverbs and check the ones that seem useful and understandable and x the ones that I don’t understand. There are more than a few about which I still lack understanding.

My plan for Lent is to post about Forty Inspirational Classics that I have read and would recommend to others. The posts will start on Ash Wednesday, March 9th, and God willing, end on Easter Sunday, my Resurrection gift to you all.

HAPPY READING!

Certain Women by Madeleine L’Engle

A couple of years ago I started on a Madeleine L’Engle Project. My goal was to read or re-read all of Ms. L’Engle’s books in the order in which they were published. I didn’t get all that far, but I did re-read some favorites and post about them here at Semicolon. Then, I became distracted by other projects, and I haven’t read anything by Madeleine L’Engle in a while.

So, I am pleased the my participation in the Faith and Fiction Roundtable impelled me to read Certain Women again, one of Ms. L’Engle’s later novels. It’s the story of famous stage actor David Wheaton who is dying of cancer, attended by the wife of his old age, Alice, and by his daughter, Emma, who is also an actress. Alice is actually David Wheaton’s ninth and final wife, and he has nine children, the products of eight previous failed marriages. David Wheaton has always wanted to play the role of King David from the Bible, but the opportunity never came. As Wheaton reviews his life, he and his complicated family see the analogies between the life of David Wheaton, actor, and the life of David, sweet singer and King of Israel.

In the hands of another writer, this book would probably have been about David Wheaton, a man who married many wives and whose life experiences bore a certain resemblance to those of King David, with the similarities being left to the reader to discover. L’Engle chose to highlight the analogies by having Emma’s husband, a playwright, spend most of the novel attempting to write a play, specifically a vehicle for Wheaton to star as King David. By the opening of the novel, the play is a failed attempt that never was completed, and David Wheaton is much too old and sick to play the part of David anyway. But as the novel progresses the characters review scenes that were written about David and his many wives: Michal, Ahinoam, Abigail, Maacah, Bathsheba, Abishag, and others. And Wheaton and his family discuss the similarities between the Wheaton family and King David’s family and the differences. Somehow the Biblical stories give the characters insight into their own family dynamic and help them to reconcile with God and with each other.

I thought the first time I read the book, and I remembered again as I re-read, that this novel in particular, of all Madeleine L’Engle’s novels, has a certain soap opera quality to it. (Madeleine L’Engle’s husband was an actor and a long time character on the daytime drama, All My Children.) The characters move in and out of one another’s lives like soap opera characters, and there’s a lot of adultery, divorce, re-marriage, and other family drama (nothing terribly explicit or offensive). However, L’Engle’s people are more complicated and have more depth to them than the average soap opera witch or ingenue. The story this time around reminded me of Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead in its portrayal of an old man preparing to die, reminiscing about his life, and trying to understand the decisions he’s made and their ongoing effect on his family members. Gilead is probably, almost certainly, the better written book, but somehow Madeleine L’Engle’s books always speak to me.

In this reading I was impressed by the importance of forgiveness for both the sinner and the one sinned against:

“He said that it was only after David lusted after Bathsheba, caused Uriah’s death, only after he had failed utterly with Tamar and Amnon and Absalom, only after he was fleeing his enemies, fleeing his holy city of Jerusalem, that he truly became a king.”

“Parents always fail their children. If we’d had children, we’d have failed ours. That’s simply how it is, and the kids have to get along as best they can. My parents were who they were. Dave is Dave.”

“Emma closed her eyes. There was a terrible empty space where Etienne and Adair should have been. ‘What is forgiveness?’
Chantal’s long fingers gripped the steering wheel. ‘It’s not forgetting. That’s repression, not forgiveness.’
Emma looked over at her sister.
‘Remembering,’ Chantal said, ‘but not hurting anymore.'”

What is your definition of forgiveness? And how do you forgive someone who is either absent or unrepentant?

Jesus said of the prostitute who washed his feet, “Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven–for she loved much. But he who has been forgiven little loves little.” Perhaps only those who know that they have sinned greatly can understand and experience the depth of God’s grace, mercy, and love.

Other participants in today’s discussion of Certain Women:
My Friend Amy: Certain Women, The Women in David’s Life
Heather at Book Addiction.
Book Hooked Blog.
Sheila at Book Journey
Jennifer at Crazy for Books
Carrie at Books and Movies
Ronnica at The Ignorant Historian
Thomas at My Random Thoughts
The 3r’s Blog: Reading, ‘Riting, and Randomness
Word Lily
Tina’s Book Reviews