Sunday, November 16, 2014

November Recap

Dear Bookclub,
 Again, so sorry to miss our meeting.. still cursed with a head cold and cough. The two-year-old grandson weathered it in a mere 3 days but I appear to have given it a place to stay for the season.

With a nod to Paul O'Rourke, Kim served beer, pizza, and a Red Sox discussion. Would love to discuss this book with anyone! Our April 2015 selection was chosen: "The Husband's Secret".

Looking forward to the Bookclub Christmas Party on December 13 at 7 PM at the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo. Please be sure to respond to Karen's darling evite!







Next up is "The Boys in the Boat" by Daniel James Brown, one of my favorite books of the year. I hope you enjoy it!

Happy Reading,
LK

Saturday, November 8, 2014

November Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
 The 2014 Man Booker prize for fiction was awarded at a ceremony on October 14, 2014. Until this year, only novels written in English and published in the UK were eligible for consideration. Beginning in 2014, rules were changed to extend eligibility to any novel written in EnglishIt is therefore the first time in the award's history that authors from the United States of America have been included.

On September 9 , 2014, the shortlist was announced..... among the six novels was our selection:

***Joshua Ferris:  To Rise Again at a Decent Hour ***
Richard Flanagan: The Narrow Road to the Deep North
Karen Joy Fowler: We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves
Howard Jacobson: J
NeelMukherjee: The Lives of Others
Ali Smith: How to be Both


           Hey Joshua, show us your teeth :)


 

 On the 14th October, chair judge A. C. Grayling announced that Australian author Richard Flanagan had won the 2014 Man Booker Prize. (The judges spent three hours deliberating before announcing the winner. Grayling described the historical novel as a "remarkable love story as well as a story about human suffering and comradeship").

 Meanwhile, back in the Ferris world,  "To Rise Again at a Decent Hour" just won the Dylan Thomas prize, two days ago. This is interestingly awarded to the best literary work written in the English language written by an author aged 39 or younger. (the age Thomas was when he died). (Aside: Ferris turned 40 on 11/8/2014....... today!)

Enough with the minutiae. But I love it and I love this novel.

Please RSVP to Kim for our November 13 meeting.

Read, floss, read,
LK



 





















Wednesday, October 22, 2014

October 2014 Bookclub Recap








Dear Bookclub,
I was so disappointed to miss last week's meeting at Karen's. I knew she'd put on a beautiful gathering - I still have her last year's October meeting in my memory bank of charming evenings. It's all those pumpkins!




In the spirit of literary letters, I thought I'd share verbatim Karen's response to my request for a report on the evening. Emails are the new quill and pen- so here it is in the original format:


Hi Lynn-

Sorry it has taken awhile for me to send this but it was a busy weekend! We had a great turn out for Book Club and a very lively discussion (even if most of it was not regarding the book).

We all enjoyed the book as it was a heartwarming break from some of our more gruesome reads of late.  What  a wonderful book to theme with food too! We had all things Irish. I served homemade Baked Potato Soup, pumpkin bread, Reuben spread on rye & caraway crackers, and Irish almond cake with Tullamore Dew Irish whiskey in it! I have included a couple of pictures for the Blog too.

The books suggested were:

Factory Man by Beth Macy

The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr  (revisited)

After voting and discussion we chose All the Light We Cannot See. It had been suggested earlier but we felt it was worth revisiting.

We missed you and I hope your migraine is gone. If it is any solace, I have been getting less frequent migraines of late.

We also discussed the Christmas party. We will have a cash bar at the gathering and appetizers will be served. We will figure out a dollar amount per person as to the cost by next meeting.

Hope to see you soon!

Karen



And just to add to our literary weight, this will be a collection of letters. My request for information yielded this nice note from Julie:

Karen beautifully connected the evening from "book to table" with an Irish theme that dazzled all.  From her potato soup to a delicious Irish pound cake, we enjoyed it all sprinkled with conversation tidbits about the lovely story.

Karen briefed us on the holiday party (Karen has those details, Lynnie) and we selected a book (Karen has the winner... not sure... I Voted for The Interestings by Meg W. (again see Karen).

It was a fun night catching up in the glow of carved pumpkins!  A  great turnout of 9, I think, was well accommodated by Karen's comfortable seating area.

js




Thank you so very much Karen and Julie!

Finally, a collection of Whiskeys: 







Happy Reading!
LK

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

October 2014 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
Just to finish a few items about our last meeting; an explanation about the "Lyn(n)(e)"'s is due, as well as the list of books considered for our next selection. For those of you not present at Lynn T's last month, you did not get to meet Diane's old friend, Lyn, from Chicago. Visiting San Diego for a conference, to see Diane and of course, to attend our meeting, Lyn was absolutely delightful and a fun addition into the Lyn(n)(e) lineup of the night.

Considered for February:

"One Plus One"  JoJo Moyes *chosen
"The Dovekeepers" Alice Hoffman
"I am Hutterite: The Fascinating True Story of a Young Woman's
                               Journey to Reclaim Her Heritage" Mary-Ann Kirby


Next up:

Patrick Taylor


From Taylor's website (www.patricktaylor.ca): Born in 1941, Taylor was brought up in Bangor, Northern Ireland, and received his medical education in Ulster. He initially practiced in a rural Ulster village akin to Ballybucklebo before taking specialist training in Obstetrics and Gynaecology. After living in Belfast through the first two years of the recent Irish Troubles (1969-1994) he and his family emigrated to Canada where he pursued a career in medical research and teaching in the field of human infertility. His contributions have been honoured with three lifetime achievement awards including the Lifetime Award of Excellence of the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society.

for more:http://www.patricktaylor.ca/ptaylor_bio.html





I think you will find Taylor's book wee buns to enjoy and have it read in a doodle. Apologies to the Ulster-Scots if this sounds glipe.

Please RSVP to Karen for our October 16th meeting. 

Read on!
LK


Thursday, September 25, 2014

September 2014 Recap

Dear Bookclub,
We needed no beacon to gather at Lynn T's last Thursday but perhaps the lights should have darkened to kick us out! "The Light Between Oceans" provoked much thought and discussion about the compelling situation of a baby 'found'. We did not let the long debate deter from all other necessary discussion so we just settled in for  - oh - four hours. Jim is such a good sport. Thank you Lynn (& Jim)!

The Lyn(n)(e) Project


We wondered if lighthouses were still in use with GPS and other modern advancements. Yes they are!

"New" Point Loma Lighthouse





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Point_Loma_Lighthouse



"Old" Point Loma Lighthouse
Interesting aside; story below about a man restoring the old Graves Island Lighthouse for his family vacation hang-out in the Boston Harbor:



http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2014/09/15/one-year-after-its-auction-boston-harbor-graves-island-light-station-getting-eye-catching-makeover/prMFDbj5fRtOOa0m3bgDYN/story.html


Next up:




Happy Reading!
LK


Monday, September 8, 2014

September 2014 Bookclub

Dear Bookclub,
An evening at Julie's for our August gathering is a sweet summer memory by now. Harlan Coben's "Missing You" provided the background for a stimulating conversation punctuated by Julie's roving taste treats. Moving from patio seating to patio dining to formal dining room, we feasted along the way, discussing the cyber thriller. Julie 'axed' us to 'unearth' all the subplots:


Suggested selections for January by Julie:
"Fault in Our Stars" by John Green
"The Language of Flowers" by Vanessa Diffenbaugh      *chosen




 ♫  "It's that time of year....♫ daaaa dum de dum ♪" ........

Karen and Kate, our holiday committee are pleased to announce that our holiday party will be on Saturday December 13 at 7 PM (that's 12/13/14!) at the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo in the Fireside Room. We will have a cash bar and appetizers. Specifics are still being formulated but it is official. Please mark your calendars! Our book selection will be the absolutely fantastic "The Boys in the Boat" by Daniel James Brown".  Thank you K & K!


Coming up: Our September meeting is on the 18th at Lynn T.'s! Please RSVP to Lynn.

 M.L. Stedman's "The Light Between Oceans" has been on the New York Times bestseller list for weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks and is soon to be a major motion picture from Spielberg’s Dreamworks. Gregory Coles from the New York Times, 'Inside the List' (August 10 2012), states:

DARKNESS AND LIGHT: Some writers crave publicity, while the very hint of it makes others curl into a defensive ball like hedgehogs or pill bugs. M. L. Stedman — whose new novel, “The Light Between Oceans,” enters the hardcover fiction list at No. 7 — is a hedgehog. The book carries no author photograph, and only a brusque biography: “M. L. Stedman was born and raised in Western Australia and now lives in London. ‘The Light Between Oceans’ is her first novel. Go away.” (O.K., so I added the last sentence myself.) Stedman has mostly shunned press interviews as well — but not entirely, and because this is the age of the Internet it’s possible for a determined reader to track down a couple of profiles that ran in her native Australia this spring. They are, refreshingly, less about her personality than her novel, the story of a World War I veteran who moves with his wife to a remote island for work as a lighthouse keeper. “There is something that appeals to the human psyche about lighthouses because of their isolation,” Stedman told The Sydney Morning Herald in March. “Their presence offers up a marvelous set of dichotomies the human imagination likes to explore — darkness and light, safety and danger, stasis and movement, isolation and communication. The story throws up the role of isolation on morality — when you don’t see the impact of your actions. Perhaps it’s easier to fool yourself when you cannot see the face of those who are affected by what you do.” The article does offer a few glimpses of the private Stedman (the “M” stands for Margot, and she has worked as a lawyer), but for the most part she stands her ground with admirably Pynchonian resolve. “Details of my life won’t really shed light on the story,” she said. “I’d much rather let readers focus on the book and their own experience of it.”


Yikes! This publicity pic looks like she cut it out of the school librarian directory.

OK - enough..... Please enjoy the book....

Happy Reading,
LK





Sunday, August 17, 2014

August Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
We meet next Thursday, August 21, at Julie's to discuss Harlan Coben's "Missing You".  Please RSVP to Julie.


Coben is New Jersey through and through: born, raised, educated (except for his stint at Amherst), married and rooted there. I know some of New Jersey and I know his childhood swimming teacher, pictured below (middle!):



Hope you are enjoying the Coben ride of this latest novel; our twisty-mystery summer read!

Happy Reading,
LK

Thursday, July 24, 2014

July Bookclub Recap

Dear Bookclub,
A short and sweet visit; I was so sorry to miss the reported discussion on "Defending Jacob" at Kate's. From Diane, Julie and Kate: great debate and pondering about the murder gene and family dynamics ensued around the dining table (also great food and drink!) "Jake was guilty; Jake was innocent; Jake's mother did it." Everyone agreed that it was an engaging read.

Kate further addressed, "Reactive Attachment Disorder with which Jacob was diagnosed, although it was noted in the book that this would  be a very unusual diagnosis for a boy without severe attachment (abandonment) or abuse issues with his primary caregiver. I don't think a boy raised as Jacob was could have this diagnosis. I do think there were several underdeveloped or unsubstantiated ideas thrown at the reader in this book - probably why we had so many different interpretations and opinions in our discussion. Regardless, the book certainly held my attention and was a great topic for discussion." 

Fantastic titles were presented by Kate for November's choice:

~ "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors and the Collision of Two Cultures" by Anne Fadiman

~ ""The Book of Unknow Americans: A Novel" by Cristina Henriquez

~ "Euphoria" by Lily King

~"To Rise Again at a Decent Hour" by Joshua Ferris *chosen

Holiday plans are being researched. Kate and Karen have graciously agreed to be our committee. Stay tuned. Thank you so much K & K!!

And it's Throwback Thursday........


From March 2005:
 

Happy Reading,
LK


Sunday, July 13, 2014

July Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
Not with typical family drama, William Landay's twisted tale, "Defending Jacob", presents the Barbers on a spiraling downward course of disturbing events. Discussion will be wide-eyed. Please RSVP to Kate for our next meeting, this Thursday, July 17.



Pictured above is James Fallon, a neuroscientist from UC Irvine, and his family. Studying the brains of psychopaths for nearly 20 years, Fallon made a startling discovery: his ancestry of violent murderers. And there's much more..... please check out the story below:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127888976

Interesting that the mentioned factor of child abuse in the NPR report seems to be missing in Landay's book.  Obviously this is not a precise and exacting condition... many factors involved.

Careful reading! (then you can reward yourself with a carefree reading!)
LK


Sunday, June 22, 2014

An Extensive Exploration of "The Invention of Wings"

Dear Bookclub,
From the Charleston inspired she-crab soup to the story quilt, Diane's comprehensively designed evening of discussion for "The Invention of Wings" was a rich experience and hugely appreciated. Joining us were Diane's sister-in-law, Jean Knoepfle, and niece, Becky Knoepfle, both visiting from Punta Gorda, FL, both on Eastern Time, and both had read the book. Very good guests and great sports, indeed!

Our large circle around the fire-pit overlooking the valley of Rancho Bernardo, unwittingly broadcast our deep approval of Sue Monk Kidd's profound story. Agreeing that it was perfectly told, we marveled at the contrasts of privilege, freedom, place and time.

Diane sought out and found a marvelous "story quilt" in keeping with the concept in our book. Marilyn Bigelow was kind enough to lend her tribute-quilt made in memory of her father for our meeting. The leaves of fall were depicted using a method involving gathering real leaves as templates and then creating an imagery of shadows using a spray bleaching technique. So lush and creative... the photo below does not quite reflect all the intricate styling described.



Next, we were ushered into Diane's living room, where Chip, the bartender was now the AV coordinator, magically bringing Oprah and Sue Monk Kidd before us:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9HH_-FlG2E


Diane bravely recommended FOUR suggestions for an upcoming selection:

1) "Lean In" by Sheryl Sandberg
2) "Wild" by Cheryl Strayed
3) "Under the Wide and Starry Sky" by Nancy Horan
4)  "An Irish Country Doctor" by Patrick Taylor *

*chosen


Our final journey was into the transformed dining room, where the quilt had been replaced:





No words necessary, except it was as amazing as it looks.


Happy Reading!
LK





Wednesday, June 11, 2014

June 2014 Bookclub News









Dear Bookclub,
Our next meeting is fast approaching; June 19 at Diane's to discuss "The Invention of Wings" by Sue Monk Kidd. Set in antebellum Charleston, South Carolina, this is the author's first historical novel, based on the remarkable true story of Sarah Grimke´: abolitionist, writer, suffragist!



Oprah has gone a bit crazy over this book (which is not a bad thing) and has filled the electronic versions with her 'notes' (which I have yet to find of interest). I hope you are able to glide right over them. They are downright babble. (Sarah would have thought so too).
 

As always, I am intrigued by the various covers of books. One can only wonder why the more beautiful version of the British publication is supplanted by the more menacing US version:





Happy Reading!
LK

PS RSVP to Diane :)

Friday, May 30, 2014

May 2014 Meeting

Dear Bookclub,
Lori treated us to an immersion of "After Her" culture at last night's meeting. Not only did she research and find Marin Joe's:

http://www.marinjoesrestaurant.com/
(Check out the blurred faces in the photos... hmmmmm)

...she made us incredible Italian meatballs and amazing raspberry-laden tiramisu. In order to ignore the shoelaces in her centerpiece, I had to have three(3) glasses of wine. After all, I'd walked to Lori's.



After agreeing that the story was interesting but the writing dragged with "Show don't tell, please!", we softened to the process and Maynard's intent when Lori presented Joyce Maynard discussing the book with the real-life sisters, and daughters of the chief homicide detective of the Trailside murders. Please take a few minutes to see on this youtube video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZmyOrDQCf8


Hopefully, some of the discussion of "At Home in the World", will encourage more to read it. Very different and truly compelling.

Lori recommended three outstanding books for an upcoming selection:
"The Goldfinch" by Donna Tartt
"The Light Between Oceans: A Novel"  by M.L. Stedman*
"The Whip" by Karen Kondazia

* chosen


Happy Reading,
LK

Thursday, May 22, 2014

May 2014 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
We are meeting next Thursday, May 29 at Lori's to discuss "After Her" by Joyce Maynard. At the risk of the ire of the repetition police, please read "At Home in the World", also by Joyce Maynard if you have a chance. Both books are fast reads, entirely different; the former is a novel; the later a memoir about her experience with J.D. Salinger. Very good.


Joyce, then:

and now:



Please RSVP to Lori.

Happy Reading!
LK

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Happy Huntington


Dear Bookclub,
Our tour group had a fantastic time in Pasadena this past week, escaping the terrible fire conditions here in San Diego for the peaceful hot hills of San Marino. Greeted by the Langham's floral entry, we shifted gears quickly.





Sipping pink drinks Thursday afternoon, calmed the frazzled nerves stirred by the smoke and tasks of packing the evacuation bags, and then unpacking them, and then wondering if they should have been kept packed(!) as the Cocos fire blew up while we drove through Escondido. Really good pink drinks.



Chinese Garden Tea & Tour

Friday morning we joined Janet Keyes, our highly informative docent, for a delightful tour of the Chinese Garden. Guiding us through the Garden of Flowing Fragrance, Janet enlightened us about the Walk of Colorful Clouds, moon gates, bamboo rocks, the Jade Ribbon Bridge, the Pavilion of the Three Friends, the Terrace that Invites the Mountains among many other elements and points of interest.



As we learned more and more about the inspiration behind the garden, our peaceful awe was explained - this was designed for scholarly pursuits. The harmony and balance created a fertile environment for literary and artistic activities - we were feeling the love!




Later, in response to our inquiry, Janet kindly shared a list of books about botany (and China):

 Charles Elliott, The Transplanted Gardener. An American in England Looks at Hedges, Ha-ha's, History and More.

 Charles Lyte, The Plant Hunters.

 Rebecca Rothenburg. The Bulrush Murders. (She only wrote 4 books but they all have botanic themes/clues - especially this one.)

 Robert Van Gulik, The Haunted Monastery, The Chinese Maze Murders, and others. (Van Gulik was a Dutch diplomat and Chinese scholar. His novels are set in 18th cent. China and based on stories about a Tang era magistrate named Dee. All the books have wood block illustrations). 

 Dai Sijie and Ina Rilke, Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress: A Novel.

 Xinran, The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices. (Powerful stories.)

 
 
Further Fun
After the tour, the tea refreshed us further for the afternoon scramble of seeing as much as possible before fatigue flattened us. It was a successful pursuit: Children's Garden, mansion, library, The Secrets of Archimedes (this was very, very cool!!!!! Please check it out: http://www.huntington.org/secretsofarchimedes/), and the gift shop of course.

Our dinners were great (highlights:our driver Al, our other drivers and the stories behind them; zucchini bread; the Parkway Grill; Green Street Restaurant; ivy wall).

We are already scheming for our next year's trip - no decisions just relishing the sweetness of being together!

Happy Reading,
LK


Friday, April 18, 2014

April Update

Dear Bookclub,

Last night's meeting at Barb's was well attended as we discussed "The Book Thief".  I am looking forward to the movie now... Lynne had just seen it after finishing the book and she mentioned some notable differences.

Barb recommended some great summer reads for August:

"Where'd you go Bernadette?" A Novel" by Maria Semple
"The Condition" by Jennifer Haigh
"Missing You" by  Harlan Corben *chosen


Bunny study:






 Hare hails heroines:





B. E-reader




Hoppy Spring Reading!
LK

PS Please make sure you have bookclub on your May calendar as adjusted here. That's May 29th at Lori's!


Thursday, April 10, 2014

April 2014 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,
A heart-breaking jewel, "The Book Thief" is unlike anything we've read. Hoping you will read it and join the discussion at Barb's next Thursday, April 17. Don't forget to RSVP.

Reading electronically has changed our world and I personally, love it. However, I do miss covers, so please enjoy this montage:






I'm actually reading this book as hardcopy (second cover from the right).  Kind of nice because of the line drawings:




OK, if you haven't started it yet, intrigued?? Please read it!

Please note: Our May meeting has been changed from our regular third Thursday of the month (5/15) to the fifth Thursday (5/29). Our Huntington Trip is 5/15, our host, Lori, is unavailable 5/22 and has offered 5/29 instead. Please mark your calendars and I hope it isn't a problem. Thanks!

Best,
LK

Friday, March 21, 2014

Orphan Train


Dear Bookclub,
Last night's meeting at Lynne's was wonderful!  Julie shared the story of her great-grandmother, Mabel Lee, who as an 8 year old girl, had been transported by orphan train to a new life. Presenting memorabilia that included numerous photos of Mabel, her husband, two daughters, and Julie's mother, Julie brought the novel we'd read to an amazing level of reality. We were so lucky to have this opportunity to appreciate the impact and outcome of this woman's experience. Thank you Julie!






Titles considered for an upcoming selection that Lynne presented: Anna Quindlen's, "Still Life with Breadcrumbs", "The Husband's Secret" by Liane Moriarty and "Defending Jacob"* by William Landay *(chosen).

Keep on reading!
LK

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

March 2014 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,

At Sue's February Bookclub meeting, a remarkable feat: 8 members attended and all had read the book, "The Sandcastle Girls"! Pats on the back abound. Sue recommended three titles for her upcoming selection: "Invention of Wings" by Sue Monk Kidd, "Still Life with Bread Crumbs" by Anna Quindlen, and "Stella Bain" by Anita Shreve. Kidd's book was chosen.  

Next week, we will discuss Christina Baker Kline's novel, "Orphan Train".  Based on the Orphan Train Movement, a supervised welfare program that transported orphaned and homeless children from crowded Eastern cities of the United States to foster homes located largely in rural areas of the Midwest, Kline's read is memorable and fascinating.

The orphan trains truly operated between 1853 and 1929, relocating about 250,000 orphaned, abandoned, or homeless children. Below the photo are two pieces from the archives at the National Orphan Train Complex in Concordia, Kansas. Note the distinction in payment between girls and boys in the first article and the conductor's sentiments in the second article.






ASYLUM CHILDREN
A company of children, mostly boys, from the New York Juvenile Asylum, will arrive in Rockford, at the Hotel Holland, Thursday morning, Sept. 6 1888, remaining until the evening.  They are from 7 to 15 years of age.
Homes are wanted for those children with farmers, where they will receive kind treatment and enjoy fair advantages.  They have been in the asylum from one to two years, and have received instruction and training, preparatory to a term of apprenticeship, and being mostly of respectable parentage, they are desirable children and worthy of good homes.
They may be taken at first upon trial for four weeks, and afterwards, if all parties are satisfied, under indenture – girls until 18 and boys until 21 years of age.
The indenture provides for four months schooling each year, until the child has advanced through comp… interest, and at the expiration of the term of apprenticeship, two new suits of clothes, and the payment to the girls of fifty, and to the boys of one hundred and fifty dollars.
All expenses for transportation will be assumed by the Asylum and the children will be placed on trial and indentured free of charge.
Those who desire to take children on trial are requested to meet them at the hotel at the time above specified.
E. Wright, Agent





The Minneapolis Journal – October 15, 1908


A CARLOAD OF BABIES
Sixty-Seven Little Ones Shipped West from New York
OCTOBER 15, 1908 — A dispatch from Milwaukee says there were 67 of them and 67 different varieties.  There were babies from two years up to five, all colors, shapes, sizes and previous conditions of servitude.
Little waifs they were the discard of New York, out in search of a home far from the center of sorrows and woes that they were born into.
On the way to St. Paul from New York a special car with these babies passed through Milwaukee.  With the children there were several Sisters of Charity and two trained nurses.
The Home Finding society of New York is sending them west to deal them out into good homes among the farmers near St. Paul.
When the conductor came out of the car there was a suspicion of moisture in his eyes.
“I won’t go through there again,” he said.  ”"They’re happy, and all that, but it’s too pitiful.  They all wanted to shake hands with me and caught hold of my hand and looked up at me and smiled as I passed.  I supposed they are taught to do it.”
“There are all kinds, and they are just as sweet as most babies are.  It is a shame that they will never know a real mother and father.”
The Sisters made the babies beds by placing boards across from seat to seat, for the special car was nto a sleeping car.  Several babies were piled into one “bed.”  The car accommodated the 67, besides the nurses and Sisters.
Long pieces of sheeting were stretched across the tops of the seats to cover the “beds” and to keep out the cinders and dust.

        ******************************************************************


At our meeting, Julie plans to share about her great-grandmother Mable Lee, who was sent on an orphan train. Looking forward to that - so amazing!

Please RSVP to Lynne H. and hope to see you there.


 Read on!
LK



Friday, February 14, 2014

February Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,

Happy Valentine's Day! 

 

 

 





Hope your hearts are filled with the spirit of our friendship and your souls radiant as these roses!

Plans are being formulated for the Spring 2014 trip to Huntington Library and Gardens. A very fun and productive happy-not-limited-to-an-hour meeting at the Veranda, way back on Tuesday 2/4, sparked the start of decision making. Trip will be May 15-17. An email with further details to follow for those planning to attend.

Up next: bookclub at Sue's on February 20th to discuss Chris Bojhalian's, "The Sandcastle Girls". Please RSVP to Sue ASAP!


From The Washington Post, Eugenia Zukerman, Published: July 16, 2012:

The Armenian genocide during World War I is the subject of Chris Bohjalian’s 14th novel, “The Sandcastle Girls.” Inspired by his grandparents’ background, the author explores the suffering and atrocities of that time with astounding precision, compassion and grace.
“How do a million and a half people die with nobody knowing?” ponders Laura Petrosian, the book’s modern-day narrator. The answer, she will discover, is really very simple: “You kill them in the middle of nowhere.”
Laura has embarked on a search to find out more about her Boston Brahmin grandmother and her Armenian grandfather, who met during the slaughter about which she knew very little. “To understand my grandparents, some basics would help,” she says. “Imagine an oversized paperback book with a black-and-yellow cover, The Armenian Genocide for Dummies.” This light-hearted tone is in stunning contrast to the next chapter, which flashes back to 1915 to the horrors taking place in Aleppo, Syria.

........

(to read more)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/chris-bohjalians-the-sandcastle-girls-relives-the-armenian-genocide/2012/07/16/gJQA1oLOpW_story.html






Hope to see you at Sue's!
LK

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Mid-January news

Dear Bookclub,
I want to keep everyone up to date with upcoming selections. Chosen from Diane's suggestions, for April,"The Book Thief" (also considered: "12 Years a Slave" and "The Lacuna"). Chosen from Lynn's suggestions at the 1/16 meeting, for May,"After Her" by Joyce Maynard (also considered: "Please Look After Mom" by Kyung-Sook Shin and ""My Beloved World" by Sonia Sotomayor).

Are these your glasses? Left here on the counter adjacent to the bar last Thursday night, please let me know if you recognize them and I will get them to you.

The plans for our Huntington Trip are still being formed. So far, May 15-17 is most popular. Anyone interested in having a special meeting to firm up ideas? The impromptu happy hour at The Veranda last year was such a success, I am tempted to stir it up again. Speak up and stay tuned please!

Read On!
LK

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Welcome 2014...

Dear Bookclub,
Happy New Year!


 

 Looking forward to good reads and more importantly, good times together. We sure did have fun last year, not only with our varied monthly meetings, but with the trip to The Huntington, having Sue Meissner speak to our group, not to mention hanging out in La Jolla with Chris Bohjalian. I also loved our impromptu happy hour at the Veranda. And what a holiday finale at Diane and Chuck's gorgeous home. OK - let's bring it on for the next year...

Let's get a date on the calendar for a trip to The Huntington this spring. I talked to a woman in the tours office today for quite some time(!) and she gave me lots of interesting information. The new entrance project is supposed to be done mid-late April. This is a bit different from what I'd understood (early 2015??) but perhaps there are phases. She believed it was worth waiting until after the re-opening to visit. This project involves a new restaurant, classrooms, theatre, etc.  I propose considering May 8-10 or May 15-17. What do you think? Please let me know if you are interested in this trip and if these dates are even something you are able to consider. Going back to the drawing board is always an option. I will try to get as much input as possible.... and then.... maybe... we will need one of those emergency impromptu happy hours at the Veranda. Would be great to get this on the calendars ASAP.

Next task is to vote on Diane's suggestions for our next selection(May) as we didn't really have the opportunity to think about it while we kept Chip busy at the bar. Please consider the following titles and then email your choice by 1/6:

1) "Twelve Years a Slave" by Solomon Northup
2) "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak
3) "The Lacuna" by Barbara Kingsolver

This is a tough list - they are all enticing.




Finally, please send me your preferred month to host if you are not listed in the 2014 calendar to the right. 

Look forward to seeing you on January 16 - here at my place.... discussing "The Rosie Project".
 ......  RSVP


Happy Reading,
LK
 

pictures: Boca Raton art & nature 12/2013