Thursday, October 27, 2011

Recommended Reads

Perhaps the best part about being in a book club is getting recommendations from people who like the same types of books as you.  Here are some of the title's that were highly touted at the most recent MUSE group:

We liked these three so much that we picked them for Spring's MUSE Group:
Known World, 2003 by Edward P Jones
Wench, a Novel, 2010 by Dolen Perkins-Valdez
Empire Falls, 2001 by Richard Russo

Other titles::
Kate Morton books including, The Distant Hours, The Forgotten Garden and The House at Riverton
The Kitchen House, 2010 Kathleen Grissom
Next to Love, 2011 Ellen Feldman
The Outlander by Diana Gabalden
Ariannah Franklin novels including Mistress of the Art of Death, Grave Goods, The Murderous Procession, and The Serpent’s Tale
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See, 2001
The Melodean (known also as the Christmas Gift) by Glendon Swarthout (older book but good Christmas Story)
Winter Garden by Kristen Hanna
Women of the Silk by Gail Tsukiyama



Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Thirteenth Tale


Can you name the book by the characters?  Here’s an easy one…Harry Potter?  How about Bella, Jacob, and Edward?  Perhaps a little harder… Diana Bishop?   One more question, what do all of these characters have in common?  They are all supernatural beings, a mix of sorcerers, vampires, werewolves, and witches.  They are quite popular with readers these days and their stories make for spine-tingling Halloween reading.  But whatever happened to the good old-fashioned ghost story?  I was looking for a modern ghost story for October’s MUSE group and found it in “The Thirteenth Tale” (2007) by Diane Setterfield.  Perhaps you recognize the names Vida Winter and Margaret Lea?

“The Thirteenth Tale” is considered a gothic novel.  The gothic genre, characterized by a brooding fearful atmosphere, is often set in an old castle or decaying mansion, features characters with secretive, mysterious pasts, and includes a touch of the supernatural in the form of real or imagined spirits.  Think Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Dracula, and Rebecca.  Those four top the list of GoodReads’ “Best Gothic Reads of All Time.”  The Thirteenth Tale is number ten on this list, making it one of only two modern novels to achieve this distinction. (Interview with a Vampire is the other one, placing ninth on the list)

Vida Winter is a dying, best-selling British author who contracts with antiquarian bookseller Miss Lea to write her biography.  Daily, in the library of Vida’s home, the lives of the Angelfield family are revealed by Vida.  There is the dark-hearted violent Charlie with his obsession for his sister, the beautiful and willful Isabelle, and Isabelle’s feral twins Adeline and Emmeline.    Secret gardens, crumbling ruins, misty landscapes and ghostly apparitions chill the pages.  The time setting is unclear, the story is bizarre and the biographer (or reader) is never certain that Vida is telling the truth. One reviewer called The Thirteenth Tale, “A good story written by a very good writer about a good story told by a very good writer.”  Confused, read the book!

Join the MUSE group on October 25th, 6:30pm to discuss this book with other readers.  We'll meet in the Dean’s Conference Room in the Main Building, 400 East Fourth Street.    

Monday, September 19, 2011

Water for Elephants


Did you ever find a book that you just couldn’t get into?  That’s how Water for Elephants was for me.  Geez, I think every book-lover I know has read it and has seen the movie but I still couldn’t get past the prologue.  Now that I have finished it, I can’t believe I had this problem!  The book is story-telling at its best.  Unique but believable characters, an intriguing setting (the circus), an interesting format (it’s told alternately by 23 year old Jacob and Jacob at 90), and a story that will knock your sox off.  A blend of love story, adventure story, and cultural study, once past Chapter 1, I couldn’t put it down.

Following the death of his parents, Jacob Jankowski drops out of college and life and accidentally joins the circus.  He becomes the veterinarian for Benzini Brother’s Most Spectacular Show on Earth.  It is “not” the most spectacular show on earth, but rather a Ringling Brothers wannabe during the depression era.  Through author Sara Gruen’s clear writing and thorough research, the magical, glamorous, seedy, and vicious underworld of circus workers is brought to life.  An Amazon editorial review explains “She has all the right vocabulary: grifters, roustabouts, workers, cooch tent, rubes, First of May, what the band plays when there's trouble, Jamaican ginger paralysis, life on a circus train, set-up and take-down, being run out of town by the "revenooers" or the cops, and losing all your hooch.”  Jacob falls headlong into this world and into love with the boss’s wife. 

As Jacob and Marlena’s relationship develops, along comes Rosie.  Rosie is an elephant purchased by Uncle Al, the despicable heartless owner of the circus.  Rosie is to be the financial savior of the circus but unfortunately she is under the tutelage of August, Marlena’s abusive husband, whose brutality does not endear him to the bull.  Rosie gets her revenge in a rather predictable ending.  I say predictable because Gruen builds the story like a house of cards as she provides bold hints of the big collapse. And big and glorious it is; a satisfying ending for both the 23 year old Jacob and the 90 year old Jacob.

If you would like to participate in a discussion of this book, please come to the MUSE group on September 27, at 6:30 in the Main Building of Kent State, East Liverpool.  Lemonade, although not the circus variety, and other circus fare will be served.  The program is free and open to the public.  Call or email Susan Weaver for more information:  330-382-7432, sweaver@kent.edu.    

Thursday, September 15, 2011

MUSE Fall 2011

So after a very short summer, we are ready to convene the next MUSE season.  The reading choices are listed below.  Each meeting is in the Dean's Conference Room in the Main Building of Kent State University at East Liverpool and begins at 6:30.  MUSE is sponsored by the campus Library and is free and open to the public.  Refreshments are always served, often the food is in keeping with the theme of the book.  This definitely means that circus food will be on the menu for the September meeting!  What should it be?  Popcorn? Cracker jacks? Lemon shakes?  Elephant ears? Cotton candy?  Candy apples?  Come to the meeting and see!

September 27, Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
The brutish and enticing world of the circus is revealed to the reader by two versions of Jacob Jankowski; Jacob at 90 years of age (or maybe 93) and Jacob at 23.   Jacob lives and collides with a menagerie of animals and seedy human characters as he falls in love with the boss’s wife.   This novel has a bit of everything; adventure, mystery, fictional memoir, love story, and historical account.  Read it before the DVD is released on November 1!

October 25, The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
The Thirteenth Tale is a haunting mystery perfect for Halloween reading.  It is the story of octogenarian Vida Winter, a best-selling British author and Margaret Lea, the young antiquarian bookseller and amateur biographer whom Ms. Winter has chosen to write her life story. The problem is that Ms. Winter has spent her life telling stories -- including 19 different versions of her background and childhood. In the end, both women have to confront their pasts and family secrets…as well as the ghosts that haunt them still.

November 9, UnBroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand
Unbroken is the true story of Louie Zamperini, a juvenile delinquent-turned-Olympic star-turned-war hero. During a routine search mission over the Pacific, Louie’s plane crashes into the ocean.  Along with his friend Phil, the pilot, he survives gunfire, sharks, and starvation on a tiny raft, only to be rescued and thrown into a Japanese prison camp. Louie’s ordeal during the war and his struggle to return to civilian life are moving tributes to the Greatest Generation.  This inspiring read serves as a reminder, to all of us, of what US veterans have endured and sacrificed for the safety of our nation.  

Friday, July 8, 2011

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

We just experienced the United States’ patriotic commemoration of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.  Most of us donned our red, white, and blue and enjoyed such traditions as fireworks, parades, and cookouts with family.  Imagine a future North American country called Panem that commemorates its founding with a televised, over-the-top ceremony, mandatory to watch, of two young adults from each of the country’s 12 districts.  Following the ceremony, the tributes are thrown into an elaborate and enormous arena where they will brutally fight to the death in the Hunger Games.   The sole survivor wins a life of luxury and notoriety. 

The Hunger Games was recommended to me by students here at Kent State.  Online, I learned that The Hunger Games, published in 2008 and followed by Catching Fire (2009) and Mockingjay (2010), is the hottest young adult series since Twilight.  I quickly downloaded the novels and scrolled through all three in a matter of days.  Like Twilight, the protagonist is a misfit young woman with two very different young men who adore her.  No vampires here but lots of blood and violence fill the pages and that is where the similarities end.

The reader experiences the stories through the eyes of 16 year old Katniss who lives in District 12, an Appalachian coal mining district that could very well be our tri-state area.  The people live like peasants, working in mines, factories or on farms while those in a city called the Capitol live the glamorous “bella vita.”  When Katniss’ little sister’s name is drawn in the lottery, Katniss volunteers to take her place.  Obviously she survives the gladiatorial ordeal (or there would be no novels two and three) but her ambition to win is complicated by the introduction of her district-mate and new found friend, Peeta…remember, there is only one possible victor!  Peeta shows Katniss the importance of “holding on to one's humanity in such inhuman circumstances.”  Katniss, unlike Peeta, is conniving and has survivor skills.  She is cold, clever, and calculating but still likable.  While reading, it is impossible to figure out how author Suzanne Collins will end these stories, since they seem to have no possible happy endings.  But each one ends in a good place, readers will feel quite content.
 I hope you can join us at MUSE Group, 6:30 on July 12 in the Main Building of Kent State University at East Liverpool.  We'll be discussing The Hunger Games and chowing down on homemade pepperoni rolls (in honor of Peeta the baker).  There is no charge to attend and all are welcome.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Next MUSE Group

Hope you can join us July 12th for a discussion of "The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Collins.  This is book one of a  trilogy.  Watch this blog for a review of the book (coming soon!). 
The group meets at 6:30 in the Dean's Conference Room, Main Building, Kent State University, East Liverpool, OH.  Everyone is welcome.  Refreshments will be served. 

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Help By Kathryn Stockett


Margaret Mead said "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”  Three such people, Aibileen, Minnie, and Skeeter, conspire to change their corner of the world by revealing what it is like to be a black maid working for a white woman in Jackson Mississippi in 1962.

Aibileen is a genteel black maid, raising her 17th white child in the Leefolt household. She has returned to work after a grieving for her son who was killed in an industrial accident.  Minnie, plump, sassy, and angry is Aibileen’s closest friend.  She’s known for her sharp tongue and her cooking; chocolate pie is her specialty as well her weapon.  Recently fired and blacklisted by Hilly, the pretentious leader of the Junior League, she takes a job with a Jackson newcomer.  Skeeter, who Aibileen says is “the kind that speak to the help,” is a raw-boned, middle-class, 22 year old graduate of Ole Miss, back in town and working for the local paper.  She tries to coerce the fearful maids into talking about “what you get paid, how they treat you, the bathrooms, the babies, all the things you’ve seen, good and bad”   She wants them to talk about life with the white ladies, or as one reviewer put it, “the pure, down and out bitchery of the white ladies who become dissatisfied with their maids and proceed to ruin their lives.”  Reluctantly, Aibileen and Minnie steal away and tell their stories.  Skeeter writes the book. 

The Help, rejected by 45 literary agents before being picked up by Penguin Books, has been on the New York Times Bestseller list for two years and has sold 3 million copies. It is on my own list of “favorite books of all-time.”  I found it to be funny, shocking, compassionate, and highly readable.  With lovable heroines and despicable villains, it is sure to be a blockbuster movie as well.  The Help, the movie, will be released on August 12th.   Be sure to get a copy of the book to read before then.  And join the MUSE group on June 7th at 6:30 in the Main Building of Kent State to talk about the experience.  Chocolate pie, although Minnie’s recipe will NOT be used, will be served.  (Susan Weaver is director of library services at Kent, East Liverpool.  Contact her at sweaver@kent.edu)

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

ROOM by Emma Donoghue




Meet Jack.  He’s five.  He’s living in an 11 by 11 foot room with Ma.  Sometimes, when “Old Nick” comes by for the night, Jack sleeps in the Wardrobe.

Well there you have it.  That’s all I can write without revealing some plot points.  So if you don’t want to spoil the story, quit reading now, go get the book and experience one of the most original, horrific, funny, suspenseful, and heart-felt novels to hit the shelves in recent years

Jack tells the story so, as readers, we know only what Jack knows. Life within the Room seems unusual but not terrible.  Jack is happy in his daily regimen of exercise, watching TV (but not too much because “it rots our brains”), playing with a snake made of eggshells, coloring on toilet paper.  But then there are the clues; Ma’s screams and her dislike of Old Nick.  A sense of fear and dread builds as we begin to “get it” even though Jack doesn’t.  They are being held captive!

The story then takes a turn and through some harrowing, thrilling pages, Ma and Jack escape the Room.  But there is no “happily ever after” following such an ordeal.  There is so much they have missed out on or not experienced at all, that it is overwhelming for both mother and son.  Seeing the real world through Jack’s eyes is at once funny and heart-wrenching.  Donoghue pulls it all together and provides an ending that is just right, both honest and satisfying.   

This is a memorable book, one that you won’t be able to get out of your head for weeks. You will be sucked into Jack’s world and you will reconsider your own.  For a book discussion, there are many facets to explore:  familial love, discovery and rediscovery, aggression, human suffering, resilience and isolation to name a few.   

Check out Donoghue's fabulous web site which features an interactive drawing of the ROOM.

Summer Reading Club

We have decided to extend MUSE Group and do a summer session!  Each session will begin at 6:30 in the Main Building.  Since it's summer (almost), I thought perhaps you would like to shun the heavy reads and poetic prose and go with something more entertaining and easy to read.  I have chosen these books because of their high interest level, popularity, and because I liked them!  

The books and dates are: 

May 3:  ROOM by Emma Donoghue


June 7: The Help by Kathryn Stockett.  

July 12:  The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins.  (Book one of the trilogy)

Check back here for more information about the books.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Writing in the Age of Silence

I didn’t expect to like this book.  It’s a memoir.  Not that I don’t like memoirs.  It’s just that recently I’ve been reading lighter, escape-type novels and I prefer to stick with that.  And besides… I didn’t even know this Sarah Paretsky (the author)!  But the book, Writing in the Age of Silence, was recommended by a friend and it was short.  I wouldn’t have to suffer for long.
            Obviously, millions of other readers know Paretsky.  She was recently named the 2011 Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America and is the best-selling author of a series of crime novels starring detective V I Warshawski.  And I didn’t suffer at all; I enjoyed every word of Paretsky’s thoughtful reflections on her dysfunctional family and her rural Kansas upbringing, her literary and political growth, and the development of her female detective.  Most importantly, she talks about how these things affected her as a writer and how she and other authors continue to struggle to find their voice. She writes “Every writer’s difficult journey is a movement from silence to speech.  We must be intensely private and interior in order to find a voice and a vision—and we must bring our work to an outside world where the market, or public outrage, or even government censorship can destroy our voice.”  She goes on, in the last chapter, to elaborate on each of these forces that work against the modern day writer.
            In another chapter she talks of the American spirit of individualism and how the stereotypical P. I. was the embodiment of this trait. Paretsky credits authors Chandler, Daly, and Hammett for influencing her as she created Warshawski.  V I Warshawski, operating in Paretsky’s beloved Chicago, is not only individualistic, she is a woman detective operating in the male-dominated world of crime fighting.  There is no possible way that Paretsky’s feminism and some of her persona isn’t present in the DNA of Warshawski. 
            This is certainly good reading material for anyone who is an author, whether aspiring or accomplished.  Warshawski fans, as well as fans of biographies and memoirs, and simply anyone who enjoys a soul-searching look into the times we Americans are living in, will appreciate this book.  As for me, I’ve just downloaded Body Works, Paretsky’s latest crime novel, which the N Y Times has named one of the Top Mysteries of 2010.
            Dr. Karen Boyle, Professor of English at Kent State University at East Liverpool will lead the discussion of Writing in the Age of Silence at the MUSE Group.  The meeting is April 12th, in the Main Classroom building at 6:30 pm and all are welcome to attend.