From a fellow Sepia and sometime Magpie contributor, my bloggy friend Vicki Lane's latest is "The Day of Small Things" which fits the bill as a great story, over 413 pages in paperback, small print, well told in the dialect of Appalachia. The characters are alive on the pages. The interesting twist to this tale at the end made me ponder, which works best at the time or the situation, Christianity and prayer or the old Indian ways, the little people, the connection to the spirits and sprites? This is the greatest story I have read in a long time and yet it was perfect timing for me to read her provocative thoughts like, "our mothers, good or bad, are always with us..." something like that near the end of the book. The names of the characters lure the reader through the story, some are, Least, Lilah Bel, Granny Beck, Mr Aaron, John Goingsnake, Redbird, Calven, Prim, Dorothy, Birdie, Belvy, and the places Dark Holler, Gudger's Stand, well you get the drift it's southern, Appalachian. The dialect is exceptionally fitting to the tale and the characters. This link to Vicki's blog has the review from the Los Angeles Times http://thedayofsmallthingsvickilane.blogspot.com/ Here is the closing paragraph, " It will be late summer when we bury her and the yard grass will have grown knee high. But the joy of that perfect day, with me and Luther young and happy, comes back to me every time I hang out the laundry or whenever Bernice's boy comes over to cut the grass. He uses a power mower--that ratchety song is gone forever, I reckon--but the sweet green smell of new mown grass don't never change." I will recommend this book to my book club and donate my copy to my local library for other readers to enjoy.
I knew I had to read George W Bush' "Decision Points" and purchased my first edition upon release; it is one that will stay in my personal library. I do not recommend this book to people who have not followed news nor studied current or prior national history nor to those who lack familiarity with the Bush legacy and family. I would be curious if someone like that read it what they would think; I suspect they would not enjoy this book because I think it requires some solid knowledge or foundation as it is not written lightly and is more like a history, although not a chronology of his presidency. I have found in discussions that history means different things to different people. To myself it is the building block of all that happens next, the basis for actions, and the key to understanding; a mixture of philosophy and geography and time and place; it is knowledge and awareness. GW's own love of history comes through loud and clear. I loved this book and now far better understand his decisions, some of which I did not agree with. I also had read many books about and by the Bush family and Karl Rove's "Courage and Consequences" which was another tremendous building block to relishing this book. It was interesting to me to recall what Rove had written as that same situation was portrayed in "Decision Points." There is no variance in descriptions though from different persons. I knew before I read it that Bush had been wrongly lambasted by our very liberal media and cohorts, represented and taunted as a dummy, a joke, or worse. Reading this thoughtful book verifies that all that was BS by the far left and worse down right lies. The book is not difficult to read but neither is it one to whiz through lightly, not one of those simple pleasure reads. It is for thoughtful pondering and contemplation. A book for thinking. There are no surprises, but many simple truths. George Bush prevails as a statesman and an exceptional leader, in fact someone who understands the prerequisites and demands of leadership and who was able to make the tough calls and decisions when the country needed them most. He emphasizes relationships he made with world leaders and their perspectives. His greatest accomplishment is that America was not attacked again by terrorists on his watch (Thank you President Bush!) He admits his big disappointment was in not bringing Osama bin Laden to justice. In the introduction he writes that as he began to consider his memoirs, historians suggested that he read "Memoirs" by President Ulysses S. Grant, which he did. "Like Grant, I decided not to write an exhaustive account of my life or presidency. Instead I have told the story of my time in the White House by focusing on the most important part of the job:making decisions."
I have other friends who have also read and relished this book, all are avid readers and historians. We will see what others think, but it's place on the Best Seller's speaks a tribute to the well written book. After I read it I needed to download mentally and so moved to Vicki's; while "Decision Points" with 477 pages, and 14 pages of index consumed weeks of reading other books are only evenings.
The last book is Homer Hickam's second in his trilogy about life in the West Virginia coal mining town,"The Coal Wood Way." another exceptional read. The story he began in "Rocket Boys" continues through the boys' senior year of high school and the cross roads for the mine and the town. You know because of my ancestors' work in the mines I am drawn into the memoir. When he describes men walking with "trudging grace to and from the vast deep mine" and the "black faces after a shift" I see my Grandpap and my Great Grandfather Frank and so many other ancestors. His writing is alluring, "we endured as always" a tribute to the town and the people. "True things are filled with shining glory" summarizes why I prefer to read non-fiction. In this book he makes a trip to the mine to be renovated, 11 East with Jake, his idol and his father's nemesis, Mr. DuBonnett, the union boss. A small cadre of Germans have arrived to direct the renovation of what his father hopes will be the salvation for the town and for the miners. I laughed out loud when his mother reads something that is in his desk drawer and justifies it perfectly: " I said aloud, ' You looked at my list?' 'Sure' she answered, 'It was in your desk drawer. Why wouldn't I look at it?' I was outraged but knew better than to show it. 'Oh I don't know.....maybe because it was at the bottom of the drawer under a bunch of other stuff that belongs to me.....' ...'Sonny as long as you live in my house, anything you bring into it is fair game. But before you ask, no the reverse isn't true. Adults have things that kids aren't allowed to see.'..."is there some sense to that?" I asked emboldened by my anger. 'No, it's just the way things are...Let me tell you something. Someday you may have kids of your own. You'll want to know what they're up to and you'll do just about anything to find out. When they get mad about it, you tell them ol'Granny Elsie Hickam taught this to you: Parents can do any dang thing they want it it's to make sure their kids get brought up right." I know I had shades of that same conversation with my son and my Mom with me! 360 pages of a paperback and worth every word, phrase and page.
I have other friends who have also read and relished this book, all are avid readers and historians. We will see what others think, but it's place on the Best Seller's speaks a tribute to the well written book. After I read it I needed to download mentally and so moved to Vicki's; while "Decision Points" with 477 pages, and 14 pages of index consumed weeks of reading other books are only evenings.
The last book is Homer Hickam's second in his trilogy about life in the West Virginia coal mining town,"The Coal Wood Way." another exceptional read. The story he began in "Rocket Boys" continues through the boys' senior year of high school and the cross roads for the mine and the town. You know because of my ancestors' work in the mines I am drawn into the memoir. When he describes men walking with "trudging grace to and from the vast deep mine" and the "black faces after a shift" I see my Grandpap and my Great Grandfather Frank and so many other ancestors. His writing is alluring, "we endured as always" a tribute to the town and the people. "True things are filled with shining glory" summarizes why I prefer to read non-fiction. In this book he makes a trip to the mine to be renovated, 11 East with Jake, his idol and his father's nemesis, Mr. DuBonnett, the union boss. A small cadre of Germans have arrived to direct the renovation of what his father hopes will be the salvation for the town and for the miners. I laughed out loud when his mother reads something that is in his desk drawer and justifies it perfectly: " I said aloud, ' You looked at my list?' 'Sure' she answered, 'It was in your desk drawer. Why wouldn't I look at it?' I was outraged but knew better than to show it. 'Oh I don't know.....maybe because it was at the bottom of the drawer under a bunch of other stuff that belongs to me.....' ...'Sonny as long as you live in my house, anything you bring into it is fair game. But before you ask, no the reverse isn't true. Adults have things that kids aren't allowed to see.'..."is there some sense to that?" I asked emboldened by my anger. 'No, it's just the way things are...Let me tell you something. Someday you may have kids of your own. You'll want to know what they're up to and you'll do just about anything to find out. When they get mad about it, you tell them ol'Granny Elsie Hickam taught this to you: Parents can do any dang thing they want it it's to make sure their kids get brought up right." I know I had shades of that same conversation with my son and my Mom with me! 360 pages of a paperback and worth every word, phrase and page.