Monday, May 17, 2010
Catch Up!
Critical Condition by Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele - A must read! But be careful -- your blood pressure will sky rocket! The authors competently prove why medicine cannot be operated like a Wall Street Fortune 500 Company. And after revealing all that is wrong with modern medicine, they share their ideas of how to fix it. Enlightening!
The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin - a delightful and encouraging experiment on how to find more happiness in your life even if you think you are already quite happy. She even provides a web page with tools to start your own happiness project or a happiness project group.
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby - The author, in his late forties, is a victim of locked-in syndrome following a stroke. Despite not being able to talk or move, he dictates this memoir by blinking his eyes. I am told that it was made in to a movie, but I haven't seen it yet. Really inspires you to overcome your own adversities - most are mild compared to Jean-Dominique's.
The Primal Teen by Barbara Strauch - a cerebral yet enlightening work especially if you live with teens! I valued the information shared if not the bland style in which it was presented.
The Help by Kathryn Stockett - Story of three women in the south during the Civil Rights Movement - two black and one white - and the complexities of relationships between the white southern women and their black "help."
Siddhartha by Herman Hesse - a modern classic, was very timely for my own spiritual journey. Philosophy in story form.
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger - I cannot believe I waited until I was 42 to read this book on teenage rebellion. Ha Ha At first, it moved slowly, but I so enjoyed Salinger's language and style. It reminded me of the first book I read this year - The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
Lisey's Story by Stephen King - My first Stephen King novel. (I read his memoir On Writing years ago.) And I must say - I was enchanted! Not just by the plot (which was wonderful), but by his style, his language, his insight into relationships. Yeah - it was weird. I mean, can Stephen King NOT be weird? But is was a cool kind of weird -- like The Green Mile weird. It has been a while since I read a novel that I was sad to say goodbye upon completion of the final page. This was one of those stories...
I Don't Like My Neck by Nora Ephron - A witty little collection of essays on aging and other stuff... By the way - did you know Nora Ephron wrote You Got Mail and When Harry Met Sally? And at times, I could pick up on those musing dialogues that speckle her works. But this was - on the whole - a disappointment. I expected to be guffawing a bit more - instead, I grew tired of her self-absorbed Manhattan life. It was a quick read -- perhaps due to lack of substance.
Okay - so that is a very quick update. I have completed 16 books as we enter week 20 of 2010 - four books behind. But I will be going on a long car ride with Steve in a few weeks, so hopefully I can catch up! Thanks for rooting me on!
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Ursula Le Guin's Gifts

I first met Ursula Le Guin when I was in middle school. I had just finished Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy, and I was wallowing in a post-read depression. My brother, ever intuitive to my reading nuances, introduced me to Le Guin’s Earthsea Trilogy. Set in the mythical world of Earthsea, the trilogy tracks the life of the young wizard, Ged, from adolescence, through middle-age, and completes the cycle in Ged’s wizened golden years. I fell in love once again and found a balm for my Tolkien-tried heart. (Of course, I would re-read Tolkien’s trilogy AND the Silmarillion two more times after this. That is the beauty of making friends with books - you can revisit them again and again and again...)
So it was with much enthusiasm and anticipation that I picked up a “new to me” Le Guin work, Gifts. While supposedly a mythical setting as well, the tale was clearly reminiscent of the Scottish highlands complete with clans, keeps, and kilts. These highlander clans all possessed unique “gifts” such as calling animals, unmaking, and crippling -- gifts they used to protect their clans and support their keep. Until two young people started to question why the gifts were used defensively when so much good could be accomplished if used for the betterment of all the clans. Thus the focus of the book is on the two young protagonists -- Orrec and Gry -- and their private rebellion against their clan by refusing to use their gifts.
It was an intriguing read as I once again fell in love with Le Guin’s writing. And I have since discovered that it is the first in a series called The Annals of the Western Shore. So now, of course, I simply MUST read on to book two - Voices.
As much as I delighted in my reacquaintance with Ursula, I must be truthful when I say Gifts comes no where near the magnitude of her Earthsea Trilogy. Of course, this could be a matter of perspective when we take into consideration I first read the Trilogy on the heels of Tolkien. Perhaps I should reserve judgment until after I complete an adult reading of the Earthsea series. And of course I will keep you updated on the Western Shore series as soon as I finish Voices.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Where have I been?
Week Six - Book Six: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
Week Four - Book Five: The Personal Efficiency Program (2nd edition) by Kerry Gleeson
Apparently, there is a 4th edition of this book now. The one I read was published in 2000, so it was a bit outdated regarding technological advancements. But still -- no matter. It was a jump start for me to grab control of my “spiralling out of control” business tasks.
I found this book on the shelf of the house I was staying in with Steve this week in Winston-Salem, so I was motivated to finish it before we returned home again. I was unprepared for my reaction to its simple mantra of “Do It Now!” I started compiling focus sheets and project plans which pushed me on to tackle the annually daunting task of compiling all our tax related receipts and records for our accountant.
I don’t know if this book is all that compelling, or if it just hit me at the right time (January is the month to organize, right?). But it gave me the tools to jump start what has lived latent in my brain for the past year. From there, I subscribed to the Home Office Organizer podcast (in iTunes) and joined the No Guilt Big Goals 30 Day Challenge (just google it) all in an effort to get my life back on the right track of order and efficiency.
So my projects? Get my taxes stuff to my accountant by the middle of February and get my home office organized by the end of February. There! I posted it so now I have to do it, right?
Somewhere in there is the goal of finishing my book. (Don’t ask me which one -- I’ve started writing several.)
Week Four - Book Four: The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawande
Steve picked this book up the last time we went to B&N for “coffee.” Dr. Gawande is a general surgeon, and so many of his anectdotes are medical and applicable to Steve’s life. However, being the calendar keeper/schedule maker/color coding freak that I am, the idea of a book about checklists piqued my interest. Needless to say, I finished it within 24 hours of starting it.
Fascinating is all I can say -- how the simplicity of a clear cut highly developed checklist can improve surgical safety, build skyscrapers, save lives of airline passengers, keep investment firms afloat during financial crisis! Amazing.
While it is obvious this book is an asset to medical and/or business professionals (of which I am neither), I would encourage ANYONE to read it. The thesis is just too simple to pass over. (Of course, I’ve been making checklists for years and couldn’t survive without them. Now I am vindicated!)
Bees Review
Sweet as honey! :) In a way, Lily reminded me of Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird. I loved the innocence in which she related with the “colored” women in her life, and the joy she felt when they included her in their joking about the “white folks.” At one point, Lily says she doesn’t know why color matters at all. Wisdom beyond her years...
I could go on, but I am choosing to remain silent so that I can ponder this book in my heart. It is that kind of book.
Just read it if you haven’t already done so!
Week Three - Book Three: A Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Believe it or not, I have never read this book despite all the time on the best seller lists and book club reading lists. And since I really want to see the movie, I decided I had better read the book first. As you saw in my previous blog, I started this book before I had finished the last one. Oh well -- old habits die hard.
I need to read this one right now after the previous mind boggling read. Bees is a guilty pleasure as I am not able to put it down.
Next week I will be in North Carolina with Steve, so my plan is to move this blog to another server so that it will be interactive. I am really interested to see what all of you are reading and to hear your comments on my picks. Soon...
Week Two - Book Two: A Whole New Mind by Daniel Pink
As I said in my last blog, I am a member of our school district’s high school task force searching out ways to make our school better. So I am trying to get this book read before our next meeting which is Monday, January 18th. This guy does a great job of writing research based information in a friendly format. I am really enjoying his findings and think they are very profitable especially as we guide our college-bound daughter in career choices. It is a bit denser, so I am not glued to it like I should be. And yes, I confess -- I started another book on the side which I said I wouldn’t do. But hey - everyone needs a bathroom book, right? So, I am simultaneously reading The Secret Life of Bees. LOVE IT! (More on that book at a later date.)
But if any of you out there are in education, I would highly recommend A Whole New Mind. For me, it is one big “Aha!” Finally, someone that sees education from my perspective. But then again, I am a right-brain directed thinker.
Wallflower Finished
I finished The Perks of Being a Wallflower this morning. I really enjoyed the writing style - it was written in letters to an unknown recipient during “Charlie’s” first year of high school. The style was reminiscent of Donald Miller in Blue Like Jazz - very conversational and simple drawing the reader in and immersing you in the world of Charlie and his friends. The honesty of Charlie’s experiences is raw at times but continually insightful.
Not particularly upbeat nor depressing, the book hovers somewhere in between where many of us live the majority of our lives - the mundane experience of getting through each day. Probably not the best book for me to read coming out of the holidays -- I tend to battle depression after Christmas, and this book did not do much to help me out of that pit. But I continued reading for the pure joy of the language and topic.
Truly well written. I recommend it to older teens and young adults - middle school kids still much too young for Charlie’s world (in my opinion).
On another note -- I am aware of the fact that this is NOT an interactive web sight (much to my chagrin). I was looking forward to all your responses to my blogs, but that isn’t going to happen with iWeb. So, I am exploring alternatives. If you are web sight savvy, I look forward to suggestions as I am new to this world. Email or Facebook me with your insights.
On to book two - A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future by Daniel H. Pink. I am a member of a task force team at our district’s high school, and this is recommended reading. So, I want to complete this before our next meeting mid-January.
Onward!
Week One - Book One: The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
This was given to me as a Christmas present from my daughter’s boyfriend, Greg Parker. It is one of his favorite books that he read his senior year of high school. I was curious and asked if he HAD to read it for a class, and he said, no - it was a book that got passed around the senior class and a lot of his friends read it. So, I am curious to read a book that high school seniors willingly read and recommend.
December 31, 2009 - Tentative Reading List
Several of you have asked me lately if I really intend to go through with this challenge, and my answer is YES! I’m hoping all of you will help me achieve my goal my continuing to encourage and goad me to keep going. AND, I’m hoping that some of you will join me and make your own reading list for 2010. It might not be a book a week, but it could be a book a month or two a month.
Okay - here is my rough reading list. Of course, I will need 52 books in all, and as you can see, I don’t have quite that many YET. So, feel free to pipe in here with some of your favorites -- and make sure to tell my WHY I should read it. “It’s a great book!” won’t suffice! Tell me what components of the book make it great, how did it make you feel, why do you think I would enjoy it, etc. Remember, this isn’t just to help ME compile my 2010 reading list. This is also for all the other bibliophiles reading this blog.
So, here goes (in no particular order):
- A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf
- In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens, Alice Walker
- Agnes Grey, Anne Bronte
- The Portrait of a Lady, Henry James
- Chance, Joseph Conrad
- Courage for the Earth, Peter Matthiessen
- The Fragile Absolute, Slavoj Zizek
- J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography, Humphrey Carpenter
- A Sand County Almanac, Aldo Leopold
- Meeting the Tree of Life, John Tallmadge
- Teacher Man, Frank McCourt
- The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger
- Blink, Malcolm Gladwell
- Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe
- Jude the Obscure, Thomas Hardy
- Darwin on Trial, Philip E. Johnson
- Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Robert M. Pirsig
- Catch 22, Joseph Heller
- Wherever You Go, There You Are, Jon Kabat-Zinn
- The Stranger, Albert Camus
- Religion and Nothingness, Nishitani
- Siddhartha, Hermann Hesse
- The Secret Life of Bees, Sue Monk Kidd
- The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison
- Julie and Julia, Julie Powell
- The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho
- Olive Kitteridge, Elizabeth Strout
- My Life in France, Julia Child
- The Band of Brothers, Stephen E. Ambrose
- Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Annie Dillard
- Small Wonder, Barbara Kingsolver
- Touching the Void, Joe Simpson
- Prodigal Summer, Barbara Kingsolver
- The Kingdom of God is Within You, Leo Tolstoy
- The Sea Around Us, Rachel Carson
- My Antonia, Willa Cather
- Night, Elie Wiesel
- The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Stephen Chbosky
- The Longest Trip Home, John Grogan
- Howard’s End, E. M. Forster
- Crazy for the Storm, Norman Ollestad
- The Celtic Way of Seeing, Frank MacEowen
- The Primal Teen, Barbara Strauch
- A Whole New Mind, Daniel H. Pink
- The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis
