I do not think that there can ever be enough books about anything and I say that knowing that some of them are going to be about Pilates.The more knowledge the better seems like a solid rule of thumb, even though I have watched enough science fiction films to accept that humanity’s unchecked pursuit of learning will end with robots taking over the world.-Sarah Vowell

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Dark Knowledge by Clifford Browder


I received this copy of the book from the author of Bill Hope, His Story [see the July 26, 2017, entry], I reviewed favorably in the past. This in no way influenced my review.

Set in the years after the Civil War in New York City this book focuses on the Harmony family--a family who earned their money both from Captaining and from shipping itself.  Chris Harmony is a history student who is interested in writing a history of the family, his grandfather Caleb Harmony, in particular.  His grandfather was a legend and told him many tales when he was growing up about his exploits.  When he died his chest of documents went to Chris's father who never got around to going through them and now he has just died leaving the task to Chris and his sister Sal.

But his uncle Jacob wants the chest when he finds out about it and Chris's interest in digging around in the past.  He and his son Dwight try to sneak it out of the house when they come over for Sunday dinner but Chris catches them and the chest stays in the house.  What is worth all this trouble to hide from?  Chris soon finds out his answer when Jacob's other son Rick comes back from his voyage at sea as a sailor to help him and Sal with the contents of the chest. It looks as though Grandpa Caleb might have owned slaver ships and sold slaves in Brazil and Cuba where it was still legal and possibly even New York where it was illegal.  Also, that Jacob was involved too and that their dad owned a part of a slaver ship for a while and that he knew what they were up to and looked the other way.

Dwight, under the guise of helping him, introduces him to the mysterious and charming Mrs. Louise Rivington who entertains men in a kind of salon for those in shipping. Her father was big in the industry and taught her much about shipping and investing.  Chris hopes to get answers from her about some of the people whose names have come up in his investigations as well as the names of some ships.  The help she gives him is interesting. 

This was an excellent book. I really enjoyed reading about the history of the American illegal slave trade.  I learned quite a bit about that horrid practice right along with the characters of the book.  Chris is quite innocent and a bit of a babe in the woods, but he is not a complete fool as he does not completely trust his cousin or uncle. His sister Sal is a delight to read as she is smart, fresh, sassy, and progressive for her times like taking up shooting lessons.  Cousin Rick was another delightful character. He would breeze in shake things up and then sweep back out to sea again.  Overall this novel is worth reading and I highly recommend it. 

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Dark-Knowledge-Clifford-Browder/dp/1681143674/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1517408998&sr=1-2&keywords=dark+knowledge


Monday, January 29, 2018

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee


I eventually do get to books on my list.  This one has been on it for at least thirty years.  Better late than never.  I last saw the movie years ago and remembered virtually nothing of it, so I was reading it with basically no knowledge of what was going to happen, except that there was a trial.  It says a lot that this book still holds up since it was first published in 1960.  Perhaps because things have not changed as much as we would like to think they have.

The book opens up with Scout and her older brother Jem  meeting their neighbor Miss Rachel's nephew, Dill, who has come to spend the summer visiting from Mississippi. Dill is Scout's age and the three take to each other immediately.  Dill has a habit of exaggerating.  They spend the summer playing out movie roles and such and Dill asks lots of questions about the Radley place.  The Radley place is a mysterious place.  The family has always been odd.  They would spend lots of time indoors and were very religious.  The children ended up getting into trouble and the judge was going to send them to a correctional school where they would get an education.  The parents let them send all of the kids but Arthur.  The other kids grew up to have successful careers and Arthur was locked up in the house and not seen until in his thirties he stabbed his father in the leg with a pair of scissors.  His father convinced the sheriff not to put him in the asylum and he was locked up in the basement of the jail. Eventually the sheriff told his parents they had to take him back or put him in the asylum.  So back to the house he went.  When his parents died, his brother Nathan came to take care of him.  Dill became obsessed to try and see what was going on in the house and see if they could get Arthur "Boo" Radley to come out. 

Soon the summer ends and Scout is faced with entering school for the first time.  Her teacher, Miss Caroline is "not from around here".  Scout ends up on the wrong foot with her right off when Miss Caroline learns that she can read and write already when she is not supposed to .  Then when its time to go to lunch one of the kids, a Cunningham, does not have a lunch so Miss Caroline offers him a quarter and tells him he can give it back to her tomorrow, but he refuses.  The class looks to Scout to explain things to her.  When she does, she rather botches it.  The Cunninghams do not take anything that they cannot pay back.  She learned from her father about entitlements that people pay for services with what they can and she explains to the teacher that the boy can't pay her back and she doesn't need stovewood.  The teacher raps her knuckles with a ruler for that.  Scout and Jem have the boy over for lunch.  When they come back from lunch one of the poor, trashy, evil Ewells is leaving.  They only show up for the first day of school then leave.  When Miss Caroline tries to make him stay he is cruel to her and she puts her head on the desk and cries.  The children come up to her and explain things to her. In this world who you are means something about you. 

Scout and Jem would continue to have an obsession about the Radley house and one day they would notice that things were being left in the tree trunk nearby and since no one was claiming them, they took them, not knowing who put them there.  Then one day, Nathan poured concrete and filled the hole, which broke their hearts, because by then they suspected that Boo was the one leaving the items.  That summer they would become more stupid than brave and go out at night and sneak onto the property and try to peak into the window, but they are heard and when they run back across the backyard a gun goes off near them.  Jem's pants get caught in the fence and he has to leave them, which is hard to explain to his father and the neighbors who have gathered in the street when they heard the gun shot.  Later that night he goes back to get his pants and the rip had been mysteriously sewn up. 

Atticus is assigned a case by Judge Taylor, that he accepts, to defend Tom Robinson who has been accused of raping Mayella Ewell.  Now, no one likes the Ewells. They look down on them as the lowest of the low.  The father Bob Ewell drinks the government money he gets that he is supposed to use to support the many children he has and illegally hunts (which is considered a felony in Maycomb County) but gets away with it because no one wants his kids to go hungry.  No one can seem to make his kids go to school for more than one day a year, the first day.  They eat food out of the dump next door to their shack. But they're still white, so their word is still worth more that a black man who goes to church and is an honest worker and married with children.  A man whose left arm is withered and useless from a farm accident.  Scout and Jem  begin to hear things like that their father is a "nigger lover" and other such horrid things. Scout's first reaction is to fight, but then her father tells her she must not for his sake.  He also tells her that it is true.  He loves all people but not to use the word nigger because it is "common". 

The night before the trial there is a heart-stopping scene when Atticus is at the jail sitting in a chair by himself reading a paper and watching over Tom when a mob shows up.  Jem, Scout, and Dill are hiding in the bushes watching when things start to go ugly and then something totally unexpected happens.

Atticus's sister, the dreaded Alexandra, descends upon them that summer.  She is forever trying to get Scout out of her overalls and into dresses.  She tries to teach her and Jem the importance of being a Finch and the various traits of the other families of Maycomb County.  Of course, the thing about Maycomb County is that it has always been so isolated that for centuries people have intermarried and everyone is related to everyone else in some way.  Atticus reminds Alexandra that the Finch trait until this generation was incest. Soon Alexandra is the Queen bee of society.

Not everyone is cruel or yells horrid things to Atticus and the children.  One of their neighbors, Miss Addie, loves to spend her time outdoors obsessing over her flowers.  She loves having the kids over.  She's fifty, Atticus's age, and bakes cakes for them to eat and talks to them about important things they need to know, like why their father is so important to this town and that he really is good at quite a lot of things they don't know about.  Miss Addie also has a way of putting the women of the Missionary group in their place when they get out of line. She is not afraid of anything. While she is a good Baptist, she is constantly yelled at by the "foot washing" Baptist who come by once a week who tell her she is going to hell for working in her garden and not staying indoors reading the bible.

Tom, of course, has no hope of an acquittal.  Atticus knows this.  He does know that there is a good possibility of having it overturned on appeal.  Its rather sad that in a court of law, where every person is supposed to be equal, you find that they are not.  I wish I could say that has changed, but it hasn't.  We're just as bigoted today as we were in the 1930s when this book took place.  We're doing a bit better with relations with African Americans, but we are having a very hard time with other races, religions, other sexualities, etc.. As humans we will always find something to be prejudiced about.  It is in our nature.  Toni Morrison wrote a book fifteen years ago called Paradise. It was about a city that was founded by former slaves.  Soon a hierarchy was formed and prejudice reared its head, as lighter skinned blacks saw themselves as better than the darker skinned blacks.  It is a sad fact about us and shows how this book is so important and needs to be read, and often, to remind us of the ugliness of our nature. 

***Addendum.Something that had nothing to do with the story of the book, but which struck me strongly.  In this book, Tom, if found guilty of rape, will be sentenced to death. Any man at that time in Alabama who raped a woman would receive that sentence.  It is sad that today it is extremely hard to get a rape case to trial, and even if you do, to get a conviction. If you manage to get a conviction, chances are the rapist won't spend much time in jail, much less get a death sentence, which maybe he should. After all, he took a life.  When someone is raped, their old life is gone. It is shattered and in pieces.  If they are lucky, they are able to find a way move forward.  I think John Irving had it right when he wrote in his novel the Hotel New Hampshire that rape is the worst thing you can do to a person because you can't survive murder.

Quotes
Nobody knew what form of intimidation Mr. Radley employed to keep Boo out of sight, but Jem figured that Mr. Radley kept him chained to the bed most of the time.  Atticus said no, it wasn’t that sort of thing, that there were other ways of making people into ghosts.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 14)
Miss Caroline told me to tell my father not to teach me any more, it would interfere with my reading.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 22)
Now you tell your father not to teach you any more.  It’s best to begin reading with a fresh mind. You tell him I’ll take over from here and try to undo the damage…Your father does not know how to teach.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 23)
There are no clearly defined seasons in South Alabama; summer drifts into autumn, and autumn is sometimes never followed by winter, but turns to a days-old spring that melts into summer again. 
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 79)
For reasons unfathomable to the most experienced prophets in Maycomb County, autumn turned to winter that year.  We had two weeks of the coldest weather since 1885.  Atticus said, Mr. Avery said it was written on the Rosetta Stone that when children disobeyed their parents, smoked cigarettes and made war on each other, the seasons would change: Jem and I were burdened with the guilt of contributing to the aberrations of nature, thereby causing unhappiness to our neighbors and discomfort to ourselves.
-Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 85)
Next morning I awoke, looked out the window and nearly died of fright.  My screams brought Atticus from his bathroom half-shaven.  “The world’s endin’, Atticus!”  Please do something---!” I dragged him to the window and pointed.  “No it’s not,” he said.  “ It’s snowing.”
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 86)
Simply because we were licked a hundred years before we started is no reason for us not to try to win.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 101)
Try fighting with your head for a change.. it’s a good one, even if it does resist learning.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 101)
Mockingbirds don’t do one things but make music for us to enjoy.  They don’t eat up people’s garden’s don’t nest in corncribs, they don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us.  That’s why it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 119)

“For a while” in Maycomb meant anything from three days to thirty years.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 169)
All the little man on the witness stand had that made him any better than his nearest neighbor was, that if scrubbed with lye soap in very hot water, his skin was white.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 229)

If there’s just one kind of folks, why can’t they get along with each other?  If they’re all alike, why do they go out their way to despise each other?  Scout, I think I’m beginning to understand why Boo Radley’s stayed shut up in the house all this time.. it’s because he wants to stay inside.
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 304)
“An’ they chased him ‘n never could catch him ‘cause they didn’t know what he looked like, an’ Atticus, when they finally saw him, why he hadn’t done any of those things…Atticus, he was real nice…” “Most people are, Scout, when you finally se them.”
--Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird p 376)
Link to Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Kill-Mockingbird-Harperperennial-Modern-Classics-ebook/dp/B00K0OI42W/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1517234319&sr=8-1&keywords=to+kill+a+mockingbird

Friday, January 26, 2018

Jessica Jones: Alias Vol. 2 by Brian Michael Bendis (Writer), Michael Gaydos (Artist), Mark Bagley (Jewel Sequences), Rodney Ramos (Jewel Sequences), Matt HOllingsworth (Colorist), David Mack (Rebecca's Journal Art), Richard Starkings (Letterer), Comicraft's west Abbott (Letterer), Comicraft's Oscar Gongora (Letterer)


This comic opens up with Jones taking a road trip to Lago, New York to find a missing sixteen-year-old girl, Rebecca.  Her mother and aunt seem to have never noticed her until now and they believe that her father is behind it. That he is some kind of molester who killed her when she fought back.  The dad is actually a sad sack of a guy who is pretty pissed off about the situation with his ex.

The local cop sticks his nose in her business but does offer up a little useful information.  Jones picks up some collage books at Rebecca's dad's house that belonged to her and takes them with her to help her get an idea of who she is.  When someone is murdered things become complicated and Jomes has to figure things out fast.

Carol Danvers, Ms. Marvel, tries to set her up with a superhero of sorts.  Jones examines the way she does some things in her life in this comic and I think it's a good thing even if it probably won't last long.  The case she's on isn't as interesting as the one in the previous comic, but the personal aspects are far more worth reading.  The artwork in this comic is amazing, especially the collage work which is shown at the end of the book. The issue covers are also amazing as usual using pastels and pieces hooked together to form an image.  I really love this series and this book really moves it forward nicely. I can't wait to find out what happens in the next volume.

Link to Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Jessica-Jones-Alias-Vol-2001-2003-ebook/dp/B0167MQNN2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516972465&sr=8-1&keywords=jessica+jones+alias+volume+2

   

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Black Panther and the Crew: Volume 1 We Are the Streets by Ta-Nehisi Coates (Writer), Yona Harvey (Writer), Dan Brown (Colorist), Paul Mounts (Colorist), Scott Hanna (Inker), Mack Chater (Inker, Penciler), Stephen Thompson (Inker, Penciler), Butch Guice (Penciler), and VC's Joe Sabino (Letterer)


This new series is set in Harlem and goes back and forth in time between the 1950s to today telling the story of Ezra Keith, or Lynx, and his gang of heroes who cleaned up the streets back then and then disappeared.  Now Harlem needs a new brand of heroes to combat the evil that is taking over like with the Americops, a mechanical menace that seems to concentrate all their time in Harlem hassling everyone for the littlest things, such as a radio turned on or for being out in a group and just hanging out.

Ezra was arrested for protesting, which was nothing new for the old man. However, when he dies in police custody a protest breaks out in the streets that are growing to a near riot level.  Ezra's niece and nephew, Hazel and Malik are trying to calm everyone down and keep it from getting out of control.  They use Ororo Munroe who had been a friend of Ezra's and is also a friend of Misty Knight's to reach out to Misty, who had been a cop, to seek her help in finding out what exactly happened.

Misty will wind up seeking help from Luke Cage and a mysterious man from Australia who was also a friend of Ezra.  Of course, T'Challa shows up having gotten a message from Ezra that peeked his curiosity and discovers Ezra's secret and what really happened all those years ago that even Ezra himself didn't know about.  This comic is told with different comic issues focusing on a different character's point of view for when they are not doing the flashbacks, which I thoroughly enjoyed.  This is an incredible team that is put together to fight for Harlem and they have their work cut out for them.  Misty has been a favorite character of mine and Ororo I have loved from X-Men for years and it's great to see them together kicking ass.  The artwork is soft, in contrast to the story it is telling, and the colors are bold, like the statement that is being said.  In the flashbacks I was happy to see that they used a light brown sheen to it, almost a sepia tone, to indicate it was the past.  This promises to be an excellent series and I can't wait to read the next installment.

Link to Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Black-Panther-Crew-Are-Streets/dp/B075MSNVBQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516799122&sr=8-1&keywords=black+panther+and+the+crew

 

Monday, January 22, 2018

The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien


O'Brien has put together a collection of short stories that are connected by the characters so that it almost feels like a novel, with him as the narrator.  The cast of character include: Rat Kiley the medic who has a way of telling a story that makes you wonder how much was truth; Mitchell Sanders who believes every story has a moral to it; Kiowa, the Native American who carried a New Testament Bible with him everywhere along with his grandfather's hatchet; and the First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross, their leader, who took every death personally, blaming himself.

My favorite story was "The Things They Carried" which describes the things they carried such as "P-38 can openers, pocket knives, heat tabs, wristwatches, dog tags, mosquito repellent, chewing gum, candy, cigarettes, salt tablets, packets of Kool-Aid, lighters, matches, sewing kits, Military Payment Certificates, C rations, and two or three canteens of water."  But it goes much deeper than that to the letters they carried from back home to the pain they carried, both physical and mental, to having to carry each other and above all carrying the land around them.  It's a powerful story told with simplicity.

Tim received his draft notice on June 17, 1968, and a lot of thoughts warred in his mind. He was too good for this war that he did not believe in.  He had been all set for a free ride to Harvard for grad school, but now that was gone.  He took a job working at a plant that made pork products and his job was to get blood clots out of the necks of the pigs. He spent eight hours getting sprayed in pig's blood.  No amount of showering could completely get rid of the stench.  He began to think about going to Canada and dodging the draft until one day he did just that--almost. He made it right to the border and stayed at a lodge trying to make up his mind.  He didn't want to be thought of as a coward by not going not to mention he'd be leaving his whole life behind him. On the other hand, he'd stay alive.  An old man ran the lodge and his quiet manner and in other ways, he helped him to make the decision.  You really get inside the mind of those who left and those who stayed by reading this short story and realize there's no shame in either decision.

The short stories "Speaking of Courage", "Notes", and "In the Field", all pertain to the death of one of the soldiers.  It was monsoon season and the upper command had decided that they were to make camp in this specific field even though the locals said it was an evil field and bad for them.  That night they found out why.  It was where the latrine went to the local village.  Soon they were mired down in shit and mortars started to fly and land in the field causing the muck to suck everything around it down, which is how the soldier went under. They tried to pull him up by his boot but were unable to get him out of the mire.  The next day was spent trying to find his body in the mess because Cross would be damned if he was going to leave a man behind.

I really loved this book. The stories connected very well together considering they were written and published in different places and times.  It is a work of fiction but it has the feel of non-fiction. You truly believe that these things happened, which is the mark of a good storyteller.  This is an incredible book that speaks volumes with very few words.  Its punches land deftly and knock you for a loop that leave you thinking long after you put it down.

Quotes
I remember Norman Bowker and Henry Dobbins playing checkers every evening before dark…There was something restful about it, something orderly and reassuring.  There were red checkers and black checkers. The playing field was laid out in a strict grid, no tunnels or mountains or jungles.  You knew where you stood. You knew the score. The pieces were out on the board, the enemy was visible, you could watch the tactics unfolding into large strategies. There was a winner and a loser. There were rules.
-Tim O’Brien (The Things They Carried “Spin” p 32)

War is hell, but that’s not the half of it, because war is also mystery and terror and adventure and courage and discovery and holiness and pity and despair and longing and love. War is nasty; war is fun. War is thrilling; war is drudgery. War makes you a man; war makes you dead.
-Tim O’Brien (The Things They Carried “How To Tell a True War Story” p 80)

You’ve never felt more alive than when you’re almost dead.
-Tim O’Brien (The Things They Carried “How To Tell a True War Story” p 81)

For Rat Kiley, I think, facts were formed by sensation, not the other was around, and when you listened to one of his stories, you’d find yourself performing rapid calculations in your head, subtracting superlatives, figuring the square root of an absolute and then multiplying by maybe.
-Tim O’Brien (The Things They Carried “Strongheart of Song Tra Bong
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Things-They-Carried-Tim-OBrien-ebook/dp/B002TWIVNA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516634584&sr=8-1&keywords=the+things+they+carried+by+tim+o%27brien

Friday, January 19, 2018

The Astonishing X-Men: Vol. 4: Unstoppable by Joss Whedon (Writer), John Cassady (Artist), Laura Martin (Colorist), Christ Eliopoulos (Letterer), and Joe Caramagna (Letterer)


In the previous comic, Ord managed to escape with the help of the robot DANGER who both still seeks to destroy the X-Men.  The X-Men are still recovering from Emma Frost's mental manipulations while she was under the influence of Cassandra Nova.  Cyclops doesn't have his powers and Kitty is emotionally traumatized.  Agent Brand of S.W.O.R.D. [Sentient Worlds Observation and Response Department] has her precogs working on the Breakworld situation and they discover who the mutant is who supposedly destroys Breakworld according to Breakworld's oracles and its Colossus.  Brand kidnaps the X-Men as well as the now captured Ord and DANGER and is heading toward Breakworld.

There's a group on Breakworld led by Aghanne who tends to the sick and wounded of her planet and believes the end times are coming but only because of those who rule it, not because of some prophecy. Meanwhile, Powerlord Kruun is hunting down Colossus to keep him from fulfilling the prophecy.

Brand is not afraid of Kruun exactly. She's more afraid of the missile on one of Breakworld's moons that is aimed at the Earth.  So, the X-Men head toward the moon to try to defuse the missile while on Earth superheroes do what they can to help, just in case and Colossus keeps Kruun busy by distracting him by pretending to carry out the prophecy.

This book explodes with action and is a fitting end to this four-part series.  The plot twists and turns on a dime.  Not everyone makes it through this, sadly.  The art is vivid and sometimes haunting and the colors leap from the page.  I have thoroughly enjoyed these books and this one was the icing on the cake. 

Link to Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Astonishing-X-Men-Vol-4-Unstoppable-ebook/dp/B00AAJQVAO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516367851&sr=8-1&keywords=astonishing+xmen+vol+4 

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

The English Wife by Lauren Willig


This stunning novel opens up in 1899 with a murder. Janie Van Duyvil and her cousin Anne Newton have just discovered Janie's brother Bay with a knife sticking out of his chest inside the folly at his house during the Twelfth Night party he and his wife Annabelle were having. Janie sees Annabelle in the river.  When help is brought back, Annabelle has disappeared into the river and the police doubt that Janie saw her to begin with.

The book travels back in time to when Annabelle and Bay met in London in 1894 when Annabelle was Georgina Evans, an actress at a cheap theater.  Sir Hugo, a notorious rakehell, invites Kitty and Annabelle to dinner with his friend Bay, Georgina balks and Bay takes her outside and puts her in a cab.  He later comes back to the theater to apologize and thus begins a friendship that turns into something more.

Janie is the quiet daughter of a formidable towering matron of society, whose mother is obsessed with the family name and its place in society.  Anne "stole" the man she was to marry, not that Janie minded all that much.  She works at the Girls Club doing charity work helping young women to her mother's consternation.  The papers are saying that Bay killed Annabelle and then himself because she was carrying on with the architect of the house they had just had built.

Janie becomes determined to find out the truth and when a reporter, James Burke, finds his way into the house and she has words with him, she decides to go to him and make a bargain with Burke for them to be honest with each other and share information and he could print anything he found as long as it was the truth.  Of course, the two of them are attracted to each other.

The characters are interesting such as Anne who deals in triple entendre and does daily battle with Mrs. Van Duyvil, her aunt who took her in and never let her forget it and Georgina who is scrappy and takes nothing from no one. This book has more twists and turns than a mountain road and it opens up on an exciting note that catches you right away and never lets you go.  The pages fly so fast your fingers will have scorch marks. 

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/English-Wife-Novel-Lauren-Willig-ebook/dp/B072TY6MS6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516201448&sr=8-1&keywords=the+english+wife

Monday, January 15, 2018

The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom


The book opens in the 1790s with the Captain returning from a long voyage overseas to his tobacco plantation in Virginia with an eight-year-old girl, Lavinia, in tow. Her parents were indentured to him but died on the ship leaving her brother whom he sold his papers to another farm and her whom he brought back to his farm to fulfill her indenture to him. He places her in the kitchen house with Belle who really isn't thrilled with this.  Belle is the Captain's daughter, though his wife, Miss Martha, thinks he is sleeping with her.  He plans on freeing her, finding her a husband and sending her to Philadelphia when she turns eighteen, which she just has.  Belle does not want to leave the only home she has ever known or the only family she has.

Mama Mae, who takes care of Miss Martha and things in the big house, takes care of everybody and she pushes Belle to be more understanding of the young girl who at first barely speaks and cannot remember her name or anything about herself.  Mama Mae is married to Papa George who works in the barns and the two have four children: Dory, an adult who works with Miss Martha and has a sick baby from Jimmy who works in the fields; Ben who is eighteen and works in the barns and is in love with Belle; and Fanny and Beattie who are eight-year-old twins who help out in the big house.

Miss Martha suffered several miscarriages, but has two living children, Marshall, age eleven and Sally age four.  Sally is all sunshine and light and sweetness. Marshall seems alright at first, but then his father gets him a bad tutor and he and Rankin the evil overseer fill his head with ugly thoughts about slaves and do things that help turn him mean.  The slaves do what they can to try to protect Marshall and help him, but he doesn't seem to appreciate it.  His mother takes laudanum and stays in a stupor to avoid dealing with the reality of her losses and her loneliness.

Lavina grows up not knowing at first that she's white and feeling that the slaves are her family, but eventually, it is pointed out to her and she is heartbroken.   Meanwhile, her and Belle will get closer and Belle's situation will become more precarious, especially as the Captain is an old man and his son Marshall grows meaner each day and hates Belle. One day he will take over the plantation and then what will happen to her?

This book explores life on a plantation from the eyes of Lavinia a girl who almost straddles both worlds and Belle a slave who has a chance at freedom but seems reluctant to take it, perhaps due to its conditions of marriage to a man she's never met and leaving the only family she's ever known.  You quickly become attached to these characters and really feel for them.  Like Lavinia you want them to be a part of your family.  This is an excellent read and will keep you up late at night turning the pages as it did me.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Kitchen-House-Novel-Kathleen-Grissom-ebook/dp/B0034DGPEU/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516023910&sr=8-1&keywords=the+kitchen+house        

Friday, January 12, 2018

Captain Marvel: Earth's Mightiest Hero Vol. 2 by Kelly Sue DeConnick (Writer), Jen Van Meter (Writer), Scott Hepburn (Artist), Matteo Buffagni (Artist), Pep Larraz (Artist), Gerardo Sandoval (Artist), Filpe Andrade (Artist), Jordie Bellaire (Colorist), Matthew Wilson (Colorist), Nolan Woodard (Colorist), Andy Troy (Colorist), VC's Joe Caramagna (Letterer), and VC's Clayton Cowles (Letterer)


When we left off at the end of the last book, Captain Marvel had just been diagnosed with a legion on the part of her brain where her powers come from. She was told by the doctors that she was not to fly or the legion would grow. She would ignore it and find that she would have trouble flying, so she gave it up and the Avengers came through and gave her a vehicle to fly with.  Unbeknownst to her the Kree who was there when she got her powers and supposedly died, the evil Yon-Rogg, is the one who sent Deathbird to attack her and wear her down.

While Captain Marvel and the Avengers are kept busy tackling evil cohorts and dinosaurs in the quest to find an elderly homeless woman that is a friend to Carol, Yon-Rogg breaks into her apartment and steals the piece of Kree technology that gave her her powers.  She has no idea who could have stolen it. Her neighbor has a camera in the hallway since he's trying to find stuff to get her kicked out of the building. So she makes a deal for the tape.  Carol has her friend Wendy, a  computer whiz, look into the tape.

Meanwhile, Kree metal warriors that had been placed on earth many years ago are coming up everywhere. The Avengers and S.W.O.R.D. head out to take care of them.  But there are too many of them. After calling the Kree homeworld, Yon-Rogg has a devious plan in place and he needs Captain Marvel to complete it.  How will they get out of this mess?

The book contains three other stories one about a new villain, one about a huge battle in space against a great foe, the builders, who created the universe and now intends to destroy it causing everyone in the universe to band together as one to fight them, and one involving the Amazing Spider-Man. This is a fabulous book. Carol is not the same after her encounter with Yon-Rogg.  She loses her memory and it's interesting to see how she reacts to those around her and in battle.  Without her memories has she lost what it means to be human?  While in the previous comic when she became sick the artist used a sketchy form to draw her, in this comic most of the artists use strong strokes to draw her to show her drawing upon her strength.  This really is an incredible book and I can't recommend it enough.

Link to Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Captain-Marvel-Earths-Mightiest-Hero/dp/1302901281/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1515764448&sr=8-3&keywords=captain+marvel+earth%27s+mightiest+hero

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of Family and Culture by J.D. Vance



Vance uses his life story and that of his family and extended family in order to explain the cultural and economical ways of the hillbilly. Just what is a hillbilly? Generally, they are someone who is from the Appalachian Mountain region who is poor, rural, and working class. Sometimes undereducated. The stereotype has them with no teeth because they drink Moutain Dew and don't go to the dentist.  Also that they are gun happy people ready to use them especially if you get their daughter pregnant.   The heavy popping of opioid pills such as Percocet and Oxy began in the mountains of West Virginia and Kentucky, which is where the term "pillbilly" comes from.

Vance's Mamaw and Pawpaw came from a holler in Kentucky called Jackson. He got her pregnant at the age of thirteen and the two took the famous Route 23 out of Kentucky to Ohio (sometimes referred to as "Middletucky") where a good job at a steel manufacturer, Amaco, awaited.  They weren't the only ones. Plenty of people from Appalachia left for jobs in Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania (or "Pennsyltucky"), and Illinois. In the 1950s thirteen out of one hundred in Kentucky took the hillbilly highway out and in Harlan County Kentucky, thirty percent of its population, mostly coal miners, left.

Life was hard for his Mamaw and Pawpaw. She had several miscarriages and three children that survived.  These included Uncle Jimmy, Aunt Wee, and his mother.  His Pawpaw was an alcoholic and things could get ugly in their house.  He would straighten himself out and while he and his wife stayed married they would end up with their own separate homes once their kids were grown, but remained close.  But heaven help anyone who bothered one of the children or a member of the family. When Uncle Jimmy was five, he saw a toy in the pharmacy that he wanted for Christmas and his parents told him to go in and look at it while they finished shopping at a store. When he picked it up to play with it, the clerk in the store told him that he wasn't allowed to touch the toy and kicked the boy out of the pharmacy.  When his parents found him and found out what happened they went in and trashed the place and stood up for their son's honor, because how dare someone tell their son that he can't come in their store.

He would take a while to adjust to a new place as his mother moved him and his older sister, Lydnsey, around to different homes with different men.  The one constant was his Mamaw's place.  Life with his mother was hard as she had a temper and in her relationships, fighting was the only way she knew how to deal with things. So dishes went flying and she would get violent with the men in her life.

According to J.D., this was how most hillbillies acted. Also, they spent money they didn't have at Christmas on fancy gifts for the kids, hoping the IRS refund check would cover it.  Sometimes there would be someone in the house with a substance abuse problem.  In J.D.'s case, it was his mother who got hooked on pills.  They also abuse the Welfare system and try to get out of work if they can.

Vance basically says that you have to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, but most of these people don't have boots. And he had helped himself.  His Mamaw received a pension check from his Papaw when he died and likely social security.  He credits his Mamaw, his sister, his teachers, and the Marines with helping him to avoid going down the wrong path and instead earning his degree at Ohio State and his law degree at Yale, something practically unheard of from where he was from.  He offers a lot of criticism but no solutions and he overgeneralizes and forgets the people in his life that weren't loud and violent like his sister and Uncle Jimmy and Aunt Wee and cousin Gail and their spouses.  It's like he wants them to be the exception that proves the rule, but there are more of them in his life than the violent argumentative types.  Also, I think there are plenty of people who are dying to get jobs of any kind if you just give them a chance.  And there are programs that train people in Appalachia to learn a new trade for a company that is in the area.  Vance is close to using stereotypes, though with stereotypes there is some truth to them.  Read this book with caution.

*Vance is contemplating a run for office and it is my opinion that he wrote this book as a stepping stone for this purpose. But that is just my opinion. 

* I add this as I think it might be interesting and be a counterpoint to the book.  

 I was born in poverty in Appalachia. ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ doesn’t speak for me.

J.D. Vance, author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” in Washington in January. (Astrid Riecken/For The Washington Post)
By Betsy Rader September 1, 2017
Betsy Rader is an employment lawyer at Betsy Rader Law LLC, located in Chagrin Falls, Ohio. She is running as a Democrat to represent Ohio’s 14th Congressional District in the U.S. House.

J.D. Vance’s book “Hillbilly Elegy,” published last year, has been assigned to students and book clubs across the country. Pundits continue to cite it as though the author speaks for all of us who grew up in poverty. But Vance doesn’t speak for me, nor do I believe that he speaks for the vast majority of the working poor.

From a quick glance at my résumé, you might think me an older, female version of Vance. I was born in Appalachia in the 1960s and grew up in the small city of Newark, Ohio. When I was 9, my parents divorced. My mom became a single mother of four, with only a high school education and little work experience. Life was tough; the five of us lived on $6,000 a year.

Like Vance, I attended Ohio State University on scholarship, working nights and weekends. I graduated at the top of my class and, again like Vance, attended Yale Law School on a financial-need scholarship. Today, I represent people who’ve been fired illegally from their jobs. And now that I’m running for Congress in Northeast Ohio, I speak often with folks who are trying hard but not making much money.

Although high school graduation rates are rising and there are more private and federal grants available, most low-income students have a tough time attending and staying in college. Here are nine facts about poor students and the college experience. (Video: Claritza Jimenez/Photo: iStock/The Washington Post)
A self-described conservative, Vance largely concludes that his family and peers are trapped in poverty due to their own poor choices and negative attitudes. But I take great exception when he makes statements such as: “We spend our way into the poorhouse. We buy giant TVs and iPads. Our children wear nice clothes thanks to high-interest credit cards and payday loans. We purchase homes we don’t need, refinance them for more spending money, and declare bankruptcy. . . . Thrift is inimical to our being.”

Who is this “we” of whom he speaks? Vance’s statements don’t describe the family in which I grew up, and thy don’t describe the families I meet who are struggling to make it in America today. I know that my family lived on $6,000 per year because as children, we sat down with pen and paper to help find a way for us to live on that amount. My mom couldn’t even qualify for a credit card, much less live on credit. She bought our clothes at discount stores.

Thrift was not inimical to our being; it was the very essence of our being.

With lines like “We choose not to work when we should be looking for jobs,” Vance’s sweeping stereotypes are shark bait for conservative policymakers. They feed into the mythology that the undeserving poor make bad choices and are to blame for their own poverty, so taxpayer money should not be wasted on programs to help lift people out of poverty. Now these inaccurate and dangerous generalizations have been made required college reading.

Here is the simple fact: Most poor people work. Seventy-eight percent of families on Medicaid include a household member who is working. People work hard in necessary and important jobs that often don’t pay them enough to live on. For instance, child-care workers earn an average of $22,930 per year, and home health aides average $23,600. (Indeed, it is a sad irony that crucial jobs around caretaking and children have always paid very little.)


The problem with living in constant economic insecurity is not a lack of thrift, it is that people in these circumstances are always focused on the current crisis. They can’t plan for the future because they have so much to deal with in the present. And the future seems so bleak that it feels futile to sacrifice for it. What does motivate most people is the belief that the future can be better and that we have a realistic opportunity to achieve it. But sometimes that takes help.

Yes, I worked hard, but I didn’t just pull myself up by my bootstraps. And neither did Vance. The truth is that people helped us out: My public school’s guidance counselor encouraged me to go to college. The government helped us out: I received scholarships and subsidized federal loans to help pay my educational expenses. The list of helpers goes on.

Now that so many people have read “Hillbilly Elegy” this summer, I hope they draw this better moral from the story: Individuals can make a difference in others’ lives, and by providing opportunities for all, our government can do the same. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness should be legitimate expectations for everyone, “hillbillies” included.
                                                                                                                                                   

Monday, January 8, 2018

I Work at a Public Library: A Collection of Crazy Stories from the Stacks by Gina Sheridan


As a former librarian I found myself, quite often, laughing out loud at some of these stories, both because they brought back memories and because it made me realize I had sadly not had the ability to continue to work as a librarian and experience more stories.  The author, in true library fashion, orders the chapters in the Dewey Decimal System.  The chapter titles are: Computers, Reference Work, Reading Interests and Habits, Curiosities and Wonders, Listening In, Communication, Failures and Disruptions of, Bullying, Rare Birds, Human Anatomy, Telephones, Children's Humor, and Volumes of Gratitude.

In the first chapter, Computers, what is the reply to the question "I keep getting the blue screen of death"?  "Sir, that's the desktop".  Another man keeps coming up to the desk asking tons of questions, including: How do I make the computer like a typewriter?; There are red squiggly lines under everything I type.; Now I want to make a website.  Do I just get the framework up ...using the typewriter function?; Maybe you could help me make a website. I have about an hour.  Another man wants them to disable Google because they are "taking over the United States".  One librarian was helping a patron upload his resume for a job application from a flash drive.  When she asks him which job is applying for, he says, "all the jobs on the Internet". 

In the chapter "Reading Interests and Habits" here are some of the book titles patrons have requested: Fifty Shades of Grey's Anatomy, How to Kill a Mockingbird, The Diary of Aunt Frank, Lord of the Flies by Tolkien, The Hungry Games, and The Lively Bones.  A woman expresses her disinterest in e-books, claiming they will be the death of libraries.  When the librarian informs her the library has e-books, she replies, "aren't they invisible?".  In the chapter, Curiosities and Wonders, one person comes in looking for the margarita machine, which, honestly, would have been nice to have at my library. 

A conversation overheard between a young woman showing her mother how to search for items at the library: Mother: There are almost three thousand movies to choose from? Daughter: Well, movies and TV shows.  Mother: So are you saying that the library is now the video store? Daughter: Among other things. Mother: Who else knows about this?.  A seventy-year-old man tells his wife, "I think we really should do the Facebook.  Art and Frieda are doing it.  We don't want to be the only ones left."  A conversation between one parent and another in the children's room: Parent 1: Do you ever hide books you've read over and over again because you're so sick of them? Parent 2: Oh, definitely.  When they ask for them, I say the book fairy came to get it.  One time they saw one of the books at the library so now they think the librarians are the book fairies.  One of my personal favorite lines in this book from a patron who says "It's too cold in here.  What is wrong with you people?  Do you like frozen books?"  I wore a sweater jacket year round at the library.

But my absolute favorite is the one on a librarian putting up a display for Banned Books Week, which is something I did when I worked.  Librarian: I'm making a display about books that people complained about.  They wanted them removed from the library.  Girl: Why? Librarian: Because they didn't like what the books were about and didn't want anyone else to read them, either...Can you imagine what would happen if every person could choose one book to remove from the library forever? Girl: There wouldn't be any books left on the shelves.  Librarian:  That's right!  It wouldn't really look like a library anymore, would it? Girl:  We are learning about bullying at school.  It sounds like even libraries get bullied sometimes.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Work-Public-Library-Collection-Stories-ebook/dp/B00NQF0JNY/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1515417269&sr=1-1&keywords=i+work+at+a+public+library

Friday, January 5, 2018

Astonishing X-Men: Volume 3 Torn by Joss Whedon (Writer), John Cassaday (Artist), Laura Martin (Colorist), Chris Eliopoulos (Letterer)


In the previous books, S.W.O.R.D. (Sentient Worlds Observation and Response Department) has been butting heads with S.H.I.E.L.D. S.W.O.R.D. has Ord, the alien who came to earth to kill the mutants because it was foretold that one of them--an X-Men--would be the end of their world.  Right now he is locked up tight and Agent Brand of S.W.O.R.D. is trying to find a peaceful solution to the situation.  Brand has an inside man in the X-Men headquarters.  Meanwhile, Emma Frost has been talking with a mysterious group that turns out to be the Hellfire Club.

Kitty Pryde is having a hard time dealing with things and is having nightmares about losing people, even though she now has Peter back.  Emma and Scott's relationship is rocky and Emma goes in and manipulates him using her powers into believing that his powers no longer work, so they don't.  She lets in the rest of the Hellfire Club members and they all go to work on the others.  There is something in the mansion that they want and with Charles gone they see a chance to get it.

This book is all about manipulation of the mind.  Whedon does an excellent job of doing some manipulating of his own. It's also fun to see what happens to Wolverine.  The dreamscapes are rather vividly drawn. It will be interesting to see where this comic will go on the concluding one titled Unstoppable.

Link to Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Astonishing-X-Men-Vol-3-Torn-ebook/dp/B00AAJQVAE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1515163250&sr=8-1&keywords=the+astonishing+x+men+torn

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

The Alienist by Caleb Carr


Set in 1896 New York City, this psychological mystery involves a serial killer who kills and mutilates young boys who dress up as girls.  The narrator of this book, John Moore, is a reporter for the New York Times and good friends with a psychologist, or as they were known at the time, alienist, Dr. Lazlo Kreizler.  Kreizler is the one who figures out that there is a killer loose and contacts the police commissioner, Teddy Roosevelt, a man he met in college to see about setting up an independent and secretive investigative group that would include Moore and the determined Sara Howard, Teddy's secretary, Lucius and Marcus Isaacson, two brothers who are detectives on the police force that can be trusted and who have knowledge of forensic sciences.

Kreizler's servants, Cyrus, a large black man who acts as bodyguard and whatever Kriezler needs and the youth Stevie, who drives his carriage and runs errands.  Mary keeps the house, but Kreizler has kept her out of it for her safety.   All three of them have committed murder and Kreizler has testified for them in court as to their sanity and recommended that they are remanded over to his care rather than go to an asylum.

Kreizler believes that by studying the victims they can figure out who the killer is. The methods they use are ones that are used today like examining the possible childhood and its effects on the present.  Some of them, though are not. Like taking a picture of the dead person's eye in the hope of catching a picture of the killer.

The killer keeps them guessing for a while about how he gets to his victims since no one remembers them ever leaving their rooms.  Also, why does he leave the bodies near water and what is the point of the mutilation that occurs after death?

The narrator can be overly dramatic at times, but I really do like him.  My favorite character though is Sara. She has to overcome so much to prove that she can be a part of the team, and honestly, she's smarter than Moore. She's also a crack shot, which Lucius and Marcus, the cops, are not.  It was also pretty cool to see Teddy Roosevelt who is one of my favorite presidents as a character.  This was a great book that did hold some surprises for me and was a bit of a mental exercise in a good way.  It was like putting together an intriguing puzzle using pieces garnered by what were at the time new found ways.  It's amazing to see how far we have come, but it's also amazing to see how advanced they were in their investigation, but not unrealistically so.  This was truly a book worth reading.

Quotes
The he bolted for the door, leaving me to apologize more fully for the abrupt departure—which,not surprisingly Wissler didn’t seem to mind at all. Scientists’ minds may jump around like amorous toads, but they do seem to accept such behavior in one another.
-Caleb Carr (The Alienist p 290)

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Alienist-Novel-Lazlo-Kreizler-Book-ebook/dp/B000JMKV9Y/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1514985312&sr=8-1&keywords=the+alienist+by+caleb+carr

Monday, January 1, 2018

Star Wars: The Weapon of a Jedi: A Luke Skywalker Adventure by Jason Fry


This book takes place right after New Hope.  Luke is the hailed hero, but he much prefers to be just a regular pilot with the rebuilt Red Squadron (the only ones to survive from the original were him and Wedge).  Luke and Wedge are pulling up the rear at the end of a mission and while Luke's Jedi reflexes help with his flying (and with helping him and Wedge avoid trouble from TIE fighters), he worries about how he will ever learn how to be a Jedi if there is no one to train him.  He has not heard from Obi Wan since he was inside the Death Star.  As everyone is leaving the area to meet up at the rendezvous point, Luke senses the Force and sets Artoo to fly the X-Wing so he can meditate.  He has a vision of being in a jungle practicing with a lightsaber, when suddenly there is danger behind him.  It does not make sense and he has no idea where he was.

The Red Squadron Leader has a mission for Luke to retrieve logs of Imperial communications.  The order comes directly from Mon Mothma herself, but to Luke, its a rather boring mission.  He signed up to fight, not pick up data tapes.  And worse, he will have to fly a Y-wing, which is an ungainly and slow fighter. His cover story is that he is a hyperspace scout. C3PO, for better or worse, is along for the ride too.  The Force seems to be telling him to go to the planet Devaron, which is one of the stops, but he ignores it and goes on.  After being hit by TIE fighters and barely escaping, he ends up on Devaron anyway to seek repairs and finds the planet is part of his vision.

Luke lands on a sort of airstrip and is met by a Davorian named Kivas and his daughter, Farnay.  He is a mechanic and they reach an agreement about fixing his fighter.  Luke and the droids head into the town of Tikaroo to find a place to stay and something to eat.  He walks into the main building and is immediately assaulted by various "people" insisting they are the best guide in the area and offering their services--for a price of course.  Luke soon finds out that Devaron has become a popular place to hunt creatures known as pikhrons.

Luke is not interested in hunting innocent animals, but he is interested in hiring a guide to the ancient ruins, but soon finds that no one goes to Eedit, as it is off limits by order of the Empire and is said to be haunted by the "wizards" who used to live there.  That night Luke has a vision about the ruins.  The next day, Farnay offers to take him there as a guide, but she only has one small beast for them to ride.  It just won't be possible.  At that time, Farnay happens to see his lightsaber and becomes afraid that he is one of the wizards, but he assures her that he is not a Jedi (well he isn't yet) and decides to trust her with the truth and tells her his real name and that he is with the Rebel Alliance.  He believes that whatever he finds in that Temple will help her planet in some way and him as well, if he can just get there.

Luke finds himself forced to take on Sarco Plank as a guide as he is the only one who can take him to the ruins.  He knows the man is dangerous and that he cannot trust him, but he has no choice.  He will also find that Sarco won't be the only one he needs to look out for. This Temple will be the link between New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back.  It will explain how Luke learns something about how to finally use his lightsaber, which is one of the biggest unanswered questions of the saga. There are those who are not fond of Luke as a character, but this is a really good book and a very good story about the history of the Jedi, a planet that has been destroyed by the Empire,  and a strong teenager who learns to stand up for herself and others. 

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Journey-Star-Wars-Skywalker-Adventure-ebook/dp/B00V6YWFMU/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1514816048&sr=8-1&keywords=star+wars+the+weapon+of+a+jedi