Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Made Me Look: Book Titles I'm Glad Made Me Take a Second Look

I read one last week.


The Portable Veblen? Huh? And what is with the squirrel on the cover?

Had to read it. 

The main character, I soon learn, is named Veblen. Veblen is the name of a (famous?) economist, too. 

And again I ask: What is with the squirrel on the cover?

A quirky title, a quirky cover, a quirky book. This one is going on my list of favorite reads ever.


A Swim in a Pond in the Rain by George Saunders. It's kind-of like taking a class on Russian literature by reading about it.

When You Trap a Tiger. The 2021 Newbery. And she does try to trap a tiger. In a house. 

The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. Need I say more?




The World's Poorest President Speaks Out. It's a picture book. And it's a speech from the president of a country who refuses to get rich from his office. It's quite hopeful.

How to Be Happy (Or At Least Less Sad). A workbook that works. 

Gathering Moss. Really? I can hear you say. A book about moss? I know, I know, but trust me, it's amazing.




The Salt Path. What is a salt path? And who made this beautiful cover?

Humans * of New York * Paris * St. Petersburg * Hong Kong * Amsterdam * Juba * Santiago * Karachi * Acra * Buenos Aires * Berlin * Calcutta * Bogata * Lima * Jaipur * Rio de Janeiro * Johannesburg * Dohuk * Singapore * Seoul * Tokyo * Warsaw * Mumbai * Medellin * Barcelona * Madrid * Tabriz * Jammu * Odessa * Dhaka * Cairo * Jerusalem * Bankok * Florence * Sao Paolo * Rosario * Lencois * Sydney * Toronto * Abu Dhabi * Nairobi * Jakarta * Montreal * Amma Alexandria * Bariloche * Rome * Cordoba * Lagos * London * Manila * Kampala Erbil * Melbourne * Auckland * Passu * Tehran * Anzali * Akwamufie * Saigon * Mexico City * Bay of Islands * Moscow * Montevideo * and More. People from all around the world share little tales from their lives. With lovely photos.

Good Morning, Monster. A therapist relates the stories of clients who had terrible lives. Some really awful growing-up years for these folks, but, happily, they did find a fabulous therapist who helped them. 




Top Ten Tuesday was created by 
The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each Tuesday That Artsy Reader Girl assigns a topic and then post her top ten list that fits that topic. You’re more than welcome to join her and create your own top ten (or 2, 5, 20, etc.) list as well. Feel free to put a unique spin on the topic to make it work for you! Please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own post so that others know where to find more information.

Saturday, March 20, 2021

A Week in Which I Go Inside a Store for the First Time in a Year

 





I must thank you all for your helpful advice last week. I was at a low spot emotionally, and you reminded me of all the many ways I can work to get myself out of that awful place. Thank you so much. Have I told you all lately how much I love my blogging friends? I do.






It certainly helped my mood to read four wonderful books last week. I delighted in The Color of Magic and All Things Wise and Wonderful, both of which were full of humor and good storytelling. I enjoyed Tom Brown's Schooldays, too, the story of an English boy's time in boarding school, first published in the early nineteenth century. I'd especially love to know if any of you have read The Portable Veblen, published in 2016, but which I just discovered last week. It went straight onto my Favorites shelf. Quirky times two.

The Color of Magic by Terry Pratchett (Mood-Boosting Books)

All Things Wise and Wonderful by James Herriot (Mood-Boosting Books)

Tom Brown's Schooldays by Thomas Hughes (1001 Children's Books)

The Portable Veblen by Elizabeth Mckenzie (Fiction)








Yes, and...Daily Meditations by Richard Rohr (Daily Meditation Reading)

The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri (Chapter-a-Day Read-Along)

Tarka the Otter by Henry Williamson (1001 Children's Books)

The Little Book of Lent (Daily Reading During Lent)

Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion (Naturalist Book Club)

Women Who Dared: 52 Stories of Fearless Daredevils, Adventurers, and Rebels (Women's History Month)






I finally was able to pop in for Battle of the Books, created by 1000 Books You Must Read Before You Die author Jim Mustich, and hosted over Zoom by the Cuyahoga County Public Library. The format is compelling: five people are given four minutes each to advocate for their favorite books that need to join the next 1000 BYMRBYD list, and then the audience votes. This episode featured author Thrity Umrigar, book reviewer Donna Seaman, author Andromeda Romano-Lax, blogger Anne Bogel, and professor Mary Bly (who writes romances under the pen name Eloisa James). It was great fun. You must stop in for the next battle, and if you don't subscribe to Jim Mustich's bi-weekly e-mail newsletter, you are missing out. 






It's harder than I expected to photograph a butterfly.


I'm excited to see that we have a lot of naturalist events coming up this spring. We're participating in Spring Fling, where we help birders at Quintana Neotropical Bird Sanctuary (masked, socially distant). We are participating in an eight-month long Butterfly Monitoring project at Camp Mohawk. And we will check out the sites on loops of The Great Texas Wildlife Trail in our county. 





Good Thing #1:
I went inside a store for the first time in a year.
Guess what kind of store it was?
Good guess! Yes, it was a bookstore.



Good Thing #2:
I was sure the freeze killed everything, but,
no, my azaleas are blooming.


Good Thing #3:
Our garden is in. Kale and basil and rosemary and carrots survived the freeze,
and now we have added tomatoes and green peppers and green beans and jalapeños





How are you doing this week?





I'm happy you found your way to the Sunday Salon. Sunday Salon is a place for us to link up and to share what we have been doing during the week. It's a great way to visit other blogs and join in the conversations going on there. 

Some of the things we often talk about at the Sunday Salon:

  • What was your week like?
  • Read any good books? Tell us about them.
  • What other bookish things did you do? 
  • What else is going on in your life?

Other places where you may like to link up over the weekend are below. Click on the picture to visit the site.


My linkup for Sunday Salon is below. 

Thursday, March 18, 2021

What's Going on In My America? Part Two, In Search of the Common Good

What’s going on in my America?

For a long time now, I’ve felt like I’ve somehow woken up and found myself on the bad side of It’s a Wonderful Life.


Call me naive. I grew up in the fifties and sixties. I lived in a small town. There was a sense of everyone helping each other to do better. People were demonstrating for change, and changes were taking place across the country. There was a feeling of hopefulness, that even if things weren’t perfect, they were getting better, that people cared about each other and about the world. To paraphrase JFK, our motivation was to ask not for what the world could do for us, but for what we could do for the world.


Now let’s move forward forty years.


I look around now and what do I see? Bold out-and-out lying in public discourse. A huge part of the population that feels it has no part in the conversation. Elected officials who head to warmer climates during an emergency in the state in which they serve. A president who asserts, against all evidence, that the election was stolen from him, and who riles up common people to the extent that they invade the buildings where people meet to form the laws, threatening to kill the leaders of our government. People who ignore scientists and refuse to wear a mask or get vaccinated to protect themselves and the vulnerable. Black people who are killed by police officers or incarcerated at an extraordinarily high rate. Immigrants who are being shut out and villanized. The rich with more wealth than they could ever spend in their lives who continue to press for tax breaks and other legislation that would allow them to accumulate ever more wealth, while the working poor struggle to provide for their family on a minimum wage that fails to keep up with inflation. I could go on and on…


I’ve sought out books to help me sort all of this out. 


Alienated America: Why Some Places Thrive While Others Collapse by Timothy P. Carney


Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community by Robert D. Putnam

 

Our Towns: A 100,000 Journey Into the Heart of America by James M. and Deborah Fallows


Love Your Enemies: How Decent People Can Save America from the Culture of Contempt by Arthur C. Brooks

 

I shared my thoughts on these books here. 

 

These books were extremely helpful in my understanding of the anger I sense in others as well as in helping me to have good conversations with others. But it’s more than just my conversations with others that need help, I think. 

 

I look to these two books:


The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It by Robert B. Reich

 

The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? by Michael J. Sandel

 

By page six, Robert B. Reich in The System has already shared this quote from New York magazine’s Frank Rich: “Everything in the country is broken. Not just Washington, which failed to prevent the financial catastrophe and has done little to protect us from the next, but also race relations, health care, education, institutional religion, law enforcement, the physical infrastructure, the news media, the bedrock virtues of civility and community.” Reich goes on to say, “He might have added the environment and our democracy.”

 

Wow. 

 

Reich looks at the roots of all these problems and he finds the source of the problem in those who control money and, consequently, power, in our country. He quotes activist Greta Thunberg: “If everyone is guilty, then no one is to blame. And someone is to blame. Some people---some companies and some decision-makers in particular---have known exactly what priceless values they are sacrificing to continue making unimaginable amounts of money.”

 

Reich shares some horrifying wealth inequality statistics. “ Between 1980 and 2019, the share of the nation’s total household income going to the richest 1 percent more than doubled, while the earnings of the bottom 90 percent barely rose….the richest 0.1 percent...own almost as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent of households combined.” And, worse, “All this has been accompanied by a dramatic increase in the political power of the super-wealthy and an equally dramatic decline in the political influence of everyone else.”

 

Whew. Can we go on? I feel we must. 

 

“As long as they control the purse strings, the oligarchs know there will be no substantial tax increases for them. Instead, their taxes will fall. There will be no antitrust enforcement to puncture the power of their giant corporations. Instead, their corporations will grow larger….Government will provide even more corporate subsidies, bailouts, and loan guarantees. It will continue to eliminate protections for consumers, workers, and the environment. It will become a government for, of, and by the oligarchy.”

 

Oh dear.

 

“If democracy were working as it should, government officials would make the rules roughly according to what most citizens want them to be. They would also take into account the interests of the poor and of minorities, and give them a fair chance to make it as well. The system would be working for all of us. In a vicious cycle, though, the rules are made mainly by those with the power and wealth to buy the politicians, regulatory heads, and even the courts (and the lawyers who appear before them). As income and wealth concentrate at the top, so does political leverage.”

 

Reich asserts that America is not “suffering a breakdown in private morality. To the contrary, it’s burdened by a breakdown in public morality.”

 

How does Reich suggest that we get out of this mess? He dreams of a multiracial, multiethnic coalition of Americans in the bottom 90 percent of the population who come together based on “a common understanding of what it means to be a citizen with responsibilities for the greater good.” He goes on to say, “The reason to fight oligarchy is not just to obtain a larger share of the economic winnings; it is to make democracy function so that we can achieve all the goals we hold in common.” His call to action is, “Democracy will prevail, if we fight for it.” 

 

Michael J. Sandel is also quite bleak in his assessment of America. He arrives at his conclusions about the state of the nation from his years of experience teaching at one of our nation’s most revered institutions. Sandel looks at the turbulence among our people, and he, like Reich, believes the problems stem from the divisions between those who control the money and power in our country and those who seem to have none. Sandel shows how our fundamental philosophy of belief in a meritocracy, in a system where those who are smart and powerful deserve to be smarter and more powerful, is flawed. He convincingly shows how closely SAT scores and IQ points are tied to income, how coming from wealth leads to more wealth, how few people in our society move from poverty to affluence. It’s not enough, he tells us, to simply open the door a little wider, to let in a few more of the poor into opportunities to obtain wealth. It’s the underlying philosophy, he says, that must be changed, to strip away both the unwarranted hubris of the haves and the sense of inferiority and failure from the have-nots. Sandel and Reich agree that we need to recenter ourselves on the idea of a common good. Sandel hopes to promote the idea of people as producers rather than consumers, to restore the idea of the dignity of work, and to create policies that allow workers to find good jobs that support strong families and communities. Sandel strongly condemns the financial industry, noting that “much financial activity hinders rather than promotes economic growth.” He would act by “discouraging speculation and honoring productive labor.”

 

I’m no politician; I’m simply a regular citizen who would like to make things better. These books have helped me understand (a bit) the workings of our complex economy and government and have given me ideas about ways to act to promote our common good. My sense of hopefulness is growing.

 

At least that’s a start.


 

 What are your thoughts about the state of America?

Do you have ideas about ways we can recenter America on the idea of the common good?

How can we end the divisiveness among Americans?

Have you read any good books you'd suggest for me?

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Wondrous Words: When You Need a Translator to Read in Your Native Tongue

 






Tarka the Otter. I've been reading this 1001 Children's Book You Must Read, and, wow, what a vocabulary. Tarka was first published in 1927, and the author is English.

When you are reading a book in your native language, but you still need a translation....


Sere reeds...

Salmon and peal from the sea...

Voles...

Alder and sallow grew on its banks...

Musical over many stretches of shillet...

Straying from the wood beyond the mill-leat...

His holt was in the weir-pool...

At dimmity it flew down the right bank of the river...

Seeds of charlock...

A ream passed under the stone bridge...

Where a gin was never tilled and a gun was never fired...

The nightjar returned...

He yikkered in his anger...

His mother, tissing through her teeth...

The pair of cole-tits that had a nest...

Like brown thong-weed...

Hound-taint from a high yelping throat...

A dozen hounds were giving tongue...

Chiffchaffs flitted through honeysuckle bines...

The shock-headed flowers of the yellow goat’s beard...

A grey wagtail skipped airily over the sky-gleams of the brook...

Paler than kingcups...

Her rudder dripping wet behind her...

Here burred the bumblebees...

The grunting vuz-peg...

At dimpsey she heard the blackbirds...

The breaking of rank florets and umbels...

They came to a bog tract where curlew and snipe lived...


Tell me, please, is it just me or are these unfamiliar words to you, too?






For more wordless photos, go to Wordless Wednesday.

Wondrous Words Wednesday is a weekly meme where you can share new words that you’ve encountered, or spotlight words you love.  Feel free to get creative! It was first created by Kathy over at Bermuda Onion and is now hosted at Elza Reads.