Showing posts with label Class Conficts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Class Conficts. Show all posts

Friday, October 22, 2021

New Book Alert: Accidentally Engaged to The Billionaire Book 5 by Bridget Taylor; Some Reality But Soap Opera Schemes Overshadow Charming Wish Fulfillment

 


New Book Alert: Accidentally Engaged to The Billionaire Book 5 by Bridget Taylor; Some Reality But Soap Opera Schemes Overshadow Charming Wish Fulfillment

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Bridget Taylor's Accidentally Engaged to the Billionaire Book 1 was a charming display of wish fulfillment as billionaire Charles Bentley is ordered to get married by his 35th birthday or risk losing his fortune. On a whim, he proposes at first sight to Jane, a pizza deliverer who is in financial straits. The two attend balls, fancy dinners, and country clubs acting like a happily engaged couple under the suspicions of Charles' avaricious uncle, Jack and attorney, Wyatt. Meanwhile, Charles and Jane are supported by Charles' cousin, James and challenged by Jane's sister, Helena who has her own private grudge against the Bentley family. Five books later, Accidentally Engaged to the Billionaire Book 5, moves things considerably. Charles and Jane have married and while Charles loves Jane, Jane is uncertain about her own feelings and the two intend to still end their marriage after a year. That is until Jane, who had long believed that she couldn't have children, learns that she is pregnant. Meanwhile, James and Helena have taken their relationship to a higher level with an impending engagement. Jack however has plans to destroy both couples and keep the Bentley inheritance for himself. Book 5 of the Accidentally Engaged series offers some slight semblance of reality into this modern fairy tale particularly with the ever present class conflicts and pregnancy complications. Jane's pregnancy is handled with much care and sympathy. We see a couple who adjusted to the fact that children would not be in the cards, making their unusual situation easier, are now blindsided by this emotional complication. The complication becomes physical when they learn that Jane has fibroids and giving birth could potentially injure or even kill her. This plot brings the romanticism of the previous book to a halt and allows Taylor to inject some realism into an otherwise paint by numbers romance. Many romances end with marriage or babies ever after. Once the couple says I do and they can hear the pitter patter of little feet, then it's over. Hugs and happy endings for all. But that's not always the case as Book 5 demonstrates. Pregnancy itself is a very complicated painful thing that is very difficult for couples to go through and it can be very hard physically, mentally, emotionally, and financially. Some are just not prepared for the reality of having a family, especially a couple who began so arbitrarily and unrealistically as Charles and Jane did. There are also times when the plot takes on soap opera extremes. Uncle Jack who was the primary antagonist in Book 1 was mostly in small doses then as the uptight snob. Now he forces his way to the forefront as a scenery devouring villain. He appears to have taken lessons from J.R. Ewing from Dallas as he connives to take James and Charles' inheritances. He especially threatens James by demanding he take a DNA test to see if he is biologically a Bentley. Another nice touch in Book 5 is something that I had long predicted: longtime adversaries James and Helena would end their animosity and hook up. I was right and in a nice twist from Jane and Charles' speedy engagement and marriage, they take the time to get to know each other. They have a typical courtship and slow burning romance that culminates in a marriage, suggesting that the conflicts that Jane and Charles have because of their speed will be or have been worked out during the pre-wedding phase. Like with Jane's pregnancy complications, this brings this otherwise airy romance down to earth.


Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Classics Corner: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen ; Definitive Book on Learning About and Teaching American History In High School







Classics Corner: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen; Definitive Book on Learning and Teaching American History in High School

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


If you thought, or still think, your high school American History class and textbooks were boring, chances are you are not alone. James W. Loewen discovered his college freshman didn't know any more about history than they did in high school.

To remedy this situation, Loewen studied high school history textbooks such as The Land of Promise, Rise of the American Nation and discovered feel-good blandly written history that focused on jingoism and patriotism and had very little analysis or depth. Loewen's book, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong aimed to discover those errors and improve on the way American History is taught in schools.

"Textbooks.....keep students in the dark about the nature of history, " Loewen wrote. "History is furious debate informed by evidence and reason. " Loewen's brilliant and insightful book challenges how history textbooks are written and provides the Reader with an alternative approach to history. Even the Readers that may not necessarily agree with the information Loewen provides will appreciate the more thoughtful, critical, and analytical approach to history and receive a deeper understanding of the American past.


Loewen begins by discussing heroification, making heroes and demigods out of historic figures. History students may know of Helen Keller's childhood in which Annie Sullivan taught her to sign and speak, but may be unaware of Keller's adulthood in which she became an ardent Socialist.

Woodrow Wilson is described in textbooks as an idealistic President who helped found the League of Nations, but the books often leave out Wilson's racism in which he segregated the federal government, propositioned the Espionage Act which ordered Americans to report "suspicious activities" like speaking out against WWI, and ordered invasions of various Latin American and island countries.

"Denying students the humanness of Keller and Wilson and others keeps students in intellectual immaturity, "Loewen wrote. "It might be called a Disney version of history: The Hall of Presidents at Disneyland similarly presents our leaders as heroic statesmen not imperfect human beings. "

Loewen put the textbooks to task for how they wrote about many of the standards in American History. Christopher Columbus is not written as an intrepid explorer looking for new trade routes to the Far East. Instead, he is seen by Loewen as an opportunist who saw a country rich with gold to plunder and people to enslave.

Far from being the deus ex machina-kindly Indians who provided the Pilgrims with the first Thanksgiving, instead Massasoit's tribe once thrived in the Massachusetts area and had been all but wiped out by smallpox brought on by white immigrants.

Loewen suggests that the Thanksgiving meal was not just a gesture of friendship but a plea for survival. (And how did the Pilgrims' descendants reward that kindness? Well Loewen writes that they declared war on the local tribes and took their land for themselves.)


Speaking of Native Americans, Loewen fills his Readers on wars the whites have declared on Native Americans such as King Phillip's War in 1675 as well as textbooks' portrayal of Native Americans as either bloodthirsty savages who made unprovoked attacks on whites or childlike innocents who were unaware of how to cultivate their land and needed the White Saviors to guide them.

African-Americans have it bad if not worse according to Loewen. The textbook perspective of the Antebellum South as an idyllic Paradise for masters and slaves and Reconstruction as a time of thieving Northern "carpetbaggers" and naive freed slaves who couldn't lead their farms or states is less out of historic primary sources than out of Gone With The Wind. In actuality Loewen writes that in the post-Civil War days many former slaves were elected into offices and performed in jobs admirably. In fact the real troubles were usually performed by the disgruntled former Confederates who formed the Ku Klux Klan and whose actions would later create Jim Crow Laws and the Myth of the Fallen South.

Loewen also cites the implied racism in how textbooks portray white abolitionists such as John Brown as "being insane"(when he was devoted to the cause of freeing slaves) and Abraham Lincoln as being indifferent to the cause of slavery solely for preserving the Union (when in reality he felt that the Union could never be preserved if half of its population where in chains).

The chapters about racism should be used as a guide for current issues. Loewen's book reveals that unfortunately the Myth of the Fallen South and the inherent racism that goes with it are still with us even now in 2020. If nothing else, the fight over taking down or leaving alone Confederate statues and the support and disagreements towards the Black Lives Matter protests reveal that those historical myths are still with us and are unfortunately very hard to die. Those struggles are still fresh in our minds and despite what some say, people cannot easily "get over them." If they aren't acknowledged or certain minorities are still treated poorly, partly because modern white people used glamorized versions of the Old West or the Antebellum South as justifications for stereotyping and continuing to treat Native Americans and African Americans so horribly.


Besides race, another issue that Lies My Teacher Told Me opens up is social class.This chapter reveals that George Carlin's often repeated quote "They call it the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it" is not too far off. As Loewens pointed out, we are surrounded by symbols of class and social structure from the homes we live in, to the clothes we wear, to the brands we buy, to the cars we drive. Unfortunately, social class cuts deeper as while Americans are so fond of repeating the "Land of Opportunity" myth ad nauseum, that they fail to notice and history classes fail to teach that those opportunities are not passed out freely nor are those opportunities necessarily based on merit. Many stumbling blocks to achieve a higher economic standards are often affected by someone's race, nationality, economic standards, or gender.

In schools teachers and textbooks are fond of the rags to riches myths such as Andrew Carnegie, Oprah Winfrey, or Steve Jobs, and fail to account that they are the exceptions. For every Carnegie who became a multimillionaire, there are countless others who work just as hard and barely eke out a living. These exceptions cause snobbishness in people that assume if someone is poor then they must be lazy or are not working hard enough. This rationale is often why many social and welfare programs are cut leading to increased poverty.


Education for example is not the same in every school. Wealthier students have the luxury of new technology, equipments, and pre college courses, while poorer students often have to make do with dated materials and hopes that they can get a scholarship or financial aid. It makes one wonder with the Coronavirus pandemic being such an issue if schools were able to pass out enough technology for students to study at home and whether teachers and students had the proper Internet access to use them. Not to mention, the most recent controversies about schools being forced to open in the fall will see a division between the schools that can afford to follow guidelines and use work and study at home alternatives and those that can't. Will the numbers of poorer students and faculty members catching the virus increase because of the lack of alternate options?


The most eye-opening chapters discuss the impact the Federal Government and Big Business had on modern history.

Loewen says that avoiding the role economics play in United States-International relations interferes with the textbooks' "international good guy approach." The United States's official word on interfering with other foreign countries is to "spread democracy", but Loewen's book shows that Capitalism and economics are the actual driving forces.

One example of this approachs is when International Telephone and Telegraph (ITT) led the U. S government in destabilizing Salvador Allende's Socialist Chilean government. Other examples include Union Carbide in India and United Fruit in Guatemala.

Many of the United States' gave support in other countries, particularly in Central and South American and Middle Eastern countries and not necessarily for the good of the people. Such examples include returning the shah of Iran to his throne in 1953, bringing down the elected government in Guatemala in 1954, attempting to bring down Fidel Castro's government through terror and sabotage and many many more.

These decisions often led to generations of tyranny and dictatorships and citizen led rebellions against not only their leaders but hatred towards the United States, often taking the form of terroris organizations and cartels. Also the deplorable conditions that these countries were left in because of United States interference caused many of these people to leave and emigrate to the United States.

The book predates the recent controversies towards asylum seekers and young immigrant children separated from their families, kept in cages, and many of them found to have disappeared, perhaps in the hands of unscrupulous adults. However, one cannot help but read the chapter and understand the United States's role in creating the unstable governments and low socioeconomic standards that those people are emigrating from.

Equally powerful is the approach or rather non-approach many textbooks have in portraying the Vietnam War. Of the textbooks surveyed, Loewen said most devoted less than 10 pages to Vietnam and only depicts photographs of smiling American soldiers leaving out the most provocative memorable images like the running girl covered in napalm. In fact, Loewen says that most high school teachers leave out the Vietnam War in discussions. (Recalling my own history classes, I only remember discussing the Sixties once and that was a brief end of year talk on the music. )

While the Vietnam War was a recent event for the book, one wonders how other events are portrayed in modern history classes. While certain events like 9/11 probably could not be avoided, do textbooks refer to the U.S. interference, such as the First Gulf War, that led to such animosity in the Middle East and the creation of terrorist groups? Were the controversies about the decision go to war in Iraq and the subsequent War on Terror get a mention or was that one of the things that textbook authors left out? What about the creation of the Patriot Act and the far reaching tactics of the NSA? There are still many gray areas to explore in American History and judging by many of the attitudes that people still hold to revere or criticize the past, unfortunately they are still around.

Loewen also refers to the low prominence that history has in high school curricula of schools not hiring qualified history teachers who can study and challenge the materials. Instead the school sboards settle for social science teachers or coaches. (Anothe recall from my high school history courses: football coaches taught all our social science and history classes.) As well as the lack of experienced historians that edit and critique these books. Many of the books were published to impress the school and education boards and to make as little waves as possible. Unfortunately, as Loewens reminds us history is not like that. It is a subject that is by nature controversial and needs to be taught that way: honestly and accurately.


While the book was first published 25 years ago, it's clear the situation has not yet improved. However Loewen frequently has updated his book and has written similar ones about Historic American Landmarks.(One wonders how he feels about the statues). If blandly written "feel good" history doesn't go away, neither will Loewen and neither should people who study and know the truth behind the American History Myths.

Friday, February 28, 2020

New Book Alert: The Baron and the Enchantress (The Enchantress Book 3) by Paullett Golden; Excellent Beginning and Ending Marred By Dragging Repetitive Middle



New Book Alert: The Baron and The Enchantress (The Enchantress Book 3) by Paullett Golden; Excellent Beginning and Ending Marred By Dragging and Repetitive Middle

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Spoilers: Paullett Golden's Historical Romance, The Baron and The Enchantress, is like the little girl with the curl in the middle of her forehead from the nursery rhyme. When it is good, it is very good but when it is bad, it's horrid.

Well not really horrid, just dull and repetitive.

It begins well with an interesting premise in which a working class woman learns that she is descended from a noble family and ends well with lovers united, goals met, and families grown stronger. However, the steps between conflict and resolution are marred by a long slow trip through the same situation repeated over and over with barely any change in character and plot.


Lilith Chambers is an 18th century midwife who was raised and educated in an orphanage when news breaks out that she is the long-lost sister of Sebastian Lancaster, Earl of Roddam. She was raised as Sebastian's full sister by who she believed were her birth parents. Unfortunately, after the death of her loving adopted mother, her abusive father, the former Earl, sends her to an orphanage where she learns that she is actually the illegitimate daughter of the former Earl and a servant woman. After the Earl's death, Sebastian seeks to reunite his family by drawing Lilith back into the family.

Lilith's skills as a midwife proves useful in assisting Sebastian's wife, Lizbeth through a difficult delivery. She also captures the interest of Walter Hobbs, The Baron Collingwood. Walter is capitvated by Lilith's independent fiery spirit and she is drawn by his altruistic nature. The two become romantically involved, but Lilith is concerned that the revelation of her illegitimate birth could cause problems with her new-found family and love life.


The book starts out strong with characters that defy traditional romance expectations. One of the more unique refreshing takes with Lilith's age. She's 33. When most Historical Romance female protagonists usually are in their late teens and early twenties, it's nice to read about one who is approximately the same age as her usual readership. Lilith is a woman who has had plenty of life experiences and an older woman's more cynical outlook on life.

Also, Lilith is someone who is just as interested in pursuing a career as she is in getting married. Most of the early chapters focuses on Lizbeth's pregnancy and Lilith helping her. Her interactions with Lizbeth such as purposelyt contradicting the physician's reactionary medical advice reveal that she is good at her job.

She also teaches at the orphanage in which she was raised. She aids young girls in their scholarly pursuits, particularly in Math and Science. She also wants to help unwed troubled mothers, like her own birth mother, who are alone and abandoned. Lilith is someone with a great brain and a willingness to use it to help others.


Sebastian, Walter, and their family are also nice surprises as well. One would expect a wealthy titled family to look down on their poorer relation, but they don't. Sebastian welcomes her with open arms. Lizbeth instantly treats her like a much beloved sister, even before she saves her and her baby's lives. One would expect Lizbeth's aunt and Walter's mother, Hazel, to turn her nose up at Lilith's arrival. But after giving some terrified early misgivings during Lizbeth's delivery, she recalls her own rags to riches upbringing and welcomes Lilith grandly.

Walter in particular is also an interesting romantic figure. Like Lilith, he too dreams of a life of significance. He wants to do something important with his wealth and title. When he hears about Lilith's upbringing, he decides to fund an orphanage. While Lilith questions this, he is clearly committed to the goal and wouldn't mind having the assistance of a certain attractive educator/midwife in achieving it.

It is a nice departure to see noble people in literature using their resources to help others revealing that nobility isn't always just an inherited name. Sometimes it is an adjective that describes upstanding character.


Unfortunately, Golden does too good a job of revealing their acceptance of Lilith, that there is really nowhere for the book to go. There are some stereotypical snobbish aristocrats, but they don't really develop the plot that much. There is also an opportunistic clergyman acquaintance of Lilith's who becomes too obsessed with her. This subplot hints that the clergyman could make trouble for Lilith, but apart from having a case of foot-in-mouth disease not much happens and his story is arbitrarily solved.

Instead most of the book focuses on Lilith's lack of acceptance towards her new family, not theirs toward her. She constantly makes assumptions about the wealthy that are discredited by the actions of Walter, Sebastian, et al. Even after she is proven wrong, she still thinks of them as elitist snobs. She started out as an interesting strong willed character, but quickly devolves into a judgemental reverse snob.

I know that she was raised in an orphanage, but she is allegedly a woman of great brilliance and intelligence. Surely, her experience with Sebastian's family should serve as a counterexample to her assumptions. Not to mention that she should consider that if stereotypes aren't true about her, what makes her think that they are true about them. In fact, the more that they, particularly Walter, try to welcome her, the more she resists. I suppose it's supposed to make her endearing, but honestly it makes her look like a hypocrite.

This argument between Lilith's assumptions and Walter's actions keeps coming up and is repeated as though there isn't anything else that the book has to do. The problem may be because the story takes place en media res after Lilith's identity had been revealed in the previous novel, The Earl and the Enchantress. With a strong introduction, there may not have been anywhere else for this book to go.


Thankfully, Golden does salvage the ending into a sweet resolution that works well in which lovers are not only united, but they make plans to open that orphanage and home for unwed mothers, to help the next generation.

The Baron and the Enchantress starts and ends so we'll that it is a shame that the middle could use some of the same magic to become equally as enchanting as the rest of the book.