Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Doing my Pat Conroy Dance
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
The Atlas of Love: A Novel by Laurie Frankel

This started out as a cute, simple book. It follows the main character who has two best friends and one of them gets pregnant by this guy who decides he doesn't want to have a kid. Three girls decide to move in together and raise the baby - very 3 Men and a Baby/Little Lady action - and they all experience the frustrations of raising a baby and being graduate students/professors(?).
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne

This book was about the progressive fall of the Comanche Indians, as told through the story line of Cynthia Ann Parker and her son, Quanah Parker – the last great Comanche chief.
I thought the first and third quarters of the book were interesting but the middle part was a little harder to get through. I think I just like the humanist side of relating to either Cynthia or Quanah but the middle section of the book focuses on the systematic destruction of the tribes by the Mexican, Texan and US governments and while heart-breaking/fascinating – war maneuvers don’t typically hold my attention.
This book actually got me a little riled up but I couldn’t honestly decide who’s “side” I was on each time I started to rant about a particular piece from it. Yes, the Indian attacks were horrific – rape, murder of non-combatants, scalping, torture, kidnapping – all despicable, despicable things BUT then there are two parts to think about.
1 – Of course, I would do anything to defend myself/ my family if I felt we were being encroached upon and essentially had a target on our heads
2 – The book makes the point that this was their way of life. The Plains Indians, Comanche’s in particular, were a war society – it wasn’t just white settlers they did this to it was to any enemy - so they didn’t think they were being unusually caustic or acting outside the normal set of agreed upon war responses.
Then when I start thinking about the settlers – the early ones really had to be either crazy or dim-witted to move out to where they did. It would be the rough equivalent of setting up shop in Afghanistan right now, not really the place to see and be seen folks! But that is what makes us Texans great – bull-headed as all but we will keep our land and guns, won’t we?
So while Manifest Destiny was not a term used at this time – the concept was there and people were pushing west. Who wouldn’t want to go? Explore uncharted territory; find anything that wasn’t one of the over-crowded eastern sea-board cities?! So they go, being told they can and that the government wants them to (Fun Fact: The Mexicans enticed people to settle Texas to ostensibly be a first barrier against the raiding Comanches).
So these people feel they have every right to move west and are appalled at the atrociously violent raids against them so they react in a variety of ways – successively more violent over the years.
Are the Indians right that their land/culture/livelihood was taken from them and no response is an over-reaction OR are the settlers right to be able to push forth into new worlds of discovery as the nation was being built? There are obvious moral aspects of this that tip the argument (genocide being one) but I just can’t fall fully on one side. I think that if it wasn’t the white settlers, it would have been another invading group eventually.
Anyways, great book – completely recommend. Hope someone reads it so I can see what you think!!
Monday, April 4, 2011
Gone to Texas: A History of the Lone Star State by Randolph Campbell
Sunday, March 27, 2011
When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women From 1960 to the Present by Gail Collins
The book looks at fashion, education, careers, family, the sexual revolution, Civil Rights, and so much more. I had no idea how intertwined the Equal Rights Amendment was with the battle for Civil Rights. I learned so much from this book, both about events and people I was already familiar with as well as many I was not. I have a whole new group of heroines and even a few heroes, as well as several villains and villainesses.
This would be a wonderful book for a book club as each person would have a different perspective based on their age, where they were living, and their personal circumstances. I certainly have a very different perspective on many things after reading this book.
If you read it, I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Friday, March 4, 2011
Little Bee by Chris Cleave
Oh dear, this was one that I know I was supposed to have liked – that millions of Oprah fans would boo me for not enjoying but I think its “a pass.”
The premise of the book is a young girl who is an African refugee and was stuck in a detention center in England for two years and finally escaped. On the day of her release – she made a phone call to a man and he killed himself soon after, before she was able to make it to his home. This man had a family and Little Bee basically lands with the family and as we learn, has a history with both the man and his wife from their vacation to Africa several years prior.
You can all guess the turmoil (and who really vacations in Africa?) that was experienced during this trip - the incident on the beach is a very poignant part of the story and probably the best 20 pages of the book. It does make you very acutely aware of the lives some of these refugees are fleeing and how little alterative they have to jumping ship and hoping for the best in a new country.
Despite that bit of clarity, I thought the rest of the book was kind of slow and I just wasn’t really that invested in the characters. I did learn that British kids are afraid of “baddies” vs. our American “bad guys” – learn new things everyday.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

I read this book because the author of “Devil in a White City” said he took inspiration from it for his scenes with Holmes the serial killer during the Chicago World’s Fair. Maybe I’m not deep enough (and definitely not sensitive enough, damn you TV) but I though the book was pretty slow and kind of boring.
It follows the two killers leading up to and after a horrible murder of a very peaceful family of four and the law as they are trying to solve the case after the murders are discovered. The reader has it all connected (its really not as complex as you think/hope/expect the whole time its being built up) and the characters are kind of annoying. It was an interesting look at truly heartless people who can kill in cold blood (with no true motive) and then eat a hamburger after but it didn’t shake me the way I think it was supposed to. Their cold blood didn’t run my blood cold.
I did just find out that it was based on actual murder and all the characters were real. Apparently Capote and Harper Lee went to the town after the murderers were caught, conducted hundreds of interviews with the towns people and law enforcement and then Capote spent six years writing the book.
According to Wikipedia this book was "regarded by critics as a pioneering work of the true crime genre." I know this is considered a classic so was surprised to feel so mediocre about it, has anyone else read it? What did you think?