Another wonderful love story, that transcends the pages of this book. Author Elizabeth J. Church has created a novel that explores relationships and personal dreams. She had this reader thinking about her personal relationships and life expectations even before she reached the end of the book.
This is the story of Meridian Wallace, who comes of age during the war years. She is turning 17 in 1941, and going off to college as a naive young woman from a sheltered childhood. As she pursues her degree in ornithology, she is also learning about friendship, men and relationships. She dates two men, one young and brash, one older and more mature. She is a very bright young student with a chance to go onto graduate school. She gives it all up for marriage. Would things have turned out differently if the Unites States had not entered World War Two at that particular time? Meridian will never really know. But what she does know is that along the way she has made many personal sacrifices in the name of love. As we follow Meridian and her husband Alden Whetstone through their relationship, Meridian follows Alden out to Los Alamos, New Mexico has he advances his career working on the secretive atomic bomb project.
As Meridian enters her 40s she becomes a woman of the 1960s and she explores the world of women's liberation. She becomes an advocate for women's rights and equality. Meridian had given up her dreams of post graduate work studying birds. As she grows she finds ways to feel stronger as the woman she has become. She returns to studying the birds and she draws parallels between the way different species interact with each other. " Actually, I thought, the small birds' behavior made perfect sense - they were so low in the pecking order, so vulnerable. Their predators were bountiful, between the roadrunners, crows, raptors, dogs and cats. The entirety of a sparrow's world was peopled with threats. Of course women are flighty, I thought. We have more predators than men; we have to operate constantly with greater wariness. Women alone in parking lots can be singled out, mugged, or worse. Our own mates can beat us, kill us."
She goes as a person finds strength within herself. Though Meridian does not think this is a story about Los Alamos or the development of the atomic bomb or the war; this reader thinks that is also an important topic touched on in this novel. We hear the viewpoint of Alden who has helped create the bomb that killed thousands of people and ended a war. We also meet Clay Griffin, a young man who has returned from fighting in Vietnam. He puts forth the viewpoint of a pacifist, who felt that he was fighting a war that was unjustifiable. The reader has a chance to also reflect on her feelings about the dichotomy of these two wars. This is another great topic to think about in this book.
Lastly there is the great discussion topic of relationships between men and women. The give and take between a husband and wife. The equality or inequality of those relationships. The book gives a discussion group some great jumping off points both about those interactions and how they may have changed from one generation to the next.
Not to be overlooked there is also the wonderful small details in the book. Each chapter heading is a type of bird. With a definition that relates to the birds relationships. One of the chapters, "A Murder of Crows 1. Among the smartest animals on earth, the American Crow is highly adaptable."
What a beautiful descriptive story.
Monday, August 29, 2016
Monday, August 15, 2016
Moonglow
Moonglow, is the newest novel written by Michael Chabon. This book takes us on a ficticious journey that follows Chabon's family story starting with his Grandfather's life as a young man.
Moonglow is written in quite an unusal style. The narrator writes in the first person and only refers to his grandfather as grandfather, not really naming him until quite far into the book. He refers to his mother also by just her title, mother, and not her name. It is not until near the end of the book where he talks about an uncle named Sam Chabon, and a family company called, Chabon Scientific So as a reader you keep wondering how biographical this book really is.
The story takes place at the end of his grandfather's life and uses the style of flashbacks and rememberences to fill in the plot. His grandfather is living out the last days of his life in the author's mother's home. The author and narrator has come home for a last visit with his grandfather. As his grandfather reminisces he tells stories about parts of his life he has never revealed before.
In his storytelling he also uncovers secrets about his wife that were never discussed in the family before. The narrator's grandmother had been a victim and survivor of the Second World War. The grandfather had been an American soldier who helped fight at the end of the war and liberate some of the concentration camps in Europe. The grandfather has always been very interested and involved with the United States space program. He has built model rockets and watched every space launch. He talks about the involvement of German scientists who were able to escape Germany after the war and become apart of the US space program.
"I’m disappointed in myself. In my life. All my life, everything I tried, I only got halfway there. You try to take advantage of the time you have. That’s what they tell you to do. But when you’re old, you look back and you see all you did with all that time is waste it. All you have is a story of things you never started or couldn’t finish. Things you fought with all your heart to build that didn’t last or fought with all your heart to get rid of and they’re all still around. I’m ashamed of myself.” These are the words of the narrator's grandfather, as he lies on his death bed talking to his grandson. He is telling stories of his life and revealing the family secrets that have been kept during his lifetime.
This was an interesting family story. Maybe writing your family history as fiction is a good way to take a family story give it the ending you the way you would really want it to turn out. You can listen to the stories you relatives tell and recreate the facts to make it all end positively.
Moonglow is written in quite an unusal style. The narrator writes in the first person and only refers to his grandfather as grandfather, not really naming him until quite far into the book. He refers to his mother also by just her title, mother, and not her name. It is not until near the end of the book where he talks about an uncle named Sam Chabon, and a family company called, Chabon Scientific So as a reader you keep wondering how biographical this book really is.
The story takes place at the end of his grandfather's life and uses the style of flashbacks and rememberences to fill in the plot. His grandfather is living out the last days of his life in the author's mother's home. The author and narrator has come home for a last visit with his grandfather. As his grandfather reminisces he tells stories about parts of his life he has never revealed before.
In his storytelling he also uncovers secrets about his wife that were never discussed in the family before. The narrator's grandmother had been a victim and survivor of the Second World War. The grandfather had been an American soldier who helped fight at the end of the war and liberate some of the concentration camps in Europe. The grandfather has always been very interested and involved with the United States space program. He has built model rockets and watched every space launch. He talks about the involvement of German scientists who were able to escape Germany after the war and become apart of the US space program.
"I’m disappointed in myself. In my life. All my life, everything I tried, I only got halfway there. You try to take advantage of the time you have. That’s what they tell you to do. But when you’re old, you look back and you see all you did with all that time is waste it. All you have is a story of things you never started or couldn’t finish. Things you fought with all your heart to build that didn’t last or fought with all your heart to get rid of and they’re all still around. I’m ashamed of myself.” These are the words of the narrator's grandfather, as he lies on his death bed talking to his grandson. He is telling stories of his life and revealing the family secrets that have been kept during his lifetime.
This was an interesting family story. Maybe writing your family history as fiction is a good way to take a family story give it the ending you the way you would really want it to turn out. You can listen to the stories you relatives tell and recreate the facts to make it all end positively.
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