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What I'm Reading AUGUST 2015
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Portia wrote: "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic opened the world of graphic novels for me. Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant? is superb. So, of course, is [book:The Complete ..."
Evolved? You mean those first lessons I took from Jiggs and Maggie and from Blondie and Dagwood when I was a child weren't the real thing? Oh my goodness. I think they are the very foundation for how I see the world today. Hahaha! I'm more than half serious! Oh, and Brenda Starr!
Evolved? You mean those first lessons I took from Jiggs and Maggie and from Blondie and Dagwood when I was a child weren't the real thing? Oh my goodness. I think they are the very foundation for how I see the world today. Hahaha! I'm more than half serious! Oh, and Brenda Starr!

Oh yes, Brenda Starr, and the black orchid.
Ruth wrote: "Ellen wrote: "Portia wrote: "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic opened the world of graphic novels for me. Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant? is superb. So, of c..."
I don't remember the Black Orchid! Sunday comic? I didn't follow ones that scared me, like Terry and the Pirates, so the Black Orchid may have been one I bypassed.
I don't remember the Black Orchid! Sunday comic? I didn't follow ones that scared me, like Terry and the Pirates, so the Black Orchid may have been one I bypassed.

The black orchid is what Brenda Starr's mysterious lover Basil (St. John, was it?) would send her.
Ruth wrote: "Ellen wrote: "Ruth wrote: "Ellen wrote: "Portia wrote: "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic opened the world of graphic novels for me. [book:Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant?|185..."
Oh, I'd forgotten. But she is why I am a redhead.
Oh, I'd forgotten. But she is why I am a redhead.
Portia wrote: "Evolved, yes, I think so. The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For"
Very interesting! Thanks! You know, what I learned as a kid from the Sunday comics about couples was that we're opaque to each other, and sometimes to ourselves, a lot of the time. Sometimes you have to move through places where you can't quite see where you're going, or where he/she is going, and you just have to trust. That part probably hasn't changed. Or maybe I was reading into the old comics things that weren't there, but I don't know that that's true, now that I've typed the words. Art is art, and it's what you say to the art in your mind and heart that is the most important part of the interchange. There is a woman essayist whose name escapes me, nuts, who says so many of us look at art the wrong way, say "That piece (painting, sculpture, book, poem) doesn't speak to me," and we dismiss it and walk on by. Her position is that we should sit there until we find out what WE have inside ourselves to say to IT, that that's how we learn and grow. So interesting. Thanks again!
Very interesting! Thanks! You know, what I learned as a kid from the Sunday comics about couples was that we're opaque to each other, and sometimes to ourselves, a lot of the time. Sometimes you have to move through places where you can't quite see where you're going, or where he/she is going, and you just have to trust. That part probably hasn't changed. Or maybe I was reading into the old comics things that weren't there, but I don't know that that's true, now that I've typed the words. Art is art, and it's what you say to the art in your mind and heart that is the most important part of the interchange. There is a woman essayist whose name escapes me, nuts, who says so many of us look at art the wrong way, say "That piece (painting, sculpture, book, poem) doesn't speak to me," and we dismiss it and walk on by. Her position is that we should sit there until we find out what WE have inside ourselves to say to IT, that that's how we learn and grow. So interesting. Thanks again!

Did she read it herself, Sheila? What did you think?

Susan_T, The CDs I have from the library are read by David Pittu. I'm only on Chapter 1 and making slow progress, I've started it three times now. It doesn't seem to be going anywhere.

Horsley takes a snippet of history and crafts a novel featuring a mild-mannered physician, a wealthy family’s strong-willed youngest daughter, and a displaced Lakota man in 1888 Paris. I enjoyed some of the philosophical / spiritual discussions, but on the whole the novel didn’t work for me.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Gripping, fascinating, and informative. Millard’s writing is on a par with Erik Larsen and Laura Hillenbrand when it comes to writing history with the pace of a thriller.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Ann wrote: "I liked Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President as well, BC. What a horrible case study in medical malpractice!"
Book Concierge wrote: "Just finished
by Candice Millard – 5*****
Gripping, fascinating, and informative. Millard’s writing is on a par with Erik Larsen and Laura Hillenbran..."
I heard about this on NPR, can't remember which show, some time ago, and it sounded fascinating; not only the grisly end, but the idea that Garfield might have turned history around. Glad to be reminded of it. Thank you.
Book Concierge wrote: "Just finished

Gripping, fascinating, and informative. Millard’s writing is on a par with Erik Larsen and Laura Hillenbran..."
I heard about this on NPR, can't remember which show, some time ago, and it sounded fascinating; not only the grisly end, but the idea that Garfield might have turned history around. Glad to be reminded of it. Thank you.

Yes. Truly cringe worthy.
Great review BC

Well I work for surgeons .... I couldn't stop myself from yelling at the CD player as I drove to and from work ..."WASH your hands !!!!"


SUBTITLE: Medicine and What Matters in the End Just because physicians CAN do something, should they? At what cost – not to society or to our wallets, but at what cost to our humanity and dignity? Atul Gawunde, a surgeon in Boston Massachusetts, explores the ways in which medicine (and specifically American medicine and American society) helps and hinders the aged, the infirm, and the dying.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Well I work ..."
We discussed this in January 2013. Here's a link: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


SUBTITLE: Medicine and What Matters in the End Just because physicians CAN do something, should they? At what cost – not..."
I liked this a lot.



SUBTITLE: Medicine and What Matters in the End Just because physicians CAN do something, should the..."


I really need to read this. I can't believe I haven't already. I'm putting this audio on my wishlist right now.



It made me glad I have the doctor I do, who has a special interest in dying. OMG, that sounds awful, but I'm sure you know what I mean.


Also slogging my way through The Women's Room. The discussion on it should be good, though, and perhaps I'll come to appreciate it more for what it was in its time.
Karen, I think you'll enjoy Cormier. I used his books so much the few years I taught English, especially to engage boys in reading who otherwise would have none of it.
Oh, help, Franzen's Purity is out! Do I buy it and closet myself away, or wait until my library gets it a year from now? I have to wait... My vow: I will only purchase books I want to bring with me to The Home For The Bewildered.

Because Philby came from the "right sort," many of his friends in Mi6 just refused to accept the growing evidence that he was a traitor to his country.
Very interesting!
Just ordered all five in this series Justice Calling by Annie Bellet, because I read an article about how she withdrew her Hugo Best Short Story of 2015 nomination because she was endorsed by people who oppose diversity in the Hugo's.
Amy King, moderator of the Poetry GR group, has been the blogger of the month at The Poetry Foundation, and has been writing about activist writing and diversity, and wow, has she caught all heck.
But I'm not a writer; I'm a reader. What's an activist reader to do? I don't know if I'll enjoy these books or not, but I'm going to support this woman whose personal beliefs brought her to such a momentous decision.
Amy King, moderator of the Poetry GR group, has been the blogger of the month at The Poetry Foundation, and has been writing about activist writing and diversity, and wow, has she caught all heck.
But I'm not a writer; I'm a reader. What's an activist reader to do? I don't know if I'll enjoy these books or not, but I'm going to support this woman whose personal beliefs brought her to such a momentous decision.
If announcements are to be believed (and sometimes the radio station runs an incorrect promo) ursula le guin to be interviewed on NPR's Weekend All Things Considered this morning, which begins at now, 8:00 a.m. eastern time, USA. You can listen to it later (that is, the older shows are available after broadcast, I don't know how long) at http://www.npr.org/programs/weekend-e...
If you want to listen live and don't have an NPR station, you can stream it live by clicking the "Listen Live" box at the upper right of the screen at http://publicradioeast.org/schedule/p...
It's a 2-hour show, so I don't know when it will be aired within that time.
If you want to listen live and don't have an NPR station, you can stream it live by clicking the "Listen Live" box at the upper right of the screen at http://publicradioeast.org/schedule/p...
It's a 2-hour show, so I don't know when it will be aired within that time.

I loved that book, Ann. There was a fine line between those who were excellent spies and those who were working for the other side.



This beautifully written, poignant novel tackles the aftermath of war and how those aftereffects ripple through multiple generations. I feel I learned a little of the Japanese mentality by seeing things from Hideo and his wife’s points of view. I thought Taniguchi captured the way in which a child thinks, the kind of logic a child would use in piecing together an explanation for what is going on around her. . I loved Helen – her tender heart, her courage and resilience. And Hideo’s quiet strength, endurance and healing heart. And while there is no clearly happy resolution, the novel’s ending looks to the future with hope.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I want something similar, Jane, with the addition of a 220 lb. mother panda cradling me in her arms as she rocks me gently to my final sleep.

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Books mentioned in this topic
The Ocean in the Closet (other topics)My Brilliant Friend (other topics)
The Women's Room (other topics)
A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal (other topics)
Justice Calling (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ben Macintyre (other topics)Ursula K. Le Guin (other topics)
Ben Macintyre (other topics)
Robert Cormier (other topics)
Jane Smiley (other topics)
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http://www.ala.org/tools/libfactsheet...
I find this kind of thing interesting! I am not a librarian but a library fan, and sometimes hand off stuff to my own library.
Last year I mentioned Brown Girl Dreaming (a middle-grade novel published to great reviews & a winner of a National Book Award) to a 5th grade teacher, who had never heard of the book. You just never know!