Sunday, July 17, 2022

Owls of the Eastern Ice by Jonathan C. Slaght

 Slaght's love of the Russian far east wilderness began as a young boy when his father was part of the USA diplomatic corps in Russia.  Then as a Peace Corps volunteer he began to zero in on giant owls of the same area.  Eventually his focus was on the endanged Blakiston's fish owl.  For a good part of every year, Slaght followed these owls through frozen rivers and rugged terrain.  The quirky characters that join him create another story.  The conditions went beyond challenging straight to horrible.  Got to admire his commitment - this would be a no way situation for me.


Wednesday, July 13, 2022

The Air Between Us by Deborah Johnson

 Dr. Cooper Connelly and Dr. Reese Jackson are both doctors in Revere, Mississippi - one is white, one is black. One works in the top floors of the Doctor's hospital and one serves clients from the back door. But this is post "Brown v the Board of Education" and changes are on the way. When a 10 year old black child arrives at the hospital with a white man suffering from mysterious gun shot wounds, there are more questions to be answered other than which door is the right one to use. There is reason to feel good about events in the end of the story but a lot of secrets to unravel first. Start your pondering with Connelly's words on page 155 about "the air between us".

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli

 If ever a book screamed Booker Prize, this is it - uniquely structured, thought provoking and really really depressing.  Four people set out on a trip from NYC to Arizona - 2 adults and 2 children. The adults are married. The boy child came to the marriage with the man.  The younger girl child, with the woman. They are never named.  They are identified by the role they play in the narrative - mother, child sister, husband, lover..etc.  The adults are documentarians.  They met recording sounds and languages of the city.  But that project has ended and now they are each pursuing a different path - a path away from each other.  He is recording "echoes" of Geronimo and the Apache nation.  She is focused on the lost children attempting to cross our southern border.  Among their luggage are seven boxes which introduce various sections of the book..  Four are all the notes and history gathered for his project. One is the beginnings of her research including a small red book that appears to be both historical and prophetic.  Boxes six and seven belong to the children and are empty at the beginning. The boy hopes to fill them with the images he is capturing with his new Polaroid camera.  His lack of technique often produces hazy almost ghostly images. The girl is too young to record anything but memories.  With the marriage unraveling, the tension in the car is punctuated by conversations about Native American genocide and the tragedy at the border.  At one point the children get lost and the young boy records their journey on 20 pages of thoughts and observations unhindered by any "full stop" punctuation.  It is a book I kept reading because it was so highly recommended.  Not something to read if you are looking for a cheery tale.

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr

 I read somewhere that Doerr kept a chart of the characters and events of this book so he wouldn't lose track of the story. In the beginning there seems to be too many threads to possibly make sense of it all.  Really it turns out to be three stories with multiple narrators and lots of time leaps all connected by a single book.  The earliest story is the tale of Anna and Omier.  Both young and poor, their paths cross during the  battles of Constantinople in the 1400's. They find the book.  The "contemporary" story follows the life of Zeno who, at the age of 80, is helping a group of young children in a library in Idaho perform a story from the book- and Seymour, a troubled teen whose attempt to blow up the library is thwarted by their practice. The third story is told by the young girl, Konstance, locked in a room alone aboard an interstellar space ship in the not-so-distant future.  Frantically, she copies, from memory, bits of the book her father read to her.  The technology aboard the spaceship keeps her alive and oddly connected to life on Earth but to what end? 

All of this, Doerr says, is to honor books and the libraries and librarians who guarantee our right to read them, to freely "know".  As Licinius, the old man who taught Anna to read says, "But books like people, die.  They die in fires or floods or in the mouths of worms or at the whim of tyrants.  If they are not safe-guarded, they go out of the world.  And when a book goes out of the world, the memory dies a second death."  This 600+ page journey is at the very least memory making.