Keepin’ It Classy and Classic

I love finding new reading material. My Kindle is filled with books from every genre – young adult, religious, sci-fi, romance, popular fiction – every decade. Some of these classics I have read and loved and have downloaded to spark an interest in my children. As a self-professed Wizard of Oz fan girl, I had to download the complete Oz collection by L. Frank Baum. I read the first book in the series and thought secretly that the world of Oz was based on some vivid and bizarre hallucination possibly from licking frogs or eating mushrooms. I never thought it could get weirder than flying monkeys, but it does.

Another book I downloaded for my son was Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin. In this true story, a white writer used prescription medication and a tanning light to darken his skin. As a “black” man he travelled through the still segregated South and documented his experience in a diary that he later turned into a novel. I remember reading this as a teenager and feeling deep empathy and shame for the injustices minorities suffered at this pivotal time in our nation’s history. I want my son to open up to this perspective as well, so when I found Black Like Me, I snapped it up. Well, downloaded it quickly.

 

For my son, the scientist/adventurer, I have downloaded or purchased hard copies of From the Earth to the Moon and Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne and Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson (my son loved both books). For both children, I found a copy of Bridge to Terbithia by Katherine Paterson, a book I adored as a child.

 

Other classics I can’t wait for my kids to devour include, Lord of the Flies (which I loved), Catcher in the Rye (which I hated) and The Great Gatsby (another love). I still have a lot of classics to consume myself. I’ve never completed an Emily Bronte novel. Or Jane Austen.  I have a long way to go in my quest for personal literary growth when it comes to the classics. But my kids, they are on a good roll.

What classics do you love the most? What am I missing that I should be reading myself or that I should get for my kids?

Gone Girl: Believe the Hype

In real life, I’m a rule follower. Tell me not to carry anything but cab fare and my student ID, and I’ll be the only one at graduation communicating to the outside world with smoke signals. Try to sneak me in as your second cousin Louisa from Argentina, and I’ll fold every time. But don’t try to get me to climb on any crazy bandwagon. This rule follower has standards. I like to stumble upon my pop culture pleasures on my own, thank you very much, sometimes to the point of absurdity. (I loved Seinfeld before it got big, then stopped watching because everyone else was. Moral of the story: sometimes it’s really okay to jump off the bridge with the cool kids.)

This summer I decided to go against my nature. Instead of sticking to my tried-and-true summer reading plan–a kickass woman’s biography and the latest Falco book–I took a peek at more Summer Reading Lists than you can shake a sunhat at. And you know what? Hundreds of professionally rabid readers (especially the ones you find here) aren’t wrong.

Put down Fifty Shades. So three months ago. And the juicy parts will always be there. What you want to be reading now? Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn. Positively addictive. A crazy premise: on Nick and Amy Dunne’s fifth wedding anniversary, Amy disappears. Soon it’s clear Nick may never be up for husband of the year, but as the days drag on and the fingers start pointing–is he really a killer?  Flynn takes us inside a marriage gone very very wrong–giving Amy and Nick each their own unique voice and inner life.

You won’t believe where she takes you, and you’ll love her for it. Reese Witherspoon’s production just bought the film rights with Flynn signed on to write the screenplay. It’s a certified pop sensation most everyone who’s anyone in the entertainment industry saw coming from a mile away. So what? I still love me my indie street cred, but sometimes it’s nice to sit back and go with the flow. In this case, it’s a tsunami.

 

By Blood – Ellen Ullman

Our narrator, a professor on leave from his university, takes an office in an aging, once-grand, old building in downtown San Francisco. It’s late summer, 1974. San Francisco thrums along despite an undercurrent of chaos and fear. The Zodiac Killer still prowls Northern California, the economy is stagnant all over the United States, and kidnapped heiress Patty Hearst dominates the headlines. The professor plans to prepare a series of lectures on Aeschylus’ play, The Eumenides, in his newly acquired work space. Like the protagonist in the Greek tragedy, the professor is pursued, by his own demons rather than the vengeful Furies of the play. We soon learn the professor’s leave is involuntary; he has fled at least part way across the country to avoid confronting the aftermath of some vaguely defined wrongdoing. The misdeed, the investigation, and the flight induce the latest episode of what the professor terms his “nervous condition”. The professor rented the office to add routine to his life and give himself a reason to leave his rented, shabby beachfront house. It’s a rocky beginning:  ”The dark emotions seemed to be part of my body, instinctual, issuing from the cells as surely as saliva or blood or urine, and with as little conscious opportunity to intervene in their production.”

Within a month, his routine is more or less established and he writes the first workable notes for his lecture. The building is quiet. It calms him. Then one morning as he works, he notices the acoustics of his office changed. White noise emanates from the space next door. Just above the electronic din, he hears distinct sounds he recognizes as indistinct conversation. As he listens, irritated at the interruption, the noise stops. Two female voices drift through the slightest of doors between the offices. Captivated by the voice of the patient in the psychotherapist’s chair, he begins eavesdropping in earnest, taking great pains to remain inaudible as well as invisible.

Soon his life revolves around the appointments of his “dear patient”. He overhears her concerns, her troubles. Problems at home with her girlfriend, varying from squabbles about housekeeping to fundamental differences in their views of lesbian politics. But the problem that fascinates him most is her adoption, what the patient refers to as her “mysterious origins”. The patient describes a little girl, just a baby, she once encountered in a foundling hospital:

“Born unhappy. Built in. Original, like sin. In her bones and blood and skin. And nothing would ever change that verdict. She was going to have a hard time in this world. I looked at that little baby — she was still screaming; why didn’t somebody soothe her now, for God’s sake? — and I wondered: What would I have done? How deep and dark and terrible that cylinder must have seemed. Would I have been able to do it: reach in and find the shiny little happiness at the bottom?”

The therapist, believing the patient recreates unhealthy romances based on her relationship with her adoptive mother, encourages and even pushes the patient to explore her adoption and the reasons for the secrecy surrounding her birth. Unknowingly, the therapist sets in motion events that dredge up decades-old secrets that reach around the globe, encompassing Germany after the fall of Hitler, the establishment of the Israeli state, and the role of the Catholic Church in safeguarding the Jewish children of post-war Europe.

Ellen Ullman’s story drips with literary allusions and brims with redolent, enthralling language, creating a shifting, slightly Gothic, and richly layered tale of a man’s obsession with, and interference in, a young woman’s search for her genetic origins. The patient unwittingly takes on the role of the professor’s surrogate. By experiencing her therapy, anonymously funneling information about her adoption, and living vicariously through her, he hopes to find a parallel peace for himself. The intimacy of the voyeuristic relationship is, of course, one-sided; the creation and delusion of an obsessive man. Both truth and lies emerge as the patient follows her biological family tree. In the end, we are left to decide the importance of identity, genetics, and family just as the patient will:  for ourselves.

American Terroir – Rowan Jacobsen

I love food. I am a foodie and I will try anything that you put in front of me (except octopus). I also love to cook and absolutely love to bake. During these summer months, I love to use what I can find at the local farmer’s market. It’s nice to know where your food comes from. But do you REALLY know where your food comes from?

American Terroir Savoring the Flavors of Our Woods, Waters, and Fields, was a book I borrowed from a colleague, who could not stop talking about it. From the back cover:

The first guide to the “flavor landscapes” of North America, American Terroir explains how local conditions such as soil and climate affect the flavor of iconic American foods. Complete with recipes and a resource section for finding the best place-specific foods, it’s the perfect companion for any self respecting locavore.

I got more out of this book than I thought I would. I love dark roast coffee, but now I won’t drink it. Did you know that dark roasting ruins the coffee bean? We can blame this on Starbucks. I’m terrified of bees, but now I laugh when I see them. Once you’ve read a bee referred to as a “flying penis” you can’t help but laugh at them as they fly by.

Speaking of bees, that little honey bee that’s in your refrigerator, do you know what kind of honey it is? Did you know honey never spoils?

I learned so much about salmon and honey and coffee and avocados and mussels. Literary fans, did you know there was a Green Gables mussel?

My favorite chapters encompassed the foods I love to consume most: wine, chocolate and avocados. But the most intriguing chapter of this book to me was the chapter on forest gastronomy. Why yes, I think I would love to go through the forest and pick lily petals for salads. If I’m ever in Quebec, I want to eat at the restaurant this chapter is centered around.

If you love food, this book is a great read for you. It will make you want to travel to see these processes and land in person. I want to go to Michoacan to see the avocado trees and eat the ham that is supposed to be better than prosciutto. I want to go to Prince Edward Island and eat a Green Gables Mussel, to Alaska for the fresh king salmon and to Chiapas for chocolate.

Have you read any good food-related books? Share them in the comments!

Calling All Angels

I’ll come right out with it: I’m a huge nerd. HUGE. And I’m totally fine with that. I embrace it. “For one day, the geeks shall inherit the earth…” or something like that, right? So imagine my delight when, in the middle of a truly compelling plot, I found… History.

I’m not talking about 10th grade American History, where we learned about which president was best known for getting stuck in a bathtub (Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?). I’m talking history like we all wish was on the History Channel. The history of the Lausanne Cathedral in Lausanne, Switzerland, the history of the town itself, brought me to yearn for the beauty and peace described in brilliant and concise detail. Add in the mystery surrounding an ancient scroll banned from the Bible, and I was all in. Plus? All true. (I Googled it.)

Through tight and seamless prose, author Jon Steele weaves together the lives of three seemingly unrelated people: Katherine, a high-priced call girl hiding out in Lausanne, Switzerland, after the IRS came looking for all of her “assets”; Jay Harper, a security consultant with the IOC, though through his whiskey breath and bloodshot eyes, even he can’t see why he was recruited for this station; and Marc Rochat, le guet de Lausanne, or, the watcher of Lausanne, who spends his nights calling the hour from the belfry of the Lausanne Cathedral. These three souls, these… Angels… Must find their way to one another through forces of both heaven and hell to save what is left of Creation here on Earth.

The Watchers brings together light and dark, sacred and profane, history and metaphysics, all to tell a tale of human salvation, and to remind all of us, I think, that we’re not alone. Our guardian angels are always watching.