I was contacted today about reviewing a book called As Nora Jo Fades Away. It is Lisa Cerasoli's account of being the fulltime caretaker of her grandmother who suffered from Alzheimer's and was slowly "fading away." This is not a topic I would have wanted to read about just a few years ago, but because we are watching my mother-in-law go through the same process right now, I find comfort in the experiences of those who have already endured the horror of watching a family member succumb to the disease.
As it turns out, the memoir is also the basis of a documentary film titled "14 Days with Alzheimer's." This is the trailer to that film:
Here's another look at Nora Jo (I have had this conversation so many times with my mother-in-law that this one is hard for me to watch):
(22nd Book Trailer of the week in a continuing series of unusual and memorable book trailers spotted by Book Chase)
A seventeen-year-old book blog offering book reviews and news about authors, publishers, bookstores, and libraries.
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Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
The Highs and Lows of World Book Night 2013
Pre-Set-Up Picture of Mall Common |
Michael Perry's "Population: 485" |
Bored men with nothing to read who dared not stray from where their wives sat them? What more could I ask for? Within an hour I had given away the last 11 books, talked books with some nice guys of all ages, and walked away convinced that each of them was sincerely grateful for the book I left behind. (I was even referred to as a "lifesaver" by two of the guys. Now that's appreciation.)
So the highs easily trumped the lows, and I can't wait to learn what World Book Night 2014 will bring.
Monday, April 22, 2013
The Burgess Boys
The
Burgess kids lost their father in a freakish accident when Jim was eight and
the twins, Bob and Susan, were four.
They were too young to be blamed for what happened, but each of them, in
their own way, would be traumatized by the collective guilt associated with
that tragic day. Now, decades later,
they are still paying the price.
The
boys both practice law in New York City and have left little Shirley Falls,
Maine far behind. Their sister, on the
other hand, has never even been to New York City and still lives in Shirley
Falls with her troubled teenage son. The
Burgess family, while not quite estranged, is most certainly not a close
one. Zach can barely remember his
uncles. And when Jim and Bob are
together, Jim still takes great joy in belittling his brother, something he has
done since at least the day their father died – behavior that the good-natured
Bob seems hardly to notice.
But
suddenly, all the way from Shirley Falls, Susan frantically reaches out to her
brothers for support and legal help.
Zach is in trouble, big trouble, and neither the boy nor his mother is
emotionally prepared for what they are about to face. For the first time since their mother died,
the Burgess kids are together in their old hometown, and they can barely stand
the town – or each other.
Elizabeth Strout |
With
remarkable insight, Elizabeth Strout, beginning with the trauma they suffered
as small children, moves up and down the Burgess family timeline to explain how
they became the people they are today.
Bob and Susan, neither of whom can handle stress or confrontation, are
the most obviously emotionally stunted of the three, but the outwardly
successful Jim is only better at hiding his problems than they are. Layer by layer, Stroud develops their
distinct personalities, and when they are finally forced to confront their
past, it is only a question of which of them will crack first.
The
Burgess kids did not grow up to become likable adults, and Strout does not
pretend that they did, but it is hard not to be sympathetic as one observes
their efforts to cope with their lives.
Their father, after all, was only the most obvious victim of the
accident that claimed his life – there were three other victims that day.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Stephen King's Carrie - 2013 Version
Carrie is the novel that introduced Stephen King to the world (although I did not really discover him myself until I picked up a paperback copy of The Shining a while later). Co-incidentally, the 1975 Hollywood version of Carrie is largely responsible for making Sissy Spacek a household name despite the fact that she already had been around for about five years. Obviously, the bullied teen's story has a firm grip on America's imagination.
Now comes word that a new film version, one much truer to King's novel, will be released in late 2013. The movie will star Chloe Grace Moretz as Carrie and is directed by Kimberly Pierce.
I admit that the movie looks intriguing based on this one trailer, but I have to wonder whether anyone already familiar with Carrie will really want to sit through a new version, even one produced by today's technology. Will "familiarity breed contempt" in this case?
What do you think?
Now comes word that a new film version, one much truer to King's novel, will be released in late 2013. The movie will star Chloe Grace Moretz as Carrie and is directed by Kimberly Pierce.
I admit that the movie looks intriguing based on this one trailer, but I have to wonder whether anyone already familiar with Carrie will really want to sit through a new version, even one produced by today's technology. Will "familiarity breed contempt" in this case?
What do you think?
Friday, April 19, 2013
Lost in the Stacks
I'm rather honored that Danielle over at A Work in Progress added my bookshelves to her "Lost in the Stacks: Home Edition" feature today. Danielle's post includes multiple pictures of my books and shelves along with my answers to her questions regarding the shelves and how I handle my book collection.
If you're interested, here is the direct link to A Work in Progress. I've followed her "Lost in the Stacks" posts for a while now and always find them fun...loving to snoop the book collections of others, as I do. Too, if you are interested in sharing your own shelves, I imagine that Danielle would like to hear from you.
(Thanks, Danielle, it was fun.)
If you're interested, here is the direct link to A Work in Progress. I've followed her "Lost in the Stacks" posts for a while now and always find them fun...loving to snoop the book collections of others, as I do. Too, if you are interested in sharing your own shelves, I imagine that Danielle would like to hear from you.
(Thanks, Danielle, it was fun.)
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Life After Life
Although I am one generation away
from needing "elder care" for myself, I have spent a whole lot of
time with my 91-year-old father in an assisted living facility during the last
three years. Remarkably, he is healthier
and happier today than the day he took up residence there - and both of us
attribute his improvement more to his daily interaction with the friends he has
made there than to the extra care and assistance he receives. There is just something special about being
around people so regularly.
So when I spotted Jill McCorkle's Life After Life I wondered if she had
gotten in right. Would her portrayal of
daily life inside an assisted living facility accurately present all the ups
and downs of what residents experience as they navigate their "life after
life" period or not? Well, I can
now say that not only does McCorkle get it right, she also creates a number of
memorable characters along the way.
Life
After Life is set in a Fulton, North Carolina
"retirement facility" called Pine Haven Estates. Most, but not all, of its residents are
locals who have known each other since childhood. One of them, in fact, taught third-grade for
so many years that she remembers most of Fulton's citizens as they were when
they were eight years old. Sadie, now
85, has come to believe that, in our hearts, we are all still eight years old,
and she conducts herself accordingly.
Sadie's best friend is Rachel,
another retired schoolteacher, who has moved from Massachusetts to spend her
final years in North Carolina because of mysterious (and well-guarded) reasons
of her own. Then there is Toby, a
"youngish" lesbian and former high school English teacher, whose
tendency to see the humor of any situation (and she is not afraid to laugh
about it) makes her a treat to have around.
Throw in Stanley, who is outrageously pretending to suffer from dementia
so that his son will finally move on with his own life, and the social
possibilities are endless.
Jill McCorkle |
But McCorkle does not stop
there. She includes characters like
Joanna, a hospice worker who is a regular visitor to Pine Haven Estates; C.J., a
much tattooed and pierced young lady who provides the facility's beauty care;
and Abby, the troubled 12-year-old who lives next door and prefers to spend her
free time in Pine Haven Estates rather than with her feuding parents. All of these "outside" characters
have lives and problems of their own that they bring with them to Pine Haven, a
reminder to the residents that the world they remember is still spinning right
outside their front door.
Life
After Life is fun but it comes with the serious
message that "life after life" is what we make of it - and that we
best be preparing for it a long time before it begins. In what I think is a rather jarring ending
(which is sure to irritate some readers) one character learns about life the
hardest way possible. This one is
definitely worth a look.
(Review Copy provided by Publisher)
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
The Last Bookshop
The video shown below was created in the UK by BakeryTV and is very well done. It is a depiction of where the world could be headed if shopping trends and technology changes continue in the direction they are headed today. The film is a rather satirical look at the worst-case scenario but it makes a couple of legitimate points about the future of books.
The Last Bookshop video is a bit over 20 minutes long, but the real punchline comes at the end, so try to stay with it. Honestly, it is so wonderfully acted, scripted, and produced that you are more likely to be disappointed when it ends rather than you are to cut it off before the end.
The Last Bookshop video is a bit over 20 minutes long, but the real punchline comes at the end, so try to stay with it. Honestly, it is so wonderfully acted, scripted, and produced that you are more likely to be disappointed when it ends rather than you are to cut it off before the end.
Monday, April 15, 2013
World Book Night 2013 Fast Approaching
World Book Night 2013 (April 23) is fast approaching. I, in fact, expect an email in the next day or so authorizing me to pick up a case of 20 copies of Michael Perry's Population:485 from a near-by Barnes & Noble for distribution that evening.
Now it is time for me to finalize a spot to give the books away - and that is not quite as easy as it sounds. The primary goal of World Book Night is to get books into the hands of light readers and others who seldom read a book at all. So where do I best find them? Starbucks, in the common area of a local shopping mall, in front of a Wal-Mart (don't laugh), at a sandwich shop?
Last year I gave away copies of John Irving's A Prayer for Owen Meany to residents of a senior living home a few miles from me. The book's were much appreciated, and I really enjoyed talking books with the folks I met that night. But this year, I thought I would try for a more general selection from the population - keeping in mind that Population: 485 is not for younger readers.
Suggestions?
Now it is time for me to finalize a spot to give the books away - and that is not quite as easy as it sounds. The primary goal of World Book Night is to get books into the hands of light readers and others who seldom read a book at all. So where do I best find them? Starbucks, in the common area of a local shopping mall, in front of a Wal-Mart (don't laugh), at a sandwich shop?
Last year I gave away copies of John Irving's A Prayer for Owen Meany to residents of a senior living home a few miles from me. The book's were much appreciated, and I really enjoyed talking books with the folks I met that night. But this year, I thought I would try for a more general selection from the population - keeping in mind that Population: 485 is not for younger readers.
Suggestions?
Sunday, April 14, 2013
For the First Time Since 1947, a Bay Psalm Book Will Change Hands
One of the eleven remaining copies of the very first American book produced in America is for sale. And for a mere $30 million you can just about guarantee that it will be yours - just register with Sotheby's for the Bay Psalm Book auction scheduled for November 26, 2013 in New York.
The last copy of the Bay Psalm Book to change hands was purchased way back in 1947 by Yale University for a then, whopping $151,000.
This copy is expected to sell for something between $15 million and the $30 million I mentioned earlier. It is one of two copies owned by Boston's Old South Church, whose leadership plans to use auction proceeds for repairs to the building and for various programs sponsored by the church.
Wow.
The last copy of the Bay Psalm Book to change hands was purchased way back in 1947 by Yale University for a then, whopping $151,000.
This copy is expected to sell for something between $15 million and the $30 million I mentioned earlier. It is one of two copies owned by Boston's Old South Church, whose leadership plans to use auction proceeds for repairs to the building and for various programs sponsored by the church.
Wow.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Driving Mr. Yogi
I suspect that Driving Mr. Yogi will almost exclusively be read by baseball fans,
particularly fans of the love-them-or-hate-them New York Yankees. And that's a shame, because the book is
actually a rather beautiful portrayal of love, respect, loyalty, and the
powerful impact of mentoring by one generation of another. Yes, as its subtitle makes clear, this is a
book about two of the greatest Yankees ever to play the game: catcher Yogi
Berra and pitcher Ron Guidry, two men with little in common other than their
outstanding ability to play the game of baseball. But playing baseball is the smallest part of
this story.
Yankee owner George Steinbrenner was
not known for his social skills, and Yogi Berra was a man with a long memory
and the ability to hold a grudge indefinitely (neither of which make it easy to
work for someone like Steinbrenner).
Baseball managers are "hired to be fired," of course, and Yogi
never objected to the fact that Steinbrenner fired him. But
he took offense to how Steinbrenner
handled the firing - and refused to return to Yankee Stadium, or speak to
Steinbrenner, for fourteen long years.
It was the vain Steinbrenner who cracked first, and decided to visit
Yogi in New Jersey to work things out.
Ron Guidry, Yogi Berra |
So when Berra arrived in Florida for
his first Yankee Spring Training in fourteen years, Ron Guidry, a Berra protégé
and sometime Yankee pitching coach, was eager to meet him at the airport to
help his old coach get settled in.
Little did Guidry know at the time, that this would be the beginning of
perhaps the most beautiful friendship he would ever experience. What began as a courtesy on Guidry's part,
one stemming from his immense respect for Berra, would evolve into a deep
friendship that made the lives of both men better. If the truth were known, it probably made
them both better men. But over time, as
Berra aged and became feeble, the relationship evolved into one in which Guidry
was his friend’s protector, always there to
ensure that Yogi did not suffer a crippling fall or otherwise endanger
himself. Theirs was almost a father-son
relationship.
Driving
Mr. Yogi might be specifically aimed at
baseball fans, but it is also perfect for anyone interested in the aging
process or in dealing with an aging parent of their own. The book
is filled with insights beautifully presented via the many little personal
moments that Ron and Yogi shared with author Harvey Araton. We can all learn something from their story.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Bad Books, Vicious Libs, and Baseball Dopes Like Pedro Strop
I seem to be in the middle (I hope it's at least the middle) of a frustrating period during which I can't find a book that doesn't leave me feeling as if I'm wasting precious reading-time on it. The last few books I've started are either so poorly written (dominated by convoluted sentences, or even worse, by poor grammar and sentence fragments) or they are so utterly boring that I toss them aside from frustration after 50 or 60 pages.
The sad thing is that the poorly written ones I've encountered during this streak have the best plots or topics, and the better written ones are the boring ones. At this point, I'd settle for mediocrity in both writing and plot as a good compromise to jumpstart my reading. I'm not sure which is worse: overhyped books from major publishers or all the self-published books out there that should have been kept at home. I don't mean to sound cynical (or worse, unfeeling), but the book-haystack is getting larger and larger, making it more difficult than ever to find the good stuff. And that is frustrating.
Maybe, it's me. Do you ever get to the point where everything seems to be annoying and frustrating? Maybe it started when I noticed the viciously gleeful reaction so many on the left are having to the death of Britain's Margaret Thatcher. That disgusting display of intolerance was enough to put me in a bad mood, and might be the reason my reading enjoyment went south about the same time. I read many authors whose political opinions I don't necessarily agree with, and some of them have jumped on the trash-Thatcher bandwagon, so maybe that's it.
The final straw was last night when I turned to a longtime favorite pastime, televised baseball, for some relief. Didn't happen, thanks to some dope named Pedro Strop who pitches for the Baltimore Orioles. This clown wears his baseball cap cocked so far to the side that it almost touches his right ear. I wish I had a photo I could post, but just picture a very crooked baseball cap on this fool's head - something you might see on some thuggish yo-yo hanging out at the local mall trying to look cool - and you will get the idea. Come on, Mr. Baseball Commissioner, are you going to put up with this kind of thing? Do you really want Major League Baseball to become the NBA? If players don't respect themselves or their fans, can't you at least demand that they respect the sport? That's sort of your job.
I always figured that the older I got, the more patience I would have, especially after I retired. It's sure not working out that way.
The sad thing is that the poorly written ones I've encountered during this streak have the best plots or topics, and the better written ones are the boring ones. At this point, I'd settle for mediocrity in both writing and plot as a good compromise to jumpstart my reading. I'm not sure which is worse: overhyped books from major publishers or all the self-published books out there that should have been kept at home. I don't mean to sound cynical (or worse, unfeeling), but the book-haystack is getting larger and larger, making it more difficult than ever to find the good stuff. And that is frustrating.
Maybe, it's me. Do you ever get to the point where everything seems to be annoying and frustrating? Maybe it started when I noticed the viciously gleeful reaction so many on the left are having to the death of Britain's Margaret Thatcher. That disgusting display of intolerance was enough to put me in a bad mood, and might be the reason my reading enjoyment went south about the same time. I read many authors whose political opinions I don't necessarily agree with, and some of them have jumped on the trash-Thatcher bandwagon, so maybe that's it.
The final straw was last night when I turned to a longtime favorite pastime, televised baseball, for some relief. Didn't happen, thanks to some dope named Pedro Strop who pitches for the Baltimore Orioles. This clown wears his baseball cap cocked so far to the side that it almost touches his right ear. I wish I had a photo I could post, but just picture a very crooked baseball cap on this fool's head - something you might see on some thuggish yo-yo hanging out at the local mall trying to look cool - and you will get the idea. Come on, Mr. Baseball Commissioner, are you going to put up with this kind of thing? Do you really want Major League Baseball to become the NBA? If players don't respect themselves or their fans, can't you at least demand that they respect the sport? That's sort of your job.
I always figured that the older I got, the more patience I would have, especially after I retired. It's sure not working out that way.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
The Cat
The horror of losing a child is bad
enough. But when that child is the only
one you are ever likely to have, and you are a fast-approaching-forty, single
mother, the loss can steal your very will to live. Throw in the guilt Elise feels about letting her eleven-year-old son be run
down by a car in his own front yard, and her wish to join him in death is easy
to understand. Her world has been
changed forever, her purpose in life snatched while she was not paying
attention.
In such pain that she wants nothing
more than to be left alone, the bewildered Elise begins to plan her death. It should be easy enough certainly for
someone as determined as her. But then
it hits her: if she kills herself, there will be no one left to take care of
her son's beloved cat, Pursie. She knows
her son will never forgive her if she abandons the animal to the woods
surrounding their rural home. So,
reluctantly, she makes it through the first night without her son as her
"jailer lay next to her and purred."
The
Cat chronicles the next seven months of
Elise's struggle to maintain her sanity as she cares for Pursie - and finally,
even a little for herself. As Elise
crosses off the days on her calendar, she and Pursie settle into an existence
of near isolation. That isolation,
however, will prove to be an impossible goal as Elise, over time, is forced to
interact a bit with friends, neighbors, and others concerned about her. Try as she might, she will not be allowed to cut herself off from the rest
of the world.
Edeet Ravel |
Much of Elise's story is told through
the memories she types out as a way to forget for a few minutes about her son's
death. Her less than ideal childhood
(Elise was born with nevus flammeus,
a purple "stain" largely covering the left side of her face that made
her a target for the taunts of other children) perhaps explains her ease with
total isolation and a tendency to slip into despair. But, as Elise will learn, hope can come from
where one least expects to find it - and then she has to decide what to do with
it.
The
Cat might not be long on action, but its
message is a powerful one that readers will think about long after they turn
the novel's final page. If "literay
fiction" is your preference, this one might be for you.
(Review Copy provided by Publisher)