Showing posts with label Non-fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Non-fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Barbara O'Neill's Forgotten Home Remedies Apothecary: The Mega Encyclopedia of 500+ Remedies 4 Books in 1 by Margaret Willowbrook; The Ultimate Air Fryer Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days of Crispy, Flavorful, & Guilt-Free Recipes to Revolutionize Your Cooking and Satisfy Every Craving-Perfect for Newbies and Seasoned Chefs by Lionel Miller; 2025 Crock Pot Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days Super Easy and Delicious Slow Cooker Recipes Book for Every Home-Cooked Meals (sic), from Breakfast to Desserts, Lunch and Dinner By Mathildetru Lauruiridsen

 Barbara O'Neill's Forgotten Home Remedies Apothecary: The Mega Encyclopedia of 500+ Remedies 4 Books in 1 by Margaret Willowbrook; The Ultimate Air Fryer Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days of Crispy, Flavorful, & Guilt-Free Recipes to Revolutionize Your Cooking and Satisfy Every Craving-Perfect for Newbies and Seasoned Chefs by Lionel Miller; 2025 Crock Pot Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days Super Easy and Delicious Slow Cooker Recipes Book for Every Home-Cooked Meals (sic), from Breakfast to Desserts, Lunch and Dinner By Mathildetru Lauruiridsen

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews


Barbara O'Neill's Forgotten Home Remedies Apothecary: The Mega Encyclopedia of 500+ Remedies 4 Books in 1 by Margaret Willowbrook 

Barbara O'Neill's Forgotten Home Remedies Apothecary by Margaret Willowbrook is a detailed book that gives Readers various natural herbs, teas, tonics, and others for various illnesses and injuries. 

The introduction shows us O’Neill’s commitment to holistic healing and what Willowbrook called “a journey of self-discovery and nurturing.” The four books focus on Daily Wellness, Women and Men's Herbal Health, Skin, Hair, and Beauty Apothecary and Family Wellness and Children's Remedies. This shows the many ways that natural healing remedies work.

The Daily Wellness Book includes such remedies for ailments such as: Ginger and Honey Cold Syrup for Immunity Strength, Elderberry and Peppermint Tea for Immunity Boosting, Clove and Cinnamon Warming Infusion for Antiviral and Antibacterial, Maca and Astragalus Powder for Daily Vitality, Green and Lemon Tea for Brain Energizer, Reishi and Ginseng Tonic to Rejuvenate the Body and Mind, Dandelion and Mint Liver Detox Tea for Comfort and Relief, Anise and Fennel Carminative Tonic to Reduce Gas and Bloating, and Lemon Balm and Rosemary Powder for Digestion.

The Women's and Men's Herbal Health Book includes such remedies as: Nettle and Red Clover Tea for Hormonal Support, Chasteberry and Licorice Root Powder for Women's Balance, Raspberry Leaf and Spearmint Tea for Fertility Support, Shatavari and Goji Berry Tonic for Women's Wellness, Lemon Balm and Black Cohosh Tonic for Menopause Support, Rhodiola and Schisandra Blend for Endurance and Stamina, Hibiscus and Ginger Tea for Morning Energy, Fo-Ti and Turmeric Tonic for Resilience, Maca and Ginseng Powder for Men's Reproductive Stamina.

Skin, Hair, and Beauty Apothecary includes remedies such as: Chamomile and Aloe Cleanser for Gentle Skin, Rosehip and Vitamin E for Moisturizer, Green Clay and Lavender Face Mask for for Skin Care, Coconut Milk and Honey Conditioner for Hair Care, Argan and Rosemary Conditioning Oil for the Scalp, Vanilla and Olive Oil Lip Balm, Pomegranate and Argan Oil for Anti-Aging, and Vitamin C and Aloe Eye Serum for Hydration.

Family Wellness and Children's Remedies include such remedies as: Catnip and Chamomile Tea for Sleepy Time, Thyme and Lemon Syrup for Respiratory Support, Calendula and Shea Butter Balm for Eczema Relief, Holy Basil and Nettle Tea for Family Immunity, Thyme and Rosemary Steam for Antiviral, Fennel and Peppermint Tea for Family Digestive Support, Chamomile and Lavender Syrup for Improving Sleep Quality, Plantain and Coconut Salve for Minor Cuts, Bruises, and Abrasions, and Lemon and Mint Cool Compress for Headache Relief.

The Forgotten Home Remedies Apothecary is the type of book that anyone who studies homeopathic remedies and natural holistic medicines should never be without.


The Ultimate Air Fryer Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days of Crispy, Flavorful, & Guilt-Free Recipes to Revolutionize Your Cooking and Satisfy Every Craving-Perfect for Newbies and Seasoned Chefs by Lionel Miller

Lionel Miller’s The Ultimate Air Fryer Cookbook for Beginners is a delicious book that offers flavorful recipes that make the most of this particular kitchen appliance, the air fryer.

The introduction talks about maintaining healthy diets without sacrificing flavor. It offers a versatile selection of meals and a joyful cooking experience. Readers can use their creativity and efficiency to cook diverse meals.

The recipes include various meals such as: Easy Buttermilk Biscuits for Breakfast, Beef Jerky for Family Favorites, Easy Cinnamon Toast for Fast and Easy Everyday Favorites, Hamburger Steak with Mushroom Gravy for Beef, Pork, and Lamb, Thanksgiving Turkey Breast for Poultry, Garlic Shrimp for Fish and Seafood, Greek Yogurt Deviled Eggs for Snacks and Appetizers, Air-Fried Okra for Vegetables and Sides, Crispy Tofu for Vegetarian Mains, and Chocolate Cake for Desserts.

The Ultimate Air Fryer Cookbook is a brilliant addition to any cook’s recipe collection.





2025 Crock Pot Cookbook for Beginners: 2000 Days Super Easy and Delicious Slow Cooker Recipes Book for Every Home-Cooked Meals (sic), from Breakfast to Desserts, Lunch and Dinner By Mathildetru Lauruiridsen

Mathildetru Lauruiridsen’s 2025 Crock Pot Cookbook for Beginners provides healthy suggestions for those who want a  slow moving home cooked meal.

The introduction extols the low and steady cooking style and how it encourages savory and spicy meals with great flavor and taste. Wholesome balanced meals can be made with minimal effort. Lean proteins, whole grains, and vegetables can lead to nutritional food. The crock pot is a time saver since people can put the food in the pot, set the timer, temperature at low heat, and go through their day while the food is cooked slowly for hours. In a world where speed and immediate gratification are the norm, cooking with a crock pot gives us moments where we can slow down and appreciate a whole hearty meal.

The recipes include such meals as: Slow-Cooked Blueberry French Toast for Breakfast, Cheesy Grits Casserole for Beans and Grains, Gran’s Big Potluck for Poultry, Red Wine-Marinated Sirloin, Cajun Shrimp for Fish and Seafood, Slow-Cooked Garden Tomato Soup for Stews and Soups, Sweet & Spicy BBQ Little Smokies for Snacks and Appetizers, Onion Potatoes for Vegetables and Sides, Decadent Hot Fudge Pudding Cake for Desserts, and Italian Sausage and Pepper Hoagies for Pizzas, Wraps, and Sausages.

The Crock Pot for Beginners is a steady cookbook that presents wholesome and hearty meals for those who are looking for nutritious meals that helps them pause and savor what they eat. 



Thursday, September 12, 2019

New Book Alert: Strung Out: One Last Hit and Other Lies That Nearly Killed Me by Erin Khar; Deeply Emotional Account of Heroin Addiction, Recovery, and the Psychology Behind the Addiction




New Book Alert: Strung Out: One Last Hit and Other Lies That Nearly Killed Me by Erin Khar; Deeply Emotional Account of Heroin Addiction, Recovery, and the Psychology Behind the Addiction




By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Spoilers: It is interesting that I am reviewing Erin Khar’s Strung Out: One Last Hit and Other Lies That Nearly Killed Me for this blog at the same time that I am reviewing The United States of Opioids by Harry Nelson for another site. Both books illustrate how large the Opioid Crisis has become and how it affects both society and the individual. The latter book is a dry fact based account of the Crisis and how it began as well as the various institutions and people that put the Crisis in motion. What it lacks is the personal and the individual case story of people with addictions. It sacrifices the details for the picture of the crisis at large.

Erin Khar's memoirs fills that need. It fills in the details and makes the Opioid Crisis personal. It tells the story of Khar's struggles with drug addiction as well as the mindset that led her down this path as well as her recovery from her addiction.

Khar, a radio advice columnist, was inspired to write this memoir after watching a news report on opioid addiction with her then-twelve-year-old son, Atticus. Atticus asked if his Mom ever had taken drugs. Khar was stunned at the question and hoped that she would never have this conversation with her son, so she could maintain his innocence. She explained why people became addicted and realized that she had to open up about her own past.

Khar writes the mindset of a person with an addiction really well. One way that she accomplishes that is by showing the reasons behind the addiction. Many people think that the addiction is the problem, full stop. When a person breaks their addiction, then they will be fine. Khar's writing shows that is not always the case.

Even before she first sneaked Darvocet from her grandmother's medicine cabinet, Khar was beset with problems that made her young life impossible. Her parents’ divorce along with her father's behavior in trying to buy her love with material possessions and her mother's involvement with an abusive boyfriend traumatized her. Khar had low self-esteem and even as young as four years old, she cut herself and held notions of suicide.

Throughout her young life, Khar derided herself as “ugly” and a “monster,” feeling insults from other children and rejection from boys deeply.
In a later chapter, Khar encountered an old family friend and had a panic attack. She remembered that he molested her when she was four years old and blamed herself ever since. These incidents reveal the lost soul that Khar was before she stole the Darvocet and injected heroin with her boyfriend at 13 and began an addiction that claimed her teen and young adult years.

Khar's book is graphic in its detail about her addiction and how it affected her friendships and romances. Through high school, Khar lived the exterior of the perfect A+ student who was a cheerleader, volleyball player, and horseback rider. In her spare time, she swallowed pills from friend's medicine cabinets, cut herself, took heroin, and slept with her boyfriend, Ted. Much of Khar's retreat into her addiction stemmed from her trying to act like the perfect student in front of everyone so she could hide the pain underneath. Readers with addictions and psychiatric disorders will completely understand this exhausting masquerade that they use to hide the lost soul underneath.

After her grandmother's death when she was fifteen, Khar withdrew from her egocentric father and depressed mother and explored the night life in ‘90’s downtown L.A. that involved her going to clubs, dating several unappealing men, and of course frequent drug use. She lost many of her friends and boyfriends. Ted and Khar broke up after Sam, Ted's cousin and another drug user that she was seeing on the side, died of an aneurysm. Her best friend Ellen, with whom Khar saw many rock bands, broke up with her after she spent too much time with another boyfriend, Ian. Ian, an older man, ended things with her because they were far apart in age (though Khar suspected that he was seeing someone else.). The breakups sent Khar in an even further downward spiral as she experimented with crystal meth and pills.

She dated a drug dealer named Mike-Jim (“He said his name was Mike, but really it was Jim or the other way around,” Khar said) so he could supply her with her new drug of choice,crystal meth. Another unstable boyfriend, Will admitted that he put thirty phenobarbital in her spaghetti after she broke up with him.
These chapters grimly show how each break up, each disappointment, and each instance of abuse and mistreatment can bruise an already fragile personality. To cope, sometimes a person with an addiction can use that as a reason to continue their addiction.

Even when she tried to find a fresh start, Khar was surrounded by her old demons. She spent some time in Paris attending Sorbonne University, going to cafés and museums, making new friends, and trying her best to break her addiction. She became involved with Vincent, a Frenchman, who eventually moved to Los Angeles with her. When she discovered that he hadn't broken up with his old girlfriend, he moved out and she relapsed back into heroin.

In 1997, during the height of the so-called “heroin chic” trend, Vincent and Khar’s mother forced her into rehab. While she tried to follow the twelve-step program to the letter and bonded with many of her fellow patients, her addiction was never truly far behind. A friend at the rehab overdosed during his release and she was too terrified of a relapse to go help him, sending her mother instead.
When she was caught between two men, she missed heroin and returned to the drug.

During a psychiatric session with her mother, Khar's PTSD from her earlier molestation was mentioned. Her mother's denial of the events sent Khar into depression and a return to cutting as well as the drugs.
It is truly heart-breaking to read about this woman travelling from place to place, friend to friend, lover to lover hoping to break her addiction. But the seemingly endless cycle continues and she once again finds herself alone and reaching for the needle or the bottle.

There are some truly chilling moments that reveal how a drug addiction can be unpredictable and frightening, to the point that a person with an addiction can't trust their own mind, body, or the people around them. During rehab, Khar hallucinated spiders crawling up and down her room.

After she and her friend, Diana, had shot up, Khar accidentally o.d.’ed, to the point that she almost died.
A pregnancy with Jack, a troubled boyfriend, ended in an abortion, but Khar continued the relationship because of the drug access they provided for each other. Khar knew the relationship was unhealthy (“The difference between us was that Jack was a drug addict and I was a mentally ill person who had an addiction,” Khar said), but stayed with him.

Many of Khar's transactions put her at the forefront of the socioeconomic gap and she realized that as a biracial woman from a wealthy family, she had advantages such as access to good rehab centers and treatment programs, that many of her fellow addicts and dealers did not.
She bought drugs from many people who were on the lower economic scale and were primarily black and Latino. She witnessed many of the unfair treatment they got such as harsher prison sentences or deportation while she and others of her background were given court appointed rehab.

In one haunting moment, Khar bought drugs from a 12-year-old African-American boy. She reasoned that a 12-year-old doesn't just wake up one day and decide to sell drugs. He sells them because he has no other options in the neighborhood in which he lives and is denied many of the employment, education, and health access that Khar had.

Khar finally kicked her addiction for good, when she was pregnant with her son, Atticus. However, many of the reasons behind her addiction such as low self-esteem and unhealthy relationships continued. Atticus’ father, Michael continued to hold her addiction over her head and refused to admit his infidelities causing Khar to solely blame herself for the end of their marriage. She also started a clothing line with a friend that fell apart so she avoided situations and her friendship ended for a time.

These last chapters reveal the end of the addiction is not the whole story, especially when the reasons behind the addiction remain. When she held Atticus for the first time, Khar repeated a mantra: I love him more than I hate myself realizing that she still had the capacity for love.

She began to make healthier choices like hanging out with better friends who encouraged her sobriety or had recovered themselves and acted as guides to aid her. She got involved with Yoga to help change her mindset and outlook. She found her gift for writing and took to blogging essays and an advice column, Ask Erin.(“She's made all the mistakes so you don't have to.”) She also fell in love with and married Seth and had a second child, Franklin finding stability and happiness in her family.

Erin Khar's book is brilliant at capturing not only a drug addiction, but the reasons and mindset that created the addiction and the resources, healing, and emotional support that one needs to make a full and complete recovery.

New Book Alert: Corruption Behind Bars: Stories of Crime and Corruption in Our American Prison System by Gary York; Gripping Eye-Opening Accounts of Criminal Activity In American Prisons



New Book Alert: Corruption Behind Bars: Stories of Crime and Corruption in Our American Prison System by Gary York; Gripping Eye-Opening Accounts of Criminal Activity In American Prisons




By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Spoilers: Gary York knows a lot about corruption in the prison system. As a Senior Prison Inspector, he spent twelve years conducting criminal, civil, and administrative investigations in many state prisons.

He wrote books on the subject and his book, Corruption Behind Bars: Stories of Crime and Corruption in Our American Prison System is a gripping account of many of the situations inside these prisons. What he found were buildings full of lawbreakers, both inmates and employees. York's book is filled with 42 chapters of such stories.

York begins his book by discussing how a prison becomes a den of more illegal activity than the outside.
“Imagine taking a group of dishonest individuals and putting them all in the same location. Now add, a few corrupt staff members…..This mixture can cause numerous illegal activities. Just one corrupt staff member...can cause a chain of events that lead to months of investigative work in order to infiltrate and dissolve the illegal activity. Corruption causes citizens to feel officers are not trustworthy and leaves them wondering who the officers are working for, the citizen or the inmate.”


In the first chapter, York chillingly explains the recruitment process that he calls “The Inmate Recruitment Game.” Once they enter the Graybar Hotel, inmates are denied certain privileges, such as drugs, sex, even simple things like a home cooked meal. They get by these restrictions by either making sure their friends get hired in the prison or, failing that, find a way to blackmail or entice a staff member. They may find information on the staff member, such as an extramarital affair or financial dirty dealing, from friends on the outside.

York's profile of these inmates show them as master manipulators. They befriend the staff member and learn secrets on them, then trick them into giving them a simple contraband item like a single cigarette or a can of beer. Then, they will ask for bigger items. If the staff member refuses, the inmate then threatens to reveal the secret they learned as well as the earlier contraband. Suddenly, the inmate has a new friend, that gives them whatever they want including illegal contraband and , lo and behold, the corrupt inmates and employees rule the Big House.

One chapter in York's book illustrates this concept clearly. Helen, a classification officer, supervised inmate orderlies in a move from her old office to a new one.
A handsome inmate began smiling at her. She smiled back in a more flirtatious manner. The inmate then began writing her poems and painting floral pictures as gifts.

Helen was flattered by the attention and already was in trouble for not reporting the gifts. She and the inmate sneaked into the old classification office and had sex. The captain entered the office to find Helen and the inmate in flagrante delicto. The inmate was locked up in disciplinary confinement and Helen was removed from her job. However, when the inmate was transferred to another prison, Helen was added to his visitor's list.
This chapter reveals how the inmates use the staff members’ insecurities and loneliness against them. By manipulating Helen’s need for romance and telling her the right things to make her think she loved him, the inmate’s sexual needs were met.

If not sex, sometimes the inmates wanted other urges to be satisfied like their drug and alcohol addictions.
A drug treatment center was under investigation from York for this very reason. York searched the financial records and discovered that there were frequent requests for new window screens. York learned that male offenders often broke through the screens, either to be with female offenders or to pick up drugs that friends and family members dropped off in the woods outside the treatment center.
The male offenders picked up the drugs and entered the female's section through the window. The offenders engaged in sex, drinking, smoking marijuana, and taking other drugs. “They were angels by day and vampires by night,” York observed. The entire program was shut down and the officers and other staff members were relocated.

Women's prisons can also be hotbeds for contraband. Many of the items demanded are things to enhance an inmate's femininity, such as make up, perfume, and jewelry, particularly tongue rings. In a women's prison, York discovered that two female officers made extra money on the side by bringing the inmates tongue rings and name brand makeup. The makeup was provided to replace the generic makeup approved by the prison and hated by the inmates. The tongue rings were a fashion statement because they were stylish and cool and also because the inmates used the tongue rings on each other for oral sexual pleasure and arousal. After York confiscated the tongue rings and makeup, he learned the names of the officers from the inmates. The officers resigned and surrendered their correctional officer certifications for life.
Sometimes the officers are just as corrupt as the employees as York shows in his chapter involving Florida's former Department of Corrections Secretary James Crosby. Crosby hosted wild parties with bigwigs, booze, and girls. He and other officials accepted kickbacks from private vendors and state funds. Other officials imported and sold steroids to give to the prison softball team. Crosby also protected officers who abused and intimidated inmates and staff.
Many of Crosby's cohorts were exposed and investigated. Some came clean particularly about the steroid use and the parties. Eventually in 2006, Florida governor, Jeb Bush ordered Crosby to resign. He agreed to plead guilty for accepting kickbacks and was sentenced to eight years in a federal prison.
The chapter on Crosby shows what happens when a prison official is as corrupt and scheming as the inmates. When that happens, the whole system can fall apart when citizens can't trust that law officers will protect them.

Sometimes the favors that staff members grant inmates seem innocuous but are symbols of power one has over them. This is particularly true for Warden David Farcas of the Charlottesville Correctional Institution. Farcas recruited captains, officers, and supervisors into what was called “The Family” a small group of prison officials who did favors for each other like covering up abuse. While inmates spoke up against the mistreatment, authorities did not take their claims seriously. Officers were supposed to testify as well, but the officers were too afraid of “The Family” to protest.
Farcas also granted favors to prisoners that he liked such as letting some use his cell phone to make long distance calls. In his previous position, Farcas gave an inmate and his father a steak dinner. He later had the same inmate transferred to Charlottesville.
One of the more bizarre favors that Farcas granted the inmates was to invite a skydiving team land on the prison compound during their annual Christian program. It is forbidden to allow airplanes to enter a prison without receiving approval from the State Capitol, conducting background checks on those who use the plane, and searching the plane for contraband or potential escapees. Farcas sidestepped these regulations and granted the skydiving team permission for no motive but to show off his power and prove that he could grant such a huge favor.
The Inspector General's office received various complaints on Farcas’ behavior from inmates and officers who were willing to talk about the Family's doings. Farcas was removed from his position, but temporarily received a new wardenship at Cross City Correctional Institution during the rise of Secretary James Crosby (see above). When Crosby resigned, Farcas was one of several prison employees terminated by Governor Jeb Bush’s actions to end illegal activity in Florida's prisons.

Juvenile correctional facilities also have their share of illegal activity going on inside those walls. In Hillsborough Correctional Institution, The young offenders got into fights, arming themselves with broom handles and padlocks as makeshift weapons. Warden Roderick James declared “If you want to act like animals, then you will be treated as animals.” Officers then handcuffed the young men to a chain link fence then laughed as a thunderstorm poured down on the boys.
James ordered the officers to use pepper spray on any dissenters. The inmates spent the night on the gymnasium floor handcuffed on the basketball court floor and sleeping on thin mattresses. The young men spent 33 hours handcuffed, before being released.
The inmates and officers, lieutenants, a major, the assistant warden, and the prison chaplain all testified that James ordered the punishment. James denied being involved in punishing the boys, but his attendance on the court log told a different story. James was demoted, suspended for a few days, and transferred to Avon Park Correctional Institution where he was eventually promoted to warden once again.
This chapter highlights a heart-breaking reality in America's prisons that sometimes when officers are caught breaking the laws that they swore to protect, unfortunately they receive very little punishment.

York's book is an eye opening look inside prisons where instead of rehabilitating and receiving second chances, the people on both sides of the law are often guilty of doing more of the same.

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

New Book Alert: Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell; Charming and Funny Look At the Life of a Scottish Bookseller






New Book Alert: Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell; Charming and Funny Look At the Life of a Scottish Bookseller

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Shaun Bythell's Confessions of a Bookseller is not long on plot. In fact there is hardly any plot in the book. Instead this sequel to Bythell's previous book, Diary of a Bookseller has plenty of charm, humor, witticisms, and eccentric characters that would be unbelievable in fiction were they not real people.

Bythell owns and operates The Book Shop, Wigtown the largest second hand bookshop in Scotland. This book covers 2015, a year in which he dealt with quirky colleagues, eccentric customers, and the difficulties of running a book store.

Bythell was surrounded by a colorful group of colleagues that could have come out of fiction themselves. There is Granny, an Italian woman, who earned the nickname because she talked about aches and pains and talked about death. Another one is Petra who rented the upstairs apartment to host belly dancing classes. (“Shake, Read, and Roll” would make a good slogan.)

One of the stand outs in this kooky cast is Nicky, Bythell's main employee. She arrived fashionably late, wore black clothes, and brought food on Foodie Fridays (usually stuff that Bythell didn't like.). Often she and Bythell bickered about how the store was run. Nicky gave her two weeks notice once, but the two relied on each other for help and friendship.

Nicky is like most friends and co-workers. You fight, sometimes you want to see the back of each other. But you also rely on each other for loyalty, laughs, strength, and friendship.

As humorous as Bythell's colleagues are, his exchanges with customers are equally as memorable.
One of the struggles Bythell had were donations that meant more to the customers than to Bythell. Many entries feature Bythell driving several hours out of his way to investigate boxes of books only to return with less than a handful because the books were either damaged beyond repair, written by authors that are widely distributed like Dan Brown or Stephanie Meyer, or of only personal interest to the donor. (Family Bibles are out for that reason.)

Another issue the introverted Bythell often had to deal with were talkative customers, who began discussing reading habits then talk about family struggles and personal habits. “NEVER ask for an anecdote when you work in a bookshop,” warned Bythell.

One hilarious roundabout conversation occurred between Bythell and a customer who had to learn the difference between a bookshop and a library.
“Will to live rapidly diminishing,” Bythell inwardly moaned as he said for what seemed like the hundredth time that no she didn't have to return the books once she bought them.

Bythell also had to contend with weird questions asked by customers about what books he had. One asked for a childhood book that she didn't know the name but featured a koala stealing berries. Anyone who works in a book store or library will understand the vague requests. (“I don't remember the name of the book but it has a red cover.”)

Bythell also had to contend with his share of unusual requests both in person and online. One online request asked for Mein Kampf along with other pro-Nazi materials. Bythell didn't know why and didn't want to know.

There were also customers that asked for specific books about certain subjects every day from Scottish genealogy to trains. One of those types of customers was Bythell's father, an avid fisherman who always asked for books about anglers and fish.

Along with colleagues and customers, Bythell also wrote about the advertising that he did to draw in customers, particularly online where he received interest from as far away as Asia, the Americas, and the other European countries. For Christmas, he and Nicky posted two different videos and had the visitors vote on their favorite.

He also wrote about the various quotes that he and other co-workers displayed on Facebook that deal with books and reading. One of those reads “You passed by a Book Shop. Is something wrong with you?”

As much as the Internet was a boon to Bythell's business, it could also be a curse. Bythell became so irritated with customers realizing that they had books on their Kindle that he and a colleague designed and sold “Death to Kindle” mugs at the Book Shop.
In his previous book, Bythell displayed a broken Kindle on the wall of the Book Shop. The display went viral earning Bythell some extra online celebrity.

By far the most eventful time for the Book Shop is the Wigtown Book Festival which takes place during the final week in September. Bythell wrote about the planning, preparation, and organizing an event from a village of less than 100 citizens welcoming people from all over the world. Besides offering discounts, Bythell participated in various events like the Literary Quiz, the optimistically titled Wigtown's Got Talent, and the Fun Run (which he admits is an oxymoron).

While the plot of Confessions of a Bookseller is slight, there is one plot thread that dangles throughout the book. That is Bythell's relationship with his partner, Anna. Anna created different things associated with the Book Shop, like the Writer's House, which offered courses in reading, writing, and art and the Open Book, in which renters can temporarily operate and organize their own bookshop, like an Airbnb. Granny started working there.
As good as Anna was for business, and as good as she and Bythell were personally, they had differences that could not be met. In his mid-forties, Bythell wanted to start a family, Anna was much younger and did not. They broke up and Anna returned to the United States.

Some of the most moving chapters are when Bythell encountered old friends and explained why he was alone, feeling a lump in his throat. During Christmas, he sent her a cordial happy holidays email and wished he could see her in person.

Despite the quirky colleagues, odd customers, and demands on his personal time, Bythell is clearly a man who loves books and loves sharing them with others. This is shown in the first entry when he writes, “The pleasure of handling books that have introduced something of cultural or scientific significance to the world is undeniably the greatest luxury that this business affords and few -if any-
walks of life provide such a wealth of opportunity to indulge in this. This is why, every morning getting out of bed is not an anticipation of a repetitive drudge but in expectation that I may have the chance to hold in my hands a copy of something that first brought to humanity an idea that changed the course of history….That is what it's all about.”

Any of us who work with books whether selling, lending, publishing, appraising, editing, writing, teaching, or reviewing them understand completely.

Thursday, February 7, 2019

Lit List: Life-Enhancing Ideas Website Non-Fiction

Lit List: Life-Enhancing Ideas Website Non-Fiction

By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

This is to show all of you dear Readers that I have not been neglecting the blog or reading. On the contrary, I have diversified my reading and reviewing abilities to spread throughout the Internet. I am showing pages of many of the reviews that I have been working on for other sources. Most of them are smaller reviews or reviews that belong to the other site, but I am permitted to share links. If you have any books that you would like me to read and review on these sources then I would love to hear about them.

These reviews are for the blog Life-Enhancing Ideas which feature articles on education, psychology, and other means of self-improvement. The books I have and will review for this blog are non-fiction and cover education, psychology, gender studies, race relations, and business. I would like to extend a big thank you for the blog administrator Ernst Marc for giving me the chance to review these books for his blog.


1. A Kind of Mirraculas Paradise: A True Story About Schizophrenia by Sandy Allen-A moving and heartbreaking story about Allen's uncle Bob who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia from the time he was a teenager. The book is effective in writing about Bob giving us a full picture of the man as well as the illness. It also covers the difficulties that family members have in understanding such a condition.












2. Sharp: The Women Who Made An Art of Having An Opinion by Michelle Dean-A witty and memorable collection of biographies about female writers who stunned the world with their opinions, writing, and witty repartee. Dean focuses on such noted authors as Dorothy Parker, Rebecca West, Hannah Arendt, Nora Ephron and others who not only sought to change the world and get people's attention, but made sure that they always had the last word.












3. The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google by Scott Galloway- A sharp and biting look at the tech companies that have shaped our lives: Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google. Galloway reveals the corporate strategies that the companies used to take over the tech industry and become a huge part of our lives. He also shows how we can adapt to their presence.












4. The Personality Brokers: The Strange History of Myers-Briggs and the Birth of Personality Testing by Merve Emre-A brilliant and insightful biography of the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) and the women who created it. Emre neither praises nor condemns the test nor its creators, mother and daughter Katherine Cook Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers. Instead she takes a middle ground revealing its uses for career placement and relationships but also the difficulties people have of fitting themselves into tiny boxes.













Exuberance: The Passion of Life by Kay Redfield Jamison-
A fascinating look on the emotion exuberance and the people who have it. Jamison discusses various people whose exuberance led them to achieve great things like Teddy Roosevelt's commitment to conservation, Wilson Bentley who studied snowflakes, and Humphrey Davy whose love of science was only surpassed by his love of teaching. She also explores people whose sense of exuberance led them to foolish even dangerous things such as tulipmania in the 17th century and the authors F. Scott Fitzgerald and Robert Louis Stevenson who battled with alcoholism and mental illness respectively.








My Confederate Kinfolk: A Twenty First Century Freedwoman Discovers Her Roots by Thulani Davis
A fascinating biography of Thulani Davis's family. She relates her grandmother's mixed race heritage as the daughter of Chloe Tarrant Curry, the daughter of African-American former slaves and Will Campbell, a Scottish American man whose family founded Springfield, Missouri. Davis covers the couple who had a very unconventional romance for their day as well as their family members who ran the gamut from authors, to farmers, to politicians and were involved in changing the post-Civil War American South.

Friday, December 7, 2018

New Book Alert: Trailer Trash: An ‘80’s Memoir by Angie Cavallari; Totally Detailed and Radical Memoir Is Perfect For Children of The ‘80’s



New Book Alert: Trailer Trash: An ‘80’s Memoir by Angie Cavallari; Totally Detailed and Radical Memoir Is Perfect For Children of The ‘80’s

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




I have two reasons to identify with Angie Cavallari's book, Trailer Trash: An ‘80’s Memoir. 1) Like Cavallari, I was a child of the ‘80’s and spent some of that gnarly time growing up in Florida (Ft. Walton Beach to be precise) and 2) My Mom grew up in Tampa, Florida as Cavallari did. So we both understood and enjoyed many of the things Cavallari spoke of in her book.

Cavallari, her parents, sister, and brother moved to the Pelican Mobile Home Park in Tampa, Florida in 1980 where her parents managed the trailer park. Cavallari's childhood was forever linked with the park, its eccentric residents, and memories of MTV music videos, Rubik's Cubes, and E.T.

Trailer Trash doesn't have a large plot so much as it features several small moments organized into chapters with minimal dialogue. That works well for this book. Cavallari's reminisces are rich in detail and recall that bring these moments to life. When she describes the tedious task that she and her siblings had of cleaning the trailers, the Reader's nose wrinkles at the accounts of soiled sheets, drug paraphernalia, broken bottles and who really wants to know what else.

The highlight of any book set in the ‘80’s, especially for those of us who grew up in that time, is the constant parade of trends, fads, entertainment, and other signs of an ‘80’s upbringing. The book is peppered with various songs and music videos such as Genesis’ “Land of Confusion,” Debbie Gibson's “Lost in Your Eyes”, and The Bangles’ “Eternal Flame” that are probably meant to present earworms for the average Reader. Cavallari described various activities like playing on a Slip and Slide and going to a skating rink (called originally enough, the United Skates of America) as well as watching prime time shows like Thee A Team, Dukes of Hazard, and Knight Rider, and You Can't Do That on Television on Nickelodeon and Don Knott's movies on the Disney Channel. She also writes about fashion trends like extremely permed hair and large fist-sized hoop earrings. These memories will fill former ‘80’s kids with warm nostalgia or embarrassed derision (and will no doubt give children or younger relatives and friends more fuel with which to tease them.).

Cavallari also captures the Florida setting so well that my mother who is also a former resident of Tampa Bay recognized them. Cavallari frequently watched Dr. Paul Bearer, the local Creature Feature host who showed older cheesy horror movies (no doubt directed by the likes of William Castle). She also writes of visiting the Ben T. Davis Beach (AKA Tampa Bay Beach) which far from being a paradise, Cavallari considered it crowded, noisy, hot, and extremely polluted and dirty. Cavallari even states that the only thing she hated more than cleaning the mobile home units was “going to the beach with (my) Mom.”

Cavallari also captures the eccentric spirit of a state that thrives on tourism. She visited the usual theme parks such as Walt Disney World (which she described as the only place her “family behaved themselves.”) and Busch Gardens. She also acknowledges the stranger tourist sites that Central Florida had to offer like Gibsonton, a small town that was home to various carnival workers during the winter season. Cavallari described the homes with amusement park rides in their front yards and dives run by sideshow entertainers in a way that both teases them for their weirdness and respects them as people who live for standing out in the crowd and being themselves.

Cavallari also offers helpful lists including glossary terms and descriptions of the various tenants. The glossary terms offer the lingo that is used in the trailer park as well as nearby Gibsonton. The glossaries are hilarious and helpful with terms such as “Mobile Homes” (what the residents prefer to call trailers) or “TPD” (the Tampa Police Department who seemingly get called in at least once a day.) The Gibsonton section is rich in terms like such as “Mark” (people who attend carnivals so named because the employees could easily con them to take part in the rigged games) and brilliantly foreshadows the Cavallari's eventual move to Gibtown (Gibsonton to the locals).

The residents are also described in a list format which focuses on their oddities making them a bizarre memorable bunch. They range from Florence who wore halter tops and no brassieres and was often seen walking to and from the liquor store to “Drive-Thru Bob” who was the first person Cavallari met who had an emergency tracheotomy and Bob’s wife, Alice, who was an expert in all things sitcom and would often describe various episodes in great detail. The Pelican Mobile Home Park appeared to be an odd assortment of alcoholism, drug addiction, and peculiar traits that could be signs of mental illness. It's no wonder that many of the tenants would eventually die of heart disease, natural causes and other means. These deaths would eventually cause the Cavallari's family to move and apparently traumatized her so much that she would later recall them in great detail and abandon in her book.

Cavallari captures her youth brilliantly. The end appears to set up a sequel in which the family moved from the trailer park to Gibsonton. I look forward to another trip down Cavallari's memory lane.

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Weekly Reader: Six Women of Salem: The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials by Marilynne K. Roach; Definitive Account of the Salem Witch Trials Individualizes The People Involved



Weekly Reader: Six Women of Salem: The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials by Marilynne K. Roach; Definitive Account of the Salem Witch Trials Individualizes The People Involved

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Of the hundreds of accounts of the Salem Witch Trials, two books stand as the definitive account: The Witches, Salem 1692 by Stacy Schiff is one. It is a comprehensive account of the Trials, covering the people and the events and analyzes the potential reasoning behind it by offering social, psychological, physical, and religious motivations.




Six Women of Salem: The Untold Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials by Marilynne K. Roach is the other. Instead of being a comprehensive account of the entire event, Roach personalizes it. She focuses on six individuals to show how the Trials affected specific people. While she offers some theories, they narrow in comparison to the immediacy of how lives were destroyed by accusing others and being victims of the accusations.




Roach wisely selected six different women from various social statuses, families, and that stood on different sides in the Trial. They were:




Rebecca Nurse-An elderly woman with a large supportive family. She often helped many people in the Village through troubled child births and illnesses. Despite her good reputation, her family was involved in various lawsuits against another family: The Putnams who became their sworn enemies. Despite the petitions from her family to have her exonerated, she was arrested, tried, and executed by hanging.




Bridget Bishop-A tough poor woman who had a bad temper and three marriages. One of her marriages was abusive and she was forced to stand in the pillory after she defended herself. She was also known to be somewhat bawdy and wore a red petticoat to the dismay of many of her fellow Puritans. Like Nurse, she was arrested, tried, and executed by hanging.




Mary English-A well-to-do woman, she married a man from Jersey who Anglicised his name from Philippe L’Anglais to Phillip English. She was one of the wealthiest families in Salem, but was distrusted because of her wealth and immigrant status. She was arrested and tried along with her husband, but thanks to some influential friends and money, they managed to escape.




Ann Putnam Sr.-The wife of Thomas Putnam and mother of Annie Putnam Jr., one of the afflicted girls. Putnam suffered many stillbirths and infant deaths, becoming afflicted herself and blamed her troubles on her family's enemies, the Nurse family, specifically Rebecca. Her daughter, Annie, became one of the star witnesses identifying people from nearby towns such as Andover and Lynn. After the Trials, Putnam’s daughter Annie was the only one of the accusers to make a public apology after her parents’ deaths.




Tituba-A slave in the home of Rev. Samuel Parris, the first afflicted family. Despite the theories of many, Roach’s book shows that she did not practice fortune telling to frighten the girls and only resorted to folk magic once at the behest of a white neighbor to make a “witch’s cake” to identify the tormentor of the afflictions. Despite this, she was fingered by the girls as the perpetrator and she in turn named two other outcasts: Sarah Goode, a beggar and Sarah Osborne, a woman who had a common law arrangement with a lover. Despite implicating others, Tituba remained in prison throughout the Trials and was eventually sold by Parris to pay off the prison debt that accrued during her confinement.




Mary Warren-A servant girl in the home of John and Elizabeth Proctor. She may have been one of the girls who engaged in fortune telling (by putting a shattered egg in a glass and seeing an image of the man she was to marry. One of the girls believed to be either Rev. Parris’ daughter, Betty or niece, Abigail saw a coffin.). She became one of the accusers who claimed to be haunted by the Devil and named her employers as well as various other people. Though she was eventually tried for witchcraft herself, she continued to accuse others while still in prison. After the Trials, she was released and disappeared from history.




In limiting the accounts to just these six women, Roach makes the accounts of the Trial more personal and intimate. She writes about the women's backgrounds and their various behaviors throughout the Trials. They also show that the accusations could fall on anyone. A woman who was considered a pillar of the community like Nurse, could be tried as a witch just as easily as a woman who previously had a rough reputation like Bishop. Roach showed the innocent lives that were ruined by religious paranoia and fear mongering that led to false accusations and executions or acquired reputations as accused witches.




Roach also engages in some literary techniques. At the beginning and ending of each chapter, Roach writes italicized sections that go into the character’s minds. She admits that these sections are just wishful thinking, but she is able to fill in the blanks with possibilities regarding their motivations and thoughts during their imprisonments.




Tituba in particular benefited from this approach. Because so little is known about her historically, Roach only had a few records and her imagination to go on. Many historians don't know where she came from originally (though Parris purchased her in Barbados), the proper spelling of her name, or what manner of name Tituba is since there are variations in various South American and West African countries. They are even uncertain whether Tituba was black or fully black. Since many of the court documents describe her as “Tituba Indian” or “Tituba, an Indian woman” rather than the usual epithets to describe a black person, it's possible that she may have hailed from South America originally and may have been a First Nation Native American woman or at least mixed race.




Roach’s writings portray Tituba as a woman caught up in a “damned if you do, damned if you don't” situation. She was at the mercy of her white owners and was bound by their laws and morals, having little say in the matter. In the sections depicting Titus's thoughts, she is given the option of either saying she isn't a witch and being beaten severely before her execution or confessing and never being trusted by her master and being sold anyway. While some may have criticized Tituba’s confession as the spark that lit the fire, Roach clearly understood that she was considered the lowest rung in a society that cared very little about her and considered her property. It makes her actions understandable that she would implicate people who had little opinion for her. Also in her presumed confessions, she would insist that “Satan wanted her to hurt the girls,” which she refused, Tituba painted herself as someone who loved the young girls in her care and wanted to protect them even though they named her.




The book also takes us into the eyes of both accusers and accused, the ones who claimed to be afflicted and the ones that were tried as witches, particularly Mary Warren and Anne Putnam Sr. Like reading books about the Holocaust or other terrible periods in history, it is important to understand why people act the way they do. Why did people feel it was their right to consider other people property? Why did they acquire such a low opinion of Jewish people that they were able to send them to death camps without a thought then insisting they were only following orders? And why did people believe so badly they were cursed by the Devil that they had to find someone to blame and that included their friends, family, and neighbors?




While many debate whether the afflicted were affected by mass hysteria, ergotism, or were simply faking it, Roach portrays Warren and Putnam as sincere in their beliefs that the Devil was cursing them. Putnam believed that the deaths of her infant children were the results of God’s punishment for sin in the village. A fear of God's wrath and punishment can cause people to see the Devil everywhere even in those they know.

For Mary Warren, she believed that something was affecting her. While that something more than likely was religious anxiety as well as untreated or unverified at the time mental illness, Warren more than likely stuck to the party line that she was cursed by witches out of fear and confusion. By the time the Trials continued, she and Putnam, as well as the others, were so far gone that to stop would be an admission of guilt. To fully understand history, you have to understand why people did horrible things so they can never be repeated.




Six Women of Salem is an excellent book that brings human faces to this long ago troubling time in history and shows who they were and how they acted and showed they really weren't that different from who we are today.

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Weekly Reader: Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination by Neal Gabler; A Comprehensive Biography About The Good and The Bad of The Man Who Taught Us All To Wish Upon a Star




Weekly Reader: Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination by Neal Gabler; A Comprehensive Biography About The Good and The Bad of The Man Who Taught Us All To Wish Upon a Star

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Like the subject of last week's biography, Barbie, the image of Walt Disney and the company he produced are what we put into them. Are Disney's products beautiful works of art and offer a sense of magic, escapism, and wish fulfillment to those who come into contact with them? Are they over commercialized pieces of tripe that distort the original stories from which they came turning them into sentimental nonsense? What about Walt Disney himself? Was he a brilliant artist who created wonderful characters and worlds? Was he an anti-Semitic perfectionist who peddled mindless drivel to the masses?




Neal Gabler's comprehensive biography of Disney gives us both sides to his character: the creative innovator and the driven perfectionist. Like many people, he was neither good nor bad and Gabler gives us this multifaceted look at him.




No matter what we feel about Disney and his creations, what can be agreed upon is that they are pure escapism. Whether you ride the rides at the Disney park, watch your favorite animated feature for the hundredth time, or laugh at the antics of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and their friends you are transported to another vibrant, clean, beautiful, and hopeful world. This theme of escapism is not coincidental. In fact, Gabler’s book shows that this was a theme that Disney had been looking for his whole life.




Even though Disney was born in Chicago in 1901, he and his family moved to Marceline, Missouri when he was four. Even though Disney's father was a hard taskmaster, he had an idyllic childhood in Marceline. Gabler’s writing showed Disney’s childhood years as one of playing with friends, studying at school, and exploring nature. Disney would return to his nostalgic feelings about Marceline and recreate that childhood town or towns just like it in movies like So Dear To My Heart and Pollyanna and on the Main Street U.S.A. section at Disneyland.




Disney's early career showed the beginnings of his tremendous talent and his detached nature. He created early characters like Oswald The Lucky Rabbit, the precursor to his later characters. One of his most creative early works were the Alice Comedies, which depicted a live-action girl interacting with animated characters.

Unfortunately, those early years also taught Disney a lesson about betrayal. Charles Mintz, one of Disney's colleagues signed a contract with Universal Pictures giving him the rights to Oswald and taking Disney out of the loop. This moment would become the groundwork for Disney's guarded personality and suspicions towards his employees.




Disney's desire for escape and imagination not only came into creating his characters but in remembering how they were created. He often told the story that he created Mickey Mouse during a train ride in which he drew a mouse figure and suggested the name Mortimer for the little fellow. His wife, Lillian, didn't care for the name and suggested Mickey instead. The truth is more prosaic than the legend. Actually Mickey was created and named during a brainstorming session between Disney and his animators in which they suggested various animals and settled on a mouse.

Despite the dispute in his creation, Mickey became a success after the release of his first sound cartoon, Steamboat Willie. The popularity of the character was also helped by the original Mickey Mouse Club in which children were invited to attend screenings of the cartoon shorts as well as the merchandise with Mickey plastered all over the place. (Proving that Disney like the company after him would be an expert on marketing and commercializing his characters.)



Despite the perception of Disney and his company becoming conservative and formulaic, the book reveals Disney's willingness to take risks and innovate his creations, particularly during the early years. One of his most famous examples was in making Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, his first feature length animated film. Many thought that no one would sit through a feature length cartoon. Disney and his animators tried unique approaches to animating the movie such as using a multiplane camera to provide background detail to the landscape and rotoscoping (filming live action humans and animating over that image) to capture facial styles and features. He also improved upon the original story by providing names and personalities to the seven dwarves and offering dark visuals such as a terrified Snow White running through the woods where hallucinations frighten her and the beautiful Wicked Queen using ingredients like a scream of fright, an old hag’s cackle, and the dark of night for a magic potion to turn her into an old peddler. Disney’s first animated feature was such a success and pleased him so well that to the end of his life, he considered Snow White and Mary Poppins as the only two features he considered perfect.




Besides his pleasure for Mary Poppins on a technical level including combining live action and animation in the scene where Mary, her friend, Bert, and her charges, Jane and Michael Banks go
on a “Jolly Holiday” through a chalk drawing of the countryside, Mary Poppins also touched Disney on a personal level. He identified with George Banks, the father who is unable to spend time with his children and regretted it in the end because Disney did not spend as much time with his wife, Lillian and daughters, Diane and Sharon as much as he liked. Disney also loved the Sherman Brothers song, “Feed the Birds”, a moving song about an old bird woman feeding birds outside St. Paul’s Cathedral who urges people to give money to feed the birds for “tuppence a bag.” He loved the song so much that whenever he met with the brothers, all he would have to say is, “Play it” and they knew which song he wanted to hear.




Sometimes the risks didn't always pay off. When Disney created the movie Fantasia, he intended it to be a continuing project of animated shorts put to classical music much like they already did with the Silly Symphony shorts. The movie would then be updated every few years with new segments. He also wanted to make the movie a full sensory experience by inserting odors into the theaters including floral, gunpowder, saltwater and other scents. Unfortunately despite Disney's ambitions for the project, Fantasia tanked in its initial release discontinuing his proposed ongoing project idea for the movie until 1999 when his company released Fantasia 2000. Many children were reportedly bored by the music, parents either objected to the animation segments or felt that they were inappropriate for children. Classical movie buffs, including Igor Stravinsky whose piece “Rite of Spring” was used in the movie (and whose “Firebird Suite” would be used for Fantasia 2000) thought that Disney's animated segments distorted the music’s original styles. Disney took this failure as a personal blow. It's a shame that Disney didn't live long enough to see the hippy generation give Fantasia a new life as an ultimate visual experience just as they did with Alice in Wonderland, which also similarly tanked upon its initial release. Both Fantasia and Alice in Wonderland obtained cult followings and then later received the critical and commercial success that they originally had been denied proving that sometimes Disney's vision wasn't always wrong, just far ahead of his time.




Gabler also explores Disney's darker nature with great detail. Despite giving a warm welcoming persona, in truth he was very guarded and standoffish to his employees. He wasn't above showing preferential treatment to animators who had been with him from the beginning or that he favored including his legendary “Nine Old Men” such as Ollie Johnston, Milt Kahl, Ward Kimball, and Woolie Reitherman. He considered them friends and would laugh and joke with them and approve of their ideas for scenes and characters (making it perfectly clear that his word was the final say.).

However, he wouldn't have as much camaraderie with other animators like Freddie Moore (who had been fired by the company twice.) and many of the artists that did the lesser known work such as in-betweeners and clean up. (Those who didn't draw the initial characters but went scene by scene frame by frame to make sure the characters and scenes were uniform and mistake free.) This hierarchy created dissension in the ranks as many who were not in Disney's favor feared his criticism and wrath. He often made public examples of them either in the studio or in the Sweatbox where they watched the rushes. Many of the animators who weren't in Disney's favor either quit in fury or were outright dismissed.




This “With me or against me” attitude was particularly noticeable during the Animator’s Strike of 1941 in which a group of animators led by Art Babbit campaigned to unionize Disney's animation team. Disney was an ardent anti-Unionist and refused. While the strikers and the corporate office eventually came to a negotiation, Babbit resigned and Disney considered him a traitor to the end of his life.




The strike and Disney's mistrust of some of his employees created a fear of Communism in him. Disney was a “friendly witness” to the House of Un-American Activities and wasn't above naming names based on nothing more than mere speculation. Unfortunately Disney's staunch anti-Union and anti-Communism stance as well as the images in some of his works (such as Jim Crow in Dumbo, the Big Bad Wolf impersonating a Jewish peddler in the Three Little Pigs, and the movie, The Song of the South which had been so criticized by the NAACP and other groups that Walt Disney Studios still refuses to re-release it in any form) led to accusations that Disney was both racist and anti-Semitic, accusations that Gabler dismissed.

Gabler cited that Disney hired both Jewish and African-American employees and had close friends that were both. At most Gabler writes that Disney could have been guilty of being “racially insensitive” as so many people in Hollywood were at the time by using stereotypical characters for cheap laughs and making inappropriate remarks. Another proof of Disney not being anti-Semitic Gabler believes could also be seen in his other works particularly the World War II propaganda cartoons. The darkest one (among the darkest animated works the Disney company produced even to this day), Education for Death comes down hard on Nazi anti-Semitic policies by depicting a young Aryan boy destroying others and ultimately bringing about his own destruction because of them.




Gabler also explored how the public persona of Walt Disney as the warm family-friendly benevolent creator and works was both a virtue and a prison to him and his company. This even started at the beginning with Mickey Mouse. In the original shorts, Mickey was a mischievous troublemaker who often played pranks on his adversaries. However as his popularity grew, Mickey shifted towards a heroic nice guy making him seem dull and bland in comparison to his colleagues the temperamental Donald Duck and the clumsy Goofy. Donald even eclipsed Mickey in popularity because audience found his flaws more relateable rather than Mickey's goody-two-shoes character. (In fact one of Mickey’s most popular cartoons The Sorcerer's Apprentice shows Mickey reverting back to his more mischievous persona by using magic to make a broom come to life and gather water to disastrous results.)




Walt Disney himself would suffer from the strain of maintaining a clean cut personality that he had honed by the 1960’s. This personality and his desire to churn out wholesome family films became a straightjacket that he couldn't quite break free from.

By the 1950’s, Disney's cartoons were no longer daring or original despite or perhaps because he also created Disneyland (which Gabler considered Disney's escape of all escapes.) and such shows as Davy Crockett and the Mickey Mouse Club. Disney instead seemed corny, stodgy, and emblematic of the safe middle-class America. Instead during that time the true animation innovators came out of Hanna-Barbera with Tom and Jerry, Warner Bros. With Loony Tunes, and Dr. Seuss with Gerald McBoing Boing, all of which claimed Academy Awards for Animated Short Subjects (which used to be a lock for Disney and his crew.). According to Gabler, when Disney saw To Kill a Mockingbird, he reacted with envy saying, “We should have done that.” However, he knew that the image that he created for the people would never permit him to make a dramatic film about rape and racial tension. It wasn't until Disney released Mary Poppins in 1964 and made plans for his EPCOT, community of tomorrow (which became Walt Disney World) that Walt Disney retained some of that original magical spark that had eluded him when he became formulaic.




Even though Disney died in 1967, his company still continues to be both loved and loathed by many. Those who say that the company deviated from Disney's vision (or saying he is rolling in his grave or would be upset) are missing the point. The company that Walt Disney left behind is just like he was. They are innovative in style but with conventional storylines. They are wish-fulfillment and formulaic. They are creative in giving us memorable characters and commercial by throwing merchandise at us. They are unafraid to be different by coming to television, creating adult films, adding new facets to the company, shifting from traditional to computer generation, and are willing to adapt for the subsequent generations, but they also peddle in escape and entertainment. They are and have always been exactly what Walt Disney wanted them to be.



Monday, September 3, 2018

Weekly Reader: Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win The Space Race by Margot Lee Shetterly; A Wonderful True Story of A Group of Brilliant Trailblazing African-American Women





Weekly Reader: Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win The Space Race by Margot Lee Shetterly; A Wonderful True Story of A Group of Brilliant Trailblazing African-American Women


By Julie Sara Porter


Bookworm Reviews





Without the brilliant minds of Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, and the other African-American female mathematicians in the West Computer division of NASA, it's very doubtful that the Americans would have made it out of Earth's lowest hemisphere let alone into Space and ultimately the Moon.


Margot Lee Shetterly’s best selling biography, Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win The Space Race which became the Academy Award nominated film Hidden Figures pays these women a debt long owed. They are written to be courageous, brilliant women who were able to break through racial and gender barriers and contribute to these important moments in American history.





The exciting opportunities for these women came in the late ‘30’s when NASA was the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) when studying airplanes was the goal. The superiors realized that there were plenty of female mathematicians that they could recruit to create trajectories and figures for the planes to travel. These women were called computers as they computed these large sums in their heads and provided solutions based on the data they used. Interestingly enough this assumption that women would be the best at calculating these figures runs contrary to the modern offensive stereotype that women and girls can't “do math and science,” a stereotype that many in the STEM fields have been trying to counter. The careers of the women in this book should serve as an inspiration for any girl or woman to aspire to become mathematicians and engineers themselves.





The other door that opened was in 1941 when after prodding by A. Philip Randolph, the head of the largest black labor union, the Roosevelt Administration declared Executive Order 8802 ordering the desegregation of the defense industry and Executive Order 9346 the Fair Employment Practices Committee to monitor economic inclusion. All this meant that African-Americans were permitted to work in defense projects to help fight for their country.





One of the first recruits was Dorothy Vaughan, a former math teacher. Even though she and the other African-American female recruits were segregated to the west side of the Langley offices thereby dubbed the “West Computers,” Vaughan was able to compute her figures accurately. She was also able to take charge of the other computers so that when their former supervisor suffered a nervous breakdown and had to be institutionalized, Vaughan seamlessly stepped in to take her place as the Chief Supervisor of the West Computer division.


Vaughan also proved to be adaptable to changing circumstances. When NACA transformed into NASA and the focus changed to space exploration, Vaughan studied the potential for rocket travel. Then when the human computers changed over to electronic computing, Vaughan spent some time in night school studying computer programming and languages to stay ahead of her field.





Another brilliant woman in this group was Mary Jackson. She learned the benefit of making powerful alliances. A Girl Scout troop leader and mother who always tried to give the children in her neighborhood pride in themselves and their race, Jackson was derided by the white engineers. After one particular incident, she stormed off in fury and told her troubles to Kazmierz Czarnecki, the assistant section head of the Supersonic Pressure Tunnel. Czarnecki invited Jackson to work with him. Jackson earned her position by demonstrating her engineering skills.


She also was able to rise from the title of “mathematician” to “engineer”, a feat rarely accomplished by any of the woman working at Langley let alone the African-American women. The “Engineer” title meant more money, prestige, and recognition for Jackson's services.





By far the most famous of the West Computers was Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson. She balanced her role as a widowed mother of three, a romance with 2nd Lt. Jim Johnson, and her work as a mathematician and West Computer. Her research into analytic geometry impressed many of the white male engineers who promoted her to work directly under them. She also showed extraordinary persistence such as continuing to ask her supervisors if she could attend meetings to the point where they allowed her to attend them just so she would stop asking. Another sign of her intelligence and persistence was in receiving credit for her research. When Ted Skopinski transferred to Houston, his former supervisor ordered him to finish his research. He suggested that Johnson complete the research since “she did most of it anyway.” Not only did Johnson finish the research, but she received credit and authorship, a feat not accomplished by many other women in her field.


Johnson also had a reputation for accuracy in her calculations so much so that she was willing to argue with others if she discovered a flaw in the numbers. She calculated the trajectory for Alan Shepard's flight into.space.


Her reputation for genius and accurate calculations reached the ears of astronaut, John Glenn, who planned to orbit Earth. He asked for her specifically and said that he would not fly unless Johnson verified the calculations. After Glen’s historic flight, Johnson also contributed calculations for future space flights such as Apollo 11’s trip to the Moon.





Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, and Katherine Johnson showed that with intelligence, courage, and persistence racial and gender barriers can not only be broken. They can be shattered beyond repair and anyone can be recognized for their achievements, no matter their race or gender.

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Classics Corner: Midnight In The Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt; True Southern Gothic Tale is Filled With Eccentric Characters and a Sense of Place



Classics Corner: Midnight In The Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt; True Southern Gothic Tale is Filled With Eccentric Characters and a Sense of Place

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Spoilers: It is hard to treat Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil as a nonfiction book. It is a true story with real people and involves a real crime: The shooting of hustler, Danny Hansford by his older on-and-off lover, antiques dealer, Jim Williams. But it is not written like a non-fiction book filled with dry facts, statistics, and interviews, court reports, and newspaper articles about the shooting and the people involved.

Instead Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil reads like a novel, a nonfiction novel. Like Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood, Alex Haley’s Roots, and Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil uses various literary techniques such as setting, plot, characterization, and dialogue to tell it's story and does it very well. It turns a true crime into a Southern Gothic story.




Author John Berendt really made Savannah, Georgia come to life in his book. He described the beautiful antebellum houses, the humid atmosphere, and the feeling of being cut off from the rest of the world (because at the time, traveling to Savannah was hard except by crossing one bridge.) expertly. He also recounted Savannah's history and transformation from the pirate’s den in Treasure Island, to the “Grand Old Southern Lady” of Gone With The Wind, to its then reputation as a place that was so caught up in tradition that it's residents refused to let Big Businesses move in. This book no doubt did wonders to Savannah's tourism and if Berendt's characterization of the locals is anything to go on, it was probably not a good thing.




Besides the setting, Berendt perfectly wrote the residents of Savannah as a group of eccentric oddballs. Everyone had so many unique quirks and characteristics that one must wonder if a phrase is written in Savannah's bylaws stating “Thou must be eccentric to reside in these city limits.”

There is Luther Driggs, an amateur chemist who hinted that he created a poison that he could pour into Savannah's water supply and kill everyone. (The real-life inspiration behind Driggs said that though he was an amateur chemist, he created no such thing and blamed Berendt for giving him such a reputation.) Emma Kelly, a pianist who was known as “The Lady of Six Thousand Songs” and who knew and played everyone's favorite song. Joe Odom, an attorney owned Sweet Georgia Brown, a piano bar with Mandy Nichols, a lovely lady that Odom forever promised to make “his third wife.” Sonny Seiler, a defense attorney who was so devoted to the University of Georgia Bulldogs football team that he owned a pit bull, Uga IV (there were three previous Ugas) that became the team’s unofficial mascot. Then there's Lady Chablis, a saucy drag performer who called herself “The Grand Empress if Savannah.” She enjoyed flirting with Berendt and making herself the center of attention, including in one memorable moment crashing a debutante ball of Savannah's African-American elite much to Berendt's embarrassed chagrin.




Standing in the center of this cast of fascinating weirdos was Jim Williams. The 52-year-old antiques dealer loved giving the impression of coming from old money by showing off his collection of antiques and buying the house built by songwriter Johnny Mercer’s great-grandfather. When asked if he minded being called “nouveau riche”, Williams said that “it's the riche that's the important part.”




Williams also went to extremes to stand out in the crowd. During the filming of a TV movie about Abraham Lincoln, Williams draped a Nazi flag over his house to ruin the shot and to protest the anger that Savannah's residents had about movies being filmed there with the constant changes to location and the often pushy cast and crew. Williams was also known for his Christmas parties which were the highlight of the year so much that people worried throughout the year whether they would be put in his “In” box or “Out” box.

Williams also loved to show off his collection of rare weapons and guns as though daring to be shot. This revealed a certain sense of danger in Williams, almost a death wish.




This sense of danger probably explained Williams’ relationship with 21-year-old hustler, Danny Hansford. Hansford was an Eighth grade dropout with a hair trigger temper and who was described by a former girlfriend as a “Walking streak of sex.” He also did odd jobs for Williams and was implied to be his lover. When Hansford entered the Williams home, it was almost a guarantee that he would be drunk, lose his temper, fight with Williams, and break something of his. Williams’ sense of danger did not seem to mind Hansford's temper, in fact seemed to enjoy it, until one night when after a fight, Williams shot Hansford to death.




Williams was arrested and charged with murder, though he claimed it was self-defense because Hansford threatened to shoot him.Thus began his trial or rather trials. Williams’ case was given four separate trials each time because of technicalities or legal issues. The miscarriages of justice are present throughout the trials as Williams,found guilty during the first three trials,looked for any reason to reopen the case. There is also a sense of fatigue as the trials go on leading to the possibility that Williams was acquitted the fourth time so they wouldn't have to go through the case again.




Williams not only used legal means to gain victory, he used supernatural means. He contacted Minerva, a voodoo priestess, to provide him good luck and to curse the prosecuting attorney. In one of the most memorable passages in the book, Minerva, Williams, and Berendt visited a cemetery in Beaufort, South Carolina where Minerva used her abilities to not only hex the attorney but to get the spirit of Hansford to lay off of Williams by getting Williams to admit good things about the young man. Williams responded by mentioning Hansford's Camaro, artistic talent, and sense of humor.




An even creepier passage occurs later in the book after Williams was acquitted. Minerva and Berendt went to another cemetery to speak to “the head man” that Minerva suspected was “working against Williams from beyond the grave”: none other than Danny Hansford. Minerva begged and argued with Hansford's spirit to leave Williams alone but the spirit continued to laugh at Minerva so she gave up in frustration.




Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil stretches nonfiction by offering an account that is so bizarre that it seems like it couldn't have happened in real life. But it did, with all of its weirdness, bizarre cast, and unique situations. The final irony gives an almost literary twist to this strange story: Shortly after his acquittal, Jim Williams suffered a fatal heart attack right in the study where he and Hansford had their final confrontation and in the exact spot where Hansford would have shot Williams if Williams hadn't shot him. You just can't make things like this up.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Classics Corner: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs: True Story Captures the Brutality of Slavery and The Rewards of Freedom

Classics Corner: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs: True Story Captures The Brutality of Slavery and the Rewards of Freedom
By Julie Sara Porter,
Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin reflected the horrors of slavery but from the authorship of a white woman. While it received much defense and criticism, even to this day (particularly from many who use the term, "Uncle Tom" as a derogatory term), it opened a lot of pre-Civil War eyes to slavery and the abolitionist movement. However, because Stowe wrote it (and did meticulous research for it which she explored in the follow up A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin), it can only gain an outsider's perspective of what she imagines the life of a slave to be like. A book that had been written about the same time reflects the life of a slave much better, because it is the true story of a former slave written by herself.

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs (1813-1897) improves on Stowe's narrative because this was Jacob's life and her observations. The book was published under the name Linda Brent and with pseudonyms (however for this review, I will use the real names of the people.).  Jacobs explored the horrors of her situation and her eventual daring escape with honesty, warmth, rage, and even a dry detached wit that not only matches up to Uncle Tom's Cabin, but surpasses it in terms of writing quality.
Jacobs resorted to some literary techniques in her writing such as addressing the "Reader" in an intrusive narrative form and she invited the Reader to imagine themselves in such a situation. But most of her narration is honest, frank, and doesn't resort to melodrama. For example she uses situational irony when she recounts one of her master's description of a run away slave who was found in New York to be starving and begged to return. Jacobs later mentioned seeing this woman who was completely happy and had no intention of returning. "Many of the slaves believe such stories, and think it is not worth while to exchange slavery for a hard kind of freedom," she wrote.
She described such horrible events  as physical abuse and sexual assault, but in a plain matter-of-fact way to let the story speak for itself that slavery was a cruel institution. She didn't need to resort to drama to grab her reader's attention. She just let her own story speak for itself.

Jacobs recounted her childhood including her birth by her mother Delilah Horniblow and biracial father, Elijah Knox, and her upbringing by her grandmother. The home was so loving that Jacobs was unaware that she was property until her mother's death when she was six. "I was so fondly shielded that I never dreamed I was a piece of merchandise, trusted to them for safe keeping, liable to be demanded of them at any moment."

Jacobs lived with her mother's mistress, who was kind enough to teach her to read, write, and sew but not kind enough to free her. So after she died, the mistress left a will with a codicil that ended up causing Jacobs to be sold to the mistress' five-year-old niece, Mary Matilda Norcrom.
Mary Matilda's father, Dr. James Norcrom sexually harassed Jacobs when she came of age.He alternated between appearing  nice and erupting into violent rages, both of which terrified Jacobs. "My master met me at every turn, reminding me that I belonged to him, and swearing by heaven and earth that he would compel me to submit to him." Jacobs recounted excellently that fear of being continuously abused and assaulted by a powerful man and the loneliness that she has no one to turn to who could help her.

Jacobs used many means to resist Norcrom's advances including becoming involved in a consensual sexual relationship with a white man who fathered her two children, Louise Matilda and Joseph.
 Jacobs justified her sexual relationship as a means of survival. "I  was a poor slave girl, only fifteen years old," she wrote. "To be an object of interest to a man who is not married, and who is not her master, is agreeable to the pride and feelings of a slave, if her miserable situation has left her any pride or sentiment."
However Jacobs' relationship had strings attached. While her lover promised to free their children, he refused to do so, though he eventually returned them to their grandmother.  He also bought her brother and became upset that because he believed "some damned abolitionist encouraged him to run away." (In actuality, Jacobs' brother seized the opportunity to run away on his own.)
The careless behavior of Jacobs' white lover and former mistress shows that the Myth of the "Good Slave Owner" is just that: a myth. That when people with the best of intentions towards their slaves
still took part in such a heartless institution that offered no equality towards people seen as property. That even if a slave was fortunate enough to work under a kind master or mistress that encouraged them to read and never had them whipped, the slave was  not  seen as a human being in their own right. The kind master or mistress' protection may last only as long as they are still alive. The slave still could be at the mercy of being sold and separated from their friends and family, a real fear that filled Jacobs' life as she worried about her children being sold and Norcrom threatened to do if she resisted his advances.

Jacobs eventually ran away and in the book's most intense passages escaped to the last place Norcrom would have looked for her: instead of heading North, she turned right around and hid in the crawl space of her freed grandmother's attic. Jacobs watched from her grandmother's attic with glee as Norcrom made several fruitless trips up North to New York figuring that she ran up there to hide with relatives. But she also watched with heartache as her children and other relatives were sold and she can't do anything about it (though Norcrom kept bothering them about their mother's whereabouts which they did not know until Jacobs had been in hiding for years.) Even though Jacobs described the attic as "an uncomfortable prison" and her concern for her children was always apparent, she considered it a better alternative to being found and returned by Norcrom. "I heard the old doctor's threats but they no longer had the same power to trouble me. The darkest cloud of my life had rolled away," she wrote with pride about her escape and her children's removal from Norcrom's clutches.

Jacobs eventually escaped to Philadelphia in 1842  by boat to live with some anti-slavery friends and found work as a nursemaid in New York. She eventually was able to reunite with her children. Her book has a finality as she said that her story does not end with marriage, instead ending with the freedom of herself and her children. "We are as free from the power of slaveholders as are the white people of the north," she wrote with pride and dreamed of greater things like owning her own home (which she eventually did) and teaching about the evils of slavery (which she did at anti-slavery conventions), and her children going to school (which they both did. Louise Matilda  worked towards educating young African-American children and Joseph joined his uncle and Jacobs' brother to live in California).

There is an interesting story that when Jacobs first thought of telling her story, she was uncertain of her own writing abilities. So she appealed to Harriet Beecher Stowe, even suggesting her daughter, Louise Matilda accompany Stowe to England to recount her story. Stowe refused suggesting that Louise Matilda's story as a former slave might hold her to being spoiled and pampered by the English audience. Stowe also doubted the veracity of Jacobs' story and wanted to consult with her employer. Jacobs was outraged and sharply retorted, "...what a pity we poor blacks cant (sic) have the firmness and stability of character that you white people have."
Jacobs proved with her own observations and brilliant gift of writing that she was more than capable of telling her own story herself.