Showing posts with label Illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illness. Show all posts

Saturday, March 9, 2024

Deliveries by Paul Smyth; Over Long But Adventurous Flight Plan

Deliveries by Paul Smyth; Over Long But Adventurous Flight Plan

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Paul Smyth’s Deliveries  is a suspense thriller that can get long and tedious but once it gets going, can be pretty suspenseful and thrilling.

Cargo pilot Paul Jackson accepts an assignment to deliver some cargo to his friend, resort owner, Jack Ward. With his co-pilot, Dave McMurray, Paul takes his Cessna 185F to the air in what should be a typical delivery flight. Unfortunately, inclement weather and a dwindling fuel line make the flight anything but typical. Worse, Paul displays some symptoms of poor health while he is in the air. Some news from Paul’s wife, Diane, makes the situation clearer: Paul should not be flying. He is ill and is currently on what is supposed to be his last flight. However, if they don’t land the plane soon, it really will be their last flight. 

The plot summary makes the book sound more exciting than it really is. For a novel about flying, the book ironically takes a while to get off the ground. Each plot point takes forever to develop before it actually does.

Paul exhibits a few warning symptoms in the air. Then ten chapters later, Diane gets a phone call about a changed appointment. She panics over it for several more pages before she learns what his condition is and what the ramifications are for him while flying. Then she tells his colleagues many, many pages later. It doesn’t build suspense or emotional conflict so much as the characters just repeat the same conversation about Paul’s condition and that he shouldn’t be in the air, etc. After a while the feeling is like, “We got it the first time. Can we move on now?”


Once it finally does, there are genuine moments of suspense. Paul and Dave are hanging on for dear life in the air and the turbulent weather adds to the overall effect of feeling trapped in a large cylinder in high altitude. It takes a long time for a crash or a landing to occur to the point where the suspense can either be gripping or repetitive. Oddly enough in this case it does both. It's repeated often but the Reader is at the edge of their seat while simultaneously rolling their eyes.

The stress by the people on the ground is also keenly felt. In an almost cathartic moment, Diane lets Paul's colleagues have it because of her worry and frustration. Her characterization is not particularly compelling and at times, she comes across as shrill and whiny. However, in this incident, she isn't wrong in her accusations and her outburst is completely justifiable.


Deliveries is like one of those long layover flights. It takes awhile to get you where you need to go, but once it actually gets moving you may like parts of the journey.

 

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Weekly Reader: Tapestry of My Mother's Life: Stories, Fragments, and Silences by Malve Von Hassell; Moving and Detailed Account of Von Hassell's Mother's Life During WWII and The Cold War

 



Weekly Reader: Tapestry of My Mother's Life: Stories, Fragments, and Silences by Malve Von Hassell; Moving and Detailed Account of Von Hassell's Mother's Life During WWII and The Cold War

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Every year, a trend seems to appear in the books that I review. Last year the most frequent themes were dystopian societies and lovers who travel through time or discover that they are reincarnations of lovers in the past. While one could say that COVID probably inspired both trends by forcing authors to face reality in the former and escape from it in the latter, that may have been true for the books published in 2020-2021. But some were published earlier and read about the same time. Sometimes inspiration strikes several people at once.

So far the main themes that I am reviewing this year are: young women traveling to fantasy worlds and family histories/memoirs. The former is probably more escapism. After all, if the author and Reader can't disappear from a world of COVID, inflation, racial and income inequality, climate change, war,  and political unrest then their protagonist can. The latter theme might also be inspired by current events as well. The last two years may have caused people to rethink their lives and how they got to this point. They might have talked to older relatives or studied primary and secondary sources about their lives and wonder how they faced their struggles in different times. 


In the family history/memoirs category, I reviewed We've Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections by Donna Y. Farris, Emma's Tapestry by Isobel Blackthorn, and the latest Tapestry of My Mother's Life: Stories, Fragments, and Silences by Malve Von Hassell. Similar to Farris's memoir, Von Hassell uses past experiences and a gift for writing to deal with personal loss. Similar to Blackthorn's book, Von Hassell peers into the past of a relative to answer some long neglected questions about her family's story. Blackthorn wrote about her great grandmother. Von Hassell chose to write about her mother, Christa.


 Von Hassell's mother died in 2009, two months after the death of her son and Von Hassell's brother, Adrian. Von Hassell and her older brother, Agostino were faced with the heartbreaking task of cleaning out their mother's belongings. While going through Christa's things, the siblings discovered some curious questions about the silent woman that they thought that they knew. Though their mother was a gifted storyteller on certain aspects of her life, there were things that she never talked about until after her death and the children had to learn about them.


 The details that Agostino and Von Hassell read reveal a troubled childhood in pre-WWII Pomerania, adulthood during the Cold War, an unhappy first marriage marked by forced separation, and the existence of a previous lover, Heinrich, who neither Von Hassell nor Agostino knew about. Researching her mother's history taught Von Hassell a lot about her mother and saw her not as a quiet cypher but as a full blooded woman with interests, passions, longings, and loves that her daughter never knew about.


Von Hassell described her mother as a woman who quickly adjusted to life and the circumstances surrounding her. She believed that Christa's birth signified this. Christa was born during a snowstorm in December, 1923. The chauffeur and Christa's grandfather had trouble getting help, so her father assisted the midwife in the delivery. Her mother had fainted. During the panic to keep her alive, newborn Christa was accidentally put inside a drawer. After the crisis was averted, they found baby Christa in her drawer fast asleep.


Christa von Zitzweitz and her brother Hans-Melchior grew up in a large estate, Muttrin, that had been in her family's possession until 1945. Her childhood on the estate seemed idyllic as her vivid descriptions captivated her daughter's imagination. Von Hassell felt like she walked alongside her mother in the vast landscape, spacious rooms, and her favorite haunt, the cloakroom. Christa's childhood memories of practical jokes, loving extended family members, and friendship with the servants is purposely described as nostalgic and enchanting before the reality of Nazism crashes in. Christa, like everyone else around her, was unaware of the dark clouds of hatred, violence, and tyranny that were coming soon.


Christa attended boarding school in the 1930's partly to avoid her volatile mother and stern but loving father. To her daughter, Christa claimed ignorance and obliviousness of the Nazi's true intentions. She remained tight lipped about world events while her personality was developed during this troubled time. Many of Christa's older cousins joined the BDM (Bund Deutscher Madel, League of German Maidens). One spoke of role call and singing and was at first enthusiastic. Later Christa reported that "she lost interest in the organization" but did not elaborate on the reason. Another cousin was rejected by the organization because her grandmother was Jewish.


Christa. herself joined the organization but this part of her life remained a secret to her children. Christa never once spoke about her involvement in the group or her life in Hitler influenced Pomerania. Later the family moved to Warsaw and Christa remained secluded from such topics as Kristallnacht. This silence disturbed Von Hassell and as of the writing of this book, she still puzzled over not asking more about it. She saw it as indicative of that generation that some openly admitted their guilt in being a part of such heinous crimes, others like Von Hassell's mother refused to talk about it. 


In fact, Von Hassell's family didn't question Hitler's policies until it began to directly involve them. When the leader did a character assassination against a disgraced former ally, Christa's father thought that he had gone too far. He then became involved in resistance efforts against Hitler. Christa's father and brother later fought in the war while Christa and her mother livedd off of ration cards. 

 In hindsight, it shows how myopic some people can be that they don't care about what goes on in the world unless it affects them personally. It reveals the feelings of many people when they live in such times, they can't always fully grasp the enormity and horror around them until it's too late.


Christa's young adulthood was a time of rationing and censorship. As Von Hassell observed, she adjusted to her surroundings. Christa learned how to save food by cooking recipes, like a special rum cake, that lasted for days. She also joined the RAD (Reichsarbeitsdienst, National Labor Service) and worked in a sewing machine factory. 

There was also constant censorship, particularly in letters to and from soldiers. Christa lived quietly, playing the outward obedient woman even if she disagreed internally. Her interest in art and literature, which she shared with her father and brother, were the only ways that she could fully express herself.


Christa finally felt some liberation when she transferred from the University of Leipzig to the University of Tubingen in 1942. She was attracted to the Medieval style town, the architecture, churches, and art lectures. She also became close to the mysterious Heinrich, the man whom Von Hassell and Agostino later found his and Christa's letters. 


Heinrich Hartman was a Navy medic-midshipman and studied for a medical degree at Tubingen. After Christa's death, Von Hassell found binders filled with their letters that were exchanged from 1942-44 and included sketches of artwork and architecture, flowers, copies of poems, and postcards. She also owned a booklet entitled "A Contract of Marriage Between Ferdinand and Louise." It was clear that Heinrich was more than just a friend or classmate of Christa's. 

By the publication of the book, Von Hassell did very little research on Heinrich's personal life but she ascertained through his letters that he was a quiet mystical man with a very romantic passionate side. 


Heinrich and Christa wrote for two years while Christa's personal life was going through upheavals. Her father and brother were killed in 1943. 

That year, she also met Egloff von Tippelskirch, a lawyer with a steady, pragmatic, and clear headed personality. For a time, Christa wrote to both men, caught between the romantic Heinrich and steady Egloff. She was also in despair over the poverty, bleak censorship, and loss of half of her family. It's easy to see why she wrote to both men. Perhaps, she felt that she could be herself and all the years of adjusting and accepting finally wore thin. Through those letters, Von Hassell saw through the quiet shell that her mother lived to the passionate woman inside. 


During the turbulent final days of the war, Christa kept writing to both men while Egloff pressed for an answer of whether she would marry him and Heinrich wondered why her letters were getting fewer. Fate made the decision for her when Heinrich was killed in action in November, 1944 and Christa and Egloff announced their engagement on December 19  that year. They were wed on December 28, 1944. 


No sooner did WWII end, then the Soviets came marching in and Christa and others found themselves in just as bad a situation as before. Christa and Egloff were barely newlyweds, before he had to leave her. Christa was back on rations caring for her now depressed mother. 

One moment that crystalized the hard times in Christa's mind was when Soviet soldiers arrested a neighbor, who was a fellow officer of Christa's father and family friend. As they took him away, his wife was hysterical, dragging him by the coat and begging him not to go. He told her to calm down and Christa's mother reached over, slapped the other woman across the face, and admonished her by asking if her husband wanted to see her like that. The woman calmed down but her husband was later reported dead.


Christa had to deal with loss as well. Egloff was interred in a detainment camp. While she and her mother were relocated,Christa worked as a Red Cross Nurse and tried to get word to her husband.  Finally, in 1948, she received word that Egloff died of typhus two years prior. This loss propelled Christa to leave Eastern Europe and her mother behind to move to England in 1949. 


Christa moved to Bonn in 1950, slowly helping her mother leave the Eastern side to move to the capital city of West Germany to be with her. The older woman had a rigid attitude towards life even to the point that though she was attractive, refused any subsequent offers of marriage. 


In 1951, Christa met Wolf Ulrich von Hassell, the man who would become her second husband. Like Christa and no doubt many people of their generation, he understood the pain of loss and embittered questions of how they got to this point. 

Wolf Ulrich had a very cosmopolitan upbringing, born in Italy in 1913,  but moving around various cities like Rome, Barcelona, and Copenhagen. He then studied law at the University of Tubingen and Konigsberg, East Prussia. 

In 1939, Wolf Ulrich left a naval career behind when he suffered a rare lung disease. He spent three years in a sanitarium in Switzerland. Even though he was released, he had asthma for the rest of his life.


Though safe from the physical toll of war, Wolf Ulrich was no stranger to the emotional and mental toll. He suffered tremendous survivor guilt when men his own age joined the military and got killed on the battlefield. His father who had resisted against Hitler was arrested and executed in 1944. It's no surprise that he was described as "sensitive, steadfast, honest decent but also cautious and at times withdrawn." 

For Christa who had learned to adjust and accepting, she took initiative in their early courtship. When Wolf Ulrich worried that their ten year age gap might be a problem, she assured him that he wasn't too old to have a family and despite his ill health that he wouldn't die.


The previous times also caused dissension between Christa and her in laws. Her mother in law was a woman of strict principles and high standards and considered a second marriage to be sacrilegious. When Wolf Ulrich became a diplomat, his mother insisted that her late husband was the only "true diplomat in the family." These standards and gatekeeping practices passed over to one daughter and son who remained estranged from the Von Hassells for the rest of their lives. However, another sister maintained a warm relationship with the family.


The von Hassells though happy were troubled by ill health. Wolf Ulrich had continual bouts with asthma and bronchitis and Christa had a near death experience after the birth of her eldest child, Agostino in 1953. The childbirth complications also occurred during the subsequent births of Adrian in 1956 and Malve in 1957.

 Christa also had frequent debilitating migraines that caused her to nap frequently and withdraw from her husband and children at times. These migraines intensified during a subsequent move to Bonn and often reoccurred on the anniversary of her father and brother's deaths.


Despite their parents' ill health, the children had a good upbringing. Von Hassell described her childhood in Brussels as "content and unaware of any wrinkles in the universe. After (the Von Hassells) moved to Bonn in 1965, life became more complicated."


While they loved their parents, the Von Hassell children began to notice more sternness from them. Their father was away from home a lot and had frequent bouts with bad health, but was relentless in observing their homework and making sure his children got all the right answers. This occurred during a time when Von Hassell described herself and her brothers as "struggling academically and emotionally." They were experiencing the growing pangs of being new kids in a new place and were the targets of bullying.

Wolf Ulrich's strictness was measured and calm. He often used logic to dictate his preferences and wore his children down with reason.


Christa was also a rigid parent. She was often questioning her children about their activities. Just saying "fine" wasn't enough for her. They had to elaborate on what they did, who they were with, and tell every detail of their day. She had high expectations and tried to discipline her children with the same ideals in which she was raised.


She also worked around the house, often working with what they had. Von Hassell said that her mother's favorite word was "uberwending," something that was done quickly if approximately so that the surface would be presentable, to create a good impression without maintaining perfection. This applied to Christa's accommodating adjustable nature which accepted that things could change quickly and can be lived through.

However, this adjustability did not necessarily apply to her children.  Unlike her husband who ruled with logical reserve, Christa ruled her family with sheer will power. Saying no to her commands was not an option. 


Von Hassell's characterization of her parents during this time period portrays them as stern people of the old world and old generation, that were rocked by their previous circumstances. Their sternness in their parenting tactics could be a way to compensate and shield their children from the dangers that they had to live through during the Holocaust and Cold War.

This is also a universal truth in the difference between how Von Hassell and her brothers looked at their parents in Brussels to Bonn. In Bonn, the children were growing into adolescence and they saw, as many children do, more of their parent's flaws and limitations rather than believing that they could do no wrong as they had in the past. 


There were other ways that Christa and Wolf Ulrich's pasts continued to haunt them and they transferred those fears and anxieties to their children on a subconscious level. One was having a tight lipped correspondence within the family and keeping family news only amongst themselves. When Christa was hospitalized with a liver disorder, Wolf Ulrich and the children wrote to her. In her book, Von Hassell wrote "the older the child, the shorter the letter." Only Von Hassell's letters were filled with childlike rambling and extreme details. Her father and brothers' were much shorter. Wolf Ulrich's were terse and filled with legal jargon and reason. They had learned not to go overboard with emotion because they could lose the people that they love quickly and to not expose themselves to heartbreak.


Another trauma that the Von Hassell parents endured was the rejection of customs, traditions, and even words that brought up bad memories of the Nazi Party. One of those was the celebration of Mother's Day. When she was three, Von Hassell, based on a nanny's suggestion, gave her mother a bouquet of wildflowers to celebrate the event. To this day, the author doesn't remember what was said but she remembered how she felt afterwards and never celebrated Mother's Day with her mother again.

She later learned that the Nazis had valued that day, even making it a national holiday because it fit in with their hard lined notions of "Kinder, Kurche, Kirche" (Children, Church, Kitchen) as being the preferred goal for their idea of the "perfect Aryan woman." Even something as seemingly innocuous as a child's gift took Christa Von Hassell to that frightened young woman growing up in a sea of vast hatred and tyranny that her family at one time blindly supported.


The final link connecting Christa to her home during WWII was severed in 1970 when Chancellor Willy Brandt signed the Treaty of Moscow, officially recognizing the People's Republic of Poland as part of East Europe and therefore under Soviet control. Christa wept when her beloved Pomerania became swallowed by the new Polish borders. 

When Wolf Ulrich said that the clock could not be turned back, Christa kept repeating, "You don't understand! You weren't born there!" and swayed back and forth. For Von Hassell, this was the only time that as a child, she ever saw her mother lose control, grieving for her childhood home like the death of a friend or family member. For her, it was.


In 1972, Christa and her mother joined Wolf Ulrich who accepted a position as second in command to the German Mission in the United Nations in New York City. Agostino remained in Germany to attend university and Adrian was housed in a nearby boarding school while he continued his final two years of high school.

Then 14 years old, Von Hassell was looking forward to the new adventure while her mother stayed silent and accommodating. She only admitted years later how much it hurt to leave her sons behind. She however grew to love New York City, walking around, and enjoying the sights of the big American city. 


In his diplomatic position, Wolf Ulrich was often involved in helping to shape Cold War policies. His comment about "important exchanges happening in hallways rather than formal meetings" reveal the cloak and dagger nature of the time in which people on both sides tried to subvert one another with intelligence, doubletalk, and shaking each other's hands while grimacing with distrust.

Christa was a part of that. As a diplomat's wife, she hosted parties and gatherings where conversations, concessions, agreements, and disagreements were made amid the small talk and idle chatter. Christa was such a together person that when a blackout occurred during a party, she continued to entertain guests like nothing happened.


In the mid 70's, the family reunited with Adrian attending law school, Agostino working towards a journalism degree, and Malve finishing school in the United States. 

 Christa finally finished her aborted academic career by attending graduate courses at NYU's Institute of Fine Arts, preparing for her husband's retirement in 1978. She wrote for German language publications as well as about the art market, exhibits, and galleries in New York. The Von Hassell parents bought a vacation home in Southampton. For a family that was forced to live in the moment and adjust to their immediate surroundings and haunted by their past, they were finally able to relax, plan, and look forward to a brighter future.

 

However, the old ghosts never really left. After his retirement, Wolf Ulrich was gripped with depression and confusion about what to do with his life. He edited his wife's writings to the point that she felt his suggestions bordered on nagging. Meanwhile, Von Hassell attended a PhD program at the New School for Social Research. The younger woman decided to move out and needed her parent's co-sign on an apartment lease. At first Christa refused and they got into a huge fight. Christa felt the anxiety of her youngest child leaving and fought to keep her with her parents. Von Hassell argued towards her own independence. Von Hassell was able to move out but her mother responded with icy silence. With the firmness and silence that Christa honed during her years in Europe, she retreated but she didn't like it.


On her own, Von Hassell hovered between exhilaration and depression. She was excited about the new studies and challenges. She liked her apartment even though it was battered, patched up, and had been broken into three times. She loved the colorful neighbors, the small shops that she could walk to, and her cast iron kitchen bathtub.

However, Von Hassell also had depressive moods. She spent some time lying in bed and listening to and trying to analyze Leonard Cohen's lyrics. 

Those times, Von Hassell behaved like a bird who left the nest and knows how to fly but is uncertain about where to fly towards.


However, Von Hassell found ways to cut her mother's past from her own. Her advisor suggested that she do her dissertation on the University in Exile of academics and scholars who fled 1930's and continued their research at the New School for Social Research. Hitting too close to home, Von Hassell refused and instead decided to study the experiences of first generation Japanese immigrant women in America and their relationship with her daughters. Von Hassell wanted to study a culture different from her own, but she also saw some universal meaning in the relationship between parents and children. Perhaps she also felt a link with the relationship between immigrant mothers and their first generation American daughters as an echo of her own relationship, as a first generation American daughter with an  immigrant mother. 


Von Hassell also found joy during her time away from her family. One experience gave her a love of river rafting. Another time, she saw or thought she saw the image of a miniature lion on a subway platform. Seeing the lion gave her a sense of exhilaration and pleasure at living for the moment. She also began to understand how her mother, despite her struggles, found comfort and contentment in the simplest things. Von Hassell maintained a closer relationship with Christa becoming a friend and confidant as well as a daughter.


While in her thirties, Von Hassell accepted a good position as a translator and spent many weekends with her parents, particularly because her father's health was failing. She and her family felt caught between two worlds never feeling like they belonged in Europe, but not 100 percent that they belonged in America. They felt senses of doubt, insecurity, inadequacy, and arrogance, and an aversion towards commitment.

 Von Hassell cites these personality traits as among the reasons why neither she nor Adrian ever married. Agostino was the only one of the siblings who did. He married an American woman and had sons. However, he carried many of the same traits that his siblings possessed. 


As an unmarried woman approaching middle age myself, I find this aspect of Von Hassell's character comforting and refreshing. It's understandable why many of us choose not to marry. Sometimes, it's a reserved nature or something in our pasts that prevent us from making that step or avoiding it all together. It does not mean that we avoid loving others or being loved. That is especially true of Von Hassell. She adopted a son from Ukraine in 2001 and Christa was a loving grandmother to him as she was to Agostino's children.

However, as Von Hassell, pointed out her family is surrounded by metaphorical ghosts and bad memories. Sometimes those ghosts manifest itself between the generations as it did with Von Hassell and Adrian.


 Von Hassell remained close to her parents and helped care for her father when he was diagnosed with cancer. They talked about books and laughed while Christa and he exchanged poetry. In 1999, Wolf Ulrich died in his home. True to her nature, Christa made the phone calls, straightened up his room, and prepared for widowhood.


In 2003, Christa was diagnosed with multiple myeloma. At first Christa tried denying it and lived life as normal. But by 2005, her cancer worsened. Adrian and Von Hassell divided caring duties. Adrian looked after her in New York City while Von Hassell and her son took over in Southampton. Her contrary nature and unwillingness to accept help got on both her children's nerves but they had happy times as well such as the time when Christa, Adrian, Von Hassell, and her son saw Don Giovanni at the Metropolitan Opera. She also helped choose a dog and delighted in having someone to talk to while her children and grandchild went about their lives.


In 2009 Adrian himself was diagnosed with cancer. Despite the twin ill healths of both her son and herself, Christa remained quiet and steady. She only broke down when she saw his body treated with chemotherapy in the hospital. She wept that she barely recognized him.

After her son died of a heart attack, Christa was complacent doing exactly what her daughter asked her to do. Von Hassell made the funeral arrangements and helped move Adrian's things out of his apartment. Christa was mostly silent until the last of her younger son's things had been removed and she sobbed.


Christa suffered a relapse, no doubt from the stress of losing her son. She refused to give up and argued with doctors, nurses, home care aides, and her daughter. Von Hassell's son was the only one who could convince her to take her medicine without argument. When she was alone, Christa locked herself in the bathroom. Von Hassell made her see reason by asking if she wanted to die in the bathroom or in the hospital. Christa stopped and opened the door. She died one week after her son's memorial service.


In the final chapters, Von Hassell ponders about her family's ghosts. The ghosts of family members with whom they lost contact during the Holocaust and only in the past few years was Von Hassell able to reunite and make contact with. The ghosts in her parent's childhood stories in attempts to turn the real horror of invading soldiers and dictators into a fictional monster that can just be wished away by the turning on lights and saying the words "The End." The ghosts of her parent's traumas that shaped her and her siblings into the adults that they had become.


In writing Tapestry of My Mother's Life, Von Hassell has finally understood her mother as a complete whole woman. Maybe she is finally ready to lay her ghost to rest.














 




Sunday, April 17, 2022

Weekly Reader: We've Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections by Donna Y. Farris; Heart Breaking and Inspirational Memoir About Second Acts in Life, Career, and Love

 



Weekly Reader: We've Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections by Donna Y. Farris; Heart Breaking and Inspirational Memoir About Second Acts in Life, Career, and Love


By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: F. Scott Fitzgerald was certainly wrong. There are second acts in American lives. 

Donna Y. Farris' book, We've Got To Stop Meeting Like This: A Memoir of Missed Connections is all about those second acts when a person rediscovers themselves after much disappointment in work and love. They find happiness in a new life filled with a fulfilling career, and devoted love.


Farris' book begins after her elder daughter, Sienna left for college. This transition caused Farris to feel loss and depression. She was left with Sylvie, a daughter that she loved but couldn't always communicate with. She also felt that her relationship with her husband, Jim, was growing stale and the two barely tolerated each other. While she had a talent for sales, the only positive thing that she found about her job with a finance company was that the commute was shorter than the previous one.

 To cheer herself up, Farris accompanied a friend to a Kripalu Yoga Retreat. The poses, meditative techniques, and the spiritual connection gave Farris  a new perspective. She became inspired to become a yoga instructor.


After her announcement, Jim's worst behaviors came to light. His partying with friends and condescending nature towards Farris' yoga studies were bad enough. The final straw occurred when Farris discovered that he sent flowers to and had an affair with another woman. Time to file for divorce.


After going through the loss and stress of ending her marriage, Farris took her yoga teacher training course seriously. She also began writing articles for The Elephant Journal. 

After some reluctance, she tried online dating. After a few early attempts, she clicked with Mario, a single father. They went through the usual dating conflicts and the childrens' struggles before a real romance and partnership developed.


Now in most books, usually novels, this would be the end of the book. Farris has a career that she genuinely loves and finds herself in a good relationship with a loving, understanding, and supportive man. The final page says, "The End." Credits roll and light comes up. Unfortunately, in real life endings are not so tidy. They only end with the author deciding that it is over. 

In fact, Farris' career change and close relationship with Marco occurs in the middle of the book. So there is a lot of pain, stress, and anguish left to go for Farris to reveal.


Even Farris' career change is written realistically. During her first visit, Farris isn't even sure that she likes Yoga. Her minivan with its "MINIDVA" license plate clashes with Priuses and Subarus and their "Kindness Counts" and "Coexist" bumper stickers. She remembers the old Sesame Street sketch, "One of These Things is Not Like the Others." 

She also felt uncomfortable doing poses. She muttered sarcastic comments under her breath and dreamt of walking out. But then she got past the initial discomfort, and began to use many of the practices such as writing about her issues in her daily life. She remembered how much she loved writing. An instructor also told her that "how we are on the mat is how we are in life…If we want to make change in our lives, the mat is the place to practice. It is where transformation begins."


Yoga however is not a quick fix or a bandaid for Farris' life. Her blog title 12 Months to Zen(nish) says it all. Farris still had to deal with depression, anger at her ex, bad dates, and the stress of single motherhood. An hour on a mat isn't going to change that. However, yoga gave Farris the capability to move forward in her professional and personal life. 


Farris also has to deal with stresses with her family and romantic relationships. She learned some surprises about her parents that caused her to rethink how she viewed them, particularly her distant mother. It also caused her to rethink how she raised her daughters. The realization that her parents and by extension herself are human and are more than they thought allowed her to become closer to Sienna and Sylvie.


Farris's relationship with her daughters and Yoga practice helped strengthen her in one of her biggest challenges. This also proves that life, unlike literature, can throw things at us even when we think that the plot ends on a high note. No sooner did Farris, Marco, and their blended family come together, wedding bells were on the horizon, then they were hit with a health scare that shook them into another troubling crisis. This health scare also changes the tone of the book. It started out as a seriocomic memoir about a divorced woman starting over but becomes a tearjerker about facing hardship and illness just when you least expect it.


Sometimes with memoirs and autobiographies, the book can't always end with a happy finale. Sometimes the end of a life is the end of the book. Sometimes, the only lesson that we can learn is to find the courage and strength to move on.

Saturday, April 10, 2021

Weekly Reader: Bound by P.L. Sullivan; Brilliant Concept and Strong Female Lead (or Leads) Make Up For The At Times Confusing Plot



Weekly Reader: Bound by P.L. Sullivan; Brilliant Concept and Strong Female Lead (or Leads) Make Up For The At Times Confusing Plot

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: One thing that I will say about Bound by P.L. Sullivan is that its concept is incredibly intriguing and original. It involves a woman from a seemingly violent race who has another personality surgically attached to her and she is required to commit violence in the name of another world. It's a strange concept but science fiction allows us to imagine the impossible and Bound excels at that.


In a world of Polis, Adin Rayne is a Keld. That basically means in her home world with it's rigidity, laws, and preference for nonviolent conflict, Adin is well an outlier to say the least. The Keld are held under suspicion because they appear to have violent and sociopathic tendencies. In fact, Adin, as a nursery school child, was responsible for the death of one of her caregivers. The authorities have the bright idea to channel those violent tendencies and have her serve in their military peacekeeper organization. Her violent tendencies are even further curbed by her being mentally  bound to another girl at the point of death named Shennan. Shennan is supposed to calm Adin's more violent nature into something more diplomatic. 


Decades later, Adin and Shennan are sent to investigate a strange disorder called The Mad or Rills. Rills spread from planet to planet afflicting people with insanity. Insanity becomes a contagion and anyone could be affected. It's a tough assignment, one that causes a lot of problems for Adin/Shennan and their colleagues, friends, and family. It is a very painful disorder in which glyphs appear on the victim's face and they act in a violent thoughtless manner.


This is one of those science fiction novels with an incredibly confusing plot. Sometimes it's hard to tell who is fighting who, who all the players are, and what side they are on. It's one of those books were you expect a traitor because everyone is pretty much suspect. Unfortunately, unlike Centricity which is well written enough to make the Reader go back and decipher what they missed, the density of Bound's plot doesn't leave enough interest to do that. The revelation of the Rills' origin is someone hard to follow as well whether they are organic or man made and act according to their own survival instincts or someone else's orders.


However what the plot lacks in coherence, it makes up for a very baffling and intriguing concept, particularly within the characters of Adin and Shennan. The bound is sort of like having Dissociative Identity Disorder except the other personality is surgically inserted inside the body. However, the bound goes one step further. When one woman sleeps or is shut down, the other takes over. They are able to communicate telepathically even when one is asleep and the other awake. They share each other's thoughts, memories, and know one another's associates, friends, and lovers. What is particularly impressive is that when one personality is ascendant, the body changes appearance to reflect which one is in charge. So they can go from short androgynous dark haired Adin to tall sexy blond Shennan within a conversation.


What is most fascinating with this concept of binding is that we see how this affects  both Adin and Shennan. The bound brings out their most positive and negative attributes. Adin is the more action gung ho fighter. When it comes time to investigate trouble on a planet, guns ablazing, she's your woman. She has a strategic military thought process and doesn't mind using it by leaving a few bodies in her wake. 

Shennan is the diplomat. She is the one called on to negotiate with planetary leaders and speak to superior officers in the calm rational manner that Adin lacks. Shennan is the talker and Adin is the doer.

There are times when their morals and values flip flop. Shennan's cold nature and determination to meet an assignment to the finish sometimes clashes with Adin's concerns about the living element and what the cost is to all involved.


Shennan and Adin's dichotomy is expertly explores in terms of their relationships. Adin is more reserved and had an on again/off again lover. Shennan however is more sexually adventurous and has had male and female lovers. Some of the more moving chapters occur between Adin and Shennan and Shennan's former lovers, including Cale, a man with whom she broke his heart when they were in the Academy, and Lyssa, a woman who Shennan considers her greatest love.


With the Bound, Sullivan raises some interesting themes and questions about the nature of violence. In some ways, the book is similar to A Clockwork Orange in that if someone is brutally forced to give up their violent nature then does that make it right? Adin and Shennan are not a whole person. They are two halves of one person unable to function without each other. In their insistence in using Shennan to end Adin's violence, the Polis prove to care very little about the cost on these two women or their emotional and psychological states. They also seem to have little regard for what their orders mean to the other planets and their citizens. Their authoritarian nature ends up being colder, more violent, and more sociopathic than anything that Adin would have thought of on her own.


Bound is sometimes hard to follow but its concept and characterization are incredible. Anyone who reads to it will be Bound to have an intriguing thoughtful suspenseful time.



Tuesday, January 26, 2021

New Book Alert: The Unexpected Leader by Joel Sadhanad; Inside Look at Corporation, Leadership, Rivalries, and Artificial Intelligence



 New Book Alert: The Unexpected Leader by Joel Sadhanad; Inside Look at Corporation, Leadership, Rivalries, and Artificial Intelligence

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: It's an understatement to say the the corporate business world as we know it is dealing with great change. With a global pandemic putting jobs and lives at risk, automation and remote working making offices superfluous even unnecessary, even well known brands struggling to find consumers, and changes in regulations, standards, sustainability, goals, and structures that affect everyone from the highest CEO to the lowest level worker, businesses are at a level of uncertainty on how to look towards their future.


Joel Sadhanad's novel, The Unexpected Leader, looks at the changing look at businesses in this transition period. Sadhanad expertly gives us an insider look at the world inside these corporations and the strategies, rivalries, leadership, and wide reaching decisions that affect businesses and the people that work within them on the eve of a certain pandemic.


The book is set in 2019 as WHO is murmuring warnings about the potential for a global pandemic and the need for emergency preparedness. The plot involves various characters throughout India who intersect through their involvement in the business world, showing that despite jokes and assumptions, corporations are not soulless entities. They are made of people, people who distribute, sell, and provide goods and services and others who purchase and rely on them.


There is Bhagwan Das, a senior editor and journalist is keeping one eye on this potential pandemic crisis and one eye on the business world around him. Aryan Rajput, a sales associate attends a demonstration of frighteningly human androids and learns a new trendy buzz word "leadfluencer" (achieving results through relationships and removing the problems that prevent team members from performing their jobs effectively.)

 Ajith Ramprasand,CEO of Good Morning, a fictitious coffee empire,  contemplates placing automation in his coffee shops instead of "burning money" by hiring inefficient middle managers. Anil Ramprasand, Ajith's younger brother doesn't mind engineering Big Brother's removal from Good Morning and taking his place.

Neha Singh, an ambitious young assistant regional manager, dreams of getting promoted, owning her own franchise of coffee shops, and getting married in that order. 


Sadhanad does an excellent job of humanizing these characters and offering their alternative points of view. No one is necessarily seen as right or wrong in their views and the majority of the characters make valid points with their words and are completely understandable within the context of their background and personalities. The Ramprasand Brothers for example differ on the directions that they want to take Good Morning. Anil is somewhat avaricious and duplicitous in his methods (like poaching Ajith's entire management team) but he doesn't want to ignore the human elements towards business. Ajith is fascinated with Artificial Intelligence, partly because of the cost in hiring and firing human employees, but he is a benevolent employer. He trains Neha to head a new franchise and personally walks her through a speech.


Aryan and Neha are the two most interesting characters in the book. Aryan tries to implement many of the leadership goals into his daily life and notices when others,like the Prime Minister, seem to lack them. He is fascinated by how AI has evolved to the point that a neural network can be created of a person's personality and mindsets. He is also understandably nervous about the implications of humans being replaced. He is also a family man who is protective of his daughter who has Wilson's Disease.


By far the standout character in this ensemble is Neha. A feminist whose fiance has very backwards views towards women, Neha is determined to do her best at her job. When she is given her own franchise, later dubbed Warm Hugs, she is naturally excited about the prospect but nervous about the new responsibilities. She and Ajith have a sweet mentor-protegee relationship as he helps her prepare for her first meeting. She is the voice of any job seeker who is waiting for that big break and becomes a bundle of nerves when they receive it. However when given the chance, she brims with confidence and bright ideas that cause her to excel.


Of course The Unexpected Leader opens up about the terrifying clouds on the horizon including the possibility of artificial intelligence replacing everyone even those on the top administrative positions. If they get replaced, then there is no hope for the people on the bottom level. Then the whispers of a virus from China get louder, especially when some of the characters take a trip there and Aryan's daughter develops a troubling fever.


The Unexpected Leader shows the Reader the crossroads which businesses found themselves and are still inside. Sadhanad shows a world that is in the process of great change and will probably never be the same again.