Saturday, June 30, 2018

July's Schedule


Okay last month wasn't as good as I hoped, I only posted two reviews and am posting the last two during the first weekend in July. But every month brings new promise. Like I did with last month, this month I am planning on experimenting a little. Because in months past, I often missed a book or two, I won't set the deadlines for when the reviews will be posted. Instead these reviews are scheduled to appear sometime in July hopefully. (Though some may have to be moved if so needed.)

This month there will be two main themes: Magical Realism in Fiction and Non-Fiction and Alternate Looks at Favorite Characters.
 What's the comparison? Well nothing really, except they are both fun ideas. We are going to get a hold-over non-fiction book from last month which is the definitive work about Neo-Paganism in the United States. Then we will explore yet another spiritual journey courtesy of Paulo Coelho. We also explore the first book by the influential and controversial Carlos Castaneda describing his friendship with the enigmatic Don Juan Matus.

We also will look at the world of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland seen through the eyes of a new visitor. We will also explore the teen and adulthood years of some childhood favorites: The Peanuts gang and Encyclopedia Brown, Boy Detective (or characters who strongly resemble them).

So without further ado, here they are, July's reads:

1.Classics Corner:  Drawing Down the Moon: Witches, Druids, Goddess-Worshipers and Other Pagans in North America by Margot Adler

2. Weekly Reader: The Witch of Portobello by Paulo Coelho

3. Weekly Reader Bonus: Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead by Bert V. Royal

4.Weekly Reader: After Alice by Gregory Maguire

5. Classics Corner: The Teachings of Don Juan Matus: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge by Carlos Castaneda

6. Weekly Reader: The Boy Detective Fails by Joe Meno


Classics Corner: Imajica by Clive Barker; A Parallel Universe Fantasy That Draws You In and Won't Let Go




Classics Corner: Imajica by Clive Barker; A Parallel Universe Fantasy That Draws You In and Won't Let Go


By Julie Sara Porter,


Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: First I want to thank my sister-in-law Tzyra Andreeva for giving me this wonderful book. It's definitely a great gift.

You don't read a book like Clive Barker’s Imajica. You inhabit it, you immerse yourself into it. The parallel world setting, the magical eccentric characters, the intricate plot and deep themes of religion, gender roles and realizing one’s own identity draw the Reader in and doesn't let them go.

This is the type of book that starts the Reader thinking that it's one thing but early hints show that it becomes a completely different work. Charlie Estabrook, an obsessive Englishman wants to hire an assassin to murder Judith, his soon-to-be-ex-wife and the Reader sits back ready for a psychological thriller. But certain things happen that prove otherwise about the narrative.


There’s the bizarre coincidence that both Judith and her former lover, John Furie Zacharias AKA Gentle can only remember the last ten years of their lives. There's the go-between with Estabrook and the assassin who is murdered by a strange man who not only appears out of thin air but murders the go-between by putting unearthly insects in his mouth that crawl through his skin. Then,there's the passage where the hired assassin,Pie’oh’pah transforms from male to female depending on who is observing it. Well that's horror master Clive Barker, the creator of the Hellraiser and Candyman franchises for you.

Instead of being a conventional thriller or a conventional well just about anything, Imajica reveals itself to be an evocative novel set within five parallel universes. The Universes called the Dominions (Earth is the Fifth Dominion) were connected as one called the Imajica but now have lost those connections. Many sorcerers and magic users have attempted to join the Five Dominions in a ritual called The Reconciliation to no success. Among them, the back story tells us, was a sorcerer who attempted the Reconciliation 2,018 years ago who not only failed but ended up on the wrong end of a cross. (Guess who?) The most recent attempt was made 200 years ago by a Maestro Sartori who failed miserably and made some very magical and destructive decisions that affected the rest of the characters and himself.

What happens next is a road trip through the unique worlds of the other four Dominions. In trying to defend Judith from the eccentric assassin, Gentle begins to bond with it. Soon he and Pie’oh'pah form a friendship and travel to the other Dominions. Pie’oh'pah has its own motives which get revealed later. For Gentle, an art forger and ladies’ man, the trip is to give him direction and possibly some answers for questions that have plagued him for the past ten years.


Meanwhile Judith goes on a magical journey of her own. Astral projection allows her to travel inside the body of a mysterious woman who has been imprisoned in a comatose state for over 100 years inside the home of a member of the Tabula Rasa. They are a secret organization who are driven to destroy any magic users and stop the Reconciliation and aren't particular about the methods to achieve these goals.

The Four Dominions are brilliantly captured in Barker's writing. They are individually characterized with unique details that describe the landscapes. One Dominion is surrounded by a frozen lake with killer tides...literally. Another has a green sky which turns purple at night. Another has a comet for a sun and another has two suns and an immense desert. Another looks like a living city and turns out to be one.

There are also unusual characters in these environments as well. There are human characters with gills, feathers, and fur (some with all three). Pie'oh'pah’s transformations from male to female are illusions to seduce its lovers into thinking that they are seeing their strongest desire. A little girl Huzzah is described as a very ugly girl but is one of the sweetest most adorable characters in the book. There are also frightening characters like the Nullianacs, creatures with hands for heads who devour their enemies. Once the First Dominion is revealed to be a living city, it becomes a thing of nightmares.

Besides describing unique settings, Barker provides brilliant rich characters in the novel, many of whom are more than they seem. The Second Dominion's capital city, Yzordderrex is ruled by the Autarch, a malevolent war mongering tyrant and Quaisoir, his mentally ill wife. In other books, they would be the direct villains of the piece. But Imajica isn't so clearly defined. As Gentle, Judith, The
Autarch and Quaisoir discover they are more connected than they thought, the lines between heroes and villains become blurry making the four very developed.

Judith and Gentle are very developed characters in their struggles throughout the novel to discover their identities. Gentle begins the novel as a dilettante artist who uses his talents to copy other works and hop from one bed to another. His journey through the Dominions becomes one of self-discovery. He and Pie'oh'pah fall in love when Gentle realizes what a loving and loyal creature his companion is. He also embraces some dormant magical abilities which he uses in the protection of his friends and loved ones.


Gentle becomes confused whether his role is to continue the Reconciliation or to stop it. He learns who he once was in a heartbreaking and frightening scene in which he is driven to insanity by the memories of not only his current life but the previous ones before it.
Once he remembers his former identity's cruelties and deceptions, he is determined to make things right in this life. When he confronts Hapexamendios, the God that was the true author of this destruction, Gentle is prepared to face Him to claim his identity for himself.


Judith also goes on her own journey.When she learns that she was created for the purpose of being a romantic object for someone, she seeks to break that pattern to become her own person. Like Gentle, she refuses to remain a plaything for others’ designs.
Judith also discovers some abilities that allow her to free the Goddesses who had been removed by Hapexamendios and The Autarch's theocracy. She recognizes the strength of many of the other female characters and in herself.
It is only when Judith and Gentle are able to accept their former identities and be willing to break their old patterns to become their own people are they able to truly bring completion to the Dominions in a very unique and clever way.

Like his magical characters and setting, Barker weaves a spell on the Reader that captivates them and holds onto them long after the book is closed. That is why this is the best book that I have read this year so far.

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Weekly Reader: All The Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation; Put Your Hands Up for the Ultimate Guide to Unmarried Women in 21st Century America







Weekly Reader: All The Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and The Rise of an Independent Nation; Put Your Hands Up For The Ultimate Guide To Unmarried Women in 21st Century America

By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

Who is gonna rule the world? Single girls!
Okay, I promise I will stop quoting BeyoncĂ©. But Rebecca Traister’s nonfiction book All The Single Ladies gives an account of a growing phenomenon: Unmarried Women who remain unmarried or have late in life marriages.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau the number of unmarried women, in 2017, is 53.2 percent, outnumbering married women. According to Traister “For young women, for the first time it is as normal to be unmarried as it is to be married, even if it doesn't always feel that way.”
Since she learned in 2009 that American marriages fell below 50 percent, Traister realized that by the time they hit their mid-thirties many of her female friends remained unmarried. So she began a nearly ten year study of women who no longer required men “to put a ring on it.”
(Okay, okay I'll stop.)

Many single women, such as this Reader, often feel alone when they learn that many of their friends are married, in committed relationships, or have children. Traister says that it is more common than most women realize and that it shouldn't carry the social stigma that it used to.
She wrote, “The vast increase in the number of single women is to be celebrated not because singleness is in and of itself a better or more desirable state than coupledom. The revolution is in the expansion of options.....There are now an infinite number of alternate routes open; they wind around combinations of love, sex, partnership, parenthood, work, and friendship, at different speeds.”

In one chapter, Traister recalls single women who made an impact in history despite taunts that they were “sexless” and the percentages of unmarried women a “dismal spectacle.” Such notables as poet Christina Rossetti, novelists Anne and Emily Bronte and Willa Cather, medical professionals like doctors Elizabeth and Emily Blackwell and nurses like Clara Barton and Florence Nightingale, and social reformers like Jane Addams, Alice Paul, and Susan B. Anthony.
Traister also recognizes figures from the late 20th-early 21st centuries like Anita Hill who accused Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment, the fictional television character Murphy Brown (Candice Bergen) who had a baby without a husband, and Sandra Fluke who testified about insurance regulations being proposed for buying birth control. All received criticism partly because of their unmarried statuses.
 According to Hill’s autobiography, her single status allowed her “detractors to place 'her as far outside the norms of proper behavior as they could.’” Then vice-president Dan Quayle accused the Murphy Brown storyline as “supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid professional women was mocking the importance of fathers by bearing a child alone and calling it another lifestyle choice.”
Fluke also met with antagonism particularly from Right-wing radio talk show host, Rush Limbaugh. He called Fluke a “prostitute” and “slut.” A writer at American Spectator called Fluke “The Modern Welfare Queen for the 21st Century.”
Even Oprah Winfrey, the currently highest paid entertainer, keeps getting pestered with questions about when she is going to marry longtime partner, Stedman Graham and have children. “If I had children, they would hate me,”Winfrey said. “They would have ended up on the equivalent of the Oprah show talking about me; because something (in her life) would have to suffer and it probably would’ve been them.” The stories of these and other women in the book reflect that even when single women make great strides in the world, the focus is often on their marital status and why they aren't married. (Imagine how many articles would be wasted about an unmarried female President of the United State’s wardrobe choices and why there's no First Gentleman.)

Traister explores many of the benefits single women have and their current options which are much larger than the days when women had no choice but to wait at home with relatives until she found a husband. Many areas, particularly cities are welcome towards single women. Traister realized this herself while living in Manhattan; she observed a fight between a straight male-female couple. She looked around the restaurant and saw that, except for the fighting couple, she was surrounded by women dining either in pairs or by themselves. A woman eating alone was no longer a peculiar sight, especially in the cities.

“Cities are chock-full of single people, male or female: never married, divorced, widowed and separated,” Traister said. “While more than 25 percent of people across the United States live alone, metropolises like Cincinnati, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Seattle, and Denver boast single dwelling households that compromise more than 40 percent of their total populations.”
Among the reasons that single women chose urban landscapes is because of the variety of careers and people. Even as far back as the 19th century. “... New mills and factories especially in New England, actively recruited young women as cheap labor,” Traister said. “Improvements in infrastructure….made it easier for women to leave rural homes and head to growing cities to work as seamstresses and milliners, governesses, and laundresses.”

Urban life is still an appeal for modern single women, Traister writes because of variety and domestic infrastructure. “In metropolises, women are more likely to find a deep and diverse pool of romantic and sexual prospects, and to encounter a combination of community and anonymity that unburdens them of centuries of behavioral expectations,” she said. “Urban landscapes often physically force people of different classes, genders, races, and religions to mix and meet in the public spaces that they share with each other.”

One of the benefits that single women often have, Traister writes are deeper friendships with other women. After marriage and children, friendships often change as women find little in common with each other or less time to be together. During singlehood, women often find a tight group of friends to form a sisterly bond. (Think of the characters in the show, Sex and the City or the movie, Waiting to Exhale.)
Traister refers to two women, Ann Friedman and Aminatou Sow who met at a Gossip Girl viewing party. The two shared a great deal in common including a love of independence. While both are heterosexual, Friedman describes Sow as “(her) emotional support, (her) everything.” The two have made plans for the future, including maintaining their friendship if they relocate.
“It is really important that my co-workers know (Friedman),” Sow said. “...I don't even think I say that she is my best friend because it's so much more to than that to me. She is the person that I talk to every day. She is my person.”
This sentiment “she is my person” is echoed in the series Grey’s Anatomy, created by Shonda Rhimes, an unmarried mother of three. In Grey’s, two female doctors share a close friendship and refer to each other as “my person.” Friedman and Sow are still good friends though Sow is single and lives in Northern California and Friedman lives in Los Angeles with her partner. The two women share a podcast called, “Call Your Girlfriend.”

Besides friendships, single women relish their time alone. Kitty Curtis, a hair stylist from New Jersey (who now lives in Florida) said that she had first felt scared of being alone after a bad relationship. She thought of entering another relationship but the feeling passed. “I really value my time alone, “Curtis said. “ I started to value not having another adult agenda of any sort, and I got cozy and comfy in my new life. It's just a really easy life being alone.”
One of the things Curtis enjoys is the ability to travel. “I felt like I was constantly having to pull somebody along into a dream,” she said. “....Now I feel like there's so much to see in the world, so many more things to do. It's so much more exciting than the combining my dreams with somebody else's.”

Some women make the same decisions that men do by waiting until they are settled in their careers, something they learned from their own pasts. Traister remembers that her grandmother had a career as a biology professor which she gave up to marry her husband and give birth to her daughter, Traister's mother. “She was always sick, had headaches and back problems,” Traister’s mother recalled. “She was obsessive about the floor; she scrubbed it three times a week on her hands and knees. She was not a happy lady; it was clear, even to me, as a kid.”
In 1958, Traister's grandmother received an offer to replace the deceased biology teacher. After asking her husband's permission, Traister's grandmother accepted the job. Her daughter saw an instant change in her mother's behavior. “When she went back to work, it was like night and day,” Traister's mother said. “She was busy; she didn't have to scrub the floor three times a week. She dressed up. She took more care of her appearance. She was happier. Everything about her changed.” Traister's mother learned that lesson well about finding meaningful work that she decided not to be a stay-at-home mother. She spent five decades as an English professor. “I love being everybody's grandmother and mother, and wife, and all of that-that’s wonderful,” she said. “But basically there's got to be something that's me and that's been my working life.”

“Every generation has struggled to overcome the generational obstacles set before the previous one, and often eliminates these obstacles for the next, “Traister wrote. Traister herself learned from her mother and grandmother. She had an accomplished career as a writer at large for New York magazine, contributing editor at Elle magazine, and wrote about women in politics, media, and entertainment from a Feminist perspective for New Republic and Salon. She wrote articles for The Nation, The New York Observer, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Vogue, Glamour, and Marie Claire and a previous book, Big Girls Don't Cry about the 2008 election. She herself did not get married until she was 35 and had been a successful author. Traister describes her single years as beneficial to her eventual marriage. “I’d been heartbroken, afraid, jubilant, and bored,” she said. “I was a grown-up: a reasonably complicated person. I’d become that person not in the company of any one man, but alongside my friends, my family, my city, my work, and simply by myself.”

That's not to say that Traister writes only about the good things about being single. Sometimes she writes about the difficulties single women have especially impoverished single mothers. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics women still earn $0.78 for every $1.00 men make and the gap is wider for women of color.
Also certain factors like pay inequality, wage stagnation, and social policies favor married couples because of the assumption that men are still the primary breadwinners. According to Atlantic writers, Christina Campbell and Lisa Arnold, “Marital privilege pervades every facet of our lives.” Campbell and Arnold found that health, life, home, and car insurance cost more for single people than for marrieds. They also found “it is not a Federal crime for landlords to discriminate against potential renters based on their marital status.”

While there are options for women to choose single motherhood such as IVF, freezing embryos, adoptions, or giving birth without marrying, there are still grim stigmas associated with single mother-headed households. 42 percent of families headed by single mothers lay below the poverty line. Some of those families are headed by women who had their first child out of high school.
One of those was Pamela who was 17 when she gave birth to her first child. Her boyfriend was 34 and they decided to have the baby. She wanted to go to college partly to get away from her alcoholic father.
Pamela wasn't alone. Many of her fellow students dropped out of high school after giving birth. “Those that didn't graduate and the spouse wasn't around didn't go to college,” Pamela said. “They ended up working full-time jobs, at McDonald's or at a clothing store.”
Pamela graduated from New York College in 2004, and lived with her boyfriend without marrying him. She had a second child with her partner and they are still together but not married. She works as a legal assistant at the Office of the Bronx District Attorney and plans on going to law school.

Other problems associated with singlehood are emotional. There is the exhaustion of earning money and caring for the household. “For most working Americans the times off for honeymoons and paid leave after babies are pipe dreams,” Traister said.”....Single people and those without children often find themselves not only without the encouragement to take personal time off on their own; they often compensate for their colleagues’ breaks by making up the work, slogging through even more hours.”

Another emotional factor that is a detriment to single people is the loneliness particularly when they get older. When Frances Kissling watched over her dying mother, the unmarried Kissling was stunned by her mother's question, “who is going to do this for you?” “It knocked me on my ass,”Kissling said. “Oh my God, who is going to do this for me?” Kissling got her own answer when she was diagnosed with kidney disease and during therapy she realized she was alone.
Of course there is no guarantee that because someone is in a relationship or has children that someone will be cared for, Traister writes. “Those who take comfort that in getting married thinking they are evading a future of lonely decline do not often consider the very realistic possibilities of divorce, abandonment, or the early death of a partner,” Traister said.

All the Single Ladies is a very honest book about the good and bad of being single. While singlehood is not for everyone, it is no longer a status in which to be ashamed. This single lady isn't.







Classics Corner: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky; An Insightful Look Inside One Year of a High-School Boy


Classics Corner: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky; An Insightful Look Inside One Year of A High-School Boy
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky is not a big plot-filled novel. Instead it is filled with different various incidents which contribute to the characterization of an introverted teen and his complicated relationships with family, friends, and girlfriends.

Charlie writes letters to an unnamed ”Friend.” The Friend is never revealed and there are even implications that he doesn't exist. Instead the letters give Charlie a chance to unload his deepest emotions and confused thoughts about the world around him.

Most of Charlie's entries consist of his friendship with Patrick and Sam, a quirky brother and sister who welcome Charlie with open arms and encourage him to be more outgoing. He is still grieving over the suicide of a friend and has a hard time relating to people but Patrick and Sam help bring him out of his shell.

With Patrick and Sam, Charlie embraces new things like driving down tunneled bridges while listening to classic rock. (In a terrific passage, Charlie does this and remembers how he “felt infinite.”) They also love to watch The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Charlie at first feels out of place with the crazy costumes, bizarre audience participation, and Patrick’s portrayal of Frank N’Furter and Sam's as Janet. But he eventually adapts and becomes a proud “Time Warp”er.

He also gets involved in his friends’ complicated love lives and that bleeds into his own. He discovers that Patrick is gay when he catches him in an embrace with Brad, a closeted football player. Patrick and Brad’s relationship is hidden until Brad’s abusive father finds out. Brad, in an attempt to push Patrick away, joins in a bullying incident that puts Patrick in the hospital.

Sam and Charlie also have relationship issues. Over the course of the book they date other people but begin to realize they feel that they are more than friends. This moment climaxes when Charlie goes to a party with Sam, her boyfriend, Craig and his current girlfriend, Mary Elizabeth. During an intense time of drinking, drugs, and game of Truth or Dare, Charlie is dared to kiss the prettiest girl at the party and he kisses….Sam. Needless to say his relationship with Mary Elizabeth does not last.

There are also other characters who help shape Charlie’s coming of age journey. There's Bill, Charlie's English teacher who recommends novels for the teen to read like Camus’ The Stranger and Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise. Charlie also does extra credit essays on what he reads to share that love of literature with Bill finding a kindred spirit in his teacher.
There's Charlie's sister who is involved in an abusive relationship. When Charlie accidentally reveals this, she becomes furious with her kid brother and continues her relationship in secret.

Then there's Aunt Helen, Charlie's favorite relative. She is long dead but she still remains a part of Charlie's life. She haunts his memories as he remembers her death in a car accident on her way to get him a birthday gift. He also remembers that she had some difficult unspoken incidents in her past that caused her to withdraw from others except Charlie. Opening up his feelings for Aunt Helen reveal some of Charlie's current difficulties with relationships.

There is one revelation about Aunt Helen which is brilliantly foreshadowed and leads to a definite change in Charlie's behavior and relationships. However, for an important plot point, it’s placement in the second to the last chapter make the revelation and aftermath a little rushed. It would have served better to be in the middle of the story where the aftermath would be central to Charlie's development.

However, The Perks of Being A Wallflower is one of the best examples of the life of a teenage boy and the complexities that go into those years when we are still trying to figure out who we are and who we are going to become.


Tuesday, June 5, 2018

June Schedule



June Schedule 

"June is bustin' out all over...." (Rodgers and Hammerstein, Carnival) "....And I only have time for one review a weekkk...." 

I was going to put in a review for The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky but it seems to have disappeared on me. Oh well, maybe another time. Well May was not as productive as I would like but thankfully for a good reason: I had some good Upwork jobs. So this month I plan to be a little smarter. I am going to only post one book review a week. Again as always this is a tentative schedule.

I also want to give a big thank you and shout out to my sister-in-law Tzyra Andreeva for sending me some reading material, two of which will be reviewed this month. Thank you as always. 

June 10-Weekly Reader: Make Love Not War: The Sexual Revolution, An Unfettered History by David Allyn

June 17-Weekly Reader: All The Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and The Rise of an Independent Nation by Rebecca Traister

June 24-Weekly Reader Classics Corner: Drawing Down The Moon: Witches, Druids, Goddess Worshippers, and Other Pagans in Today's America by Margot Adler

June 30-Weekly Reader Classics Corner: Imagica by Clive Barker