Monday, May 30, 2022

All of You Every Single One by Beatrice Hitchman

 Monday, May 30, 2022--San Antonio

All of You Every Single One by Batrice Hitchman covers the period from 1911-1946. It starts in Sweden where a woman married to a playwright realizes she is unhappy and discontented after meeting a female tailor whose present provides a spark of excitement and interest.  The two women leave for Vienna where they plan to build a life of their own together.  They settle in a Bohemian area of the city and slowly find friends among other fringe members of society--a Jewish landlady, a gay neighbor, a child they raise as guardians, etc.; the result is that they become what is known today as "a chosen family" by those who find their lives do not fit within the conventional expectations of most members of society and sometimes find themselves rejected by their blood families.  The novel, however, is really about how their lives are much like everyone else's with the added factors of 1) always being alert for dangerous reactions from others who can be threatened by people who are different and do not follow the "rules" of society and 2) not being able to accomplish among themselves what cisgender people do--not able to marry, not able to have children when they wish they could, etc.  However, life continues through these various challenges with some quite shocking results and even without as much interference as might be expected.  Side relationships develop with members of high society, escapes are required to avoid the law and later the Nazis, hopes are raised and dashed, and secrets are exposed.  But life goes on.  The story has such scope and such interesting characters that I kept imagining that it could become a Masterpiece Theater production for BBC/PBS.  I gave the book 4 stars out of 5.

Thursday, May 26, 2022

Civilwarland in Bad Decline by George Saunders

Thursday, May 26, 2022--San Antonio

Civilwarland in Bad Decline by George Saunders is on many lists of the best collections of short stories.  Saunders is best known for short stories and is considered to be among the best of American short story writers.  I found most of these stories to be delightfully entertaining and funny enough to have me laughing aloud.  Saunders has a knack for writing the things that go through a person's mind that are thought to be inappropriate to state aloud.  In writing these things, the reader gets a better understanding of the characters than one would ever have with a live acquaintance or even friend.  Since some parts of the book were not as good as others, I will rate the book as 4 stars out of 5.  

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Of Women and Salt by Gabriela Garcia

Wednesday, May 11, 2022--San Antonio

Of Women and Salt by Gabriela Garcia received very positive reviews, was listed as a novel of note by the Washington Post, and received the Isabel Allende Most Inspirational Fiction Award last year.  It is an interesting book, but it was not quite as good as I expected it to be.  Several times throughout the book, the wording caused confusion for me and I had to reread either to determine for sure who was saying what or what was actually being said.  Plus the ending came too fast for me--a very quick passage tying up details regarding 4 different characters rather than a tidy close.  The stories were interesting though--all eight main characters being women who faced very trying times in their lives.  Among the difficulties were workplace discrimination, dangers and other difficulties related to the civil war in Cuba, racial discrimination among Cubans both at the time of the revolution and today, spousal abuse, child molestation, drug abuse, trauma from seeing a parent killed, trying to get by in Castro's Cuba, dangers of gangs in Central America, child migration without a parent, immigration raids, border retention centers for families, deportation, etc.  I can't highly recommend the book, but it was interesting and is worth 3 1/2 stars out of 5.

Monday, May 2, 2022

Young Mungo by Douglass Stuart

Monday, May 2, 2022--San Antonio

Young Mungo by Douglass Stuart has gotten rave reviews this spring.  The same author wrote Shuggy Bain which also got rave reviews and won the Booker Prize a couple of years ago.  Both books deal with poor families in Glassgow.  And both books are told in the words of a young gay boy--the previous book by a boy who is a child and the latter by a boy who is an adolescent (14 going on 15, required to stay in school until he is 16, and faces the constant danger of being taken away from his siblings if the government learns their mother is not living in the home with them).  But there are differences.  The earlier book was about the hardships of being poor which are mostly caused by having a mother who makes bad choices in her attempts to try to improve their lives; the sexuality of the storyteller is background information.  There is still a mother making bad choices in Young Mungo, but she is mostly an absent mother who leaves her 3 children to fend for themselves, and the storyteller's gay sexuality is a major factor in this story as he "discovers" he is gay (in addition to being sweet and sensitive), as he maneuvers around the expectations of his older brother who runs a protestant gang and expects his brother to participate in their violent and illegal activities, and as he deals with his need to be mothered which is provided mostly by his slightly older sister (about to turn 16) who feels she must deal with all the problems caused by the absent alcoholic mother who feels she should not be stuck with children since she is still young and desires male companionship and freedom to live her own life.  Set in the 1980s following the closing of the shipbuilding yard and the mines during the Margaret Thatcher period, life is hard for everyone in the slums in the east end of town.  Plus, there are religious rivalries between the protestants and the Catholics like in Northern Ireland.  Added to that, being a "poofter" is socially unacceptable and is like having a target on one's back for anyone to abuse you at any time, so a young gay boy must hide his sexuality and try to live a straight life or face a miserable life of hiding from society and face being bullied and beaten regularly.  Mungo finds love and does not want to live a false life, and the decisions made by members of his family because of it put him in grave danger alone among strangers and later when discovered with his boyfriend.  The book is quite depressing, but not in a way that it is a turnoff for the reader, since there are joys, too, and hope. I gave the book 5 stars out of 5.