Showing posts with label Great Read. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Read. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Great Read!!!!!


Extremely loud and incredibly close
Subject(s):
FICTION: Fiction - Literary

Description:
Jonathan Safran Foer emerged as one of the most original writers of his generation with his best-selling debut novel, Everything Is Illuminated. Now, with humor, tenderness, and awe, he confronts the traumas of our recent history. What he discovers is solace in that most human quality, imagination. Meet Oskar Schell, an inventor, Francophile, tambourine player, Shakespearean actor, jeweler, pacifist, correspondent with Stephen Hawking and Ringo Starr. He is nine years old. And he is on an urgent, secret search through the five boroughs of New York. His mission is to find the lock that fits a mysterious key belonging to his father, who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11. An inspired innocent, Oskar is alternately endearing, exasperating, and hilarious as he careens from Central Park to Coney Island to Harlem on his search. Along the way he is always dreaming up inventions to keep those he loves safe from harm. What about a birdseed shirt to let you fly away? What if you could actually hear everyone's heartbeat? His goal is hopeful, but the past speaks a loud warning in stories of those who've lost loved ones before. As Oskar roams New York, he encounters a motley assortment of humanity who are all survivors in their own way. He befriends a 103-year-old war reporter, a tour guide who never leaves the Empire State Building, and lovers enraptured or scorned. Ultimately, Oskar ends his journey where it began, at his father's grave. But now he is accompanied by the silent stranger who has been renting the spare room of his grandmother's apartment. They are there to dig up his father's empty coffin.


Reviews:
From Booklist, ALA, Starred Review

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Great Read!!!!!!





All Souls
A Family Story from Southie

by Michael Patrick MacDonald

This reader is a contemporary of the author of this compelling memoir of growing up in South Boston in the turbulent 1970s. Having grown up on the other side of Boston, in a working-class northern suburb, though in mostly better economic contitions, the book becomes a fascinating telling, from another point of view, of memorable events in that time and place. But the book, while in danger of having a provincial quality, contains broadly relevant themes of poverty and race in society, and acknowledges complexities in these issues not often recognized in the corridors of American power. The author grew up poor in a section of mostly-Irish South Boston, in a public housing project called Old Colony. His mother was an energetic and generous woman, who played music in bars and flaunted her good looks in the neighborhood. She, eventually, would have eleven children, all of whom would be marked for life by violence, drugs and poverty. And yet, Southie was a vibrant, insular and tightly-knit Irish-American community that the author recalls very fondly, even through repeated stories of tragedy. While the tone the author takes indicates that he doesn't think his own family's tragedies are exceptional amongst the families in the neighborhood, those tragedies do loom large and sad in the story. He lost two brothers to suicide and another to criminal violence. A third, practically his namesake, died in infancy. Another brother was wrongly accused, based on corrupt police testimony, of murder. Other family members experience various violence along the way. It is an epic story. Within the closed world of the projects, there is a code of silence about the extent of the death and destruction around them. And there is denial. When African-Americans and the government and social institutions that support them, attempt to integrate the projects, it is the fear of drugs and violence that foments opposition, despite the fact that the neighborhood is already drowning in drugs and violence. In 1974, Southie became nationally known when school desegregation and forced busing was violently opposed by Southie residents. The author shows us his family's response which is not steeped in racism, but rather in the resentment that liberals in government, press and non-government organizations would use Southie as a social experiment. The resentment, at least initially, is directed not at African-Americans, but at the police and government leaders. At times, though, this assertion sounds like Southerners protesting that the Civil War was all about states' rights. There are larger factors at work here, and the author sometimes dances around these. And yet, he does manage to get the reader to question our conventional approach to race and poverty in this country. In the end, by the mid 1990s, Southie is becoming gentrified, to the author's regret. And, again, he asks relevant questions about the rights of the poor in neighborhoods given over to larger social or economic forces. The book is troubling in almost every sense. The tale is straightforward and compelling. It is a heartfelt and revealing story. Recommended.