Books

I have been doing a lot of reading lately especially when I am sitting with my Mom.

A few weeks ago I finished reading Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin. What a wonderful book. It is definitely my favorite book of all the books that I have read in the last year. Goodwin is a wonderful story teller. I loved learning about the key figures of the American Civil War. Every person who aspires to being a great leader should read this book. Lincoln understood leadership and has to have been one of the most amazing leaders in American History.

Einstein’s Wife – Work and Marriage in the lives of Five Great Twentieth Century Woman by Andrea Gabor is  about the lives of Mileva Maric Einstein,  physicist and wife of Albert Einstein, Lee Krasner, a great American painter and Jackson Pollack’s wife, Maria Goeppert Mayer, winner of the Nobel prize in chemistry, Denise Scott Brown, architect and urban planner and Supreme court justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Other than O’Connor I knew nothing about any of these women. I liked learning  about them but on the whole the book was plodding. When you compare it to books like Team of Rivals or John Adams you realize what excellent, compelling writers Goodwin and McCullough are.

My Life in France by Julia Child and Alex Prud’homme is the life story of Julia Child focusing on the period between when she moved to France and started cooking and 1961 when she published Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Although at times the book drags a bit I found It inspiring and interesting . Child and her co-authors spent 10 years developing and researching the recipes and writing the cook book. I really admire Child’s persistence and commitment.

1776 by David McCullough is another wonderful book that I really enjoyed. Even though I knew how it would come out, the story of the beginning of the American revolutionary war is amazing. I highly recommend it.

I also just finished John Adams also by David McCullough and really loved it too. Authors like McCullough and Goodwin make writing history look easy but I know they have rare skills. John Adams, Team of Rivals  and 1776 are better than fiction.

I think I will try to read at least one book about each of our presidents. I just started His Excellency George Washington by Joseph J. Elllis which promises to  be a great read.

The Tortilla Curtain by T.C. Boyle

Our book club book this month was the Tortilla Curtain by T.C. Boyle. I wasn’t going to write about it because I really did not enjoy reading it, but we had an excellent discussion of the book last Tuesday night so I think I’ll summarize what was discussed and how it changed my view of the book. I’ll be interested in other people’s views of the book too.

The book is about a liberal couple, Delaney and Kyra Mossbacher, and an illegal immigrant Mexican couple Candido and America Rincon. Both couples live in Topanga Canyon near Los Angeles. The book contrasts their lives. Boyle is a very talented writer. I have a very clear mental picture of the people and places in the book. His descriptions  and language are what someone called transparent. You don’t notice the language it just paints the picture for you.

Boyle also uses a lot of symbolism. Tortilla Curtain does make you think about illegal immigration and all its complexities. I can see why it is apparently a very popular book to study in High School.

Tortilla Curtain is very obviously intended to be like Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. In fact it makes me want to read Grapes of Wrath again because I remember that although both books are disturbing I could appreciate Grapes of Wrath and Tortilla Curtain just annoyed me. I’m not sure why Grapes of Wrath works for me and Tortilla Curtain doesn’t.

One thing that really bugs me about Tortilla Curtain is that nothing good happens to the Rincons. Candido is hit by a car and later mugged. America is exposed to harmful chemicals by the one person who hires her and then raped by someone else on the way home. They have a blind baby. They start a wild fire. They are caught in a mud slide. Every time Duke asked me how the book was coming I had one more calamity to report. If some one writes a book and the plot contains only good things the book is considered ridiculous but when only bad things happen as they do in Tortilla Curtain it is apparently OK. It reminded me of the book A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry  because nothing good happened in that book either. Yuck!

What the book club discussion helped me realize is that Boyle apparently enjoys shocking people and Tortilla curtaian should perhaps be seen as fable or satire. It didn’t help me like the book but it made me realize that maybe it does succeed in what it is trying to achieve.

Selling Books

I love books and reading!  I always have. When I was young I wanted to grow up and be a librarian. Bookcases_2
When I look at a book I often remember when I read it, what was going on in my life and how the book made me feel. For the books I haven’t read yet I like to remember how I acquired them. I enjoy savoring the anticipation of reading them someday.

Since we’ve decided to sell our house and move, it makes sense to get rid of some of my books. When I made this decision I had 8 big bookcases overflowing with books and several boxes of books in the garage. I’m selling a bunch but of course I’m keeping all my favorites.

Over the past year I have been culling out the books I don’t want to keep. On April 17 of last year I started selling books on Amazon. So far I’ve sold 167 books. After fees and postage I’ve cleared $384. Listing the books, packaging them and taking them to the post office takes time and It certainly is not going to make me rich but I am enjoying it. Plus, trying to sell the books makes the process of parting with them easier. Currently I have about  260 books for sale on Amazon.

For books that are too old to sell on Amazon I am selling them on EBay. Currently I have several books about books for sale on Ebay. I’m selling other stuff on EBay too. I’m always surprised what sells and what doesn’t and for how much.

I’m selling stuff on craigslist too. I don’t sell books there, usually only bigger stuff.

Often books don’t sell. When that happens I give them to charity. By then I’ve broken my attachment to them and I’m able to let them go.

Update 5/1/2007 – The sales on Bay have ended. I am still selling stuff on EBay sometimes. My user name is ruthie730 if you want to see if I have anything currently. Here is a list of the books I sold and the selling prices:

$6.60 – Books and Collectors by Maurice Dunbar
$.99 – Dans Ces Bras

$.99 – French Little Women

$5.76 – A box of 13 Nora Roberts Paperbacks

$71.00 – Complete 21 volume set – The Annals of America
** note: I may have to refund this one because the post office seems to have lost one of the boxes I shipped.

$1.80 -The Book of the Month – Sixty Years of Books in American Life edited by Al Silverman
$5.00 – Prince of Forgers
by Emile Mabille, Henri Leonard Bordier, Joseph Rosenblum
$3.37 – Prince of Librarians, Life & Times of Antonio Panizzi by Edward Miller
$2.60 – Slightly Chipped
by Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone
$1.80 – The Joy of Books
by Eric Burns
$11.98 – 18 different back issues of Biblio Magazine
$1.00 – The Bookman’s London by Frank Swinnerton
$6.23 – Penny Wise and Book Foolish by Vincent Starrett
$17.50 – Two A E Newton books about book collecting

$3.25 – Dukedom Large Enough – Reminiscences of a Rare Book Dealer  1929-1956 by David A.
Randall
$11.51 – Hooked on Books
by Maurice Dunbar
$12.55 – Infinite Riches – The Adventures of a Rare Book Dealer by David Magee
$11.44 – Sunwise Turn – a Human Comedy of Bookselling by Madge Jenison
$4.24 – Great Books and Book Collectors by Alan G. Thomas

One of the good things about retirement

One of the lovely things about being retired is that for the first time in my life my daily schedule and agenda are under my control. My days were externally driven in childhood, in school, at  work, and then parenthood. Now I decide what I am going to do every day. I decide what is important and what isn’t. It is up to me! I absolutely cherish this freedom.

So, for example, last Tuesday I drove to Sunnyvale and had breakfast with a friend before taking her to the San Jose airport for her flight. Then back to Sunnyvale where I caught Cal Train to San Francisco for lunch with Allison.  The train service on the the San Francisco peninsula is wonderful and the scenery is great too. I walked to Allison’s office. It was a beautiful warm sunny day (rare for San Francisco). After we ate our sandwiches we sat in Yerba Buena park and talked before she had to go back to work. Then I walked back to the train and took it back to Sunnyvale.

My friend Linda’s house is near the train station. She I went out for dinner before our book club meeting. The book club book was Any Bitter Thing by Monica Wood. It was a wonderful very enjoyable book. I liked that it was well developed. The characters were very believable and it had a thought provoking and satisfying ending.

Tuesday was a perfect day partly at least because I was doing things I wanted to do.

In Search of History

While we were in Mexico I read and thoroughly enjoyed In Search of History by Theodore White. The book, written in 1978, is the personal story of the White’s life as a journalist and the people and historical events he experienced. The lessons still seem very valid and the view of history is fascinating.

White is a great story teller. In Search of History is organized into four parts. Part one is set in Boston where White grew up and went to Harvard. Part two is set in war time Asia, primarily China, from 1938 to 1945. Part three is set in post war Europe between 1948 and 1953  and Part four covers 1954 – 1963 in the U.S. Although White is probably best known for the Making of the President books that tell about the 1960, 1964, 1968, and 1972 Presidential elections and for giving the Kennedy era the title "Camelot", I found his stories about the communist take over of China and about Europe and the Marshall plan the most compelling.

I almost always enjoy autobiographies because I enjoy reading about people’s interaction with and reaction to history.  By telling the story of his life, White  sets out to find history in what he has seen experienced.

I love the idea of blogs as conversations. As I was sitting on the balcony of our condo in Manzanilla reading In Search of History I kept finding passages that I wanted to discuss. I made notes and am finally getting around to sharing four of the passages here.

  • After describing his experience of the Japanese bombing of  Chungking  in May of 1939 White wrote;

"What I learned was that people accept government only if the government accepts its first duty – which is to protect them….. Whether in a feudal, modern, imperial or municipal society, people choose government over non government chiefly to protect themselves from dangers they cannot cope with as individuals or families."

Although it seems self evident I hadn’t really thought about it.  I was struck by how  important a lesson this is when we think about the nascent government in Iraq today.

  • White experienced the Chinese civil war between the nationalist and the communists first hand. His perspective on the American reaction to the civil war was very interesting.  He writes the following about the period when the U.S. began to help Chiang K’ai-shek’s forces:

"No one explained, nor could I publish, that at the moment when Mao had to choose between the Russians and the Americans, we forced his choice back on the Russians, where he would rest uneasily for the next twenty years. Nor was it understood that we were involving America in an Asian civil war for the first time"

It is kind of ironic when you think that White wrote this book in 1978  thinking of Korea and Viet Nam. I bet he never would have guessed that Viet Nam wouldn’t be our last Asian civil war.

  • In talking about leaving Time magazine in July of 1946 and his split with Harry Luce, Time’s Publisher, White talks about learning something that I remember learning during one of my first jobs. I saw the truth of the following in every company I worked for right up to my last days at Intuit.

"With boy scout simplicity he (White) believed that organizations are as loyal to their employees as they expect those employees to be to them. He did not yet know that organizations and corporations have an internal loyalty only to the thrust that drives them forward and that individuals are sacrificed to that momentum."

  • Later in the book White talks about the emergence of national magazines like Life, Time, Look and the Saturday Evening Post in the 1890’s.

"This period of political breakthrough is remembered for the muckrakers who gave their name to an era. Yet the advent of the national magazine meant much more than the simple exposure of of oil monopolies…… It meant that whoever was responsible for a national magazine had to think nationally…. Their political power, nationally, thus was prodigious.

White was in the middle of what was happening to the national magazines in the mid 1950s and the impact that TV had on them. His reflections about working for Collier’s magazine and what it meant when the magazine was closed resonated with me. But I am struck by how National magazines changed the newspaper business, television changed the national magazines  and now the Internet is changing television and of course all of these mediums also continue to change. One hears a lot of talk about the Internet and/or blogs being the end of newspapers but it seems to me this is just one more change in a long line of changes. Newspapers, magazines and television will not go away they will just continue to change.

I would definitely recommend In Search of History. I would also be very interested in other people’s reaction to the book. I have found that these quasi book reviews that I write continue to get wonderful comments long after they are written. It is almost like having an on line book club with no time limitations.

I think I will do a future post with a list of other autobiographical books I have enjoyed. Does anyone have any suggestions of autobiographical books they have enjoyed?