Gardener's Group discussion
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What Did You Just Finish, What Are You Reading Now & What Books Have You Brought Home Recently? (Spoilers Possible)

I had an interesting experience yesterday at the local grocery store in this town of 1500 people I live in. An elderly black man and his grandson came in. My town is all white except two adopted black girls. But the woman I was with (a very gregarious woman) had met this man before. So she started talking to him, as his grandson shopped, and after she left, I continued talking to him. He was a WW2 vet, that is when he met his wife, and had been married 62 years! Anyway, after a while, the grandson returned, handing the man back his cell phone. Then the grandson made a comment, that the old man didn't hear, about using his phone to call Africa. I think the grandson assumed that I was "doing the christian thing talking to the old black man" and was making a snide comment. (The entire family was from Texas originally, not recent immigrants from Africa.) His tone of voice and the way he looked at me was slightly condescending. But his granddad had told me that the grandson had come for a visit, and stayed when he realized his grandparents needed help. So I knew this kid was a good person. So I asked him about job prospects, told him my son's company was hiring, gave him the name and my son's name. I think it took him aback. Anyway, it was a weird conversation with the grandson. I really liked his grandfather, though.




Have you read Rush Home Road? I'm reading it right now and it's very good.


Your experience is so interesting in light of the book I just read--"Makes Me Wanna Hollar". My town has about 5 black people, an Asian family who run a restaurant and a few Native Americans, so it sounds similar to yours and offers little experience for anyone to gain insight into how people of other races view white people. This book spells it out in no uncertain terms. From what I learned it seems a certain segment of the younger generation of Black Americans expect to be hassled, disrespected, suspected and invisible as far as whites are concerned.

I'm reading an old Graham Greene "The Comedians" which is about the dictatorship in Haiti under Papa Doc and the Tonton Macoute. The book was published in 1966 and what's odd is Papa Doc recently returned to Haiti and some of the inhabitants of the island and welcoming him back.








This sounds like a fascinating place to live. Everyone around me is pretty much the same.

This is just the kind of thing I find so interesting. I would just love for people to accept others as they are. My grandkids are in confirmation classes at our church. They recently had a Muslum speaker who explained many things about their beliefs and answered questions from the kids. The kids were fascinated. They understood that although there are differences in many ways we are all the same.

I saw something similar a few years ago and I was surprised as well. I guess we want others to think our way is best.

I would love the name of that book.

Studying anthropology and behavioral sciences as I have all my life, I have learned that there are so many commonalities among people, just different ways of expressing them. Even wanting "our" way to be seen as the best way is one of the commonalities. Most religions have the same basic moral codes, just different stories to explain them. And of course, there are differences in the cultures, like whether it is a "sin" to cut one's hair, not cover one's head or cover one's head, wear skirts or pants (in China, a woman wearing a dress is viewed as a wanton woman, the exact opposite of most European/American/Mideastern beliefs, but you can understand it if you think about it. A woman is much more available sexually in a dress- just pull up the hem. That is why the wearing of Bloomers was so controversial here in the US- it made the wives LESS available because the skirts had to be pulled up, then the bloomers pulled down! Men saw it as restricting their marital "rights".) It is all just so interesting, there is always more to learn.

Studying anthropology and behavioral sciences as I have all my life, I have learned that there are so many commonalities among people, just different ways of expressing them. Even wanting "our" way to be seen as the best way is one of the commonalities. Most religions have the same basic moral codes, just different stories to explain them. And of course, there are differences in the cultures, like whether it is a "sin" to cut one's hair, not cover one's head or cover one's head, wear skirts or pants (in China, a woman wearing a dress is viewed as a wanton woman, the exact opposite of most European/American/Mideastern beliefs, but you can understand it if you think about it. A woman is much more available sexually in a dress- just pull up the hem. That is why the wearing of Bloomers was so controversial here in the US- it made the wives LESS available because the skirts had to be pulled up, then the bloomers pulled down! Men saw it as restricting their marital "rights".) It is all just so interesting, there is always more to learn.



LOL. I also love how we can all have very different tastes in what we read and no one thinks we're strange if we haven't read the latest best seller.


LOL. I also love how we can all have very different tastes in what we read and no one thinks we're strange if we haven't read the latest best seller. "
Yes!


Terri, I loved Dewey, and know the town very well. I visited there a lot with my job as advocate for the Medicaid mental health clients in Iowa. I always stayed in the renovated hotel downtown rather than the new ones at the edge of town. It is mentioned in the book. Picked up some small antiques in a shop there.
I just finished three books my sister handed down to me. Two by Nelson DeMille- a new author to me. He had interesting characters and plots. Night Fall The Gate House Also Walter Mosley, another new author, The Long Fall. He has a series with this new character. I don't think I will look for this series, but if my sister gives me another, I will probably read it. Do like how he stresses the diversity and intermarriages in New York.

I had to add the other three books to my "to read" list. Not quite sure about the "by the time you read this". It may hit too close to home. I was 12 when my dad died, but 8 when my folks divorced. I am now reading some of his sermons (he was an Episcopal minister). I am finding that I wish he had left me a manual- there is much in his sermons that would have helped me in my life. The concepts of competition (I am not competitive, have not really understood this concept very well) and enemies (also not part of my way of thinking) and the urge to defeat versus destroy enemies. There were some people with whom his knowledge would have helped me to understand. So may not read that one. I will have to see when I get it.


Terri, I loved Dewey, and know the town very well. I visited there a lot with m..."
If you are going to read another Nelson DeMille I would suggest "The General's Daughter".

I had to add the other three books to my "to read" list. Not quite sure about the "by the time you read this". It may hit too close to home. I was 12 when my dad died, but 8 when my folks d..."
I'm sorry to hear that Miriam, that must have left a lot of scars on your heart. My father was also a minister, and died after having Alzheimer's for seven years--so "Still Alice" was hard for me to read. How wonderful that you have your father's sermon's to read! Your comments made me realize that all parents should probably write a "journal" or letters to their children telling them the important things they learn in life.
I'll let you know what I think of that book after I finish it.


What denomination was your dad? Are you sure no one in the family has his sermons? My grandmother had my dad's. No one knew she had kept them.
Finished another book my sister had given me- a commercial novel. The type I read very quickly and then forget. I had read this one before, suspected it, but didn't remember the ending so reread it. It even had an Iowa City reference, and I didn't remember much of it. Interesting, though. Rough Country



My parents are originally from Evansville, Indiana. They became Christians after they moved to S. California in the late 50's. I was born in 1958. My father became a minister when I was 10.
My mother and father moved to San Antonio, Texas to be near my sister after my father was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. My mother still lives there and attends the Nazarene church every Sunday.
There are lots of Nazarene churches in California, including the Santa Clarita Valley where I live today.

I remember the Nazarene college, but not its name. Wasn't it in Nampa? I was 30 miles south of Nampa in a town, Melba, of 200 people for 13 miserable years. Lovely country, just not a good place for me.
My parents were from the Chicago area and Iowa City. My dad got sent to Sioux City Iowa, Memphis TN (where I was born) and then Nashville TN. After my folks divorced, my mom moved us back to Iowa City, then the Chicago area. I have since lived in Oklahoma City, Dallas, Idaho, and am now back in the Iowa City area. Only been to CA once, to visit my sister when she was there briefly after college (before she went to England for five years). Oh, and for their wedding, in the mountains above Fresno. His family had a ranch up there. Great hiking!



Yes, it was made into a movie. I thought they did a pretty good job of staying with the book.

This is so interesting, I have never heard of the Nazarenes before.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Hare With Amber Eyes: A Family's Century of Art and Loss (other topics)The Hidden Half of Nature: The Microbial Roots of Life and Health (other topics)
White Beech: The Rainforest Years (other topics)
Orchids of Britain and Ireland (other topics)
A Garden with House Attached (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
D.E. Stevenson (other topics)Margaret George (other topics)
Bernd Heinrich (other topics)
Adriana Trigiani (other topics)
Konrad Lorenz (other topics)
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Where the Heart Is
5 of 5 stars (re-read)."
Love Billie Letts.