Book Reviews

Book Review:  The Wedding Dress
by Rachel HauckA story about 100 year old trunk, four generations of women and the perfect wedding dress.  


 What is the story of this dress? What are the stories of these four women?  How are these women connected?  Who made the dress, why does it look like it has never been worn?  

Charlotte Malone owns a bridal shop and prides herself in finding the right dress for every bride.   
One afternoon she goes out,  to think and pray, and finds herself at an auction where she somehow buys  100 year old trunk, that is welded shut, a trunk that she can’t really afford, want or need, from a strange little man in a bright purple shirt. 

This book combines romance of this magical wedding dress, that seems to “find” the women that are supposed to wear it, with some historical references of Birmingham, Alabama during the last 100 years.   It has humor and fun, mystery and intrigue, romance and turmoil.  

I agree with one Amazon reviewer who said 
On the scale of one to five, I give this book a four. Fun and humorous, The Wedding Dress would make a great ‘tuck in your bag’ on a vacation or ‘rainy day’ read.

This book is available at Jackson District Library as an Overdrive MP3 eAudiobook.  Others check your local library or Amazon.com
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 Book Review: Bent Road by Lori Roy

From the library catalog record:

For twenty years, Celia Scott has watched her husband, Arthur, hide from the secrets surrounding his sister Eve's death. As a young man, Arthur fled his small Kansas hometown, moved to Detroit, married Celia, and never looked back. But when the 1967 riots frighten him even more than his past, he convinces Celia to pack up their family and return to the road he grew up on, Bent Road, and that same small town where Eve mysteriously died.”
He is convinced that it will keep is family safe and help his son become a man.

In some ways it makes me think of Grapes of Wrath, but I can’t really say why.   The farmhouses they live in are usually described as old and run down, there is a passage where the son talks about wearing shoes that are too small, because he is growing too fast.

2/3 of the way through this book and I was still trying to figure out why I was still reading it.  It’s dark and rough, depressing and scary, I don’t usually read this kind of book, and I’m not sure I even like the people.  I feel sorry for some of them.  The father is mean, but not as mean as the brother-in-law. But I could not put it down.

I thought I was reading it to find out what happened to Eve, and that did surprised me, but there are a couple of other twists and turns that surprised me too.   I had to set in my car and listen to the last 3 minutes before I could go to work.

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Broken for You by Stephanie Kallos               

From the Amazon.com
“…the story of two women in self-imposed exile whose lives are transformed when their paths intersect. Stephanie Kallos's debut novel is a work of infinite charm, wit and heart. It is also a glorious homage to the beauty of broken things. When we meet septuagenarian Margaret Hughes, she is living alone in a mansion in Seattle with only a massive collection of valuable antiques for company. Enter Wanda Schultz, a young woman with a broken heart who has come west to search for her wayward boyfriend. Both women are guarding dark secrets and have spent many years building up protective armor against the outside world. As their tentative friendship evolves, the armor begins to fall away and Margaret opens her house to the younger woman. This launches a series of unanticipated events, leading Margaret to discover a way to redeem her cursed past, and Wanda to learn the true purpose of her cross-country journey.
From the Book jacket
“Exuberant, heartbreaking, and alive with a potpourri of eccentric and irresistible characters”  
Not only does Margaret, live in her mansion with valuable antiques for company, she talks to them. She asked for her furniture’s permission to rent one of the 15 rooms to a stranger.

I found the writing and the descriptions in some passages hilarious.  (Laughing out loud, in the car, all by myself, at least I’m not talking to my car, Yet!!!!
For example:
One of the women was strikingly tall and wore a bulky woolen cape, two emaciated support stockinged legs and a wooden cane protruded from the bottom.  The woman’s head emerged from the top, it’s near perfect roundness accentuated by the fact that it was nearly completely bald.  The overall effect was that of a perambulatory floor lamp with the bald head providing a small globular finial.
The other woman was shorter and the shape and size of her torso suggested that it had been formed by pinning together 5 adipose spheres, two for the breasts, one for the stomach and two for the buttocks.”  
The book while covering only a few years,  does flashbacks to WWII, and the gathering-up robbery and detention of Jewish people.  Although it may be a cliché and worn one at that.   Family isn't always the people you are born to.
I agree, with all of the above reviewers. .  I found it funny and heartbreaking,   As many of you may know, I judge a book by how well I get to know and like the characters, Well, I loved these strange, unconventional, wounded, caring and loving people.  I would love to see what happens to them in the future

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Book Review:  Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

 I wrote this review for JDL home page in 2007.  With the movie coming out in April.   I thought it might be a good idea to publish here.
Inside Jacob Jankowski’s ninety-something-year-old mind dwell memories of himself as a young man, tossed by fate into the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. Memories of a world filled with freaks and clowns, with wonder and pain, and anger and passion; a world with its own narrow irrational rules, its own way of life and its own way of death. The world of the Circus: to Jacob it was both salvation and a living hell. Jacob was there because his luck had run out… Marlena,…was there because she fell in love with the wrong man….Rosie the elephant was there because she was the great gray hope, the new act that was going to be the salvation of the circus; the only problem was Rosie didn’t have an act—in fact she couldn’t even follow instructions. …”(from the book jacket)

This book takes the reader inside the life of the “Circus.” (How realistic it is, I can’t really say, having never lived in a circus.) It’s language and terminology: “a first or May,” “A Monday Man” “Rubes”, “Redlighting.” It made me think of the TV show I watched as kid, Circus Boy, (only because it was set in a Circus) actually it was much more like the movie the Greatest Show on Earth.

It carries the reader through a whole range of emotions:

  • Frustration of the frail old Jacob in the nursing home, not being able to remember how old he is (is it 90 or 93?), unable to remember the nurses name, impatience the other patients imperfections. The soft food he was forced to eat because some patients didn’t have teeth, even though he still had all his. Although this is a sad situation Gruen was able to write it in a way that made me smile (I thought of the Billy Crystal character). 
  • Humor of an elephant that had no act and couldn’t follow directions but was able to sneak around the circus grounds un noticed to get the lemon-aid.
  • Anger at the mistreatment of animals and people
  • Passion and action -- walking on the tops of moving train cars, fist fights, etc.
  • The beauty and excitement of animal acts and for me a surprise ending.

A good book- and because I was listening to it on CD was more than one time, I “had” to sit in my car after I got where I as going, in order to listen to the rest of a chapter.

My opinions of the movie that I have not seen and has not been released yet:
The movie stars Hal Holbrook as the old man.  I great choice.
                            Reese Witherspoon, she may be OK, I don't think that would have been my choice
                            Robert Pattinson (Twilight)  I an not sure about this at all.

My recommendation READ THE BOOK before you see the movie.  It was great.

Keep reading JB.
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Book Review:  The Candy Bombers

This is a long post, but the book is verrrry long. I listened to the audio version and it was just under 25 hours.

In 1948 American Forces were transporting necessary supplies to West Berlin by truck, train and barges. Russia in an attempt to control all of Berlin blockaded those transports in June. American and British pilots risked their lives to air lift billions of pounds. One Pilot and his crew won the hearts of German Children and their parents by dropping candy tied to tiny parachutes to the children.

Publisher's Weekly said that this book could have been cut by a third, I agree that this book is too long, and sometimes difficult to follow (at least in the first half.) The writing style while factual (taken from journals and diaries) is also very dry. I listened to the audio edition and the reader shows very little emotion and is very flat. It did improve in the last half.

I learned many things from this book. Considering that this took place less than one year before I was born, I would have thought that I would have heard someone talk about it

I don't remember ever even hearing about the Berlin airlift, I did not realize
• That the United States and their allies were very close to going to war with Russia in 1948.
• That the United States military force was very small and after much debate and argument, the draft was reinstated in the spring of '48.
• That, according to Cherny, the Berlin Airlift was a huge factor in Truman's re-election.
• That the Airlift , and the candy drops were one of the big reasons that Germany remained a democratic republic, rather than turning to Communism.
There are things that could be very emotional, the first time the airlift pilots say a bombed out Germany, the pilots meeting the German people and their feelings about saving them, when just a few years earlier they were trying to destroy them.

The writing style while factual (taken from journals and diaries) is also very dry. I listened to the audio edition and the reader shows very little emotion and is very flat.
It did improve in the last half. Even a few moments that were a little humorous, for example:
• When General Lucius Clay, military governor of Germany was preparing to return to the United States after being fired, everything in his house was packed up and they had begun shipping things home. They day before he was scheduled to ship out he was told he would be needed to stay. He went home and told his wife they were not leaving and she said but you can't, you have no pants.
• Some of the interactions between the very shy "candy bomber" Gail "Hal" Halvorson and his fiance and wife.
The airlift almost failed, but after Liutenant General William Tunner was put in charge the Airforce carried billions of tons of food and coal to keep the people of West Berlin alive during the winter of 1948-49.

Lt. Gail Halvorson became a celebrity and made the rounds of the talk shows on the new Television media. because he started dropping candy on handkerchief parachutes to children who were watching the planes come in delivering the supplies to a blockaded West Berlin.
Children and parents wrote thank-you letters to Halvorson calling him Uncle Wiggly Wings because Halvorson would wiggle the plane wings as a signal just before he made the drops, Candy Bomber , Bonbon Bomber, Chocolate Uncle.

As I said I had never heard about much of this. I knew that Gemany was divided, and that East Germany and East Berlin were ruled by Communists, but I had not heard of the Russian Blocade, the Berlin Airlift, or the Candy Bombers. Not from my father, who served in WWII, or my Uncles who were stationed in Germany in the 50's, or in any of my History classes in school.

I think someone could make a really good movie from this. If you like history in general and World War II in particular I would recommend this book, but read the text version so you can skim over the less interesting parts.



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