I have seen a hawk sitting in a tree, watching a squirrel. The squirrel was distraught, wanting to go into its nest but he knew the hawk was there. He ran up and down the lower trunk while the hawk flew from branch to branch. Lucky for the would-be prey, the hawk grew bored and flew to other feeding grounds.
Saturday, November 21, 2020
Covid-19 Life: Nature in the 'Burbs, Books TBR
I have seen a hawk sitting in a tree, watching a squirrel. The squirrel was distraught, wanting to go into its nest but he knew the hawk was there. He ran up and down the lower trunk while the hawk flew from branch to branch. Lucky for the would-be prey, the hawk grew bored and flew to other feeding grounds.
Sunday, November 15, 2020
Beethoven: A Life in Nine Pieces by Laura Tunbridge
by Laura Tunbridge
Yale University Press
Pub Date: October 26, 2020
ISBN: 9780300254587
hardcover $35.00 (USD)
A major new biography published for the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, offering a fresh, human portrayal
The iconic image of Beethoven is of him as a lone genius: hair wild, fists clenched, and brow furrowed. Beethoven may well have shaped the music of the future, but he was also a product of his time, influenced by the people, politics, and culture around him. Oxford scholar Laura Tunbridge offers an alternative history of Beethoven’s career, placing his music in contexts that shed light on why particular pieces are valued more than others, and what this tells us about his larger-than-life reputation.
Each chapter focuses on a period of his life, a piece of music, and a revealing theme, from family to friends, from heroism to liberty. We discover, along the way, Beethoven’s unusual marketing strategies, his ambitious concert programming, and how specific performers and instruments influenced his works.
This book offers new ways to understand Beethoven and why his music continues to be valued today.
About the author
Laura Tunbridge is Professor of Music at the University of Oxford. She is the author of three monographs—Schumann’s Late Style, The Song Cycle, and Singing in the Age of Anxiety—and the recipient of a three-year Major Research Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust for a project on string quartets.
Saturday, November 14, 2020
Covid-19 Life: New on my TBR Shelf, Virtual Book Clubs, Quilting Projects
But first, we visited with our family before the weather changed. We visited my brother, sitting on his deck. Deer came to the yard and birds visited the feeder as we talked.
He designed and built a shed that is like a small cabin with a porch swing facing the canal that goes to Cass Lake.
Canal to Cass Lake |
And we visited our son and his girlfriend outdoors, with masks, watching the grandpuppies play in the yard. We only spent a few moments indoors to see Gus, the new kitten.
Gus |
Sunny |
The weather quickly changed, the leaves came down, and it finally feels like November.
local Oak and Moon last week |
Luckily, I have plenty to keep me busy. My TBR galley shelf is filled up and I have dozens of incomplete quilt projects to finish and fabric to 'use up'.
Bellevue Literary Press sent me the ARC of Norman Lock's new book in his American Novels series, Tooth of the Covenant which is about Nathaniel Hawthorne. I have enjoyed four other novels in the series and some day hope to read the others.
- John Keats, a biography by Suzie Grogan
- Jane Austen’s Best Friend: The Life and INfluence of Martha Lloyd by Zoe Wheddon
- The Life She Wished to Live: A Biography of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, author of the Yearling by Ann McCutchan
- Wonderworks: The 25 Most Powerful Inventions in the History of Literature by Angus Fletcher
- The Bookseller of Florence: The Story of the Manuscripts that Illuminated the Renaissance by Ross King
- The Last Green Valley by Mark Sullivan interested me because it is about Germans in the Ukraine under Soviet rule who had to escape during WWII
- The Fortunate Ones by Ed Tarkington
- The Invisible Women by Erika Robuck
- Girl Explorers by Jayne Zanglein
- Brood by Jackie Polzin
- Lady Bird Johnson: Hiding in Plain Sight by Julia Sweig
- Astrid Sees All by Natalie Standiford
- Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
- The Souvenir Museum by Elizabeth McCracken
I used a vintage embroidered linens, crotchet, trims, buttons, and a quilt top.
Every day I take a walk around the neighborhood. I was surprised by this squirrel going in and out of a hole in the tree.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Angry Weather: Heat Waves, Floods, Storms, and the New Science of Climate Change
A pioneering scientist solves a pressing climate question: Can we pin the blame for individual extreme weather events on humans?Massive fires, widespread floods, category 4 hurricanes—weather disasters are becoming more frequent each year, but not everyone agrees on what causes them. Renowned University of Oxford researcher Friederike Otto provides an answer with attribution science, a revolutionary method for pinpointing the role of climate change in extreme weather events. Anchoring her book with the gripping, day-by-day story of Hurricane Harvey, which caused over a hundred deaths and $125 billion in damage in 2017, Otto reveals how attribution science works in real time, and determines that Harvey’s terrifying floods were three times more likely to occur due to human-induced climate change.At a time when our inability to determine climate change’s role in weather events has impacted everything from how much aid a devastated region receives to the culpability of corporations and governments, Otto’s research laid out in this groundbreaking book will have profound impacts, both today and for the future of humankind.Published in Partnership with the David Suzuki Institute.Friederike (Fredi) Otto is a physicist, climate researcher, associate professor, and the acting director of the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford. Otto is also a co-investigator on the international project World Weather Attribution, which assesses the human influence on extreme weather and has been profiled in the New York Times, Nature, and others.
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
The Decameron Project: 29 Stories from the Pandemic
by The New York Times
Scribner
Pub Date: November 10, 2020
ISBN: 9781982170790
hardcover $25.00 (USD)
from the publisher:
A stunning collection of new short stories originally commissioned by The New York Times Magazine as the COVID-19 pandemic swept the world, from twenty-nine authors including Margaret Atwood, Tommy Orange, Edwidge Danticat, and more, in a project inspired by Boccaccio’s “The Decameron.”
When reality is surreal, only fiction can make sense of it.
In 1353, Giovanni Boccaccio wrote “The Decameron”: one hundred nested tales told by a group of young men and women passing the time at a villa outside Florence while waiting out the gruesome Black Death, a plague that killed more than 25 million people. Some of the stories are silly, some are bawdy, some are like fables.
In March of 2020, the editors of The New York Times Magazine created The Decameron Project, an anthology with a simple, time-spanning goal: to gather a collection of stories written as our current pandemic first swept the globe. How might new fiction from some of the finest writers working today help us memorialize and understand the unimaginable? And what could be learned about how this crisis will affect the art of fiction?
These twenty-nine new stories, from authors including Margaret Atwood, Tommy Orange, Edwidge Danticat, and David Mitchell vary widely in texture and tone. Their work will be remembered as a historical tribute to a time and place unlike any other in our lifetimes, and offer perspective and solace to the reader now and in a future where coronavirus is, hopefully, just a memory.
Sunday, November 8, 2020
Nowhere Like This Place: Tales from a Nuclear Childhood by Marilyn Carr
In Nowhere Like This Place, Marilyn Carr reminisces on her childhood growing up in a planned Ontario neighborhood where everyone's dad worked at the nuclear reactor plant, known as 'the plant,' although Carr at first thought her dad spent the entire day riding the bus that he took to work.
With ironic humor, Carr recalls growing up as I did, in a world filled with unrecognized threats.
Asbestos floor tiles that needed constant waxing and asbestos clay projects in school. Baby car seats with a horn that did nothing to protect the baby. Kids at the beach without lifeguards. Biking all day in bear country, eating wild berries and drinking from the river. Lead paint and eating glue. And snow boots that neither protected from the cold or offered traction on the ice.
She recalls the awful 1960s cuisine of Tang and oleo-margerine, girls puzzling on how to wear snow pants with a skirt or garter belts with a mini-skirt, and the eternal problem of missing Barbie doll shoes.
It was a world of risk to be a kid back then.
First jobs, hobbies she dreamt would lead to a career, girlfriends and learning about boys--all the normal things girls go through--are recalled.
This was a joy to read, funny and warm, entertaining and nostalgic. There are not deep insights, no overcoming of neglect or abuse. Sometimes it is good to just sit back and enjoy someone's journey.
I was given a free galley from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.
Read an excerpt here.
by Marilyn Carr
BooksGoSocial
November 3, 2020
ISBN: 9781771804356
$7.99 Kindle, $17.99 paperback (USD)
Marilyn Carr’s family arrived in Deep River, Ontario in 1960 because her dad got a job at a mysterious place called “the plant.” The quirky, isolated residence for the employees of Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories was impeccably designed by a guy named John Bland. It’s a test-tube baby of a town that sprang, fully formed, from the bush north of Algonquin Park, on the shore of the Ottawa River. Everything has already been decided, including the colours of the houses, inside and out. What could possibly go wrong?
Nowhere like This Place is a coming-of-age memoir set against the backdrop of the weirdness of an enclave with more PhDs per capita than anywhere else on earth. It’s steeped in thinly veiled sexism and the searing angst of an artsy child trapped in a terrarium full of white-bread nuclear scientists and their nuclear families. Everything happens, and nothing happens, and it all works out in the end. Maybe.
Saturday, November 7, 2020
Covid-19 Life: Jitters, TBR shelf, The Fur-grandkids
It's been a tense few days in our home as it has been across America. Our local and state candidates all won reelection, but there is that long wait for the presidential winner to be announced. Our two-mile square town had an amazing turnout in all the precincts, including ours.
We sent a few dollars to candidates across the country, and got some nice thank yous, including this postcard from Mark Kelly!
The weather in Southeast Michigan has warmed up to 70 degrees! The quilter met in the park in the morning when it was in the lower 50s out, so we were bundled up.
“The Fortunate Ones feels like a fresh and remarkably sure-footed take on The Great Gatsby, examining the complex costs of attempting to transcend or exchange your given class for a more gilded one. Tarkington’s understanding of the human heart and mind is deep, wise, and uncommonly empathetic. As a novelist, he is the real deal. I can’t wait to see this story reach a wide audience, and to see what he does next.” —Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife
- The next American Novel by Norman Locks coming from Bellevue Literary Press, Tooth of the Covenant. I have read four books in this series.
- From LibraryThing, All that We Carried by Erin Bartels, a Michigan author whose previous books I have reviewed
- The Bookseller of Florence:The Story of the Manuscripts That Illuminated the Renaissance by Ross King