Sum It Up: 1,098 Victories, A Couple of Irrelevant Losses, and a Life in Perspective

Sum it upPat Head Summit has been in the news many times as the all time winningest coach in NCAA basketball history.  As head coach of the University of Tennessee Lady Vol’s her abilitiy to create amazing teams of winning girls is unsurpassed.  Most recently she has been in the news for the announcement of her devastating diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.  Sum It Up is Pat Summit’s memoirs of a life with incredible accomplishments and difficult challenges.  As the only girl in a very hard working farming family, her only past time activity was trying to keep up with her brothers in their nightly games of hayloft basketball. Her demanding father pushed her to her limits and as a coach she demanded the same in the girls she coached.   The many quotes throughout the book from her family and friends verify what a strong challenger she was no matter whom or what she was up against.  Pat battled back from a terrible knee injury after her journey to Russia with the Olympic team.  Her drive to rehabilitate was not enough to be able to play to the level of where she had been so she was able to put her abilities into coaching.  She  coached an undefeated season, co-captained the first women’s Olympic team, and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame.  She always saw that her fame was of little importance in this world of ever changing victories.

Pat Summit is a courageous woman facing a difficult future with optimism, hope and a zest for life even though most others with that diagnosis feel the opposite.  She recognizes that nothing is certain with Alzheimer’s and everything is possible.  There are people in the best medical institutions working on a cure and her faith and their science together can work miracles.

Mortality by Christopher Hitchens

Mortality is sure to make you laugh and may make you cry. After being diagnosed with esophageal cancer, Hitchens begins to keep notes and write about his experiences. Not written for any particular audience, this book touches on religion, aspects of being an author, and living with and treating cancer. Fans will appreciate this straightforward discussion of issues involved when facing the end of life. Those who haven’t before read Hitchens’s writing may see why he’s amassed such a great following. At just over 100 pages, this is a very quick and thought provoking read.

A Walk on the Beach

Walk On the Beachby Joan Anderson

A friendship begins with A Walk on the Beach of Cape Cod and ends up with a hike on the Inca Trail in Peru.  Joan Anderson finds a friend and mentor while walking the beach in Cape Cod.  She had fled there to find herself.  “One of the most significant gifts the beach has given me was Joan Erikson, an elderly woman whom I met accidentally on a foggy February day.  She was to prod me to find myself again, even when I thought all was lost.”  Ms. Erikson turned out to be the wife and collaborator of Erik Erikson, a leading psychoanalyst whose stages of human development influenced the field of contemporary psychology.  “There I was in a midlife crisis, when I met the person whose husband coined the term ‘identity crisis’!”  The relationship that grew from this chance meeting by the sea was one of mutual gain to both parties.

Ms. Erikson even at 90 was a very active person, so the situations these two got into were amazing at times.  It was fun to go along on their journey together.  Eye opening in places, but also entertaining along the way.

I Want to Be Left Behind

Finding Rapture Here On Earth a Memoir

by Brenda Peterson

left behindBrenda Peterson tells her story of her love of this earth and all nature.  She sat by the ocean and watched over seal pups.  She went down the Colorado River in the depths of the Grand Canyon.  She tells of many of her adventures in nature.  She loved the earth and all it’s pleasure.  She tells of her family of Southern Baptists and there ideas, which were ideas she had rather leave behind.  Even her nieces and nephews called her Aunt Wuu Wuu, because of her strange ideas.  I Want to Be Left Behind is told with much humor and you’ll grow to care about Brenda and her family.

Buddy: How a Rooster Made Me a Family Man

by Brian McGrory

Pam, a veterinarian, and Brian, a writer, have differing opinions about the chicken that has come to live with them.  Pam’s children raised the chick for a science project and fell in love with her.  Brian who usually gets along great with animals and children, doesn’t relate to the fowl and the chicken doesn’t much like Brian either.

Buddy the Rooster is thought to be a hen until about half way through the book.  It’s the Brazilian cleaning lady that sets them straight.  Roosters aren’t known for being friendly, so the family fears that Buddy will have to go, and that makes Brian happy, although he would never have admitted it to Pam and her girls.  Throughout the book Brian’s hopes of ridding his life of Buddy are dashed.  But in the end Buddy has a special place in his heart.

Brain on Fire by Susannah Cahalan

I’ve been reading buzz about Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan for a few months now, so I decided to find out what had people so excited about this one. The book is the author’s memoir of the month when she was struck down with a very serious illness that had doctors stumped for quite some time. Her symptoms ranged from numbness to psychosis to catatonia. Cahalan actually had to use her skills as a journalist to go back after she had recovered and interview her family, friends and doctors to piece together her entire illness. She has very few memories from the time of a serious seizure right before being admitted to the hospital until awhile after her treatment and recovery started.

Perhaps the fascination with the story is that most people know serious illness can strike at any time. Cahalan’s experience is different than many because she was able to make a full recovery and relate her experience to others.

Life After Death by Damien Echols

In Life After Death, Damien Echols recounts his life spent on Death Row, for 18 years, following a wrongful conviction for murder. Like many young men dismissed by society and rebelling against authority, Echols was a teen who grew up in poverty and remained on the outside of acceptable society, wearing black and with long hair–characteristics which drew the attention of local police. When three young boys were murdered, Echols and 2 friends were arrested, charged and convicted of the crime. They became known as the West Menphis Three. Echols describes his life on death row–the lack of humanity and privacy, deplorable living conditions and cruel jailers. His strength and his ability to rise above his circumstances are nothing short of amazing. Echols studied and learned about many religions, finding strength and solace in Zen Buddhism, spending many hours meditating in his cell. HIs spirituality and his love of reading helped him to survive the isolation and desolation of prison. The case drew the attention of several celebrities following a documentary made by Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh, titled West of Memphis, and the publicity created a demand for the case to be re-opened. Echols and the other two men were released from prison in August of 2011. This is a remarkable story of not only survival but of courage and dignity under the most dehumanizing conditions and raises many questions about the harsh treatment of prison inmates and about the death penalty itself.

Women’s Lives

by Susan Withee, Adult Services Manager

I’m a pretty eclectic reader overall with interests that bounce around through much of the Dewey Decimal system and make forays into all sorts of fiction.  But an ongoing and constant reading interest of mine is books about women’s lives, which have fascinated me since I climbed the stairs to the Children’s Room in the old Carnegie Library and checked out Abigail Adams: A Girl of Colonial Days.  Since then I’ve continued to read anything from collections of women’s journals and letters, to books of humorous and true confessions, to biographies and personal memoirs, to social and cultural history.  Here are some interesting books that I’ve enjoyed in the past year about women and their lives and history.

The Wilder Life: My Adventures in the Lost World of Little House on the Prairie by Wendy McClure.  Author McClure, a young woman with a very understanding boyfriend and a childhood obsession with writer Laura Ingalls Wilder, set out to revisit all the joy she experienced from the Little House series by traveling to locales from the books, researching the real Laura’s story, and experimenting in her own apartment with Laura-esque chores like grinding wheat and churning butter.  Reminiscent of Sarah Vowell’s wacky and humorous travelogues through American history, McClure’s experiences and commentary are often hilarious and wry, and her observations on girlhood both in Laura’s time and now are penetrating and poignant.  A fun and unexpectedly touching book.

The Magic Room: A Story About the Love We Wish for Our Daughters by Jeffrey Zaslow.  A series of vignettes taken from a bridal shop owned and operated by three generations of strong, hard-working women in small-town rural Michigan, this is a tender, sympathetic look at the changing nature of weddings, marriages, and families since the shop opened during the Great Depression. The Magic Room is a wonderful book about ordinary women and the dreams, joys, and sorrows they encounter and share. (I especially recommend it if you, like me, are a secret devotee of the TV show Say Yes to the Dress!)

When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to the Present by Gail Collins.  Starting out in 1960, when women still needed their husband’s permission to get a credit card and single women were routinely denied home mortgages (if they were even allowed to apply), this book tells the amazing story of five decades of nearly unimaginable social change in the lives of American women.  For women and men of a certain age, this is a startling reminder of all they have lived through and witnessed first-hand, and for those young women who take the changes of the past 50 years for granted it’s a sobering revelation.  Collins’ writing style is conversational, anecdotal, and witty and this social history is a page-turner – absorbing, enjoyable, and enlightening.

Unorthodox: The Scandalous Rejection of My Hasidic Roots by Deborah Feldman.  Born into the ultra-orthodox, insular Satmar Hasidic sect, Deborah Feldman grew up under strict traditional religious and social customs that governed every aspect of everyday life, but she struggled to meet the group’s expectations and live the life prescribed for girls and women.  Her first rebellion was to secretly visit a public library some distance from the Satmar neighborhood and read voraciously from secular and popular works in English.  Her final attempt to conform, an arranged marriage, was a disaster, and with the birth of her own daughter, Deborah began planning her escape from the community.  This is a fascinating look at a mysterious and secretive group; an absorbing and suspenseful personal memoir.

Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake by Anna Quindlen.  Pulitzer-prize-winning columnist and novelist Quindlen looks back on her life from the milestone of her 60th birthday, and makes observations and offers perspectives in her trademark style – candid, astute, funny, acerbic, and touching.  Of parenthood she writes, “Being a parent is not transactional. We do not get what we give. It is the ultimate pay-it-forward endeavor: We are good parents not so they will be loving enough to stay with us but so they will be strong enough to leave us.”  About her aging body she writes, “I’ve finally recognized my body for what it is: a personality-delivery system, designed expressly to carry my character from place to place, now and in the years to come. It’s like a car, and while I like a red convertible or even a Bentley as well as the next person, what I really need are four tires and an engine.”  Amen, Sister.  This book was a delight.

 

Becoming Odyssa: Adventures on the Appalachian Trail

Jennifer Pharr Davis spent four months hiking the Appalachian Trail after her college graduation.  How many women would wear the same pair of socks for days on end while hiking mostly on her own for 2,175 miles, encountering moose, rattlesnakes, armies of bugs, lightning storms, blizzards, rain and hail?  Unlike her fellow hiker, Cheryl Strayed whom I wrote about in the review, Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, Jennifer chose to backpack with a lighter pack getting along without the best equipment.  Her trials were similar but her background was far less ‘wild’, coming from a stable southern Christian family.  Jennifer’s experiences with people she meets along the way are funny, frightening and an education.  Her miles traveled per day seemed nearly impossible to me. The second time she hiked the AT she set the fastest record for men or women on thru-hikes averaging 47 miles per day.  This book is a great motivator to get outside and enjoy nature while you exercise!

Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

Cheryl Strayed has written a frank memoir of her life journey as she hiked the Pacific Crest Trail in Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail.  Cheryl chose to hike the 1,100 mile trail after the devastating death of her mother from cancer and her divorce.  This remarkable tale of her hike is composed of harrowing and painful experiences such as rattlesnake near misses and hiking in boots that are too small with a back pack, The Monster, considerably larger than anyone else carried.  This book is also composed of beautiful discoveries about life and how she wants to live it and helpful, good people she meets along the way.

Oprah chose Cheryl’s book as her first book club selection for her new 2.0 book club in June.  She said her thought was after reading Wild, ‘Where is the Oprah Winfrey show when you need to announce and tell everybody about this book?”

Oprah’s 2.0 website

Let’s Pretend this Never Happened (A Mostly True Memoir) by Jenny Lawson

I don’t remember when I first heard about Let’s Pretend This Never Happened, but I know I’ve been meaning to read it for months. It was definitely not a disappointment. My husband could always tell I was reading this over the past couple days/week because I’d burst out laughing on a regular basis.

Blogger/comedienne Jenny Lawson had a strange childhood growing up in poverty in rural west Texas. She certainly ended up with some interesting stories. Like the time her father brought home a bunch of turkeys that would follow her to school every day. Or when she was in high school and she got her hand stuck in a cow’s uterus.

No one was going to grow up to be normal after a childhood like that. And Jenny Lawson certainly did not. Let’s just say the love of taxidermy animals did not skip a generation.

If you don’t like profanity or are easily offended, this is not the book for you. If you’re looking for a hilarious read in which the author overcomes a lot of adversity in life, you should definitely get on the hold list for this one.

Diary of a Player by Brad Paisley

I’ve been a Brad Paisley fan for awhile.  I plowed through all of his CDs at the library and had to buy a few of my own.  So it wasn’t a surprise that I had to pick up this book, but it turned out to be even more than I thought it would be.  Diary of a Player is Paisley’s memoir of his life as a guitar player, with bits about the rest of his life sprinkled in.  I have never in my life played a guitar, so I was a bit tentative.  He writes about his guitar influences like his grandfather who gave him his first guitar and the old guys who formed his first band, sharing how these guitar players  from his early years helped him develop as a player and as a human being.  He emphasizes how music threads through the generations, connecting the past with the future and how playing the guitar has provided him with an outlet for all the joys and sorrows of life, as well as a refuge from the world.  This enjoyable book made me an even bigger Paisley fan, but it also changed the way I listen to and think about music.

To the Last Breath

To the Last Breath is a memoir by Georgetown physics professor Francis Slakey that recounts his exploits of climbing the highest peak on each continent and surfing every ocean. On the surface this is an adventure tale, and Slakey does a great job of recounting some of his experiences. You can feel the tension as he is climbing Mount Everest in a blizzard and encounters several climbers whose lives hang in the balance. In Morocco, while being driven over treacherous mountain passes by a crazy driver, Hassan, (who insists that he is the best driver in Morocco) his car nearly plunges off of a cliff. In Indonesia, after climbing Pucak Jaya in the jungles of New Guinea, he is ambushed at gunpoint while driving through a large gold mine, but the soldiers eventually let him through. He discovers he has dodged a bullet, when he finds out that a few hundred yards from this very spot a group of American school teachers was ambushed with several of them killed and wounded. This memoir, however, is more than just an adventure tale. Slakey’s exploits are told with the purpose of showing how these experiences changed his life. At a fairly young age he determined he would never buy a house, get married, or have children. He then became a rather cold, guarded individual with few if any close, personal relationships or ties to anything. By the end of the memoir, he has experienced many extreme adventures, but even more remarkable are the changes within himself and his outlook on life.

The Hungry Ocean by Linda Greenlaw

The Hungry Ocean was published in 1999 and became a New York Times bestseller.  Recently I found it while looking for something totally different to read and I was not disappointed.  This riveting tale of a woman swordboat captain is the reason I love reading non-fiction.  Linda Greenlaw leads such a different life from me and any of my landlubber friends that I can’t imagine she lives on the same planet.  What an amazing story of a gutsy lady from Maine who spends her life on the ocean.

Linda Greenlaw is captain of the Hannah Boden, a sister ship of the Andrea Gail, a boat that was lost in the horrible storm of 1991 and portrayed in the movie The Perfect Storm. Captain Greenlaw is in command of five men who spend month-long trips fishing over 1000 miles off the northeast coast in the Grand Banks.  She has to fight weather, mechanical failures, close quarters with very little time for personal hygiene, disagreements, illness, and all the decisions of where to fish in order to bring home a full boatload that will pay their expenses.  The story of her personal experiences in how to run a complex operation is fascinating.

Ever By My Side

 Ever By My Side: A Memoir in Eight Acts Pets by Dr. Nick Trout is much more than a veteranarians account of his daily life.  It is a story of relationships, of hope, and of hurting.  The senior Mr. Trout had Nick pictured in a “James Herriot” type practice, so when Nick decides to go to America and practice, his father is disappointed.  Another disappointment came when Dr. Trout married a woman with cats and they didn’t add any dogs to their family home.  Dr. Trout tells how the pets in his life help him understand, enjoy, and get through hard decisions.  When his daughter became very ill, it took a pet to help him through her illness.  Of course his memoirs include animal antics that are hilarious and heart warming as well as sad.  You’ll enjoy this book if you like animals, but even if you aren’t an animal lover it’s a great story for everyone.