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Summer Reading 2018

Plainsong by Kent Haruf

By Barbara on 07/09/201801/10/2018

I am a bit faster at reading than writing.  This makes 10 books read and shared during the summer challenge. Kent Haruf is new to me.  The novel came from a friend who had many many books dropped off at her house while recovering (for three months) from a broken knee and hip—she’s finally mobile

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Summer Reading 2018

Miss Pym Disposes by Josephine Tey

By Barbara on 07/09/2018

I have always enjoyed a good mystery, and Josephine Tey is a master at her craft.  Robert Bernard wrote in his introduction to the novel, “Tey belonged to the Golden Age of British crime writing (roughly speaking, 1920-1950), and her place in the pantheon of mystery writers is unassailable.” Tey’s tale takes place at a

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Summer Reading 2018

Summer Reading Wrap Up

By borkali on 05/09/2018

I took a little time to revisit my blog posts from the last ten weeks, and after tallying can say I did in fact read 10 books in 10 weeks. Yahoo! I wasn’t sure since there were several I picked up and put down since we began ten weeks ago. I even read an 11th

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Summer Reading 2018

Week 10 “The Descent of Alette” by Alice Notley

By Teri Rife on 04/09/201805/09/2018

The poet Alice Notley, whose work is included in the ModPo syllabus, wrote this epic poem. A female hero replaces the typical male heroic figure undertaking a Quest—a feminist epic, published in 1996. The epic is set in a multi-layered underground: a subway system in which everyone is trapped, including Alette, a deeper system of

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Summer Reading 2018

Book Seven: Women in Praise of the Sacred: 43 Centuries of Spiritual Poetry by Women, edited by Jane Hirshfield

By meredith on 04/09/201805/09/2018

So, this book was another gift ~~ this time from my husband, Chris.  He knows that I love poetry, and that I also spend quite a bit of time in spiritual study and practice.  So, what a perfect combination in this book.  And then, to realize it was edited by Jane Hirshfield was an unexpected

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Summer Reading 2018

The Milk Lady of Bangalore By Shoba Narayan

By Barbara on 01/09/201801/09/2018

The Milk Lady of Bangalore will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about cows in Bangalore.  Shoba Narayan writes about food, travel and culture.  This is an account of the return to her native India with her husband and two children.  She and her husband studied in the U.S. and began raising a

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Summer Reading 2018

Tracks: A Woman’s Trek Across 1,700 Miles of Australian Outback by Robyn Davidson

By Barbara on 01/09/201805/09/2018

A friend was downsizing her library and passed this book on to me.  It is a page turner!  The story is a true firsthand account of a young (late 20’s) woman’s adventure preparing for and crossing the outback with a dog and three camels.  Davidson starts out with virtually no money, works in a bar, and

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Summer Reading 2018

A Mind of Her Own by Susan Quinn

By Barbara on 29/08/201830/08/2018

This book has been sitting on my shelf for years.  I read part of it for a course on Horney, Freud and Jung and knew that someday I wanted to read the entire volume.  I picked it up because I recently watched a fascinating documentary, The Century of the Self, which describes the influence of

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Summer Reading 2018

Week 9 Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker by Jennifer Chiaverini

By Teri Rife on 28/08/201830/08/2018

  Last week, a neighbor pressed into my hands this book which she had checked out at the library. We use different library systems, and mine doesn’t have it. So, this became my Week 9 read. Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker is a historical novel about Elizabeth Keckley who was born a slave, bought her freedom with

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Summer Reading 2018

Week 9: Marianne Moore’s Observations

By borkali on 27/08/2018

While hanging out in the foothills of Sequoia National Park this weekend I read this collection of Marianne Moore’s poetry. The introduction is excellent, and I’d recommend reading it before diving into her work. Reading this collection gave me an appreciate for the complexity in Moore’s work. I learned from the introduction that her poem

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