Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Welcome to the Literacy Coalition's Book Blog

The Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition, an all-volunteer organization, is launching this blog as part of its mission to promote, support, and advance literacy in our region. The blog complements Cheryl Manciero's monthly New Haven Register column, Reading Along.

We invite readers to tell us about books they're reading, recommending, delighting in, deploring, learning from, teaching with, laughing about -- whatever may be the case.

To get us started: I most recently read J.M. Coetzee's Diary of a Bad Year, which was disappointing -- inferior to Waiting for the Barbarians and Disgrace, the two other of his novels that I'd read, years before. I would recommend those other two and still plan to explore his fictionalized memoirs about his childhood and youth.

I am currently reading Migrant Imaginaries, by Alicia Schmidt Camacho of the Yale faculty (also a board member at Junta for Progressive Action), and Toward Excellence with Equity, by Ronald Ferguson, who studies achievement gaps. I've just begun the first and have read a few chapters of the second.

In February, I read The Most Famous Man in America, by New Haven's own Debby Applegate, about Henry Ward Beecher. Beyond her treatment of debates over slavery and abolition, the Civil War and Reconstruction, her vivid portrayal of 19th-century media culture, popular religion, commerce, sin, and redemption resonates as the U.S. reckons with the costs and consequences of another, even more gilded age. Beecher's family -- including his sister Harriet Beecher Stowe -- and characters ranging from Lincoln and Victoria Woodhull to Twain and Whitman are part of the book's appeal. Debby Applegate writes, for example, of Beecher and Whitman: "Both men shared a bottomless enthusiasm for New York, with its vast variety and primal energy, and both insisted that love was the only meaningful bond between the heterogeneous human atoms and the great cosmos."

Of local interest, she recounts how Beecher's father, Lyman Beecher, sent young Henry to Amherst College rather than Yale partly because he "regarded[ed] his safety greater in Amherst than in New Haven," where Yale was susceptible to the "Southern influence" of "honor and spirit." This, in the author's words, "often led to dueling, gambling, and other dangerous hobbies that could easily corrupt his impressionable boy." (Amherst tuition also was a relatively inexpensive $40 per semester, with board $1.50 a week.)

In March, the work of another New Haven author -- Jennifer Baszile -- drew me. Her The Black Girl Next Door combines powerful insights about social class, family, and race with sharply witty observations about adolescence and the humorous juxtapositions of life. Hers is such a personal book that any quotation would lack context; do read it for yourself.

Thanks to the New Haven Free Public Library, recently my wife and I have been reading various books to our children, ages three and and one. Among the titles: Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House in the Big Woods and, now, Little House on the Prairie.

That's plenty for this blog's initial post. Now let's invite neighbors of all ages -- anyone who is interested, from the home, school or workplace, the private, public, or nonprofit sectors -- to tell us what you're reading. Later this spring, with the approach of the Arts and Ideas Festival in June, we'll especially encourage discussion of poetry in connection with the "Favorite Poem Project."

Happy reading,

Josiah Brown, for the Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition

3 comments:

  1. I have a terrific book to recommend - That Old Cape Magic by Richard Russo. Russo is an amazing writer and for those of you who are approaching a certain age, that is with grown kids, there are few who won't relate to his wonderful characters, the humor and the themes.

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  2. This was a great summer of reading for me.

    I began with the Pulitzer Prize winner, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, by Junot Diaz. This is one of the most high-energy novels I have read. Junot introduces a very endearing, if not profane, omniscient narrator who guides the reader in language tightly packed with references to Dominican history and popular culture (some that had me reaching for my Spanish/English dictionary). The story also unfolds through the multiple points of view of its characters. I am not a comic book fan, but clearly Diaz borrows from and builds on that genre.

    I chose this novel after having read Diaz's short fiction in the New Yorker and wondering if it was going to be a good coming of age tale for my college reading students. Ultimately, I decided Oscar Wao is not for them, but I do recommend it to anyone looking for an intense and sometimes humorous read.

    I am currently reading Jericho's Fall by Stephen L. Carter. I absolutely loved The Emperor of Ocean Park a few years ago and couldn't put it down. I've enthusiastically followed Carter's career and was lucky to get a signed copy of his latest.

    Jericho's Fall is another thriller, this time told through the voice of Beck DeForde, former mistress of ex-CIA head, Jericho Ainsley. Jericho is dying , and he calls Beck to his side. Why?

    Carter keeps DeForde's character, a Princeton dropout and now divorced single mother and mid-level retail executive, at an "everywoman" level. She is obviously smart and up to the task of playing mind games with any number of politicos and shady characters that come surface, but she never seems more than a step ahead, and the novel maintains a very engaging edge.

    Some readers have remarked, and I agree, that Carter does a great job with his female character's voice. It never seems inauthentic, though, Beck's constant remarks about another female character's weight and looks often read like commentary rather than reflection. If that is a fault, I think it could have just as easily come from a female writer. And, if the heavy (no pun intended) commentary is a problem, it is the only one that I can find so far--Carter's writing is at its best.

    I was pleased to see Jennifer Baszile's The Black Girl Next Door mentioned above. Baszile, by the way, shares Yale affiliation with Carter (She was Yale's first African American professor of American History; Stephen L. Carter is currently a professor of Law there.).

    Baszile is a young woman; she grew up in the 1970s. One of the things I find most vital about Baszile's memoir is that it highlights the political and social awareness bigotry forces in its youngest victims. Like other writers who have told the story of their early confrontations with racism (I am thinking of Dick Gregory here.), Baszile revisits the loss of her innocence and the nascent seeds of anger when a teacher confirms her white classmate's belief that Black people have "something special in their feet to help them run faster than white people." Baszile is similarly made wiser than her years when her family endures a cross burning on their front lawn.

    These aspects of Baszile's personal history--tragic and terrifying-- are at times told in a measured, unemotional way that may result from the author’s desire to reach back and protect her younger self.

    I am just getting around to Three Cups of Tea (2006), Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin's book about Mortenson's mission to build schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan where educational opportunities for girls and women are few.

    This summer I also read: Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell; Food Matters by Mark Bittman, and the Penland Book of Handmade Books.

    I am making my way through SEND by David Shipley and Will Schwalbe; Words into Type (Skillin/Gay), and Grant Writing by Judy Tremore and Burke Smith.

    Ralph Ellison: a Biography by Arnold Rampersad, on my bedside stack for while now, will have to wait until fall.

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  3. This was a great summer of reading for me.

    I began with the Pulitzer Prize winner, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, by Junot Diaz. This is one of the most high-energy novels I have read. Junot introduces a very endearing, if not profane, omniscient narrator who guides the reader in language tightly packed with references to Dominican history and popular culture (some that had me reaching for my Spanish/English dictionary).

    I chose this novel after having read Diaz's short fiction in the New Yorker and wondering if it was going to be a good coming of age tale for my college reading students. Ultimately, I decided Oscar Wao is not for them, but I do recommend it to someone looking for an intense and sometimes humorous read.

    I am currently reading Jericho's Fall by Stephen L. Carter. I absolutely loved The Emperor of Ocean Park a few years ago and couldn't put it down. I've enthusiastically followed Carter's career and was lucky to get a signed copy of his latest.

    Jericho's Fall is another thriller, this time told through the voice of Beck DeForde, a former mistress of ex-CIA head, Jericho Ainsley. Time seems to be running out on Jericho's life, and he calls Beck, his former flame, to his side. Why?

    Carter keeps DeForde's character, a Princeton dropout, newly divorced single mother and mid-level retail manager, at an "everywoman" level. She is obviously smart and up to the task of playing mind games with any number of politicos and shady characters who come out of the woodwork, but she never seems more than a step ahead. The novel maintains a very engaging edge.

    Some readers have remarked, and I agree, that Carter does a great job with his female character's voice. It never seems inauthentic, though, Beck's constant remarks about another character's weight and looks often read like commentary rather than reflection. I think faults such as those could just as easily have come from a female writer.

    Other readers have remarked on Beck's racial ambiguity. Is she Black? Is she White? Does it matter? Carter keeps readers guessing.

    I think anyone looking for late summer fiction with a little more heft will find Jericho's Fall thoroughly enjoyable.

    I was pleased to see Jennifer Baszile's The Black Girl Next Door mentioned on this blog. Baszile, by the way, shares Yale affiliation with Carter (She was Yale's first African American professor of American History; Stephen L. Carter is currently a professor of Law there.).

    One of the things I find most vital about Baszile's memoir is that it highlights the political and social awareness bigotry creates in its youngest victims. Like other writers who have told the story of their early confrontations with racism, I am thinking especially of Dick Gregory here, Baszile revisits the loss of her innocence and the nascent seeds of anger when a teacher confirms her white classmate's belief that Black people have "something special in their feet to help them run faster than white people." Baszile is similarly made wiser than her years when her family endures a cross burning on their front lawn.

    These aspects of Baszile's personal history--tragic and terrifying-- are at times told in a measured way, but if the author maintains this control as a means of self-protection, I understand.

    I am just getting around to Three Cups of Tea (2006), Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin's book about Mortenson's mission to build schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan where girls and women lack educational opportunities. I am looking for the sense of adventure and inspiration this true-life tale's promises.

    This summer I also read:
    Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
    Food Matters by Mark Bittman
    The Penland Book of Handmade Books

    I am making my way through
    SEND by David Shipley and Will Schwable
    Words into Type (Skillin/Gay)
    Grant Writing by Judy Tremore and Burke Smith.

    It looks like Ralph Ellison: A Biography by Arnold Rampersad, which has been on my bedside stack for a while now, will have to wait until fall. —Susan Monroe

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