Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults Gathering This Friday, October 10

Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults Gathering This Friday, October 10

Hi everyone, just a reminder, our October book club gathering is this Friday, October 10, from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. We’ll be meeting at the library and discussing the novel Tom Lake by Ann Patchett.

Looking forward to November, we’ll be meeting on Friday, November 14 from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m., and discussing the book When Books Went To War: The Stories That Helped Us Win World War II by Molly G. Manning; this book received positive reviews, including a glowing one from the retired head of Circulation for the library, Marcia Stewart.

Here is an overview of the book from the publisher:  

While the Nazis were burning hundreds of millions of books across Europe, America printed and shipped 140 million books to its troops. The “heartwarming” story of how an army of librarians and publishers lifted spirits and built a new democratic audience of readers is as inspiring today as it was then (New York Times).

When America entered World War II in 1941, we faced an enemy that had banned and burned 100 million books. Outraged librarians launched a campaign to send free books to American troops and gathered 20 million hardcover donations.

In 1943, the War Department and the publishing industry stepped in with an extraordinary program: 120 million small, lightweight paperbacks for troops to carry in their pockets and rucksacks in every theater of war. These Armed Services Editions were beloved by the troops and are still fondly remembered today.

Soldiers read them while waiting to land at Normandy, in hellish trenches in the midst of battles in the Pacific, in field hospitals, and on long bombing flights. They helped rescue The Great Gatsby from obscurity and made Betty Smith, author of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, into a national icon.

Copies of When Books Went To War can be picked up at the Circulation Desk starting today.

And looking further forward, our December 2025  gathering will take place on Friday, December 12 and we will be discussing the short novel Small Things Like These by Clarie Keegan. Copies of our December read will be available at the library the first week of December, and copies may be requested now by anyone who’d like to read ahead.

Hope to see everyone on Friday!

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Email: reimerl@stls.org

Tel: 607-936-3713 x4212

Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults Gathering is Friday, June 13

Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults Gathering is Friday, June 13

Hi everyone, just a reminder we’ll be gathering at the library from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m., this Friday, June 13, to discuss our June Read The Cemetery of Untold Stories by Julia Alvarez. 

Copies of our July Read, Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout, which incidentally features two of her main characters for her other works, Olive Kitteridge and Lucy Barton.

Our July Book Club gathering date/time is: Friday, July  11 from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m.

Also of note, the library will be closed on Thursday, June 12 due to maintenance issues – as they are working on replacing the water and sewer lines.

The library is planning on re-opening at its usual time of 9:00 a.m. on Friday, June 13, when will be open our regular hours of 9:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. 

Have a great day everyone!

Linda

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And here are the After May Book Club Notes for May: 

Our May Book Club Read was Colored Television by Danzy Senna 

In a nutshell, Colored Television tells the story of a forty-something biracial writer & adjunct professor named Jane, her black husband Lenny who is an idealistic painter, and their two young children. The family have moved around a lot in the Los Angeles area, house sitting, as the price of rental and for sale properties in the area has skyrocketed and is out of their reach.  

During the novel, Jane finally completes the novel she has been working on for ten years and gives it to her publisher hoping that once it is published, she will finally receive tenure at the college where she works. Her novel is rejected by her publisher; Jane doesn’t get tenure, is frustrated and tries working as a television screenwriter for TV producer named Hampton Ford.  Subsequently, her rejected novel is read by the unscrupulous Ford who steals the ideas in her book and uses them as the basis for a hit TV series.  

Meanwhile, Jane’s husband, Lenny, has not been doing well professionally either. The consensus is that his artwork would sell well if he only he let it be known in/on his paintings that he is a black man. Lenny refuses to change the way he paints, believing art should speak for itself.  

Friction occurs between Jane and Lenny as they work through their difficulties. Jane seeks legal counsel regarding the theft of her unpublished manuscript but is told that as Hampton Ford is so wealthy and influential it is unlikely that she could win a case against him.  

Then the friend Jane is house sitting for returns home early and Jane and her family must move out of his house before they are ready to do so.  Lenny is practical looking for apartments they can afford, which are not in desirable locations. Jane wants to live in an area she calls “Multicultural Mayberry,” but the prices of homes in that area are out of their range. Jane walks the Multicultural Mayberry neighborhood and goes crying into a retirement home where she tells the manager who is on duty; she wants to live in the area but can’t afford to do so. The manager allows the family to temporarily move into the Retirement Home, and the novel ends with Jane sitting in the common room with other residents and watching Hampton Ford’s popular TV series, based on her manuscript. 

In an epilogue provided by the author, readers discover that eventually, Jane writes another novel which is published and obtained tenure. Lenny created a small logo for his pairings letting the world know he is a black man, and his paintings begin to sell like hotcakes in Japan. And the family is finally able to buy a house in Multicultural Mayberry.  

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After Jesus Before Christianity: A Historical Exploration of the First Two Centuries of Jesus Movements by Erin Vearncombe, Brandon Scott Hal Taussig & The Westar Institute  

From the creative minds of the scholarly group behind the groundbreaking Jesus Seminar comes this provocative and eye-opening look at the roots of Christianity that offers a thoughtful reconsideration of the first two centuries of the Jesus movement, transforming our understanding of the religion and its early dissemination. 

Christianity has endured for more than two millennia and is practiced by billions worldwide today. Yet that longevity has created difficulties for scholars tracing the religion’s roots, distorting much of the historical investigation into the first two centuries of the Jesus movement. But what if Christianity died in the fourth or fifth centuries after it began? How would that change how historians see and understand its first two hundred years? 

Considering these questions, three Bible scholars from the Westar Institute summarize the work of the Christianity Seminar and its efforts to offer a new way of thinking about Christianity and its roots. Synthesizing the institute’s most recent scholarship—bringing together the many archaeological and textual discoveries over the last twenty years—they have found:  

There were multiple Jesus movements, not a singular one, before the fourth century 
There was nothing called Christianity until the third century 
There was much more flexibility and diversity within Jesus’s movement before it became centralized in Rome, not only regarding the Bible and religious doctrine, but also understandings of gender, sexuality and morality. 
 

Exciting and revolutionary, After Jesus Before Christianity provides fresh insights into the real history behind how the Jesus movement became Christianity.  

After Jesus Before Christianity includes more than a dozen black-and-white images throughout. 

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Books Read by Book Club Members in the Past Month: 

Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism by Sarah Wynn-Williams: From trips on private jets and encounters with world leaders to shocking accounts of misogyny and double standards behind the scenes, this searing memoir exposes both the personal and the political fallout when unfettered power and a rotten company culture take hold. In a gripping and often absurd narrative where a few people carelessly hold the world in their hands, this eye-opening memoir reveals what really goes on among the global elite. 

Sarah Wynn-Williams tells the wrenching but fun story of Facebook, mapping its rise from stumbling encounters with juntas to Mark Zuckerberg’s reaction when he learned of Facebook’s role in Trump’s election. She experiences the challenges and humiliations of working motherhood within a pressure cooker of a workplace, all while Sheryl Sandberg urges her and others to “lean in.” 

Careless People is a deeply personal account of why and how things have gone so horribly wrong in the past decade―told in a sharp, candid, and utterly disarming voice. A deep, unflinching look at the role that social media has assumed in our lives, Careless People reveals the truth about the leaders of Facebook: how the more power they grasp, the less responsible they become and the consequences this has for all of us. 

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The Blanket Cats by Kiyoshi Shigematsu and Jesse Kirkwood: 

Seven struggling customers are given the unique opportunity to take home a “blanket cat” . . . but only for three days, the time it’ll take to change their lives. 

A peculiar pet shop in Tokyo has been known to offer customers the unique opportunity to take home one of seven special cats, whose “magic” is never promised, but always received. But there are rules: these cats must be returned after three days. They must eat only the food supplied by the owner, and they must travel to their new homes with a distinctive blanket. 

In The Blanket Cats, we meet seven customers, each of whom is hoping a temporary feline companion will help them escape a certain reality, including a couple struggling with infertility, a middle-aged woman on the run from the police, and two families in very different circumstances simply seeking joy. 

But like all their kind, the “blanket cats” are mysterious creatures with unknowable agendas, who delight in confounding expectations. And perhaps what their hosts are looking for isn’t really what they need. Three days may not be enough to change a life. But it might just change how you see it. 

Memorial Days: A Memoir by Geraldine Brooks: Many cultural and religious traditions expect those who are grieving to step away from the world. In contemporary life, we are more often met with red tape and to-do lists. This is exactly what happened to Geraldine Brooks when her partner of more than three decades, Tony Horwitz – just sixty years old and, to her knowledge, vigorous and healthy – collapsed and died on a Washington, D. C. sidewalk. 

After spending their early years together in conflict zones as foreign correspondents, Geraldine and Tony settled down to raise two boys on Martha’s Vineyard. The life they built was one of meaningful work, good humor, and tenderness, as they spent their days writing and their evenings cooking family dinners or watching the sun set with friends at Lambert’s Cove. But all of this came to an abrupt end when, on Memorial Day 2019, Geraldine received the phone call we all dread. The demands were immediate and many. Without space to grieve, the sudden loss became a yawning gulf. 

Three years later, she booked a flight to a remote island off the coast of Australia with the intention of finally giving herself the time to mourn. In a shack on a pristine, rugged coast she often went days without seeing another person. There, she pondered the varied ways those of other cultures grieve, such as the people of Australia’s First Nations, the Balinese, and the Iranian Shiites, and what rituals of her own might help to rebuild a life around the void of Tony’s death. 

A spare and profoundly moving memoir that joins the classics of the genre, Memorial Days is a portrait of a larger-than-life man and a timeless love between souls that exquisitely captures the joy, agony, and mystery of life. 

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Love Your Enemies: How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt by Arthur C. Brooks: 

NATIONAL BESTSELLER 

To get ahead today, you have to be a jerk, right? 

Divisive politicians. Screaming heads on television. Angry campus activists. Twitter trolls. Today in America, there is an “outrage industrial complex” that prospers by setting American against American, creating a “culture of contempt”—the habit of seeing people who disagree with us not as merely incorrect, but as worthless and defective. Maybe, like more than nine out of ten Americans, you dislike it. But hey, either you play along, or you’ll be left behind, right? 

Wrong. 

In Love Your Enemies, social scientist and author of the #1 New York Times bestseller From Strength to Strength Arthur C. Brooks shows that abuse and outrage are not the right formula for lasting success. Brooks blends cutting-edge behavioral research, ancient wisdom, and a decade of experience leading one of America’s top policy think tanks in a work that offers a better way to lead based on bridging divides and mending relationships. 

Brooks’ prescriptions are unconventional. To bring America together, we shouldn’t try to agree more. There is no need for mushy moderation, because disagreement is the secret to excellence. Civility and tolerance shouldn’t be our goals, because they are hopelessly low standards. And our feelings toward our foes are irrelevant; what matters is how we choose to act. 

Love Your Enemies offers a clear strategy for victory for a new generation of leaders. It is a rallying cry for people hoping for a new era of American progress. Most of all, it is a roadmap to arrive at the happiness that comes when we choose to love one another, despite our differences. 

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The Next Day by Melinda French Gates 

Transitions are moments in which we step out of our familiar surroundings and into a new landscape―a space that, for many people, is shadowed by confusion, fear, and indecision. The Next Day accompanies readers as they cross that space, offering guidance on how to make the most of the time between an ending and a new beginning and how to move forward into the next day when the ground beneath you is shifting. 

In this book, Melinda will reflect, for the first time in print, on some of the most significant transitions in her own life, including becoming a parent, the death of a dear friend, and her departure from the Gates Foundation. The stories she tells illuminate universal lessons about loosening the bonds of perfectionism, helping friends navigate times of crisis, embracing uncertainty, and more. 

Each one of us, no matter who we are or where we are in life, is headed toward transitions of our own. With her signature warmth and grace, Melinda candidly shares stories of times when she was in need of wisdom and shines a path through the open space stretching out before us all. 

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One Good Thing: A Novel by Georgia Hunter:  

1940, Italy. Lili and Esti have been best friends since they first met at university. When Esti’s son Theo is born, they become as close as sisters. While a war seethes across borders, life somehow goes on—until Germany invades Italy, and the friends suddenly find themselves in occupied territory 

Esti, older and fiercely self-assured, convinces Lili to join the resistance efforts. But when disaster strikes, a critically wounded Esti asks Lili to take a much bigger step: To go on the run with Theo. Protect him while Esti can’t. 

Terrified to travel on her own, Lili sets out with Theo on a harrowing journey south toward Allied territory, braving Nazi-occupied villages and bombed-out cities, doing everything she can to keep the boy safe. 

A remarkable tale of friendship, romance, motherhood, and survival, One Good Thing reminds us what is worth fighting for—and that love, even amidst a world in ruins, can triumph. 

After Book Club Notes: January & February 2025  

After Book Club Notes: January & February 2025  

Hi everyone, here are the after meeting notes for our January & February 2025 gatherings!

SSC Library After Book Club Notes: January 2025: 

Our January book club gathering was held at the library on Friday, January 10.   

Our January Read was Help Wanted by Adelle Waldman  

Help Wanted relays the story of a group of workers, mostly part-time, who work a middle-of-the-night shift unloading the daily supply truck at a big box store. The store, Town Square, a stand-in for one’s local Walmart or Target, is located in the fictional town of Potterstown, N.Y.  

The managerial team for the work crew consists of shift manager Meredith, who owes thousands of dollars in student loans, is a self-centered individual whose people skills are sadly lacking, and who rubs workers the wrong way nearly every time she speaks. Little Will, the department supervisor, a discouraged former high school hockey star who previously worked in his family’s carpet and tile store, before it went out of business during the 2008 financial crisis and who has a second job landscaping; and Big Will the store manager, who believes the store has gone down-hill in recent years due to staffing cuts, outdated inventory software and the explosion of internet sales.  

The work crew is known as “Team Movement,” and consists of part-time employees who are struggling to make ends meet and would like to be promoted to full-time positions but most of whom don’t get that opportunity. The employees include Nicole, who at the beginning of the novel is lamenting the fact that she isn’t able to access the credit on her daughter’s food stamps card due to a technical glitch and who doesn’t have enough money to take her work clothes to the laundromat several times a week to wash them; the hardworking Ruby who has a son in prison, was denied time off to go visit him, who has difficulty reading and would like to get promoted to fulltime but can’t without having the college degree she lacks; Joyce an ethical married senior who tells it like she sees it; the tempestuous Milo, the “thrower” for the group, who tosses items directly from the truck to co-workers to sort; Raymond who lives with his girlfriend in his mother’s basement and whose throat hurts him but he doesn’t initially get it checked out due to a lack of medical coverage and later discovers he has Lyme disease; and Val the leader behind the unofficial worker’s group who, when they discover the store manager position is opening up, promotes the idea of praising the much disliked Meredith to the rafters during the employee feedback interviews with upper level management, so that Meredith gets promoted to Big Will’s job and is then, hopefully, replaced by a member of the Team Movement group.  

In the end, the “Promote Meredith to Store Manager” plan is derailed, not by Milo, who readers initially think sunk the promotion by letting it slip that Meredith offered members of Team Movement caffeine pills during a shift; but, as temporary worker Callie discovers, later in the book, when she overhears departing store manager Big Will on his cell phone in the parking lot; by Big Will himself who in the end couldn’t stand by and let Meredith, who he doesn’t think would be a good fit as store manager due to her poor people skills, get promoted.  

The book ends with Meredith’s competition for the store manager position, Anita, landing the store manager job, Meredith leaving to take a job at another store, and Team Movement getting ready to unload yet another truck.  

So, the story really is a slice of life tale, chronicling the lives of the Team Movement crew and their three hierarchical supervisors during a period in their lives, while also illustrating the challenges entry level & low level workers have in making ends meet, and in just getting through life without a good paying job with benefits; while additionally illustrating that coveted full-time jobs are few and far between in the retail world.  

Most of our book club members didn’t care for the book. The feedback was that the character development could have been better, the story felt a bit disjointed, it wasn’t an uplifting tale, and for those who have worked in retail themselves it was an unwelcome reminder of the difficulties presented to those who work in retail sales.  

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January Book Club Members Enjoyed The Following Books/Videos between book club gatherings (titles are books, unless otherwise noted): 

The Case For God (2009) by Karen Armstrong:  

Moving from the Paleolithic age to the present, Karen Armstrong details the great lengths to which humankind has gone in order to experience a sacred reality that it called by many names, such as God, Brahman, Nirvana, Allah, or Dao. Focusing especially on Christianity but including Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Chinese spiritualities, Armstrong examines the diminished impulse toward religion in our own time, when a significant number of people either want nothing to do with God or question the efficacy of faith. Why has God become unbelievable? Why is it that atheists and theists alike now think and speak about God in a way that veers so profoundly from the thinking of our ancestors? 

Answering these questions with the same depth of knowledge and profound insight that have marked all her acclaimed books, Armstrong makes clear how the changing face of the world has necessarily changed the importance of religion at both the societal and the individual level. And she makes a powerful, convincing argument for drawing on the insights of the past in order to build a faith that speaks to the needs of our dangerously polarized age. Yet she cautions us that religion was never supposed to provide answers that lie within the competence of human reason; that, she says, is the role of logos. The task of religion is “to help us live creatively, peacefully, and even joyously with realities for which there are no easy explanations”. She emphasizes, too, that religion will not work automatically. It is, she says, a practical discipline: Its insights are derived not from abstract speculation but from “dedicated intellectual endeavor” and a “compassionate lifestyle that enables us to break out of the prism of selfhood”. 

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A Complete Unknown (2024) (Movie): In 1961, an unknown 19-year-old Bob Dylan arrives in New York City with his guitar and forges relationships with musical icons on his meteoric rise, culminating in a groundbreaking performance that reverberates around the world. – Internet Movie Database; based on the book Dylan Goes Electric by Elijah Wald 

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Parable Sower (1993) by Octavia Butler: When global climate change and economic crises lead to social chaos in the early 2020s, California becomes full of dangers, from pervasive water shortage to masses of vagabonds who will do anything to live to see another day. Fifteen-year-old Lauren Olamina lives inside a gated community with her preacher father, family, and neighbors, sheltered from the surrounding anarchy. In a society where any vulnerability is a risk, she suffers from hyperempathy, a debilitating sensitivity to others’ emotions. 

Precocious and clear-eyed, Lauren must make her voice heard in order to protect her loved ones from the imminent disasters her small community stubbornly ignores. But what begins as a fight for survival soon leads to something much more: the birth of a new faith . . . and a startling vision of human destiny. 

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Like Mother, Like Mother: A Novel (2024) by Susan Rieger: Detroit, 1960. Lila Pereira is two years old when her angry, abusive father has her mother committed to an asylum. Lila never sees her mother again. Three decades later, having mustered everything she has—brains, charm, talent, blond hair—Lila rises to the pinnacle of American media as the powerful, brilliant executive editor of The Washington Globe. Lila unapologetically prioritizes her career, leaving the rearing of her daughters to her generous husband, Joe. He doesn’t mind—until he does. 
 
But Grace, their youngest daughter, feels abandoned. She wishes her mother would attend PTA meetings, not White House correspondents’ dinners. As she grows up, she cannot shake her resentment. She wants out from under Lila’s shadow, yet the more she resists, the more Lila seems to shape her life. Grace becomes a successful reporter, even publishing a bestselling book about her mother. In the process of writing it, she realizes how little she knows about her own family. Did Lila’s mother, Grace’s grandmother, die in that asylum? Is refusal to look back the only way to create a future? How can you ever be yourself, Grace wonders, if you don’t know where you came from? 
 
Spanning generations, and populated by complex, unforgettable characters, Like Mother, Like Mother is an exhilarating, portrait of family, marriage, ambition, power, the stories we inherit, and the lies we tell to become the people we believe we’re meant to be. 

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The Three Weissmanns of Westport (2010) by Cathline Schine 

Jane Austen’s beloved Sense and Sensibility has moved to Westport, Connecticut, in this enchanting modern-day homage to the classic novel 

When Joseph Weissmann divorced his wife, he was seventy eight years old and she was seventy-five . . . He said the words “Irreconcilable differences,” and saw real confusion in his wife’s eyes. 

“Irreconcilable differences?” she said. “Of course there are irreconcilable differences. What on earth does that have to do with divorce?” 

Thus begins The Three Weissmanns of Westport, a sparkling contemporary adaptation of Sense and Sensibility from the always winning Cathleen Schine, who has already been crowned “a modern-day Jewish Jane Austen” by People’s Leah Rozen. 

In Schine’s story, sisters Miranda, an impulsive but successful literary agent, and Annie, a pragmatic library director, quite unexpectedly find themselves the middle-aged products of a broken home. Dumped by her husband of nearly fifty years and then exiled from their elegant New York apartment by his mistress, Betty is forced to move to a small, run-down Westport, Connecticut, beach cottage. Joining her are Miranda and Annie, who dutifully comes along to keep an eye on her capricious mother and sister. As the sisters mingle with the suburban aristocracy, love starts to blossom for both of them, and they find themselves struggling with the dueling demands of reason and romance. 

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SSC Library After Book Club Notes: February 2025: 

Our February 2025 Read was The Women by Kristin Hannah. 

The aptly titled novel The Women, chronicles the experiences of Frances “Frankie” McGrath.  Frankie is the daughter of an affluent family living on the coast in California and is a twenty-year-old nursing student.  

As the novel opens, Frankie is at a part being thrown by her parents for her older brother Finn, who is about to leave to serve a tour of duty in Vietnam.  While getting away from the guests at the party, and looking at her father’s honor wall, full of photos of male members of the family who have served in the military. Frankie encounters her brother’s friend and fellow solider-to-be Rye Walsh who tells her that women can be heroes too. Frankie is then inspired to finish her nursing training and volunteer to serve as a nurse in Vietnam.  

As soon as she completes her nursing degree, the idealistic Frankie signs up to be an army nurse, becoming Second Lieutenant Frances McGrath with a tour of duty in front of her. She goes home and tells her parents she is going to serve, expecting them to be proud, and instead they are alarmed and ashamed; and their conversation regarding her service is interrupted by a telegram informing them Finn has been killed in action.  

Once she gets to Vietnam, Frankie, who is a complete novice as a combat nurse, is thrown from the proverbial frying pan into the fire very quickly. She arrives at the base where she’ll be serving and is shocked when she sees the reality of war in the form of the first batch of wounded soldiers that arrive shortly thereafter.  

At first Frankie thinks she can’t work as an army nurse, it is too intense and frightening, but eventually, and with the help of her two sister nurses, Barb Johnson and Ethel Flint, she becomes a hardened combat nurse. While working in Vietnam she meets and falls in love with a married surgeon named Jamie Callahan. Jamie is honest about being unhappily married and the two realize their love for each other but are never intimate.  Jamie is later severely wounded and transported out of the base hospital on a helicopter to get more in-depth medical care. Frankie assumes that Jamie has died, signs up for and serves a second tour of duty and gets involved with her late brother’s friend Rye, who lies to Frankie telling her that is no longer engaged.  

Eventually Frankie finished her second tour and goes home. And when she gets home Frankie realizes that neither the public nor her parents want to discuss the Vietnam War; and that conventional thinking of the time held that the military service of women, even combat nurses, didn’t count. To add insult to that injury, her parents didn’t even tell any of their circle of family or friends that Frankie was in Vietnam, they put out the false story that she was studying in Italy because they were ashamed of her service.  

The rest of the book chronicles Frankie’s difficulty in adjusting to civilian life after the war; dealing with her post-traumatic-stress disorder, with the help of her sister nurses Barb and Ethel but receiving no help at all from her family or the veteran’s administration.  

Frankie tries to ignore her PTSD symptoms, and carry on with life even getting engaged to a kind psychiatrist named Henry, but finds that her PTSD lingers just under the surface and comes forcefully to the foreground upending her life, when major emotional events occur in her life; as when she suffers a miscarriage and after she resumes a relationship with Rye Walsh, who she eventually discovers did not die in Vietnam as she was told, but instead was a prisoner of war; and later realizes, while covering a nursing shift at a local hospital, that Rye has lied to her yet again and hasn’t left his wife, but instead has just had a second child with her.  

In the aftermath of the shattering realization that Rye-was-being-a-lying-cad again, Frankie is involved in a car accident during which she almost hits a bicyclist; and then she makes a half-hearted suicide attempt and finally hits rock bottom.  She wakes up in a psych ward at an inpatient therapeutic drug and alcohol treatment facility, having been admitted by her mother. She is confined there for eight weeks while she receives counseling and starts the slow ascent back to being able to function and live life again.  

In the aftermath of her initial counseling, Frankie becomes empowered. She decides she needs to move away from the cottage her parents bought for her in their neighborhood and move somewhere less populated. She sells the cottage and Barb flies in to take a discovery road trip with her, as she looks for a new place to live. The duo drives up the coast and then turns eastward, eventually winding up in in the small town of Missoula, Montana. The rural area is quiet and features stunning natural views. As they drive to the outskirts of the town, they find a sign indicating 27 acres are for sale – and Frankie knows she has found her home.  

In the last chapter of the book, readers discover time has moved on, it is 1982. Frankie bought the 27 acres of land and has recovered and regained control of her life. She went to school and obtained a degree in clinical psychology and opened a counseling ranch, named The Last Best Place, for other female veterans. Frankie even created her own “Hero’s Wall,” showing photos of women who served in Vietnam.  

And Frankie has just received an invitation to the unveiling of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C. Frankie goes to the memorial unveiling with Barb and Ethel, and runs into three people she doesn’t expect to see; her parents, who despite the pain over losing Finn surprised her and made the trip; and Jamie Callahan, her first love, the surgeon she thought died in Vietnam all those years before, but who had in fact survived and is now divorced. Frankie and Jamie talk while clinging to each other beside the memorial, and the story fads to black as they used to say about the movies.  

And then, fittingly, turning the last page of the book, readers see a photo of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial which was dedicated in 1993.   

The general book club consensus was that The Woman was a good-to-great read, telling a story that needs-to-be told, of the women, who served during the Vietnam War. Comment was made that some of the characters, Frankie and Finn’s parents for example, could have been fleshed out a bit more – but even so, this book got a “thumbs-up-read-it” score.  

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February Book Club Members Enjoyed The Following Books/Videos between book club gatherings (titles are books, unless otherwise noted): 

The Borrowed Life of Frederick Fife: A Novel (2024) by Anna Johnston: A zany case of mistaken identity allows a lonely old man one last chance to be part of a family. 

“Would you mind terribly, old boy, if I borrowed the rest of your life? I promise I’ll take excellent care of it.” 

Frederick Fifewas born with an extra helping of kindness in his heart. If he borrowed your car, he’d return it washed with a full tank of gas. The problem is, at age eighty-two, there’s nobody left in Fred’s life to borrow from, and he’s broke and on the brink of eviction. But Fred’s luck changes when he’s mistaken for Bernard Greer, a missing resident at the local nursing home, and takes his place. Now Fred has warm meals in his belly and a roof over his head—as long as his look-alike Bernard never turns up.  

Denise Simms is stuck breathing the same disappointing air again and again. A middle-aged mom and caregiver at Bernard’s facility, her crumbling marriage and daughter’s health concerns are suffocating her joy for life. Wounded by her two-faced husband, she vows never to let a man deceive her again. 

As Fred walks in Bernard’s shoes, he leaves a trail of kindness behind him, fueling Denise’s suspicions about his true identity. When unexpected truths are revealed, Fred and Denise rediscover their sense of purpose and learn how to return a broken life to mint condition.  

Bittersweet and remarkably perceptive, The Borrowed Life of Frederick Fife is a hilarious, feel-good, clever novel about grief, forgiveness, redemption, and finding family.  

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The Burning (2024) by Linda Castillo: When two members of the Painters Mill, OH, police force hear screams in the woods, they find a body still on fire. Police Chief Kate Burkholder investigates the victim’s past, learning that Milan Swanz was Amish but had been excommunicated after he was given numerous chances to change his ways. Rumors of fallen men called schwertlers go back over 70 years, but the stories of the past remind Kate of the victim, who was burned at the stake. Kate is caught between unfounded legends, the area’s Amish community, which is reluctant to report crimes or speak ill of the dead, and her law enforcement colleagues who feel she is protecting the perpetrator of the murder. When her brother becomes a suspect, Kate is sidelined but continues to investigate. While she’s threatened and viciously attacked, her husband, Tomasetti, and her small team continue to support her. VERDICT The 16th Kate Burkholder mystery (following An Evil Heart) is another riveting police procedural. Despite the violence and some graphic, gruesome details, fans will be eager for the latest well-developed mystery set in Ohio’s Amish country. -Starred Library Journal Review   

Reader’s Note: The Burning is the sixteenth book in the Kate Burkholder series. If you’d like to binge read from the beginning, book one is:  

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Creation Lake (2024) by Rachel Kushner:  

Note: Even though this book received a starred review, the book club member who read it gave it a thumbs down review – just FYI! 

The Plot: An undercover agent embeds with radical French environmentalists in this scintillating story of activism and espionage from Kushner (The Mars Room). 

Sadie Smith, a former FBI agent who lost her job after she was accused of entrapment, takes an assignment from unidentified contacts in the private sector. Her mission is to infiltrate the subversive commune Le Moulin, which is led by activist Pascal Balmy and is suspected of having destroyed a set of excavators at a reservoir construction site. Le Moulin’s ideas derive from their elderly mentor, Bruno Lacombe, who has spent the past 12 years living in caves. Bruno emerges from time to time to communicate with the group by email, but none of the characters see him in person. In Paris, Sadie seduces a filmmaker friend of Pascal’s to secure an introduction to him. Kushner intersperses Sadie’s tale with Bruno’s colorful claims, such as the alleged superiority of the Neanderthals (their square jaw was a “sunk cost”) and the existence of mythological creatures like Bigfoot (“We are not alone”). Eventually, Sadie learns of the group’s plans to protest a local fair, and she 

approaches the conclusion of her assignment with alarming amorality. Most of the narrative is dedicated to the activists’ philosophizing and Sadie’s gimlet-eyed observations, which Kushner magically weaves together (“People tell themselves, strenuously, that they believe in this or that political position,” Sadie muses. “But the deeper motivation for their rhetoric… is to shore up their own identity”). Readers will be captivated. – Starred Publishers Weekly Review  

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Donegal Generations (2013) by Tom Gallen: Donegal Generations is an entertaining piece of historical fiction that follows various men as they describe their lives in rural Ireland during the 1700s and 1800s. Encompassing a lighthearted attitude, this gripping novel crafts captivating stories that hook readers from the very beginning. Offering engaging stories on family, courtship, and adversity that are impossible to put down, this wonderful novel is a unique glimpse into life in rural Ireland in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Through three successive generations of Irish families, three men will discuss their lives, childhood, religion, superstitions, and courtships in eighteenth and nineteenth century Ireland. Each man documents his struggle with the land, landlords, and an oppressive government. Each also encounters a mysterious woman who inhabits a hidden spring. Their stories offer a glimpse into life during these times. Patrick must overcome a rival suitor for his intended bride. Later, he does his best to control a secret society formed by his neighbors that threatens and terrorizes their tyrannical landlord. His son, James, is involved in plotting the murder of a man suspected of killing a loved one. James’s journey will take him down a spiritual path as he tries to provide for his family. Finally, Charles’s story finds a man working to overcome alcoholism and the great potato famine before immigrating to America to find work in the textile industry. Using subsequent generations of Irish men to tell touching stories that are unique to the times, this one-of-a-kind book takes readers on an exciting journey through a difficult time in Irish history. Inspired by his own genealogical research, author Tom Gallen decided to use this newfound information to craft a story about how his ancestors lived before and during the great potato famine. Using the history of the locales in the novel, Gallen incorporated his findings into Ireland’s rich backstory to create a truly fulfilling and entertaining work of historical fiction. Uniquely using the personal perspective of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in a present tense and first-person style, Donegal Generations is an approachable and mesmerizing work of fiction that will stay with readers long after they’ve finished the final page.  

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Escape From Germany (2024) (Movie): 1939, Hitler’s army was closing borders, and eighty-five American missionaries were in Germany serving their church. The escape of these missionaries from Nazi Germany is one of the most dramatic events to occur in modern church history. – IMDB 

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Mad Honey (2024) by Jodi Picoult: Picoult joins forces with novelist and transgender activist Boylan (Long Black Veil) for a spellbinding yarn involving a teen’s trial for murder. Beekeeper Olivia McAfee fled her abusive husband in Boston for New Hampshire with her six-year-old son, Asher. Twelve years later, Asher is charged with murdering his high school girlfriend, Lily, a newcomer to town. The story unfolds from Olivia and Lily’s viewpoints (Lily’s before the murder), and centers on the budding relationship between Asher and Lily and the subsequent court case against Asher, who is represented by Olivia’s older brother, Jordan, a high-profile defense attorney who has appeared in previous Picoult novels. Both teens have troubled relationships with their fathers, and the authors painstakingly explore the impact of physically and emotionally abusive men on their families. After a big reveal in the second half, the canvas stretches to include a primer on transgender issues, and the shift is mostly seamless though sometimes didactic. More successful is the atmospheric texture provided with depictions of Olivia harvesting honey and the art of beekeeping, and the riveting trial drama. Overall, it’s a fruitful collaboration. – Publishers Weekly Review   

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Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America (2001, with a 2021 anniversary edition) by Barbara Ehrenreich: In contrast to recent books by Michael Lewis and Dinesh D’Souza that explore the lives and psyches of the New Economy’s millionares, Ehrenreich (Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of the Middle Class, etc.) turns her gimlet eye on the view from the workforce’s bottom rung. Determined to find out how anyone could make ends meet on $7 an hour, she left behind her middle class life as a journalist—except for $1000 in start-up funds, a car and her laptop computer—to try to sustain herself as a low-skilled worker for a month at a time. In 1999 and 2000, Ehrenreich worked as a waitress in Key West, Fla., as a cleaning woman and a nursing home aide in Portland, Maine, and in a Wal-Mart in Minneapolis, Minn. During the application process, she faced routine drug tests and spurious “personality tests”; once on the job, she endured constant surveillance and numbing harangues over infractions like serving a second roll and butter. Beset by transportation costs and high rents, she learned the tricks of the trade from her co-workers, some of whom sleep in their cars, and many of whom work when they’re vexed by arthritis, back pain or worse, yet still manage small gestures of kindness. Despite the advantages of her race, education, good health and lack of children, Ehrenreich’s income barely covered her month’s expenses in only one instance, when she worked seven days a week at two jobs (one of which provided free meals) during the off-season in a vacation town. Delivering a fast read that’s both sobering and sassy, she gives readers pause about those caught in the economy’s undertow, even in good times. – Publishers Weekly Review   

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North Woods (2023) by Daniel Mason: A young couple escapes their colonial Massachusetts colony and runs for seven days before being free from pursuit. Finding fertile land, they establish a homestead, plant a garden, and start a family. That origin story and its biblical themes presage the ambitious task Mason (A Registry of My Passage upon the Earth, 2020) sets for himself as this land and home serve as a through line for centuries of occupants in this magisterial mosaic. Apples are a core symbol for Mason. When a violent attacker is felled by an axe, an apple seed takes root, “a shoot rises, thickens, seeks the bars of light above it, gently parts the fifth and sixth ribs that once guarded the dead man’s meager heart.” Subsequent tenants of the land include Charles Osgood, whose dream is to cultivate the perfect apple. Osgood’s Wonder becomes a sought-after variety. Long after Osgood has gone to soil, his twin daughters maintain the orchard well into spinsterhood. Years later, a little-known painter finds solitude on the homestead, but his heart is asunder, hiding an illicit love until his nurse provides him with the courage to finally express his yearnings. Other inhabitants reinforce the dual nature of the human condition, simultaneously serving as minuscule collections of molecules against the inevitable march of time while also contributing to a collective, quasi-supernatural consciousness. Truly triumphant. – Starred Booklist Review  

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Our Lady of Kibeho: Mary Speaks to the World from the Heart of Africa (2010) by Immaculée Ilibagiza:  

“No matter what your race, religion, political affiliation, or personal belief system, you will be inspired by Our Lady of Kibeho—a true story of the power of faith and the great potential of forgiveness.”— John Fund, columnist for The Wall Street Journal 

Thirteen years before the bloody 1994 genocide that swept across Rwanda and left more than a million people dead, the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ appeared to eight young people in the remote village of Kibeho. Through these visionaries, Mary and Jesus warned of the looming holocaust, which they assured could be averted if Rwandans opened their hearts to God and embraced His love. 

Much like what happened at similar sites such as Fátima and Lourdes, the messengers of Kibeho were at first mocked and disbelieved. But as miracle after miracle occurred in the tiny village, tens of thousands of Rwandans journeyed to Kibeho to behold the apparitions. For years, countless onlookers watched as the Mother and Son of God spoke through the eight seers about God’s love, sending messages that they insisted were meant not only for Rwandans, but for the entire world, to hear. Mary also sent messages to government and church leaders to instruct them how to end the ethnic hatred simmering in their country. She warned them that Rwanda would become “a river of blood” —a land of unspeakable carnage —if the hatred of the people was not quickly quelled by love. 

Some leaders listened, but very few believed: the prophetic and apocalyptic warnings tragically came true during 100 horrifying days of savage bloodletting and mass murder. After the genocide, and two decades of rigorous investigation, Our Lady of Kibeho became the first and only Vatican-approved Marian (that is, related to the Virgin Mary) site in all of Africa. But the story still remains largely unknown. 

Now, Immaculée Ilibagiza plans to change all that. She made many pilgrimages to Kibeho both before and after the holocaust, personally witnessed true miracles, and spoke with a number of the visionaries themselves. What she’s discovered will deeply touch your heart. 

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Recipes for a Beautiful Life: A Memoir in Stories (2015) by Rebecca Barry: Writing with a delicate balance of humor and truth, critically acclaimed author Rebecca Barry reflects on motherhood, work, and marriage in her new memoir about trying to build a creative life. 
 
When Rebecca Barry and her husband moved to upstate New York to start their family, they wanted to be surrounded by natural beauty but close to a small urban center, doing work they loved, and plenty of time to spend with their kids. But living their dreams turned out not to be so simple: the lovely old house they bought had lots of character but also needed lots of repairs, they struggled to stay afloat financially, their children refused to sleep or play quietly, and the novel Rebecca had dreamed of writing simply wouldn’t come to her. 
 
Recipes for a Beautiful Life blends heartwarming, funny, authentically told stories about the messiness of family life, a fearless examination of the anxieties of creative work, and sharp-eyed observations of the pressures that all women face. This is a story of a woman confronting her deepest fears: What if I’m a terrible mother? What if I’m not good at the work I love? What if my children never eat anything but peanut butter and cake? What if I go to sleep angry? It’s also a story of the beauty, light, and humor that’s around us, all the time—even when things look bleak, and using that to find your way back to your heart.  
 
Mostly, though, it is about the journey to building not just a beautiful life, but a creative one.  

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The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World by Robin Wall Kimmerer and John Burgoyne: From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Braiding Sweetgrass, a bold and inspiring vision for how to orient our lives around gratitude, reciprocity, and community, based on the lessons of the natural world. 

As Indigenous scientist and author of Braiding Sweetgrass Robin Wall Kimmerer harvests serviceberries alongside the birds, she considers the ethic of reciprocity that lies at the heart of the gift economy. How, she asks, can we learn from Indigenous wisdom and the plant world to reimagine what we value most? Our economy is rooted in scarcity, competition, and the hoarding of resources, and we have surrendered our values to a system that actively harms what we love. Meanwhile, the serviceberry’s relationship with the natural world is an embodiment of reciprocity, interconnectedness, and gratitude. The tree distributes its wealth—its abundance of sweet, juicy berries—to meet the needs of its natural community. And this distribution ensures its own survival. As Kimmerer explains, “Serviceberries show us another model, one based upon reciprocity, where wealth comes from the quality of your relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.” 

As Elizabeth Gilbert writes, Robin Wall Kimmerer is “a great teacher, and her words are a hymn of love to the world.” The Serviceberry is an antidote to the broken relationships and misguided goals of our times, and a reminder that “hoarding won’t save us, all flourishing is mutual.” 

Robin Wall Kimmerer is donating her advance payments from this book as a reciprocal gift, back to the land, for land protection, restoration, and justice. 

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Sonny Boy: A Memoir (2024) by Al Pacino: From one of the most iconic actors in the history of film, an astonishingly revelatory account of a creative life in full 

To the wider world, Al Pacino exploded onto the scene like a supernova. He landed his first leading role, in The Panic in Needle Park, in 1971, and by 1975, he had starred in four movies—The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, Serpico, and Dog Day Afternoon—that were not just successes but landmarks in the history of film. Those performances became legendary and changed his life forever. Not since Marlon Brando and James Dean in the late 1950s had an actor landed in the culture with such force. 

But Pacino was in his midthirties by then, and had already lived several lives. A fixture of avant-garde theater in New York, he had led a bohemian existence, working odd jobs to support his craft. He was raised by a fiercely loving but mentally unwell mother and her parents after his father left them when he was young, but in a real sense he was raised by the streets of the South Bronx, and by the troop of buccaneering young friends he ran with, whose spirits never left him. After a teacher recognized his acting promise and pushed him toward New York’s fabled High School of Performing Arts, the die was cast. In good times and bad, in poverty and in wealth and in poverty again, through pain and joy, acting was his lifeline, its community his tribe. 

Sonny Boy is the memoir of a man who has nothing left to fear and nothing left to hide. All the great roles, the essential collaborations, and the important relationships are given their full due, as is the vexed marriage between creativity and commerce at the highest levels. The book’s golden thread, however, is the spirit of love and purpose. Love can fail you, and you can be defeated in your ambitions—the same lights that shine bright can also dim. But Al Pacino was lucky enough to fall deeply in love with a craft before he had the foggiest idea of any of its earthly rewards, and he never fell out of love. That has made all the difference.  

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True Gretch: What I’ve Learned About Life, Leadership, and Everything in Between (2021) by Gretchen Whitmer: From trailblazing Michigan governor, Democratic leader, and national advocate for women’s rights, Gretchen Whitmer, comes an unconventional and deeply personal account of her life and career—“Not your nana’s ponderous political memoir” (New York magazine)—offering insights into her leadership during the Covid-19 pandemic, her fight against domestic terrorism threats, and her resilience in the face of extraordinary challenges. 

When Gretchen Whitmer was growing up, her beloved grandmother Nino taught her that you can always find something good in other people. “Even the meanest person might have pretty eyes,” she would say. Nino’s words persuaded Whitmer to look for the good in any person or situation—just one of many colorful personal experiences that have shaped her political vision. (And, as Whitmer writes, one that resonated more than another piece of advice her grandmother offered, to “never part your hair in the middle.”) 

In this candid and inspiring book, Whitmer reveals the principles and instincts that have shaped her extraordinary career, from her early days as a lawyer and legislator and her 2018 election as governor of Michigan, to her bold and innovative actions as she led the state through a series of unprecedented crises. Her motto in politics, she writes, is to “get shit done.” 

Whitmer shares the lessons in resilience that steered her through some of the most challenging events in Michigan’s history, such as the Covid-19 pandemic, a five-hundred-year flood, the rise of domestic terrorism, and the fierce fight to protect reproductive rights. 

Along the way, she tells stories about the outsize characters in her family, her lifelong clumsy streak, the wild comments she’s heard on the campaign trail, her self-deprecating social media campaigns (including her star turn as a talking potato with lipstick), and the slyly funny tactics she deploys to neutralize her opponents. 

Written with Whitmer’s trademark sense of humor and straight-shooting style, True Gretch is not only a compelling account of her remarkable journey, but also “welcome reassurance that someone might be courageous and capable enough to run toward the fire” (The Washington Post)—a blueprint for anyone who wants to make a difference in their community, their country, or the world. It is a testament to the power of humor, perseverance, and compassion in the face of darkness. 

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West with Giraffes: A Novel (2021) by Lynda Rutledge:  

An emotional, rousing novel inspired by the incredible true story of two giraffes who made headlines and won the hearts of Depression-era America. 

“Few true friends have I known and two were giraffes…” 

Woodrow Wilson Nickel, age 105, feels his life ebbing away. But when he learns giraffes are going extinct, he finds himself recalling the unforgettable experience he cannot take to his grave. 

It’s 1938. The Great Depression lingers. Hitler is threatening Europe, and world-weary Americans long for wonder. They find it in two giraffes who miraculously survive a hurricane while crossing the Atlantic. What follows is a twelve-day road trip in a custom truck to deliver Southern California’s first giraffes to the San Diego Zoo. Behind the wheel is the young Dust Bowl rowdy Woodrow. Inspired by true events, the tale weaves real-life figures with fictional ones, including the world’s first female zoo director, a crusty old man with a past, a young female photographer with a secret, and assorted reprobates as spotty as the giraffes. 

Part adventure, part historical saga, and part coming-of-age love story, West with Giraffes explores what it means to be changed by the grace of animals, the kindness of strangers, the passing of time, and a story told before it’s too late. 

Looking forward to March, our read will be: Life After Power: Seven Presidents And Their Search for Purpose Beyond The White House by Jared Cohen. The book is 332 pages with notes and copies are available at the Circulation Desk. And if you can’t get a copy, let me know and I’ll send one to you.

Our March 2025 gathering will be held at the library on Friday, March 14, 2025, from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m.

Have a great day everyone!

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Book Club For Adults February 2025 Gathering Next Friday!

Book Club For Adults February 2025 Gathering Next Friday!

Hello everyone, just a quick reminder post!

The February 2025 Book Club for Adults gathering will be next Friday, February 14 from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m.

Our February Read is The Women by Kristin Hannah and copies are available at the Circulation Desk.

Our January Read, a New York Public Library recommended title, was Help Wanted by Adelle Waldman. A cliff notes overview of the plot is that it is a slice of life-style novel that chronicles the lives of a group of workers at a big box company. The workers cover the late-night-to-early-morning shift at the store unloading a new, huge supply truck each morning.  Waldman details how the group unloads the truck and goes on to detail the lives of several members of the group, most of who are working part-time and living paycheck to paycheck. And then, when they learn the store manager position is opening up, they concoct a scheme to get their much-disliked supervisor, whose people skills are sadly lacking, promoted to store manager with the hope that a member of their group will get promoted to the position of group supervisor. The scheme doesn’t go as planned and several of the workers move on before the end of the novel, which ends, much like it began with the remaining staff members getting ready to unload another supply truck.

Book club members did not care for this title. A comment was made by one of our members that she had worked in just such an environment, for a big box store, and thus lived the experience and didn’t need to relive it.

So, thumbs down for our January Read, which although a critically acclaimed title, wasn’t enjoyed by our group.

I have high hopes book club members will enjoy our February Read: The Women by Kristin Hannah, as it has been the kind of a book that I have found so engrossing it has been hard from me to stop reading it to do anything else!

Looking forward to next month, our March Read is a non-fiction title, Life After Power: Seven Presidents and Their Search for Purpose Beyond The White House (332 pages of text, plus notes/references). The presidents whose post-presidential lives are chronicled are Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, Grover Cleveland, William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush. And as there are only two copies of this book in the system, I will be bringing freebie copies to our February gathering.

And just a quick note for any new book club members – please join us – registration is not required, just show up – everyone is welcome! And if you haven’t finished the book, or didn’t care for it – please come anyway – you are welcome to join in the discussion or just sit and listen if you prefer. Light refreshments will be provided.

Have a great day everyone,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Email: reimerl@stls.org

SSC Library December 2024 Book Club for Adults Notes 

SSC Library December 2024 Book Club for Adults Notes 

Hi everyone, the library’s December 2024 Book Club for Adults gathering was held on Friday, December 13, 2024. 

Our December Read was a cozy mystery, Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Sutanto. 

The consensus was that the book was a fun, light cozy read featuring a 60-year-old tea shop owner named Vera Wong, as the protagonist. Vera has a grown son named Tilly but lives alone in an apartment above her tea shop. As the book opens, Vera, who knows how to cook and make excellent tea, has one regular customer in her shop that needs sprucing up, a widower named Alex.  

Readers accompany the lonely & feisty Vera through her daily routine getting up super early, going for a walk, sending a motivational text to her son and opening her shop for business; and on the second day of the story, Vera goes downstairs and finds a dead man on the floor of her shop.  

The unknown dead man has bruises and scratches on his face and is clutching a flash drive in one fist. Vera decides she can solve the crime better than the police and takes the flash drive before calling 911. 

And thus, the plot is set into motion. 

The other characters are introduced: Ricki Herwanto  and Sana Singh both of whom had business dealings with the unscrupulous dead man who the police discover is a local businessman named Marshall Chen. It is noted that Marshall had multiple allergies, a point that is important later. The list of characters also includes Marshall’s twin brother Oliver, Marshall’s wife and daughter Julia and Emma and the previously mentioned Alex Chen, Vera’s most faithful customer. 

This being a cozy mystery all the characters are sympathetic to the reader, sans the villain of the piece Marshall Chen,  who it transpires hired Ricki to create a tech bot for him for $25,000 and then refused to pay him the last $24,000; swindled Sana, then a young college student out of her artwork to make a profit via digital currency, reflected his bad behavior off on his brother Oliver making their father think Oliver was the black sheep of the family and Marshall the golden son. Additionally, he treated his wife and daughter abysmally and was in the process of leaving his family when he died, because as he told his father they were holding him back. 

Vera, who has been quite lonely in her widowed life, is fiercely determined and believes she usually knows the right thing to do in any situation. She initially believes that she has four murder suspects: Ricki, Sana, Oliver and Julia. And as she investigates the murder, she also tries to take care of her suspects, cooking them meals to suit their individual needs and moving in with Julia and her daughter Emma, to cook for them, help them in general and encourage Julia to re-start her photography career which Marshall had frowned upon.   

Vera, who has felt needed and is no longer lonely since she moved in with Julia and Emma, eventual arranges a dinner four her suspects, intending to determine who the killer among them is, and reveal how she solved the mystery to the group.  

During the meeting Vera realizes none of her suspects killed Marshall.  She admits to the group that she took the flash drive from Marshall’s body and had also made it look like her shop was broken into encouraged the police to continue their investigate of Marshall’s murder, which they believed was due to an allergic reaction to a bird’s nest. Riki, Sana and Oliver are not pleased that she has been investigating them, and Julia is furious with Vera for her meddling and throws her out of her house.   

Vera then returns to her apartment above her tea shop, and is so depressed she doesn’t get out of bed for three days and is found unresponsive by Riki when he brings some of her furniture, that he repaired, back to her shop. Riki calls 911 and Vera, is described by the young author, Jesse Sutanto, as being an old feeble lady lying unconscious in her bed, is taken to the hospital where the doctors find she is dehydrated and has a has a case of bronchitis but is otherwise in good health. As Riki, Sana, Julia and Oliver congregate around Vera’s hospital bed her son Tilly arrives and the quartet tells him that they are her family, and he hasn’t treated her well. 

In the aftermath of the hospital visit Riki, Sana, Oliver and Julia all reconcile with Vera. They also help spruce up her shop, so it is a bright cheerful place and not the dark dingy shop it was before. The group take Vera to the shop, and she is touched by what they have done and says she will make them tea. And while she is preparing the tea, she a notices that her jar of bird’s nests is missing, and she remembers the last time she used it while making tea for  her favorite customer, Alex Chen, who she realizes is both the murderer and it the father of  Marshall and Oliver, something Vera did not know because when Alex discussed his family with her over tea, he used the Chinese names of his sons and not the English names.  

And so, Vera has unmasked the murderer, and it is a brighter day. Julia receives money from a life-insurance policy on Marshall and pays Riki the $24,000 Marhshall owed him; and he can now afford to bring his younger brother to San Francisco from China, Sana has new confidence and starts working on art projects again, Oliver has been revealed to his father as a good son and Vera moved back in with Emma and Julia, cooking for them and enjoying their company and being in charge. Vera even takes food to Alex who is in jail, and to Alex’s guards so they will treat him well.  

Book club members found the book fun, and Vera a feisty and sympathetic character. The only negative comment, and one that was echoed by the whole group, was the description of the depressed Vera as a feeble old lady. The author Jesse Sutanto tells readers early in the book that Vera is sixty-years-old; and later describes her, during her depression episode as lying in bed and looking “so tiny, so old, so defeated.” I tried to find out how old the author is, thinking that might explain why she thought to describe Vera as looking “so tiny, so old,” but was unable to find a birth date for the author. According to the Book Riot site, the author received an MFA degree from Oxford in 2009, so the group assumes she is in her thirties and have forgiven her for her description of sixty-year-old Vera as “so tiny, so old.” 

The group was pleased to discover that there is a sequel to Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murders; Vera Wong’s Guide to Dating a Dead Man, coming out in April 2025.  

Books Read By Book Club Members In The Last Month: 

Atlas Obscura: Wild Life: An Explorer’s Guide to the World’s Living Wonders by Cara Giaimo & Joshua Foer:

From the bestselling authors of Atlas Obscura and Gastro Obscura comes a nature book like no other—a dazzling, over-the-top collection of the world’s most extraordinary wild species that takes you to all seven continents and beyond. It’s more than a field guide–it’s an adventure. * National Bestseller * Named a Best New Book by BookRiot, New York Post and more * Named a Best Wild Elephant Gift Under $30 by Taste of Home.  

From the curious minds of Atlas Obscura, authors of #1 New York Times bestselling Atlas Obscura and Gastro Obscura, comes an unputdownable celebration of the world’s living wonders. 

Learn how dung beetles navigate by the stars, and trees communicate through their roots. 
Meet one of the strongest animals in the world: the puny peacock mantis shrimp. 
Pay your respects to a 44,000 year old shrub, float along flying rivers, and explore a garbage dump overseen by endangered storks. 

Examine old examples of bird song notation written on sheet music. 
Also, first person interviews: hear from a honey hunter and his avian partners, a scientist working to find the world’s only ocean-dwelling insects, and an offshore radio DJ who is at the heart of the local fishing community.    

Featuring over 500 extraordinary plants, animals, and natural phenomena, with illustrations and photos on every page, the book takes readers around the globe—from Antarctic deserts to lush jungles, and into the deepest fathoms of the ocean and the hearts of our densest cities. Teeming with detail and wildly entertaining, Wild Life reinvigorates our sense of wonder, awe and amazement about the incredible creatures we share our planet with.

 

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Anne Franke: The Diary of A Young Girl  by Anne Frank:

In 1942, with Nazis occupying Holland, a thirteen-year-old Jewish girl and her family fled their home in Amsterdam and went into hiding. For the next two years, until their whereabouts were betrayed to the Gestapo, they and another family lived cloistered in the “Secret Annex” of an old office building. Cut off from the outside world, they faced hunger, boredom, the constant cruelties of living in confined quarters, and the ever-present threat of discovery and death. In her diary Anne Frank recorded vivid impressions of her experiences during this period. By turns thoughtful, moving, and amusing, her account offers a fascinating commentary on human courage and frailty and a compelling self-portrait of a sensitive and spirited young woman whose promise was tragically cut short. 

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The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt:

After more than a decade of stability or improvement, the mental health of adolescents plunged in the early 2010s. Rates of depression, anxiety, self-harm, and suicide rose sharply, more than doubling on many measures. Why? 

In The Anxious Generation, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt lays out the facts about the epidemic of teen mental illness that hit many countries at the same time. He then investigates the nature of childhood, including why children need play and independent exploration to mature into competent, thriving adults. Haidt shows how the “play-based childhood” began to decline in the 1980s, and how it was finally wiped out by the arrival of the “phone-based childhood” in the early 2010s. He presents more than a dozen mechanisms by which this “great rewiring of childhood” has interfered with children’s social and neurological development, covering everything from sleep deprivation to attention fragmentation, addiction, loneliness, social contagion, social comparison, and perfectionism. He explains why social media damages girls more than boys and why boys have been withdrawing from the real world into the virtual world, with disastrous consequences for themselves, their families, and their societies. 

Most important, Haidt issues a clear call to action. He diagnoses the “collective action problems” that trap us, and then proposes four simple rules that might set us free. He describes steps that parents, teachers, schools, tech companies, and governments can take to end the epidemic of mental illness and restore a more humane childhood. 

Haidt has spent his career speaking truth backed by data in the most difficult landscapes—communities polarized by politics and religion, campuses battling culture wars, and now the public health emergency faced by Gen Z. We cannot afford to ignore his findings about protecting our children—and ourselves—from the psychological damage of a phone-based life. 

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The Debt by Angela Hunt: 

After fleeing a painful and compromising past, Emma Rose Howard settled eagerly into the role of a pastor’s wife. She and her husband, Abel, dedicated themselves to parenting a mega-church and influenced thousands of lives through its related ministries. 

But when Emma Rose receives a phone call from a living, breathing remnant of her troubled past, she finds herself wondering if something in her life is woefully out of balance. The presence of this unexpected intruder soon threatens everything Emma Rose has believed about her calling, her marriage, and her relationship with God. 

The Debt not only invites readers to embrace the painful heartache and incomparable joy that accompany a soul’s redemption, but it challenges us to follow Christ to new and unexpected places. 

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Entitlement: A Novel by Rumaan Alam:

Brooke wants. She isn’t in need, but there are things she wants. A sense of purpose, for instance. She wants to make a difference in the world, to impress her mother along the way, to spend time with friends and secure her independence. Her job assisting an octogenarian billionaire in his quest to give away a vast fortune could help her achieve many of these goals. It may inspire new desires as well: proximity to wealth turns out to be nothing less than transformative. What is money, really, but a kind of belief? 

Taut, unsettling, and alive to the seductive distortions of money, Entitlement is a riveting tale for our new gilded age, a story that confidently considers questions about need and worth, race and privilege, philanthropy and generosity, passion and obsession. It is a provocative, propulsive novel about the American imagination.  

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Gray Matter: A Neurosurgeon Discovers the Power of Prayer . . . One Patient at a Time (A Neurosurgeon Discovers the Power of Prayer… One Patient at a Time) by David Levy & Joel Kilpatrick:

A perfect blend of medical drama and spiritual insight, Gray Matter is a fascinating account of Dr. David Levy’s decision to begin asking his patients if he could pray for them before surgery. Some are thrilled. Some are skeptical. Some are hostile, and some are quite literally transformed by the request.  

Each chapter focuses on a specific case, opening with a detailed description of the patient’s diagnosis and the procedure that will need to be performed, followed by the prayer “request.” From there, readers get to look over Dr. Levy’s shoulder as he performs the operation, and then we wait—right alongside Dr. Levy, the patients, and their families—to see the final results.  

Dr. Levy’s musings on what successful and unsuccessful surgical results imply about God, faith, and the power of prayer are honest and insightful. As we watch him come to his ultimate conclusion that no matter what the results of the procedure are, “God is good,” we cannot help but be truly moved and inspired. 

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Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering by Malcolm Gladwell:

Twenty-five years after the publication of his groundbreaking first book, Malcolm Gladwell returns with a brand-new volume that reframes the lessons of The Tipping Point in a startling and revealing light. 

Why is Miami…Miami? What does the heartbreaking fate of the cheetah tell us about the way we raise our children? Why do Ivy League schools care so much about sports? What is the Magic Third, and what does it mean for racial harmony? In this provocative new work, Malcolm Gladwell returns for the first time in twenty-five years to the subject of social epidemics and tipping points, this time with the aim of explaining the dark side of contagious phenomena. 

Through a series of riveting stories, Gladwell traces the rise of a new and troubling form of social engineering. He takes us to the streets of Los Angeles to meet the world’s most successful bank robbers, rediscovers a forgotten television show from the 1970s that changed the world, visits the site of a historic experiment on a tiny cul-de-sac in northern California, and offers an alternate history of two of the biggest epidemics of our day: COVID and the opioid crisis. Revenge of the Tipping Point is Gladwell’s most personal book yet. With his characteristic mix of storytelling and social science, he offers a guide to making sense of the contagions of modern world. It’s time we took tipping points seriously. 

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Stories written as letters – similar to the subscription service described on the Flower Letters website; subscribers receive letters relaying parts of a story in a selected category. The letters arrive in beautiful envelopes with equally stylish stationery. For more information check out the Flower Letters site found here:  

https://theflowerletters.com/

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Also discussed during our December gathering was the funny video, The Parking Lot of Broken Dreams, created for the library as part of the local, annual Flx Gives which raises funds for non-profits. For more information on Flx Gives check oout their website found here: https://www.flxgives.org/ 

And here is the link for The Parking Lot of Broken Dreams video: 

The Parking Lot of Broken Dreams 

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And as an early reminder, the January 2025 Book Club for Adults gathering will be held on Friday, January 10, 2025, from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. at the library.  

Our January Read is Help Wanted by Adelle Waldman, copies of which are available at the library.  

Our original January Read: The Women by Kristin Hannah has been bumped to February, on account of the Hammondsport Library ‘s book club selecting that title for their January Read. 

Have a great day, 

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Reminder Upcoming November SSC Library Book Club Gathering & October Gathering Notes

Reminder Upcoming November SSC Library Book Club Gathering & October Gathering Notes

Hi everyone, first up the reminder! Our November Book Club for Adults meeting is next Friday, November 8, 2024 from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m.

We’ll be discussing our November Read, The Great Divide by Cristina Henrquez, which focuses on some of the everyday people impacted by the building of the Panama Canal in 1904. Copies of the book can still be picked up at the library if anyone needs a copy.

And copies of our December Read: Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice For Murders by Jesse Q. Sutanto will be available on November 8.

Hope to see everyone next Friday!

Have a great weekend,

Linda


Now, on to a review of our last book club gathering and read!

The October SSCL Book Club for Adults gathering was held on Friday, October 11, 2024.  

We discussed our October Read Mrs. Nash’s Ashes by Sarah Adler.  

Despite the title, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes was a lighter read than our September book, Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian which features characters who survived the Armenian Genocide of the early twentieth century.  

The cliff notes version of the plot is that Mrs. Nash’s Ashes follows the story of three main characters; former child actress Millicent “Millie” Watts-Cohen, English teacher and writer Hollis Hollenbeck, and Millie’s friend and neighbor, the late Mrs. Rose Mcintrye Nash. The story of Millie and Hollis is contemporary; the love story of Millie and the love of her life, Elsie Brown is told in flashbacks.  

As a child Millie appeared in a popular TV show and she recently had a spectacular public breakup, outside a restaurant, with her former boyfriend Josh, when she discovered he had been using her fame, by creating a false social media account in her name, to advance his career. Hollis and Josh went to school together, and he too was at the restaurant the night of the breakup and took a very distraught Millie home after her fight with Josh. 

Fast forward a couple of months and Mrs. Nash has recently died, Millie having promised her she would reunite her ashes, which she has stored in her backpack, with Elsie, who she discovered was alive and living in Florida. Millie booked a flight to Florida and was waiting for her flight at the National Airport in Washington D.C., when a male fan unknowingly accosted her, and a curmudgeonly Hollis, who was also waiting to catch a flight to Florida, came to her rescue. 

Longer story short, the airport experienced technical difficulties, Millie and Hollis’s flights are cancelled, and they decide to car pool it to Florida; along the way they encounter a number of humorous and interesting obstacles including a road closure due to an olive oil spill, the angst of Millie’s former boyfriend Josh who sees photos of Millie and Hollis on social media, and Millie being asked to be the Grand Marshall in a parade in a small town they stay in for a few days, while Hollis’s car is being fixed.  

Interspersed with the story of Millie and Hollis, is the story of Rose and Elsie who meet, near an army base in Florida, during World War II; when Rose is a pigeoneer and Elsie an army nurse. The women fall in love and spend a great deal of their off-duty hours together playing games, hanging out on a lovely local beach and just enjoying each other’s company; but both realize in the end, that a future together is impossible due to the social norms of the day. Rose finishes her service as a pigeoneer goes home, marries and has children; and writes occasionally to Elsie for a few years until it seems, due to an inaccurate report, that Esther has been killed while serving in Korea.  

Decades later, Millie discovers that, in fact, Elsie survived the Korean War and is living in a hospice in Florida; and this discovery prompts the road trip. 

Despite some literal and figurative bumps in the road Mille and Hollis make it to Florida and rush to Elsie’s hospice only to discover that Elsie died the day Millie and Hollis met in the National airport. Millie is sad that she wasn’t able to keep her promise to Mrs. Nash and reunite her, the form of her ashes, with Elsie. Instead, Millie decides to bury Mrs. Nash’s ashes on the same nearby beach where the women spent much of their time together during World War II.  

An epilogue of the story, available by signing up to receive the author, Sarah Adler’s, newsletter, indicates that a year after the contemporary road trip Millie and Hollis took, that they have become a couple.  

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What Other Books Book Club Members Have Read Recently:

Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World by Anne Applebaum  

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the Pulitzer-prize winning author, an alarming account of how autocracies work together to undermine the democratic world, and how we should organize to defeat them 

“A masterful guide to the new age of authoritarianism… clear-sighted and fearless… a masterclass in the marriage of dodgy government to international criminality… (both) deeply disturbing.”—John Simpson, The Guardian • “Especially timely.”—The Washington Post 

We think we know what an autocratic state looks like: There is an all-powerful leader at the top. He controls the police. The police threaten the people with violence. There are evil collaborators, and maybe some brave dissidents. 

But in the 21st century, that bears little resemblance to reality. Nowadays, autocracies are underpinned not by one dictator, but by sophisticated networks composed of kleptocratic financial structures, surveillance technologies, and professional propagandists, all of which operate across multiple regimes, from China to Russia to Iran. Corrupt companies in one country do business with corrupt companies in another. The police in one country can arm and train the police in another, and propagandists share resources and themes, pounding home the same messages about the weakness of democracy and the evil of America. 

International condemnation and economic sanctions cannot move the autocrats. Even popular opposition movements, from Venezuela to Hong Kong to Moscow, don’t stand a chance. The members of Autocracy, Inc, aren’t linked by a unifying ideology, like communism, but rather a common desire for power, wealth, and impunity. In this urgent treatise, which evokes George Kennan’s essay calling for “containment” of the Soviet Union, Anne Applebaum calls for the democracies to fundamentally reorient their policies to fight a new kind of threat. 

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The Impossible Us by Sarah Lotz 

 Nick: Failed writer. Failed husband. Dog owner.

Bee: Serial dater. Dress maker. Pringles enthusiast.

One day, their paths cross over a misdirected email. The connection is instant, electric. They feel like they’ve known each other all their lives. So they decide to meet.

While Nick buys a new suit, and gets his courage up, Bee steps away from her desk, and sets off to meet him at a London train station. With their happily-ever-after nearly in hand, what happens next is incredible and threatens to separate them forever.

As their once in a lifetime connection is tested, Nick and Bee will discover whether being together is an impossible chance worth taking.

The Life Impossible by Matt Haig 

The remarkable next novel from Matt Haig, the author of #1 New York Times bestseller The Midnight Library, with more than nine million copies sold worldwide 

“What looks like magic is simply a part of life we don’t understand yet…” 

When retired math teacher Grace Winters is left a run-down house on a Mediterranean island by a long-lost friend, curiosity gets the better of her. She arrives in Ibiza with a one-way ticket, no guidebook and no plan. 

Among the rugged hills and golden beaches of the island, Grace searches for answers about her friend’s life, and how it ended. What she uncovers is stranger than she could have dreamed. But to dive into this impossible truth, Grace must first come to terms with her past. 

Filled with wonder and wild adventure, this is a story of hope and the life-changing power of a new beginning. 

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Ordinary Grace by William Kent Krueger 

“That was it. That was all of it. A grace so ordinary there was no reason at all to remember it. Yet I have never across the forty years since it was spoken forgotten a single word.”  

New Bremen, Minnesota, 1961. The Twins were playing their debut season, ice-cold root beers were selling out at the soda counter of Halderson’s Drugstore, and Hot Stuff comic books were a mainstay on every barbershop magazine rack. It was a time of innocence and hope for a country with a new, young president. But for thirteen-year-old Frank Drum it was a grim summer in which death visited frequently and assumed many forms. Accident. Nature. Suicide. Murder.  

Frank begins the season preoccupied with the concerns of any teenage boy, but when tragedy unexpectedly strikes his family—which includes his Methodist minister father; his passionate, artistic mother; Juilliard-bound older sister; and wise-beyond-his-years kid brother—he finds himself thrust into an adult world full of secrets, lies, adultery, and betrayal, suddenly called upon to demonstrate a maturity and gumption beyond his years.  

Told from Frank’s perspective forty years after that fateful summer, Ordinary Grace is a brilliantly moving account of a boy standing at the door of his young manhood, trying to understand a world that seems to be falling apart around him. It is an unforgettable novel about discovering the terrible price of wisdom and the enduring grace of God 

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New Seeds of Contemplation by Thomas Merton 

New Seeds of Contemplation is one of Thomas Merton’s most widely read and best-loved books. Christians and non-Christians alike have joined in praising it as a notable successor in the meditative tradition of St. John of the Cross, The Cloud of Unknowing, and the medieval mystics, while others have compared Merton’s reflections with those of Thoreau. New Seeds of Contemplation seeks to awaken the dormant inner depths of the spirit so long neglected by Western man, to nurture a deeply contemplative and mystical dimension in our lives. For Merton, “Every moment and every event of every man’s life on earth plants something in his soul. For just as the wind carries thousands of winged seeds, so each moment brings with it germs of spiritual vitality that come to rest imperceptibly in the minds and wills of men. Most of these unnumbered seeds perish and are lost, because men are not prepared to receive them: for such seeds as these cannot spring up anywhere except in the soil of freedom, spontaneity and love.” 

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A Novel Proposal by Denise Hunter 

When western novelist Sadie Goodwin must pen a romance novel to rescue her lackluster sales, there’s only one tiny problem: she’s never been in love. 

Desperate to salvage her career, Sadie accepts an invitation to hole up at her friend’s beach duplex for the summer and devote herself to this confounding genre. After all, where better to witness love than on the beautiful South Carolina shore? 

But Sadie soon finds many ways to procrastinate the dreaded task—like getting to know the beach regulars and installing a Little Free Library on the property. She even attempts conversation with Sam Ford, the frustratingly stubborn neighbor on the other side of the duplex. But things take an unexpected turn when Sadie finds inside her library an abandoned novel with a secret compartment—and a beautiful engage­ment ring tucked inside. 

Suddenly, locating the ring’s owner becomes the perfect way to put off writing that romance. Sadie draws a reluctant Sam into her mission. And as the two close in on an answer to the mysterious proposal, she discovers a tender side to him. She begins to wonder if he just might make the perfect hero for her romance novel—or maybe even her heart. 

From the bestselling author of The Convenient Groom (now a beloved Hallmark Original movie) comes a sweet and sizzling story of a romance writer surprised by her own happily ever after. 

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There Are Rivers In The Sky by Elif Shafak 

From the Booker Prize finalist, author of The Island of Missing Trees, an enchanting new tale about three characters living along two great rivers, all connected by a single drop of water. 

“Make place for Elif Shafak on your bookshelf. Make place for her in your heart too. You won’t regret it.”—Arundhati Roy, winner of the Booker Prize 

In the ancient city of Nineveh, on the bank of the River Tigris, King Ashurbanipal of Mesopotamia, erudite but ruthless, built a great library that would crumble with the end of his reign. From its ruins, however, emerged a poem, the Epic of Gilgamesh, that would infuse the existence of two rivers and bind together three lives. 

In 1840 London, Arthur is born beside the stinking, sewage-filled River Thames. With an abusive, alcoholic father and a mentally ill mother, Arthur’s only chance of escaping destitution is his brilliant memory. When his gift earns him a spot as an apprentice at a leading publisher, Arthur’s world opens up far beyond the slums, and one book in particular catches his interest: Nineveh and Its Remains. 

In 2014 Turkey, Narin, a ten-year-old Yazidi girl, is diagnosed with a rare disorder that will soon cause her to go deaf. Before that happens, her grandmother is determined to baptize her in a sacred Iraqi temple. But with the rising presence of ISIS and the destruction of the family’s ancestral lands along the Tigris, Narin is running out of time. 

In 2018 London, the newly divorced Zaleekah, a hydrologist, moves into a houseboat on the Thames to escape her husband. Orphaned and raised by her wealthy uncle, Zaleekah had made the decision to take her own life in one month, until a curious book about her homeland changes everything. 

A dazzling feat of storytelling, There Are Rivers in the Sky entwines these outsiders with a single drop of water, a drop which remanifests across the centuries. Both a source of life and harbinger of death, rivers—the Tigris and the Thames—transcend history, transcend fate: “Water remembers. It is humans who forget.” 

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The Unexpected Abigail Adams: A Woman “Not Apt to be Intimidated” by John L. Smith Jr. 

A Wall Street Journal Spring Books 2024 Selection: “What to Read This Spring” 

An Extraordinary Portrait of America’s Beloved Female Founder and First Lady 

Abigail Adams, wife of John Adams, was an eyewitness to America’s founding, and helped guide the new nation through her observations and advice to her famously prickly husband, who cherished her. She met many important and significant figures of the period: George Washington and his wife Martha, Thomas Jefferson, Sally Hemings, Benjamin Franklin, Henry Knox, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, John Jay, Marquis de Lafayette, John Paul Jones, Alexander Hamilton, James Monroe, artist Patience Wright, and even King George III and Queen Charlotte of England, as well as King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette of France. In The Unexpected Abigail Adams: A Woman “Not Apt to Be Intimidated”, writer and researcher John L. Smith, Jr., draws on more than two thousand letters of Abigail’s spanning from the 1760s to her death in 1818, interweaving Abigail’s colorful correspondence—some of which has not appeared in print before—with a contextual narrative. In this priceless documentation of one of the most important periods of world history she comments on the varied personalities she encountered and, while her husband was away from home serving in the Continental Congresses and as a diplomatic envoy in Europe, she wrote him frequently about their home in Massachusetts, their family, national and local politics, and, during the early years of the war, crucial information concerning revolutionary activities around Boston. She was an advocate for education for women, a shrewd businesswoman, and had an unrivaled political acumen. Her strength in the face of disease, loss of children, and other hardships, and her poignant, beautiful, and often philosophical commentary, advice, and predictions allow Abigail to demonstrate her fully modern sensibilities. This major biography of Abigail, the first in over ten years, is a riveting, revealing portrait of a remarkable woman that readers will find very relatable—and one that transforms how she is perceived.   

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And the TV Series:  

Lessons In Chemistry (Apple TV+) 

2024 nominee for 10 Emmy Award, including Outstanding Limited Series. Set in the early sixties; Denied her dream of being a scientist, Elizabeth Zott accepts a job on a TV cooking show and sets out to teach a nation of overlooked housewives way more than recipes. – Apple overview 

October Book Club For Adults Is This Friday!

October Book Club For Adults Is This Friday!

Hi everyone, here is our monthly reminder email; the October Book Club for Adult gathering will be held this Friday, October 11, 2024, in the Conference Room at the Southeast Steuben County Library.

Our October read, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes by Sarah Adler, is a lighter one and one of the books recommended as among the best of 2023 by The New York Public Library. If you’d like to check out the full NYPL list of recommendations here is a link to the online collection: https://www.nypl.org/books-more/recommendations/best-books/adults

Also of note, we still have a few free copies of our October read at the library if anyone needs a copy. And copies of our November read, The Great Divide by Cristina Henriquez have arrived too, and may be picked up at any time – just FYI, in case anyone would like to get a jump on next months’ read.

Have a great day and I hope to see you Friday!

Linda Reimer, SSCL

If you have questions about The Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults let us know! You can always drop by the library and inquire; and also please feel free to give us a call at 607-936-3713, or send an email to reimerl@stls.org

September 2024 Book Club for Adults Gathering This Friday!

September 2024 Book Club for Adults Gathering This Friday!

Hi everyone, here is the monthly reminder post!

Our September Book Club for Adults gathering will be held at the library this Friday, September 13, 2024. We’ll be meeting in the Conference Room at the library from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. 

Our September Read is Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian. We still have copies of the book available at the Circulation Desk, if anyone needs a copy.  

Our October Read is a lighter read, called Mrs. Nash’s Ashes, we have a limited number of copies available at the library this week & will have more copies available next week. I can even mail a copy to anyone in our group if that is helpful.  

Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is one of the New York Public Library’s Best Reads of 2023.  

And if you’re not familiar with it, the New York Public Library has a neat best of the year reading list on their website: https://www.nypl.org/books-more/recommendations/best-books/adults

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Our August Read was the novel Remarkably Bright Creatures which is a hopeful novel, despite it having several tragedies fueling the plot. It features a seventy-year-old heroine, Tova Sullivan, who works at an aquarium, Marcellus the intelligent and adventurous octopus she befriends there; Cameron Cashmore a troubled youth with an initially unknown connection to Tova; and Ethan Mack a local store owner and friend of Tova, who also befriends Cameron.  

Remarkable Bright Creatures is a story of the importance of community and families; the families we start out with and those we make of ourselves, and how connections with other people can enrich people’s lives (and octopus’s lives too!).  

The book was universally liked by the book club members at our August gathering; so, if you’re reading this post/email and haven’t read the book – we recommend you check it out! 

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Other Reads Read By Book Club Members In The Past Month: 

Disclaimer: The inclusion of a book on this list represents personal recommendations by book club members and does not constitute an endorsement or approval by the library. The library encourages thoughtful exploration and discussion of ideas and views from all members of society. For assistance in finding additional resources or for further recommendations, please visit our library or reach out to our staff. 

Here is the list of books club members have read in the past month; book summaries are from the publishers of each title, unless otherwise specified as a professional review, i.e. Booklist, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal etc. 

And having said all that, let’s get back to the books!

The List of Books Read in August by Book Club Members:

America Betrayed: How a Christian Monk Created America & Why the Left Is Determined to Destroy Her by David Horowitz: Americans’ pride in their heritage and undermine their will to defend it, the attacks on America’s heritage begin with malicious slanders intended to turn the American dream of equality and freedom into a “white supremacist” nightmare. We are told America, from its inception, has been a “racist” nation that treats minorities as less than human. We are told America deserves to be destroyed. This destructive lie is now the official doctrine of the Biden White House, the “woke” Pentagon, the Democratic Senate, and the curricula of American schools. 

America Betrayed restores the true history of America’s achievements and its role as a beacon of freedom. Framed by an account of Martin Luther’s history and ideas, David Horowitz demonstrates that racial progress in America originates not from Leftist policy but from its founding ideals. America Betrayed is a history and a manifesto focused on the current war to save our country and restore the dignity and freedom of the individual. 

 

The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Reader by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Ann J. Lane: THE CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN READER is an anthology of fiction by one of America’s most important feminist writers. Probably best known as the author of “The Yellow Wallpaper,” in which a woman is driven mad by chauvinist psychiatry, Gilman wrote numerous other short stories and novels reflecting her radical socialist and feminist view of turn-of-the-century America. Collected here by noted Gilman scholar Ann J. Lane are eighteen stories and fragments, including a selection from Herland, Gilman’s feminist Utopia. The resulting anthology provides a provocative blueprint to Gilman’s intellectual and creative production. 

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The Asteroid Hunter: A Scientist’s Journey to the Dawn of our Solar System by Dante Lauretta: A “brilliant account of a 21st century real-life fantasy” (Sir Brian May) of space exploration and a lesson in fragility in the quest to return an asteroid sample and unlock the mystery of formation of life on earth, braided with the remarkable life story of the OSIRIS-REx mission leader, Dr. Dante Lauretta.  

On September 11, 1999, humanity made a monumental discovery in the vastness of space. Scientists uncovered an asteroid of immense scientific importance—a colossal celestial entity. As massive as an aircraft carrier and towering as high as the iconic Empire State Building, this cosmic titan was later named Bennu. Remarkable for much more than its size, Bennu belonged to a rare breed of asteroids capable of revealing the essence of life itself. But just as Bennu became a beacon of promise, researchers identified a grave danger. Hurtling through space, it threatens to collide with our planet on September 24, 2182. 

Leading the expedition was Dr. Dante Lauretta, the Principal Investigator of NASA’s audacious OSIRIS-REx Asteroid Sample Return Mission. Tasked with unraveling Bennu’s mysteries, his team embarked on a daring quest to retrieve a precious sample from the asteroid’s surface — one that held the potential to not only unlock the secrets of life’s origins but also to avert an unprecedented catastrophe. 

A tale of destiny and danger, The Asteroid Hunter chronicles the high-stakes mission firsthand, narrated by Dr. Lauretta. It offers readers an intimate glimpse into the riveting exploits of the mission and Dr. Lauretta’s wild, winding personal journey to Bennu and back. Peeling back the curtain on the wonders of the cosmos, this enthralling account promises a rare glimpse into the tightly woven fabric of scientific exploration, where technical precision converges with humanity’s profound curiosity and indominable spirit. 

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Cats: Photographs 1942 – 2018 by Walter Chandoha, Sarah Wrigley, et al.: On a winter’s night in 1949 in New York City, young marketing student and budding photographer Walter Chandoha spotted a stray kitten in the snow, bundled it into his coat, and brought it home. Little did he know he had just met the muse that would determine the course of his life. Chandoha turned his lens on his new feline friend—which he named Loco—and was so inspired by the results that he started photographing kittens from a local shelter. These images marked the start of an extraordinary career that would span seven decades. 

Long before the Internet and #catsofinstagram, Chandoha was enrapturing the public with his fuzzy subjects. From advertisements to greetings cards, jigsaw puzzles to pet-food packaging, his images combined a genuine affection for the creatures, a strong work ethic, and flawless technique. Chandoha’s trademark glamorous lighting, which made each cat’s fur stand out in sharp relief, would define the visual vocabulary of animal portraiture for generations and inspire such masters as Andy Warhol, who took cues from Chandoha’s charming portraits in his illustrated cat book. 

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Dear Sister: A Memoir of Secrets, Survival, and Unbreakable Bonds by Michelle Horton: A breathtaking memoir about two sisters and a high-profile case: Nikki Addimando, incarcerated for killing her longtime abuser; and the author, Michelle Horton, left in the devastating fall-out to raise Nikki’s young children and to battle the criminal justice system. 

In September 2017, a knock on the door upends Michelle Horton’s life: she learns that her sister has just shot her partner and is now in jail. Stunned to find herself in a situation she’d only ever encountered on TV or in the news, Michelle rearranges her life to raise Nikki’s two young children alongside her own son. Determined to reunite her sister with her kids, Michelle launches a fight to bring Nikki home, squaring off against a criminal justice system designed to punish the entire family. 

During the investigation that follows, Michelle is shocked to learn that Nikki had been hiding horrific abuse for years. She realizes that in order to understand the present, she must excavate the past. She retraces their childhood, searching for clues to explain how so many people could have been blind to her sister’s dangerous situation. Dear Sister is a profound, intimate story about not just surviving trauma, but turning it into hard-won wisdom. It is a story of resilience and the unbreakable bond of family. 

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The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck: First published in 1939, Steinbeck’s Pulitzer Prize-winning epic of the Great Depression chronicles the Dust Bowl migration of the 1930s and tells the story of one Oklahoma farm family, the Joads—driven from their homestead and forced to travel west to the promised land of California. Out of their trials and their repeated collisions against the hard realities of an America divided into Haves and Have-Nots evolves a drama that is intensely human yet majestic in its scale and moral vision, elemental yet plainspoken, tragic but ultimately stirring in its human dignity. A portrait of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless, of one man’s fierce reaction to injustice, and of one woman’s stoical strength, the novel captures the horrors of the Great Depression and probes into the very nature of equality and justice in America. At once a naturalistic epic, captivity narrative, road novel, and transcendental gospel, Steinbeck’s powerful landmark novel is perhaps the most American of American Classics. 

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The Heart of Everything That Is: The Untold Story of Red Cloud, An American Legend by Bob Drury, Tom Clavin, et al.: Red Cloud was the only American Indian in history to defeat the United States Army in a war, forcing the government to sue for peace on his terms. At the peak of Red Cloud’s powers the Sioux could claim control of one-fifth of the contiguous United States and the loyalty of thousands of fierce fighters. But the fog of history has left Red Cloud strangely obscured. Now, thanks to the rediscovery of a lost autobiography, and painstaking research by two award-winning authors, the story of the nineteenth century’s most powerful and successful Indian warrior can finally be told. 

In this astonishing untold story of the American West, Bob Drury and Tom Clavin restore Red Cloud to his rightful place in American history in a sweeping and dramatic narrative based on years of primary research. As they trace the events leading to Red Cloud’s War, they provide intimate portraits of the many lives Red Cloud touched—mountain men such as Jim Bridger; US generals like William Tecumseh Sherman, who were charged with annihilating the Sioux; fearless explorers, such as the dashing John Bozeman; and the memorable warriors whom Red Cloud groomed, like the legendary Crazy Horse. And at the center of the story is Red Cloud, fighting for the very existence of the Indian way of life. 

“Unabashed, unbiased, and disturbingly honest, leaving no razor-sharp arrowhead unturned, no rifle trigger unpulled….a compelling and fiery narrative” (USA TODAY), this is the definitive chronicle of the conflict between an expanding white civilization and the Plains Indians who stood in its way. 

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The Housemaid Is Watching by Freida McFadden: A twisting, pulse-pounding thriller from Freida McFadden, the New York Times bestselling author of The Housemaid and The Coworker 

“You must be our new neighbors!” Mrs. Lowell gushes and waves across the picket fence. I clutch my daughter’s hand and smile back: but the second Mrs. Lowell sees my husband a strange expression crosses her face. In that moment I make a promise. We finally have a family home. My past is far, far behind us. And I’ll do anything to keep it that way… 

I used to clean other people’s houses―now, I can’t believe this home is actually mine. The charming kitchen, the quiet cul-de-sac, the huge yard where my kids can play. My husband and I saved for years to give our children the life they deserve. 

Even though I’m wary of our new neighbor Mrs. Lowell, when she invites us over for dinner it’s our chance to make friends. Her maid opens the door wearing a white apron, her hair in a tight bun. I know exactly what it’s like to be in her shoes. But her cold stare gives me chills…  

The Lowells’ maid isn’t the only strange thing on our street. I’m sure I see a shadowy figure watching us. My husband leaves the house late at night. And when I meet a woman who lives across the way, her words chill me to the bone: Be careful of your neighbors. 

Did I make a terrible mistake moving my family here?  

I thought I’d left my darkest secrets behind. But could this quiet suburban street be the most dangerous place of all? 

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How to Age Disgracefully: A Novel by Clare Pooley: A senior citizens’ center and a daycare collide with hilarious results in the new ensemble comedy from New York Times-bestselling author Clare Pooley 

When Lydia takes a job running the Senior Citizens’ Social Club three afternoons a week, she assumes she’ll be spending her time drinking tea and playing gentle games of cards. 

The members of the Social Club, however, are not at all what Lydia was expecting. From Art, a failed actor turned kleptomaniac to Daphne, who has been hiding from her dark past for decades to Ruby, a Banksy-style knitter who gets revenge in yarn, these seniors look deceptively benign—but when age makes you invisible, secrets are so much easier to hide. 

When the city council threatens to sell the doomed community center building, the members of the Social Club join forces with their tiny friends in the daycare next door—as well as the teenaged father of one of the toddlers and a geriatric dog—to save the building. Together, this group’s unorthodox methods may actually work, as long as the police don’t catch up with them first. 

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How to Say Babylon: A Memoir by Safiya Sinclair: With echoes of Educated and Born a Crime, How to Say Babylon is the stunning story of the author’s struggle to break free of her rigid Rastafarian upbringing, ruled by her father’s strict patriarchal views and repressive control of her childhood, to find her own voice as a woman and poet. 

Throughout her childhood, Safiya Sinclair’s father, a volatile reggae musician and militant adherent to a strict sect of Rastafari, became obsessed with her purity, in particular, with the threat of what Rastas call Babylon, the immoral and corrupting influences of the Western world outside their home. He worried that womanhood would make Safiya and her sisters morally weak and impure, and believed a woman’s highest virtue was her obedience. 

In an effort to keep Babylon outside the gate, he forbade almost everything. In place of pants, the women in her family were made to wear long skirts and dresses to cover their arms and legs, head wraps to cover their hair, no make-up, no jewelry, no opinions, no friends. Safiya’s mother, while loyal to her father, nonetheless gave Safiya and her siblings the gift of books, including poetry, to which Safiya latched on for dear life. And as Safiya watched her mother struggle voicelessly for years under housework and the rigidity of her father’s beliefs, she increasingly used her education as a sharp tool with which to find her voice and break free. Inevitably, with her rebellion comes clashes with her father, whose rage and paranoia explodes in increasing violence. As Safiya’s voice grows, lyrically and poetically, a collision course is set between them. 

How to Say Babylon is Sinclair’s reckoning with the culture that initially nourished but ultimately sought to silence her; it is her reckoning with patriarchy and tradition, and the legacy of colonialism in Jamaica. Rich in lyricism and language only a poet could evoke, How to Say Babylon is both a universal story of a woman finding her own power and a unique glimpse into a rarefied world we may know how to name, Rastafari, but one we know little about.  

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Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade: A Novel by Janet Skeslien Charles: 1918: As the Great War rages, Jessie Carson takes a leave of absence from the New York Public Library to work for the American Committee for Devastated France. Founded by millionaire Anne Morgan, this group of international women help rebuild destroyed French communities just miles from the front. Upon arrival, Jessie strives to establish something that the French have never seen—children’s libraries. She turns ambulances into bookmobiles and trains the first French female librarians. Then she disappears. 

1987: When NYPL librarian and aspiring writer Wendy Peterson stumbles across a passing reference to Jessie Carson in the archives, she becomes consumed with learning her fate. In her obsessive research, she discovers that she and the elusive librarian have more in common than their work at New York’s famed library, but she has no idea their paths will converge in surprising ways across time. 

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Pioneer in Tibet: The Life and Perils of Dr. Albert Shelton by Douglas Wissing: Dr. Albert Shelton was a medical missionary and explorer who spent nearly twenty years in the Tibetan borderlands at the start of the last century. During the Great Game era, the Sheltons’ sprawling station in Kham was the most remote and dangerous mission on earth. Raising his family in a land of banditry and civil war, caught between a weak Chinese government and the British Raj, Shelton proved to be a resourceful frontiersman. One of the West’s first interpreters of Tibetan culture, during the course of his work in Tibet, he was praised by the Western press as a family man, revered doctor, respected diplomat, and fearless adventurer. To the American public, Dr. Albert Shelton was Daniel Boone, Wyatt Earp, and the apostle Paul on a new frontier. Driven by his goal of setting up a medical mission within Lhasa, the seat of the Dalai Lama and a city off-limits to Westerners for hundreds of years, Shelton acted as a valued go-between for the Tibetans and Chinese. Recognizing his work, the Dalai Lama issued Shelton an invitation to Lhasa. Tragically, while finalizing his entry, Shelton was shot to death on a remote mountain trail in the Himalayas. Set against the exciting history of early twentieth century Tibet and China, Pioneer in Tibet offers a window into the life of a dying breed of adventurer. 

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Ruin Their Crops on the Ground: The Politics of Food in the United States, from the Trail of Tears to School Lunch, by Andrea Freeman: In 1779, to subjugate Indigenous nations, George Washington ordered his troops to “ruin their crops now in the ground and prevent their planting more.” Destroying harvests is just one way that the United States has used food as a political tool. Trying to prevent enslaved people from rising up, enslavers restricted their consumption, providing only enough to fuel labor. Since the Great Depression, school lunches have served as dumping grounds for unwanted agricultural surpluses. 

From frybread to government cheese, Ruin Their Crops on the Ground draws on over fifteen years of research to argue that U.S. food law and policy have created and maintained racial and social inequality. In an epic, sweeping account, Andrea Freeman, who pioneered the term “food oppression,” moves from colonization to slavery to the Americanization of immigrant food culture, to the commodities supplied to Native reservations, to milk as a symbol of white supremacy. She traces the long-standing alliance between the government and food industries that have produced gaping racial health disparities, and she shows how these practices continue to this day, through the marketing of unhealthy goods that target marginalized communities, causing diabetes, high blood pressure, and premature death. 

Ruin Their Crops on the Ground is a groundbreaking addition to the history and politics of food. It will permanently upend the notion that we freely and equally choose what we put on our plates. 

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Have a great day & hope to see everyone at the library this Friday!

Linda