The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake

(2010)
292 pages

     I’ve read a few  less-than-stellar reviews about this book yet I adored it!   Everybody has their own opinion, naturally soooo I’m here to share mine.  I think my favorite college professor would have had a field day with this book’s symbolism.  It delves headlong into the mother/daughter role and how a mother loves her children.  Even though it takes place in modern day I’m reminded of a 1950’s family at times.

Synopsis (from good reads):

     On the eve of her ninth birthday, unassuming Rose Edelstein, a girl at the periphery of schoolyard games and her distracted parents’ attention, bites into her mother’s homemade lemon-chocolate cake and discovers she has a magical gift: she can taste her mother’s emotions in the cake. She discovers this gift to her horror, for her mother—her cheerful, good-with-crafts, can-do mother—tastes of despair and desperation. Suddenly, and for the rest of her life, food becomes a peril and a threat to Rose.
    The curse her gift has bestowed is the secret knowledge all families keep hidden—her mother’s life outside the home, her father’s detachment, her brother’s clash with the world. Yet as Rose grows up she learns to harness her gift and becomes aware that there are secrets even her taste buds cannot discern.

My thoughts:

     Eating just that one bite of what should be a special birthday cake draws her closer to her mother than most girl’s her age ever get.  She tastes loneliness and despair=fairly typical feelings for some housewives with  lack of direction but Rose loses her appetite.  Rose continues to uncover her mother’s secrets including an affair=suddenly she tastes a lightness mixed with a new happiness. 

     Family dynamics are fully explored in Bender’s story as she looks at the triangle formed between a mother and her two children.  Rose knows her mother and is her mother’s aide.  She never tells her mother’s secrets, there’s a confidante aspect to their relationship.  Mothers and daughters often have a special and fairly difficult relationship and Bender portrays this through the food sensory idea.  What symbolizes a mother more than food??  The second part of the triangle is Rose’s brother, Joseph.  Joseph has his own magical talent which makes him completely introverted and seperate from his family but of course, he is the one his mother dotes on. Rose admires Joseph and wants to spend time with him while Joseph feels overwhelmed by human contact. 
    See daughter tries to help and please mother while mother obsesses about son.  Now Rose and Joseph’s father is a lawyer and spends his quiet time working at home and having minimal contact with his family-he’s nice but not emotionally there.  Dad has his own secrets.  Classic family psycho-drama well-told by Bender.

Good Quote:

Every now and then, I would crawl out of bed in the middle of the night to find her in the big armchair with the striped orange pattern, a shawl-blanket draped over her knees.  I, at five, or six, would crawl into her lap, like a cat.  She would pet my hair, like I was a cat.  She would pet, and sip.  We never spoke, and I fell asleep quickly in her arms, in the hopes that my weight, my sleepiness, would somehow seep into her.  I always woke up in my own bed, so I never knew if she went back to her room or if she stayed there all night, staring at the folds of the curtains over the window.  (20-21)

or

She put her cheek down to rest on our matched hands and closed her eyes.  She was wearing a new eye shadow, pale pink on her brow bone, and she looked like a flower resting there.  How much I wanted to protect her, her frail eyelids, streaked with glimmer: I put a hand lightly on her hair.  (100)

I loved the connection Rose establishes with her mother and food. How do we cook?  Do we cook frantically or do we stop and smell; cook with love.  That’s what Rose needs.  What Rose does with this knowledge later as she becomes more comfortable with food is passionate.  I also adored the close-up view of Los Angelos.  Bender gave me a real sense of  location as I walked the streets with Rose even though it’s been years since I’ve visited LA.  Now that I’ve gone through intimate details of this book it’s crazy that I’m giving it away-I should read it again as I’m sure with Bender’s wonderful writing I haven’t found every detail.  Oh, it’s really so good.  I hope you’ll try it yourself!

Enter my birthday giveaway here.
Shop Indie Bookstores

Still Alice

2009
336 pages

     I won this lovely book from Kay at My Random Acts of Reading and my gratitude is deep as I couldn’t put this book down.  I read it in like three days and cried through the last half.  I am a teary person-always have been-I can tear up at commercials, movies or while talking about my children. This book did it for me.  I adored Alice’s character. 

Synopsis:

     Alice Howland is proud of the life she worked so hard to build.  At fifty years old, she’s a cognitive psychology professor at Harvard University and a world-renowned expert in linguistics with a successful husband and three grown children.  When she becomes increasingly disoriented and forgetful, a tragic diagnosis changes her life-and her relationship with her family and the world-forever. (from the book)

My thoughts:

     I’m aging; when I look at my hands I see my mother’s hands and my face is forever changed. Yet with moderate excercise  and good nutritional choices I maintain a healthy weight and don’t have one gray lock in my long hair-yet I am aging everyday.  I know it and it is okay and Alice feels the same.  She’s only fifty-just beginning to enjoy the second half of her life.  Her kids are grown and she is proud of them.  Lydia, her youngest, is her only major sore spot as her daughter chooses acting as a career, taking theory classes and refuses higher education.  The angst this creates in Alice is a marvelous vehicle for her and Lydia’s relationship to achieve huge growth throughout the story.
      Years ago when I was a high school student I took care of a woman with Alzheimer’s disease, although at that time, I don’t think they used that title.  I can’t remember her name (I know, that looks bad) but her husband hired me to spend evenings with her while he played in a jazz combo for events around our small MN town.  The woman was healthy on the outside but very confused and agitated on the inside.  Soon after her husband would leave and while I was preparing dinner for her she would go into their room and get all dressed up (pretty dress, pearls, heels) and go stand by the door and wait for him.  When I would call her to dinner she would question who I was and why I was there.  It was a bit of a circus and I always felt overwhelmed.  Her husband eventually had to put her in a nursing home. 

     Reading Still Alice brought those feelings of agitation back again as I experienced first hand the memory loss that terrifies Alice.  She’s a strong woman and when she experiences a few unexplainable lapses Alice seeks medical help and keeps it all to herself for quite awhile.  Her husband, John, who loses his glasses and car keys all the time can’t believe this is happening to Alice, and while he is a good husband, he really can’t believe it is happening to him!  Why should his life change?  So while we experience life first hand through Alice’s narration we do get a sense of how the rest of the family is affected by Alice’s diagnosis.  I enjoyed the connection between Alice and her children best with each child having a very separate reaction at first.  I would never sit down and read a nonfiction book about Alzheimer’s but reading Genova’s I felt like a got a detailed look at how this disease shows no mercy to a person’s  memory. 

     Honestly, this book will make you laugh and cry as you become one with Alice and her memory.  Here is a quote which finds Alice speaking to a doctor about her symptoms:

I’ve been having lots of problems remembering, and it doesn’t feel normal.  I’m forgetting words in lectures and conversations, I need to put ‘cognitive class’ on my to-do list or I might forget to go teach it, I completely forgot to go to the airport for a conference in Chicago and missed my flight.  I also didn’t know where I was for a couple of minutes in Harvard Square, and I’m a professor at Harvard, I’m there everyday.  (61)

     She struggles  comes to terms with herself and finds out her own meaning of family through her journey.  I could give quote after quote of funny stuff, like sitting in her lecture hall as a student, instead of teaching the class but I’d prefer you take my word for it and read this book.  Hopefully, we will find a cure for this difficult disease and I cross my fingers everyday that my own forgetful  mother does not have Alzheimer’s…I already get a little agitated (without peace) when she tells me a story, three or four times.  Thank you Kay for hosting this giveaway~I loved Alice’s tale.

  5/5 stars
Highly recommended for all adults
**As I was going back into the book to look up names I found so many good little quotes-I may have to reread this one.**

Other Reviews:

Missy’s Book Nook
Dolce Bellezza

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

by Alan Bradley
(2009)
370 pages

I’ve been getting a great deal of reading done as I try to relax and heal my back.  It’s not easy for me to lay around all day but I’m having a fantastic time finishing so many books.  Cleaning my house will just have to wait.

Languishing on my pile since last summer was Alan Bradley’s novel and winner of the Debut Dagger Award, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie.  I’m done now and so happy to have finally read it.

Synopsis:

In his wickedly brilliant first novel, Debut Dagger Award winner Alan Bradley introduces one of the most singular and engaging heroines in recent fiction: eleven-year-old Flavia de Luce, an aspiring chemist with a passion for poison. It is the summer of 1950—and a series of inexplicable events has struck Buckshaw, the decaying English mansion that Flavia’s family calls home. A dead bird is found on the doorstep, a postage stamp bizarrely pinned to its beak. Hours later, Flavia finds a man lying in the cucumber patch and watches him as he takes his dying breath. For Flavia, who is both appalled and delighted, life begins in earnest when murder comes to Buckshaw. “I wish I could say I was afraid, but I wasn’t. Quite the contrary. This was by far the most interesting thing that had ever happened to me in my entire life.”

(from GoodReads)

My thoughts:

I’m not a huge fan of mysteries because well, they often scare me too much.  This one was more of a thoughtful mystery with a very entertaining heroine.  Flavia is a rule breaker, a curious adventurer who doesn’t really listen to anyone else but her own instinct.  Harriet, her mother, was  killed in a mountaineering accident when Flavia is just one yet the connection between mother and daughter is strong.   She doesn’t understand her two sisters, Ophelia and Daphne, who lay about reading and weeping all day long and her father has never fully recovered from his wife’s death and spends his day moping about the house as well.  Flavia seems to breathe new life into her family as she races about on Harriet’s old bike trying to fit all the odd clues together.  

My favorite quote:

Closed? Today was Saturday.  The library hours were ten o’clock to two-thirty, Thursday through Saturday; they were clearly posted in the black-framed notice beside the door.  Had something happened to Miss Pickery? 
I gave the door a shake, and then a good pounding.  I cupped my hands to the glass and peered inside, but except for a beam of sunlight falling through motes of dust before coming to rest upon shelves of novels there was nothing to be seen.
“Miss Pickery!” I called, but there was no answer.
“Oh, scissors!” I said again.  I should have to put off my researches until another time.  As I stood outside in Cow Lane, it occurred to me that Heaven must be a place where the library is open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
No…eight days a week.    (57-58)

I love any great quote that highlights the library and the use of the word “scissors” as an explicative makes perfect sense!!  There is a second Bradley book featuring Flavia de Luce, The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag #2-the title is interesting and I know Flavia will shine again.
4/5 stars
adult mystery fiction

Other reviews here:

FyreFly’s Review
Stainless Steel Droppings

My back is still pinched and my thoughts are scattered but as this is a book that counts for Reading from my own shelves challenge I wanted to write my thoughts out and pass the book on.  My chiropracter’s wife wants to read it so I’m happily passing it on at my appointment tomorrow morning.

Weekend Update

We’ve been camping in Michigan for one week and we made it out alive.  I love camping but I kissed my [dirty] carpet so thankful  am I to be home!! Camping makes one appreicate home so much…the indoor plumbing, the kitchen sink,  baths, wifi, the ice box, a roof!   We went to Michigan so teenage son could fish and so sweetheart husband could run the Charlevoix Marathon [his 10th].  I planned to have some marathon reading sessions in-between adventures.  My reading dreams are always bigger than reality.  I did spend a fair amount of time with my lovely  in-laws and enjoyed a wine-tasting with them (quietly, just the 3 of us).

What I did read:

Maggie’s Door by Patricia Reilly Giff (yes, I started off easy but it was good and I love Giff)
Serena by Ron Rash (oh, my)

What I’m still reading:

Oh. My. Gods. by Tera Lynn Childs (lighter reading after Serena)
Singing for Mrs. Pettigrew by Michael Morpurgo (still, I know, V and A)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (I’m on chapter 10 with peaceful girl-oh what joy to be rereading this aloud for another child!!)

What I carried  all the way to Michigan and back without reading:

 The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alen Bradley (even though I’m really looking forward to this one)

I also did a little knitting and worked a large crossword, which are both easy activities to do while riding in the passenger’s  seat so I can talk to driving husband.   I’m so grateful for his driving abilities!!  Love you. 

We had very sporadic cell and wifi service and it was refreshing to be off the grid.  I did have two posts pre-written before our departure last Saturday and I was thrilled with how well my Father’s Day tribute turned out.  It is difficult for teenagers to be without their technology but I love to watch my son fish much more than play FIFA soccer on his ipod.  Stepdaughter is still waiting to hear about housing assignments at Oberlin so had to check email each time we landed at a cafe.  Please…she wants the new green choice available only to freshman!!!  [waving magic mama wand]

I have several posts to write about camping and knitting as well as the books I finished.
As I browsed through other blogs tonight, touching base with many on my blog roll, I saw lots of challenge up-dates (woe is me!)  I need to get my reading in gear!! 
Now that our major vacation is done and checked off my summer to-do list and number one son is off for a month camping with grandparents I may have tiime to read a few  many days away~in my hammock. 

Now since I am very sleep deprived [how much sleep do you really get in a tent while it is downpouring?] I need to get some rest.  No alarm.

What about your week…what fantastic and marvelous adventures did you have?

Look Again

(2009)

     I think every parent’s worst nightmare would be to have your child stolen; taken away in the dead of the night by some monster of a person…oh, right, that’s my awful reaccuring dream.  Lisa Scottoline takes an adopting parent’s worst nightmare and crafts this very beautiful story around it.  I loved getting to know Ellen Glesson as she moves from the joys of juggling single-parenting her son, Will, to the demands of a full-time reporting job.  Her comfortable world begins to crack just a little the day she spots one of those “Have you seen this child?” flyer and the child’s photo looks remarkably like Will.  She tosses the flyer away only retrieving it seconds later.  She becomes fixated on looking into Will’s adoption, driving here and there across the East Coast locating family members of the birth mother’s. 
    I knew things were not quite right when the adoption lawyer turned up dead but that was only a small tip of the rest of the mystery involving Will’s legal parents.  I so enjoyed it and at times didn’t want to put it down.  It was supposed to be my lighter book sandwiched between Little Bee by Chris Cleave and The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, both excellent books on serious topics.  It was lighter but fun and exciting as well.  I noticed from checking out her website, Scottoline has a a new book out, Think Twice.  I have a lot of books in line to read first but I know I will look for other books by her, including this new one.
Quote: 

“Mommy, look!”  Will called out, running toward her with a paper in his hand.  His bangs blew off his face, and Ellen flashed on the missing boy from the white card in the mail.  The likeness startled her before it dissolved in a wave of love, powerful as blood. p. 2 Look Again

This is a story about a mother’s love and how far that love will push you to go beyond normal and  find the truth.  There are shocking surprises along Ellen’s journey to uncover the truth about her son yet it wasn’t so scary that I couldn’t sleep at night.  She has an interesting love twist and a really wicked coworker bringing her misery but her role as a mother is definetely the strongest.  Doesn’t the cover pull you in a little also.  This is the paperback cover of the one I have while the hardcover has a bright red cover with no picture. 
Recommended
3.5/5 peaceful stars
Check out these other reviews:
and
Mimi and Christina at 2 Girls 1 Book review.

The Book Thief

by Markus Zusak

(2007)

     Watch this fantastic video [below] of Markus Zusak discussing his book. He has a sexy accent and he talks about the book with such passion. I loved that this book is set from a German village giving us the opportunity to see their take on Hitler’s Germany (it wasn’t all Yeah Heil Hitler) and I enjoyed death as the narrator. It gave me a sense of peace at death’s interaction in our daily lives.
     This book like Chris Cleave’s Little Bee is about having hope in the midst of waiting. I highly recommend this book and plan to read other Zusak novels because of his ability to create such real characters and twist the storyline around.  If you, like me, let this one slip by-go find a copy and read it.  You won’t be disappointed.


5/5 peaceful stars
Highly Recommended for HS and adult audience
Maw Books review of The Book Thief (2008)

p.s. I received this book in 2007 as an ARC (before I even blogged and knew what an advanced reader’s copy really was); I passed it on to my son instead and then let it languish on my bookshelf!!

Little Bee Activism

We don’t want to tell you WHAT HAPPENS in this book.
It is a truly SPECIAL STORY and we don’t want to spoil it.
NEVERTHELESS, you need to know enough to buy it, so we will just say this:
This is the story of two women. Their lives collide one fateful day, and one of them has to make a terrible choice, the kind of choice we hope you never have to face. Two years later, they meet again – the story starts there …
Once you have read it, you’ll want to tell your friends about it. When you do, please don’t tell them what happens. The magic is in how the story unfolds.  ~Good Reads Synopsis
This is the warning that comes with the book and I plan to stick to it but that makes it difficult to actually review and/or talk about the book other than with people who’ve already read it.  My thoughts are if you can handle the reality of this book then you should read it. I think it should be required reading for everyone.  
 We are blessed to live in a country where our civil rights are guaranteed.  Justice is not always what it should be here in the states but our biggest problems stem from natural disasters, stock market prices and occassional groups of terrorists rather than kangaroo courts.   We haven’t had an actual war on our soil for about 146 years. Yet in many countries human rights issues are very real and often insane.  I do believe that we live in a much larger global world than our parents’ generation but we still have only  a vague view on how business is conducted in many countries.  Chinese workers get paid aproximately $3.00 a day for producing goods sold at stores here in the U.S. And when a country rich in oil sells that oil through a corrupt and greedy government the people of the land are the victims in so many ways.  When we pump gas into our cars we don’t see the long history of what it took to get that oil here.  We need to pay more attention to how that oil steadily streams into our internal combustion engines. With BP’s recent oil spill in the Gulf Coast we should again, unrelentingly, be looking for alternative ways to fuel our cars.  We should find a way to make trains efficient at transporting us all over this country.  Instead we continue the status quo while people in oil rich lands continue to suffer, despite the oil, because of their opressive governments and big oils willingness to deal with zealots, and we don’t really know the half of it. 
Seriously read this book because “when the men come” we need to be less oblivious and a little more prepared!! 
We all need a Little Bee and a Batman in our lives to remind us the world needs our help.
Click here for Chris Cleave’s website.
Be Peaceful~

Little Bee-Teaser Tuesday

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme,
Anyone can play along! Just do the following:
  • Grab your current read.
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! ( You don’t want to give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Here is my teaser for today:
From Little Bee by Chrise Cleave

I will tell you what happened when the taxi driver came.  The four of us girls, we were waiting outside the Immigration Detention Centre.  We were keeping our backs to it, because that is what you do to a big gray monster who has kept you in his belly for two years, when he suddenly spits you out.  You keep your back to him and you talk in whispers, in case he remembers you and the clever idea comes into his mind to swallow you all up again. p. 50
There are beautifully poignant sentences on each page of this book so it was tough to choose. 
Happy Reading~

The Opposite of Me

(2010)

With my Kleenex box next to  me and a little Vicks Vapor Rub doing its thing, I finished Pekkanen’s first book.  Wow.
I am blown away by talent.  I follow Sarah through her newsletter, distributed neatly in my inbox and one day I clicked on it and she was drawing readers in, offering a chance to win something if we would only preorder her new book.  I was drawn in and even though I’m supposed to be on a book-buying hiatus, I preordered it.  I don’t even know what it was she was giving away nor do I care because I liked her book and it was worth it. 

Usually I take a few days to ponder the book or I don’t have time to write a review right away but this time since I’m still laying in bed, breathing in the Vicks, I thought I would share the book love spontaneously!  I’m going to be somewhat brief just because it is brand-new and I want you to read it fresh and if I tried to explain all the intricacies of the plot I may fall asleep due to symptoms of the common cold. 

Summary:

Two sisters, twin sister to be exact, grow up with out ever having that deep connection so many other twins or even siblings feel toward each other.  Linsdey is the smart one, having done well through grad school, now works at a very high powered NY ad agency.   She’s in line to take over as the new VP of Creative blah-blah big wig job. Meanwhile, Alex, the beautiful sister is modeling and about to get married in their hometown, Washington D.C.  Their paths are destined to cross and they do and it’s fun to be there, peeking in.

My Thoughts:

The book is told through Lindsey’s view point and I have to admit the first section I was worried-Lindsey’s character made me all jumpy and I didn’t enjoy the feeling but later I realized Sarah had done her writing job well by making me feel  part of Lindsey’s hectic NY lifestyle.  I just wanted to slow down.   Little flecks of humor emerge between the twins verbally-sparring with each other but the real comedic wit comes from their parents.  Woo hoo-what wonderfully-funny parents (embarrasingly funny-yes) but heck what are other people’s parents really for except to help us see our own parents more humorously! Through all the relationships in this book it has a lot to say about families and relationships and how we live our lives altogether, without seeing each other fully.

See great characters+ great plot=easy read and Sarah Pekkanen achieved this on her first time!  Of course, like Hollywood fame she didn’t just whip this out I’m sure plus she has tons of other writing credits to her name.  According to the interview in the back of the book, she is already working on a new book and I’m so glad!!  Once it has a title I can put it on my to-read list.

Buy the book or ask your library to purchase a copy-it is worth it.
Julie P. at Booking Mama’s review and another great one can be found here-S. Krishna’s Books.
Watch the You Tube trailer-nice without giving it all away.

Highly Recommended-Adult Fiction
5/5 peaceful stars

Happy Reading!

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by by Stieg Larsson

Lots of reviews exist about this book so I’m not going to rehash the plot.  It was my first pick for 2010 and I enjoyed it.  It kept me up reading and I plan to read the next two in the series at some point. 
The back blurb says:  “At once a murder mystery, family saga, love story, and tale of financial intrigue wrapped into one satisfying complex and entertainingly atmospheric novel.”

(What the heck is an atmospheric novel, really?

 It contained all that ( I enjoyed the family saga and financial intrigue) plus two very intriguing characters, Mikael Bloomkvist and Lisbeth Salander.  I’m not a big fan of scary thrillers so this veers way, away from my normal reads but  again,  I did enjoy it.  My husband noticed my sleep issues while I was immersed in the book.  I had trouble falling asleep and woke randomly through the night. Maybe knowing that will make many of you want to read it.  Some people love getting scared and while this is a mild thriller it was enough for me. 
There is also the sexy issue-my son noticed on the back this comment-“A sexy, addictive thriller.”-Glamour.  He didn’t think I should be reading anything sexy or addicting!!  It does have s-e-x in it, which is generally not a huge deal but this goes to the extreme with bondage and abuse occuring.  This is the issue that really CREEPED ME OUT!!
I struggled through the several areas where this occurs.  I don’t want to give much away as I know there are many out there who have not picked up this series just as I have yet to read Twilight.
It was addictive because I enjoyed those two characters but sexy, well, not for me!!  How many have read this thriller??  Have you read the whole series yet?  A friend told me the second one is the best.  Agree or Disagree?  As this was one I read from my own shelves I must tell you I passed it on to my husband…after he reads it we will pass it on to someone else.  (I’m not interested in any of my kids reading it for quite a few years.)
I’m on to something lighter-Bill Bryson’s The Life and Times of Thunderbolt Kid, which is just plain funny and a unique historical trip.

Happy funny reading-

Here is the fairly interesting article for NY Times reviewer, Alex Berenson.-I like how he brings up the Swedish issue-is this a common occurence in their culture-the author made it seem so!