WOW! This is an incredible story about the cross-country journey of Annie Wilkins by horseback from Maine to California, beginning in Fall 1954 and ending in 1956. Poor, unwell, alone, she makes a decision to travel to see the Pacific Ocean in California. She sells off her assets, acquires a sturdy horse and sets off south with her young dog. Relying on the kindness of strangers, she most often is able to find a place to stable or pasture her horse and shelter overnight sometimes in a home or even a jail cell. This is a story about her courage and fortitude, and positive attitude, and a different time period where there were often caring, welcoming people along her route to help her along, and even rescue her on occasion. This is the mid-fifties when automobiles were beginning to dominate on newly built highways, and horses were no longer used for transportation. There are harrowing descriptions of trucks barreling down on her as she clings to the sides of roads. She even travels on route 66. Her story captures the interest of first local communities, gradually reaching further out into the country at large, and she is waylaid for interviews, and asked to help promote local towns. She earns pocket change along the way to pay for things she needs but is also gifted services like shoeing her horse or vet care. Fascinating account of an ordinary person who becomes extraordinary for about a year and a half as she travels over five thousand miles on horseback.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
A Town Called Solace by Mary Lawson
I enjoyed this book very much. A man newly separated from a partner of many years quits his job and moves to a small rural town in Northern Canada to a home he has inherited from a woman he barely remembers. A seven year old girl secretly continues taking care of the old woman's cat as the man remains unaware he shares the home with a cat. Soon, however, the new homeowner although he appears to want to just be left alone, finds himself "adopted" by the little girl and caught up in the mystery of both his inheritance and the disappearance of a teenager. This is an uplifting story that makes the ordinary seem special as individuals interact with one another.
Saturday, May 14, 2022
Sisters of Night and Fog by Erika Robuck
This historical fiction provides a descriptive and poignant story that focuses on two women who participated in the WW2 resistance effort in France. Their courage despite ever present danger to move among the Nazi occupiers and rescue downed Allied pilots, or deliver and collect important information for the Allied leadership enabled them to participate in a vital part of the struggle to defeat the Germans. The two main characters come alive in this skillfully balanced portrayal of their lives that highlights their resistance work but also places them in the context of family life with all its competing responsibilities.
Sunday, May 8, 2022
Forever Young by Hayley Mills
A poignant memoir by this actress whose father was a famous actor, and mother was a playwright, and she was signed by Walt Disney to a multi-film contract at age twelve. She describes both an exciting life filled with celebrity and celebrities but also haunted with the anguish and typical insecurities of an adolescence spent alternating between intense months of film making and then returning to a boarding school where she was often behind academically and out of sync with her schoolmates. This memoir is also filled with generous and admiring portrayals of many of the accomplished people she worked with, or met at parties and events she attended. Her peripatetic life sounded glamorous but was clearly also exhausting for a young girl who enjoyed spending alone time riding her pony in the English countryside. Her iconic film, The Parent Trap with its infectious song, let's Get Together, yeah, yeah, yeah remains a pleasant memory from my childhood, and I enjoyed reading this memoir.
Saturday, March 19, 2022
Whereabouts by Jhumpa Lahiri
Descriptive, pensive, often melancholic vignettes of the author's life. Ruminations on the significance and meaning of her experiences. Beautifully written.
Friday, March 11, 2022
Man's Search For Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl
I have returned to this book multiple times over my lifetime, having first read it when I was a teenager back in the sixties. Today, as human beings slaughter people in the Ukraine, I felt the need for it once again. It is often hard to see beyond the horrific headlines which relentlessly record the cruelties we humans inflict upon other living beings and the destruction we wreak upon our Environment as we pursue our goals in life. I awaken in the predawn in my comfortable home, my mind filling with the anguish I feel everyday as reality again intrudes with its evidence of horrific suffering. My propensity to despair does not accomplish anything but feed my ever present depression. Frankl offers his readers, a pathway to responding to this anguish reminding his readers that our freedom to make choices even under the unbelievable suffering Holocaust survivors endured is the freedom we can never relinquish. What choices can I make today that might propel my anguish into meaningful actions to make our World a better place?
Saturday, January 29, 2022
Song of a Captive Bird by Jasmin Darznik
A poignant story about the Iranian female poet, Forugh Farrokhzhad, which describes her struggle to live, create, and publish her astounding poetry in the patriarchal society and totalitarian state of Iran under the last Shah. Forugh tells her own fictionalized story, enhanced by the inclusion of excerpts of her poetry, giving the reader a very visceral exposure to her remarkable life.
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
We Begin at the End by Chris Whitaker
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
Quite a story about Bella da Costa Greene, the woman who worked as J.P. Morgan's personal librarian, taking over the acquisition of famous old books for his private library. An African-American, she passed as White in Racist America in order to be free to accomplish what her intelligence and talents supported. This narrative poignantly describes her daily fear of being exposed that she had to overcome to operate confidently in the male dominated, high stakes world of auctions, and to make essential contacts with the wealthy elites. Facts and fiction blend harmoniously to give the reader an appreciation for this incredible woman.
Sunday, December 19, 2021
The Kitchen Front by Jennifer Ryan
Delightful, uplifting story about four women who start out as competitors and end up friends. World War 2 brings stringent food rationing to England. Learning to cook palatable food with limited ingredients is difficult so the Ministry of Food provides recipes for women on the "kitchen front". Competitions become a significant entertainment and this story describes in delicious detail, a competition to choose a co-presenter on a radio food show. Evocative descriptions of nature, honey extraction, preparation of food and scary recounting of war planes flying overhead provide the reader with a visceral experience of life in England on the home front.
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Something Worth Doing by Jane Kirkpatrick
An inspiring historical fiction about Abigail Scott Duniway, a strong accomplished woman who advocated for suffrage for women during the forty years leading up to the 19th Amendment. A pioneer, a teacher, a businesswoman, a writer, she did it all.