Friday, September 21, 2012

A TRAIN IN WINTER – AN EXTRAORDINARY STORY OF WOMEN, FRIENDSHIP, AND RESISTANCE IN OCCUPIED FRANCE by Caroline Mooehead


Caroline Moorehead. A Train in Winter – An Extraordinary Story of Women, Friendship, and Resistance in Occupied France (New York: Harper Collins, 2011). 317 pages. Additional materials in an Appendix, Source Notes, and Bibliography.

(NON-FICTION: HISTORY)

Reviewed by Chuck Dayton



This work of non-fiction is written by Caroline Moorehead who lives in London and Italy. In this work, she interviews women who survived the “Paris Roundup” of French Resistance workers by the Nazis and collaborating French police. In January 1943, they were sent to their final destination, Auschwitz on the only train from Paris with all women (230). Only 49 would return to France.

This is a remarkable but emotionally difficult-to-read account from interviews, diaries, and collected papers of this phenomenal group of women. Those who survived the atrocities of imprisonment credited the closeness achieved by the women while imprisoned as a reason for survival. Some helped in the camps as quasi nurses, some helped the weaker of the women on work details, but all shared food, talked with each other every night, and kept each other warm. Death was all around them, including many of their group.

To me, an interesting aspect of the book is the experience of the women who came back to France after the liberation of the camps. Many were faced with children they left behind who no longer knew them, others with no spouses, parents or children surviving. Some started over. Some just gave up from the guilt of having survived when so many died. Interestingly, many of the women noted that they actually missed their shared time together with other women as it had been in the camps and reported they were lonely upon return to their homes. Some tried to talk to others about their experiences, only to become silent on the subject. One woman, speaking to a group, was told she could not be telling the truth because if she were, she would not have survived the experiences.

This is an important book, I think, to help us remember how cruel fellow human beings can be under the leadership of a deranged person. A poll in France as recently as the 1980’s showed that about 34% of French people aged between 18 and 44 did not think that the existence of gas chambers had been clearly proven. Let us strive to never forget.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

CRADLE TO CRADLE: REMAKING THE WAY WE MAKE THINGS by William McDonough & Michael Braungart


William McDonough & Michael Braungart, Cradle to Cradle: remaking the way we make things (New York: North Point Press; a division of Farrar. Straus & Giroux, 2002).

(NON-FICTION)    
 
Audio Version: Read by Stephen Hoye (Tantor Audio, 2008).

Reviewed by Wilda Morris


I sometimes feel as though there is no hope for the environment. We are depleting and destroying a large proportion of the world’s non-renewable resources. An ever-increasing number of people are within reach of television programs and movies which project images of North American life styles. Millions see and want luxuries they had not previously known existed. Advertising encourages this phenomenon.

I read in Cradle to Cradle that fabrics used in furniture, drapes and carpets contain dangerous chemicals; our computers contain more than a thousand different materials, including toxic gases, mercury and acids; and the shoes in which we walk or run through the forest preserve (in order to enjoy nature) are leaving deleterious substances in our footprints.

However, Cradle to Cradle has given me a sliver of hope. “Reduce, reuse, recycle” is not the right approach, the authors argue. It will not end the “cradle to grave” approach to manufacturing which started with the industrial revolution. McDonough (an architect) and Braungart (a chemist) have a different “design assignment.” They believe it is possible to create:

“*  buildings that. . . produce more energy than they consume and purify their own waste water
*  factories that produce effluents that are drinking water
*  products that. . . do not become useless waste but can be tossed onto the ground to decompose and become food for plants and animals and nutrients for soil; or, alternately, that can return to industrial cycles to supply high-quality raw materials for new products
. . .
*  transportation that improves the quality of life while delivering goods and services
*  a world of abundance, not one of limits, pollution, and waste.”  (Pp. 90-91)

The authors use the image of the cherry tree, which produces more blossoms and fruit than needed, but this “waste” is converted into nutrients for its environment. If you do not believe the vision embodied by McDonough’s and Braungart’s design assignment is possible, I encourage you to read Cradle to Cradle (or listen to the book on CD). You will learn about projects already completed or underway which join the best intentions of environmentalists and manufacturers. You may not agree with everything you read, but the book may help you envision a new approach to protecting the environment.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

THE END OF FOOD by Paul Roberts


The End of Food by Paul Roberts (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008; Mariner Books; Reprint edition, 2009).Also available on Kindle and CD.

(Non-fiction)

Reviewed by Wilda Morris



Paul Roberts argues that “On nearly every level, we are reaching the end of what may one day be called the ‘golden age’ of food, a brief, near-miraculous period during which the things we ate seemed to grow only more plentiful, more secure, more nutritious, and simply better with each passing year” (xii). The modern food system is an economic system which treats food like other consumer products, which has meant increasingly larger scales of production to provide high volume at lower costs, continuous innovation to create new products, and distribution channels not unlike those of toys or DVDs. But, according to Roberts, food is not suited to the kind of mass production and distribution. The system has contributed to obesity, the development of food-borne pathogens against which we have no defense, failed programs against world hunger which have increased malnutrition in some areas of the world, while putting small producers out of business. The current food system will make it exceedingly difficult for human beings to respond to changes which will result if predictions of global warming are correct. Rising fuel costs and the depletion of water resources threaten the system.

The book is organized “somewhat like the economic system it seeks to reveal” (xxv). Roberts begins with a history of the food economy, then, in chapter 2, discusses how food became industrialized. NestlĂ©, the world’s largest food distributor is used as the primary example. Then Roberts looks at the ways in which large food companies leveraged size and market share to take control of the supply chain, driving smaller produces from the market and changing the nature of food. He discusses how these changes resulted in a decline in the nutritional quality of food as the system demanded more and more processing, and how this has contributed to diabetes and other health issues.

Roberts discusses how the benefits of globalizing the food system have been balanced by new dangers, including easier transmission of diseases and greater vulnerability to increases in energy costs.  Increased control by large corporations centered in the US, Europe, Brazil and China has excluded millions of people, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, without adequate food or nutrition. The US Department of Agriculture has been complicit in the creation of many problems for other countries by its support of US agribusiness. I found the case study of Kenya and its food issues quite eye-opening.

According to Roberts, if we are to overcome problems related to food-borne disease; soil contamination; water, energy and land scarcity, we need to completely overhaul our food system and reduce our meat consumption. Neither transgenic nor organic food will solve the problem. Other options are available, but there is resistance to needed changes from the large corporations benefiting from the current system, not to mention politicians who want the support of these magnates. There is also resistance to the required changes in culture: eating less meat; doing more of our own cooking instead of reaching for the most processed—and often most convenient—products. and so on.

This book provides much for us to chew on, as we consider where our food comes from and how it comes to us.



Note: Page numbers are from the paperback edition.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

THE GARDEN OF LAST DAYS by Andre Dubus III


The Garden of Last Days by Andre Dubus III (New York: W. W. Norton, 2008), 535 pages.
Also Available on Kindle.

(Novel)

Reviewed by Chuck Dayton



Sue and I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Dubus at a book reading in Iowa City on June 9th, 2009, our wedding anniversary. He wrote a very complimentary note in my book regarding a question that I had asked. He is the son of Andre Dubus II, who is a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop. He was raised around authors in his early years, relating that he watched cartoons on Saturday mornings with his father’s best friend, Kurt Vonnegut, while growing up. This author’s first book, House of Sand and Fog was extremely popular and was eventually made into a movie.

The Garden of the Last Days is a novel set in south Florida, intertwining the lives of some very interesting people and some ordinary people. The title is played out in the garden of Jean, a widow, who tends her garden while babysitting a small child whose mother happens to be a stripper trying to make ends meet. In a rather long and involved plot, it is revealed to the reader that some patrons of a strip club turn out to be the Arab terrorists currently in flight schools in Florida, preparing for the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York.

It was interesting to me to see how the lives of ordinary people and the lives of these Arab men were so intertwined, and yet their goals were so different. Because of their incredibly conservative Muslim backgrounds, there is a lot of angst portrayed in their involvement with American culture. This is not a violent book, and the actual commission of the terrorist acts is but a small part of the plot. I recommend this book if you are interested in the interpersonal relationships of people of radically different cultures. 

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

CUTTING FOR STONE by Abraham Verghese


Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese (Vintage; Reprint edition:January 26, 2010)
 
(NOVEL)

Reviewed by Lisa Proehl

Abraham Verghese is a physician and author. His two non-fiction books are My Own Country, about his work with AIDS patients in rural Tennessee, and The Tennis Partner, a memoir of a difficult friendship. Cutting for Stone is his first novel.

The story is set in Ethiopia, where conjoined twins Marion and Shiva Stone are born and immediately lose their mother, a nun, to the complicated pregnancy. What follows is the story of their coming of age as Ethiopia hovers close to revolution. The twins share a very strong connection with each other, a fascination with medicine, and eventually a passion for the same woman.

There are several plot twists which keep the reader engaged throughout the novel. What resonated most deeply for me was the beautiful expression of the power and beauty of doing healing work, as well as the profound love and connection between the twin brothers.

My favorite book of 2010! I highly recommend it.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

TWENTY GOOD READS FOR LOVERS OF HISTORICAL MYSTERIES


The “Cadfael Chronicles,” twenty historical mysteries sent during the English Civil War of the 1100s, by Ellis Peters (various publishers and editions available). They were written between 1977 and 1994, in the following order:
                              


Dialogue between Wilda Morris and Thomas Kessler

WM: I read all twenty of the Brother Cadfael mysteries by Ellis Peters (a pseudonym of British author, Edith Pargeter). Did you also read all of them? If so, what did you especially like about them?

TK: It was quite a while ago, but I believe I read all that were available at the time. I enjoyed them very much for several reasons—I enjoy mystery novels, I enjoy novels set in the Middle Ages, and I enjoy novels that serve to open a window into life in monasteries. I also appreciated Cadfael's perspective on life and events. 

WM: The series was recommended to me during the month we spent on the border between Wales and England. The main setting is the Benedictine Monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul at Shrewsbury. I found one of the books in a store and bought it. I think it was The Hermit of Eyton Forest. It was a mistake not to begin with A Morbid Taste for Bones, the first book in the series. If you don’t start with the first book, you know something that gives away too much in an earlier volume. Thirteen of the books were made into television shows (with Derek Jacobi playing Brother Cadfael). I never understood why our public television station played the third episode first. One of the suspicious characters in the second novel becomes a regular, much-respected character in the later books. If you already know he is a “good guy,” he won’t look like a villain in One Corpse Too Many. That reduces the suspense. I highly recommend starting with the first volume of the series and working your way through in order! Do you have a favorite?

TK: I don't remember enough details to specify a favorite in terms of the story, but the one that I am reminded about most often is Monk's Hood because it involved a poisoning using a toxic plant called Monkshood - which has a beautiful hood-shaped purple bloom. After reading the book I planted some Monkshood in our yard (just to look at - not to use as poison), and think of the novel every time I see the plant.

WK: Maybe you could give me a cutting of Monkshood for my garden! Your mention of that reminds me that Cadfael was an expert in herbs and other plants. As a monk, Cadfael was in charge of the monastery herb garden, which was grown primarily for medicinal purposes. Cadfael was called on when a monk was ill, as well as when a body was found in the area around Shrewsbury. Cadfael had been a soldier in the Crusades and had brought back herbs that were new to English gardens.

TK: I’d be glad to provide you a cutting!  It spreads slowly without being invasive and seems to be quite hardy and I’ve begun to plant cuttings in various places in our yard.  Two interesting features of the books for me was that Cadfael was an herbalist and that being a monk was a “second career” after having led a more worldly life, including service in the Crusades.  That juxtaposition of two radically different life-styles and worldviews is what I was referring to when I said I appreciated his perspective on life and events.

WM: At one point, after the fourth or fifth of the series, I thought the books were getting a bit redundant. I put the series aside for a couple of months, and then went back to it. After that, I never found them redundant or boring. Now I wonder if it was after that that some of the plots drew on Cadfael’s life as a Crusader (and his time as a sailor), before he settled down and became a monk. This back-story gave the author interesting material on which to draw.

TK: Interesting. This conversation is making me want to go back and read the Cadfael series again.  I think that I’d appreciate and enjoy them even more than I did the first time. Do you have copies of most of the books? It just occurred to me that while I spend a fair amount of time in used bookstores and at used book sales, I seldom see Cadfael novels. I can only remember running across one in the past several years. Have you had the same experience?

WM: I have seen some of these books at The Frugal Muse in Darien, Illinois, where I sometimes buy used books.  To change the subject a bit, it seems to me that these books could be used as a resource on which to base a series of discussions of theological issues. Off hand, I can think of several: the use of relics; a Christian view of sexuality; whether it is ever appropriate to lie, etc. What do you think of this idea? Are there other issues you would add to the list?

TK: I think using the Cadfael novels as the basis of theological discussions is a great idea—and perhaps a way to engage some folks who might not think they'd enjoy such discussions. I'd have to re-read some of the novels to comment much more, but certainly issues of faith and authority - as well as historical discussions of 12th Century England.
 
WM: Yes, I should have thought of religious authority as a discussion topic; Cadfael had some interesting conflicts with other members of the monastery community, especially Prior Robert and the prior’s clerk!

TK: The issue of religious authority is quite interesting.  Cadfael’s position as herbalist is certainly not a “power position” within the monastery or Catholic hierarchy.  But to my mind his wide previous experience before joining the order provided him more authority in terms of understanding of human nature and society.  I always enjoyed seeing how he managed to maneuver in the hierarchical system.

WM: Another interesting topic for discussion would be the relationship between the secular world and the sacred, a theme which occurs regularly in this series. Grace, ethics, and the role of prayer are other potential discussion topics which could be based on reading one or more of the Cadfael series.

I learned some things about the history of Great Britain while reading these books. The fact that the stories take place in historical sequence is helpful from that perspective. I don’t recall ever having heard of the struggle between Matilda (also called Maud) and Stephen for the throne of England until I read these books. Did you find the books an enjoyable way of picking up a little historical knowledge?

TK: They were very enjoyable! If you liked the Cadfael novels you might also enjoy books by Sharon Kay Penman. She has at least three mysteries out (example: The Queen's Man) - and if you enjoy "bigger" reads, her novel When Christ and His Saint's Slept is a much longer read about Matilda/Maud's struggle with her cousin Stephen for the throne. For some reason I find this particular period of English history fascinating—although I certainly wouldn't have wanted to live in England at that time. Another novel set in that same period that I enjoyed very much is The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. That period of English history provides the grist for discussion on many, many topics and aspects of “the human condition”—much as the U.S. Civil War does.

WM: I really enjoyed The Pillars of the Earth also. You aren’t the first person to recommend Sharon Penman’s books to me. I guess it is time for me to start reading them. And one of these days, I’m going to reread all twenty of the Cadfael novels. Edith Pargeter died in 1995, so there will not be any more books in the series.


Thursday, June 14, 2012

CIVIL WAR by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven


(GRAPHIC NOVEL)

Civil War 1-7. written by Mark Millar and drawn by Steve McNiven (New York: Marvel Comics, 2010).

Reviewed by Kevin Penrod

This is by far one of my favorite comic books. It’s about all our favorite super heroes from Marvel getting split down the middle and going at it with each other. It starts out with a reality show staring some semi-unknown trying to get their ratings up so they go after a team of very powerful super villains. In the battle there is a huge explosion which causes the death of a lot of innocent civilians including a few children. In the aftermath the government passes the super hero registration act which calls for all masked heroes to make their identities known and register with the government. For some this seems like a good idea, especially with Tony Stark (Iron Man) heading the idea. When it is passed there are a few heroes who go underground because they oppose it. Leading this team is Captain America who was against it from the start. With constant action and a great story to go along with it, Civil War is a comic I recommend to any Marvel fan.