Monday, October 27, 2014

Here Come the War Brides!


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"Happiness lies in the joy of achievement and the thrill of creative effort." Franklin D. Roosevelt

This week I'd will write about the book that I recently completed, War Brides.
I enjoyed this historical novel very much and I will share my thoughts on it in a few moments.

Friday night we had the opportunity to attend a special dinner and program in recognition of the "Hometown Heroes" of Durham. First responders were acknowledged for their bravery and service in the line of duty. These men and women included police officers, a 911 telephone operator, EMTs, and others. The awards were given by the non-profit organization, Emergency Chaplains, which has been in existence here in Durham, NC for about 7 years. I estimate that there were about 200 people at this banquet, and none of us had to pay for our meal. It was an inspiring evening and we gave each award recipient a standing ovation. A brief video was shown about each person to share the reasons that they were nominated for each award. The job of the emergency chaplains is to minister to people who are in crisis when there is an emergency such as a deadly car crash. The chaplains also minister to the police officers and other first responders as well, providing them with the support they need to deal with the many trying tasks that they do each day. Not only do the chaplains minister to the people of our community and to the first responders, but they also provide the annual banquet to recognize the people who serve our community for their outstanding work. It was a positive and inspiring way to spend a Friday night, and I'm glad that we were invited.

Now for the next five books from my card catalog:

How to Really Love Your Child by Ross Campbell
Carpe Diem: Seize the Day by Tony Campolo
The Kingdom of God is a Party by Tony Campolo
The Plague by Albert Camus
The Moonflower Vine by Jetta Carleton

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War Brides is a good, enjoyable read that gave me yet another perspective on World War II, Hitler, Nazi power, and how the war affected the people of Europe. Most of the action takes place in England. The book's author, Helen Bryan, clearly knows her way around England, and her many years of living in London provide the background of the story. I've read quite a few books about the Holocaust, but this book is one of the few that I've read that lets me see how the war affected the Brits and others in Europe. This book reminds me of books such as The Nazi Officer's Wife, A Woman in Berlin, and Bonhoeffer's book, The Cost of Discipleship. Incidentally, Bonhoeffer was eventually beheaded for being a Christian in his own country (Germany). All of these books give us a glimpse into what people in Europe must have gone through as they worried about things such as being bombed and the food/clothing rations.

War Brides is about a group of women who find themselves living together in a small town near London, Crowmarsh Priors. These women are Elsie, Frances, Evangeline, Alice,and Tanni. We read about their lives as the war began and we learn how they met their husbands. Some of the men who married these women are Richard, Hugo, Bernie, and the Vicar. Even during war, weddings went on and neighbors helped each other with the things that were needed for a wedding and setting up a household. But this book isn't primarily about weddings or brides - it's primarily about relationships and how these young women helped each other get through days filled with fear, hunger, loneliness, pregnancies, and more. One example of this is that the young women decide to help Tanni find out what happened to her young sisters who were twins. As Jews, the girls had been taken from their mother to be hidden from the Nazis, but Tanni never found out what happened to the girls. Tanni's parents were killed in Auschwitz, but there was no record of what happened to the twins. The young women of Crowmarsh Priors used all of their resources to try to secretly find out where the twins were and to figure out an "underground" way to reunite them with Tanni. Most of the story takes place in the late 1930s, but at the end of the story, 1995, the women are reunited as elderly women and we find out what happened to them and their spouses after the war. I must admit that I did not expect this type of ending, but that's part of the allure of this book. I won't give away what the women DID when they came back to their old church as elderly women, so please do read it for yourself.

Now I'm reading The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown. I'll write about it in the near future. Meanwhile, read on and on...

Melissa




Monday, October 13, 2014

"Librarians are generals in the war on ignorance." Grammarly.com

Last week I started my post by talking about coffee, a topic that is always fun for me to talk about. Since my post, however, I've decided that I need to cut back on the amount of caffeine that I ingest. So, since I had a new bag of Kirkland brand coffee beans from Costco (Kirkland Guatemalan), I decided to buy some good decaffeinated coffee and add it to my own coffee mixture to make my own "half-caf". I'm also drinking just one cup of this each morning, and no more caffeine for the rest of the day. Is it hard? YES. But I think it's going to be helpful for my overall good health. The taste of my half-caf is about a 6 on a scale from 1-10, but it's not half-bad (no pun intended).

Today I'll begin by listing the next five books in my index catalog:

1. This Time Together by Carol Burnett

2. Heaven is for Real by Todd Burpo (I enjoyed the movie too - adorable little boy!)

3. Running With Scissors by Augusten Burroughs

4. Decision Points by George W. Bush

5. A Dog's Journey by W. Bruce Cameron

By now you know that "a few of my favorite things" are books, coffee, and traveling. I also like libraries, walking, listening to contemporary Christian music, and spending time with my family. It's the little things that make life fun. I also like to bake, especially for other people. I'm already looking forward to our Christmas baking day when my daughter and I bake cookies, pumpkin logs, and peanut butter balls for neighbors, friends, and our own family. No one seems to bake anymore, so I think people appreciate a sampling of delicious holiday treats baked with love. I keep holiday bags, holiday tins, etc. so that I'm always ready to give someone our treats. This is something that I look forward to very much, and if I could not do it for some reason, I'd be sad. I know that baking Christmas cookies is not the true meaning of Christmas, but it's a way that I show people that I care about them. It also helps to have treats ready in the freezer for holiday parties, church events, and for Christmas day itself.

Last week I wrote about the book, The Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street. It is the story of an immigrant named "Malka" who left Russia with her family and came to New York. Life was very difficult, of course, and they soon fell into a life of extreme poverty. Eventually Malka lost all contact with her family and often wondered if she'd ever see them again. Eventually the family who adopted Malka gave her a new name, "Lillian," and she became a Catholic. She helped the family with their home business, making and selling frozen treats. She became quite good at making new flavors and marketing their product. She was able to get some formal education and this led to her relationships with Albert Dunkle, the handsome illiterate man that she ended up marrying. Lillian had been Bert's tutor, so this is how they got to know each other. Later on, the Dunkles start their own business, "Dunkle's Ice Cream." They eventually get to hang out with the rich and famous as their brand is sold across the U.S. Lillian is not honest in her business dealings, and others aren't honest with her. Lillian met her father who had abandoned the family many years earlier, and she desperately hopes that he has changed and that he really wants to have a relationship with her. However, he is dishonest and selfish, and he steals from her. Later when he is dying, he sends someone to ask Lillian for money. Lillian is outraged by this and she turns the messenger away. At the end of her life she is a bitter, angry old woman who has no friends. I conclude that she was never really happy because she used deceit to put her company at the top of the ice cream world. She may have been the ice cream queen, but she was miserable for most of her adult life. I would have liked there to be a happy ending to the story, but it's not the case. I guess we all like to read about an immigrant who came to our country with nothing and yet became very successful. But money and fame do not make a person successful, and things are not always as they seem.

What am I reading now? I'm reading War Brides on my kindle, a book that I've seen as a bestseller. So far I'm enjoying it. It's a book with stories about various women who lived during war times. Their lives are interesting and typical of the times in which they lived. Hopefully I'll have time today to read more so that I can share more about it next time. Looks like I chose another historical novel!







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Have a great week and read on...
Melissa

Monday, October 6, 2014

The Ice Cream Queen and more

"The only thing worse than a Monday is a decaffeinated Monday." (Maxine,
DealDash).

Did you have real 100% proof coffee today? I'm trying to cut back to one cup of caffeine per day, but I can't say that it's going to be easy. I need the kick, the jolt that helps me say, "I can do this today. I can face whatever happens." After I've had my allotment of coffee, I feel much better.  It's more important, I think, now that Fall has arrived and these cool mornings very brisk. Coffee says, "You are now a warm, friendly person who has plenty of energy to do everything that you need and want to do today." So, friends, if you must choose decaffeinated coffee for medical or sleep reasons, at least buy some decaf whole beans and grind a pot every day. So, have a great Monday...and enjoy your hot drinks. Oh, and if you are a coffee drinker leave me your comments about what kind and brand that you prefer.



Today I'd like to discuss the book that I finished this weekend, The Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street by Susan Jane Gilman. Thank you, again, 'Nita in Tennessee, for recommending this historical novel. I've known 'Nita for almost 40 years and I'm pretty sure she knows what kind of books I enjoy. It's so fun for me to share the love of reading with friends like 'Nita. She hit a home-run on this one, and I will continue to rely on her for book recommendations from time to time. I also get book ideas from looking at the bestseller list, talking to my parents, and more. OK, so I digress...getting back to the Ice Cream Queen...The main character in the book is a Russian immigrant, Malka, whose family was from Vishnev. They had planned to travel to South Africa by ship but due to Malka's father's acts of foolishness, they ended up bound for America. While they had planned to seek out Uncle Hyram in South Africa, their relative who promised them jobs and provisions, Papa exchanged their S.A. tickets for American ones. Mama was furious when she found out, and she never forgave him.

As the story unfolds, the family has to live in a filthy, crowded apartment where Mama and Papa do small laundry and sewing work. They never have enough to eat, and even the young girls are expected to get out and work. Malka and one of her sisters start to sing and dance for strangers on the street in exchange for a penny. Three months after they arrived, five year old Malka, is hit by a horse and carriage, and so for the rest of her life her leg causes great pain and limping. She is sent to "rehab facilities" but no one ever shows her any love or attention. Of course, her parents can't afford to help her, and Papa has left them. So, Malka is taken in by a family who sells frozen treats, but there are still times when she is hungry. Mr. Dinello, the Italian man who accidentally hit her in the street, takes her in because he feels somewhat sympathetic and takes her home, knowing that his wife won't approve. Mind you, Malka doesn't speak English or Italian yet, but she learned "on the job." She never sees her parents after the accident, but she longs to see them, to be loved, and to know that her family is still alive. The former Jew is baptized as a Catholic, an her name is changed to "Lillian Dunkle." Next time I'll share my thoughts of what happened to Lillian after that. As I read this book, I couldn't help but think about the life of Frank McCourt, an Irish immigrant who suffered greatly in both Ireland and in the U.S. I noticed that Gilman partially dedicates this book to Frank McCourt, for obvious reasons. I recommend that you read all three of McCourt's autobiographical books, Angela's Ashes, 'Tis, and Teacher Man.

The next five books in my card catalog are as follows:

1. Adulting by Kelly Brown
2. It Was Always Africa by Pam Brown
3. A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson
4. Losing Mum and Pup by Christopher Buckley
5. The Blue Zones by Dan Buettner

 So have a great Monday, and have it your way!

-Melissa



Friday, October 3, 2014

Fall into Fall

 
Start Fresh this Fall: 5 Ways to Make the Most of Your NIH Training ...
 
 
Autumn has arrived here in North Carolina! It's the favorite season for many of us, including myself. The colors and so beautiful and the weather is cool. "Sweatshirt weather" is definitely my favorite type of weather. I saw a quote recently that says, "It's October, so you know what that means...Merry Christmas!" (someecards) While I don't feel that way, the retail industry has gotten out of hand and is getting out the holiday gifts, decorations, and music WAY too early. And besides, that's not what Christmas is all about anyway! Nevertheless, enjoy today for what it is without dreading, fearing, or even eagerly anticipating the future. Today is a gift. Take it, strive to have joy in it, and you will most likely have a beautiful Fall day.
 
Last time I wrote about some of the books in a series that I've read. There are many, many more of course. What books in a series have you read? And do you have a favorite author that keeps you seeking his/her books? I've read seven of Barbara Kingsolver's books, as I mentioned last time. I kept choosing her books because I enjoyed the first book that I read so much, The Poisonwood Bible. Incidentally, Kingsolver is from my home state originally, Kentucky, so we claim her. After I read a seventh book by her I wrote her a letter. She responded with a form letter, but it had her real, fresh signature on it! I understand that she's a very popular author who can't possibly answer all of her own mail, but at least she signed it! In the case of Kingsolver, I've enjoyed both her fiction and non-fiction works. Her non-fiction book, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, was just as good as her novels. I've found that as I get older I read more and more non-fiction. I think it's because I enjoy reading about people's lives and the interesting experiences that they've had. But many of the biographies that I've read are about very ordinary people. They're fun to read because the author knows how to tell their story in a funny, inspiring way. One such book is by Mildred Armstrong Kalish, Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression. Kalish tells about the things that she experienced as a poor farm daughter, but in the end you feel good because not only did she survive her upbringing, but she found some humor in it. I definitely recommend this book. Was it ever a bestseller? Not that I know. Was it ever mentioned on "Oprah" or in the news? Nope. Sometimes this kind of book is a hidden gem that needs to be discovered. So look it up. I sent Kalish an email a few years ago and she quickly responded. It was a thrill to hear directly from her. In my email I had told her that I greatly enjoyed her book. I also brought up some theological issues that she alludes to in her book. I basically told her that I disagreed with many of her theological conclusions and told her that I found the Christian faith to be truthful and reliable. Her problem was that she was often forced to attend church, but the family members who forced her weren't living a Christian life themselves. A good writer doesn't mind if you disagree with them at times - they are just happy that they created some conversation. So, in light of this fact, please leave me your comments in the space below. Tell me what you like or don't like about my blog. I'd also like to know the titles that came to mind as you read today's post. I'd like to know your favorite series books, your top ten list, and just about anything you have to say.
 
And now for the next five books that are in my card catalog:
 
1. There's Still a Snake in My Garden by Briscoe
2. Memoirs of James Pedigru Boyce by Broadus
3. Year of Wonders by Brooks
4. How Can We Get Lily Rose to Settle Down? by Brown
5. The DaVinci Code by Brown
 
So, fall into Fall, and fall into a great book!
 
-Melissa