Thursday, September 26, 2019

We Are The Weather by Jonathan Safran Foer

This week Greta Thunberg's impassioned accusation, "you have stolen my dreams and my childhood" by talking about "money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth," brought many to tears...and others to attack the sixteen-year-old activist. We don't want to hear Thunberg because we don't want to accept her vision of the future.

We have heard the reasoned arguments and warnings. Most people accept climate change as scientific fact. In the popular film An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore warned, "We have everything that we need to reduce carbon emissions, everything but political will. But in America, the will to act is a renewable resource." But the political will has not been there and many deny the scientific studies as fable.

The first Earth Day I purchased a "Give Earth a Chance" pinback button at the information table set up in my high school hallway. I took ecology in college, recycled when we had to cart everything to centers, limited the use of our car (when we turned in our lease we had totaled 8,000 miles over three years).

"Most people want to do what's good for the world, when it doesn't come at personal expense."~from We Are The Weather

But we also eat eggs and cheese and use the air conditioner and furnace. Some things are easier to give up, and some things we cling to. I can't tolerate high temperatures and without air conditioning, I am a mess. Michigan has experienced more 95 degree days than ever, and we are told it will get worse. I think about it all the time, how we may need to install a bathroom in the basement when we need to escape to its coolness because the a.c.will be illegal or limited or unaffordable.

In We Are The Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast, Jonathan Safran Foer argues that people just don't "feel" the threat of climate change; we think of it as some apocalyptic fantasy set in the future. Like Justice Felix Frankfurter when he learned of the Warsaw Ghetto and concentration camps responded, "I must say I am unable to believe what you told me...My mind, my heart, they are made in such a way that I cannot accept it."  The good justice believed, and he was horrified, but it was too much for him to fathom it was real.

Foer's book is, in essence, a long discussion with us, and himself, on how difficult it is to get to where Thunberg is: a deep commitment based on a sense of personal and existential threat of death.

We are killing ourselves. We are committing suicide. We can change our behavior and it can affect the weather and, perhaps, save our lives, our children's lives.

Foer offers individuals how to change the future through personal action. Walk, bicycle, instead of using cars. (check; my husband walked to work much of his career.) Avoid flying (check; I've only flown a few times my entire life), have one child less (check; we have one). Dry clothes on a clothesline instead of in a dryer. (Done that, had the stiff underwear to prove it. But I do have an energy-efficient dryer.)

And eat a plant-based diet (kinda, sometimes).

Our first year of marriage we bought Diet For a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappe. Some of those recipes remain regular favorites in our house, such as Mexican Pan Bread. Later we collected Moosewood Restaurant's cookbooks and added more delicious recipes. We fell into the cooking of our childhood when raising a picky-eater child. But after he left for college, I read Michael Pollen's The Omnivore's Dilemma and we became strict vegetarians for three years...then, living with our son again fell back into buying more meat.

I am now in a dilemma. We are trying to get animal products back out of our diet, but I am told to increase my protein. I don't like tofu or those awful shakes. I have been buying local eggs from a farm market--is that ok? Then, there is my husband's deep and abiding love for cheese.

Foer informs that agriculture, mostly animal agriculture, accounts for 24% of annual greenhouse gas emissions. And we know those animals require huge amounts of food which takes up lots of land and energy and water, and factories to process animals into meat, and trucks to get the meat to markets. Plus, factory farming of animals creates environmental problems and pollution. Last of all, eating animal products, as my doctor has emphasized, is bad for our individual health.

Where is the 'upside' of eating meat?

It appears to come down to grilled steaks taste so good vs. save our life and humanity.

"We are the flood, and we are the ark," Foer concludes. Our fate is in our own hands.

And so we struggle on to overcome our desires and the ease of tradition as our children accuse our complacency costs their future.

I received a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.

We Are the Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast
by Jonathan Safran Foer
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Pub Date 17 Sep 2019
ISBN 9780374280000
PRICE $25.00 (USD)

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

A Downton Abbey High Tea Party - With Quilts!

photo by Theresa Nielson
The Clawson Quilting Sisters include some die-hard Downton Abbey fans. In celebration of the Downton Abbey movie release, they held a high tea at the community center.

Members contributed a block to make the teapot quilt below and they had a chance to win the quilt.

Note the real tea bag labels on some blocks!
Lucy Lesperance organized the quilt making and set the blocks together. Barb Lusk donated her skills and time to machine quilt it. When Esther's name was drawn she broke down in tears of gratitude and told me she felt blessed.
Esther with the Teapot quilt the group made
We shared tea-related quilt projects for show and tell. The quilt below used the Downton Abbey fabric line created some years ago.







Below is my mini quilt, "Tea, Earl Gray, Hot" inspired by Jean Luc Picard on Star Trek: The Next Generation.



The ladies did an amazing job decorating the tables! Flower petals and sprays of ferns were the centerpieces. We had cloth napkins and name placards.

 Members contributed teapots. Everyone brought their own teacup and saucer.
Image may contain: table and indoor
photo by Theresa Nielson
The finger sandwiches and desserts were amazing! The display could have graced any article in a glossy magazine story.

photo by Theresa Nielson
Many of the ladies dressed for the occasion.

We had displays of teapots and teacups and tea sets and more!



I wish I knew the stories behind all of these beauties. Below is Barb Lusk's grandmother's teapot with hand-painted gold trim. The green Depression Glass, circa 1920, sugar and creamer were collected by my mother.

The creativity and attention to detail by the team of ladies who organized the event was on full display. 

My husband and I saw the Downton Abbey movie and it was jolly good fun!

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Family Record by Patrick Modiano

My childhood was impacted by a move to another state, leaving behind my family, friends, and school. I was not the same child afterward. I did not live in the present for a long time. Memories of the past were held dear; I was awash in nostalgia and longing to restore what I had lost consumed me.

My grandfather wrote about his childhood in the early 1900s and I inherited his family genealogy records. Decades later I became a genealogy researcher. My father wrote his memoirs of growing up in the Depression and WWII years and running a business in the 1950s. Perhaps it was already in my blood to look back and record life. A few years back I wrote about my life on my blog, dipping into my diaries and scrapbooks to rediscover what I had forgotten.

Or misremembered. Somehow, our memories are not truly all fact, there is an element of fiction, rewriting, that happens in our brains. We naturally turn our experience into a novel, a story with meaning, a vehicle used to demonstrate the truth as we would have it.

"Memory itself is corroded by acid, and of all those cries of suffering and horrified faces from the past, only echoes remain, growing fainter and fainter vague outlines." ~from Family Record by Patrick Modiano

French Literature is my weak spot and I had not heard of Pulitzer Prizer winner Patrick Modiano. The cover and book title, Family Record, caught my eye and the blurb cinched my interest in requesting the galley.

Modiano shares his family and personal history through what are essentially short stories, glimpses that skip across time, weaving together a thoughtful consideration of experience.

He tells about returning to the places of his childhood and youth and encountering people who knew his family. He records meetings with strangers with mysterious pasts. And of the beautiful woman who pretended to be the daughter of a once-famous entertainer and who asked him to write his biography, setting Modiano on a career path.

He recreates the romantic meeting of his parents in occupied Paris and recalls the uncle who longed to live in the country in an old mill. He tells the story of losing himself to the present in Switzerland at twenty years old and seeing the man who collaborated with the Nazis to deport thousands from France, deciding to confront him.

"...And in Paris, the survivors of the camps waited in striped pajamas, beneath the chandeliers of the Hotel Lutetia. I remember all of it."~ from Family Record by Patrick Modiano
He begins with the birth of his daughter and the rush to obtain her birth registration and he ends with his daughter in his arms, a being yet without memory.

It is a lovely read, quiet and thoughtful.

The publisher granted me access to a free egalley through NetGalley in exchange for my fair and unbiased review.

from the publisher:
An enthralling reflection on the ways that family history influences identity, from the 2014 Nobel laureate for literature

A mix of autobiography and lucid invention, this highly personal work offers a deeply affecting exploration of the meaning of identity and pedigree. With his signature blend of candor, mystery, and bewitching elusiveness, Patrick Modiano weaves together a series of interlocking stories from his family history: his parents’ courtship in occupied Paris; a sinister hunting trip with his father; a chance friendship with the deposed King Farouk; a wistful affair with the daughter of a nightclub singer; and the author’s life as a new parent.

Modiano’s riveting vignettes, filled with a coterie of dubious characters—Nazi informants, collaborationist refugees, and black-market hustlers—capture the drama that consumed Paris during World War II and its aftermath. Written in tones ranging from tender nostalgia to the blunt cruelty of youth, this is a personal and revealing book that brings the enduring significance of a complicated past to life.

Internationally renowned author Patrick Modiano has been awarded, among many other distinctions, the 2014 Nobel Prize for Literature. He lives in Paris. Mark Polizzotti is the translator of more than fifty books from the French, including nine by Modiano.

Family Record
by Patrick Modiano
Yale University Press
Pub Date 24 Sep 2019
ISBN 9780300238310
PRICE $16.00 (USD)

Monday, September 23, 2019

Poems for the Very Young: Autumn

Today I am sharing Autumn poetry from Poems for the Very Young Child compiled by Dolores Knippel and illustrated by Mary Ellsworth, Whitman Publishing Co, 1932






See Spring poems from this volume at
https://theliteratequilter.blogspot.com/2019/04/poems-for-very-young-child-poems-for.html
See Summer poems at
https://theliteratequilter.blogspot.com/2019/06/poems-for-very-young-child-summer.html

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Four Memoirs: Race, Family, Divorce, and All Things Greek

This September I read four memoirs!

Advanced Reading Copies of Motherhood So White by Nefertiti Austin were provided to my library book club by the Book Club Cookbook through their Galley Match. Along with receiving copies of the book for all our regular book club members we also had a Skype visit with the author!
The Wednesday Afternoon Book Club

Skyping with Nefertiti Austin
Austin's experience as a single black woman adopting an African American boy inspired her to write her memoir. She discovered a dearth of books that spoke to her personal situation, as if motherhood and adoption were white-only experiences. Austin addresses issues of systemic racism and stereotypes, the demands of California's adoption system, and the work and joy of raising a child as a single parent.

The book club has immensely enjoyed talking to the authors of our book selections, both because the writers become 'real' and so we can ask questions. We learned that Austin's editor said her first draft was too impersonal, her second draft too revealing! That makes three drafts on the road to publication! Also that she changed names to protect people's privacy.

Overall, our readers felt the book was educational and thought-provoking and thought Austin was delightful. Several readers 'loved' the book, one did not care for it. Several people also gained insight into the African American worldview and experience that was new to them.

Find a reading group guide at 

Motherhood So White
by Nefertiti Austin
Sourcebooks 
September 2019
ISBN: 9781492679011
$25.99 hardcover

After hearing a lot about Redlined by Linda Gartz, I purchased it on Kindle. Gartz offers a vivid and compelling family history against the backdrop of their changing Chicago neighborhood. She keeps a balanced understanding of the legacy of 'redlining'--the enforcing of physical racial boundaries--and its impact on her white family and the African American community. The bulk of the story involves her parents' relationship, with insights gleaned from their letters and diaries. Their determination to stay in their changing neighborhood as dedicated landlords was both their strength and their downfall. I found it an enjoyable memoir.

View the trailer at
https://youtu.be/jmAnBPYrl6g

Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
by Linda Gartz
She Writes Press
April 3, 2018
ISBN-10: 1631523201
ISBN-13: 978-1631523205
$8.69 ebook, $11.52 paperback
Greek To Me by Mary Norris was a find at the Barnes and Noble #Blowout sale. I loved Norris's blend of humor, travelogue, and memoir about her love affair with the Greek language, country, and literary history. The descriptive writing about Greece is beautiful--I feel like I have experienced it with her. It was a joy to read. I laughed, I was educated, and I was entertained.

Greek to Me
by Mary Norris
Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Publication date: 04/02/2019
ISBN-13: 9781324001270
Two Minus One by Kathryn Taylor tells the story of the unexpected unraveling of her second marriage. Just over 150 pages, it is a quick and easy read. The tone felt even and subjective as Taylor describes her long friendship with the married man who unexpectedly announced his love, leading to courtship and marriage. He professed his devotion...until he came home one day and told her it was over. Having given up her job, home, and friends to support her husband's career, Taylor had to deal with grief and recovery at age 60. The memoir will be an inspiration to women who are grieving over a failed relationship. I read a Kindle version of this book.

Two Minus One
by Kathryn Taylor
She Writes Press
November 6, 2018
ISBN-10: 1631524542
ISBN-13: 978-1631524547

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Helen Korngold Diary: September 15-21, 1919

Helen Korngold, Dec. 1919, New York City
Helen's first teaching position at Wellston with 7th Grade did not go well and she asked the principal to find a new teacher. Now Helen is bored again. Just housework to do, like in late summer.

September
Monday 15
I was bored all day.

Tuesday 16
Work just all day.

Wednesday 17
Housework is hard.

Thursday 18
Seems funny to be home.

Friday 19
But I like it better than Wellston.

Saturday 20
Fool around.

Sunday 21
Read – Theater party

NOTES:

Sept. 21
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The newspapers note 'theater parties' in conjunction with many celebrations. I wonder what show Helen saw. Tillie, the Mennonite Maid, set in Pennsylvania?
Or perhaps Scandal, about a girl's 'madcap' adventures?

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Sept. 21, 1919 ad from St. Louis Post-Dispatch shows the influence of Japanese style.

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Fall suits and coats.
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