August 18, 2009

"Two-Part Invention"

Madeleine L'Engle

How do two people come together, form one life, and live that life to the fullest? How do we love across the years, the struggles and triumphs, the complications, the joys and sorrows?

L'Engle's story of her own marriage documents just such a journey with tenderness, honesty, and unmistakable love. This book is funny, moving, challenging, and sad. Are you a human? Are you in love, seeking love, already weaving the tapestry of a marriage? Pick up this book and read a remarkable story that will touch you deep inside. 

August 14, 2009

"I Should Be Extremely Happy In Your Company"

Brian Hall

Step into the amazing adventure of Lewis and Clark as they make their way across the continent, charting their course as they go. Take into your mind their personalities and all that this journey meant to them. Add a most unusual cast of characters: their Shoshone guide - Sacagawea, a young girl whose world is turned upside down, Toussaint Charbonneau, her fur trader husband, the expedition's crew, and the native peoples they meet along their way. Voila! A story fit for the telling!

This compulsively readable novel is told in four voices - Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea, and Charbonneau, each taking their turn, adding to the tapestry of this tale. These lives and their journey - all of which had an effect on our own lives - are filled out as history class never managed. 

Hall tackles a tale whose ending we all know, but it is in the lyrical and precise prose of his telling that the wonder of this story occurs. His use of language is supreme - a unique and creative style that immediately won me over. Written almost in stream of consciousness, the book requires the reader to relax, and just go along for the ride. Let your eyes do the work. A wonderful journey!

August 3, 2009

It's Getting Hot Out There!

The temperatures outside are heating up, so here are two books to keep you cool...

"One Day the Ice Will Reveal All Its Dead" is a beautiful and poetic book by Clare Dudman that novelizes the true-life tale of German scientist Alfred Wegener whose theory of continental
drift would eventually revolutionize our perception of the world. His tale is one of unbelievable courage, endurance and perseverance against his peers who derided him, the scientific community which doubted him, and Nature herself who fought him every step of the way. One critic described this book: Dudman has clearly done her research, presenting a thorough, as well as a thoroughly intriguing, novel that beautifully portrays one truly fascinating man. Give this strange novel/biography a try. You'll learn something, you'll be transported to one of the coldest places on earth, and you'll feel for this extraordinary man who pursued his goals with great nerve and energy. 

Not in the mood for non-fiction? "The Tenderness of Wolves" by Stef
Penney is a great mystery, set in the frigid isolation of the 19th century Canadian frontier. The characters are finely drawn and Penney pulls you into this world with her amazing story. A young man disappears; that same day his mother discovers the scalped body of her son's friend. The murder draws newcomers to the small settlement, and suspects slowly begin to emerge. A journey takes place through cold and misery, and the truth is illuminated in wondrous prose and beautiful descriptions. Penney's writing is absorbing, convincing and complex. A great, many-layered story.