Pages

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

DECEMBER 2019 BOOKERS MINUTES & MUSINGS, Bookers Highlight Reel of Christmas Past, Present, & Future, a presentation by JoDee Neathery


“And the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet ice cold in the snow, stood puzzling and puzzling, how could it be so? It came without ribbons. It came without tags. It came without packages, boxes, or bags…then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. What if Christmas doesn’t come from a store. What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little more.”

22 met at the home of Jane Shaw for Bookers’ Highlight Reel of Christmas Past, Present & Future, color coded candy-cane, and presented by your chairperson, “moi” featuring a walk-through of Bookers’ Christmases from 2004 to present. As always, our members stepped up volunteering to bring food and spirits to toast the season and our very special group of ladies. Special thanks to Jane for opening her beautifully decorated home for our celebration, to Bonnie Magee, our Food Czar Extraordinaire, for coordinating our feast, to our elf, Barbara Creach, for directing the sock in a sack exchange, and to our veteran Mimosa bartender who also worked “flute” cleanup, Janet Noblitt, for keeping us hydrated and tidy! And, word of the hoopla traveled fast as a bevy of migrating birds and white pelicans converged lakeside to join in the sing-along of, We Wish You A Merry Christmas. A warm welcome to our newest book lover, Karen Gallini, and we hope she becomes a regular Booker. I’ll deliver the box of cards, a crystal angel that lights up, and a warm and fuzzy pair of socks to our Sheri Green who needs some Bookers’ love and a spark of light.

After the Highlight Reel of Christmas Past and Present, Christmas Future was presented, we ended our festivities with a reading of a short excerpt from my work-in-progress novel, A Kind of Hush, a gripping family drama detailing how life is seldom a tidy affair exploring if there is a gray area between right and wrong. The Mackie family of four is enjoying a summer outing when their life is once again upended. Are they victims of a tragic accident or was it something more heinous – and if so whodunit and whydunit. We begin in Buffalo, New York in the summer of 2012…

BOOKERS HIGHLIGHT REEL OF CHRISTMAS PAST, PRESENT, & FUTURE

One of the most timeless and universal themes, both poignant and simple highlighting the essence of Christmas was the story of four young ladies’ march from childhood to adulthood addressing the conflicts they met between family and personal growth set within the background of the Civil War. The opening line of Little Women by Louisa Mae Alcott is “Christmas won’t be Christmas without any presents….”
I’ve got a present for each of you that I hope you enjoy. It’s not wrapped in glittery foil paper and tied up with an organza ribbon. Its only value is in the memories it shares and the promise of honoring Christmas in our hearts so that it will last all year. We always talk of books being our vision into worlds we’ve yet to discover and characters we’ve yet to meet. They allow us to walk in other’s shoes by expanding our minds and embracing thoughts and cultures beyond our comfort zone. Many of you have been a Booker since our inception and some only a short while, but the purpose of this little gift is to show everyone where we have been by strolling through Bookers’ Christmases beginning in 2004. Enjoy the journey!
Christmas 2004:
Skipping Christmas, John Grisham & The 5 People you Meet in Heaven, Mitch Albom
Enter a frazzled super Mom during the holidays juggling the kid’s activities, shopping for the perfect gift, preparing the holiday meal while maintaining a smooth and orderly family life. One day in frustration, she slammed the car door exclaiming, “Who ever invented this holiday ought to be crucified.” From the back seat came a small voice, “They have already done that.” The book points to what should be celebrated rather than what is and what it means to be on the receiving end of kindness and neighborly love.
Mitch Albom’s powerful, thought-provoking book, The 5 People you Meet in Heaven, encourages the reader to embrace this idea of heaven where he suggests there are really no strangers in the world, only family we have yet to meet.
Christmas 2005:
The Life of Pi, Yann Martel
This is one of those books that fosters discussion at the drop of a hat – is it the kind of book that makes you believe in God or one that makes you believe in the human need to tell stories in order to make sense of our existence. How does a boy, a 450-pound Bengal tiger, an injured zebra, and an orangutan on a 26-foot lifeboat in the middle of the Pacific survive 227 days at sea? The author tells us, “life is a story…isn’t one with an imaginative overlay better.” God is shorthand for anything that is beyond material – he asks us to cherish a story devoted to the powers beyond.

Christmas 2006:
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, Dai Sijie
The fable style book follows two young boys exiled to a remote Chinese village for re-education during the Cultural Revolution, however, it is not about politics or the evils of the regime, but a sweet, humorous, touching story about first love, teenage relationships, and how fate of empires can hinge on the education of their youth.

Christmas 2007:
Poetry Appreciation Month
Robert Frost says a “poem begins as a lump in the throat; a sense of wrong; a homesickness; a lovesickness; it finds the thought and the thought finds the words.” Bookers shared their favorites.

Christmas 2008:
Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen
A story of survival, loyalty, adventure, love, and the frailty of aging set in the world of a third-rate circus trying to make it in the midst of the Great Depression. The story ended as it began when 22-year-old Jacob escaped his circumstances and joined the traveling circus…and then 92-year old Jacob did it again.

Christmas 2009:
Astrid & Veronica, Linda Olsson
A record number, 36, Bookers attended this one. The novel, acted out by Bernie Crudden and Patti Branco, is one of an unlikely friendship between two women, four decades apart but bound by comparable histories who find comfort and freedom in their shared stories. We learn how the shards of loneliness can be shattered by the power of love.

Christmas 2010:
Not My Daughter, Barbara Delinsky
Another record turnout, 37 Bookers with special guest, MN’s sister Dianne, who by her own admission, “reads by osmosis” listening to her sisters. We launched into a chorus of Christmas carols before our own thespian, Bernie Crudden, who donned several hats in telling this story displayed her professionalism in light of being “underwhelmed with the character development and the happy-ever-after conclusion to an unlikely story.”

Christmas 2011:
A Week in Winter, Marcia Willett
29 Bookers plopped down in an English countryside and into the lives of colorful characters telling a tale of love found and love lost leaving us with a warm and fuzzy feeling inside an old family farmhouse that was at the center of the story.

Christmas 2012:
The Young Wife, Pam Lewis & Back When We Were Grownups, Anne Tyler
A common thread zigzagged throughout both novels and the similarities of the book jackets highlighted the links between the two – both were views from behind the two women, both looking off to the side, one with an updo, the other with a ponytail…one at life’s sunrise, the other facing twilight both reflecting on their decisions. They forced us to look back and wonder, have I turned into the wrong person or am I just a different person than I was.

Christmas 2013:
Ordinary Grace, William Kent Krueger
A story about a boy standing at the door of manhood trying to understand a world that seems to be falling apart around him. The novel is about a “grace so ordinary there was no reason at all to remember it.” A miracle happened that day of ordinary grace within the sorrow of a family’s tragedy a simple prayer offered in perfect speech was unexplainable but every word, unforgettable. The book struck a chord as if a chapter was taken out of our own lives as we acknowledged that deep faith in a power greater than ourselves is essential to reconciling tragedy. The title of the book is so poignant because a miracle arrived in the steady voice of a young man who conquered fear, and a mother who returned to her family.

Christmas 2014:
The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, Gabrielle Zevin
The book is a “love letter to the world of books” about a thirty-nine-year-old grieving widow, the owner of a small bookstore on a remote island off the coast of New England who overcomes depression and bitterness to give his heart and name to an abandoned child and trust that love deserves a second chance. Control of the meeting flew out the window, when towards the end we had a lively discussion on “coupling” on the first date. I’m speechless now as I must have been then!

Christmas 2015:
Our Souls at Night, Kent Haruf
This novel is a touching, often humorous story of the loneliness of a man and a woman, both “up in years” coming together to wrestle with the events of their lives and their hopes for the imminent future. Their stories were acted out in the bedroom of Jean & Lee Alexander – Addie was played by MN and I was in the character of Louis. Addie’s final dialogue went like this: I love having Louis staying over the night…I like the friendship… hearing Louis breathe…I love the air, the country, the backyard, the gravel in the back alley, the grass… the cool nights…lying in the bed and talking to Louis in the dark…I was just so lonely especially at night.

Christmas 2016:
7 Women, Eric Metaxas
Our purpose in selecting this book was to enlighten, to learn, and appreciate the sacrifices these women endured in the name of benevolent goodwill toward humanity. Strong faith played a significant role in their resolve, but we also learned the secrets of what made these great women greater. They were Joan of Arc, Susanna Wesley, Hannah More, Saint Maria of Paris, Corrie Ten Boom, Rosa Parks, and Mother Teresa.

Christmas 2017:
The Trouble with Goats & Sheep, Joanna Cannon
Unfortunately, this was an unpopular selection as only four including me liked it. Some thought it was “much to do about nothing…a waste of time.” It was a parable, a simple story to illustrate a moral or spiritual lesson as told by Jesus in the Gospels. The author used the parable of sheep and goats found in Matthew 25:31-46 where all those on earth will be brought before the Lord and He will separate them as a “as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats.” It points out the difference between man redeemed and saved versus man condemned and lost.

Christmas 2018:
Mr. Dickens and His Carol, Samantha Silva
Last year we rebounded as this selection was a favorite, the author drawing on the truths of Mr. Dicken’s life at the time he created “A Christmas Carol.” One of the great ironies of this classic was it was written in six weeks because of his dire financial situation, but the result was the clearest example of his vision of the world, not only at Christmas  but for all time…we must be responsible for those who have less and generosity is the only antidote for our selfishness, greed, and miserliness.

So, we’ve talked about Christmas Past having looked at the 15 Christmases we’ve shared together and the common thread in all these selections was the power of love, faith, kindness, knowledge, and trust in the things we cannot explain. So, let’s look at Christmas PresentChristmas 2019 – we’re inundated with disturbing news feed from the world, our State and country; a normal day for our school children is participating in active shooter drills; trusted leaders of religious groups have fallen from grace…and the list goes on. However, here we enjoy a continual spirit of giving through our community’s philanthropic efforts and the increase of residents calling Pinnacle “home” allowing us to grow our friend-base by meeting new people. 

Also, on the bright side beyond our little piece of the world we find twenty drivers on a busy highway stopping to rescue a dog; we see two young sisters raising money to provide Thanksgiving meals to those in need in their area; thousands of winter coats are donated for children living in public housing in Chicago; a single dad adopts five siblings, ages 5,4,3,2, and 1so they could remain together; a Florida man paid off 400 student lunch debts – all of this heartwarming news happened just in November of this year. All these examples of the profoundness of Dr. Seuss who professed, “Christmas will always be as long as we stand heart to heart and hand in hand.”

Now on to Bookers’ Christmas Future – let’s look to 2020 when just maybe we might consider a new novel, a gripping family drama detailing how life is seldom a tidy affair asking the question, is there a gray area between right and wrong. The Mackie family of four is enjoying a summer outing when their life is again upended. Are they victims of a tragic accident or was it something more heinous…and if so whodunit and whydunit. We begin in Buffalo, New York in the summer of 2012 with an excerpt from my work-in-progress, A Kind of Hush.

As a side note, when the character profile of Gabe appeared to me, I scribbled it down in the middle of the night, certain my next endeavor had to include him. Why? I loved his curiosity and vulnerability highlighted by his adeptness to be younger and older than his years. He has become a part of me to the point that I think he is certain to be in my will. To me, the others feed off his uniqueness and as he grows, so do they.

Thank you for being such a captive audience and aren’t we fortunate to be here together to share in a season which engages the whole world in a conspiracy of love where the world is softer and more beautiful.

Happy Holidays, and yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus – if not, the eternal light with which childhood fills the world would be extinguished.


On the business side:

We received a card from Melba Holt which began, “No Bookers…Boo Hoo!” She and Layton have moved into Belmont Village in Dallas, Texas. She will keep up with Bookers through the minutes and is on a hunt for local fellow book lovers in their community and I’m sure she’ll be successful! She would love a visit if we’re in the neighborhood.

Our book selection committee has filled the May slot (see below) and they are still working on our summer read. We’ll keep you posted!

Kristin Hannah’s novel, The Nightingale, is in movie production and real-life sisters, Dakota and Elle Fanning, have been cast as the book sisters, Vianne and Isabelle.

Exciting News:
BookTrib was created as a news source for people who love books, want to find out what’s happening in the book world and love learning about great authors of whom they may not have heard. Their mission is to bring discerning readers and rising authors closer together in a big way with more than 70,000 monthly website visitors and close to 50,000 views on social media.

They have a book club network across the country boasting 80,000 members. Bookers is now a part of that network!! We fit their dynamic as we meet in person monthly, have a large membership base, and enjoy finding reads not necessarily on the bestsellers’ lists.

BookTrib puts together a “Booster Box” every month of four or five books (advanced reader copies and/or recently published books) and send them to the member clubs. Our job is to listen to a short synopsis, give away or raffle them off, take a photo of the “winners” and post on their website and on social media (which I will do)…They of course would love our opinion on the books. There’s a reason that publishers and authors pay $1,500.00 monthly for this service – it gives them invaluable feedback on the good, bad, and ugly, the reader dynamic, etc…During our summer months they will send the books to me and I’m thinking of doing a “monthly summer email” about them to see if anyone is interested in reading one of them…the bottom line is we’ll be getting lots of free books and who knows some might just be the treasures we are always looking for. Stay tuned! 

COLOR CODING SYSTEM
WHITE:         LIGHT READ
PINK:             MODERATELY CHALLENGING
RED:              CHALLENGING
January 14, 2020:       The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell by Robert Dugoni
Sam always saw the world through different eyes, born with red pupils he was called “Devil Boy” by his classmates: “God’s will” is what his mother called his ocular albinism. His unique condition, his mother’s devout faith, coupled with his father’s practical wisdom and his two other misfit friends makes for an entertaining read.
PINK
                                    Home of Beverly Dossett
                                    Discussion Leader: Ann Ireland
February 11:               Sold on a Monday by Kristina McMorris
A scrawled sign peddling young siblings on a farmhouse porch captures the desperation sweeping the country in 1931. A struggling reporter snaps a photograph which changes his life with consequences he never expected.
                                    PINKISH RED
Home of Daryl Daniels
Discussion Leader: Rokhshie Malone
March 10:                   The Roots of the Olive Tree by Courtney Miller Santo
A debut novel set in a house in an olive grove in Northern California, a touching story bringing to life five generations of women, including an unforgettable 112 year-old matriarch determined to break all Guinness longevity records – the secrets and lies that divide them and the love that ultimately ties them together.
PINK
Home of Patty Evans
Discussion Leader: Katherine McDonald
April 14:                     Beloved by Toni Morrison
In honor of the late Nobel Prize laureate’s finest achievement which stares unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery transforming history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby…filled with bitter poetry and suspense as taut as a rope.
RED
                                    Home of Jean Alexander
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD
May 12:                      The One-in-a-Million Boy by Monica Wood
One-hundred and four-year old Ona tells the eleven-year-old unnamed boy who has been helping her out every Saturday morning, “The story of your life never starts at the beginning.” A heartwarming tale of love, loss, and friendship.
PINK
                                    Evening Wine & Cheese meeting
                                    Home of Melanie Prebis        
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD
Summer read:             TBD

Bookers is about friends walking in each other’s shoes and a community never shy about offering hope and courage to those in need. Bookers shared in the celebration of the Christmas spirit and spread good wishes of health and happiness for the New Year. Many thanks from a humbled author to all those who have been my cheerleaders for Bookers and in my writing journey. I am a staunch believer in the wonderment of camaraderie among those in love with the written word…we agree, we disagree, we respect the opinion of others, and through reading we quench our thirst for knowledge as we stand united as a group of “bookies.”

Merry Christmas and happy reading,
JoDee



Tuesday, November 12, 2019

NOVEMBER 2019 BOOKERS MINUTES & MUSINGS, The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty


Modern “dance was a visualization of divinity, a way for dancers to realize that they were not in their bodies – their bodies were inside of them.”



Sixteen-years old Louise Brooks embodied the spirit of the Denishawn dance company noted for freeing the “human body from the ugly, crippling, unhealthy clothes that prevailed around the turn of the 20th century.” She was a maverick in every aspect of her colorful life.

17 met at the home of Bonnie Magee co-hosted by Rosemary Farmer. Barbara Creach, recovering from her “Alabama arm-twisting” led the discussion of this month’s selection. The author, a Kansas-native, imagines the life of the Wichita matron, Cora Carlisle, the thirty-six-year-old chaperone who accompanied future silent film star Louise Brooks to New York City in 1922. Cora’s story takes precedent over that of her larger-than-life fifteen-year-old “charge” as we discover the real reason she is interested in escorting her to the Big Apple where Louise is enrolled in dance school. Cora lived in a Catholic orphanage in Manhattan until she was seven and she yearns to learn about her parentage. She finds time to seek out the information she desires in spite of watching over a precocious, sexual, beautiful and brainy teenager and discovers the missing link in her life as she is liberated in a way she could not have imagined. The five weeks they spend together transforms their lives forever. Cora represents the history of women’s rights in the 20th century, applauding the end of prohibition, championing birth control and racial equality. Louise stood alone in a crowd – she was striking, extremely talented, self-absorbed, and self-destructive – a victim of abuse, an unwanted child of a mother who lived her dream vicariously through her daughter. She flew in the face of morality with the bravado of a street savvy professional no doubt begging for someone to love her for herself rather than a means to an end. Readers are introduced to the rich history of the 20’s, 30’s and beyond – from the orphan trains to Prohibition, flappers, the onset of the Great Depression, and the movement for equal rights and new opportunities for women. We learn how rapidly everything changed from fashion and hemlines to values and attitudes and what a difference it all made for those who lived in the midst of this tumultuous climate. Through their unconventional and brash war of wills relationship, Cora and Louise provided the other a sense of belonging, mutual respect, and unconditional love neither had experienced.
Our discussion included the sad relationship between Louise and her mother, Myra, who viewed her daughter only “as a limb of her own body” resenting Louise for “throwing away more than she (Myra) ever had.” We talked about the contrast in preferred reading materials between the star and the chaperone – Louise preferred German, Arthur Schopenhauer, nicknamed the Philosopher of Pessimism, whose thinking praises beauty and compassion and was one of the first to write extensively about sexuality. There was no God in his world – the original sin is the crime of existence itself…we are nothing but a set of desires (our desire to stay alive or have sex) or drives (heartbeats or the need to reproduce.) His opinion of marriage – getting married is like grabbing blind into a sack of snakes and hoping to find an eel. Cora preferred The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, winner of the 1921 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. It is a love story on many levels and a documentary of a culture – the elite rich society of New York – set in the 1870’s detailing how they buried their own dreams and deepest desires behind a greater need to be accepted and approved by their own “reference” group as “people are chained to separate destinies” true of the rich and poor alike. We examined the oddity (to our generation at least) that Lysol was promoted through advertising as a feminine hygiene product also useful as a means of birth control. We talked about the necessity that the secrets within the Carlisle family be held forever – the ramifications of their discovery would shatter too many lives – and for what purpose? We discussed how much of Louise Brooks’ behavior would be considered scandalous today – most agreeing in light of the escapades of celebrities such as Tiger Woods, Woody Allen, Monica Lewinsky, Richard Nixon, Penn State sex abuse scandal, U.S. Olympic gymnastic team doctor, Supreme Court Justice, Clarence Thomas, New York governor, Eliot Spitzer…to name a few – Louise Brooks self-medicating drinking, affairs, marriages, etc…might not even make The Enquirer. I did have a “peeve” with the 79 times “fine” was used by the author…I’m letting go!
The ending of the book reminded us we are not just one person identified by a moniker, but an accumulation of the “hats” we’ve proudly worn. 
COLOR CODING SYSTEM
WHITE:         LIGHT READ
PINK:             MODERATELY CHALLENGING
RED:              CHALLENGING
December 10:             Show up with the Christmas spirit in your heart – the one that causes the weary world to look beyond what confronts us daily and for a little moment forget the things that are small and wretched. I’m in charge. No book to buy just enjoy a dusting of Ho Ho Ho and bring one pair of warm and fuzzy tootsie covers to exchange (Christmas themed or fun slippers or socks) in a gift bag, no tag.
                                             Home of Jane Shaw
                                    Program: JoDee Neathery
Bonnie Magee will again coordinate the food and beverage.
January 14, 2020:       The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell by Robert Dugoni
Sam always saw the world through different eyes, born with red pupils he was called “Devil Boy” by his classmates: “God’s will” is what his mother called his ocular albinism. His unique condition, his mother’s devout faith, coupled with his father’s practical wisdom and his two other misfit friends makes for an entertaining read.
PINK
                                    Home of Beverly Dossett
                                    Discussion Leader: Ann Ireland
February 11:               Sold on a Monday by Kristina McMorris
A scrawled sign peddling young siblings on a farmhouse porch captures the desperation sweeping the country in 1931. A struggling reporter snaps a photograph which changes his life with consequences he never expected.
                                    PINKISH RED
Home of Daryl Daniels
Discussion Leader: Rokhshie Malone
March 10:                   The Roots of the Olive Tree by Courtney Miller Santo
A debut novel set in a house in an olive grove in Northern California, a touching story bringing to life five generations of women, including an unforgettable 112 year-old matriarch determined to break all Guinness longevity records – the secrets and lies that divide them and the love that ultimately ties them together.
PINK
Home of Patty Evans
Discussion Leader: Katherine McDonald
April 14:                     Beloved by Toni Morrison
In honor of the late Nobel Prize laureate’s finest achievement which stares unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery transforming history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby…filled with bitter poetry and suspense as taut as a rope.
RED
                                    Home of Jean Alexander
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD
May 12:                      TBD
                                    Home of TBD
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD
Summer read:             TBD
We are born from the same artist that created sunrises, sunsets, and rainbows corroborating that different shades of life make the painting more beautiful.
Happy Reading,
JoDee

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

OCTOBER 2019 BOOKERS MINUTES & MUSINGS, The Silent Patient, Alex Michaeldes


"The mind is its own place and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven."  John Milton 

19 Bookers met at the home of Rokhshie Malone to discuss this month’s debut novel, a psychological thriller featuring a famous painter married to an in-demand photographer whose life seems perfect until one fateful night. We’re introduced to a gruesome murder followed by the psychologist’s fascination with the murderer – she held captive in her own mind – and his maneuvers to secure her as a patient. We follow his successes and failures tied to her care while numerous subplots dangle throughout the book – just enough to distract the reader from the “real” story. And, finally the shocking reveal was as equally impressive as the slow-burning journey to that point. It reads more like a character study methodically building flawed characters, subsequently breaking them down layer by layer while investigating the mind of a criminal. Many thanks to Rebecca Brisendine for dissecting this complicated book and summarizing the plot as she said, “it seemed to begin in the middle, go to the end, and then reveal the beginning, ending in the middle.”

Rebecca provided details about the author that ties into the creation of his novel. He is a former screenwriter who was once told, “Books expand a story and films contract a story. When you slow down by building characters, plot, and details you share the lives in the story with the reader.” Born in 1977 in Cypress to an English mother and a Greek father, Greek mythology, especially Euripides who wrote the myth of Alcestis, haunted him and he knew someday he would write about it. In the story the hero is condemned to death by the Fates but is offered a loophole – escape death if he can persuade someone else to die for him. Alcestis offers to die for him, he accepts, she dies and departs for Hades, but it doesn’t end there. There’s a happy ending referred to as a deus ex machina which is a literary plot device where a seemingly unsolvable problem in a story is suddenly and abruptly resolved by an unexpected and unlikely occurrence. Alcestis is returned to living, hubby is moved to tears, but she doesn’t speak and is led back to the house in silence.

Alicia’s self-portrait was entitled Alcestis…it’s a painting about silence and at the heart of all art lies a mystery – her silence was her secret and her mystery. It was important to find out what molded her as the experts say no one is born evil…a baby cannot hate the mother without the mother first hating the baby…babies are sponges, blank slates with only basic needs…but something went wrong in her house for her to harbor vengeful fantasies…rage like fear is reactive…something happened in her childhood to shape her into a person capable of murder. Her father’s comment after her mother was killed in a car accident would be enough to trigger that response! And, in the end the only one she could trust was her diary.

Most read and liked the book although it started slowly for some; a few didn’t believe from the beginning that Alicia murdered her husband. We talked about Theo and his relationship with his wife and his relentless pursuit to prove she was having an affair; why did Alicia give Theo her diary – was she manipulating him and showing she held all the cards or did she trust that he was trying to help her; the author skillfully revealed Alicia’s inner turmoil through her artwork and her physical descriptions – she’s just out of reach to everyone but ever present in the story. We wondered if Alicia had another copy of the diary as Theo could have destroyed it, but he returned it to her – why – because it didn’t incriminate him in any way. Secrets are at the heart of the novel and one by one they are revealed and in the end our jaws hit the floor (at least mine did.) We also talked about Room by Emma Donoghue when MN and I recreated the 12x12 room Jack and his mother occupied. There was talk of recreating this…a visit from Alabama would be in order…stay tuned but don’t hold your breath!
On the business side:

We are all saddened by the passing of Roger Prebis on Sunday. All we can offer are thoughts and prayers from our hearts to theirs. Trees are planted, trunks get taller, thicker, and stronger, old branches support new branches. Bookers Blessing Branch represents an arm of comfort, the strength of friendship, the empathy of a shared loss, a hug wrapped in heartfelt sentiment, and love from one person to another. We attached our notes of support on the branch for the Prebis family and I delivered it today…they were thankful and touched by the outpouring! Bookers “rock.”

Many thanks to everyone who contributed to the garage sale and to those who worked tirelessly to organize the PWC event of the season. We endured gale force winds, blinding rain, and cold temperatures but the dedicated spirit that makes it successful prevailed – it’s always been about our community giving back, not only with the net proceeds going to scholarships and local charities, it’s bigger than that…for the shoppers who are treated to an early Christmas by completing their wish lists three-fold and as Jean Alexander pointed out it’s also a bonding time for PWC members, new and “old” participating in an effort to help others. That puts a smile on my face and a warmth in my heart that writing a check would not compare (in my humble opinion of course!)

Barry Evans is slowly recovering from his surgery and has been seen walking within the “compound” and rumor has it eating as much ice cream as he can…baby steps in the right direction. We wish him continued progress and send our love to the family as well.

Melba and Layton Holt covertly left Pinnacle – maybe not in the dead of night, but unknown to many of us. I emailed her “demanding” an explanation and she explained Layton needed to be somewhere to be able to receive intensive treatment for his pain and although they were “gone” their house is not on the market and she plans to visit us often. Good news for all who adore them!

COLOR CODING SYSTEM
WHITE:         LIGHT READ
PINK:             MODERATELY CHALLENGING
RED:              CHALLENGING
November 12:             The Chaperone, Laura Moriarty
A novel about the woman who chaperoned an irreverent Louise Brooks (a famous silent-film star) to New York City in 1922 and the summer that would change them both.
                                    PINKISH WHITE
Home of Beverly Dossett
Discussion Leader: Barbara Creach (Thank you MN!)

December 10:             Show up with the Christmas spirit in your heart – the one that causes the weary world to look beyond what confronts us daily and for a little moment forget the things that are small and wretched. I’m in charge. No book to buy just enjoy a dusting of Ho Ho Ho and bring one pair of warm and fuzzy tootsie covers – a sock in a sack – to exchange. 
Home of Jane Shaw
Program by JoDee Neathery
Bonnie Magee will again coordinate the food and beverage.

January 14, 2020:       The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell by Robert Dugoni
Sam always saw the world through different eyes, born with red pupils he was called “Devil Boy” by his classmates: “God’s will” is what his mother called his ocular albinism. His unique condition, his mother’s devout faith, coupled with his father’s practical wisdom and his two other misfit friends makes for an entertaining read.
PINK
                                    Home of Bonnie Magee
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

February 11:               Sold on a Monday by Kristina McMorris
A scrawled sign peddling young siblings on a farmhouse porch captures the desperation sweeping the country in 1931. A struggling reporter snaps a photograph which changes his life with consequences he never expected.
                                    PINKISH RED
Home of Daryl Daniels
Discussion Leader: Rokhshie Malone

March 10:                   The Roots of the Olive Tree by Courtney Miller Santo
A debut novel set in a house in an olive grove in Northern California, a touching story bringing to life five generations of women, including an unforgettable 112 year-old matriarch determined to break all Guinness longevity records – the secrets and lies that divide them and the love that ultimately ties them together.
PINK
Home of Patty Evans
Discussion Leader: Katherine McDonald

April 14:                     Beloved by Toni Morrison
In honor of the late Nobel Prize laureate’s finest achievement which stares unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery transforming history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby…filled with bitter poetry and suspense as taut as a rope.
RED
                                    Home of Jean Alexander
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

May 12:                      TBD
                                    Home of TBD
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

Summer read:             TBD

“As a single footstep will not make a path on the earth, so a single thought will not make a pathway in the mind. To make a deep physical path, we walk again and again. To make a deep mental path, we must think over and over the kind of thoughts we wish to dominate our lives.” Henry David Thoreau

Happy Reading,
JoDee



Friday, September 13, 2019

SEPTEMBER 2019 BOOKERS MINUTES & MUSINGS, The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett


Cathedrals, the architectural jewels of our collective memories, “speak a gentle peace binding us to the past even as it gives us images, a vocabulary, and a narrative that enables us to richly inhabit the present.”

We welcomed 19 Bookers back from our summer break at the home of Katherine McDonald hoping everyone is refreshed and ready to embrace some literature. As we begin our 16th year, it’s important to remember how it all began. In a text from Alabama this morning, MN reiterated one of our original thoughts when forming the book club was how it would encourage all to walk in the shoes of others, to broaden our horizons and leave our safe shell, opening our hearts, minds, and souls to new ideas. We’ve laughed with joy and cried too many times in heartache but throughout it all, our special group of friends…our special community of caring individuals…and our mutual respect and love of books has endured. Friendships are like a long steady soft rain…it’s not so harsh that it will destroy…yet not so soft that it goes unnoticed. Our friends nourish our hearts.

Several “regulars” were missing today – Melanie at UTSW after Roger’s extensive surgery to remove more of his malignant brain tumor – Patty Evans at hubby Barry’s side as he recovers from surgery – Pat Faherty with a doctor’s appointment in Dallas in hopes of receiving her “get out of jail card” to allow her to drive and begin PT.

Sheri Green is still undergoing chemotherapy but has gained some weight, is managing her pain better, and has been out and about a little more. And our “honorary Bookers’ prop handler,” Elaine Bownes, after a reoccurrence of some malignant cells, is back with monthly chemotherapy but is handling this little hiccup in her usual fighting spirit.

Our summer read, the dainty little tome of 400,000 words with twelve major characters and fourteen minor ones, 973 pages published in 1989, was reviewed by Melba Holt in September 2008 in our fifth year of Bookers (we welcomed new member Bonnie Magee at this meeting.)We voted to reread this wonderful work of historical fiction set in the 12th century when education was the responsibility of the church or only available to the very wealthy. Few could read or write, people were dependent on the church for their livelihood, and freedom was almost non-existent. The novel chronicles the lives of those building magnificent cathedrals that are standing to this day without power tools or understanding of structural engineering. If you are hooked on Mr. Follett’s fictional village of Kingsbridge, the second in the series, World Without End picks up two centuries later with another 1,000-page story starring the descendants of the original “Pillars” characters, followed by the final installment, A Column of Fire, a mere 923 pages published in 2017. You would certainly be ensconced in the historical timeframes and characters if you decide to read the trilogy. He has written a short history of the meaning of cathedrals entitled, Notre-Dame, 80 pages available on October 29, 2019…in his words,

The wonderful cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris, one of the greatest achievements of European civilization, was on fire. The sight dazed and disturbed us profoundly. I was on the edge of tears. Something priceless was dying in front of our eyes. The feeling was bewildering, as if the earth was shaking.”

The author, a very successful thriller writer and a self-professed non-believer in God, seemed the most unlikely candidate to write a novel about building a shrine to what he didn’t believe in. However, in search of ways to describe buildings and after reading a couple of architectural books, he developed a keen interest in cathedrals. The burning question for him was, why were these cathedrals built – beyond the obvious reason of the glory of God and the vanity of bishops. He knew he had to channel his enthusiasm into a novel – or three as it turned out. It took at least thirty years to build a cathedral, so this would be the spine of the novel recreating the entire life of the village and the people who lived there. It was voted the third greatest book ever written behind The Lord of the Rings and the Bible and was placed behind To Kill a Mockingbird as one of the sixty greatest novels of the last sixty years. The definition of success instantly assumed another level for Mr. Follett.

Jean McSpadden, who admittedly read the novel three times, led the discussion of “Pillars” offering her insights into this first book in Follett’s historical fiction series and arguably the best of the three. A show of hands revealed most had read and finished the novel…at least the first time. Jean offered a visual of two cathedrals, Lincoln and Cambridge and a photo of the Pope’s visit to the Pinnacle Club. She shared a view into the author’s reasoning and progression leading to the writing of the novel.  He did paint the church in a less than golden light…monks were sworn to chastity, but that did not apply to priests…bishops had mistresses, and parish priests had housekeepers. “Clerical celibacy was a law too hard to be obeyed.” A complete summary of “Pillars” might take days, but Jean succinctly took us from the sinking of the White Ship leaving King Henry of England without a legitimate heir and the succession of the throne disputed, to the “hanging” prologue where a innocent man dies for stealing a chalice from the monastery, to the revelation of who conspired with barons to sink the White Ship.

We discussed the character of some of the characters – particularly the evil William and Bishop Waleran Bigod; how poor Tom Builder seemed to just climb one hill and then get thrown off the top, a favorite character in Prior Philip, and the discovery of that Jonathan, Tom’s son, was alive. We talked about how inanimate objects like stained glass windows and tiles recording the entire Bible served as historical storytellers. We marveled at how long it took to build these magnificent structures, noting that it took over one-hundred years to build the Washington National Cathedral with George Herbert Walker Bush laying the last brick. We wondered if after writing this book, Mr. Follett had a change of perspective on his views of religion.

From the critics: 85% or 4,764 people posted positive reviews on Amazon with 15% or 826 posting critical comments…from the negative side readers (who are entitled to their opinions) they complained about the rape scenes and how Follett painted William with loving adoration, adding if you want to be horrified to the point of nausea, this book is for you. Another one described it as long, (which it is) boring, and trashy…pure filth, graphic sex – as if the reader needs an instruction manual and the overuse of the “f” word (which none of us recalled) is according to this reader – generally how the trashier people express themselves. Also, at issue was the use of the contemporary words “soul mate” used to describe an English peasant in the 12th century, and passages like, “she would be lively, he felt sure; she would wriggle and scratch” registered on the reader’s “crap-o-meter.” The cream of the crop, unfair to any author, are one-star reviews because of the quality of the print or the print was too small.


On the business side:
Many thanks to everyone who stepped up to the plate as usual to show our support for fellow Bookers’ Melanie and Pat. Also, MN sends her love and appreciation for the get-well cards after her second knee replacement on August 1.  If you have not responded to the luncheon for MN (11:00 @ the club, Friday, September 27th) and want to be included, please let me know no later than September 20th. We have 21 signed up. I will pass along your names to Jennifer and because of the numbers, we might have a limited or set menu. I’ll share more information as soon as possible.
As always, our committee has been diligently searching for our next great reads and appreciated those who input their suggestions as well. The committee, with the exception of Katherine, has endured a couple of setbacks, so our list is incomplete at this time. Here’s what we’re recommending so far. Please note below we need host home for May. Please let me know if you can help. And as I said in the meeting, I’ll be sitting by the phone when you call generously offering to be the discussion leader for any of these wonderful books!!

COLOR CODING SYSTEM
WHITE:         LIGHT READ
PINK:             MODERATELY CHALLENGING
RED:              CHALLENGING
October 15:                 The Silent Patient by Alex Michaeldes
Debut novel. A psychological thriller featuring a famous painter married to an in-demand photographer whose life seems perfect…until one fateful night. Please use discretion in sharing the ending as it would be a big spoiler alert for those who have not read the novel.
DEEP PINK
Home of Rokhshie Malone
Discussion Leader: Rebecca Brisendine

November 12:             The Chaperone, Liane Moriarty
A novel about the woman who chaperoned an irreverent Louise Brooks (a famous silent-film star) to New York City in 1922 and the summer that would change them both.
                                    PINKISH WHITE
Home of Beverly Dossett
Discussion Leader: TBD

December 10:             TBD
                                    Home of Jane Shaw

January 14, 2020:       The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell by Robert Dugoni
Sam always saw the world through different eyes, born with red pupils he was called “Devil Boy” by his classmates: “God’s will” is what his mother called his ocular albinism. His unique condition, his mother’s devout faith, coupled with his father’s practical wisdom and his two other misfit friends makes for an entertaining read.
PINK
                                    Home of Bonnie Magee
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

February 11:               Sold on a Monday by Kristina McMorris
A scrawled sign peddling young siblings on a farmhouse porch captures the desperation sweeping the country in 1931. A struggling reporter snaps a photograph which changes his life with consequences he never expected.
                                    PINKISH RED
Home of Daryl Daniels
Discussion Leader: TBD

March 10:                   TBD
Home of Patty Evans
Discussion Leader: TBD

April 14:                     TBD
                                    Home of Jean Alexander
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

May 12:                      TBD
                                    Home of TBD
                                    Discussion Leader: TBD

Summer read:             TBD

Books under consideration to fill these spots are as follows:
At Home at Mitford and/or The Mitford Series (A summer study in Grace), or Shepherds Abiding, Jan Karon
Hiddensee, Gregory Maguire
Christmas Quilt (# 8 in the series), Jennifer Chiaverini
Beloved, Toni Morrison (classic)
Everything You Are, Kerry Anne King
The Only Woman in the Room, Maria Benedict
The Last House Guest, Megan Miranda
The Roots of the Olive Tree, Courtney Miller Santo
Portrait of a Marriage, Pearl S. Buck (classic)
One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez (classic)
Arrowsmith or Main Street, Sinclair Lewis (classics)

“One of the greatest gifts you can give is your time.”
Happy Reading,
JoDee