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2012
Reading Group Selections
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January
2, 2012
Between
Georgia
by Joshilyn Jackson
Jackson
returns with a second quirky and touching novel abut the South.
The story of a feud between two families from opposite sides
of the tracks, it narrowly avoids the worst cliches and appropriately
exploits the more interesting ones. Jackson has been compared
to Fannie Flagg, and rightfully so; her characters are vivid
and lovable, put in situations that are so hard to explain
that it's just easier to pass the book lovingly along to a
friend. In Between, Georgia, protagonist Nonny is the adopted
child of the Frett family, a strong-willed, well-off, and
women-run clan, but she is the biological child of the criminal
and downtrodden Crabtree family.
Her
adoptive mother, Stacia, is blind and deaf, and Nonny falls
into a career in ASL interpretation. To escape her hometown
of only 91 residents, where everyone knows the story of her
lineage, Nonny runs to nearby Athens and lives out a half
marriage with a rock guitarist. Predictably, the strange and
dramatic goings-on in Between draw her home over and over
again, especially when her cousin leaves a baby daughter there
for the family to raise without her. Nonny falls in love with
young Fisher, and the cycle of untraditional mother-daughter
pairings continues. A climactic ending with perfect story
resolution makes this book tidy and uplifting, and even the
most cynical reader will surely smile as the back cover closes.
Debi Lewis
SOURCE:
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights
reserved
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February
7, 2012
The
Well and the Mine
by Gin Phillips
A
tight-knit miner's family struggles against poverty and
racism in Phillips's evocative first novel, set in Depression-era
Alabama. Throughout, she moves skillfully between the points
of view of miner father Albert, hard-working mother Leta,
young daughter Tess and teenage daughter Virgie, and small
son Jack. They see men who are frequently incapacitated
or killed by accidents in the local mines; neighbors live
off what they can grow on their patch of land; and blacks
like Albert's fellow miner and friend Jonah are segregated
in another part of Carbon Hilland often hauled off
to jail arbitrarily.
When
Tess witnesses a woman throwing a baby into their well,
no one believes her until the dead child is found, and few
are shocked. Tess, hounded by nightmares, and Virgie, on
the cusp of womanhood and resistant to the thought of an
early marriage to the local boys who court her, begin making
inquiries of their own, visiting wives who've recently had
babies and learning way more than they imagined. With a
wisp of suspense, Phillips fully enters the lives of her
honorable characters and brings them vibrantly to the page.
SOURCE:
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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March
6, 2012
Suddenly,
Last Summer
by Tennessee Williams
Thomas
Lanier "Tennessee" Williams III (born March 26,
1911 died February 25, 1983) was an American writer
who worked principally as a playwright in the American theater.
He also wrote short stories, novels, poetry, essays, screenplays
and a volume of memoirs. His professional career lasted from
the mid 1930s until his death in 1983, and saw the creation
of many plays that are regarded as classics of the American
stage. Williams adapted much of his best known work for the
cinema.
Williams
received virtually all of the top theatrical awards for his
works of drama, including a Tony Award for best play for The
Rose Tattoo (1951) and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for A
Streetcar Named Desire (1948) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955).
In 1980 he was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom
by President Jimmy Carter and is today acknowledged as one
of the most accomplished playwrights in the history of English
speaking theater.
SOURCE:
Copyright © Amazon.com. All rights reserved.
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April
3, 2012
National
Poetry Month Selection
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
by Samuel
Taylor Coleridge
"It
is an ancient Mariner, and he stoppeth one of thee...."
Although these ominous lines perennially instill fear of final
exams and term papers in the minds of high school students
and Romantic English majors, they're not often remembered
by adults. Mason's reading of Coleridge's 1796 epic poem is
at once hypnotic and stirring. The Academy Award-nominated
actor reads the chilling tale involving clashes with sea monsters,
a boat swarming with zombies and a dice game with Death in
an authoritative English accent.
Like
the ocean surrounding the Mariner's ship, his voice ebbs and
flows with the imaginative poem's various heights. He quickly
rattles off, "water, water, every where, and all the
boards did shrink; Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop
to drink" but gently whispers "And I had done an
hellish thing, and it would work `em woe: For all averred,
I had killed the bird that made the breeze to blow."
Coleridge (1772-1834), uses words to make the fantastical
believable, and here, Mason brings those words vividly to
life. A bonus track features Mason's animated reading of The
Hunting of the Snark, an eight-canto poem by Lewis Carroll.
SOURCE:
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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May
1, 2012
The
Last Song
by Nicholas Sparks
Seventeen
year old Veronica "Ronnie" Miller's life was turned
upside-down when her parents divorced and her father moved
from New York City to Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina.
Three years later, she remains angry and alientated from her
parents, especially her father...until her mother decides
it would be in everyone's best interest if she spent the summer
in Wilmington with him. Ronnie's father, a former concert
pianist and teacher, is living a quiet life in the beach town,
immersed in creating a work of art that will become the centerpiece
of a local church. The tale that unfolds is an unforgettable
story of love on many levels--first love, love between parents
and children -- that demonstrates, as only a Nicholas Sparks
novel can, the many ways that love can break our hearts...and
heal them.
SOURCE:
Copyright © Amazon.com. All rights reserved.
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June
5 and
July 3 and
August 7, 2012
Summer Shorts-Short Stories
by Popular Authors
Assorted
short stories selected by the Friends Of Smyrna Library Reading
Group.
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September
11, 2012
Ape
House
by Sara Gruen
Gruen
enjoys minimal luck in trying to recapture the magic of her
enormously successful Water for Elephants in this clumsy outing
that begins with the bombing of the Great Ape Language Lab,
a university research center dedicated to the study of the
communicative behavior of bonobo apes. The blast, which terrorizes
the apes and severely injures scientist Isabel Duncan, occurs
one day after Philadelphia Inquirer reporter John Thigpen
visits the lab and speaks to the bonobos, who answer his questions
in sign language. After a series of personal setbacks, Thigpen
pursues the story of the apes and the explosions for a Los
Angeles tabloid, encountering green-haired vegan protesters
and taking in a burned-out meth lab's guard dog.
Meanwhile,
as Isabel recovers from her injuries, the bonobos are sold
and moved to New Mexico, where they become a media sensation
as the stars of a reality TV show. Unfortunately, the best
characters in this overwrought novel don't have the power
of speech, and while Thigpen is mildly amusing, Isabel is
mostly inert. In Elephants, Gruen used the human-animal connection
to conjure bigger themes; this is essentially an overblown
story about people and animals, with explosions added for
effect.
SOURCE:
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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October
2, 2012
The
Turn of the Screw
by Henry James
Novella
by Henry James, published serially in Collier's Weekly in
1898 and published in book form later that year. One of the
world's most famous ghost stories, the tale is told mostly
through the journal of a governess and depicts her struggle
to save her two young charges from the demonic influence of
the eerie apparitions of two former servants in the household.
The story inspired critical debate over the question of the
"reality" of the ghosts and of James's intentions.
James himself, in his preface to volume XII of The Novels
and Tales of Henry James, called the tale a "fable"
and said that he did not specify details of the ghosts' evil
deeds because he wanted readers to supply their own vision
of terror.
SOURCE:
Copyright © The Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature.
All rights reserved.
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November
6, 2012
A
Suspension of Mercy
by Patricia Highsmith
Six
years after her death, Patricia Highsmith is in the middle
of a renaissance. Since the release of Anthony Minghella's
film of The Talented Mr. Ripley, her stock has been steadily
rising among readers. Two reissues, A Suspension of Mercy
and Strangers on a Train, feed the flames. In A Suspension
of Mercy, American freelance writer Sydney becomes obsessed
with the putative murder of his English wife, Alicia; in Strangers
on a Train, the source for Hitchcock's 1953 classic, one man's
guilty conscience disrupts two men's criminal plans. The movie
rights to A Suspension of Mercy have been optioned by Warner
Bros. for Heyday Films.
SOURCE:
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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December
4, 2012
The
Hunger Games
by Suzanne Collins
In
a not-too-distant future, the United States of America has
collapsed, weakened by drought, fire, famine, and war, to
be replaced by Panem, a country divided into the Capitol and
12 districts. Each year, two young representatives from each
district are selected by lottery to participate in The Hunger
Games. Part entertainment, part brutal intimidation of the
subjugated districts, the televised games are broadcasted
throughout Panem as the 24 participants are forced to eliminate
their competitors, literally, with all citizens required to
watch.
When
16-year-old Katniss's young sister, Prim, is selected as the
mining district's female representative, Katniss volunteers
to take her place. She and her male counterpart, Peeta, the
son of the town baker who seems to have all the fighting skills
of a lump of bread dough, will be pitted against bigger, stronger
representatives who have trained for this their whole lives.
Collins's characters are completely realistic and sympathetic
as they form alliances and friendships in the face of overwhelming
odds; the plot is tense, dramatic, and engrossing. This book
will definitely resonate with the generation raised on reality
shows like 'Survivor' and 'American Gladiator.' Book one of
a planned trilogy.Jane Henriksen Baird, Anchorage Public Library,
AK
SOURCE:
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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