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Mark Your Calendars! October 22, 2008

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November is a hot month for our little book club. On Monday November 3, The YSU/Youngstown Readers Series is hosting writer David Giffels at Cedars. We’re reading his book All the Way Home for our November selection.*

Here’s a summary of Giffels’s memoir from Harper Collins:

Finding the perfect house is never easy. Rebuilding one from a crumbling pile-to say nothing of making it into a home-is even harder.

With their infant son in tow, David Giffels and his wife comb the environs of Akron, Ohio, in search of just the right house for their burgeoning family. Running through David’s head the whole time are the lyrics of a Replacements song, “. . . Look me in the eye, then tell me that I’m satisfied,” and it gives all the more purpose to their quest. But nothing seems right . . . until they spot a beautiful, decaying Gilded Age mansion. A former rubber industry executive’s domain, the once grand residence lacks functional plumbing and electricity, leaks rain like a cartoon shack, and is infested with all manner of wildlife. But for a young man at a coming-of-age crossroads-”suspended between a perpetual youth and an inevitable adulthood”-the challenge is exactly the allure.

All the Way Home follows Giffels’s funny, poignant, and confounding journey as he and his wife and a colorful collection of helpers turn a money pit into a house that will complete their family. Nothing could prepare them for a home restoration epic that includes evicting squatters (both four- and two-legged), battling an invading wisteria vine, hunting a ghost, and discovering thousands of dollars in hidden Depression-era cash. But the story’s heart lies deeper, in an unexpected series of personal hardships that call into question what “home” really means, and what it means to grow up.

You can meet Giffels and purchase his book at the Reading Series Event on November 3, 7:00, Cedars. If you can’t attend, you can still purchase the book through the traditional means (Barnes and Noble, Amazon, etc.).

We’ll discuss All the Way Home at our next meeting on Tuesday November 18, 7:00, Cedars.

Mark your calendars for Friday November 29 when award-winning local author, book club co-founder, and superhero Chris Barzak will release his second novel The Love We Share Without Knowing. The party is at the Oakland Center for the Arts at 7:00. Chris will read from his novel, and copies will be available for purchase (you can even get it autographed). We’ll read Chris’s book for our December selection.

And just to give you some advanced notice on our January and February suggested-by-members titles, in January we’re reading Kindred by Octavia Butler, and in February we’re reading The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Expery. Put them on your Christmas lists.

As always, I’ll send out reminders closer to the meeting times. Our thanks go to all of your who share your time and enthusiasm each month to keep our book club going. Good times, my friends, good times.

 Kris

*please note that this is a change from our original selection

“Merricat, said Connie, would you like a cup of tea?” October 15, 2008

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“Oh no, said Merricat, you’ll poison me.”

Our October selection, Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in the Castle , is told from the point of view of Mary Katherine Blackwood, or Merricat, who lives in isolation along with her sister Constance and Uncle Julian on the family’s sprawling estate.

Merricat tells us early on that “the rest of my family is dead” and “the people of the village have always hated us.” She also intrigues us with her lists of what she likes and doesn’t like. Merricat doesn’t like to wash herself, but she likes her sister Constance and Amanita phalloides, the death-cup mushroom.

Although the novel is short and easy to read, its length is deceptive. The text is multi-layered and rich with what have become the hallmarks of gothic literature. Everything has meaning in this book, from the characters’ names to the “last” library books to the Blackwoods’ shifting position of power in their neighboring village.

Join us for a discussion of this classic mystery that raises questions about who is living and dead, sane or insane, guilty or innocent. 

How, exactly, did the arsenic get into the sugar bowl?

Here are some reviews:

And here is a site that provides some biographical information (and links):  http://www.classicauthors.net/Jackson/

This month’s meeting is on Tuesday October 21 at 7:00 at the Cedars restaurant.

If you didn’t come last month, you missed some lively conversation (although not necessarily about the book). Which members both served as the Bible study directors at their local high school? Which member looked for a sign from God about whether she should be a nun? Which member at age seven had inappropriate thoughts about an attractive priest? See what you’re missing?

So hurry up, read the book (or not) and join us for what is sure to be another memorable meeting.