Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Room by Emma Donoghue


This amazing book is the story of a 5 year old boy and his mother, told in the voice of the boy Jack. We slowly learn that Jack and his Ma live alone in a 11X11 ft. room. Because he doesn't know why, we don't know why, they never go outside or see other people (except the mysterious Old Nick). This room and his Ma are Jack's whole life, he was born there and knows nothing else. She keeps his days busy with games and exercises and a little bit of tv ('so our brains don't rot'). I don't want to give away too much but when we learn, as Jack learns, why they are there your heart will start beating faster and faster and won't slow down until the very end.

This book is going to be the one that everyone talks about, book groups will choose it, Oprah will feature it (if she has the guts.. there is a thinly veiled Oprah-like character in the book who is not portrayed kindly)

Read it, read it...

Thursday, November 4, 2010

52 books in 52 weeks..

So that’s that. ... I set out to read a book a week for a year and my year's up! Here they are...

Mudbound
Half Broke Horses
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
America America
Brangelina
Last Night in Twisted River
In a Perfect World
Goldengrove
The Lost Symbol
The Good Life
Remarkable Creatures
Game Change
Too Much Happiness
A Wrinkle in Time & When You Reach Me
Interpreter of Maladies
The White Queen
A Reliable Wife
The Invention of Hugo Cabret
Artemus Fowl
The Pact
Lift
Sara’s Key
Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter
Little Bee
Vanishing Acts
The Time Traveler’s Wife
A Gate at the Stairs
Caught
Infidel
Imperfect Birds
The House on Salt Lake Road
Crossing to Safety
Incendiary
The Road
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
Operating Instructions
Tinkers
To Kill a Mockingbird
Slow Love: How I Lost My Job, Put On my Pajamas and Found Happiness
Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand
Island Light
Surfer’s Code: 12 Simple Lessons for Riding Through Life
Gift From the Sea
Freedom
Salem Falls
Anna Karenina
The Art of Keeping Cool
Three Cups of Tea
A Secret Kept
The Hour I First Believed
Shadow Tag
A Gathering of Old Men

A Gathering of Old Men by Ernest J. Gaines


When we lived in Charlotte, NC in the late 1990s an amazing and eye opening event happened one October day. We were invited to a work party with Jim's colleagues at a hunting lodge about 45 minutes outside of town, in the 'sticks' I suppose you could call it. It started in the afternoon and included dinner and partying into the evening (and no we weren't actually hunting).

As dinner wound up and the sun started to go down a few people gathered their things and got ready to go home. We implored them to stay and enjoy the nice warm bonfire. No, they said, incredibly matter of factly, they had to start heading out because they were black and driving nice cars and it wasn't 'smart' for them to be driving in these parts after dark. They would undoubtedly be stopped by the police they said shaking their heads. What was almost more disturbing to this northeastern raised girl, wasn't that they were going to be stopped (which believe me was horrific enough) but that they took it in stride, it was just the way it was in the South, perhaps the price they had to pay for daring to be wealthy African American bankers. This affected me for months afterwards (years I suppose, I still talk about it). In almost the year 2000 this was still happening in our country, anywhere in our country. It made me question our choice of places to live and help me decide we'd leave and move up north as soon as the opportunity presented itself.

I say this because when reading this incredibly moving and powerful little book it's hard to believe that Gaines' story took place in the late 70s and not the 1940s. It takes place in a sugarcane plantation in Louisiana where, while not technically slaves, blacks were beholden to whites for their jobs and their homes. They are beaten, lynched and humiliated for not 'behaving' the way they should. When the story opens a white man lays dead in the grass and when the sheriff is called to investigate he finds a young woman, Candy and about 20 old black men standing over him with guns, each confessing to his murder. They are there to protect one man, whom Candy, one of the owners of the plantation, was practically raised by. She is fiercely loyal and will not give in and let him be arrested.

The old men have spent their entire lives backing down and giving in. One tells the story of his young brother who was in a race with a white man.. "I saw my brother win that race. But he wasn't supposed to win, he was supposed to lose. We all knowed he was supposed to lose. Me, his own brother, knowed he was supposed to lose. He was supposed to lose years ago and because he didn't lose like a nigger is supposed to lose, they beat him. And they beat him and they beat him. And I didn't do nothing but stand there and watch them beat my brother down to the ground."

Many more stories come out of their mouths; of sisters who were raped, land taken away ... 'bused me if I did it right and 'bused me if I did it wrong - my whole life. And i took it. But this is their moment, they were done with running and ready to die over this, knowing that the white man who was murdered had a father who would be on his way to find out who killed his 'boy'.

I first read this book in college in the late 80s... 10 years after the events of the book and 10 years before our experience in Charlotte. It makes me wonder how far we've come, or not come. Eloquently written, this book should be a must read for everyone.