Showing posts with label summer reading lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer reading lists. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2014

Anticipation

What are you looking forward to reading this summer? On the top of my list are Roxane Gay's An Untamed State and Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch. I've got my hands on a copy of the latter, but it's enormous! And I just don't think the short intervals of reading time I currently have available will accommodate its heft. It will be nice to have time to savor this book that won Ms Tartt the Pulitzer and that several friends have pronounced fabulous.

An Untamed State has just been released and I'm on the reserve list at Seattle Public Library. I've been following Roxane Gay on Twitter for some time. Have you heard of her? She writes a lot, and teaches at an Illinois university, and did I mention she writes a lot? She's smart, articulate and provides a perspective I have not seen before. She always makes me feel smarter, because she's clearly intelligent and I understand what she's writing. You can read an utterly heartbreaking essay about loneliness and love and reality television in yesterday's NY Times here, a pointed criticism of bell hooks criticizing BeyoncĂ©'s feminism here, and a spirited defense of unlikeable female protagonists here.

In her new novel, Gay is gathering glowing reviews for her writing, characters and honesty. Mireille is a wealthy Haitian woman who is kidnapped. This is, apparently, kind of business as usual in Haiti -- people are kidnapped; their friends and family pay the ransom; everyone wins. But that doesn't happen for Mireille. Her father refuses to pay and, oh dear. Now it's bad. Privilege and power, wealth and class, how to overcome devastating trauma -- Gay addresses some weighty issues here. It sounds utterly harrowing, and I don't usually do harrowing, but it also sounds too good to miss.

On a lighter note, Rainbow Rowell's fourth book, her second novel for adults, is due out in July. Landline follows a couple having marital trouble -- like who doesn't a few years and couple kids down the line? -- but Georgie may have busted the relationship for good this time. Until she stumbles on an unusual way to communicate with her husband that can maybe make a difference. Rowell's characters are true to life and they have great (and believeable) conversations. The books are funny and wise and sexy. I'm going to click on over to SPL right now and see if it's too early to put Landline on reserve.

What's on your summer reading list?




Friday, June 7, 2013

Making Stuff!

Somehow the school year is over and we never composed our summer reading list! Oh dear! Instead, we are going to use our blog to occasionally post suggestions, so check in now and again to see what we are reading and recommending this summer.

In honor of the Seattle Mini Maker Faire this weekend, here are my favorite crafting books:

Quilting with Style: Principles for Great Pattern Design, published in 1993. Every time I pick it up, authors Gwen Marston and Joe Cunningham remind me that quilting (and indeed any craft) is about process. It is not a race and it's not about shopping for the newest gadget.

Improv Sewing by Nicole Blum (2012), also encourages the process of creativity. Yes, there are some patterns and directions, but the underlying theme is empowerment -- figure out what you want to do and I'll bet that if sewing is involved Blum's book will have at least one project that you can adapt to make it happen.

Two great magazines supporting the maker community are Make: Magazine and Cloth Paper Scissors. Look here for inspiration as well as techniques. There are scores more periodicals, not to mention all the blogs and YouTube videos out there teaching everything from making a wallet out of keyboard circuit sheets to cross-stitch samplers.

Cooking is making too. Do you know Edna Lewis? She was the grande dame of Southern cuisine, writing several cookbooks. Tonight I made a rustic rhubarb pie from The Art of Southern Cooking, co-authored by Scott Peacock, and all I can say is delicious. There's also a charming picture book about Miss Lewis called Bring Me Some Apples and I'll Make You a Pie. It's by Robbin Gourley, and is available from your public library. While you're there, sign up for their summer reading program.

Lindi

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Interludes

Check it out! The list of summer reads that we put together every spring is now online at http://library.bush.edu/news/summerreading08.htm

This year the theme is Interludes. I picked it inspired by my daughter Kitri. She called me one recent morning (before 9, in itself an amazing event) as she was sitting on the porch in the sun reading The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy, by Jeanne Birdsall. She was thoroughly enjoying herself and the only thing she was missing was her mommy to read it to her.

As I thought about how gratifying the phone call was, about my love for that particular book with its vacation theme, and about the wonderful respite that summer is, the light bulb went on: Books about interludes, books expressing a certain suspension of the mundane. So armed with a theme, we put together a terrific collection of suggested books! From fishing to Aung San Suu Kyi's house arrest, from that creative trance of crafting to travel stories -- there's something for everyone here. With some titles you might have to reach a little to see how the theme fits, but I couldn't leave off Garth Stein's new book, The Art of Racing in the Rain, for example.

Mary Ann Gwinn, The Seattle Times book editor, recently referred to "that trancelike state you achieve when you get deep into a book"* -- may your summer be filled with trancelike interludes.

*Gwinn, Mary Ann. "Literary blogger Mark Sarvas ventures into the receiving end of critique." The Seattle Times, May 25, 2008. Accessed online 5/29/08