Sunday, September 25, 2022

What Strange Paradise by Omar El Akkad

 Amir is nine when he follows Quiet Uncle onto a boat filled with asylum seekers leaving the coast of Africa and headed to Greece. He is the one person left alive when the bodies wash ashore a small Greek island.  But he must still run. He is rescued by 15 yr old Vanna who hopes to guide him to a safe place.  They do not speak each others language but it does not keep them from understanding each other.  What to do with these books - stories of refugees, immigrants and asylum seekers? Tragic, horrifying, inspiring stories.  What do the authors want of us? Empathy? Knowledge?  Help? A solution? All the positions on the asylum seeker issues are  here. Resentment. Compassion. Ignorance.  The writing is outstanding but the ending is a challenge.

Thursday, September 8, 2022

The Exiles by Christina Baker Kline

 In the 1840's England and Ireland made a practice of emptying the inmates of  prisons like notorious Newgate  onto ships and sending them to the island colonies - in this case Tasmania then called Van Diemen's Island. The story of one such experience begins with Evangeline, falsely accused of theft to preserve the reputation of a wealthy family in London and ends with her daughter Ruby almost 30 years later.  In between we learn of the horrific conditions in prisons, slaver ships, and orphanages. But there is also the gift of friendship. Olivia, tough and big hearted, nurtures baby Ruby.  Hazel, the healer becomes both protector and mother to the child. Dr. Dunne observes the horrible situation of all the women and becomes a reformer.  
But that is just one side of the Tasmanian history examined here.  There is also the story of the Aboriginal people whose culture was destroyed by the British colonists.  We learn about Mathinna.  Although Palawa royalty and English educated, she is kept as a "trained pet" by the local British governor and then discarded - no longer able to fit in either world. 
A large portion of the white population on the continent of Australia is descended from these early convict settlers. Kline has done extensive research to explore the affect this history has had on this part of the world as well as the social injustice inherent anywhere that embraces the notion of social entitlement.


Sunday, September 4, 2022

Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult

 Diana and Finn have planned a trip to the Galapagos.  She is a rising star at Sotheby's and he is an exhausted resident at a NYC hospital.  Just as they are ready to leave, Covid is identified.  Finn is told he cannot leave because the hospital is anticipating many cases - little do they know.  Finn encourages Diana to go anyway - why waste both tickets and he will be too busy to play if she stays home.  Diana arrives at the hotel on the island just as the world shuts down.  No way home.  Sketchy communication.  One handsome English speaker to talk to.  Left with lots of time to think, she begins to reevaluate her life, her carefully laid out plans, what in life is really important, And so the story goes - but maybe not really.  There is a catch but I'll not even give a hint here.

The Last Mona Lisa by Jonathan Santlofer

 This looked interesting because it was based on some real facts and. well, it was the Mona Lisa.  However there is a whole lot of fiction happening in an attempt to connect the fact dots.  Luke Perrone is an art history professor who decides to spend a summer in Italy researching his grandfather - the man accused of stealing the Mona Lisa in 1914. It turns out that in the world of rare art dealing, a lot of other people are interested in what he may find.  People are murdered, people fall in love, forgeries seem to be everywhere,  - it's a mystery.  Is the painting hanging in the Louvre the real DaVinci painting?  Maybe - maybe not.