Really Cool Women’s Book Club

Time to Vote February 24, 2010

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 5:48 pm

It is time to vote for our next books.  Here is the Survey Monkey link:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/NSGQMT3

Here are the titles followed by the descriptions.  Please have votes in by March 3rd so we can get reading for the meeting on the 17th!

Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell

Crazy Heart:  A Novel by Thomas Cobb

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbary

Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin

The Given Day by Dennis Lehane

The Informant  A True Story by Kurt Eichenwald

Just Kids by Patti Smith

Let the World Spins by Colin McCann

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

Testimony by Anita Shreve

The Theory of Light and Matter by Andrew Porter

The Three Weissmanns of Westport - Cathleen Schine

Still Alice by Lisa Genova

A Wedding in December by Anita Shreve

Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. What do you get when a woman who’s obsessed with death and U.S. history goes on vacation? This wacky, weirdly enthralling exploration of the first three presidential assassinations. Vowell (The Partly Cloudy Patriot), a contributor to NPR’s This American Life and the voice of teenage superhero Violet Parr in The Incredibles, takes readers on a pilgrimage of sorts to the sites and monuments that pay homage to Lincoln, Garfield and McKinley, visiting everything from grave sites and simple plaques (like the one in Buffalo that marks the place where McKinley was shot) to places like the National Museum of Health and Medicine, where fragments of Lincoln’s skull are on display. An expert tour guide, Vowell brings into sharp focus not only the figures involved in the assassinations, but the social and political circumstances that led to each-and she does so in the witty, sometimes irreverent manner that her fans have come to expect. Thus, readers learn not only about how Garfield found himself caught between the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds, bitterly divided factions of the Republican party, but how his assassin, Charles Guiteau, a supporter of the Stalwarts and an occasional member of the Oneida Community, “was the one guy in a free love commune who could not get laid.” Vowell also draws frequent connections between past events and the present, noting similarities between McKinley’s preemptive war against Cuba and the Philippines and the current war in Iraq. This is history at its most morbid and most fascinating and, fortunately, one needn’t share Vowell’s interest in the macabre to thoroughly enjoy this unusual tour.

Crazy Heart:  A Novel by Thomas Cobb

From Library Journal

Singer and guitarist Bad Blake was once a first-rate country-and-western star, but now he’s 57, an alcoholic, a failure at four marriages, and playing in third-rate clubs. The biggest gig he can get is opening for Tommy Sweet, the kid Bad got started and whose career has now eclipsed Bad’s. Bad meets Jean Craddock when she comes to interview him and they fall in love. Her little boy, Buddy, inspires Bad to search for his own long-lost son, but there’s no happy ending there. And when Bad, hungry for a drink, loses Jean’s son, things take a downturn, despite Bad’s fling with AA. This first novel has the authentic patter and ambience of those seedy one-night-stands, but the plot is thin and the ending is very downbeat. There will be heavy promotion and advertising, so requests may warrant purchase.

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Lauded for his sensitive memoir (My Own Country) about his time as a doctor in eastern Tennessee at the onset of the AIDS epidemic in the 80s, Verghese turns his formidable talents to fiction, mining his own life and experiences in a magnificent, sweeping novel that moves from India to Ethiopia to an inner-city hospital in New York City over decades and generations. Sister Mary Joseph Praise, a devout young nun, leaves the south Indian state of Kerala in 1947 for a missionary post in Yemen. During the arduous sea voyage, she saves the life of an English doctor bound for Ethiopia, Thomas Stone, who becomes a key player in her destiny when they meet up again at Missing Hospital in Addis Ababa. Seven years later, Sister Praise dies birthing twin boys: Shiva and Marion, the latter narrating his own and his brothers long, dramatic, biblical story set against the backdrop of political turmoil in Ethiopia, the life of the hospital compound in which they grow up and the love story of their adopted parents, both doctors at Missing. The boys become doctors as well and Vergheses weaving of the practice of medicine into the narrative is fascinating even as the story bobs and weaves with the power and coincidences of the best 19th-century novel.

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbary

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. This audio version of the surprise French bestseller hits the mark as both performance and story. The leisurely pace of the novel, which explores the upstairs-downstairs goings-on of a posh Parisian apartment building, lends itself well to audio, and those who might have been tempted to skip through the novel’s more laborious philosophical passages (the author is a professor of philosophy) will savor these ruminations when read aloud. Tony Award–winning actress Barbara Rosenblat positively embodies the concierge, Renée Michel, who deliberately hides her radiant intelligence from the upper-crust residents of 7 rue de Grenelle, and the performance of Cassandra Morris as the precocious girl who recognizes Renée as a kindred spirit is nothing short of a revelation. Morris’s voice, inflection and timbre all conspire to make the performance entirely believable.

Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin

Product Description

In Game Change, John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, two of the country’s leading political reporters, use their unrivaled access to pull back the curtain on the Obama, Clinton, McCain, and Palin campaigns.

Based on hundreds of interviews with the people who lived the story, Game Change is a reportorial tour de force that reads like a fast-paced novel. Character-driven and dialogue-rich, replete with extravagantly detailed scenes, it’s an intimate portrait of some of the most powerful and fascinating figures in American life—the occasionally shocking, often hilarious, ultimately definitive account of the campaign of a lifetime.

The Given Day by Dennis Lehane

Set in Boston at the end of the First World War, New York Times bestselling author Dennis Lehane’s long-awaited eighth novel unflinchingly captures the political and social unrest of a nation caught at the crossroads between past and future. Filled with a cast of unforgettable characters more richly drawn than any Lehane has ever created, The Given Day tells the story of two families–one black, one white–swept up in a maelstrom of revolutionaries and anarchists, immigrants and ward bosses, Brahmins and ordinary citizens, all engaged in a battle for survival and power. Beat cop Danny Coughlin, the son of one of the city’s most beloved and powerful police captains, joins a burgeoning union movement and the hunt for violent radicals. Luther Laurence, on the run after a deadly confrontation with a crime boss in Tulsa, works for the Coughlin family and tries desperately to find his way home to his pregnant wife.

Here, too, are some of the most influential figures of the era–Babe Ruth; Eugene O’Neill; leftist activist Jack Reed; NAACP founder W. E. B. DuBois; Mitchell Palmer, Woodrow Wilson’s ruthless Red-chasing attorney general; cunning Massachusetts governor Calvin Coolidge; and an ambitious young Department of Justice lawyer named John Hoover.

Coursing through some of the pivotal events of the time–including the Spanish Influenza pandemic–and culminating in the Boston Police Strike of 1919, The Given Day explores the crippling violence and irrepressible exuberance of a country at war with, and in the thrall of, itself. As Danny, Luther, and those around them struggle to define themselves in increasingly turbulent times, they gradually find family in one another and, together, ride a rising storm of hardship, deprivation, and hope that will change all their lives.

“[An] engrossing epic. . . . A vision of redemption and a triumph of the human spirit.”
–Publishers Weekly (starred review)

The Informant  A True Story by Kurt Eichenwald

Amazon.com Review

“The FBI was ready to take down America’s most politically powerful corporation. But there was one thing they didn’t count on.”

So reads the cover of this high-powered true crime story, an accurate teaser to a bizarre financial scandal with more plot twists than a John Grisham novel. In 1992 the FBI stumbled upon Mark Whitacre, a top executive at the Archer Daniels Midland corporation who was willing to act as a government witness to a vast international price-fixing conspiracy. ADM, which advertises itself as “The Supermarket to the World,” processes grains and other farm staples into oils, flours, and fibers for products that fill America’s shelves, from Jell-O pudding to StarKist tuna. The company’s chairman and chief executive, Dwayne Andreas, was so influential that he introduced Ronald Reagan to Mikhail Gorbachev, and it was his maneuvering that ensured that high fructose corn syrup would replace sugar in most foods (ever wondered why Coke and Pepsi don’t taste quite like they used to?). There were two mottoes at ADM: “The competitors are our friends, and the customers are our enemies” and “We know when we’re lying.” And lie they did. With the help of Whitacre, the FBI made hundreds of tapes and videos of ADM executives making price-fixing deals with their corrivals from Japan, Korea, and Canada, all while drinking coffee and laughing about their crimes. The tapes should have cinched the case, but there was one problem: Their star witness was manipulative, deceitful, and unstable. Nothing was as it seemed, and the investigation into one of the most astounding white-collar crime cases in history had only just begun.

Kurt Eichenwald, an investigative reporter, covered the story for The New York Times and interviewed more than 100 participants in the case. He methodically records the six-year investigation, leaving no plot twist or tape transcript unexplored. While his primary focus is on deconstructing the disturbed Whitacre and revealing the malleability of truth, the portrait of ADM (and even the Justice Department) is damning enough to make anyone a cynic. –Lesley Reed

Just Kids by Patti Smith

Yes, THAT Patti Smith. Her memoir about her, Maplethorpe and NYC during its last great rock heyday.

Amazon.com Review

Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe weren’t always famous, but they always thought they would be. They found each other, adrift but determined, on the streets of New York City in the late ’60s and made a pact to keep each other afloat until they found their voices–or the world was ready to hear them. Lovers first and then friends as Mapplethorpe discovered he was gay, they divided their dimes between art supplies and Coney Island hot dogs. Mapplethorpe was quicker to find his metier, with a Polaroid and then a Hasselblad, but Smith was the first to fame, transformed, to her friend’s delight, from a poet into a rock star. (Mapplethorpe soon became famous too–and notorious–before his death from AIDS in 1989.) Smith’s memoir of their friendship, Just Kids, is tender and artful, open-eyed but surprisingly decorous, with the oracular style familiar from her anthems like “Because the Night,” “Gloria,” and “Dancing Barefoot” balanced by her powers of observation and memory for everyday details like the price of automat sandwiches and the shabby, welcoming fellow bohemians of the Chelsea Hotel, among whose ranks these baby Rimbauds found their way. –Tom Nissley

Let the World Spins by Colin McCann

Amazon.com Review

Colum McCann has worked some exquisite magic with Let the Great World Spin, conjuring a novel of electromagnetic force that defies gravity. It’s August of 1974, a summer “hot and serious and full of death and betrayal,” and Watergate and the Vietnam War make the world feel precarious. A stunned hush pauses the cacophonous universe of New York City as a man on a cable walks (repeatedly) between World Trade Center towers. This extraordinary, real-life feat by French funambulist Philippe Petit becomes the touchstone for stories that briefly submerge you in ten varied and intense lives–a street priest, heroin-addicted hookers, mothers mourning sons lost in war, young artists, a Park Avenue judge. All their lives are ordinary and unforgettable, overlapping at the edges, occasionally converging. And when they coalesce in the final pages, the moment hums with such grace that its memory might tighten your throat weeks later. You might find yourself paused, considering the universe of lives one city contains in any slice of time, each of us a singular world, sometimes passing close enough to touch or collide, to birth a new generation or kill it, sending out ripples, leaving residue, an imprint, marking each other, our city, the very air–compassionately or callously, unable to see all the damage we do or heal. And most of us stumbling, just trying not to trip, or step in something awful.

But then someone does something extraordinary, like dancing on a cable strung 110 stories in the air, or imagining a magnificent novel that lifts us up for a sky-scraping, dizzy glimpse of something greater: the sordid grandeur of this whirling world, “bigger than its buildings, bigger than its inhabitants.” –Mari Malcolm

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Thirteen linked tales from Strout (Abide with Me, etc.) present a heart-wrenching, penetrating portrait of ordinary coastal Mainers living lives of quiet grief intermingled with flashes of human connection. The opening Pharmacy focuses on terse, dry junior high-school teacher Olive Kitteridge and her gregarious pharmacist husband, Henry, both of whom have survived the loss of a psychologically damaged parent, and both of whom suffer painful attractions to co-workers. Their son, Christopher, takes center stage in A Little Burst, which describes his wedding in humorous, somewhat disturbing detail, and in Security, where Olive, in her 70s, visits Christopher and his family in New York. Strout’s fiction showcases her ability to reveal through familiar details—the mother-of-the-groom’s wedding dress, a grandmother’s disapproving observations of how her grandchildren are raised—the seeds of tragedy. Themes of suicide, depression, bad communication, aging and love, run through these stories, none more vivid or touching than Incoming Tide, where Olive chats with former student Kevin Coulson as they watch waitress Patty Howe by the seashore, all three struggling with their own misgivings about life. Like this story, the collection is easy to read and impossible to forget. Its literary craft and emotional power will surprise readers unfamiliar with Strout. (Apr.)

Testimony by Anita Shreve

From Publishers Weekly

Shreve’s novels (Body Surfing; The Weight of Water) benefit from propulsive plots, and her mixed latest, with its timely theme of debauchery among children of privilege, does not lack in this regard. The first paragraph foreshadows a tragedy in which three marriages are destroyed, the lives of three students at a private school in Vermont are ruined, and death claims an innocent victim. The precipitating event is a sex tape involving three members of the boys’ basketball team and a freshman girl. Beginning with an account of the debacle by the Avery School’s then headmaster, and segueing to the voices of the participants in the orgy, plus their parents and others touched by the scandal, the narrative explores the widening consequences of a single event. Shreve’s character delineation is astute, and the novel’s moral questions—ranging from the boys’ behavior to the headmaster’s breach of legal ethics to the guilt of those involved in the death—are salient if heavy-handed, while the female characters are wicked in the way women have always been stereotypically portrayed. The novel is clever, but the revolving cast of narrators often feels predictable and forced, keeping the novel on the near side of credible. (Oct.)

The Theory of Light and Matter by Andrew Porter

From Publishers Weekly

The narrators of Porter’s Flannery O’Connor Award–winning collection tend to be young and clear-eyed beyond their years as they give voice to the secrets—family, their own—that haunt them. In the opening story, Hole, the narrator ruminates on the loss of a childhood friend and the slippery nature of guilt, memory and truth. In Storms, a young man considers his relationship with a troubled sister, who abandoned her fiancé in Spain without a passport or money. The narrator of River Dog wonders if he should or could hate his brother for the things he did to other people, and for what they did to his brother. In the title story, a young woman ponders the nature of a May/December romance. If the events and secrets of these characters’ pasts have not overtaken their lives, then their reverberations still threaten to corrupt the years yet to come. Throughout, Porter shows how love and pain often come hand in hand. (Oct.)

The Three Weissmanns of Westport - Cathleen Schine

“Sense and Sensibility” is transported to the world of hedge funds and infomercials in this clever, frothy novel. When Joseph Weissmann divorces Betty, his wife of forty-eight years, she takes refuge in her cousin’s cottage in Connecticut, with her two daughters. Annie, the elder, is a sober worrywart, while Miranda, the younger, is self-involved, inclined to melodrama, and on the verge of bankruptcy after her literary agency represented too many fraudulent memoirs. The sisters become involved in a shifting game of romantic entanglements that include a celebrated reclusive writer, a semi-retired lawyer, a Hollywood-bound schemer, an epidemiologist, and a couple of vacuous hangers-on. The ironic title—the three are anything but wise men—does little justice to Schine’s real wit, which playfully probes the lies, self-deceptions, and honorable hearts of her characters. 

Still Alice by Lisa Genova

From Publishers Weekly

Neuroscientist and debut novelist Genova mines years of experience in her field to craft a realistic portrait of early onset Alzheimer’s disease. Alice Howland has a career not unlike Genova’s—she’s an esteemed psychology professor at Harvard, living a comfortable life in Cambridge with her husband, John, arguing about the usual (making quality time together, their daughter’s move to L.A.) when the first symptoms of Alzheimer’s begin to emerge. First, Alice can’t find her Blackberry, then she becomes hopelessly disoriented in her own town. Alice is shocked to be diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s (she had suspected a brain tumor or menopause), after which her life begins steadily to unravel. She loses track of rooms in her home, resigns from Harvard and eventually cannot recognize her own children. The brutal facts of Alzheimer’s are heartbreaking, and it’s impossible not to feel for Alice and her loved ones, but Genova’s prose style is clumsy and her dialogue heavy-handed. This novel will appeal to those dealing with the disease and may prove helpful, but beyond the heartbreaking record of illness there’s little here to remember. (Jan.)

A Wedding in December by Anita Shreve

From Publishers Weekly

ABig Chill–like group reunites for a 40-something wedding in this melancholy story of missed opportunities, lingering regrets and imagined alternatives by Shreve (The Last Time They Met). Bill and Bridget were sweethearts at Maine’s Kidd Academy who rediscovered one another at their 25th reunion. Bridget was already divorced; Bill left his family; the two have now gathered their Kidd coterie to witness their hasty wedding—Bridget has breast cancer—at widow Nora’s western Massachusetts inn. The death of charismatic schoolmate Stephen at a drunken high school party hovers over the event. Stephen’s then-roommate, Harrison, now a married literary publisher, remains particularly tormented by it, especially since he had (and still has) romantic feelings for Nora, who was Stephen’s then-girlfriend. Abrasive Wall Street businessman Jerry, now-out-of-the-closet pianist Rob, single Agnes (who teaches at Kidd and has a secret of her own) and various children round things out. Tensions build as the group gets snowed in, and someone gets drunk enough to say what everyone’s been thinking. Though Shreve’s plot, characters and dialogue are predictable (as are her inevitable 9/11 rehashes), she sure-handedly steers everyone through their inward dramas, and the actions they take (and don’t) are Hollywood satisfying. (Oct. 10)

 

 

Nominated Books Sept. 2009 September 30, 2009

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 7:29 pm

Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons

Getting Mother’s Body by Suzan-Lori Parks

Her Last Death – Susanna Aonnenberg

Heyday by Kurt Andersen

Julie and Julia:  My Year of Cooking Dangerously by Julie Powell

Night by Eli Wiesel

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

South of Broad by Pat Conroy

The Bean Tree by Barbara Kingsolver

The Big House – George Howe Colt

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery

The Forever War – Dexter Filkins

The God of Animals by Aryn Kyle

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

The Shadow of the Wind, by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

The Story of a Marriage by Andrew Greer

 

Nominated Books for April 2009 April 15, 2009

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 3:04 pm

A Voyage Long and Strange by Tony Horwitz

Firefly Lane by Kristing Hannah

I Loved, I Lost, I Made Spaghetti by Giulia Melacci

Shelter Me by Juliette Day

Still Alice by Lisa Genova

Telex from Cuba by Rachel Kushner

The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

The History of Love by Nicole Krauss

The Lost Spy:  an American in Stalin’s Secret Service by Andrew Meier

The Lazarus Project by Aleksandar Hemon

The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov

The Mayor of Castro Street:  The Life and Times of Harvey Milk by Randy Shiltz

The Summer before the Dark by Doris Lessing

The Women:  A Novel by TC Boyle

Things I’ve Learned from the Women who Dumped Me by Ben Karlin

We were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates

 

time to Vote for New Books! December 5, 2008

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 8:48 pm

Bridge of Sighs by Richard Russo

Ella Minnow Pea by Mark Dunn

Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons

God of Animals by Aryn Kyle

Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas Friedman
It’s Not You, It’s Biology by Joe Quirk

Lamb in His Bosom by Caroline Miller

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Wolf
New England White by Stephen L. Carter
Stop Me if You’ve Heard This Before by Jim Holt
The Forever War by Dexter Filkins
The Man in My Basement by Walter Mosley
The Year of Living Biblically by AJ Jacobs
World According to Garp by John Irving

 

Nominated books for June 2008 June 12, 2008

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 7:38 pm

Books that were nominated for June 2008

 

A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson

Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel of Letters by Mark Dunn

Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain

Love the One You’re With by Emily Griffin

Native Son by Richard Wright

Survivor by Chuck Palaniuk

The Death of Ivan Ilych by Tolstoy

The Enchantress of Florence by Salmon Rushdie

The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer

The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch

The Post Office by Charles Bukowski

The Shadow of the Wind, by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

The Short Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz

The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst

The Stolen Child: A Novel by Keith Donohue

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris

 

Nominated books for January 2008 December 27, 2007

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 9:04 pm
The Constant Gardener by John LeCarre

Run by Ann Patchett

The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold

Bridge of Sighs by Richard Russo 

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen 

Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

 Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See

Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson & David Oliver Relin

Skinny Bitch by Kim Barnouin and Rory Freedman

A River Runs Through It by Norman MacLean 

Jamestown by Matthew Sharpe

Pope Joan by Donna Cross

The Witch of Cologne by Tobsha Learner 

Water Music by TC Boyle

Good Dog Stay by Anna Quindlen

The Measure of a Man by Sidney Poitier 

 

And the nominations are… July 24, 2007

Filed under: Nominated Books — Susan @ 8:39 pm

A River Runs Through It by Norman MacLean

A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: a Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver

Emperor of Ocean Park by Stephen Carter

Gift from the Sea by Anne Morrow Linberg

I Who Have Never Known Men by Jacqueline Harpman

Jamestown by Mathhew Sharpe

Leeway Cottage by Beth Gutcheon

Odd Girl Out-The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls by Rachel Simmons

Polio an American Story by David Oshinsky

Pope Joan by Donna Cross

Reviving Ophelia by Mary Pipher

Suite Francaise – Irene Nemirovsky

Summer Reading by Hilma Wolitzer

The Alchemist by Paolo Coelho

The Devil Made Him Do It?- Daniel Myers

The girls who went away by Ann Fessler

The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner by James Hogg

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The Witch of Cologne by Tobsha Learner

Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller

Water Music by T.C. Boyle