Wednesday, June 23, 2010

What she read: The House on First Street

       In between promoting Children with Cancer: A Comprehensive Reference Guide for Parents (Oxford U. Press, 2010) and working at the library (http://www.lincolnpl.org/), I always find time to read. Usually I have several books going at once, because heaven forbid I should not have a book handy to fill odd moments when I could be doing other things--like, say, thinking. There is the audiobook in the car, the lunch book at the library, and always a pile of books by the bed. Recently I finished Julia Reed's The House on First Street: My New Orleans Story (Harper/Collins 2008).
       I have only been to New Orleans once, and it was in the post-Katrina era, but even with the city running on fewer cylinders, I was hooked. I was one of the intrepid American Library Association conference attendees when the ALA was the first major convention to return to the city after the devastation.
       This started out as a lunch book but ended up as an under-the-tree-in-a-swing-in-Maine book. In her charming story, Julia Reed explains how she went to New Orleans in the early 90s the cover a political campaign (for Vogue? really?). And pretty much stayed. Raised in Mississippi, Reed was living in New York and writing for Newsweek, among other publications. Gradually, though, she found herself in the Crescent City a lot more than in The Big Apple. What happened, of course, was love. A man and a city and then a house. Her book details the woes of renovating an old house using the worst contractor in town.--or maybe in the whole country. Or the world. After a year of frustration, fury and eventual progress, they moved into the house in the Garden District--a month before Katrina struck. The latter part of the book provides an insider's view of the hurricane and recovery.
As they say, I laughed, I cried, and I wanted to visit New Orleans again. For other New Orleans books, I recommend A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole (pre-disaster) and local columnist Chris Rose's One Dead in Attic, post-Katrina. Quite the city, either way.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

And you thought I would never finish it

Well, you were wrong! I now have in my possession several spanking new copies of Children with Cancer: A Comprehensive Reference Guide for Parents, Oxford University Press 2010. Book launch is scheduled for the Lincoln Public Library, Sunday afternoon, July 10, 2-4 pm. Save the date. More information to follow.

What she read: the Paper Marriage

Okay, I admit one of my deep, dark secrets. I read romance novels. Sure, some of them (okay, pretty much all of them) are predictable. Boy meets girl, boy hates girl, sparks fly anyway, they have hot sex and live happily ever after. Still, sometimes, don't you just want a book that leaves you feeling good? So I am subscribed to the library's NextReads romance readers' advisory online service. That gives me book suggestions beyond my favorites, Susan Elizabeth Phillips and Jennifer Crusie. That's how I discovered Susan Kay Law's The Paper Marriage (Berkley Books, 2008). Not only is the book well-written, but the device separating the would-be lovers has an ethical resonance usually lacking in category romance novels. (Hey, I still read 'em...!) More common in novels, this one also explores the love between parent and child, and does so without preaching. And it made me laugh. And it was set in Anytown USA. And it has sex, although not hit-you-over-the-head with it. It has the standard burned out famous rich professional athlete. So there's also fantasy there! I recommend it highly.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

What she read, what she wrote, what she did

This is another try to get a new blog started. As you know, the Writers' Plot blog came to an end with the New Year. Rather than join another blog group now, I decided to just post my random thoughts and see if anyone noticed. Since it is impossible for me to focus on anything for very long, I'm giving myself leverage to talk about what I read, what I write, and what I do, where I go, and, for good measure, what I eat (just now and then, probably). So far I have written a blog about how I think 2010 is going to go (and already that's totally wrong; so much for resolutions, or do we call that "planning"?). I wrote a blog about Lisa Lutz's Revenge of the Spellmans, another about Grandpa Losefsky taking the train from The Bronx to Poughkeepsie to visit us, bearing deli goodies, and another one even I've forgotten.
You will probably never see those blogs, because I can't figure out how to cut-and-paste them and I'm too busy (or, okay, maybe lazy) to rewrite them. And frankly, if even I can't remember it, it's not all that earth-shattering. So I'm starting from scratch.
This post is just a test to see if it actually works. After that, as someone said, "le deluge".

Monday, January 4, 2010

I wish everyone a Happy New Year!