Book Review: These is My Words

These is My Words: The Dairy of Sarah Agnes Prine, 1881 – 1901 by Nancy E. Turner is an exceptional novel of depth and inspiration that takes place in the Arizona Territories.

Sarah Prine is seventeen when her family decides to leave their home to find a better life. Sarah, her mother and father, two older brothers, and two younger brothers set out with a wagon train. Sarah begins a diary and although her grammar lacks refinement, her strength of character shines through.

At one point in their travels, they are escorted by soldiers, led by Captain Jack Elliot, a bigger than life cavalry officer.

The grinding life of living out of a wagon and the endless hardships vividly show the determination of our country’s early settlers. When the family, minus the two who meet untimely deaths, find their place to call home, the hard work really begins.

These is My Words captures the strength of Sarah’s character over a twenty-year period. Sarah does what she needs to do to support and protect her family, with a husband whose duties often call him away from home. Sarah forges ahead in a harsh and unforgiving land, braced by the love of an equally strong, but often absent, husband.

I loved this story that embraces the life of Sarah Prine from adolescent, to young woman, to loving mother as she lives her life through turbulent events, both joyous and tragic. These is My Words is a story I’ll remember.

The North Cascades: On the Wild Side

North Cascades: Mt. Shuksan

Wilderness camping appeals to our souls—to hear birds chirp, the owl’s hoot, the marmot’s whistle, and the rustle of something furry darting for cover. We long for the smell of fertile earth and pure, clean air. We crave to see mile after mile of dense forests punctuated with cascading waterfalls. We need to take a break from crowds and the modern conveniences of man. The allure of wilderness camping is fulfilled in the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in the North Cascades. There, in the Darrington Ranger District campgrounds, we can enjoy as much of a wilderness experience as possible while still close to access roads.

Camp Sites Galore
Many campgrounds in the Darrington Ranger District are dry camps with no source of drinking water and no garbage pickup. There are tables, campfire pits, and vault toilets. The campgrounds are usually less crowded and remote, often with spacious campsites.

Mountain Loop Highway
The gravel, winding Mountain Loop Highway offers splendid scenery and several primitive and secluded campgrounds. Towering stands of Douglas Fir, hemlock, and cedar offer resplendent forest panoramas. As you drive south from Darrington, Clear Creek is the first campground followed by Bedal.

Approaching the Mountain Loop Highway from Granite Falls and driving east, there are three fee site camping grounds which have drinking water and garbage pickup: Turlo, Gold Basin and Verlot. Other campgrounds dotted along the Mountain Loop Road are: Clear Creek, and Red Bridge. Group campgrounds, for which you must make reservations, are also along this stretch of road: Wiley Creek, Tulalip, Marten Creek, Esswine, Coal Creek and Beaver Creek and Boardman.

Hiking in the Wild
In addition to camping, the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest offers 360 miles of hiking and horse trails in the three wilderness areas: Henry M. Jackson, Boulder River, and Glacier Peak. These hiking routes have all degrees of difficulty and length, from level, easy trails to exhilarating climbs to mountain peaks. Due to changing weather and trail conditions, it’s always a good idea to check in with the Darrington or Verlot offices for detailed information on the hike you plan to take.

Visitors Center, North Cascades National Park at Newhalem
The Visitors Center at Newhalem east on Highway 20 in the North Cascades National Park is definitely worth a stop. At the west end of Newhalem, turn south and cross the one-lane bridge. Outstanding displays are featured here with life-size pictures, videos, and models of animals and birds accompanied by the sounds of wildlife.

Detailed topographic maps on the lobby walls show the North Cascades National Park in its larger context. If you are in the Newhalem area, do stop by this popular Visitors Center to learn how wilderness is being managed for the benefit of wildlife and for those who visit it.

The North Cascades National Park Service complex, made up of North Cascades National Park, Ross Lake and Lake Chelan National Recreation Areas, emphasizes understanding and managing wilderness lands in the larger ecological context. By linking public lands such as the Stephen Mather Wilderness which adjoins over two million acres of U.S. Forest Service wilderness areas and British Columbia Parks, rare animals such as gray wolves and grizzly bears roam without regard to human boundaries. The goal of the custodian of these public lands is to preserve this area’s natural and cultural resources and to provide for their enjoyment by the public.

Wilderness can no longer be thought of in 1960’s terms of “A place untrammeled by man.” There is hardly a place on earth that has not felt the effects of human activities. We must now think of wilderness as a part of the natural world to which we all belong. We have the privilege of enjoying and experiencing these pristine and beautiful places along with the responsibility to preserve our precious wilderness for future generations.

Try camping and hiking in the wilderness sites in the North Cascades and feel your own soul stirring. Nature’s treasure is there for us to enjoy and appreciate. And to protect.

Book Review: A New Day Rising

A New Day Rising by Lauraine Snelling is the second of the Red River of the North Series. I loved this book as much as I did the first. This book continues with the Bjorklund family.

In this novel, Ingeborg Bjorklund, a widow and mother of two young boys, struggles to keep her farm and family together. Living in a soddy on the Dakota Territory prairie in the 1880’s is tough for anyone, but for a woman without a husband, mere existence can be overwhelming.

Family in Norway has written to their timber man son, Haakan, a distant cousin of Ingeborg’s late husband, that Ingeborg desperately needs help. Haakan’s job in the Dakota north woods is a winter occupation, so he sets out to give Ingeborg help with the heavy field work for the planting and harvest seasons, but plans to return to the work he loves in time for winter logging.

Haakan finally arrives, a godsend to Ingeborg. Although she is relieved to have the help, Ingeborg resents having her independence threatened. On the other hand, there is no denying the attraction she begins to feel for him.

In the meantime, another relative, Ingeborg’s late husband’s younger brother, is also encouraged to go to Ingeborg’s aid, and he sets out from Norway. His trip is delayed with one mishap after another, but his expectations never waver, thinking that once he arrives, he will take over his brother’s farm. Who knows, he might acquire his brother’s widow, too.

Misunderstandings, accidents and complications arise, making A New Day Rising a powerful read. Lauraine Snelling does a remarkable job of describing the flat, fertile farmland of the Red River Valley, and its first Norwegian settlers. The Red River of the North is an amazing series. I can hardly wait to read the third novel.

Book Review: My Name is Lucy Barton

Elizabeth Strout captures feelings of profound longing, love, and loneliness in this compelling novel.

Hospitalized for nine weeks with what should have been a simple procedure, Lucy Barton reflects on her bleak childhood. At her husband’s request, Lucy’s mother visits with her, sitting in a chair at the foot of the bed, day after day. During the many periods of silence, Lucy recalls feeling cold during much of her early childhood when the family of five lived in her uncle’s garage. She attributes becoming a good student largely because of the extra hours she stayed after school, huddled against the warmth of the radiator doing her homework and reading until the building closed.

Lucy and her parents are not close, and it has been several years since they have spoken. Much of the time now spent with her mother is taken with gossip about people they once knew in Amgash, Illinois. From the conversation, feelings of resentment and longing arise.

Most of the novel takes place in the daily grind of time spent in the hospital. Once she is released, time skips forward to a writing career, her relationship with her husband and two daughters.

My Name is Lucy Barton is a short, absorbing novel that demonstrates the damage a impoverished childhood can do and how these inadequacies shape the future.

Book Review: The American Heiress

The American Heiress by Daisy Goodwin captured my imagination, especially regarding English protocol. A historical romance, this novel begins in 1893 America with a coming-out party for a rich American girl, Cora Cash. Cora’s ambitious mother wants nothing less than to have her daughter titled, but to do that one must go abroad.

They journey to England and are much sought after. As the result of a horseback riding accident, Cora is rescued by a Duke, Ivo Maltravers, the Ninth Duke of Wareham.

Don’t be fooled into thinking that it’s smooth sailing for the Duke and Duchess. Although they live in a castle with 81 servants, the castle is cold, inconvenient and without bathrooms. Comfort is not the natural order of things here. Besides the immediate chilly atmosphere, what one might expect from marriage isn’t always the norm among royalty.

The American Heiress delves into wealthy lives on both sides of the Atlantic, to issues most of us can’t imagine. What appears to be sheer comfort and opulence has its cold, harsh side. English rules of society can be different than American, and failure to pay heed can be catastrophic.

This novel is steeped in tradition. Daisy Goodwin describes in exquisite detail the fashion of the day—and the discomforts that go with it. The author has a gift for character development and although I was often put off by some of the characters, I felt they were no doubt true to the period.

Book Review: The Bridge Ladies

Betsy Lerner’s memoir is my kind of book: at once hilarious and poignant. I love her writing style, love the conflicting mother-daughter relationship, and especially love the bridge references. You don’t have to be a bridge player to enjoy this book, but as a bridge enthusiast, I found it enhanced the story.

Betsy’s husband responds to a job offer and the family returns to live in Betsy’s home town, New Haven, Connecticut. Betsy has misgivings. She and her widowed mother have never been close. Her mother, now in her eighties, has never approved of Betsy’s choices. Of anything. Betsy’s clothes, makeup (or lack of it), entertainment, her housekeeping, or occupation as a writer. Betsy has always felt she wasn’t up to her mother’s standards and resents her not-so-subtle hints.

Ever since Betsy was a little girl, her mother played bridge with four other Jewish ladies (they always had a stand-by). Sure enough, they’re still at it when Betsy returns to New Haven. Determined to really know these ladies, including her mother, Betsy joins them, as a writer interviews them, and discovers what it means to age, to lose loved ones, yet still go on. Along the way, Betsy learns about herself.

This memoir at times made me laugh out loud, made me more aware of generational differences, and encouraged me to ponder my own senior years. I highly recommend The Bridge Ladies: A Memoir.

Book Review: Becoming

 

 

 

Michelle Obama’s Becoming is an extraordinary autobiography of a woman who accomplished impressive feats from modest beginnings.

Growing up in a working-class neighborhood in Chicago’s South Side, Michelle lived with her mother, father, and older brother in a cramped upstairs apartment in her aunt’s house. Although their living quarters were small, her parents saw to it that their lives were rich with experiences that would see the children through to hard-won success.

Although the college counselor at high school told Michelle she “wasn’t Princeton material,” she persisted and, with the encouragement of another teacher, was accepted and graduated from Princeton and later from Harvard Law School.

After Harvard, Michelle worked as an attorney at a large Chicago law firm. While there she met an optimistic, cheerful young black man with a peculiar name: Barack Hussein Obama. Barack was born in Hawaii, the son of a Kenyan father and a white 19-year-old mother.

In the “Becoming Us” section of the book, Michelle discusses marriage with Barack, how he seemed destined for public life and eventually become an Illinois State Senator. While Michelle strove for a stable home life, Barack commuted from Chicago to his senatorial work in Springfield, often spending three days at home and four in Springfield. Later, he became a U.S. Senator and commuted from Chicago to Washington, D.C.

In the meantime, Michelle had changed jobs and was now a university administrator. They had two daughters, Malia and Sasha, and Michelle struggled to balance family, work, and Barack’s fast-moving political career. In the book she speaks of the grueling work of campaigning, and the discomfort of close scrutiny while on public display.

In “Becoming More,” we experience life in the White House with the 44th President of the United States, and the first black person to hold that position. Michelle describes, with good humor and candor, what it’s like to live “above the shop” in a 132-room house, with armed guards present at all times. She talks about traveling with the President in a 20-vehicle armed caravan. As first lady, Michelle strives to make her mark, to make a difference. The author tells her story of eight years in the White House with honesty and good humor.

Becoming is an intriguing autobiography. It’s a worthwhile story, told in exquisite, interesting detail. Michelle Obama isn’t hesitant about naming names, nor does she shirk from sharing her views on political shortcomings, and backs up her statements with provable facts.

Note: Becoming in hardcover format is a hefty volume of 428 pages, and that with small print. This would be a good candidate for an e-reader with adjustable font.

Book Review: The Girl Who Wouldn’t Die

The Girl Who Wouldn’t Die by Randall Platt is a gritty, unforgettable novel of triumph over tyranny during the bleak years of World War II and the German occupation of Poland.

Her street name is Arab and she is wise beyond her sixteen years. Abra Goldstein is the oldest daughter of Jewish parents. Arab is estranged from her father, but longs to see her little sister, Ruth. Blond and fair-skinned, Arab passes for German and can speak four languages, though she fears her German has a Polish accent.

Conditions are desperate in Poland. Jews are being rounded up and forced to leave their homes and stay in walled-up ghettos. Desperately needed items are scarce but Arab is expert at stealing and trading black market goods. She knows all the best routes to avoid the goose-stepping Nazis, even though some of those escape routes include going underground. Yes, the sewer. She’s beyond caring how she looks, or smells. Her goal is to get her little sister to safety, out of Poland.

Masquerading as a boy, Arab teams up with carefully selected Polish friends, and even a turncoat German, to plan an escape that has little chance of success. The fact that it’s in the dead of winter doesn’t help, nor does being on a “wanted” list make it easy to maneuver in bombed out Warsaw. And the escapees now include more than just her little sister, they involve numerous children, some of them sick.

The Girl Who Wouldn’t Die takes place from the summer of 1939 to the fall of 1941. It’s an engaging story to remember, to learn what resistance means, and to appreciate the price of freedom.

Book Review: Beautiful Ruins

In 1962, a local fisherman brings Dee Moray, a beautiful American actress, to Italy’s remote, rocky Porto Vergogna, a little village on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Kind, but naive Pasquale is flattered that while the actress waits for her boyfriend, she intends to stay at his Adequate View Hotel, an ancient building carved out of a stone hillside. Her unplanned visit changes the lives of the many characters in Beautiful Ruins, a novel by Jess Walter.

Beautiful Ruins interweaves incidents ranging from 1846, 1943, 1962, 2008, to present day, across continents from Italy to America to London. The novel doesn’t follow linear order, but loops back and forth as the story unfolds. You have to pay attention, not only to the time period, but for the various characters’ stories and how they relate to the whole.

Surprisingly, the 1962 period of the book includes famous actor Richard Burton, who is in Rome filming “Cleopatra.” Although the words mimic the real character, it is, after all, a novel.

As Beautiful Ruins toggles between time periods, the plot moves forward. The innovative story ranges from tragic moments to hilarious scenes. I thought the book smart and savvy. Being of linear nature, I kept trying to straighten out the time-line, but soon gave up and just sat back and enjoyed the story.

Fort Spokane: Stepping into the Past

To walk the grounds of Fort Spokane is to walk in the footsteps of change. Fort Spokane has a changing story, from serving as a frontier military post, to an Indian boarding school, a tuberculosis hospital and sanitarium, and now as a National Park. Fort Spokane is part of the Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area and located above the confluence of the Spokane and Columbia Rivers in eastern Washington.

Built in1880, Fort Spokane first served as a frontier military post. Many soldiers joined the Army hoping to see fighting on the frontier, but the fight against boredom was the only battle the soldiers at Fort Spokane waged. Their monotonous life consisted of waking to the bugle call, eating breakfast, marching the Parade Ground, working in the bakery or standing guard at the Guardhouse, march and drill the manual of arms in the afternoon, play baseball in the evening if weather permitted, eat dinner and go to bed. The tedious days became more than many soldiers could bear. Some turned to drink; some ran away. The guardhouse, originally built to house prisoners of war, ironically housed errant soldiers. The fort closed in 1898 when the soldiers were transferred to Cuba to fight in the Spanish-American War.

Fort Spokane was decommissioned and transferred to the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The fort opened as an Indian boarding school in 1900. Children ages five to sixteen from the Spokane and Colville tribes were removed from their families and sent miles away to the Indian Boarding School at Fort Spokane. At first they did not understand the language of the teachers and staff, yet were not allowed to speak their own language–not even to each other. They were not allowed to wear their native clothing or practice their spiritual traditions. Strict discipline and harsh punishments were the norm. The boys were trained to learn a trade such as gardening and tending chickens and cows. The girls were taught how to keep house and other domestic chores. It was a time of suffering both for the children and for their parents. The school operated from 1900 to 1907.

The last people to occupy the fort were the doctors, nurses and patients of the tuberculosis sanitarium and Indian hospital until Fort Spokane’s final closure in 1929.

Fort Spokane became a part of the National Park Service in 1960. Major restoration involved four of the remaining buildings: the Quartermaster Stable built in 1884, the Powder Magazine built in 1888, the Reservoir built in 1889, and the Guardhouse built in 1892. These structures can be seen today and visitors are encouraged to tour the grounds and buildings. The National Park Service maintains the grounds at Fort Spokane to preserve these stories for future generations.