Monday, December 26, 2005

December Meeting Reminder

It's not as cold as the Alps
so join us at Lisa's
house
Wednesday
December 28th
1:00 P.M.
1324 Bryant Ct.
Manteca
239-4452 if you're unable to attend
As is our tradition
please bring along a holiday leftover to share.
We'll be discussing
The Magnificent Ambersons.

Christmas Books Anyone?

(I just figured out how to add images to our blog! Woo hoo!!!)
Ho Ho Ho!
Did anyone get books from their wishlist for Christmas?
I was lucky enough to receive:
A Breath of Snow and Ashes- Diana Gabaldon A side note here: my sister Sue got this one for me and I had bought it for her!
A Million Little Pieces- James Frey
Milk Glass Moon-Adriana Trigiani
Rococo-Adriana Trigiani
I gave a ton of books this year.
To my 8 year old niece,Lauren, who is a voracious reader:
A 3 book Collection of E.B. White
The entire Little House on the Prarie set
A Beverly Cleary Collection
plus 3 magazine subscriptions:
Zoo Books
National Geographic for Kids
Ranger Rick
To my husband John, who has discovered the joys of reading later in life:
the new Beatles Biography
a biography on Keith Moon (drummer for The Who)
a biography on the band Cream
a biography on Charlie Watts(drummer for Rolling Stones)
The Illustrated Dead (coffee table book on Greatful Dead)
The Complete Lyrics of the Greatful Dead
Anyone sense a theme going on here?
He also got the book 700 Sundays and The Know-It-All:One Man's Humble Quest to be the Smartest Man in the World.
For my mom I got 7 different titles from the NY Times bestseller list.
Unfortunately, I didn't write them down so I can't remember them all. But one was by the author of the No.1 Ladie's Detective Agency. Another was a Suduko number puzzle book-trying to stimulate her cognitive abilities.
I hope you all got some new reading material
and were able to give some as well.
Share with us!

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Kablook.com

Mary Ann shared this site with me and wanted it passed on to our members. Check it out! www.kablook.com A great space to rate books and read other reviews and ratings.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Mary Ann!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

How could I forget you! It was so great to see Mary Ann at the Nov. meeting and see the latest pics of her wee one! A thousand lashes with a wet noodle to me for not putting your name in the Nov. attendees!

Did you Miss Out on November's Meeting?

Cathy and La Dean co-hosted our discussion of The Kite Runner at The Kabob House Restaurant in Manteca. Those in attendance were our hosts,Kim, Lisa, Victoria, Sarah,Katy. I hope I didn't leave anyone out. We feasted on a delightful assortment of Afghan foods: eggplant appetizer, potato appetizer, assorted meat kabobs deliciously marinated and served with a tasty rice. Dessert was Afghan Tea and baklava.

Those who had read the book were intrigued with learning of life in Afghanistan and the atrocities committed upon their people. It made for some difficult reading at times. I for one, cringed more than once at the violent acts described in grueling detail. But it was necessary for the reader to grasp the severity of life in that country. The characters were realistic and many wondered aloud if the author was sticking to factual events. It was learned that, indeed, many of the events were taken directly from the author's life experiences. Kim brought her laptop and the book on CD so we listened to parts of the story.

One of the restaurant owners shared some of her family history with us. Male relatives were used as human shields by the Russians during fighting there in the late 1970's and as a result she lost part of her family. They fled to Fremont, CA and settled in "Little Kabul" as she called it with many other Afghan families. Her family came to Manteca shortly after 9/11/2001 and was fearful that there would be racial retaliation on them following the attacks on our Americans in the east. Luckily, that was not their experience. If you are looking for a delightful dinner or a take out meal, check out this restaurant and support our fellow Americans.

Cathy and La Dean make the book vote difficult this month by offering so many good choices! Those up for the vote included:
Middlesex- Jeffrey Eugenides
A Walk in the Woods- Bill Bryson
A Million Little Pieces-James Frey
Bee Season-Myla Goldberg

The Bill Bryson travel book was the winner, with Frey's memoir a close second.

Our December Book Choice

A Walk in the Woods-Bill Bryson


About The Book

Back in America after twenty years in Britain, Bill Bryson decided to reacquaint himself with his native country by walking the 2,100-mile Appalachian Trail, which stretches from Georgia to Maine. The AT offers an astonishing landscape of silent forests and sparkling lakes--and to a writer with the comic genius of Bill Bryson, it also provides endless opportunities to witness the majestic silliness of his fellow human beings.

For a start there's the gloriously out-of-shape Stephen Katz, a buddy from Iowa along for the walk. Despite Katz's overwhelming desire to find cozy restaurants, he and Bryson eventually settle into their stride, and while on the trail they meet a bizarre assortment of hilarious characters. But A Walk in the Woods is more than just a laugh-out-loud hike. Bryson's acute eye is a wise witness to this beautiful but fragile trail, and as he tells its fascinating history, he makes a moving plea for the conservation of America's last great wilderness. An adventure, a comedy, and a celebration, A Walk in the Woods is destined to become a modern classic of travel literature.

Praise

"Choke-on-your-coffee funny."--The Washington Post Book World

"Bryson is . . . great company right from the start--a lumbering, droll, neatnik intellectual who comes off as equal parts Garrison Keillor, Michael Kinsley, and . . . Dave Barry."--The New York Times Book Review

"A Walk in the Woods is an almost perfect travel book."--The Boston Globe

About our December Author

Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1951. A backpacking expedition in 1973 brought him to England where he met his wife and decided to settle. He wrote for the English newspapers The Times and The Independent for many years, writing travel articles to supplement his income. He lived with his family in North Yorkshire before moving back to the States in 1995, to Hanover, New Hampshire, with his wife and four children. In 2003 he and his family moved back to England, where they currently reside.

The Lost Continent, Bill Bryson's hilarious first travel book, chronicles a trip in his mother's Chevy around small town America. Since then, he has written several more, including notable bestsellers, A Walk in the Woods, I'm A Stranger Here Myself (published in Britain as Notes from a Big Country), and In a Sunburned Country (published in Britain as Down Under).

His other books include Bill Bryson's Dictionary of Troublesome Words, Neither Here nor There: Travels in Europe, Made in America, The Mother Tongue and Bill Bryson's African Diary. His latest book, A Short History of Nearly Everything, was published in Spring 2003.

Especially for Kim



Holiday Books
Paris

By ELSA DIXLER

A burning car may temporarily have replaced the Eiffel Tower as its iconic image, but Paris remains the City of Light. This season brings several books that evoke an earlier, more romantic Paris.

Peter Barberie, in LOOKING AT ATGET (Philadelphia Museum of Art/Yale University, $45), presents 110 photographs by Eugène Atget (1857-1927), mostly from the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Atget made photographs for sale - as many as 10,000 of them - chiefly to libraries and museums. He documented Paris's parks and buildings, but also its interiors, the kitchens and bedrooms of Parisians of every social class. In "Looking at Atget," the reader can compare, for example, the "Small Bedroom of a Working-Class Woman, rue de Belleville, 1910," with the "Interior of Monsieur M., Financier, avenue Elisée Reclus, Champ de Mars, 1910" (his is less cluttered, and he has a bigger bed). Atget's photographs of prostitutes (from the 1920's) and ragpickers (a decade earlier) provide glimpses of a vanished world, but those of the statues on the grounds at Versailles look absolutely contemporary.

While Atget made prints in his darkroom in Montparnasse, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901) was at work in the emerging artists' neighborhood of Montmartre. TOULOUSE-LAUTREC AND MONTMARTRE (National Gallery of Art/Art Institute of Chicago/Princeton University, $60) - by Richard Thomson, Phillip Dennis Cate and Mary Weaver Chapin - collects posters, paintings, drawings and prints from 1885-95. In addition to these indelible images of fin-de-siècle Paris at play, the book includes reproductions of work by artists who influenced Toulouse-Lautrec, as well as essays on the history of Montmartre, cabarets and dance halls, and Toulouse-Lautrec's contribution to the rising culture of celebrity.

The cancan dancers in Toulouse-Lautrec's posters could be nowhere in the world but Paris; neither could the young couple in Robert Doisneau's famous "Kiss at the Hôtel de Ville." ROBERT DOISNEAU: PARIS (Flammarion, $60), is a feast of 560 of his photographs, edited by his daughter. Doisneau (1912-94) specialized in pictures of Parisians in their everyday lives. He shows them trying to get across the Place de la Concorde, leaping filthy gutters in Les Halles and staring at a painting in a gallery window. He also shoots the city tourists love: the banks of the Seine, the gargoyles of Notre-Dame, the stalls of the bouquinistes. He even gives us Paris in the snow, just in time for a Joyeux Noël.

NY Times 10 best books of 2005


December 11, 2005
Holiday Books
The 10 Best Books of 2005

Fiction

KAFKA ON THE SHORE
By Haruki Murakami.
Alfred A. Knopf, $25.95.This graceful and dreamily cerebral novel, translated from the Japanese by Philip Gabriel, tells two stories - that of a boy fleeing an Oedipal prophecy, and that of a witless old man who can talk to cats - and is the work of a powerfully confident writer. • ReviewFirst ChapterFeatured Author

ON BEAUTY
By Zadie Smith.
Penguin Press, $25.95.In her vibrant new book, a cultural-politics novel set in a place like Harvard, the author of ''White Teeth'' brings everything to the table: a crisp intellect, a lovely wit and enormous sympathy for the men, women and children who populate her story. • Review
PREP
By Curtis Sittenfeld.
Random House, $21.95. Paper, $13.95.This calm and memorably incisive first novel, about a scholarship girl who heads east to attend an elite prep school, casts an unshakable spell and has plenty to say about class, sex and character. • ReviewFirst Chapter

SATURDAY
By Ian McEwan.
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $26.As bracing and as carefully constructed as anything McEwan has written, this astringent novel traces a day in the life of an English neurosurgeon who comes face to face with senseless violence. • ReviewFirst ChapterFeatured Author

VERONICA
By Mary Gaitskill.
Pantheon Books, $23.This mesmerizingly dark novel from the author of ''Bad Behavior'' and ''Two Girls, Fat and Thin'' is narrated by a former Paris model who is now sick and poor; her ruminations on beauty and cruelty have clarity and an uncanny bite. • Review

Nonfiction
THE ASSASSINS' GATE America in Iraq
By George Packer
.Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26.A comprehensive look at the largest foreign policy gamble in a generation, by a New Yorker reporter who traces the full arc of the war, from the pre-invasion debate through the action on the ground. • ReviewFirst ChapterGeorge Packer Answers Readers' Questions

DE KOONINGAn American Master
By Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan.
Alfred A. Knopf, $35.A sweeping biography, impressively researched and absorbingly written, of the charismatic immigrant who stood at the vortex of mid-20th-century American art. • ReviewSlide Show

THE LOST PAINTING
By Jonathan Harr.
Random House, $24.95.This gripping narrative, populated by a beguiling cast of scholars, historians, art restorers and aging nobles, records the search for Caravaggio's ''Taking of Christ,'' painted in 1602 and rediscovered in 1990. • ReviewFirst Chapter

POSTWAR A History of Europe Since 1945
By Tony Judt.
The Penguin Press, $39.95.Judt's massive, learned, brilliantly detailed account of Europe's recovery from the wreckage of World War II presents a whole continent in panorama even as it sets off detonations of insight on almost every page. • Review

THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING
By Joan Didion.
Alfred A. Knopf, $23.95.A prose master's harrowing yet exhilarating memoir of a year riven by sudden death (her husband's) and mortal illness (their only child's). • ReviewA Profile of Joan Didion Audio: An InterviewFeatured AuthorAn Essay Adapted From 'The Year of Magical Thinking'

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Newton Booth Tarkington

The next book chosen was during the October gathering at Katy's home. It is The Manificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington. We will discuss this during the December meeting at Lisa's home. Here is a biography of that author.

Newton Booth Tarkington, an enormously prolific novelist, playwright, and short story writer who chronicled urban middle-class life in the American Midwest during the early twentieth century, was born in Indianapolis on July 29, 1869. He was the son of John Stevenson Tarkington, a lawyer, and Elizabeth Booth Tarkington. His uncle and namesake, Newton Booth, was a governor of California and later a United States senator.

In the essay 'As I Seem to Me,' published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1941, Tarkington recalled dictating a story to his sister when he was only six. By the age of sixteen he had written a fourteen-act melodrama about Jesse James. Tarkington was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy, Purdue University, and Princeton, where his burlesque musical The Honorable Julius Caesar was staged by the Triangle Club.

Upon leaving Princeton in 1893 he returned to Indiana determined to pursue a career as a writer.After a five-year apprenticeship marked by publishers' rejection slips, Tarkington enjoyed a huge commercial success with The Gentleman from Indiana (1899), a novel credited with capturing the essence of the American heartland. He consolidated his fame with Monsieur Beaucaire (1900), a historical romance later adapted into a movie starring Rudolph Valentino. 'Monsieur Beaucaire is ever green,' remarked Damon Runyon. 'It is a little literary cameo, and we read it over at least once a year.'

The political knowledge Tarkington acquired while serving one term in the Indiana house of representatives informed In the Arena (1905), a collection of short stories that drew praise from President Theodore Roosevelt for its realism.

In collaboration with dramatist Harry Leon Wilson, Tarkington wrote The Man from Home (1907), the first of many successful Broadway plays. His comedy Clarence (1919), which Alexander Woollcott praised for being 'as American as Huckleberry Finn or pumpkin pie,' helped launch Alfred Lunt on a distinguished career and provided Helen Hayes with an early successful role.

Following a decade in Europe, Tarkington returned to Indianapolis and won a new readership with the publication of The Flirt (1913). The first of his novels to be serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, the book contained authentic characters and themes that paved the way for Penrod (1914), a group of tales drawn from the author's boyhood memories of growing up in Indiana. The adventures of Penrod Schofield, which Tarkington also chronicled in the sequels Penrod and Sam (1916) and Penrod Jashber (1929), seized the imagination of young adult readers and invited comparison with Tom Sawyer.

Equally successful was Seventeen (1916), a nostalgic comedy of adolescence that subsequently inspired a play, two Broadway musicals, and a pair of film adaptations as well as Tarkington's sequel novel Gentle Julia (1922).

Tarkington broke new artistic ground with The Turmoil (1915), the first novel in his so-called Growth trilogy documenting the changes in urban life during the era of America's industrial expansion. William Dean Howells, the father of American realism, praised Tarkington's vivid depiction of the human misery generated by one man's worship of bigness and materialism.

The Magnificent Ambersons (1918), the second work in the series, earned Tarkington the Pulitzer Prize. 'The Magnificent Ambersons is perhaps Tarkington's best novel,' judged Van Wyck Brooks. '[It is] a typical story of an American family and town--the great family that locally ruled the roost and vanished virtually in a day as the town spread and darkened into a city.' The Midlander (1924) concludes the trilogy with the story of a real estate developer who is both a creator and a victim of the country's new wealth.

Tarkington won his second Pulitzer Prize for Alice Adams (1921), a novel often seen as an extension of the Growth trilogy. The unforgettable portrayal of a small-town social climber whose outlandish attempts to snare a rich husband are both poignant and hilarious, Alice Adams was later made into a film starring Katharine Hepburn.

Tarkington's other memorable books of the period include Women (1925), a cycle of amusing stories about the flourishing social life of suburban housewives, and The Plutocrat (1927), a satire of an American millionaire abroad. In addition he turned out The World Does Move (1928), a volume of autobiographical essays, and Mirthful Haven (1930), a serious novel of manners inspired by his many summers in Kennebunkport, Maine.

In the late 1920s, Tarkington commenced a prolonged battle with failing eyesight and near blindness. After undergoing more than a dozen eye operations he regained partial vision, but he was forced to dictate his work to a secretary. His joy at being able once more to see colors maintained a lifelong passion for collecting art.

The entertaining stories Tarkington wrote for the Saturday Evening Post about the art business were published as Rumbin Galleries (1937). In addition he completed Some Old Portraits (1939), a book of essays about his collection, which included works by Titian, Velázquez, and Goya.During the final years of his life Tarkington again focused on Indiana. In The Heritage of Hatcher Ide (1941) he updated the family sagas of the Growth trilogy, while in Kate Fennigate (1943) he offered another social comedy in the spirit of Alice Adams.

In 1945 Tarkington was awarded the prestigious Howells Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Booth Tarkington died at his home in Indianapolis following a short illness on May 19, 1946. The Show Piece (1947), his unfinished last novel, profiles a young egoist reminiscent of the George Minafer of The Magnificent Ambersons.

Friday, October 21, 2005

Book Concierge

Fellow bookies: I think many of us are also concierges!
My Role as a Book Concierge to My Friends

You would think after recommending books to the 1.1 million readers in our Network each month I would find suggesting books to friends to be a snap. But, oh no, this is pressure. In the past months I have found myself sweating my role of what I call, "Book Concierge."
As you can imagine, our house has quite a library in it. There are sets of bookshelves all around the house. I try to keep them categorized, but I confess I could use a few rainy weekends to get my system back under control. My sons want me to get book cataloguing software, which would be a great idea, but would kill the charm of wondering where a book is like an absent-minded librarian. I usually have a pretty good memory about how I sort the shelves, but there are moments when I can work myself into a frenzy when I KNOW we have a book and I cannot find it. As an example, I even have a four-high double deep stacked shelves of advance reading copies in one of the upstairs hallways. The other day I KNEW I had a copy of THE HISTORIAN there and sure it was...on the last shelf I looked at!
For me, the shelves at the house look like the shelves at the office --- jam packed with books. Thus when friends are heading off on trips, they stop by to visit and to meet with the "Book Concierge." While picking is pressure, hearing the feedback when you pick the right book is fun. Glenn, who is the father of one of my little one's best friends stopped by last week and told me how much he loved SHADOW DIVERS that I had given him for his trip to Greece. That sent me to the shelves looking for THE LAST DIVE since I thought he would enjoy that as a followup. On this same Greek trip Glenn's wife, Alita, wanted light beach reading. I cannot remember the six books I gave her, but she said she loved them all.
My friend Dez came by a few weeks ago before she took a trip to Bali with her significant other. She wanted just TWO books. Imagine THAT pressure. I could not just do two. She left with NIGHT FALL, THE KITE RUNNER, SNOW FLOWER AND THE SECRET FAN and another book I cannot remember. She wrote a postcard from Bali and said --- "Leo loved THE KITE RUNNER." Now I KNOW this is a great book, but making sure that it was a book that Leo would enjoy was the challenge.
Yesterday I brought a copy of SNOW FLOWER AND THE SECRET FAN to the nurse at my doctor's office. She had finished reading THE KITE RUNNER with her book club and was looking for something that was a story of friendship in an exotic location. And yes, for those of you noting that I mentioned this book twice, I DO like SNOWFLOWER. (And yes, that's three times.)
At the Y where I swim I have talked books in the locker room over the noise of the water in the showers. I have left lists of book ideas at the Y front desk for people I have met there. I have listened to people tell me about their personal book reading habits. One morning I watched another swimmer sit in the parking lot for a while after she stopped her car. When she entered the locker room I asked, "What were you listening to?" She laughed because I was right. She was hooked on an audiobook.
I learn a lot about people by what they tell me they are reading.
I have written lists of book recommendations for the moms of the boys on my son's baseball team. In between watching the action, I try to get a handle on what their sons like and from there make lists.
My friend, Jimmy, who lives in North Carolina has gotten so many of my favorite books from me over the years that if I saw his bookshelves, I might see a synopsis of my last eight years of reading. I remember last year his son was watching LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL at school and he remembered I had sent him the screenplay. He was trying to find it. I said, I think I sent it when you lived in Texas, so maybe it never got unpacked!
With friends and family borrowing books I have but one rule. They must return! I am not as anal as I was as a child where I had a stamp system like at the library. Instead now, I remember. When I looked for SHADOW DIVERS for Leo, I remembered Glenn had it!
I am sure that many of you play this same role with your friends. Have a story to share about you as Book Concierge? Then drop me a note at Carol@bookreporter.com.

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Following Amir:A trip to Afghanistan in which life imitates art

I found this essay written by the author of The Kite Runner. If this is any indication to the novel's writing style, I think I am going to enjoy it.

by Khaled Hosseini
San Francisco Chronicle
Sunday, August 10, 2003

Amir will be the first to tell you that he is neither the noblest nor the bravest of men. But three years ago, he did something both noble and brave:
He went back to Afghanistan, then ruled by the Taliban, to settle an old score. He went back after a 20-year absence to atone for a sin he had committed as a boy. He went back to rescue a child he had never met, and to rescue himself from damnation. The journey almost cost him his life. The thing is, I was the one who sent him. It was easy. After all, I created Amir; he is the protagonist of my novel, “The Kite Runner.”

Then, in March 2003, with the novel proofread and in production, I found myself tracing my protagonist’s footsteps, sitting in the window seat of an Ariana Airlines Boeing 727 headed toward Kabul. Like Amir, I had been gone a long time, almost 27 years, in fact; I was an 11-year-old, thin-framed seventh- grader when I left Afghanistan. I was going back now as a 38-year-old physician residing in Northern California, a writer, a husband and father of two. I gazed out the window, waiting for the plane to break through the clouds, waiting for Kabul to appear below me. When it did, a few lines from “The Kite Runner” came to me, and Amir’s thoughts suddenly became my own: The kinship I felt suddenly for the old land É it surprised me. É I thought I had forgotten about this land. But I hadn’t. Maybe Afghanistan hadn’t forgotten me either. The old adage in writing is you write about what you’ve experienced. I was going to experience what I had already written about.

Given this unusual circumstance, my two-week stay in Kabul took on a decidedly surreal quality, because every day I saw places and things I had already seen with my mind’s eye, with Amir’s eyes. For instance, walking through the crowded streets of Kabul for the first time, I was buoyed, like Amir, with a sense of coming home to an old friend. But also like Amir, I felt a bit like a tourist in my own country. We’d both been away a long time; neither one of us had fought in the wars, neither one of us had bled with the Afghan people. I had written about Amir’s guilt. Now I tasted it.

Soon, the line between Amir’s memories and my own began to blur. Amir had lived out my memories on the pages of “The Kite Runner,” and now I found myself living out his. When I was driven through the once beautiful, nowwar- ravaged Jadeh-maywand Avenue, past collapsed buildings, piles of rubble and bullet-pocked, roofless walls where beggars took shelter, I remembered my father buying me rosewater ice cream there one day in the early 1970s. And I remembered that Amir and his loving servant, Hassan, used to buy their kites on this same street, from a blind old man named Saifo. I sat on the crumbling steps of Cinema Park where my brother and I used to watch free undubbed Russian films in the winter and where Amir and Hassan had seen their favorite Western, “The Magnificent Seven,” no fewer than 13 times. I passed with Amir by smoke-filled, tiny kabob houses where our fathers used to take us, where sweaty men still sat cross-legged behind charcoal grills and feverishly fanned skewers of sizzling chopan kabob. Together we gazed up at the sky over the gardens of the 16th century emperor Babur and spotted a kite floating over the city. I thought of a sunny winter day in 1975, the day of Hassan and Amir’s kite-fighting tournament. That was the fateful day when 12-year-old Amir made a choice and betrayed his adoring friend Hassan, a day that would haunt him for the rest of his life; his choice would draw him back to Afghanistan and the Taliban as a grown man seeking redemption. And as I sat on a bench at Ghazi Stadium and watched the New Year’s Day parade with thousands of Afghans, I thought of my father and I watching a game of buzkashi there in 1973, but also of Amir, who had witnessed the Taliban stone a pair of adulterers in this same stadium, at the south end goalpost, in fact, where now a group of young men in traditional garments were dancing the atan in a circle.

But perhaps nowhere did fiction and life collide more dizzyingly than when I found my father’s old house in Wazir Akbar Khan, the house where I grew up, just as Amir rediscovered his baba’s old house in that same neighborhood. It took me three days of searching - I had no address and the neighborhood had changed drastically - but I kept looking until I spotted the familiar arch over the gates.

I got to walk through my old house; the Panjshiri soldiers who lived there were gracious enough to grant me this nostalgic tour. I found that, like on Amir’s childhood house, the paint on mine had faded, the grass had withered, the trees were gone, and the walls were crumbling. Like Amir, I was struck by how much smaller the house was in reality than the version that had for so long lived in my memories. And - I swear to this - when I stepped through the front gates, I saw a Rorschach blot-shaped oil stain on the driveway, just as Amir had on his father’s driveway. As I said my goodbyes and thanks to the soldiers, I realized something else: The emotional impact of finding my father’s house would have been even more intense if I hadn’t written “The Kite Runner.” After all, I had already been through this. I had stood beside Amir at the gates of his father’s house - now overtaken by murderous Taliban soldiers - and felt his loss. I’d watched him set his hands on the rusty wrought-iron bars, and together we’d gazed at the sagging roof and crumbling front steps. Having written that scene took some of the edge off my own experience. Call it art stealing life’s thunder.

Khaled Hosseini is a physician in the Bay Area and the author of the novel “The Kite Runner,” a San Francisco Chronicle best-seller.

About our next book

In Sleeping with Schubert, Brooklyn lawyer Liza Durbin takes center stage for the ultimate musical comeback when Franz Schubert takes up residence in her mind and body. It seems the composer of the "Unfinished" Symphony has loose ends to tie up.

The story’s spiritual launch site is the shoe department at Nordstrom, where Liza is Christmas shopping. The store pianist’s holiday drivel is driving her batty. When the pianist takes a break, Liza takes his place and plays brilliantly.

The reality that Franz Schubert has entered her life radically changes Liza’s relationships, career and sense of self. Everyone around her has an opinion or an agenda: Liza’s supremely proud parents, a nice Jewish couple, think of themselves as Joseph and Mary. Her wandering boyfriend returns from Italy, unhappy to find an extra guy in their bed, even if he’s invisible.

Liza’s rich, gorgeous sister dusts off her PR skills to promote a cleavage-based image, while a mysterious, self-appointed mentor from Juilliard tends to Liza’s more musical talents.

As fans, critics and late-night quipsters chomp on every detail of her life, Liza deals with heart-wrenching realities. She sees her own life overrun by a dead composer’s passion. With no idea how long it will last or what life would be like if Franz left, Liza searches for understanding. She ultimately finds answers in unexpected places, yet there are still plenty of remaining questions that allow for the thrill of speculation.

Random House, June, 2004
Random House Audio, June, 2004
Richard Pine, agent Inkwell Management
Film rights Paramount Picture

Sleeping With Schubert

I found this about our next author on her website.


About the Author
Sleeping with Schubert is Bonnie Marson’s second piece of fiction. The first was a short story called "The Sphinx," which won honorable mention in the Society of Southwestern Authors writing contest in 1994. She started a second short story but set it aside for several years until a friend suggested she "keep writing till it’s finished." Schubert is the finished story.
Before turning her creative energies toward writing, Bonnie was an artist working, mostly making paintings and drawings but playing with other media, too. Her work sold in galleries and to collectors around the country.
In addition to making art, Bonnie has had other jobs to support her food and clothing addictions. For the past 12 years, she’s worked at Canyon Ranch, the jet-set spa in Tucson, where all is sunny and lovely and healthy.
Though she’s lived in Tucson for more than 20 years, Bonnie is deeply rooted in New York. After growing up in East Meadow, Long Island, she went to college at the State University of New York at Buffalo, earning a degree in Speech Communications. She soon went back to undergrad at Douglass College in New Jersey to study fine arts.
Bonnie lives in Tucson with her husband, Steve Sadler, along with the world’s cutest dog, one good cat and one evil one. She is working on her next novel.
For more details about Bonnie’s unusual route from short story to novel to publication, read about Innocent Optimism.
Contact Bonnie at bonnie@bonniemarson.com: The author gladly reads all emails, though personal responses are not always possible. Thanks so much for you comments.

October 16th Meeting

Katy will be hosting this meeting.
We will be discussing; Sleeping with Schubert by Bonnie Marson.

Katy Downs-Stroh
911 Mariposa Way
Lodi
339-8715
runkygirl@softcom.net

Please call or email Katy to let her know you are coming.

Nov. 20th Meeting

La Dean & Cathy are co-hosting this month at Cathy Meyer's home.

Cathy Meyer
746 Evergreen Way
Manteca
239-6418

We will be discussing : The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

Please call or email Cathy and let her know if you will be attending.

Our Reading List

I also sent this as an email attachment, but in case you couldn't open the attachment, here it is again.
Lisa
We’re Booked Reading List
Feb.1996 ~Sept. 2005
Emma- Jane Austen
Like Water for Chocolate- Laura Esquival
My Antonia- Willa Cather
Snow Falling on Cedars- David Guterson
Cold Sassy Tree- Olive Ann Burns
Beach Music- Pat Conroy
Ladder of Years- Ann Tyler
The Bean Trees- Barbara Kingsolver
Uncle Tom’s Cabin- Harriet Beecher Stowe
Pigs in Heaven- Barbara Kingsolver
The Horse Whisperer- Nicholas Evans
The Shipping News- E. Annie Proulx
Song of Solomon- Toni Morrison
Cross Creek- Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
She Flew the Coop- Michael Lee West
Bone- Fae Myenne Ng
The Temple of my Familiar- Alice Walker
Object Lessons- Anna Quindlen
The Sixteen Pleasures- Robert Hellenga
A Civil Action- Jonathan Harr
She’s Come Undone- Wally Lamb
A Literary Christmas- compilation
Wicked- Gregory Maguire
The Pull of the Moon- Elizabeth Berg
The Giant’s House- Elizabeth McCracken
A Map of the World- Jane Hamilton
The Romance Reader- Pearl Abraham
Animal Husbandry- Laura Zigman
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn- Betty Smith
Salt Dancers- Ursula Hegi
Under the Tuscan Sun- Frances Mayes
The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood- Rebecca Wells
Life Estates- Shelby Hearon
A Cup of Tea- Amy Ephron
The Mistress of Spices- Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Cold Mountain- Charles Frazier
The Hundred Secret Senses- Amy Tan
Charming Billy- Alice McDermott
Your Oasis on Flame Lake- Lorna Landvik
Flaming Iguanas- Ericka Lopez
The Reader- Bernhard Schlink
Memoirs of a Geisha- Arthur Golden
Where the Heart Is- Billie Letts
Dear Exile- Hilary Liftin
The Inn at Lake Divine-Elinor Lipman
Hannah’s Daughters- Fredriksson
A Prayer for Owen Meany- John Irving
Tender at the Bone- Ruth Reichl
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister- Gregory Maguire
Crooked Little Heart- Anne LaMott
Lost Horizon-James Hilton
Body & Soul- Frank Conroy
Middlemarch- George Elliott
House of Sand and Fog- Andre Dubus III
Midwives- Chris Bohjalian
Cry to Heaven- Anne Rice
The Ladies’ Man-Elinor Lipman
The Poisonwood Bible- Barbara Kingsolver
Waiting- Ha Jin
Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind- Ann B. Ross
I Capture the Castle- Dodie Smith
Kitchen Confidential-Anthony Bourdain
Blonde- Joyce Carol Oates
Fugitive Pieces-Anne Michaels
Saying Grace-Beth Gutcheon
Warriors Don't Cry-Melba Patillo Beals
Jemima J-Jane Green
The Red Tent-Anita Diament
Life is So Good-George Dawson & Richard Glaubman
Jane Eyre-Charlotte Bronte
Joy in the Morning-Betty Smith
How Green Was My Valley-Richard Llewyelln
The Blind Assassin-Margaret Atwood
Soiled Doves:Prostitution in the Early West- Anne Seagraves
The Corrections- Jonathan Franzen
Cheaper by the Dozen- Frank B. Gilbreth,Jr.
The Lovely Bones- Alice Sebold
Back When We Were Grownups-Ann Tyler
The Sun Also Rises-Ernest Hemingway
The Hours-Michael Cunningham
Passage to Juneau-Jonathan Rabin
Big Stone Gap-Adriana Trigliani
Empire Falls-Richard Russo
Bel Canto-Ann Patchett
The Other Boleyn Girl-Phillipa Gregory
Seabiscuit-Laura Hillenbrand
The Dive From Clausen’s Pier-Ann Packer
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress- Dai Sijie
Life of Pi-Yann Martel
Atonement-Ian McEwan
Motherless Brooklyn-Jonathan Lethem
Three Junes-Julia Glass
No Hurry to Get Home-Emily Hahn
Ella Minnow Pea-Mark Dunn
Cry, the Beloved Country-Alan Patton
The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud-Ben Sherwood
Good Grief-Lolly Winston
A Fine Balance-Rohinton Mistry
Me Talk Pretty One Day-David Sedaris
Lost in a Good Book-Jasper Fforde
Plainsong-Kent Haruf
One Thousand White Women:The Journals of May Dodd-Jim Fergus
Waiting-Debra Ginsberg
Ya Ya’s in Bloom-Rebecca Wells
The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency-Alexander McCall Smith
In This House of Brede-Rumer Godden
Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons-Lorna Landvik
Sleeping with Schubert-Bonnie Marson
The Kite Runner-Khaled Hosseini
The Magnificent Ambersons-Booth Tarkington
A Walk on the Wild Side-Bill Bryson
A Million Little Pieces-James Frey

Monday, July 18, 2005

ANGRY HOUSEWIVES EATING BON BONS

ABOUT THE BOOK
From her sensational sleeper hit Patty Jane's House of Curl to her heartwarming novel Welcome to the Great Mysterious, Lorna Landvik has won the hearts of readers everywhere by skillfully balancing hilarity with pathos, and bittersweet insights with heartwarming truths. Now she returns to her beloved, eccentric stomping ground of small-town Minnesota where the most eclectic, and engaging group of women you'll ever meet share love, loss, and laughter.Sometimes life is like a bad waiter—it serves you exactly what you don't want. The women of Freesia Court have come together at life's table, fully convinced that there is nothing good coffee, delectable desserts, and a strong shoulder can't fix. Laughter is the glue that holds them together—the foundation of a book group they call AWEB—Angry Wives Eating Bon Bons—an unofficial "club" that becomes much more. It becomes a lifeline.The five women each have a story of their own to tell. There's Faith, the newcomer, a lonely housewife and mother of twins, a woman who harbors a terrible secret that has condemned her to living a lie; big, beautiful Audrey, the resident sex queen who knows that good posture and an attitude can let you get away with anything; Merit, the shy, quiet doctor's wife with the face of an angel and the private hell of an abusive husband; Kari, a thoughtful, wise woman with a wonderful laugh as "deep as Santa Claus's with a cold" who knows the greatest gifts appear after life's fiercest storms; and finally, Slip, activist, adventurer, social changer, a tiny, spitfire of a woman who looks trouble straight in the eye and challenges it to arm wrestle.Holding on through forty eventful years—through the swinging Sixties, the turbulent Seventies, the anything-goes Eighties, the nothing's-impossible Nineties—the women will take the plunge into the chaos that inevitably comes to those with the temerity to be alive and kicking. Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons depicts a special slice of American life, of stay-at-home days and new careers, children and grandchildren, bold beginnings and second chances, in which the power of forgiveness, understanding, and the perfectly timed giggle fit is the CPR that mends broken hearts and shattered dreams.Once again Lorna Landvik leaves you laughing and crying, as she reveals perhaps the greatest truth: that there is nothing like the saving grace of best friends.

READER'S GUIDE

1. During the sixties and seventies, the Angry Housewives smoked cigarettes and threw back highballs-even while pregnant-without knowledge of the harm it could do. If they could have glimpsed their futures then, what do you think would have surprised them most about their future selves? What is one thing you know now that you would have really appreciated being aware of ten years ago?

2. Why do you think groups like AHEB-women who live near each other, raise children together, and bond over books together-persist even in a climate of working moms and in a culture that is flooded with other types of media?

3. Discuss Faith's letters to her deceased mother. What kind of catharsis do they provide Faith, and how do the tone and nature of the letters change as the years go by?

4. Audrey gets a kick out of introducing Kari to strangers as a recently released convict. Discuss the women's jokes, nicknames, and embarrassing moments-how does humor work to solidify friendship?

5. Kari faces a critical decision when Mary Jo forbids her from telling Anders that the baby is his grandchild. Would you be able to keep such a secret? For which character is this secret most constructive; for which is it most destructive?

6. The women suggest that Slip thinks that by wearing revealing clothes Audrey perpetuates her role as a sex object and "subverts [her] real self." Audrey replies that she takes no one's opinion into account when she dresses-she simply likes it. How much does physical appearance burden or bless the women in AHEB? Do you think it is easy to make generalizations regarding persons who dress provocatively?

7. Faith becomes a guardian figure after staying up with the gun waiting for Eric Iverson's return, and keeping watch over Slip in the hospital bed, prepared to confront the Grim Reaper. What do you think are her conscious or subconscious motivations for being ever watchful?

8. Audrey has a talent for sensing upcoming events. In what ways do her capabilities influence how she deals with her family? Does it differ from how they affect her friendships? How much do you believe in psychic phenomena? Would being endowed with such a gift help or hinder one's decisions?

9. Merit is ashamed that a part of her believes her mother's statement that her brave Aunt Gaylene--happily unmarried, fulfilled with friends and books--was "living half a life." What sides of Merit's character produce these contradictory feelings? How do you think the other women of AHEB would respond to this opinion, and why?

10. At the AHEB meeting for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, the women toast their favorite and most influential teachers. In what other ways does the act of teaching influence the relationships in this novel?

11. Slip and Audrey allow a conflict between their children to seriously harm their friendship for a short time. If you ever had the desire to openly criticize a friend because of the way he or she raised a child, would you do so? How does Landvik's portrayal of differing parenting techniques and the children they produce function as social commentary within the novel?

12. What do you think caused Faith to (almost absent-mindedly) bring Audrey to Trilby? How did confronting Beau's sexuality help her have the strength to confront the reality of her own past?

13. Merit attributes her quiet acts of rebellion--trash rolled up furtively in her hair, choosing only banned books for AHEB meetings--to her maintenance of sanity during her years of marriage. What do you make of these coping methods? How do they compare to the methods of the other women in AHEB? Discuss your own strategies for staying lucid and balanced when confronted with situations that can be unbearable.

14. Kari and Mary Jo both question the timing and content of their admission to Julia after it's too late. Do you think it would have been wiser to have Julia grow up knowing the truth, or perhaps never knowing at all? How do you feel about Kari's impromptu decision to come clean in front of Mary Jo and without her prior knowledge? Was Julia right to be so upset?

15. How do you feel about the later inclusion of Grant as a member of AHEB? Did you think the inclusion of a male affected their particular group dynamic? What is valuable about inviting men to participate in women's dialogue?

16. Merit eventually finds Paradise, literally and figuratively. Do you believe that good things come to people who wait?

17. At the peace march, Fred states that, "Only by trying to help someone else save their life could I save my own." What do you make of this statement considering the horrors he experienced during the war? Do other characters in the novel embody or contradict this notion? Are certain characters better described as saviors than saved?

18. How are midwestern values portrayed in this book? In what ways might the book have differed if it had been set in the northeast or the south?

19. Slip is described throughout the book as the strongest--physically--of the Angry Housewives, in addition to her dynamic will and stalwart convictions. What emotions are stirred when someone who is perceived as invincible suddenly becomes critically ill? How does she continue to display conviction and energy? Do you think she will prevail?

20. Audrey says she believes in luck and God acting in tandem. What events in her life do you think contributed to this belief? How much weight do you give this sentiment regarding your own life? Do you think people tend to attribute life's painful events more to luck or to God? What about the joyous events?

21. Did you like the format of the book? How did giving every character the opportunity to voice their thoughts support the all-for-one and one-for-all theme of the book and the club itself?

22. This book covers a lot of ground, both personal and political. What do you think the most important lesson these women learn over thirty years is? Which characters were most ripe for change with the political and cultural tide? Whose story did you think most embodied the emergence of women as a growing force outside the home?

23. In order to attain a greater understanding of herself, Faith utilizes therapy, learns from her friendships and culls inspiration from books. How do these three supplement each other as means of self discovery? Which books and authors have inspired you most through the years?

24. What did you think of Merit's idea to unite mothers around the world to stop war and halt violence? Were you surprised this notion came from her?

25. Slip tells Merit that re-dubbing their book club Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons would be taking their husbands' words and "giving them and their chauvinism the finger." What other subversive techniques do the women display for giving chauvinism the finger? Do you feel it's an apt name for the club and all it turns out to be?

26. Discuss Kari's notion that her heart was able to put itself back together after the loss of Bjorn much like a lizard that can regenerate a tail. Do you think this sort of regeneration would have ever been possible without the arrival of Julia?

27. Marjorie McMahon has a plethora of nicknames: Slip, Warrior Bear, the Big Kahuna; and she is called everything from a leprechaun to a member of a "bloodstained group of nuts." What in her character lends itself so well to these various labels? Which do you think is the most accurate?

28. What do you think about Merit's final interaction with Eric Iverson? Was the slap beneath her or just what he deserved?

29. How does AHEB compare to your book club? Are there any ideas in the novel, like themes for meetings, which you'd like to incorporate?

30. Which character was your favorite? Was she or he the one you identified most with?

31. A number of the characters in the book harbor secrets. What does secret-keeping do characters like Faith and Fred, who fear their actual secrets as opposed to Kari or Beau who fear the reactions of others?

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Thoughts from La Dean


Sunday, May 15th.
Book Group Blurb

Seven lovely bookish type ladies sat outside at LaDean’s house to discuss the book "Waiting, the True Confessions of a Waitress" by Debra Ginsberg. LaDean allowed everyone to practice "waiting" by serving themselves their "grub", as Kathe called it. For one of the lovely ladies, it was her first time to attend Book Group. We welcomed Melody Gonsalves who brought along her reading glasses and looked quite like a veteran avid reader. (Of course we do know she inherited book reading genes from her mother Kathe.)

We all enjoyed Katy reminiscing about her past life as a waitress, earning her way through college. She verified the confessions of Debra Ginsberg as being very accurate and similar to her own experiences. Her reflections prompted her to share pictures of friends with whom she worked and played during her "waiting days". For those who weren’t there, you will need to ask Katy about her bus boy and bartender experience!

Kim thought the book was a metaphor for life in general, that we are always waiting for what will happen next in our lives. There seemed to be consensus of thought with Kim’s "deep thinking and analysis".

Cathy commented that she did not think the book was "great", and was not impressed with the writing. She felt the author was really stretching to fill up the pages. Even though LaDean enjoyed the book, she agreed with Cathy’s thoughts about the writing, especially when compared to the writing of Anthony Bourdain in "Kitchen Confidential". Kathe, however, thought the author was quite skilled at writing as a storyteller and enjoyed her style.
Cathy commented that she will probably tip more after reading this book, and we all agreed that the job of a waitress was mentally, emotionally, socially, and physically challenging. None of us are eager to apply for a "waiting" job in the near future!

Books presented for the July Book Group Meeting were as follows:
"The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency", by Alexander McCall Smith
"Educating Alice, Adventures of a Curious Woman", by Alice Steinbach
"Lucy" by Ellen Feldman.

AND, the winner was, "The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency".

The next book group will be held on June 12th, at Cathy’s house. We will be discussing the book, "Ya Ya’s in Bloom", by Rebecca Wells.

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Membership Update

I think I got everyone who is currently a member. If I left someone out please add them in a post of your own, ok?

NAME ADDRESS PHONE EMAIL

Victoria Brunn 1737 Brookdale Wy., Manteca 239-7120 Vbrunn@comcast.net
Sandy Dyer 422 Golden, Manteca 823-8021 sdyer@sjcoe.net
Katy Downs-Stroh 911 Mariposa Wy., Lodi 339-8715 runkygirl@softcom.net
Sarah Fagerlee 2350 Lucile Ave., Stockton 477-1158 sfagerlee@yahoo.com
Kathe Gonsalves 1364 Thrower Ct., Manteca 239-3936 gonsilla1@aol.com
Kim Martinez 1845 Matterhorn, Manteca 825-9109 kim05verizon@verizon.net
Cathy Meyer 746 Evergreen Wy., Manteca 239-6418 meyerbc@aol.com
Marie Millin 1533 Arnell Ct., Manteca 825-4989 mmillin@comcast.net
Mary Ann Pafford 433 S. Regent, Stockton 933-9507 tmpafford@gmail.com
Lisa Schnaidt 1324 Bryant Ct., Manteca 239-4452 lschmoopie@comcast.net
La Dean Talcott 1048 Cherry Ct., Manteca 823-3867 LALiteracy@aol.com

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Books are a link to people

I have to share this story with you all. This past weekend John and I were on our way to Las Vegas after a two hour weather delay in the Sacramento airport. The flight was very full, people were a bit on edge due to the delay, and I was pissed because we had to check our carry-ons due to the fact it was such a full flight. My book and magazines were in my bag and there I sat with nothing but the SkyMall magazine and an America West publication. As people filed into the plane I smiled at the woman who took the seat next to me. She settled in, put on her seatbelt and pulled out a book. I noticed it was The Lovely Bones and mentioned I had read it also. The conversation soared from that point. As John dozed my new friend Phyllis and I talked about book after book. She is an executive for a pharmacutical company who travels a great deal and is in a book group also up in Sacramento and we compared the styles of our meetings, hosting the meeting ,etc. The flight attendant came by to offer us a drink/snack and noticed the book we were talking about and joined in the conversation as she served all the rows within earshot of us. Before I knew it we were landing in Vegas and Phyllis and I parted company. Her final comment to me was," I wish you were in our book group!" It's amazing what books can do!