Sunday, March 29, 2020

April's Reading List





April's Reading List
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

What a crazy month! It has been a very stressful time due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Everyone please take care of yourselves and those around you. 

As I mentioned before, my PopSugar Reading Challenge list has gone through massive changes because of the close of our library. I am only limiting the titles to books that I either own either as a hard copy or Kindle. So far all categories have been filled. 

New Book Alert: Loose Threads (Cool Assasins Book One) by J.O. Quantaman (PopSugar Reading Challenge A book recommended by your favorite blog, vlog, podcast, or reading group)

New Book Alert: The Girl Who Found The Sun by Matthew S. Cox

New Book Alert: Raising Petals by Ashwini Rath

New Book Alert: One Month Only (Tuscany Nights Book One) by Kate Blake

Weekly Reader: Mr. Harding Proposes (The Rowland Sisters Book One) by Catherine Dove (PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book by an author with a type of flora or fauna in their name)

New Book Alert: Two Like Me and You by Chad Alan Gibbs (PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book with an upside down image on the cover)

New Book Alert: Eli's Promise by Ronald H. Balson

Weekly Reader: Alternate Warriors Edited by Mike Resnick (PopSugar Reading Challenge: An anthology)

Weekly Reader: Roaring Twenties Whodunnits Edited by Mike Ashley (PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book set in the 1920's)

Weekly Reader: Star Wars: Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina Edited by Kevin J. Anderson (PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book with a made up language)

Classics Corner: Mary Queen of Scotland and The Isles by Margaret George (PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that features a map)

Classics Corner: London by Edward Rutherfurd (PopSugar Reading Challenge-A book set in a city that has hosted the Olympics)

As always, I am excited about reading anything that you have. If you need a book reviewed, researched, or edited, then do not hesitate to contact me at juliesaraporter@gmail.com.
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Thank you all very much. As always, Happy Reading!

Classics Corner: One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez; One Hundred Years of Confusion, Beauty, Magic, Emotion, and Fate



Classics Corner: One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez; One Hundred Years of Confusion, Beauty, Magic, Emotion, and Fate

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book published in the 20th Century



Spoilers: Make no mistake about it, One Hundred Years of Solitude is not an easy book to read. But it is a book that is better experienced, thought about, and felt. It's the kind of book where images will stick with the Reader long after the book is closed. They will picture and remember those images and how they made them feel.

First come the difficulties in reading this masterpiece, then the praise.

Characters's names get repeated so often that the Reader should thank any deity imagined that there is a family tree that they can consult when mass confusion arrives over who is who.

The plot focuses on five generations of the Buenida family, a Colombian family that settles in Macondo, an isolated village. They begin with Jose Arcadio and his wife, Ursula. They have three biological children, Aureliano, Jose Arcadio, and Amaranta and one adopted, Rebeca. We then go into subsequent generations which boast of a total of 22 Aurelianos, 4 Jose Arcadios, 3 Remedios, 2 Amarantas, and 2 Ursulas. (It's not even a tradition. Other characters talk about the confusion and oddity of the name repetition.) Not only that, but many of the same generations have similar personality traits and physical characteristics, so many characters are interchangeable. They are less of individuals and more like one long continuous chain of the same people making the same mistakes, having the same beliefs, and living the same lives.

It's not uncommon to read about one character with one name and have them interact with another character with the same name, leaving the poor Reader to try to remember which generation that they are reading about. For example, Jose Arcadio the Father and Jose Arcadio the Son have a conversation in which Jose Arcadio (Son) runs off with a nomadic tribe. Then, Jose Arcadio (Father) regresses into a childlike state right before Jose Arcadio (Son) returns after a long estrangement.

The repetition of names gets comical when Aureliano, by then Col. Aureliano Buenida, impregnates 17 women, fathering sons by all of them. Of course all are named for their father, making that 17 Baby Aurelianos. It gets better. About four of the young Aurelianos move to the Buenida family manse and are called "Aureliano X," first name: Aureliano last name: their mother's family name (like Aureliano Triste). Then as if to make things even more confusing, the 17 Aurelianos all get murdered before they turn 35.

The narrative runs less like a smooth course down a stream and more like a rippling rapids down a rocky coast. Marquez writes like a person telling an oral story going on about something without making a point or telling part of a story and leave out vital information, only to remember it later. He begins the book telling us that Col. Aureliano Buenida was in front of a firing squad and had a childhood memory of seeing ice for the first time. Marquez only thinks to tell us later why he is in front of the firing squad and still later to tell us that he didn't die by the firing squad, but died much later of natural causes.


The effect of Marquez's writing is reminiscent of a ring of small children gathered around a wise village storyteller. They get droplets of information. So they lean in and pay attention to the details so they can get more. Real historical events are present like the military takeovers, civil wars, industrialization, and the rise of the fruit corporations. However, the events aren't a concrete focus so much as how they affect this little village and the people inside it. When Col. Aureliano leaves to start a military revolt against the oppressive Conservative government, he puts his nephew, Arcadio in charge. Unfortunately, Arcadio becomes a dictator turning Macando into a microcosm of the situation in the rest of Colombia, a country of great beauty trampled upon by corrupt political and military leaders. Ultimately, the other residents turn against Arcadio leaving him to face an execution as many leaders who begin their reigns with blood on their hands end the same way.

This book and The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende could be considered twin spirits. Both are multigenerational books about Central and South American families and both books are considered the embodiments of the magical realism genres. However, both books are excellent in their own ways. The House of The Spirits is technically better written. The plots in the Allende book are straight forward and have clear beginnings, middles, and ends. While the characters are different generations from the same family, they also stand out as individuals. Their personalities, traits, goals, interactions, and ambitions are recognized. It is a book that is excellent on a mental level.

One Hundred Years of Solitude is better on an emotional level. Some paragraphs might be confusing, but the beautiful images are not to be missed. No Reader will forget Jose Arcadio (Father)'s dream of a house of mirror walls that leads him to discover Macondo or the continuous rain that pours down throughout the village.

The long illness in which the villagers all have a simultaneous case of insomnia is another image that stays. As are the means they use to keep their sanity and memories intact like writing notes and placing them on common objects, so they don't forget what they are.

This is a full sensory experience that draws the Reader in and doesn't let them go. It almost has a dream-like fairy tale quality. In fact, fairy tale tropes run abound in this story. There is the jealous rivalry between two sisters: Amaranta and Rebeca that intensifies to death threats and complete isolation for one of them. The divergent paths between Jose Arcadio (Son) and Col. Aureliano is reminiscent of those stories where one brother travels the world to seek his fortune and the other remains inside the kingdom to rule. There is even an eccentric woman, Pilar Ternera, a card reader, who alternates between Fairy Godmother and The Witch in the Woods. The beauty surrounds the book so much that the Reader can forgive the lapses in coherence. It is the deep emotional connection that stays with the Reader.

If there is a book that best represents the magical realism genre, it is this one. There are so many magical touches that add to the emotional experience. Many characters have unusual talents such as Aureliano's ability to survive several near death experiences. As she grows older and blind, Ursula is able to find anything that is lost simply by paying attention to the pauses and breaks from other's routines.

One of the more interesting, almost otherworldly characters is Remedios the Beautiful. Her physical appearance draws men to commit violence or suicide. Even when she wears plain clothes or has her head shaved, her natural beauty shines through. However, she is unaware of her physical appearance because she lives in a state of permanent childlike state, almost like a holy innocent ever virginal or untouched. So of course it makes sense that Remedios' end would not be conventional. She ascends into the heavens, like a saint.

Fatalism is a common theme to One Hundred Years of Solitude. Many characters like Pilar Ternera predict things that later come true. There is a consistent curse hanging over the family's head that occurs during a dream of Ursula's. She dreams that their family line will end when a baby is born with a pig's tail. Five generations later, a baby, Aureliano, is born with the pig tail but to parents who are unaware of the implications and are helpless to stop their inevitable end.

Perhaps that is why the characters all share the same names and are not individually defined as they are in The House of the Spirits. They are fated to become the same people in that continuous chain and the links will continue until the family line ends. This isn't the story of one person in a family, but one family that moves as one person that begins the world with much beauty and magic, but is destined as we all are to come to an inevitable end.



Classics Corner: The Women's Room by Marilyn French; The Troubled Lives of Women in the Mid-20th Century



Classics Corner: The Women's Room by Marilyn French; The Troubled Lives of Women in the Mid 20th Century

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book published the month of your birthday (February, 1977)

Spoilers: Marilyn French's novel, The Women's Room, could best be summarized as Feminine Mystique: The Novel.

Betty Friedan's 1964 landmark book, The Feminine Mystique is considered the book that kick-started the second wave of Feminism. It laid out the problems that many women had when they married young, had children, and settled into lives as stay at home mothers. Friedan wrote about the "Problem That Has No Name," women who were bored, listless, and unfulfilled with their lives. They had education, but no idea what to do with it and were unable or unwilling to use it for a career or to find a life outside the home. Many of these women developed physical, psychological, and emotional disorders and used alcoholism, drug addiction, and sexual gratification as means to cope with that dissatisfaction. Friedan's book received criticism, but many women read, understood, and related to that situation. Enough to create a movement.

If The Feminine Mystique described the problem and offered potential solutions, then The Women's Room is the case study, albeit a fictional case study. However, French graphically illustrated what happened to these women as they moved from giggly schoolgirls and conformist housewives of the 1950's and early '60's to divorcees, single mothers, and feminist activists of the late '60's and '70's.

The Women's Room focuses on Mira Ward. When we first meet her, it is 1968 and she is hiding in the Ladies' restroom at the college where she is taking classes. However, it has gone through a change like everything and everybody around her. French tells us, "She called (the Ladies' room) that even though someone had scratched out the word 'ladies' in the sign on the door and written 'women's' underneath. She called it that out of thirty-eight years of habit, and until she saw the cross-out on the door, had never thought about it. 'Ladies room' was a euphemism, she supposed, and she disliked euphemisms on principle."

This book is about women like Mira who argued and challenged being called "ladies" and all that the word implies ("young ladies", "proper ladies," sophisticated ladies who dress nicely, behave properly, and don't question society's standards) to being called "women." ("Wonder Woman,", "career women," women who fight for equal rights, careers, and the rights to being treated as equally to men.)

Mira is a product of a post-WWII upper-middle class upbringing, the type of upbringing that expected her to only have an advantageous marriage. All of her education and training, primarily from her mother, was made for that specific goal. However, Mira starts out life independent. She reads books by people like Nietzsche and Radclyffe Hall that are considered forbidden and asks important questions about sex, religion, and politics. At first, she tries to be independent. She doesn't want to be someone's secretary. She would rather have the adventures and be the boss. When she becomes involved with a boy, Lanny, she imagines herself scrubbing the kitchen floor with a baby crying in the background.

After she and Lanny break up, Mira begins dating Norm, a medical student. When she and Norm get married, Mira can feel her own life and independence slipping away. She suggests teaching and ultimately getting a Ph.D. in English Literature. Norm scoffs at the idea, thinking that she wouldn't have time what with taking care of the house, cooking meals, and raising the children. (It never occurs to him to share the household tasks. When she suggests this, it is clear that he thinks the very idea is repellant.) The picture of Mira's dependence becomes clearer and more haunting when after she gives birth to two children, Normie Jr. and Clark, Mira finds herself scrubbing the floor with crying children in the background, exactly like she feared.

Some of the hardest chapters to read are the ones that not only peer into Mira and Norm's troubled married life, but the troubled lives of all of the married couples that surround them. The Feminine Mystique doesn't just hit them, it hits everyone around them. Natalie is jealous when her husband, Hamp starts making eyes at the other women in their circle. Adele has a bad temper that constantly yells at her children and worries when she is pregnant with another. Bliss is engaged in an affair with her best friend's husband. Martha is taking night school courses and becomes involved with a French teacher. Sean and Oriane move to the Bahamas where Sean abandons her, leaving her broke and ill from cancer. Samantha and Simp end up financially stranded after Simp loses his job. The most troubling story is that of Lily, who is abused by her bullying husband and budding sociopathic son into a mental breakdown. Lily moves in and out of psychiatric care and constantly receives electroconvulsive therapy, shock treatments.

What of our main couple, Mira and Norm? Norm subjects his wife to verbal abuse and is judgemental towards his wife and her friends. He neglects his children. One night, he drops a bombshell on Mira when he tells her that he wants a divorce. (The reason is never specified, but is implied that Norm is leaving her for another woman, a woman whom he later marries.) During their separation, a devestated Mira attempts suicide by slashing her wrists only to be rescued by Martha.


This book illustrates the problems that women have with the institution of marriage. The female characters are more three dimensional than the males. They are flawed hurt characters who are desperate for happiness and are instead miserable. The men are flatter, more cardboard, and more interchangeable. It makes sense when the Reader realizes that the book is exclusively told from the female point of view, from a first person female narrator who isn't revealed until the end of the book. It presents the world how she sees it.

In her eyes, men are the dominant force unknowable and powerful. The women around her are the ones who are suffering. The Narrator makes no apologies for how she writes. She challenges the idea of marriage itself and how it transforms people into someone that they don't want to be.
She also mentions how when books are written by men, they make the female characters flatter and less interesting as mothers, children, or love interests. They can't write about women, because they can't get into their heads. (Though she cited that there were exceptions like Henry James.) In retaliation, the Narrator portrays the male characters from her outside perspective because she can't get into their heads.


After the divorce, Mira finds her life completely different. She finds the life that she once wanted. The first taste of freedom is felt when she gives Norm a bill, itemizing all of the work that she did for him all of those years. Even though Norm refuses to pay, she makes her point clear that she is becoming aware of her own mind and desires.

Mira has more freedom to further her education by taking English Literature courses in college. She becomes involved in a sexual relationship with Ben, another student, and meets some wild new friends that navigate her into the Women's Movement and living life on her own terms.


That's not to say that her and her friend's lives are problem free. Isolde, a lesbian, goes from one troubled relationship to another particularly with women who are afraid to take their romance with her to another level. Val, the leader of this group of feminists, wants to start her own women-only separatist community, but seeks vengeance when her beloved daughter, Chris, is raped.

But what differs between these women and the ones before is how they deal with their problems. The women that Mira knew during her marriage are more internal. They are unable to express their discomfort. Their only ways they can challenge their unhappiness is to act upon their frustrations and neuroses. They are so dependent on their husbands, that they can no longer become the agents of change. When that dependence is removed, the Marthas, the Samanthas, the Blisses, and the Lilies don't know what to do with themselves.

The Isoldes, the Vals, and the Chrises are the agents of change. Many of them are divorced or purposely unmarried, so they rely only on themselves. If something goes wrong in their lives, they seek to change it through action. They go through emotional break ups, sexual explorations, and class and work overload but are able act on their own. Part of independence is dealing with the positive and negative aspects of living your own life, becoming aware of your own emotions, and making your own decisions. It is an independence that is won because it is earned

Mira in particular, loves her new found and hard won independence. She enjoys it so much that she turns down Ben's marriage proposal knowing that she will end up with more of the same, another stifling crippling married life of dependence. In the end, Mira realizes that she has achieved the fulfillment that she long ago wanted by herself.

The Women's Room covers that dramatic moment when women challenged their right to be thought of as independent people who should receive equal rights and protection under the law and society. It showed that time when they stopped thinking of themselves as girls and ladies and started thinking of themselves as women.



Friday, March 27, 2020

Weekly Reader: The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations by Toni Morrison; The Best Words From The Celebrated Late Author





Weekly Reader: The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations by Toni Morrison; The Best Words From The Celebrated Late Author




By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book with more than 20 letters in the title (57)


When Toni Morrison died in 2019, she left behind a tremendous legacy as one of the best authors of the 20th and 21st century. Her novels such as, The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon, Tar Baby, Sula, Jazz, and especially her masterpiece, Beloved are brilliant works with strong themes of racial and gender issues. When one reads a work by Toni Morrison, they are entering the world of a master storyteller.

With apologies to Emily Dickinson, Morrison's book, The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations is her letter to the world. It is a collection of her non-fiction essays, speeches, and other works. Published the same year as her death, it is almost set up as Morrison's farewell letter so she can express her views and have the final word.

The book has plenty of great works that express Morrison's views on various topics including race, gender, art, and other issues. The best are:


Part 1: The Foreigner's Home


"The Foreigner's Home"-The majority of the works in Part 1, feature Morrison at her most biting. In many of her essays, Morrison captured a word in its various meanings. In "The Foreigner's Home," she used the term "globalism" in all of its various definitions. She recognized the term as a means for the redistribution of wealth, but she also saw it as a code for forcing Western values and ideals onto other countries and ignoring these other countries' uniqueness. She also noted the globalized view of distorting what is public and destroying what is private.

She cited a book called The Radiance of the King which demonstrates that distorted view of globalism. In the book, a white man is ready to meet the king of an African village. He is possessed with the whole White Man's Burden ideal. It is only after he is humbled and stripped of his conferred dominance, that he is able to achieve Enlightenment and appear before the king.

"Moral Inhabitants"-Morrison took on American History in her works. She often looked at the world from the point of view of people who were considered "the Other" from the white male majority. In this essay, she cited how the writings from the past reflected how many figures really felt about black people, Native Americans, and immigrants. She dryly recounted a statistic from Colonial times which listed slaves right between rice and tar. The statistic also noted how many died, or were drawn back for exportation. (" 'Died', 'drawn back,-strange, violent words that could never be used to describe rice, tar, or turpentine," Morrison wrote)

If that wasn't uncomfortable enough, the quotes from noted historical figures can be an eye opening experience. Morrison used actual quotes from the likes of Andrew Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, Benjamin Franklin, and William Byrd to reflect their views on those considered "The Other." Byrd's journal entries noted the number of times slaves were whipped. Benjamin Franklin said "Why increase the Sons of Africa by planting them in America, where we have so fair an opportunity by excluding all Blacks and Tawneys, of increasing the lovely White and Red?"

In a time when people want to deify people from the past, it is important to remember their views no matter how negative that they may be. Being clear and honest about the past recognizes the enemy of hatred and helps people in the present challenge that hatred.


"The Habit of Art"-This essay can be summarized into three words: "Art is fierce." Morrison cited several examples in which people used their art to protest and challenge the world view around them.

Two examples in particular stand out.
One took place during the dictatorship in Haiti in which the government declared that it was illegal for anyone to retrieve and bury anyone killed by the Tonton Mascoutes. They were only to be gathered by a government garbage truck. Fed up, a teacher organized the performance of a certain play that was performed night after night. The Mascoutes assumed that they were just performing a mindless amateur theatrical failing to realize that the performance was heavy in significance. The play was Antigone, which was about a woman who risked execution to bury her deceased brother against her uncle, the king's regulations.

Another example involved a conversation that Morrison had with a writer from North Africa. She begged for Morrison's aid because in her home country, female writers were being shot in the streets because they were considered a threat to the regime. Both examples showed how art can be considered dangerous, but can also be used to fight against oppressive ideals and to tell the truth. Many artists consider those ideals worth facing arrest and dying for.


"Harlem On My Mind: Contesting Memory-Meditations on Museums, Culture, and Integration"- Morrison also wrote about the struggles of the artist in society closer to home. In this essay, she wrote about an exhibit during the 1960's at the Metropolitan Museum of New York called Harlem on My Mind. This exhibit was supposed to be reflective of the art and culture of Harlem, featuring photographs, murals, slides etc of Harlem's mostly black residents.

During an era of great political change, this exhibition met with a lot of controversy, particularly from the black community. They protested the lack of representation either on the committee or in the exhibit. They felt that they were not being represented properly and felt that their artists should speak for themselves and not through someone else's interpretation.

Morrison also recognized how artists of color struggled to be recognized as artists and not just representatives of their ethnic group. She recognized that great strides have been made of recognizing different artists and voices, but more strides needed to be done.


"The Novel Lecture on Literature"-Morrison's speech for accepting the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993 is certainly her most famous non-fiction work. It has been antholgized and quoted many times. (I personally have several copies of it in my literature collections.) The reason is because it reflects how important language is to not only writers but to anyone.

She began her speech telling a story about three young people holding a bird and confronting a wise blind elderly storyteller with the question of whether the bird was alive or dead. The storyteller said, "I don't know if the bird is alive or dead, but I know the bird is in your hands. It is in your hands."

The bird could symbolize anything to anybody, the future, youth, leadership. But to Morrison, a celebrated and award winning author, the bird symbolized language. In her speech, Morrison recognized the power language has, not just as a means for communication but as something that could create unity or destruction. Oppressive language could be as destructive as any weapon and convey a sense of mastery that does not encourage separate thoughts or ideas. Language can also bring things and people to life, by associating things with words and empowering others. The words allow people and things to live on even after they are physically gone. The word remains.

Like the storyteller, Morrison challenges her Listeners and Readers to recognize the power that language holds and that we give it that power by our words. The bird is in our hands. What are we going to do with it?


"Cinderella's Stepsisters"-Besides racial issues, Morrison also wrote about gender conflicts. In this brief, but interesting essay, Morrison used Cinderella's stepsisters as a metaphor for women turning on other women.

Sometimes women of different ideologies, personalities, ethnicities, etc. attack each other rather than aid one another. Perhaps they see other women as competition. Perhaps they themselves are oppressed by dominating forces and attack other women perhaps to take out their own frustrations or for themselves to feel superior. Morrison asked that women do not participate "in the oppression of (their) sisters."




Interlude: Black Matters


"Black Matters"-This part features questions about race and gender in literature. Morrison discusses how early American literature was created by people who mixed their old world culture and valuesz with their new surroundings to create a distinctly American style. With early African-Americans, that also came from what Morrison called Africanism, being seen as the Other and being forcibly removed from their homes instead of voluntarily. With the exception of a few published authors and slave narratives, much of the 18th and 19th century views of black people came from the words of white authors.

Morrison cited The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as an example. While many Readers saw Jim and Huck's journey as a voyage for their freedom, particularly Jim's, Morrison saw Jim's journey in less idealistic terms. She believed that Mark Twain and Huck could only understand Jim's plight through their own perspective. Because of that, Jim is seen less of a complete character, but almost as a plot device what he represents to Huck not who he is on his own. She finds Huck and Tom's mockery of Jim to be unconscionable and reflective of him as a device not a character.

This essay shows how American Literature evolved with the times and how different creators can be used to capture those voices to create a complete picture about what it means to be an American.


"Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Presence in American Literature"-It means something when an author who is considered "canon literature," questions that term. In her talent for words and language, Morrison considered calling this essay "canon fodder." She was interested in the double meaning, because the term cannon fodder referred to soldiers, usually from poor or ethnic backgrounds, who were sent to the front lines to die without their sacrifices recognized. The other meaning is canon, the works that are considered the shape of literature, the classics. "When the two words faced each other, the image became the shape of the canon wielded on (or by) the body of law. The book of power announcing an officially recognized set of texts," she said. Morrison recognized how hard it can be for canon literature to be opened to include female writers and writers of color.

Morrison broke down many of the arguments others have had about African-American art such as "African-American art exists but it is inferior." She challenges these assumptions and recognizes how African-American artists and writers use their sociology, culture, history, and struggles to convey their works and how the presence of African-Americans reshaped the American canon.

Morrison analyzed the opening lines of her own works and how she drew from her culture and experiences to convey her literature. For example the opening line from The Bluest Eye is "Quiet as it's kept there were no marigolds in the fall of 1941." Morrison said that this line comes from a familiar phrase urging the listener to keep a secret. She aimed for that cultural intimacy from her own background to draw the Reader into this story of violence and incest. The reference to marigolds suggests a child's way of interpreting the world around her. The narrator recognizes the violent acts towards her friend and uses a superstition that she hears from others to find meaning. This opening line from The Bluest Eye illustrates how an African-American author used her own culture and experiences to shape contemporary literature.


"Gertrude Stein and the Difference She Makes"-One of the best tributes are the ones that one artist pays to another. This essay demonstrates Morrison's tribute to Gertrude Stein, the author who was identified with the Modernist movement.

Morrison particularly analyzes Stein's book Three Lives which tells about three women, Good Anna, Melanctha, and Gentle Lena. Morrison was particularly intrigued by Stein's characterization of Melanctha, the African-American character as compared to the other two German-American women.

Morrison acknowledged that Stein's book dips into some of the racism of her day. Anna and Lena are indentified by their country of origin as German immigrants while Melanctha is American, but is identified by her skin color. There were also comparisons between the light-skinned Melanctha and the darker-skinned, Rose who is considered more dangerous than Melanctha.

However, Morrison also noted that Melanctha is the most developed of the three protagonists in Three Lives. She is the most active and strong willed of the trio. Melanctha also makes the strongest stance for freedom of sexuality and knowledge. Morrison compares Stein's protagonists "Three Lives moves from the contemplation of the asexual spinster's life-the Good Anna-in its struggle for control and meaning, to and through the quest for sexual knowledge (which Stein calls wisdom) in the person and body of Melanctha, an Africanistic woman; to the presumably culminating female experience of marriage and birth-the Gentle Lena."

She also said that while the three women come to sad ends, it is only Melanctha that learns from her experience. She learns about love and acceptance from her friends. Even though Stein wrote like a forward thinking woman of her time, Morrison recognized her ability to capture the voice of a woman that she would have considered The Other.




Part II: God's Language


"God's Language"-In this section, Morrison covers art and literature and where such inspiration comes from. This essay recounts how Morrison created her novel, Paradise and what a word like "Paradise" means to some people. She had to find a way to define such a term that had been seen through religious and spiritual eyes they don't reflect those of her characters. "How to render expressive religious language credibly and effectively in postmodern fiction….which represents the everyday practice of nineteenth-century African-Americans and their children, nor lends itself to postmodern narrative strategies. The second problem then is part of the first: how to narrate persuasively profound and motivating faith in and to a highly securlarized, contemporary "scientific" world. In short, how to reimagine paradise."

Besides defining paradise for her book, Morrison also wrote on a larger scale what it has grown to mean in general. It has been overimagined and overused. Modern religion and narratives fail to capture the early flowery language of Paradise's meaning, in an attempt to claim and own the ideal. Morrison chose instead to reveal the consequences of such terms instead of just defining it.


"Grendel and His Mother"-Like "Cinderella's Stepsisters", Morrison used an older story to find meaning in reality. She looks at the antagonists from Beowulf, Grendel and his mother to analyze how villainy is portrayed in ancient and Postmodern literature.

Grendel is seen as evil incarnate, no history, no motivation. He just is. His mother on the other hand can be identifiable. She seeks vengeance and is driven by love for her son.

John Gardner's novel, Grendel gives a much needed analysis on Beowulf's villain. Morrison saw Grendel as a native, someone perceived as The Other, trying to defend his home from invaders and understanding his place in the world.


"On Beloved"-By far, Morrison's greatest work is Beloved. Morrison often began her works by asking a question. In Beloved's case, the question was how other than equal rights, access, pay etc. does the women's movement define the freedom being sought particularly over control over one's body and how the women's movement involved encouragement of women to support other women.

Morrison recognized these struggles when she chose to tell the story from the point of view of a former slave who killed her daughter rather then return her to slavery. Morrison used her imagination to picture the life of a woman who had to make the decision to save a child from a fate worse than death and to rely on other women when she is haunted by the spirit of that late child. She used Beloved's haunting of Sethe as a metaphor for the past of slavery haunting the people who lived under those institutions.


"Tribute to Romare Beardon"- Morrison recognized artists of many types from Chinua Achebe, author of Things Fall Apart to funny man, Peter Sellers. One of those was artist, Romare Beardon.

Just as Morrison saw truth, wisdom, and beauty through words, she felt that Beardon saw those things in color, form, and images. She saw the "aesthetic implications," as Beardon described also in jazz and blues music which was an inspiration for both hers and Beardon's work. She saw the dialogue between Bearden and music as a union between art forms.

She believed that Beardon should be viewed in galleries and recognized as a canon artist.


"Goodbye To All That: Race, Surrogacy, and Farewell"-A true artist knows how to say goodbye in their own way. David Bowie and Johnny Cash summarized their illustrious careers with the music videos for "Lazarus" and "Hurt" respectively with images that called back to the two men in their prime contrasting to their frail appearances. The Beatles ended their partnership with the hit, "The Long and Winding Road" coming full circle with the mournful echo of "yeah, yeah, yeah." (Calling back to the more joyful "She Loves You.") This essay could be considered Morrison's goodbye. After all, it is not difficult to read about her legacy as an African-American female writer and how characters of different races said farewell without thinking of Morrison's own end. Though she died from complications from pneumonia and this may have been unplanned, this essay, the second to the last in this book, is a fitting final word.

Morrison mused on being thought of as an African-American female writer (as though she had a choice to be either African-American or female). She knew that she recognized that her works were going to by definition be about race and gender, so she sought to create works that opened those discussions. She allowed those topics to draw people of all races inward so they can recognize those experiences.

One of the ways that Morrison explored this concept was discussing the relationships between black and white women. Her own work, Beloved involved a powerful moment when Sethe, a former slave, and Amy Denver, a white woman who helped her escape and give birth to her daughter, Denver, have to leave each other. "They speak not of farewell; how to fix the memory of one in the mind of the other or as with Sethe, how to immortalize in the encounter beyond her own temporal life. ...Washing up on the bank of the Ohio River is our knowing that if both women had been the same race they could have, they might have, would have stayed together and shared their fortune."

Morrison recognized the change in paradigms for reading and writing literature and that writers are a part of changing those paradigms. Morrison said, "To the racial anchor that weighed down the language and its imaginative possibilities. How novel would it be if in this case, life imitated art….If, in fact, it I was not a (raced) foreigner but a home girl, who already belonged to the human race."


And she did. Toni Morrison was not just one of the greatest African-American writers, nor one of the greatest women authors. She was one of the greatest human authors.

Weekly Reader: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout; Strong Character Driven Stories With An Unforgettable Protagonist




Weekly Reader: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout; Strong Character Driven Stories With An Unforgettable Protagonist

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that passes the Bechdel Test (Olive, Daisy, and Nina talk about Nina's health in the story, "Starving.")


Spoilers: You can't forget a lead character like Olive Kitteridge.


The eponymous protagonist of Elizabeth Strout's anthology, Olive Kitteridge is at the center of this emotional strong character driven anthology about life in a small town.

Olive is the nucleus around which this narrative functions. She is a retired math teacher who still runs into and keeps in touch with her former students. She has been married for a long time to pharmacist, Henry Kitteridge which is up and down, more negative these days with Olive's firey temper and Henry's mental infidelities. She has a son, Christopher, a podiatrist who is married to Suzanne, a woman who Olive does not like. She is known throughout town and has many friends and is involved in many organizations.

Olive is stubborn, crochety, argumentative, opinionated, warm hearted, and loving. You love her, then you hate her, then you do both. But above all, you don't forget about her.


Strout earned a much deserved Pulitzer Prize for this wonderful anthology, because she fills it with such memorable rich characters that are recognizable, understandable, and identifiable. The strongest character of course is Olive herself. There are many stories that explore her immediate surroundings. The first story, "Pharmacy" covers her husband, Henry's involvement in the life of his employee, Denise as his compassion for her turns into an unrequited infatuation. Another story, "A Different Road", involves a hostage situation in which Olive says the wrong things to Henry in an argument that haunts them for the rest of their lives.


Olive can be extremely steadfast in her opinions. In the stories, "A Little Burst" and "Security," Olive makes perfectly clear that she does not approve of Christopher's significant others. In fact, many make the argument that she wouldn't like any of the women in her son's life. She befriends a man in the story, "River", but their differing political beliefs almost causes the friendship to end almost before it begins. Olive dominates any conversation and situation that she is in. (Even the accompanying Reader's Guide interview with Strout becomes a two-way interview with Strout and her main protagonist.)


Despite her prickliness, Olive is one that is always willing to help out those in need, particularly younger people. She uses her own experiences with a suicidal father and a family history of mental illness as an aide to help others such as Kevin, a former student contemplating suicide in "Incoming Tide." Her former life as a teacher and current life as a sometimes-busybody gives her a good handle at recognizing the difficulties that another person is going through, even a total stranger. In the story, "Starving," she instantly knows that Nina, a young woman who is new in town, is anorexic so Olive, and Olive's friends, lovers Daisy and Harmon, help get Nina the treatment that she needs.


While Olive is certainly the most engaging, other characters are quite interesting in their own right. Many of them sparkle even in stories where Olive only has a slight mention if at all. Angela O'Meara, the main character in the story, "The Piano Player" knows and plays everyone's favorite song at the local hangout. However, she also suffers through life with her dying mother, a former prostitute, and a joyless relationship that causes her to feel lonely.

Another story "Ship in a Bottle," involves a troubled relationship between a mother and her two daughters. Julie, the eldest has clinical depression and has to watch helplessly as her mother is jilted at the altar by her faithless boyfriend. Even when Olive isn't involved, Strout's gift for characterization is still present.


Olive Kitteridge and the rest of the characters are well-written and brilliant. They leap off the page and go from being characters that are interesting to read about to becoming good friends.


Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Classics Corner: Spite Fences by Trudy Krisher; A Powerful Book About Fences Built From Racism, Spite, and Hatred


Classics Corner: Spite Fences by Trudy Krisher; A Powerful Book About Fences Built From Racism, Spite, and Hatred

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that features one of the Seven Deadly Sins (Spite, Wrath)


Spoilers: We all build walls and fences around ourselves. Some build them for protection to keep people inside. Others build them to keep others out.

Sometimes, the worst fences are the ones that surround the human heart. They are built because we don't know certain people, we don't want to know them. They are built not by hammers, drills, and nails but with other tools. Tools like assumptions, prejudice, spite, meanness, and hatred. Those fences are the strongest ones and they take forever to come down, if they ever do.

That is the situation faced by Magnolia "Maggie" Pugh, the young protagonist of Trudy Krisher's powerful novel, Spite Fences. Her family is considered "poor white trash" in their small town of Kinship, Georgia during the early 1960's. Many in town disregard her family because of their poverty. She has to deal with an abusive mother, unemployed father, and Gardenia, a sister who is propped up to become a beauty queen.

The Pughs also have to contend with their neighbors, the Boggses. Maggie's mother looks down on the Boggses, saying that if her family is poor, then at least they have standards. She thinks that the Boggses are a wild uncouth bunch of hooligans and with good reason. Their son, Virgil, is a sadist who plays malicious pranks on people including the Pugh sisters. Maggie's mother demands that her father put a fence around their home to block out the presence of their neighbors.


Besides the literal fence between the Pugh and Boggs homes, the figurative fences are stronger during the Jim Crow era. Maggie is looking for work as a housekeeper to help support her family. She is referred to the home of George Hardy, a mathematics professor who's new in town. At first, Maggie doesn't see George. She cleans his house as the two pass notes back and forth to each other. It comes as a surprise that her employer is an African-American man.

Maggie tries to continue working for George, whom she grows to like and respect, while hiding it from the town, particularly her mother. She also becomes swept up in the Civil Rights Movement as the African-American community of Kinship plans a display of civil disobedience. Maggie has to rely on her open mindedness, new found friendships with the African-American community, and her talents as a photographer to break through those fences and speak out.

Spite Fences is an extremely strong character and theme driven book. At the center of this storm lies Maggie. She is similar to Scout Finch, from To Kill A Mockingbird, a young prepubescent white girl breaking through the color barrier to question the societal standards that surrounds her. She is extremely timid and conditioned, particularly by her mother, not to express her strongest emotions. She buries a lot underneath, including being an eyewitness to a violent hate crime and not speaking out about the circumstances.

It is only after she befriends George and several other African-Americans around town, putting faces to names that she has grown up near but never knew on a personal basis that she realizes that she can no longer stand on the sidelines out of fear. Seeing how others live, worship, and work. She recognizes that struggle and is able to put herself forward.

Maggie is an amateur photographer and George is able to use that talent to bond with her. He offers her his issues of National Geographic so she can study photographs of other countries. He encourages her to use her talents around town and to look inside others to capture these moments. He also discusses deep topics such as fears with Maggie, so she can look inside the people around her and see beyond their outward appearances.

Maggie's photography becomes a key in breaking down the fences. She takes pictures of her new friends and herself in happy situations that unfortunately get revealed to the White community of Kinship. Even though things don't turn out well, Maggie is able to take pictures of the oppression that African-Americans face and the means they use to challenge them. These pictures not only bring faces to their struggle, but gives Maggie an opportunity to improve her situation.

Spite Fences is about the fences that are built out of cruelty and hatred. However, with love, friendship, human concern, and recognizing our talents, light can be shown through those fences. Maybe those fences can even come down.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

New Book Alert: Murder in the Multiverse: Multiverse Investigations Unit by R.E. McLean; A Fun and Clever Series In This and Any Other Alternate Universe



New Book Alert: Murder in the Multiverse: Multiverse Investigations Unit by R.E. McLean; A Fun and Clever Series In This and Any Other Alternate Universe

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book about or by a woman in STEM


Spoilers: R.E. McLean's Multiverse Investigations Unit is a unique series in which the protagonists solve crimes in various parallel universes. It is like an exciteable physics professor giving a lesson on quantum theory with very bright flash cards and loud special effects. It's interesting and informative, but mostly it's a lot of fun.


Alex Strand, a young post-doctorate student in physics is studying quantum theories particularly how it pertains to the frequent death and resurrection of her cat, Schrodinger. (Get it, like Schrodinger's cat experiment? Yes, it's that kind of book.)

Unfortunately, she gets up close and personal to these experiments when reclusive billionaire, Claire Pope is found dead. Two mysterious police officers, Monique Williams and Mike Long tell her that they need her help to prevent the murder of... reclusive billionaire, Claire Pope.

Before Alex can say "Wha-?," she is taken to the Multiverse Investigations Unit, a secret organization which investigates and prevents crimes in the Multiverse, the various alternate universes. The MIU needs Alex's expertise in quantum physics to investigate. Alex is partnered up with Mike and the two explore Silicon City, an alternate version of San Francisco that is connected to the Hive, an artificial intelligence. The duo try to prevent Claire's murder while Alex explores this new world and conducts her own deeply personal investigation.


I haven't enjoyed a murder mystery satire this much since Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series. This is one of those book series that is a complete delight to read and be amazed at the fantasy trip the author puts us on. McLean captures the alternate universe milieu perfectly. Silicon City is a brilliantly realized setting. The details from the fashion, to the slang, to the social customs are well thought out. There is also a real sense of the sociopolitical difficulties of a populace physically connected to an artificial intelligence that limits their freedom.


There are some brilliant clever touches to the series that lends itself to the concept of alternate universes such as different versions of the same people and how even if certain things change, they are still the same people underneath. Claire for example is a billionaire in different businesses. In one universe, she created a pet food empire and in another invents accessories for ear pieces that hook up to the Hive. However in any world, she is still an agoraphobic recluse with very few friends and one ex-husband.

The MIU has an employee named Madge Ciccone who was named for Madonna because she was born the same time that the pop singer had her first number one hit, "Into the Groove." However, Madge has prematurely aged, a fad in her universe. Silicon City has its own counterpart in Madge with Madonna, who looks and dresses like the pop singer, but lives in a world that has never heard of her.


There is a clever interactive experience between McLean, the series, and the Reader. McLean has a website that describes the various other alternate universes such as one in which the British won the Revolutionary War and another in a dystopia. These other universes offer intriguing possibilities for future volumes that should be just as fascinating to explore.

The website is also a mock recruitment process for potential Multiverse Investigations Unit professionals including a quiz to join and cases (book synopsis). It takes one back to the late '90's-early '00's when websites such as Galaxy Quest's or The Blair Witch Project's were created specifically to give fans a full interactive fourth-wall-breaking experience.


Besides the fun, the series stands out by giving us fascinating characters otherwise the book would just be a travelogue into weirdness. Mike is the typical veteran with a bad history that has yet to be elaborated upon. Though there are hints that somehow he lost a partner. His facial hair goes through some unintentional peculiar metamorphoses that changes every moment from a beard, to a van dyke, to a goatee, to a handlebar etc.(apparently an after-effect to some trip gone awry.)

Alex is also well-written: the brains to Mike's brawn. Fortunately, she is a lesbian so it saves us a "will-they-won't-they" scenario between our lead partners. However, she does fancy another MIU employee so we may see a potential office romance.

She also has a painful past and a lot of guilt that has consumed her life. When she enters Silicon City, she does not look around only for scientific curiosity. She also looks for information about her past and in an emotional moment, she receives it.


Murder in the Multiverse is a brilliant first step in this fun and exciting series. It is a brilliant work in this and any other universe.

Monday, March 23, 2020

Weekly Reader: Song for a Lost Kingdom Book 1 by Steve Moretti; A Beautiful Fantasy About Time Travel, Scottish History, and Music



Weekly Reader Song For A Lost Kingdom Book 1 by Steve Moretti; A Beautiful Fantasy About Time Travel, Scottish History, and The Power of Music
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that you were interested in because the title grabbed your attention

Spoilers: Music can do powerful things, including transporting you back to a memory by recalling other moments, earlier times, and fill your imagination with nostalgia, all figuratively of course. But what if music had the power to transport you to another time, literally?
That is the situation faced by Adeena Stuart, the protagonist of A Song for a Lost Kingdom, a beautiful fantasy about time travel and the power of music.

Adeena is an amateur cellist who longs to play for a major orchestra.  In the meantime, she works at the museum managed by her best friend, Tara. The latest museum exhibit features the Duncan Cello, a cello created in the 18th century by a former student of Antonio Stradivarius. Adeena has been rejected by the conductor and plans to reaudition and "borrow" the famous cello. 
While auditioning something strange happens. Adeena finds herself in 18th century Scotland in period costume, playing in front of an audience dressed in Highland garb and calling her "Lady Katherine." She is transported back in time into the body of Lady Katherine Carnegie, a noblewoman, musician, and female composer caught up in the Jacobite rebellion. She becomes involved in political intrigue and romance in the past while returning to a failed romantic relationship and potential legal troubles involving ownership of the cello and a plagiarizing conductor. Meanwhile, Adeena's parents travel to Scotland to visit her dying grandmother and learn that the Stuarts'  connections to the Duncan Cello and Lady Katherine are much closer than they previously thought.

It's easy to compare Song for a Lost Kingdom to Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series in that both involve time travel and romance between a modern woman and an 18th Century Scotsman. However, there are a few key moments that differ between them. One of the biggest is that Adeena goes back and forth in time between historical Scotland and modern Canada. This situation leads to some humorous moments when Adeena changes things in the past just by her mere presence. During one passage, Adeena's parents, William and Jackie, read the diary of Katherine's tyrannical brother, James. They read bemused as James wrote that during an argument, Adeena-in-Katherine referred to him as "King Konge, a line of royalty (he) is unaware of but is believed to be an insult to (his) person."

 The constant time hopping takes a tremendous toll on Adeena both physically and emotionally. Her returns often bring about fainting spells that require hospitalization. An X-ray reveals potential long term medical complications should Adeena continue to travel back and forth.
She also is confused by her double life, particularly when she develops feelings for John, a nobleman with ties to the Scottish rebels. This forbidden romance puts Adeena or rather Adeena-in-Katherine at odds with Katherine's stern brother who will do anything to stifle rebellion even if it means attacking his own family. This romance also complicates Adeena's modern relationship with Philippe with whom she already is uncertain about her feelings. 

Perhaps Adeena's off kilter emotions during her time travel could be a factor in some of her decisions. However, there are other factors that make her decisions unwise at best and reckless and dangerous at worst. She steals the Duncan Cello and recruits a friend to make a dummy copy for the Exhibit, jeopardizing Tara's career. She is blackmailed by Friedrich Lang, a conductor who is not only aware that she has the Cello but shamefully steals an unpublished composition written by Katherine. Adeena is naturally angered by Lang's blatant blackmail and plagiarism, but fails to account for the fact that she brought it on by performing with the Cello, practically boasting about it in front of Lang.
Sometimes, Adeena's actions make her incredibly irritating, but she also has a lot of spunk. She stands up for herself in front of James and others and is able to call Lang out on his deceit. She isn't always likeable, but she learns and is able to use that recklessness to defend herself and those around her.

The historical setting is well-written. People who are fascinated by Scottish history will delight in the cameos by such notable figures as Bonnie Prince Charlie. Thanks to Adeena-in-Katherine, we also get a birds-eye-view of the status of women in such a society. It's disheartening to read about a woman of such musical talent like Katherine go unnoticed for centuries until a modern woman like Adeena brings her to life.

There is a strong connection to music as the book features characters whose lives revolve around music. Music has the power to do many things: incite revolution, cause people to fall in love, and in this world causes people to travel in time.

Song For A Lost Kingdom is a strong fantasy with a real sense of time and place. It plays all the right notes and composes a beautiful symphony.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

PopSugar Reading Challenge Updates



Well in case you missed the news, the entire world is under a pandemic with the Covid-19. Everyone had been affected in one way or another. Now, is a good time to stay home, go out for essentials, but mostly rest, replenish, refocus, and engage in activities to get your mind off of a stressful time. Of course that includes curling up with a good book.

Because of the virus, my local library is closed so I have had to do some changes to my blog for this year. I am eliminating the Birthday Books since I don't have access to the books in question. I am continuing with the PopSugar Reading Challenge, but I am only limiting it to books I have already read for the blog, books I already own, or books that are available online. (Next year, I may do another one with books that I haven't read. We shall see)



Here is the new and improved revised edition for the PopSugar Reading Challenge

The Secrets They Left Behind by Lissa Marie Redmond-A book published in 2020-Done
The Virgin's Lover by Philippa Gregory-A fiction or nonfiction book about a world leader-Done
Losing Gemma by Katy Gardner-A book featuring a protagonist in their 20's-Done
Sympathetic People by Donna Baier Stein-A book that you meant to read in 2019-Done
Twenties Girl by Sophie Kinsella-A book with 20 or twenty on the title-Done
Warrior Won by Meryl Davids Landau-A book with a pun in the title (Warrior I)-Done
Return of the Hypotenuse: Poetry in Math and Science by Sunil Mishra-A book on a subject that you don't know anything about-Done
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan-A book set in a country that starts with C (China)-Done
Heartburn by Nora Ephron-A book with a pink cover-Done
The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead-A book that won an award in 2020 (Kirkus Best Novel)-Done
The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler-A book about a book club-Done

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout-,A book that passes the Bechdel Test-Coming soon
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez-A book published in the 20th Century-Comimg soon
The Women's Room by Marilyn French-A book published the month of your birthday (February 1977)-Coming Soon
Murder in the Multiverse by R.E. McLean-A book by or about a woman in STEM-Coming soon
Song for A Lost Kingdom by Steve Moretti-A book that you want to read because the title caught your eye-Coming soon
The Source of Self-Regard Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations by Toni Morrison-A book with more than 20 letters in the title-Coming soon
Spite Fences by Trudy Kirshner-A book that features one of the Seven Deadly Sins (Spite, Wrath)-Coming Soon

 London by Edward Rutherfurd- A book that is set in a city that has hosted the Olympics
Mary Queen of Scotland and The Isles by Margaret George-A book that features a map
Star Wars Tales From the Mos Eisley Cantina Edited by Kevin J Anderson-A book with a made up language (Rodian, Huttese, etc.)
Alternate Warriors Edited by Mike Resnick-An anthology
Roaring Twenties Whodunnits Edited by Mike Ashley-A book set in the 1920's
Two Like Me and You by Chad Gibbs-A book with an upside down image on the cover
Loose Threads Cool Assasins by J.O. Quantaman-A book recommended by your favorite blog, vlog, podcast, or group (BookTasters Twitter)
Slow Down by Lee Matthew Goldberg-A book involving social media
A Knife's Edge by Eliot Parker-A medical thriller
The Lazy Bachelor by Catherine Dove-A book by an author with flora and fauna in their name (dove)
Red, White, and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston-A book by a trans or non-binary author
The Best of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare-A book by an author who has written more than 20 books (37)
Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens-Thr first book on the shelf that you touch with your eyes closed
The Tin Drum by Gunter Grasse- A bildungsroman
Franny and Zooey by J.D. Salinger-A book with only words on the cover
The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield-A book with a book on the cover
A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley-A book that has three words in the title
The History of Mary Prince by Mary Prince-A book by WOC
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez-A book with a bird on the cover
The Silver Suitcase by Terrie Todd-A book with gold, silver, or bronze in the title
Paper Roses by Amanda Cabot-A Western
Arena by Holly Jennings-A book that features a robot, cyborg, or AI character
Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut-A book with a great first line
All The King's Men by Robert Penn Warren-A book by or about a journalist
The Lilac Bus by Maeve Binchy-A book from a past PopSugar Reading Challenge (A book you started but didn't finish)
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery-A book with a four or more rating on Goodreads
Helen Keller by Dorothy Herrman-A book featuring a character with a vision impairment or enhanced sight
New York by Edward Rutherfurd- A book with the same title as a movie or TV series, but is unrelated to it (Ken Burns' New York)
The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens-A book written by an author in their 20's
Nancy Drew Series by Carolyn Keene or The Enchanted World Edited by Brendan Lehane-A book with 20 or more books in the series
The Oxford Book of Japanese Short Stories Edited by Theodore W.Goosen-A book set in Japan
1984/Animal Farm by George Orwell-Read a banned book during Banned Books Week

Nothing's changed in that I am still accepting new books to read. (I work from home, so it's easy for me.) As usual if you have written a new book or know anyone who has, please contact me at juliesaraporter@gmail.com
 Reviews-$10-20.00 (and can be added to Amazon or Goodreads etc. at no additional charge)
Beta Reader-$10-20.00
Editor-$50.-100.00
Researcher-$25-50.00
Proofreader-$50-100.00
Co-Aithor-$100.00-200.00

Payments can be sent through PayPal at juliesaraporter@gmail.com

We'll get through this together. As usual, Happy Reading and above all, stay safe and healthy