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

Friday, September 29, 2017

Thor: Volume Two Who Holds the Hammer by Jason Aaron (Writer), Russell Dauterman (Artist), Mattew Wilson (Color Artist), VC's Joe Sabino (Letterer), Noelle Stevenson (Writer), CM Punk (Writer), Timothy Truman (Artist) Marguerite Sauvage (Artist and Colorist), Rob Guillory (Artist and Colorist)


We left off with Dario Agger, the Minotaur who runs Roxxon, making a deal with King Malekith of Svartalfheim, a dark sorcerer elf who wants the ice giant's skull that Agger has.  Odin has given control of the Destroyer, Asgardia's most powerful weapon, to his evil brother Cul Borson to use it to seek out Thor and find out her identity and bring the hammer back to Asgardia.  Freya is not happy about this, nor is the man now known as Odinson who has a list of names of people he knows who could be Thor and is going around trying to cross them off.  On top of the list is S.H.I.E.L.D agent Roz Solomon who hasn't been seen in a while and has a beef with Roxxon. While he hunts down people from the list he finds out that Dr. Jane Foster, his former lover, is dying from cancer.

Thor goes to Roxxon to try to stop the deal Agger and Malekith is making but gets interrupted by Destroyer.  She takes Destroyer down under the island to protect the innocents.  At one time Destroyer gets a hold of Mjolnir and Thor has to fight to get it back.  But when Freya finds out what has happened she goes to Odinson and plans to head down to help Thor by herself. But Odinson knows some people who would be willing to help a fellow female. And a group of women including Scarlet Witch, Brunnhilde, Karnilla, Hildegarde, Spider-Woman, and Captain Marvel.  Will that be enough to destroy the Destroyer?  Also, will we finally find out who is the woman behind the mask?

Also included in this comic is three comics by three different artists involving Thor. The first one is Thor as an old man, the next one is the female Thor having an adventure on Asgardia, and the third is one of Thor before he has raised Mjolnir.  Then there's an old-time comic reimangined as if a woman had picked up Mjoliner but with a different story line than the current comic. One that fits with the early comics.  While it was enjoyable to watch the women coming together to help Thor out and the four comics at the end were nice this wasn't as good as Volume One. Let's hope that Volume Three proves to pick up the pace.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Thor-Vol-Holds-Hammer-2014-2015-ebook/dp/B00XZD7E62/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1506687687&sr=8-1&keywords=thor+who+holds+the+hammer

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Pay It Forward by Catherine Ryan Hyde


Arlene McKinney is a recovering alcoholic who works two jobs to make ends meet and to pay off a broken down truck that she co-signed with her boyfriend who disappeared and may be dead, but who likely isn't coming back.  She has a thirteen-year-old son, Trevor by him.  Trevor is a good kid who has a new social studies teacher at his school named Reuben St. Clair who was scarred physically by the Vietnam war and wears an eyepatch.

Reuben starts off his class every year in the new towns he seems to keep moving to with an extra credit assignment for those who choose to do it: Think of an idea for world change and put it into action.  Trevor gets an idea of what to do and sets about doing it. He takes his earnings from his paper route and places an ad in the paper that he will be giving it away to someone at a certain address on a certain day.  About forty people show up and he becomes concerned because he only wants to help one person, but a large group leaves when they see that it's only a kid.  So he decides to have them write an essay to determine why they should get it. A few more leave because they can't write. He picks out a homeless junkie named Jerry to help.  He buys him some new clothes and lets him take a shower in his home much to his mother's consternation.  Jerry is able to get a job working on cars and he helps Arlene by taking apart the truck to save her money as she is selling it for parts and it cuts into what she can get if the guy has to remove it himself.  All that Trevor asks is that Jerry does three things for three other people and have them do three things for three other people. He calls it the Pay It Forward system.  But Jerry will let him down by going back to jail.

The other person Trevor helps is Mrs. Greenberg, an elderly woman on his paper route. He takes care of her lawn and flowers.  He tells her about the Pay It Forward System.  But Trevor hears that she dies and believes that she never had time to pay it forward.  He does keep up her lawn and takes care of the stray cats that Mrs. Greenberg took care of just in case she is looking down from Heaven.

The third person on his list to help is Reuben.  He believes that Reuben and his mom should be together and that they would be happy.  But he feels he is doomed to fail on this front as well as the two keep acting defensively toward each other.  She believes that he looks down on her for her lack of education and he believes that she looks down on him for his hideous appearance.  They're both wrong, of course.  But that will not be the only obstacle to them getting together.  One bigger than the two can imagine will come between them.

This was a really good book. It was very well written with an idea that at the time of its publication seemed revolutionary.  It's a shame it didn't take hold.  Some people might have trouble with the different narrators as it can be confusing, though it wasn't to me.   I would like to take a moment here to point out that in the book Reuben is an African American and in the movie he is portrayed by Kevin Spacey, a fine actor who happens to be white.  That is a shame.  I also understand that the mioie really departs from the book for those who have seen it.  I do recommend this book.

Quotes
I no longer think I lack a judgment about men. I will never again say my instincts are poor, no sir, because how do I keep finding the same guy over and over?  I am beginning to think I have a very keen sense of judgment, only it would seem that it is on somebody else’s side.
-Catherine Ryan Hyde (Pay It Forward p 19)

Arlene started to say something back by couldn’t think what it should be and worried it would be a bad, weak-sounding something no matter how carefully she thought it up. So instead she poured two fingers of good old Jose Cuervo. The one man in her life who never told her lies, so you always knew what you would get.  And you could never say you didn’t know.
-Catherine Ryan Hyde (Pay It Forward p 23)

There was something clean and victorious about waking up feeling that bad. It meant he was alive still. That’s he’d survived again.
-Catherine Ryan Hyde (Pay It Forward p 159)

Much to Gordie’s surprise and relief, he found the ability to detach had not abandoned him. It would be another beating like so many before. He would watch it from a distance, and his skin and bones would heal. Or maybe this time not.  But he would be elsewhere as it happened, shut down.  When you don’t care anymore you deprive them of the joy of hurting you. Hard to hit somebody where they live if there’s nobody home.
-Catherine Ryan Hyde (Pay It Forward p 280)

Link To Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Pay-Forward-Catherine-Ryan-Hyde-ebook/dp/B002DQW9YO/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1506523669&sr=8-2&keywords=pay+it+forward+book

Monday, September 25, 2017

The Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy by Elizabeth May


It's been two months nineteen days since Sorcha plunged the crystal into Aileana's chest in order to make Kiernan the Unseelie King again and get rid of her at the same time.  But before that happened Aileana made a deal with the Cailleach to take her powers and try to save both worlds from destruction.  The only drawback is that her human body is not meant to hold such power and cannot for very long before dying.  The Book Of Remembrance must be found where a spell can be used to undo everything starting with the Cailleach's sister the Morrigan who became quite evil and powerful and the first ruler of the Unseelie.  She was the one who cast the curse that the ruler of the Seelie and Unseelie kingdoms would fight until one killed the other leaving the victor in charge of the fae. The Cailleach locked her up in a prison and the book, her book of spells, was locked up with her.

When Aileana wakes up she has no memory at first and runs into some of Kiernan, or rather Kadamach's forces and kills them.  She is found by Derrick who has not given up on her, which considering the number of times she has died or come close to dying, you can't blame him.  Even though they burned her body on a funeral pyre and buried the ashes, which likely explains the memory loss and the delay in coming back.  Aithinne is able to immediately see that she has her mother's powers and probes her mind for the memory of when it happened. When she does a floodgate of memories cascade down upon Aileana and she remembers everything.

Things have changed in these two months.  The remaining humans are on the mainland, except for Catherine, Daniel, and Gavin.  Kiernan has to feed to live but he can't take a human life so he feeds some leaving the humans in a fae captivated state where they need to be bitten by fae to be kept alive in a horrid existence where they waste away.  He leaves the bodies at the border between the kingdoms for Aithinne to find.  Aithinne believes that Kiernan is about to make a play for her kingdom and her life.  It's just a matter of time.  But with Aileana back this changes things.  Maybe Kiernan can be brought back from the brink of insanity that he fell into with her death.

The only wrinkle in the plan to go and get the book is that Sorcha will be needed to find the cage the Morrigan is in and she will be needed to open the book. Only someone from her bloodline can do this and Lonnrach her brother is nowhere to be found, while Sorcha is chained up in Kiernan's dungeon being tortured for her crimes.  Kiernan makes a vow with Sorcha that he will have nothing more to do with Aileana and will be with her if she will help them with this task. Aileana just hopes that there is some way out of this vow.  And there is a way out of it. If she chooses to take it.  But at what price?

The Morrigan is stronger than they expect and the fae does not have their powers in the cage and on top of that they are mortal in the cage so they can be killed and they heal much slower.  The Morrigan uses your fears against you.  She doesn't have an actual body so she inhabits the form of other things.  The Morrigan wants the book too so she can get out of the cage so it's a race to see who can find it first: one of the Morrigan's agents or them.  Or will they become one of the Morrigan's agents?

In this conclusion to the excellent Falconer trilogy, not everyone gets out alive.  But this book lives up to the series quality and the pages do really fly fast.  This book is a fitting end to such a fine set of books that I thoroughly enjoyed and will likely go back and read again one day. I cannot praise this book or this series enough. This truly is a must-read.

Quotes
“I don’t know if I believe in wishes,” I murmur, almost to myself. It’s like believing in hope. They make you want things you can’t have. Wishes are dangerous things. 
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 33)

Honestly, Aileana, everyone ought to dress up like an inebriated pirate at least once. It’s much more fun killing things in costume.
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p49)

The price you pay for truth is knowledge.
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 84)

No one deserves to be under someone else’s complete control, unable to fight back even if they wanted.  Maybe I’ve grown too soft. Maybe I’m just tired of death. Maybe it’s compassion that separates us from monsters. Does that make me better than them or does it make me a fool?
-Elizabeth May ( Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 152)

Goodness doesn’t last, Falconer. If enough time has passed and enough people hurt us, we all become cruel and heartless bastards.
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 259)

“You believe her incapable of being cruel? I’ve walked through whole battlefields covered in her victims.” “She was defending those she loves.” “Aren’t we all? We always try to play the hero first, Falconer. It makes it easier to justify the worst of our actions later.”
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 259-60)

Those painful memories don’t disappear just because you destroyed the one responsible. Killing just makes you empty.
-Elizabeth May ( Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 326)

Forgiveness isn’t something given. It’s something earned. What could I do to earn it, Aileana? Nothing. I’d make the same choices. I don’t deserve forgiveness.
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 326)

Why love a butterfly when it starts to die the moment it gets its wings?
-Elizabeth May (Fallen Kingdom: Book Three of the Falconer Trilogy p 333)

     

Friday, September 22, 2017

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


A new school year at Xavier's Institute For Higher Learning has opened to new students and old. The Professor is away dealing with business.  Jean, aka The Phoenix, is dead and Scott, the head of the school has taken up with fellow teacher Emma Frost the former enemy of the X-Men who can read minds and has the ability to turn her body into solid nearly indestructible diamonds.  The other teachers are Beast, Kitty Pryde, and Wolverine.  Kitty makes it clear that she doesn't trust Emma and that she will be keeping an eye on her. When Wolverine shows up he and Scott get into it in front of the students which is a great start to the school year.

Meanwhile, a Dr. Kavita Rao announces that she has found a cure for the mutant gene.  She prances out a small child she has cured on national TV.  The students at the school are in an uproar with some thinking that they want the cure, others thinking that they don't need it, and the rest not knowing what to think.  Around the world, people are starting to line up at centers to receive the cure.  Hank, the Beast, breaks into her lab to get a copy, but she catches him and freely gives him a sample knowing that if the X-Men back the science it will go better for her.

Hank himself is considering taking the cure if it works since he is becoming more beast than human, which leads to a fight with Wolverine in front of the children.  But there's more here than meets the eye. There's a mysterious alien named Ord from Breakworld who draws the X-Men out to fight by taking hostages at a party then fleeing into the night. What does he have to do with this? And what secret is Nick Fury keeping from them this time? You're not sure if you can trust Emma, but at times you do feel sorry for her because the ghost of Jean is everywhere. Joss Whedon lives up to his reputation and Cassady is an incredible artist, as is Martin a beautiful colorist. There are lots of surprises in store for this first book in the series that leave you wanting more.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Astonishing-X-Men-Vol-1-Gifted-ebook/dp/B00AAJQV8Q/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1506082554&sr=8-1&keywords=astonishing+xmen+vol+1

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Die Again by Tess Gerritsen


On the TV series, which does not really follow the books, the actor who played Rizzoli's partner, Frost, a really great character, committed suicide and was killed off the show.  I really hoped Gerritsen would not kill him off in the book, and she does not, which is a relief.  In the books, Korchef has retired and was going to marry Rizzoli's mom, whose husband ran off with a bimbo.  Then he comes back and expects everything to be the same.  Her mom is miserable.  She's not with the man she loves, but she is getting pressure from her two sons and her priest to stay with her husband, who is a real jackass and treats her poorly.

This is by far the bloodiest of the Rizzoli and Isles books, and that is saying a lot.  It opens with the murder of taxidermist/hunter Leon Gott, who is found in his garage, hanging from the ceiling, cut stem to stern, with most of his innards in a trash can along with the innards of a snow leopard, which is an endangered and rarely seen animal.  He has been there for four days, and well, his two cats and dog have gotten hungry and feasted on him.

It turns out that Gott was hired to stuff the leopard, who was euthanized at the zoo where he lived, and sold to a shock jock hunter radio host because the zoo needed the money.  It is illegal to sell their pelts, no matter how old they are, however.  While Rizzoli and Frost are at the zoo, one of the zookeepers is mauled to death by a cougar.  Her death is deemed an accident, but there are a lot of questions and suspicions about her death.

The book goes back and forth between the current story in Boston and one that took place in Botswana six-years ago.  A group, a Japanese couple, a British couple, two young women, and a young man, go to "rough" it in the wild with a guide named Johnny and his assistant Clarence.  One day they wake up to find the remains of Clarence's body outside the protective perimeter of the fence with bells.  He was keeping overnight watch.  Then another one of them is killed.  Some of them begin to suspect Johnny of killing them. Millie, part of the now broken up British couple, cannot believe it and thinks they are crazy.  Things go from bad to worse and only one of them will survive.

Gott's estranged son, Elliott was on that trip.  Since his death, Gott has regretted the way he treated his son.  One Sunday afternoon, after the pelt is delivered to him, he calls two people, Elliot's girlfriend and the Johannesburg police department.  The pelt is missing from his house.  Did someone steal it because of its value, or for some other demented reason?  The same night Gott dies, Elliot's girlfriend is murdered too.  As they dig, they find cases similar to the way Gott died.  Was it an animal right's group making an example of hunters or something so unthinkable and sinister who would believe it?

This is a really great book, even with all the blood and guts.  You will never guess the endgame.  There are so many twists and turns and false leads that seem so promising, yet misleading you from the truth.  Rizzoli and Isles are up against a serious killer who would not blink at killing either one of them if they get too close to finding him out.  By the way, for those who doubt the ending is possible, do not just take my word for it (I have read up on it) but remember that Gerritsen is an MD and knows what she is talking about.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Die-Again-Rizzoli-Isles-Novel-ebook/dp/B00JI4ZSDI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505915823&sr=8-1&keywords=die+again+tess+gerritsen

Monday, September 18, 2017

People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks


There really is a Hebrew codex known as the Sarajevo Haggadah.  A Haggadah is a text recited on the first two nights of Seder during Passover that includes the description of the Exodus from Egypt.  A family would likely have more than one so everyone at the table could have their own copy to read from.  Today they can come illustrated, but long ago in the Medieval times, the Jews did not believe in illustrating their texts as they believed that the commandment "Thou shalt not create any graven image by thy hand" applied here. But the Sarajevo Haggadah, made at that time, is beautifully illustrated in the style of the Christian manuscripts of its day.  There is a story behind how it managed to survive all this time when other religions and governments were burning and looting such artifacts.  But no one knows most of the story; only the bit at the end.  The author has taken the liberty to fill in the spaces with her own suppositions and has also changed the names and created a backstory for those whose stories we know about.

The book opens with Hanna Heath an expert in book conservation, especially medieval books.  She was chosen for this amazing job of doing the Sarajevo Haggadah, which has just resurfaced after having been missing since 1898 and before never having been heard of, not because she has the most experience, but because she is from Australia the least objectionable country.  Dr. Ozren Kamaran, the kustos of it and the chief librarian of the National Museum and professor of librarianship at the National University of Bosnia turns out to be around her age of thirty and not at all what she expected.  The two have an affair that is marred by the fact that he has a son in a permanent coma and a dead wife due to the Bosnian war.  But watching Hanna work is a thing of beauty and fascinating as hell.  Each artifact, stain, or marking that she notices will tell someone's story.  There's an insect, a hair, a wine stain, some salt, and the lack of claps even though the book was set up to take clasps.  It was not, of course, in its original binding, but was rebound many times, the last time in 1898.

The stories include one that concerns the insect is about a young Jewish girl named Lola from Sarajevo who runs off to the mountains when the Germans invade her town and begin rounding up the Jews.  She joins the Partisans, a group of communists cells that are fighting the Germans in guerilla-style fashion.  Her cell isn't much to talk about and is eventually disbanded and she is left alone so she goes back to Sarajevo where her path crosses with that of Serif Kamal, the librarian who saved the Haggadah from the Nazis.

Also, there's the story of the bookbinder and how the clasps came to be missing.  Then there's the story of how the wine got there in Venice in 1609 and the relationship between priest Giovanni Domenico Vistorini and Rabbi Judah Aryeh. Vistorini was in charge of determining what books were edited or burned by the Catholic Church and sometimes he consulted with the rabbi or tried to convince the rabbi to get the illegal Jewish publishers to stop publishing the messages against Christianity.  The rabbi would come to him with the Haggadah to get it passed with a seal for someone.  The story of the salt comes from 1492 and the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition.  This story concerns Ruti, a young woman whose father is a book writer and whom she herself reads the books only older men are allowed to read.  She leads a secret life her family has no idea about. Her father buys the Haggadah off of a deaf-mute boy in the marketplace and decides to give it as a gift to his nephew for his upcoming wedding.  But things change quickly when the Jews are told to leave Spain.  The last one is told about the artist herself and involves the hair. She, Zahra al-Tarek is from Africa and drew pictures of plants for her father a healer.  But when their village was attacked she was enslaved and her painting became her usable skill.  It takes her to many places and saves her life.

Throughout this book, you continue the story of Hanna who has a mother who is a top neurosurgeon and head of neurology at her hospital in Sydney.  The two do not get along as Hanna feels as though her mother was never there for her and her mother never told her who her father was. This will change in the book when someone dies and his identity becomes known to Hanna, opening up a whole family she never knew she had.

This book asks you to make some leaps that you just can't make, like Ozren being the love of her life after a very short time of being together and then not seeing each other for years.  But the stories of the different people are so interesting and colorful and tragic in some ways, yet hopeful as the book keeps on surviving through the ages until today which is a testament to three major religions coming together to save something grand, glorious, and holy. Overall this was a book really worth reading if only to imagine what might have happened to this wonderful book as it marched across time.  

Pictures of the Sarajevo Haggadah:  https://www.pinterest.com/pin/483714816208821051/?lp=true

Quotes
Vienna is the laboratory of the apocalypse.
-Karl Kraus

Sometimes, I think if you took out all the universities and all the hospitals our of greater Boston, you’d be able to fit what’s left into about six city blocks.
-Geraldine Brooks (The People of the Book p 134)

Had not the Muslims, Jews, and Christians shared these lands in contentment—in convivencia—for hundreds of years? What was the saying? Christians raise the armies, Muslims raise the buildings, Jews raise the money.
-Geraldine Brooks (The People of the Book p 222)
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/People-Book-Novel-Geraldine-Brooks-ebook/dp/B000YJ66SW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505736102&sr=8-1&keywords=the+people+of+the+book

          

Friday, September 15, 2017

Spider-Man/Deadpool: Volume One: Isn't It Bromantic by Joe Kelly (Writer), Ed McGuinness (Penciler) Mark Morales with Livesay (Inkers), Jason Keith (Colorist), and VC's Joe Sabino (Letterer)


This comic opens with Spidey and Deadpool being held captive by Dormammu of Hell and needing to rely on each other to escape.  Of course, it turns out that Deadpool had set the whole thing up of Dormammu in order to spend time with Spiderman.  He later shows up to help Spiderman with the bad guy Hydraman which goes horribly wrong for Wade (Deadpool). They do get the bad guy.

Deadpool has a reason for wanting to spend all this time with Spider-man and it isn't just because he thinks the world of him as a superhero.  Deadpool has hired to take out Peter Parker Spiderman's best friend and protector and Deadpool wants to get a sense if whether or not the intel he got was legit without having to actually ask Spider-man anything.

The two find themselves going up against Mysterio who causes Spider-man to hallucinate and see the Green Goblin everywhere, but Deadpool knocks him out of the hallucination and the two take down Mysterio before he can do damage to the city. While Beck, Mysterio, is in the hospital recovering Parker goes to visit him and Deadpool arrives ready to take him out only to be foiled by a visit by "Spider-man", or Hobie Brown the man who sometimes stands in for Spider-man when Parker needs him to on occasion in order to keep up the appearance that the two of them are different people.  This stops Deadpool in his tracks and he leaves.

Next Deadpool invites him to do a job with him in Bolivia where they run into Styx and Stone and Deadpool forgets to tell Spider-man that the job is for a drug lord.  A few days later Spider-man calls up Deadpool and asks him if he wants to hang out. So Deadpool takes him clubbing at his club but arranges a digital identity for Spider-man so his date and others won't recognize him as Spider-man.  Things, of course, get out of hand and Thor arrives to be Deadpool's date only she doesn't know that.  She's on his Free Pass list that he and his wife, Shiklah, have.  Unfortunately, Spider-man's date is a succubus who hates Asgardians so a fight between the two break out and the men really enjoy the fight a bit too much so the ladies find a way to make them pay for it.

But Wade hasn't forgotten his contract and he believes that Parker is an evil man doing evil things in his lab and that he deserves to die and he deserves to be paid for it.  So he walks up to Parker's door and shoots him dead.  Now it's time to celebrate, but will Spider-man ever forgive him?

I'm surprised it took this long for someone to pair the two most wise-assed characters in Marvel together for a comic (in both ways) run.  This comic is full of riffs and one-liners. The two set each other up and play off each other like a great comedy team.  They also fight well together and it's sweet that Deadpool crushes on Spider-man so much and Spider-man doesn't like him all that much in the beginning, as he was the reason he left the Avengers.  But after spending some time with him he comes to change his mind about Deadpool. Deadpool killing him, will, of course, change this.  This comic also includes a comic with the Vision family adjusting to the suburban life and how something strange is going on in the neighborhood. This comic is everything you could want and more with a cherry on top.  I eagerly await the next one.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Spider-Man-Deadpool-Vol-Bromantic-2016-ebook/dp/B01JT4A2D2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505338900&sr=8-1&keywords=spider-man%2Fdeadpool+1   

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Dimestore: A Writer's Life by Lee Smith


Lee Smith, an Oprah author, has written Dimestore which is not your typical memoir in that it focuses mainly on the author's writing life and how that has been affected and shaped by life events.  Lee Smith's father, a manic depressive, owned a dimestore in the mountains of Grundy, Virginia.  She did her part with the store such as to help pick out the dolls when she was a child and to arrange them on the shelf and keep them clean.  She would move them so that their arms were outstretched as though waiting for a child to come along and pick them up.

She was an only child to elderly parents who thought to never have children.  They were both mentally ill. Her mother as her father said was "kindly nervous" and would have to spend time in a mental hospital as would her daddy when the depression would hit at the end of a manic episode.  But there was always someone in the family to step up and run the store and help out at home and very rarely were both of them in the hospital at the same time.

Mental illness is believed to be genetic and her mother's side is rampant with examples of it.  It's a wonder Lee wasn't mentally ill herself. However, one of her two sons would be diagnosed as a schizo-affective disorder which is a combination of schizophrenia and manic depression.  She and both her first husband and her second husband were lucky in that he, Josh, wanted to take his medicines and gave them no trouble in that way as some mentally ill people can do and with good reason. The side effects can be atrocious and once you start to feel well you begin to believe you do not need them anymore.  In Josh's case, the side effect of his medication was causing weight gain and high blood pressure which was doing his heart no favors.  At age thirty-three, he died in his sleep of heart failure.  This affected Lee's writing in that she at first couldn't write a single thing. Then slowly she began to write her way through her grief.

In college, Lee wrote many stories about stewardesses in Hawaii and things such as that but got Bs and Cs.  She asked her professor why and he told her to write what she knew.  So she wrote a story about a group of older women she remembered from home sitting on the porch talking about the change of life and getting a hysterectomy.  She got an A.  A writer must find their voice and hers was in the Appalachian Mountains for the most part.  It was what she knew and who she was and where she got her stories from.

This book is an easy read like gliding down the river (not the mighty Mississippi River that she and her girlfriends take a raft and go down on when she is in college) on a nice Spring day. Yes, there is some sadness in it like when it talks about her son or the changes that have come to her hometown, but overall it is as sweet as the honeysuckle she drinks from and just as good.  

Quotes
Now they are going to really talk, about somebody who “has just never been quite right, bless her heart,” or somebody who is “kindly nervous”, or somebody else who’s “been having trouble down there.”  Down there is a secret place, a foreign country, like Mexico or Nicaragua.
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 14)

No matter what is wrong with you, a sausage biscuit will make you feel a whole lot better.
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 39)

My father was fond of saying that I would climb a tree to tell to tell a lie rather than stand on the ground to tell the truth.
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 63-4)

The South runs on denial. We learn denial in the cradle and carry it to the grave. It is absolutely essential to being a lady, for instance. My Aunt Gay-Gay’s two specialties were Rising to the Occasion and Rising Above It All, whatever “it” happened to be.   Aunt Gay-Gay believed that if you can’t say something nice, say nothing at all.  If you don’t discuss something, it doesn’t exist.  She drank a lot of gin and tonics and sometimes she’d start in on them early, winking at my Uncle Bob and saying, “Pour me one, honey, it’s dark underneath the house.”
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 110-11)

A layer of conservatism still covers Dixie like dew. As a whole, we Southerners are still religious, and we are still violent.  We’ll bring you a casserole, but we’ll kill you, too.  Southern women, both black and white, have always been more likely than Northern women to work outside the home, despite the image projected by such country lyrics as “Get your biscuits in the oven and your buns in the bed, this women’s literature is a-going to your head.”  It was not because we were so liberated; it’s because we were so poor.
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 117)

I asked him whether or not he believed in Jesus. “Well, I don’t know,” he said. “Every time I’m in the hospital, there are at least three people in there who think they’re Jesus. So sometimes I think, well, maybe Jesus wasn’t Jesus at all—maybe he was just the first schizophrenic.”
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 129-30)

Anne Tyler noted when somebody asked her why she writes, and she answered, “I write because I want more than one life.”
-Lee Smith (Dimestore: A Writer’s Life p 167)
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Dimestore-Writers-Life-Lee-Smith-ebook/dp/B013JBH8C4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505304800&sr=8-1&keywords=dimestore+lee+smith

Monday, September 11, 2017

The Chococate Cat Caper by Joanna Carl


In this first Chocoholic Mystery series, Lee McKinney, who has given up her career and position as a Trophy wife in Texas to come and once again work at her Aunt Nettie's Ten Huis Chocolade store as its business manager and unravel the books. Her aunt has had a tough time of it since her husband died a year-and-a-half-a-ago.  Lee intends to stay and help her aunt out until she gets her CPA and then she plans on leaving for a large firm or something more permanent.

Aunt Nettie really doesn't want Lee to fill the order for Clementine Ripley's party, but the check for $2,000 is too much to turn away for a personal vendetta.  They make cat chocolates that look exactly like her Champion Cat, Yonkers, as well as Amoretto truffles.  Lee ends up working for the party as a waitstaff for Mike Herrera's catering company thanks to her old friend Lindy who is his daughter-in-law.

So when Clementine Ripley falls down dead at the party, cyanide becomes the culprit and the amaretto chocolate becomes very suspicious which makes both Aunt Nettie and Lee suspects since Clementine kept the man who was drunk driving and killed Uncle Phil on the streets by getting him off a previous charge.  But they weren't the only ones to not like her.  Her ex-husband, Tom, was there heard arguing with her about money, it seems that her loyal assistant Marion was up to something and her investment man was conspiring behind her back. Also, Mike Herrera, the Mayor, was supposed to get the land her home was on for use as a public center, but instead she builds an ugly house on the property.   And of course, there are all the people that she screwed over in court.

There really isn't much to say that is nice about Clementine.  She is pure Evil. But even she deserves to have justice and innocent people are threatened just for knowing too much.  I really liked this book.  Lee has a speech impediment that causes her to say the wrong thing. Such as "I need the password today" for "payment".  Her tongue gets her into so much trouble and embarrassment.  Also, includes Chocolate Facts such as how the cacao bean and chocolate were first counterfeited.  This is a book worth reading.

Link to Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Chocolate-Caper-Chocoholic-Mystery-Book-ebook/dp/B005XT36D6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1505146399&sr=8-1&keywords=the+chocolate+cat+caper

Friday, September 8, 2017

Black Panther Book Two: A Nation Under Our Feet by Ta-Nehisi Coates (Writer), Chris Sprouse (Penciler), Laura Martin (Colorer), Karl Story (Inker), Walden Wong (Inker), and VC's Joe Sabino (Letterer)


Tetu and Zenzi are leaders of the insurgent group known as The People and they have sown seeds of dissent among those of Wakanda. They sought the help of former Dora Milafe Ayo (T'Challa's sister) and Aneka now known as the Midnight Angels who are seeking justice for the women and downtrodden, but they turned them down.  Tetu then turned to Ezekiel Stane a weaponeer and biotechnology expert to raise the stakes in their war. Repulsortech suicide bombers hit a city square killing many innocents and severely hurting the queen-mother Ramonda.  T'Challa has had to put aside the project of reviving his sister Shuri from her living death chamber.  Shuri is still traveling the Djalia a plane of Wakanda's past, present, and future guided by a mother spirit who teaches her tales that are to help her understand something greater.

T'Challa brings Eden Fesi known as the former Avenger Manifold to help him with Shuri, but he ends up helping him with a bigger problem he has on hand.  With Manifold's help, he is able to break through to one of the suicide bombers.  T'Challa appeals to the bombers sense of family and its connection to his nation and apologizes for not being there for the man's brother who died.  He asks him if he will serve his hate or the memory of his brother and the bomber gives him the information he can use. 

Black Panther lets himself be captured by Stane and his people in order to get a recording of Stane saying that Tetu had put a price on his head in order to get the wealth of Wakanda.  T'Challa's people send the recording out to the people to see.  Meanwhile, Manifold, Storm, Luke Cage, and Misty arrive to help Black Panther take down Stane and his people.

While this is going on the army is being sent out to go up against the Midnight Angels with very little luck as Tetu and the mysterious Deceiver from book one who has mystical powers helps them defeat the army without killing them through mind control.

This is a much easier to understand book than the first one, yet the storyline is still a complex one with many narratives that keep it interesting.  Will T'Challa be able to save Shuri and if he does what will she have to bring back from the Djalia plane that might help the situation in Wakanda right now?  Will T'Challa be able to truly get rid of Stane and what will he do with his sister and the Midnight Angels? This is a great comic and worth giving a read.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Black-Panther-Nation-Under-2016-ebook/dp/B01NBP7T8S/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1504873139&sr=1-2&keywords=black+panther

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Behind Every Great Man: The Forgotten Women Behind the World's Famous and Infamous by Marlene Wagman-Geller


There are many things you can say about these women, some are proud, others doormats, some crazy, there are homemakers, helpmeets, rabble rousers, dedicated to a cause, or just plain delusional.  But you can never say that they are not smart or that they did not help historic men get to where they did.  They are history's footnotes and the ones who are overshadowed by the lives of great men, either because at the time, women were viewed as being less, or because the man's personality simply was too powerful.  Some of these women you will want to reach back through the sands of time and shake, give a few slaps to the face and say "Snap out of it! He does not deserve you!".  Others you will applaud their ability to make the difficult decision to walk away.  Either way, these are incredible women you will not soon forget.

The first chapter details the life of Mrs. Karl Marx.  It's rather sad that my response to this was, "Karl Marx was married?"  It never occurred to me that he would ever consider marriage, for some reason.  Johanna Bertha Julie Jenny von Westphalen, the daughter of a Baron in Prussia, fell head over heels in love with the poor Marx and refused to marry anyone else, much to the consternation of her family.  She would wait seven years for him to return from Berlin with a degree.  By this time, her father would be dead and her mother, fearing she would die an old maid, gave in and let her marry him.  Marx would get a job at a newspaper writing leftist articles, but it wasn't his articles that got him fired, but his inability to meet a deadline.  When he began to insult the King of Prussia in print, the two, with children in tow, began to flee through Europe for their lives.  They settled in squalor in London, where they do not speak the language while Marx writes his famous Manifesto.  Jenny, pregnant with their fourth child would go on a speaking tour to promote his views, while Marx stayed at home and got the housekeeper pregnant.  The whole thing was hushed up, but Jenny found out anyway and blew a gasket.  Life would go on a while longer for them but would end tragically for the whole family.

Mrs.. Wagner, or the delusional one, as I call her (of course you have to be to like his music), Cosima, is the daughter of a liaison between the famous pianist Liszt and his married mistress.  When the affair ended bitterly, he refused to let her see their children and they ended up in the care of a Nurse Ratchet ancestor, whose only good thing she did for the children was to die.  Cosima adored her absentee father and was obsessed with music and musicians.  She would marry his father's pupil, Hans von Bulow in the hopes that he would become a great musician, but was deeply disappointed.  When she met the racist anti-Semite Wagner, whose music she loved, she declared her undying love. A few days later, he would go out and marry another woman.  This, however, would not keep Cosima from her great love.  Eventually, the two would marry and she declared that she wanted to die at the same time he did as she could not live without him. Now, if I had a time machine, I would travel back in time and grant her this wish and take a shotgun and shoot her head off so she would not continue to live for many decades until 1930 when the Nazi would take Wagner's music and turn it into a kind of national anthem for Germany, ensuring that Wagner will never die.  The two insane people were perfect for each other, though Wagner's fidelity was not always as certain.

Mileva Maric, a Slav, had two disabilities during the nineteenth century: a severely displaced hip, leaving one leg three inches shorter than the other, and a genius intellect.  Her wise parents, realizing, perhaps that she would not have a chance a marriage, encouraged her schooling and she became one of the first women to get into Switzerland's Zurich Polytechnic, the MIT of Europe, where she quickly rose to the top of her class.  It was here that she would have a fateful meeting with Albert Einstein, whom she would become best friends with, as he was already interested in another girl.  The more time they spent together, however, the closer the two became.  Einstein's mother warned him to end the relationship with the shiksa before something happened, but Mileva was the first person he could really talk to about anything with and who really understood him.  He would indeed get her pregnant, but he would not ask her to marry him.  She would have to return home because she was being kicked out of school.  There is no record of what happened to the baby girl they had.  He would marry her later, partly out of guilt and partly because he still loved her.  They would spend hours in the lab working.  This was 1905, known as Einstein's Annus Mirabilis (Year of Miracles) where many of his incredible ideas would come from.  How much input Mileva had, is unknown to history.  Eventually, as they began to have children, her role began to be relegated to motherhood and her role in history erased, as Einstein's eye began to wonder.

Not all of the men are bad.  Julius Rosenberg was a jewel of a man who found himself accused of something he did not do by his brother-in-law who was trying to escape a death sentence.  Ethel would also be named so that her brother's wife could be spared.  The two met when they were young and she was terrified to go on stage to sing and he walked up and told her to pretend she was singing only to him.  They fell immediately in love.  They both believed in workers rights and unions, which meant that they had both belonged to the Communist Party, as had many before World War II.  Ethel could have saved herself at any time and raised her children by denouncing her husband and naming names, but she refused.  She, more than most women, gives the true meaning to standing by your man. Before they died, they shared side by side cells and she sang to him like she had so long ago.

Ian Fleming, sworn bachelor, and author of the James Bond spy series would be brought down by a woman that would be the first Bond girl, Ann Geraldine Mary Charteris, whose shared a love of S and M and whose pregnancy, would eventually get him to the altar.  But things would only last so long and soon another woman, the inspiration for Pussy Galore, would turn Fleming's head. This would begin the heartache for poor Ann, without whom, the world would not have 007.

Ruth Bell's father was a Presbyterian doctor in Pearl S. Buck's father's ministry in China and Ruth was looked after by a born again procuress of "little flowers".  Her dream was to be an unmarried missionary.  Before she did this, her father insisted she go to Wheaton College, near Chicago, which is where she met Billy Graham and the two immediately fell in love.  Ruth knew that Billy's Southern Baptist's beliefs would mean that she would be stuck at home raising the children and would have to give up her dream of being a missionary, but she was in love.  What Billy did not know, was that Ruth was always looking for loopholes through the idea of submitting to your husband, which was not a Presbyterian idea.  It was not easy raising a brood of children mostly alone, sharing your husband with the world, but she was the best thing that ever happened to him.  She kept his ego firmly in check and on the right path.  Her most searing quip was when she was asked if she had ever considered divorce she had said "No. Murder. Yes."

 Rachel Annetta Isum would be the first of her family to go to college, UCLA, where she would meet the famous Jackie Robinson.  He would go to Hawaii to seek a semi-pro career and they would agree to marry, until, two days after he left, Pearl Harbor happened and he joined up but told her she shouldn't volunteer herself (she had been studying to be a nurse).  After a brief break-up, they got back together and after the war, when the president of the Dodgers, Branch Rickey discovers him, they get married and embark on a difficult life together.  Robinson would have this to say about it: Thinking about Rae always makes me want to remind women how important they are in making the world go around.  It's an old saying--but a true one-that behind every successful man there is usually a woman who deserves much credit for his success.  Rachel and the children would be there for every game, putting up with all the racial abuse over the years and watch him leave their lives much too soon.  Rachel is still alive and kicking doing her part to make the world a better and fairer place for others.

There are so many women to mention.  Like the women who endured much for their freedom fighting husbands, Gandhi, Malcolm X, and Mandela.   The poor woman who would suffer after her husband Oscar Wilde met the wrong man.  The one woman who walked away from Picasso and ended up marrying another famous and influential man.  The fiery woman, his Heart, who helped Larry Flynt begin Hustler magazine and match him cuss word and woman to woman and bring him back from the dead by his cojones.  The wronged Mrs. Stieg Larsson and the amazing relationship with the woman who supposedly broke up the Police and stole Sting away from her best friend.  And the completely bizarre relationship between the very weird Robin Gibbs and his wife, a Celtic Priestess, among other things.  And is anyone capable of loving a monster as Eva Braun did with Hitler? These women are all amazing in their own way.  Some are able to walk away from the disaster of their men, while others went down in a blaze of glory or faded into the night.  They have all mostly been forgotten to all of us, which is why this book is so important.  I salute these women who were brave enough to try.

Quotes
Tears are just water.
--Marlene Wagman-Geller (Behind Every Great Man: The Forgotten Women Behind the World’s Famous and Infamous p 16)
Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Behind-Every-Great-Man-Forgotten-ebook/dp/B00TE951IE/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1504708853&sr=1-1&keywords=Behind+every+great+man%3A+the+forgotten+women

Monday, September 4, 2017

The Girl Who Knew Too Much by Amanda Quick


Set in the 1930s, this novel starts off with Anna Harris stumbling across the brutally murdered body of her employer, Helen at her home in the country where Helen had written the word "run" in blood on the wall.  Anna goes to her room to pack her things and finds a notebook and a note with it saying that if Anna was reading this Helen had trusted the wrong man and that Anna was to not trust the FBI or anyone with this notebook, but that it might be used as a bargaining chip at some later date to help her.  She leaves her the keys to the Packard and some cash to go along with what Anna had been saving.

Something she hears at an autocamp gives her the idea to go to Los Angles to start a new life like so many others have.  She could get lost in the shuffle.  She changes her name to Irene Glasson and takes Route 66 west.  This stumps the man who has been looking for her, Julian Enright from the law firm of Enright and Enright who are an old firm who do shady work.  Julian is the cleanup man and the head of the firm's son.  He also takes way too much enjoyment from his work. He has not given up on finding Anna. It's just a matter of time.

Four months later Irene has been hired by the scandal rag Whispers and she is hot on a story about the actor Nick Tremayne. Gloria Maitland who is supposed to have been his unofficial girlfriend called her to come to the Burning Cove Hotel in Burning Cove, California to meet by the pool. When Irene got there she found Gloria face down in the pool and could hear someone nearby and had to make a run for it herself.

Oliver Ward, the former famed magician whose last act ended with him crippled in one leg by bullets fired into it,  is the owner of the Burning Cove Hotel and he knows that Irene will not let the story go so he wants her to work with him to try to find the killer.  But Irene has trust issues especially after what happened to Helen.  And Oliver himself has trust issues as well. But they both need to start trusting people again sometime.  And with a killer on the loose as well as someone after Irene for the notebook which contains information about something complex and earth shattering, and the time is sooner rather than later.  It will take some of Oliver's magic skills and Irene's quick thinking to get them out of this jam as the bodies start to pile up around them now and the trail of bodies from the past that led Irene to this story to begin with as she believes Tremayne is a murderer killing to hide something.

This is not your typical Amanda Quick novel. It was quite a refreshing read and a new take on the 1930s crime drama/film noir type of story.  You can almost see the hazy cigarette smoke in the air, though none of the main characters smoke, of course.  You can hear the jazzy music playing and see the dancers.  Taste all of the unique drinks of the time, like a Pink Lady.  She really places you there.  This was such a wonderful read. It kept me up half the night trying to finish it.  I highly recommend it.

Quotes

   It’s only a mistake if it kills you or you fail to learn from it.
    -Amanda Quick (The Girl Who Knew Too Much p 81)

  She saw the silhouette of Oliver’s gun. She fumbled with the catch of her handbag. Her fingers closed around the grip of the small pistol she kept inside.  “I’ve got one, too,” she said. “Of course you do,” Oliver said. He sounded resigned. “Ever fired it?” “No. How hard could it be?” “You’d be surprised.”  “There are bullets in it,” she said offended by his tone. “That helps.”
-Amanda Quick (The Girl Who Knew Too Much p 158)

“I believe you.” “Do you?” “Yes.” “Why?” “I have no idea—except that in some ways you remind me of someone I knew a long time ago. If he made a promise, you knew he’d keep it or go down trying.” “Yeah? Who was he?” “My grandfather.” “I’m a few years older than you, Irene, but I’m not that much older.” “Oh, for pity’s sake, I didn’t mean to imply that I thought you were elderly—just…reliable. Dependable. Trustworthy.” “Like a good dog?”
-Amanda Quick (The Girl Who Knew Too Much p 138-9)

Friday, September 1, 2017

Ultimate Comics: Spider-man Vol 1 by Brian Michael Bendis (Writer), Sara Pichelli (Artist), Jonathan Hickman (Writer), Nick Spencer (Writer), Salvador Larroca (Aritst), Clayton Crain (Artist), Justin Ponsor (Colorist), Frank D'Armata (Colorist), VC's Cory Petit (Letterer), Clayton Cowles (Letter)er


Miles Morales is thrilled to have won the lottery to gain entrance into the charter school Brooklyn Visions Academy. It's a chance for him to make something of himself.  He sneaks over to his uncle Aaron's apartment to share the good news. His dad doesn't want him hanging around his uncle because he is bad news.

And he is right. Aaron, aka The Prowler, has just broken into Oscorp labs where months ago they had genetically altered a spider again in order to try to recreate Spider-man.  Aaron is there to steal something else and picks up the spider for kicks not knowing what it is.  While at his uncle's apartment Miles gets bit by the spider and begins to change.  He can blend into the background, shoot shocking venom through his hands, and of course has the strength, agility, and ability to climb walls as the Peter Parker's Spider-man does.

He confides in his best friend Ganke and they both decide to keep it under wraps for now, especially since Miles's dad doesn't think too highly of mutants.  But when Spider-man dies Miles feels the need to step up and take his place and does so with the grace of an elephant.  But he is, after all, a teenager just figuring out his powers, which attracts the attentions of some powerful people including his uncle Aaron all of which have their ideas of what he should do.

This comic also includes the comic Ultimate Comics: Fallout #4 which has to do with Reed Richards.  This is a good start to the series.  Miles is a sweet but scared kid who ultimately wants to do right. And it was hard for him to act as Spider-man living in a dorm room he had to sneak out of with Genke and another person that had to be kept out of the loop.  The art is fabulous and the plot is good and has me interested in finding out what happens in the next book.

Link to Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Ultimate-Comics-Spider-Man-Michael-Bendis-ebook/dp/B00EARP20M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1504270132&sr=8-1&keywords=ultimate+comics+spider-man