Becoming Madam Secretary
by Stephanie Dray
An Intelligent woman of the 1920s and 30s (12/8/2023)
At first, I thought that the author was a good storyteller but not a great writer. As the book went on, I became so engrossed in the story, that I began to truly appreciate her writing style. Women in the 1920s and 30s were expected to fulfill their roles as wives and mothers. Frances Perkins was fortunate to have married a man who respected her intelligence, her abilities, and her need to work. Having taken the lead on important social issues, she gained the respect of politicians and was perfectly positioned for FDR to appoint her his Secretary of Labor. She learned to balance her intelligence and her causes against what men would accept from her as a lone women amongst all men, so that she was both listened to and heard. It was a remarkable feat. The writing compels the reader forward in a very satisfying way.
The Personal Librarian
by Marie Benedict, Victoria Christopher Murray
Secrets can color our lives (3/19/2021)
As someone who has lived with a family secret for almost 40 years, Belle's hiding the fact that she was fair enough to pass as white, despite the fact that she was "colored" resonated with me. I felt that the characters were well-drawn, but thought that the book moved very slowly from major issue to major issue without sufficient build-up to propel the story forward. There were times I felt as though I was continuing the work because I had committed to writing a review. In the end, I felt it was worth the effort, I just wished an editor had pared it down a bit.
I Want You to Know We're Still Here: A Post-Holocaust Memoir
by Esther Safran Foer
Remembering the past, assuring the future (12/17/2019)
"I Want You to Know We're Still Here" by Ester Safran Foer was a well-written love note from a mother to her children. The story felt like a fairy tale retelling, where you recognize the story in bits and pieces, but the names have changed and the details are different. I, admittedly, read this book because of Jonathan Safran Foer's books, but you can see from Ester's writing where her son got his strength for words. However, Ester truly has her own voice. Ester's way of formatting a story is like that of an earnest parent after the child has had its own baby and is now asking for advice. She admits that she doesn't have all the answers, that a lot of it she had to assume or research herself. She reminds us that while the survivors of the Holocaust might be leaving this earthly planet, there is still an echo or shadow of what they had to overcome and what was done. The book reads as motherly plea to remember to do our homework because as life goes on she wants to trust someone to remember the echo and the shadows because they were here, and still are as long as their stories are told.
D-Day Girls: The Spies Who Armed the Resistance, Sabotaged the Nazis, and Helped Win World War II
by Sarah Rose
Another take on WWII stories (4/7/2019)
Since my pre-teens, I have been drawn to stories about World War II. My father fought in it, as a young Jewish woman, it was part of my heritage and history. I often feel like there isn't another story that can be told that I haven't read. But there is - and that is D-Day Girls. It was a completely different twist on the stories of the War: the citizenry, the people who fought it, the conflicts between the conquerors and the defeated and how that got turned around. It was well-researched and well-written. Despite the rampant sexism that was practiced by the very people who were dependent on these women to do their jobs, it is a refreshing look at the women who made a difference in the War as something more than nurses or stenographers.
A Place for Us
by Fatima Farheen Mirza
Authentic view of life of the first and second generation immigrants (7/15/2018)
If you, your parents, your grandparents or people you know are immigrants to this country, this book will touch you on so many levels. The first generation to the country, holding on to the beliefs that make them the people they are, even if they are the "old ways"; their children, being raised on their parents values, while struggling to find their own identity in the country of their birth. There are also the family dynamics of birth order, male child vs. female child, and how culture controls and plays into that. The look into this immigrant's family life is eye-opening and educational. Written with great sensitivity. I can't say enough good things about this book.
The Kennedy Debutante
by Kerri Maher
Kick Kennedy - American Princess/British Marchioness (6/6/2018)
Oh how I loved this book! Full disclosure: I am an absolute fan of historical fiction and absolutely cannot get enough of all things Kennedy. If you are not a fan of either, you might not feel the way I did about this book.
Yes, Kick Kennedy was a privileged, pampered, watched-over American princess, but after understanding that (and forgiving it) Maher truly had her come off as her own being (as opposed to being in her brothers' shadows) and willing to give of herself, understanding the privilege under which she lived, donating her time, talent and treasure. I knew only the basic outline of her life (and death) and this book filled in the detail and gave it color. I thought that Maher did an excellent job of showing the depth of Kick as a partner/volunteer/employee and lover of her family, religion and the man she married.
Is it appropriate to call a book "delicious" any more? It was short of gossipy about a character who was talked about all of her adult life. So good!
The Travelling Cat Chronicles
by Hiro Arikawa, Philip Gabriel
Not what I was expecting (5/4/2018)
Having lived with dogs and cats for the past 35 years, and read most of the best selling novels about various pets over those years, I started the Traveling Cat Chronicles with different expectations than how I found the book to begin with. First of all, there was a cultural difference in the approach to the man/cat bond. Secondly, I felt that there was a disconnect because of the translation. I just felt that a warmth that I was used to from the American bestsellers was missing. Also, the foreshadowing - that device that keeps you moving forward to find out why things are going the way they are going - was awkward. It is only because of these issues that I gave the book a 4 and not a 5, since by the end, I was totally wrapped up in the characters and the way the story played out. If you approach the book with the understanding that it is not another "Marley and Me", that it is its own story, I think you will find it truly enjoyable.
French Exit
by Patrick deWitt
Good writing, fair story (1/27/2018)
I enjoyed the writing better than I enjoyed the story. I was looking for something quirky, which by the description of the book, I was sure I would find. Quirky is certainly one way to describe the book. As the story unfolded, I found myself less and less enchanted, but the writing was so strong it drove me on. There were moments - such as a comment about adulthood being thrust upon one at too young an age, or the dictionary game - that made the book a worthwhile read. But there were too many "where is this going?" moments. Without being a spoiler, I was disconcerted by the ending and would have appreciated an epilogue to help me understand how the characters lives were resolved.
Sometimes I Lie
by Alice Feeney
A book that requires two readings (11/21/2017)
You know from the title and the opening of the book, that there is something you will need to figure out beyond the story line itself. The story line is good. It keeps moving forward, told in different time periods. Not unlike Gillian Flynn's "Gone Girl" there is a trick - Although, in Flynn's book, it is better understood on second reading, in this book, I felt that it actually required a second reading to sort out the characters in order to now understand the trick. Maybe it's me. Maybe I needed to be paying closer attention or needed to understand the characters better. But trying to apply what I had learned at the end to what I had read from the beginning seemed a bit exhausting.
Stay with Me
by Ayobami Adebayo
A Hearbreaking Story (8/25/2017)
This story reminded me of The Gift of the Magi in the way in which each spouse selfishly gives their love to the other in such a way that the gift becomes, somehow, meaningless - and yet the love of each other is so overriding that in the end, that is all you see. The first chapter gives the foreshadowing of the heartbreak we will witness, but the story builds slowly, and it is easy to forget that foreshadowing. It is, surprisingly, not a tearjerker, just so horribly sad. And yet there is redemption in the end. Saying anything more would spoil your reading of this elegant, thoughtful and well-developed story.
The Midnight Watch: A Novel of the Titanic and the Californian
by David Dyer
A story that hit close to home (2/11/2016)
I have a family history with the Titanic. My grandmother was supposed to have come to America on the Titanic, but her father, having forgotten that his sons had become adults while he worked in America to earn their passage, did not send enough money. They literally missed the boat. By the time my grandmother and her mother and siblings came to America, the tragedy of the Titanic was known and a different route was taken. Obviously, with a background like that, I not only read The Midnight Watch for the story it told, but the story that could have been my family's. I was fascinated by the idea that such a very small sliver of time could be the subject of a full-length novel. But Dyer did a fabulous job of investigating and portraying the facts around the failure of the closest ship to the Titanic to rush to her aid and giving his characters depth and dignity. And he did so without just stretching out the facts so that he could make a novel of an appropriate length. I cried repeatedly at the loss of life, the insignificance placed on the lives third class passengers (where my family would have been) and the opportunity missed. This was an insightful, provocative and well-written novel.