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The Book Club meets at
7 PM
unless otherwise noted. |
Book Reviews
for Current Selections |
Past Selections
2010
2009
2008
2007 |
Call 330.653.6658 x 1010
for more information |
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Past Selections |
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2009 |
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Among the Missing
by Dan Chaon |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
Twelve new fictions, notable for their
stylistic grace and captivating selection of incident, by
the author of Fitting Ends (stories: 1995). In imagining
other lives we discover the gift of empathy, these tales
suggest, yet dwelling too hard or too long on other people's
experiences may lead to erasure of the self. Indeed, Chaon's
characters often seem to be renewable variations of a single
personality, inevitably egocentric and selfish, but he
presents these traits as the curse of the hapless dreamer.
Here, dreams do not waft up out of idle enchantments and
lazy afternoons; they struggle forth, life rafts offering
rescue to mauled and sinking adults, usually in their 30s,
who recall the genesis of their dreaming in troubled
childhoods. In the title story, a car bearing an entire
family disappears near a lakeside summer cabin occupied by a
boy and his mother; months later, the vehicle is discovered
mysteriously intact at the bottom of the lake. This eerie
incident teaches the boy about the final ineffability of his
world and of his own family. In another fine piece, "I
Demand to Know Where You Are Taking Me," a woman's
brother-in-law, Wendell, is convicted of rape after her
lawyer husband fails to successfully defend him. The couple
agrees to store Wendell's belongings until an appeal can be
made, and the foul language of his parakeet, Wild Bill,
prompts the wife's doubt about Wendell's innocence. The
volume's brilliant centerpiece, "Big Me," involves Andy's
childhood spying on his neighbor, a man the child is
convinced represents his future self. Andy makes notes on
how to avoid becoming this distasteful man and is eventually
caught snooping; the moment when the neighbor reads hislife,
inscribed in Andy's notebook, as a foretelling of the boy's
is a breathtaking arrangement, a renewal of fiction's
special power. Chaon's work is especially notable for his
casually precise prose and deep intelligence for the
resonant scene. A gem of a second collection from an
immensely promising writer of unmistakably original—and
distinctively rewarding—literary gifts |
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Belong to Me
by Marisa De los Santos |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
In de los Santos's second novel (Love Walked In, 2006), Cornelia Brown returns the as heroine, now married to handsome oncologist Teo and trying to make a new home in the suburbs of Philadelphia. Having moved out of New York City after the double whammy of a miscarriage and 9/11, Cornelia finds herself a shunned outsider among the community's perfect blond matrons. Particularly unwelcoming is her tightly wound neighbor Piper, who is as sharp-tongued as she is judgmental about fashion, flowers and childrearing. Cornelia does begin a fledgling friendship with another newcomer, Lake, a waitress who has moved from California to enroll her genius 13-year-old son Dev in a special school after his previous school punished him for being too smart. Dev suspects there might be more to the move, that Lake may be moving them closer to the mystery father he's never met. As much as Cornelia likes Lake, she senses Lake holding back at crucial moments and responds in kind. Meanwhile, Piper turns out to be a far more complicated woman than she seems on the surface. She drops everything (but her children) to care for her best friend Elizabeth, who's in the last stages of cancer. By the time Cornelia succeeds in becoming pregnant, she and Piper have grown surprisingly close, each opening her heart a little to the other. Days after Elizabeth dies, Piper's husband leaves her and she finds herself an outcast for continuing her (platonic) involvement with Elizabeth's mourning husband and children. In another development, Dev stumbles on the truth Lake has been hiding and learns the identity of his father. The father is stunned; Cornelia is devastated; and oh-so-sensitive, intelligent Dev is furious. Needless to say,
a happy ending awaits Cornelia, but readers will be far more
interested in Piper, a complex, genuinely intriguing
character. Pages on which she appears glow; the rest merely
flicker. Witty and intelligent but too often pat. |
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City of Thieves
by David Benioff |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
Novelist and screenwriter Benioff's glorious second novel
(The 25th Hour, 2000) is a wild action-packed quest, and
much else besides: a coming-of-age story, an odd-couple tale
and a juicy footnote to the historic World War II siege of
Leningrad. It's New Year's Eve, 1941, and Lev Beniov is
alone in Leningrad. (Note that last name: This novel was
sparked by tape-recorded memories of author Benioff's
grandfather.) The 17-year-old's mother and sister were
evacuated before the siege began in September; his father, a
respected poet, was "removed" by the NKVD in 1937. Lev's
real troubles begin when a German paratrooper, frozen to
death, lands on his street. Lev deserts his firefighter's
post, steals the German's knife, is arrested by soldiers and
jailed. His cellmate is 20-year-old Kolya, a boastful
Cossack deserter, dazzlingly handsome in contrast to scrawny
Lev, who hates his telltale big nose (he's half-Jewish);
their initial hostility turns into the closest of bonds.
Sparing their lives, for now, NKVD Colonel Grechko gives
them a near-impossible assignment in this starving city:
five days to find a dozen eggs for his daughter's wedding
cake. There's nothing doing on the black market. Then Kolya
hears of a poultry collective . . . behind German lines.
That's where they must go, decides Kolya, and Benioff makes
his boundless self-confidence entirely credible. Over half
the novel happens in enemy territory. Lev and Kolya stumble
on a farmhouse where four pretty Russian girls are being
kept as sex slaves by a Nazi death squad. (The connection
between sex and death is a major theme.) The slave-owners
are killed by Russian partisans, one of whom is the deadly
sniper Vika, a young tomboy whosteals Lev's heart. Despite a
"parade of atrocities," the pace will keep your adrenaline
pumping right up to the climactic chess game between Lev and
a fiendish Nazi officer. This gut-churning thriller will
sweep you along and, with any luck, propel Benioff into
bestseller land. |
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The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
by Stieg Larsson |
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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY:
With its rich characterizations and intriguing plot, the first book of the late Stieg Larsson's completed trilogy, involving disgraced Swedish journalist-publisher Mikael Blomkvist and the eponymous, pierced and tattooed, emotionally troubled young hacker-investigator Lisbeth Salander, clearly deserves the acclaim it's received overseas. Martin Wenner's almost indifferent, British-accented narration would seem an odd choice for a novel filled with passion, sex and violence, but as the oddly coupled Blomkvist and Salander probe the four-decade-old disappearance of Harriet Vanger, heiress to one of Sweden's wealthiest clans, the objective approach actually accentuates the extreme behavior of both and the strange subjects of their investigation. Wenner's calm, controlled manner aids the listener in keeping track of the numerous members of the Vanger family, a task that the printed book simplifies with a reference page.
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How We Decide
by Jonah Lehrer |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
A Gladwellian exploration of the brain's inner workings
during the decision-making process. Given the recent deluge
of pop-science books, readers may find it difficult to make
a selection. Enter Seed and Scientific American contributor
Lehrer's second book (Proust Was a Neuroscientist, 2007), a
laudable attempt to help people understand how their brains
make decisions-and hopefully, improve the process. On the
former point, the book is a treasure trove of scientific
data, clinical research and real-life examples of
decision-making processes. On the latter point, however, it
leaves something to be desired. At its best, Lehrer's
narrative is a compelling mixture of recently discovered
facts and intriguing theories about the differences between
the rational and emotional centers of the brain. The
author's research indicates, somewhat counterintuitively,
that the emotional areas are the primary drivers when making
complex decisions that involve multiple variables, such as
purchasing a house or car. Lehrer also looks at anecdotal
evidence of those theories in action, ranging from the
incredible efforts of a pilot to land a plane after its
hydraulic systems failed (a prime example of using the
reason center of the brain to conquer fear and take action)
to clinical experiments involving tests to see how long
unsupervised four-year-olds can resist a marshmallow (not
very, in most cases). In its most effective chapters, the
book ties research to practical applications, such as a
401(k) program designed to overcome our irrational need for
immediate reward (to the detriment of long-term saving) by
deferring the start of the program until a few months after
employment begins. Other sections lack thesame practical
applicability, and the vague generality of much of the
decision-making advice feels more therapist than scientist.
May not facilitate great improvements in decision-making,
but the Cliff Clavins of the world will exult in the
factoids and anecdotes. |
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Last Night at the Lobster
by Stewart O'Nan |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
A rueful mood piece from prolific, eclectic O'Nan (The Good
Wife, 2005, etc.) about the closing of a chain restaurant.
On a snowy morning just a few days before Christmas, general
manager Manny DeLeon opens the Red Lobster in New Britain,
Conn., for the last time. Corporate ownership is closing
this branch near a dying mall, and though Manny is moving to
the Olive Garden in Bristol (with a demotion to assistant
manager), he can take only four people with him.
Unsurprisingly, most of the understandably pissed-off,
soon-to-be-unemployed workers don't bother to show for the
last shift. O'Nan paints a vivid picture of the world of
minimum-wage labor, where people have little incentive to be
responsible or reliable. Manny is both, scrambling to keep
the restaurant running smoothly in the middle of a blizzard,
even though it's the last day and no one cares but him.
Personally, he's less upright. He doesn't want to marry his
pregnant girlfriend Deena and still carries a torch for
Jacquie, a waitress who's refused to come to the Olive
Garden because their affair is over. There's hardly any plot
here, just the frantic rush to serve lunch-O'Nan's depiction
of the complex organization of meal preparation and service
is the best since Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen
Confidential-and the long wait through a sparsely populated
dinner to shut the place down forever. Customers from hell
and surly staff interact in a dance of clashing
personalities that would be a marvelous comedy of manners if
the overall tone weren't so sad. In his mid-30s, Manny is
plagued by regret over Jacquie and not terribly optimistic
about his future. O'Nan hews to a neglected literary
tradition by focusing his sympathetic attentionon people
with few options. He offers no political message, merely the
reminder that blue-collar lives are as charged with moral
quandaries and professional difficulties as those of their
better-dressed, more affluent fellow Americans. Very
low-key, but haunting and quietly provocative. |
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The Painted Veil
by W. Somerset Maugham |
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CLEVNET SUMMARY:
Set in England and Hong Kong in the 1920s, The Painted Veil
is the story of the beautiful but love-starved Kitty Fane.
When her husband discovers her adulterous affair, he forces
her to accompany him to the heart of a cholera epidemic.
Stripped of the British society of her youth and the small
but effective society she fought so hard to attain in Hong
Kong, she is compelled by her awakening conscience to
reassess her life and learn how to love. The Painted Veil is
a beautifully written affirmation of the human capacity to
grow, to change, and to forgive. |
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People of the Book
by Geraldine Brooks |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
From 1480 Seville to 1996 Sarajevo, a priceless scripture is chased by fanatics political and religious. Its recovery makes for an enthralling historical mystery. In Sydney, ace (and gorgeous) old-book conservator Hannah Heath gets a 2 a.m. phone call. She's summoned to Sarajevo to check out a 15th-century Spanish-made Haggadah, a codex gone missing in Bosnia during a 1992 siege. The document is a curiosity, its lavish illuminations appearing to violate age-old religious injunctions against any kind of illustration. Remarkably, it's Muslim museum librarian Ozren Karaman who rescued the Hebrew artifact from furious shelling. Questioning (and bedding) Ozren, Hannah examines the Haggadah binding and from clues embedded there-an insect's wings, wine stains, white hair-reconstructs the book's biography. And it's an epic. Chapter by chapter, each almost an independent story, the chronicle unwinds-of the book's changing hands from those of anti-Nazi partisans dreaming of departing for Palestine from war-torn Croatia, from schemers in 1894 Vienna, home, despite Freud and Mahler, of virulent anti-Semitism. Perhaps the best chapter takes place in 1609 Venice. There, not-so-grand Inquisitor Domenico Vistorini, a heretic hunter with a drinking problem, contends in theological disputation with brilliant rabbinical star Judah Aryeh. The two strike up an unlikely alliance to save the book, even while Vistorini at first blanches at its art-a beautiful depiction of the glowing sun, prophesying, the hysterical priest assumes, Galileo's heliocentric blasphemy. Tracing those illustrations back to their origin point, Hannah unkinks a series of fascinating conundrums-and learns, even more fiercely, to prizethe printed page. Rich suspense based on a true-life literary puzzle, from the Pulitzer Prize-winning Brooks |
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River of Doubt:
Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey
by Candice Millard |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
The 26th U.S. president, failing re-election, has an
adventure that nearly kills him. In an admirable debut,
historian Millard records Theodore Roosevelt's exploration
of a hitherto uncharted river in the heart of the Mato
Grosso. A confluence of circumstances, including a South
American speaking tour and the eagerness of others to
investigate the Amazonian headwaters, brought Teddy, aged 55
and still bold and plucky, to Brazil, then largely unmapped
and unknown. When the opportunity came to change a planned
route to follow the uncharted course of the ominously named
River of Doubt, the former chief executive seized it
eagerly. And so, with devoted son Kermit and truly intrepid
Brazilian co-commander Candido Rondon, along with a band of
hardy recruits, the party plunged into the fierce, fecund
jungle and its unknown dangers. (It's an exploit that
standard TR biographies generally treat lightly, if at all).
With heavy, useless equipment and inappropriate provisions,
the Roosevelt-Rondon Expedition ventured into the luxuriant
wilderness where every life form threatened. There were pit
vipers, piranhas and tiny fish that attack where a man is
most vulnerable. There were poisonous plants, malevolent
insect swarms and native warriors, ever present and never
seen. The beefy former president must have embodied some
prime cuts for the cannibals as he sat in his canoe.
Eventually Colonel Roosevelt was downed by injury and fever.
He ended his journey emaciated at three-quarters of the
weight he started with on the watercourse now found in
atlases as the Roosevelt River. Millard tells the story
wonderfully, marshaling ecology, geography, human and
natural history to tell the tale of the jungleprimeval, of
bravery and privation, determination and murder in the ranks
as cowboy Roosevelt survived the Indians of the Amazon. |
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The Space Between Us
by Thrity Umrigar |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
Set in contemporary Bombay, Umrigar's second novel (Bombay
Time, 2001) is an affecting portrait of a woman and her
maid, whose lives, despite class disparity, are equally
heartbreaking. Though Bhima has worked for the Dubash family
for decades and is coyly referred to as "one of the family,"
she nonetheless is forbidden from sitting on the furniture
and must use her own utensils while eating. For years, Sera
blamed these humiliating boundaries on her husband Feroz,
but now that he's dead and she's lady of the house, the two
women still share afternoon tea and sympathy with Sera
perched on a chair and Bhima squatting before her. Bhima is
grateful for Sera, for the steady employment, for what she
deems friendship and, mostly, for the patronage Sera shows
Bhima's granddaughter Maya. Orphaned as a child when her
parents died of AIDS, Bhima raised Maya and Sera saw to her
education. Now in college, Maya's future is like a miracle
to the illiterate Bhima-her degree will take them out of the
oppressive Bombay slums, guaranteeing Maya a life away from
servitude. But in a cruel mirror of Sera's happiness-her
only child Dinaz is expecting her first baby-Bhima finds
that Maya is pregnant, has quit school and won't name the
child's father. As the situation builds to a crisis point,
both women reflect on the sorrows of their lives. While
Bhima was born into a life of poverty and insurmountable
obstacles, Sera's privileged upbringing didn't save her from
a husband who beat her and a mother-in-law who tormented
her. And while Bhima's marriage begins blissfully, an
industrial accident leaves her husband maimed and an
alcoholic. He finally deserts her, but not before he
bankrupts the family and kidnaps their son. Though Bhima and
Sera believe they are mutually devoted, soon decades of
confidences are thrown up against the far older rules of the
class game. A subtle, elegant analysis of class and power. |
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Suite Francaise
by Irene Nemirovsky |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
Acclaimed in France and the U.K., here are two sections of a
hugely ambitious novel about World War II France, plus
authorial notes and correspondence; the remaining three
sections were never written, for the already established
Russo-French-Jewish author died at Auschwitz in 1942. These
sections should be seen as movements in the symphony
Nemirovsky envisaged. Part one, Storm in June, follows
various civilians fleeing a panicky Paris and a victorious
German army in June 1940. Here are the Pericands,
middle-class Catholics, secure in their car; Madame offers
charity to refugees on foot, but strictly for show. There is
Gabriel Corte, famous writer and "privileged creature" (so
he thinks); Charles Langelet, the ice-cold aesthete who
steals gasoline from innocents; Corbin, the obnoxious bank
director who forces his employees, the Michauds, out of his
car. They can handle that; they're an admirable couple,
sustained by their humility and mutual devotion. What
interests Nemirovsky is individual behavior in the harsh
glare of national crisis; keeping the Germans in the
background, she skewers the hypocrisy, pretension and
self-involvement of the affluent Parisians. There is no
chaos or cross-cutting between multiple characters in part
two, Dolce. Here the focus is on one middle-class household
in a village in the occupied zone in 1941. Madame Angellier
agonizes over her son Gaston, a POW; her daughter-in-law
Lucile, who never loved him (he kept a mistress), is less
concerned; the women co-exist uncomfortably. Tensions rise
when a young German lieutenant, Bruno, is billeted with
them; he and Lucile are drawn to each other, though they do
not become lovers. Then another complication: Lucileagrees
to shelter a peasant who has shot a German officer. An
honest soul, Lucile is forced into duplicity with Bruno;
Nemirovsky relishes these crisis-induced contradictions. Her
nuanced account is as much concerned with class divisions
among the villagers as the indignities of occupation; when
the soldiers leave for the Russian front, the moment is
surprisingly tender. A valuable window into the past, and
the human psyche. |
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Three Cups of Tea
by Greg Mortenson |
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KIRKUS REVIEWS:
An unlikely diplomat scores points for America in a corner
of the world hostile to all things American-and not without
reason. Mortenson first came to Pakistan to climb K2, the
world's second-tallest peak, seeking to honor his deceased
sister by leaving a necklace of hers atop the summit. The
attempt failed, and Mortenson, emaciated and exhausted, was
taken in by villagers below and nursed back to health. He
vowed to build a school in exchange for their kindness, a
goal that would come to seem as insurmountable as the
mountain, thanks to corrupt officials and hostility on the
part of some locals. Yet, writes Parade magazine contributor
Relin, Mortenson had reserves of stubbornness, patience and
charm, and, nearly penniless himself, was able to piece
together dollars enough to do the job; remarks one donor
after writing a hefty check, "You know, some of my ex-wives
could spend more than that in a weekend," adding the proviso
that Mortenson build the school as quickly as possible,
since said donor wasn't getting any younger. Just as he had
caught the mountaineering bug, Mortenson discovered that he
had a knack for building schools and making friends in the
glacial heights of Karakoram and the remote deserts of
Waziristan; under the auspices of the Central Asia
Institute, he has built some 55 schools in places whose
leaders had long memories of unfulfilled American promises
of such help in exchange for their services during the war
against Russia in Afghanistan. Comments Mortenson to Relin,
who is a clear and enthusiastic champion of his subject, "We
had no problem flying in bags of cash to pay the warlords to
fight against the Taliban. I wondered why we couldn't do the
same thing to buildroads, and sewers, and schools."Answering
by delivering what his country will not, Mortenson is
"fighting the war on terror the way I think it should be
conducted," Relin writes. |
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