Wednesday, September 2, 2015

The Storied Life of A.J.Fikry, by Gabrielle Zevin

NOTE: I loved this book!  A book about reading and the importance of books can't be missed!

Characters
A. J. Fikry – Island Books
Nic – deceased wife
Maya – adopted daughter
Amelia Loman – Book rep
 
Brett Brewer – Amelia’s fiancĂ©
 
Marian Wallace –Maya’s mother
 
Ismay Evans-Parish – Nic’s sister
Daniel Parish – husband – author –A. J.’s best friend
 
Chief Lambiase

For discussion:
NOTE: All pages refer to the paperback edition of the book.

1. What do you think Lambiase should have done when he found the stolen book in Ismay's closet?  At that point in the story, what did you think had happened?
2. On page 216, when A.J.'s mother is giving everyone an ereader, she says to A.J. that he has a "moue."  Did you know what that was?
3. What did you think of A.J.'s reaction to the ereader?
4. On page 46 the customer wants a refund for The Book Thief because "it kept her up all night reading" and made her cry.  How soon in your reading did you know what book she was talking about?  What did you think of her reactions to the book?
5. What did you think of the description of Maya's approach to books - smelling them and trying to figure out the pictures?  Do you think her learning to read the word "red" is typical of children?
6. On page 87 A.J. write, "You know everything you need to know about a person from the answer to the question, 'What is your favorite book?'" Do you agree?  What is your favorite book and what does that say about you?
7. On page 92 A.J. says, 'Sometimes books don't find us until the right time."  Have you ever read the same book at two different times in your life and had different reading experiences?  Explain.
8. On their date A.J. and Amelia talk about food in books.  Do you have a memorable meal you read about in a book that you would like to eat?  Did you have any reactions to descriptions of food in books?
9. Why do you think Maya never warmed up to Ismay?
10. What was your favorite part of the book?  Your least favorite?
11. Discuss your reading experience.  Did you like the book?  Why or why not?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, wordassociation.com and barnesandnoble.com.  Click on the upper right link.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Cannery Row and The Pearl, by John Steinbeck

This is the final month of my Library Book Group's "Steinbeck Summer."    The final two discussion guides follow as well as some wrap-up questions.
 
Cannery Row
 
Characters
Doc – Western Biological Laboratory
Frankie – homeless boy
 
Lee Chong – grocer
Horace Abbeville – gave Chong the empty storehouse to settle debt, then committed suicide
 
Palace Flophouse and Grill (Abbeville building)
Mack, Hazel, Eddie, Hughie, Jones, Gay
Darling – dog
 
Dora Flood – madam – Bear Flag Restaurant
Alfred – Alfy – watchman
 
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Malloy – living in abandoned boiler in vacant lot
 
Henri - painter
 
For discussion:
1. Why didn't people believe Doc when he was telling the truth about his walk but did when he lied (chapter 17)?
2. Did you guess the question everyone had about the pole skater (chapter 20)?
3. Why did the failed party have such a long-reaching effect on the town (chapter 25)?
4. There were many seemingly unrelated stories in the novel.  Why did Steinbeck include them?
  • Chapter 26 - Joey and Willard
  • Chapter 31 - the gopher story
5. What lessons did this story tell about human nature?
 
The Pearl
 
Characters
Kino – fisherman
Juana – wife
Coyotito – son
 
Juan Tomas – Kino’s brother
Apolonia – wife
Four sons
 
Doctor
 
Priest
 
For discussion:
1. In chapter 3, when Kino started to dream that he could actually own a rifle, Steinbeck wrote, "For it is said that humans are never satisfied, that you give them one thing and they want something more."  Do you agree?  Why or why not?
2. How could the outcome of this story been different?
 
Steinbeck Summer
  • Of Mice and Men
  • Travels with Charley
  • Cannery Row
  • The Pearl
1. Which of the four stories did you like best?  The least?  Were you surprised by your choice?
2. What do you think makes Steinbeck such a revered writer?


*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, wordassociation.com and barnesandnoble.com.  Click on the upper right link.
 
 

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Summer House with Swimming Pool, by Herman Koch

Review: I greatly enjoyed this book, even though at times it was disturbing.  When I visited my PCP shortly after finishing the book I trusted that he had a different attitude towards his patients than Marc and did not recommend the book to him!  Given all the great books available, I can't say I would recommend this book to friends who ask me for suggestions, but I would tell them it is an engrossing book and that it did keep me reading and wanting to find out what happens next.  I also think it would make a good pick for a book discussion group.  I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for this review.
 
Characters
Ralph Meier – actor
Judith – wife
Two sons – Alex and Thomas
Vera – Judith’s mother
 
Dr. Marc Schlosser
Caroline – mother
Two daughters –Julia and Lisa
 
Stanley Forbes – Dutch film director
Emmanuelle – model
 
Dr. Aaron Herzl – Marc’s medical school professor
 
For discussion:
  1. What did you think as you were reading the opening section about Dr. Schlosser's thoughts regarding his patients and his role in their medical care?
  2. Were you surprised to read that Marc deliberately cut Ralph so that the cancer would get into his blood stream and spread?  Did you think this was realistic given what you knew about Marc so far?
  3. Do you think Marc would still have done the act in the above question if he knew the real story about what happened to Julia?
  4. Would you let your teen and preteen daughters be around naked men?
  5. The narrator, Dr. Marc Schlosser, several times referred to life-changing moments and events (the beginning of chapter 25 for example, when he went to the beach).  Can you think of any such happenings in your life (but possibly not so dramatic and negative)?
  6. Did Ralph and Judith have the right to allow Alex and Julia to go to the bar down the beach?  Would you have taken that responsibility and given permission?
  7. Were you able to find any positive characteristics in the male characters?  Is so, what were they?
  8. Discuss Dr. Herzl.  What role did he play in Marc's many actions and decisions?
  9. Keeping in mind that this is fiction, is it a plausible story line?
  10. When the Schlossers left the summer house early in the morning, what do you think Vera was trying to tell them?  (See end of chapter 36.)
  11. What did you think about the way Marc and Caroline reacted to what happened to Julia?  What do you think they should have done?
  12. Were you surprised that Marc and his family went to stay with Stanley in America?  Why did they go there?
  13. Once you knew what really happened with Julia, did you think her long-term reaction was legitimate or logical?
  14. Did you like the ending?  Was it satisfying or did you want to know more?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at wordassociation.com, barnesandnoble.com and amazon.com.  Click on the upper right link.
 
 
 
 



Wednesday, July 29, 2015

The Storyteller, by Jodi Picoult

 
Characters
Sage
Minka’s fictional story
Sage
Parents - died when 19 and 21
Pepper and Saffron – sisters
 
Grandmother – Minka
Darija – best friend – killed in concentration camp
 
Adam – boyfriend, married
 
Helping Hands grief support group
 
Mary DeAngelis – owner, Our Daily Bread - former nun
Rocco – barista
 
Josef Weber – Reiner/Franz Hartmann
 
Leo Stein – Office of Human Rights and Special Prosecutions
Genevra - historian
 
Ania
Emil – father, baker
 
Baruch Beiler – tax collector
Damian – Captain of the Guard
 
Aleksander Lubov – evening baker/upior
Casimir – brother – upior
 
For discussion:
NOTE: The page numbers are from the hardback edition of the book.
  1. Do you think Sage should give Josef the forgiveness he wants?  Can she really do that?  If she does not, does that make her "just as heartless as he is" (125)?
  2. One tenet of Judaism is that there are two wrongs that cannot be forgiven.  One is murder, because the victim cannot forgive, and the second is ruining someone's reputation.  How does this belief influence Sage and her decision to "forgive" Josef?
  3. How well do you think the author addressed the issue of the Holocaust?
  4. Jodi Picoult gives several reasons why the German people followed Hitler including, "Because we so badly wanted to believe what Hitler told us.  That the future would be better than our present" (123), and "No matter how educated you are, no matter how irrational it seems, you will follow a glimmer of hope" (112).  Do you think her analysis is correct?
  5. Discuss the various characters.  Were there any of their actions that you did not understand?  Were you able to connect with them even though their situations were so different than yours?
  6. Why do you think Josef did so many good things in America?  Leo thinks it was simply because of guilt (377).  Also, Sage questions if  Josef has a conscience and if not, how can he feel guilty.  What do you think?
  7. Minka felt that she lowered herself to the Nazi"s level when she started to hate all Germans.  Do you agree?
  8. Why did Franz switch identies with his brother, Reiner?
  9. Why did the author include Minka's fictional story?  What part did it play in the novel?
  10. Why did Sage kill Josef instead of turning him in which would have been more painful for him?
  11. Discuss your reading experience.  Do you think the way Picoult presented the stories was effective?  Which of the story lines did you find most interesting?
  12. Did you learn anything new or have any new insights after reading this book?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at wordassociation.com, barnesandnoble.com and amazon.com.   Click on the upper right link.
 
 

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Travels With Charley, by John Steinbeck

This is the second book in my Library Book Discussion Group's "Steinbeck Summer."   Next month we are reading and discussing The Pearl and Cannery Row.


Travels With Charley
Characters:
John Steinbeck
Charles le Chien - "Charley" - French poodle
Rocinante - camper truck


For Discussion:
NOTE: All page numbers are from the Penguin paperback edition printed in 1986.
  1. As he was starting out, Steinbeck wrote about people's reaction to his trip and how many of them had a "look of longing."  Would you like to go on such a trip?  Why or why not?
  2. Would you be able to survive in a dwelling as small as Rocinante?  What would you need to pack to be happy or content on the road?
  3. He also wrote about the amount of litter he saw along the roads and how in other countries these items would have been reused in some way.  Has anything changed?  Do you see as much litter as your used to?
  4. Steinbeck made a lot of observations about what he encountered on the trip.  One was that people didn't seem to be talking about politics (31).  Later he wrote about the same topic, "I believe this [talking about politics] was going on all over the country in private.  It must have been only publicly that the nation was tongue-tied" (199).  Has this changed since 1962?
  5. Are you a "mapifier" or a "roamer" who enjoys being lost (70-71)?
  6. Many in our group have traveled widely and/or have moved frequently.  What do you think about the idea of having roots vs. being mobile(101-104)?
  7. Steinbeck also lamented that our country is losing  the unique speech patterns and vocabulary (106-107).   Do you agree?  If you have lived in different places in our country, what unique speech patterns and vocabulary have your experienced?
  8. One of his last stops was in New Orleans where a school was being integrated.  He stopped there to observe a group of female protesters nicknamed The Cheerleaders.  His conclusion was, "These blowsy women, with their little hats and their clippings, hungered for attention. They wanted to be admired" (258).  What did you think about this episode?  Was he correct in his assessment of the women's motivation?
  9. Steinbeck wrote, "I came on this trip to try to learn something of America.  Am I learning anything?  If I am, I don't know what it is" (139).  What did he learn about America?  Did you learning anything about America from reading this book?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, wordassocaition.com and barnesandnoble.com.  Click on the upper right link.
 

Monday, June 29, 2015

The Mapmaker's Children, by Sarah McCloy

REVIEW: This is a very interesting book, particularly with the combination of historical fiction and pure fiction and the way they intersected many times throughout the story.  I also found it interesting that the two female characters from different centuries, Sarah and Eden, both had to deal with infertility, the impact that had on their lives during each time period, and the way they both fashioned a satisfying and worthwhile life.  The story was told very creatively and effectively using narrative, newspaper articles, legal documents and letters.  This is a very enjoyable, well-researched and well-written book.  I received a complimentary copy of the book in exchange for my review.
 
Characters
1859
Note: These people are historical figures
2014
John Brown – abolitionist
Mary – second wife
Sarah – daughter
Annie – older sister
Ellen – younger sister
Other siblings:
Owen – half brother
Ruth – oldest daughter
Oliver – deceased son
Martha – Oliver’s wife, also deceased
 
George Hill - abolitionist
Freddy  - son
Ruth – wife
 Pricilla - wife
Alice – daughter, mentally slow
 
Siby Fisher – free black, housekeeper and cook
Hannah and Clyde –  younger siblings
Jack Anderson
Eden Norton
Denny – Eden’s brother
Cricket – dog
 
Cleo – neighbor
Mr. Bronner – Cleo’s grandfather
 
Ms. Silverdash – historian, book store owner
 
Morris Milton
Matt – son – Morris’ cafe
Mack – son – Milton’s market
 
Vee Niles – appraiser
 
 
For discussion:
NOTE: The page numbers are from the hardback edition of the book.
  1. What parallels did you find between Sarah and Eden?  Given that they lived in two different time periods, how were they the same?  How did the issue of infertility affect their lives and how did they overcome it?
  2. On page 33 Eden introduces the idea of pictographs when examining the doll head.  Did you think it was realistic that she would think about that or was this idea forced?
  3. Discuss Eden and Jack's relationship.  Is it a realistic portrayal of the struggle many couples go through when having trouble conceiving?
  4. Did you think Sarah should have told Freddy why she would not marry him?  Was her response typical of the time period?
  5. After Brown was executed, Mary's stuttering disappeared (page 102).  Why do you think this happened?
  6. Discuss Siby and her relationship with the Hill family.  When thinking about the complexity of the war against slavery from all perspectives, Sarah reflects that her father was disappointed in the few slaves that joined him at Harper's Ferry.  On page 55 she thought, "The problem was, freed or slave, they all had ties to while families...It was a weighty decision for them to lift a spear against people they'd lived beside all their days."  Did the book give a realistic view of slavery?  Did you learn anything about the issue?
  7. Did you find the fictional characters believable?  Which was your favorite?  Why?
  8. Were you surprised about the outpouring of sympathy and food when Cricket died?  Did you feel that the reaction was extravagant for a pet?  Would your reading be influenced by whether or not you are a pet owner?
  9. About 2/3 of the way through I finished Eden's story, then read the Author's Note, and then Sarah's story.  I thought this added to my reading experience.  What was your reading experience?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and wordassociation.com.  Click on the upper right link.
 
 
 
 



Friday, June 12, 2015

Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck

This year my library book group is having a "Steinbeck Summer."  This is the first of four works we are reading and discussing.
Characters
George Milton
Lennie Small
 
Aunt Clara
 
Curley
wife
 
Slim
Carlson
 
Candy – wants to go in with George and Lennie to buy farm
 
Crooks – stable buck, crippled
 
Suzy and Clara – ran two brothels in town
 
For discussion:
  1. Why did Steinbeck never give Curley's wife a name?
  2. Why do you think George took care of Lennie and protected him?  Was there something George could have done to help Lennie more?
  3. What did you think was wrong with Lennie?
  4. What would happen to Lennie in today's world?
  5. Why, in the end, did George kill Lennie?
  6. How well did Steinbeck develop the characters?  Which did you understand the best?  Which was the most likeable?  The least?
  7. This novella is on the High School English Advanced Placement summer reading list.  Why?  What do you think today's students will learn from this book?
  8. Was there any character or event you particularly related to?  Why?
  9. The various themes mentioned as being addressed in this book are friendship, racism, loneliness and prejudice against the mentally ill.  How well did Steinbeck address these issues?  How might the novella help readers view these themes differently?
  10. This novella was written in 1937.  Why it is considered a classic?  How does it relate to today's society?
*****
First Semester Success: Learning Strategies and Motivation for Your First Semester (or Any Semester) of College, by Dr. Arden B. Hamer, is available at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and wordassociation.com.  Click on the upper right link.