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Sunday Salon: Gleaned from the Saturday Review

I try to go through the book review links posted at the Saturday Review each week, but with nearly 200 links posted this week, time is the enemy of thoroughness. I did glance over most of the reviews, and these are the books and other thoughts I found of interest to me:

A Thomas Jefferson Education: Teaching a Generation of Leaders for the Twenty-first Century by Oliver Van deMille. Suzanne used some categories from this book to talk about another book she was reviewing. I’ve heard of the Jefferson Education book, and I’ve been meaning to look for it. I am reminded.

The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa. Recommended by 3M at 1 More Chapter. This one is a translation from the Japanese and includes a lot of mathematical references, bleeding over into philosophy I deduce. I thought it sounded like a good risk.

Strand: An Odyssey of Pacific Ocean Debris by Bonnie Henderson. Recommended by Carrie at 5 Minutes for Books. The story of a self-described “forensic coastwatcher,” this book is not the sort of thing I would pick off the shelf without a recommendation from someone else, but when Carrie describes it, I am intrigued. I need to read more nonfiction, especially more about nature and science. But it has to be nontechnical and concentrated on story or you’ll lose me.

Counter Clockwise by Jason Cockcroft. Recommended by gautami tripathy. This fantasy time travel title comes out in February, and I think I’ll look it up then. It’s a children’s book, but it sounds like something I might enjoy and then pass on to the urchins.

Flipped by Wendelin Van Draanen. Recommended by Melanie at Deliciously Clean Reads. Because of where its recommended and because the premise sounds interesting, I think I might want to check out this YA novel both for myself and for Brown Bear Daughter who’s into YA realistic fiction.

Maps and Legends by Michael Chabon. Recommended by Girl Detective. Computer Guru Son is a Michael Chabon fan, but I’ve never read any of his books. I think a book of essays like this one would interest me more than Chabon’s fiction; it might even lead me to try some of his fiction.

Devil’s Brood by Sharon Kay Penman. Recommended by The Tome Traveller. I read When Christ and His Saints Slept by this author a couple of years ago, and I promised my self that I would pick up the next book in the series, Time and Chance, soon after. I never did. And now there’s a third historical novel about the life and times of Henry II and his wife Eleanor called Devil’s Brood. SInce each one of these novels weighs in at 700+ pages, I must get cracking soon. also, we’re studying the Middle Ages in achool, so this would be a good time to read the other two books in Ms. Penman’s story of Henry, Eleanor and their (in)famous children.

The End of the Alphabet by C.S. Richardson. Recommended by She Is Too Fond of Books. This one sounds fun and short, a nice counter-balance to all the heavy tomes on the TBR list.

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout. Recommended at She Is Too Fond of Books. Also by Wendy at Caribousmom. I’ve been resisting this one because I don’t like short stories, but I’ve also been inclined to try it since it’s gotten lots of good reviews and since I liked Strout’s Abide With Me when I read it. So I’ve reached the tipping point and onto the list it goes.

I have, in fact added all of these books to my ridiculously unwieldy list of books that I want to read. I may decide someday that I’ve reached the “tipping point” on that list and stop adding books, only endeavoring to finish the list before I die. Maybe when I’m about eighty year old?

12 Best Reading Lists of 2008

Jared’s Jesus Reading List at The Gospel-Driven Church. No, I haven’t read any of these, but I’d like to try to read at least one of the books on the list this year. Which one does anyone suggest I read first?

Image Journal’s 100 Writers of Faith. I’ve read thirteen of the 100 works listed, or at least attempted thirteen of them. I simply could not get through A Prayer for Owen Meany. I thought the style was annoying and the characters were not enjoyable. Some of the others on the list are favorites of mine, though, including Kristin Lavransdatter and Till We Have Faces and of course, The Lord of the Rings.

Lord Acton’s 100 Best Books, courtesy of Kevin Stilley. This list is good for making one feel uneducated and frivolous in comparison to the well-educated nineteenth century gentleman. Of the 100, I’ve read portions of four: Pascal’s Pensees, St Aungustine’s Letters, Dante’s Divine Comedy, and The Federalist Papers.

Season FIve of LOST premieres Wednesday January 21, 2009. To tide you over until then, ABC and the producers of LOST have a LOST book club with a list of all the books featured, pictured and referenced in the first four seasons. I’m still rather fond of this list at Coyote Mercury, and LOSTpedia also has a list with annotations and program notes. And here’s my LOST books post from last year.

Tullian Tchividjian’s Top 40 Books on Christ and Culture. This list is mostly, maybe all, nonfiction, and I’ve read very few of the books on the list. But I probably should read some of them.

The U.S. Presidents Reading Project has a list of all of the U.S. presidents and suggested reading selections (non-fiction) for each one. The challenge is to read one biography of each one.

Did you know that there’s a new edition of Peter Boxall’s 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die, and Arukiyomi has a new Excel spreadsheet for tracking your progress in reading the new list? My count for the old list from the first edition: 129. My count for the new list: Not sure yet?

The 100 Favorite Mysteries of the 20th Century as selected by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association’s online members. I just found this list this year, so it’s new to me.

The Headmistress’s Worthwhile Reading Challenge with links to others’ lists of 12 worthwhile books to read in 2009.

The Conservative Exiles’ Reading List by Joseph Duggan in University Bookman. I may need to read some of these just to keep myself sane during an Obama administration.

Librarian Nancy Pearl DIps Below the Reading Radar. Almost all of these suggestions sound fascinating.

My very own Semicolon Book Club list which was compiled and finalized in late December 2008, and is now revealed to the sound of a drum roll:

January: Nonfiction inspirational (For January only there are two selections. Book club participants may choose to read either or both of the books.)
1. Heaven by Randy Alcorn. Tyndale House Publishers (October 1, 2004) $16.49 from Amazon.
2. Heaven: Your Real Home by Joni Eareckson Tada. Zondervan (October 10, 1997) $11.69 at amazon.

February: Christian classic novels
The Love Letters by Madeleine L’Engle. This book may be my favorite of Ms. L’Engle’s novels; it deals with marriage, faith, the meaning of love, and forgiveness, alternating settings between twentieth century Portugal and New York and a 17th century Portuguese convent.

March: Biography/History
John Adams by David McCullough. Simon & Schuster (January 29, 2008) 768 pages.
I plan to read this book and then watch the mini-series based on the book.

April: Poetry Month
All poems are about God, love or depression. Susan Wise Bauer in The Well-Educated Mind.
Paradise Lost by John Milton. “Recommended edition: The Signet Classic paperback, Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained, edited by Christopher Ricks. (New York: Signet Books, 1968, $7.95) This edition has explanatory footnotes at the bottom of each page. These are extremely helpful since Milton uses archaic expressions and hundreds of obscure classical references.” (SWB, The Well-Trained Mind)

May: YA or Children’s award winner
The Underneath by Kathi Appelt is the book I think will win the Newbery Award in 2009.

June: Chunky Classics
David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. 1024 pages.

July: Just for Fun and Adventure
River Rising by Athol Dickson.
River Rising is set in southern Louisiana, near the mouth of the Mississippi River, just before and during the Great Mississippi River Flood of 1927. The characters are residents of Pilotville, LA, a small town surrounded by swampland, and one stranger who comes to town to find out about his parentage. Hale Poser, the stranger, grew up in an orphanage, became a preacher, and now has come to Pilotville in hope of finding out something about his heritage. As soon as Rev. Poser hits town, strange things start happening, odd things like fruit growing where no fruit is expected to be, things that are attributable either to God or to chance or to Hale Poser the Miracle man. I’ve already read this book, but I’m looking forward to discussing it with a group.

August: Shakespeare play
Hamlet. Hamlet is a hero trapped by his own indecision in an insoluble quandary: should he take revenge on his father’s murderer or remain silent, tolerate evil, and live in a world that is “out of joint” —or perhaps commit suicide to escape it all?

September: Prize winning adult novel
Andersonville by MacKinlay Kantor.
Pulitzer prize winning Civil War novel brings to life the inmates and the masters of the notorious Andersonville Confederate prisoner of war camp.

October: Love to Laugh
Scoop by Evelyn Waugh. Scoop is a comedy of England’s newspaper business of the 1930s and the story of William Boot, a innocent hick from the country who writes careful essays about the habits of the badger. Through a series of accidents and mistaken identity, Boot is hired as a war correspondent for a Fleet Street newspaper. The uncomprehending Boot is sent to the fictional African country of Ishmaelia to cover an expected revolution. Although he has no idea what he is doing and he can’t understand the incomprehensible telegrams from his London editors, Boot eventually gets the big story.

November: Love to Think
A Walk with Jane Austen by Lori Smith. “In this engaging, deeply personal and well-researched travelogue, Smith journeys to England to soak in the places of Jane Austen’s life and writings. The book is sure to ride the wave of Austen-philia that has recently swept through Hollywood and a new generation of Americans, but this is an unusual look at Jane Austen. Readers will learn plenty of biographical details-about Austen’s small and intimate circle of family and friends, her candid letters to her sister, her possible loves and losses, her never-married status, her religious feelings, and her untimely death at the age of 41. But it is the author’s passionate connection to Jane-the affinity she feels and her imaginings of Austen’s inner life-that bring Austen to life in ways no conventional biographer could. Smith’s voice swings authentically between the raw, aching vulnerability of a single Christian woman battling a debilitating and mysterious chronic illness and the surges of faith she finds in the grace of a loving God.”
(Publisher’s Weekly review)

You are quite welcome to join in the Semicolon Book Club by leaving a comment or shooting me an email (sherryDOTearlyATgmailDOTcom). Just read along, and we’ll discuss toward the end of the month. The physical meeting time for those who live in the Houston area will be the fourth Saturday of the month at my house.

12 Best Young Adult Fiction Books I Read in 2008

The Declaration by Gemma Malley. Semicolon review here.

Unwind by Neal Shusterman. Semicolon review here.

The Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale. Semicolon review here.

Tamar by Mal Peet. Semicolon review here.

The Missing: Found by Margaret Peterson Haddix. Semicolon review here.

The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary Pearson. Semicolon review here.

Here, There Be Dragons by James Owen. Semicolon review here.

Love Me Tender by Audrey Couloumbis. Semicolon review here.

Six Innings by James Preller. Semicolon review here.

Bringing the Boy Home by N.A. Nelson. Semicolon review here.

Every Soul a Star by Wendy Mass. I didn’t manage to review this one yet, but you can read Melissa’s Book Nut review here. Pretty much what she said.

The Giver by Lois Lowry. Semicolon review here.

Some of these are borderline, between young adult and children’s or between young adult and adult. Nevertheless, I think teens would enjoy all of these books, and I did, too, even though I’m long past my teens.

12 Best Children’s Fiction Books I Read in 2008

The Underneath by Kathi Appelt. Semicolon review here.

The Girl Who Could Fly by VIctoria Forrester. Semicolon review here.

Window Boy by Andrea White. Semicolon review here.

The Jumping-Off Place by Marian Hurd McNeely. Semicolon review here.

The Life and Crimes of Bernetta Wallflower by Lisa Graff. Semicolon review here.

The London Eye Mystery by Siobhan Dowd. Semicolon review here.

Masterpiece by Elise Broach. I never got around to reviewing this one, but it’s a “masterpiece” in the tradition of Charlotte’s Web, but not quite as literary. The book tells the story of Marvin the Beetle and his eleven year old human friend, James who manage together to foil an attempted art theft and forgery of priceless works by the great artist Albrecht Durer.

Alvin Ho by Lenore Look. Semicolon review here.

The Diamond of Drury Lane by Julia Golding. Semicolon review here.

The Penderwicks on Gardam Street by Jeanne Birdsall. The Penderwicks return as lovable and enjoyable as ever.

Forever Rose by Hilary McKay. The Cassons return as quirky and enjoyable as ever. Semicolon review here.

The Willoughbys by Lois Lowry. Semicolon review here.

Hard choices. There were so many outstanding books that I had to leave off my list, but these are my favorites.

I will say that all of these except for The Jumping Off Place were Cybils nominees for Middle Grade Fiction, but only three of them are likely to make to the shortlist of finalists that will be announced on January 1st. I liked several books that my fellow committee members didn’t care for, and vice-versa. Maybe you’ll enjoy some of my selections that didn’t make the finalist list.

Melissa’s Book Nut list of Cybils favorites.

2009 ACPL Mock Newbery Nominees.

The Reading Zone: Best of Cybils

All of the Cybils Nominees with links to panelists’ reviews.

Books for the Children on your Christmas List

These suggestions are made up of mostly Cybils nominees published in 2008. They should be available in your local bookstore or online from Amazon or Barnes and Noble. (You can get to Amazon anytime by clicking on any of the book cover pictures in any of my posts.)

For the baseball fans: Keeping Score by Linda Sue Park (Semicolon review here), Six Innings by James Preller (Semicolon review here), The Big Field by Mike Lupica.

For those with a penchant for the piratical:
Roger the Jolly Pirate by Brett Helquist (Reviewed at A Tuesday Story.), Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World by Jane Yolen (Carol’s Corner review), Pirates by David Harrison.

For pre-adolescent princesses: Clementine’s Letter by Sara Pennypacker (Semicolon review here), Up and Down the Scratchy Mountains by Laurel Snyder.

For middle school boys in search of adventure: Bringing the Boy Home by N.A. Nelson, Island of Mad Scientists by Howard Whitehouse (Melissa’s Book Nut review).

For Christmas-lovers: Forever Rose by Hilary McKay (Semicolon review here).

For country music lovers: The entire Maggie Valley series by Kerry Madden. (Semicolon reviews here and here)

For World War II buffs: Jimmy’s Stars by Mary Ann Rodman (Semicolon review here with a list of other WW II homefront books), Don’t Talk to Me About the War by David Adler.

For mystery lovers: The Diamond of Drury Lane by Julia Golding, The London Eye Mystery by Siobhan Dowd, The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Stewart (Melissa’s Book Nut review).

For astronomers and moon-gazers: Every Soul a Star by Wendy Mass,

For budding artists: The Calder Game by Blue Balliet (Semicolon review here), The Curse of Addy McMahon by Katie Davis (Reviewed by KBacellia).

For animal lovers: Dog Lost by Ingrid Lee, The Underneath by Kathi Appelt (Semicolon review here), Stella Unleashed: Notes from the Doghouse by Linda Ashman.

These are just a few of the books nominated for the Middle Grade Fiction Cybil Award. For more, with links to reviews, look here.

Books Read in September 2008

Sunrise Over Fallujah by Walter Dean Myers. Semicolon thoughts on Americans in war here.

The Search for the Red Dragon by James O. Owen. I didn’t manage to review this sequel to Here, There Be Dragons (Semicolon review here), and I liked it very much. Enough that I’ll be looking for the next book in the series, The Indigo King, which is supposed to be published this month.

Random Harvest by James Hilton. Good story. Semicolon review here.

A Bell for Adano by John Hersey. Semicolon thoughts on establishing democracy here.

Bertie Wooster Sees It Through by P.G. Wodehouse. This one cheered me up during the Hurricane Blues.

The Innocent Man by John Grisham. The sad, but true, story of a man with problems who was wrongfully convicted of murder. Grisham was trying to convince me that the death penalty is wrong, but he only convinced me that Oklahoma has some major judicial and law enforcement issues.

Don’t You Dare Read This, Mrs. Dunphrey by Margaret Peterson Haddix. YA problem fiction about a girl with a secret. It reminded me of this book, but I liked A Door Near Here better.

The Youngest Templar: Keeper of the Grail by Michael P. Spradlin. Semicolon review here.

First Light by Rebecca Stead. I thought this fantasy/science fiction/Arctic adventure was odd, to say the least. Absorbing, but strange.

A Week in the Woods by Andrew Clements. Semicolon review (sort of) here.

Cicada Summer by Andrea Beaty. Review coming tomorrow.

The Underneath by Kathi Appelt. Review coming.

Go here for all the Semicolon reviews of children’s and YA fiction published in 2008.

September 24: National Punctuation Day

For chidren:
Alfie the Apostrophe by Moira Rose Donohue.

Penny and the Punctuation Bee by Moira Rose Donohue.

Punctuation Takes a Vacation by Robin Pulver, illustrated by Lynn Rowe Reed.

Eats, Shoots & Leaves: Why, Commas Really Do Make a Difference by Lynne Truss, illustrated by Bonnie Timmons.

For adults, students and writers:

Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation by Lynne Truss.

A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation by Noah Lukeman.

Pirates: Books for Talk Like a Pirate Day


Of piratical books there is no end. However, here are a few of my favorites. Here’s a more exhaustive list of pirate fiction.


Picture Books:
Obadiah the Bold by Brinton Turkle. A young Quaker boy on Nantucket Island decides to become a pirate when he grows up, but he’s dissuaded after he’s forced to walk the plank (pretend) by his older siblings. Semicolon review here.

Classics:
The Dark Frigate by Charles Boardman Hawes. Semicolon review here.

Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. Classic story of the boy, Jim Hawkins, and the pirate, Long John Silver.

Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie.

Children’s Fiction:
Mystery in the Pirate Oak by Helen Fuller Orton. I used to read Ms. Orton’s mysteries when I was a kid of a girl. Good children’s mystery books.

Captain Kidd’s Cat. The True Chronicle of Wm. Kidd, Gent. and Merchant of New York as narrated by His Ship’s Cat, McDermott, Who ought to know by Robert Lawson. Not as well known as Lawson’s other animal-narrated historical chronicles, Ben and Me and Mr. Revere and I, but this story of Captain Kidd is written in the same style and just as fun and informative. By the way, I think I may be related to Captain Kidd. At least I have some Kidds in my family tree.

Ghost in the Noonday Sun by Sid Fleischman. Oliver FInch, because he was born exactly at midnight, has the ability to see ghosts. And the pirates who kidnap him need his help to to get to a treasure guarded by . . . ghosts, of course. Fleischman wrote lots of funny adventure stories just right for a rollicking good time.

Isle of Swords by Thomas Wayne Batson. I thoroughly enjoyed this pirate tale from last year. Semicolon review here.

Jade by Sally Watson. This one falls in the category of great story but hard to find because it’s out of print. In fact, Sally Watson is an author worth keeping in mind at used book sales and the like. Her books, first published in the 1950’s and 60’s, seem to be available here in reprint editions. Jade is the story of sixteen year old Melanie Lennox, an anti-slavery crusader, who joins the pirates who capture her ship so that she can continue her fight against slavery on the high seas. If anyone has an extra copy of this book lying around, I’ll certainly take it off your hands. I have fond memories of it from my childhood.

Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome.

Young Adult Fiction:
Airborn by Kenneth Oppel. Air pirates in an alternate world. Semicolon review here.

Pirates! by Celia Rees, reviewed by Carrie at Mommy Brain. YA fiction about a couple of girl pirates and about the evils of slavery.

The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle by Avi.

Nonfiction:
Sea Queens: Women Pirates from Around the World by Jane Yolen, reviewed by Matt at The Book Club Shelf.

Random Harvest by James Hilton

I read Lost Horizon a long time ago, and I’ve seen the movies. I enjoyed the book and the movies. Random Harvst by the same author is a different book, but it has the same feel to it. The characters have, and give the reader, that same longing to return to a simpler time and place; it’s a romance in the best sense of the word, just like Lost Horizon.

In fact, either finishing Random Harvest or a hormonal flare or both made me feel incredibly sad and nostalgic tonight. Then, I had a discussion with Eldest Daughter about politics and nuclear weapons and the war in Iraq and American imperialism and the global economy (yeah, all that), and that made me even sadder. So this review may or may not be truly indicative of the quality of the book. When you factor in romanticism and politics and hormones, anything can happen.

Random Harvest is an amnesia story about a man who loses three years of his life when he is wounded during World War I. The man, Charles Ranier, finds himself in Liverpool on a park bench and remembers everything that happened to him before he was wounded but nothing of the past three years, the ending of the war, and his return home. I’m not sure, but I think Hilton was trying to say something about the collective amnesia of the British people on the brink of another war because they had purposely forgotten the lessons of World War I. The book indicates that the pursuit of riches and economic power and the crusading spirit of the socialists are both inadequate substitutes for personal relationships and commitment to or faith in something beyond the here and now. Actually, I’m not sure Mr. Hilton was embedding such a didactic message in his book, but that summation approximates the message I got out of the book.

Mostly, Random Harvest is just a good story. There’s an impossibly romantic surprise ending, and I didn’t catch on to it until the last few pages of the book. So the finale was quite satisfying. And the story itself moved along somewhat slowly, but with enough going on to keep my interest, and just enough philosophical speculation to make me think a bit without straining my brain too much.

And the writing is very British and very 1940’s. Here’s a sample quotation that made me think of blogging:

“Those were the happy days when Smith began to write. As most real writers do, he wrote because he had something to say, not because of any specific ambition to become a writer. He turned out countless articles and sketches that gave him pleasure only because they contained a germ of what was in his mind; but he was never fully satisfied with them himself and consequently was never more than slightly disappointed when editors promptly returned them. He did not grasp that, because he was a person of no importance, nobody wanted to read his opinions at all.”

Smith would have been a perfect blogger.

Random Harvest was a fun, sort of melancholy-producing, book, and if you like amnesia books set in the 1920’s, written in the 1940’s, you should try it out. Other time-bending, amnesia books with a similar feel to them:

A Portrait of Jennie by Robert Nathan. Semicolon review here.

Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey. Not exactly an amnesia story, but it reminds me of Hilton’s style somehow. Semicolon review here.

Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac by Gabrielle Zevin. More modern and young adult-ish. Semicolon review here.

The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary Pearson. Also YA and more of a twenty-first century feel. Semicolon review here.

Anne Perry’s William Monk detective series features Mr. Monk as a late nineteenth century private detective suffering from amnesia. His assistant/love interest/foil is a nurse named Hester.

Any more amnesiac selections that you can remember? Mr. Hilton’s birthday was on the 9th of September, by the way. I forgot.

Semicolon’s September: Celebrations, Links and Birthdays

Reading through a Hurricane

Two from Camille at Book Moot.

Jen reviews a middle grade fiction title, Hurricane by Terry Trueman, on a hurricane in Honduras and its aftermath.

Semicolon review of Galveston’s Summer of the Storm by Julie Lake.

Semicolon review of Isaac’s Storm by Eric Larson.

I suggest for the younger set, although it’s about a summer storm, not a hurricane: The Storm Book by Charlotte Zolotow.

Other picture books on hurricanes:

Hurricane! by David Wiesner. Two brothers enjoy the excitement of a hurricane and the fun of climbing on a downed tree in their front yard.

Hurricane! by Corinne Demas. Margo and her family prepare for Hurricane Bob in 1991.

Semicolon’s September: Celebrations, Links and Birthdays