Book Review — Untold Story of the Women Who Helped Win WWII

Today I have added to the “Book Reviews” tab (above) my review of The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan. I highly recommend this book to those who appreciate science and human nature but who, like me, have been relatively clueless about the people’s history behind the atomic bomb. In fact, the way the author tells the story, I think many aspects of the book will be eye-opening even if you think you’ve already got a good grasp on the history.

You may also enjoy the author’s video, embedded here.

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The Book Review Section That Stumped Me Too Much

Trees require roots and sentences require words, but some parts are tougher to navigate than others.

Trees require roots and sentences require words, but some parts are tougher to navigate than others.

Every now and then–and it’s not difficult–I like to make other people feel smarter than me (or should that be, “than I” [do]? Too formal even for grammarians these days?). Anyway, I was happily reading along in the New York Times Book Review a couple weeks ago when a certain two-syllable word stopped me. It was a word I’d seen hundreds of times before and “thought I knew” but in any case had never let it stop me. But this day, I decided to look it up.

Here–in a review by one Cynthia Ozick of William Gass’s new book Middle C–is the sentence that harbored the word that stopped me: “Of all living literary figures, William Gass may count as the most daringly scathing and the most assertively fecund: in language, in ideas, in intricacy of form (essays zigzagging thought); above all in relentless fury.”

(Maybe I let the word stop me because I needed to breathe while reading that sentence.) Merriam-Webster online informed me that fecund means “1. fruitful in offspring or vegetation : prolific. 2. intellectually productive or inventive to a marked degree [as in] a fecund imagination” and therein, with the second definition, I had my answer. The trick now is to remember it.

For some reason the entire NYTimes Book Review that Sunday stumped me often. Maybe the reviews weren’t very interesting, but I decided to track down the words that I’d always skimmed over before but couldn’t swear I knew them. Now here’s where you can really shine and pat yourself on the back. How many in this list, sans context or multiple-choice options, can you confidently state an approximate definition for? I looked up each one of these. To be nice, I’m including their contexts. (Note to way too many of my friends: I do assume you know them all, and yes, I’m terribly embarrassed.)

1. fecund (See context above.)
2. numinous (“It [a certain antidote] saves you–or was it perhaps something more numinous?”–reviewer Parul Sehgal)
3. debouches (“…the point where the story of the individual debouches into the narrative of the nation.”–reviewer Parul Sehgal)
4. aphorisms (“Quite possibly, too, the novel is overly self-conscious about speaking back to the past, and it sometimes devolves into aphorisms, as when Winkle insists that the dead and their deeds are ‘all here, all connected, all the time, regardless.'”–reviewer Major Jackson)
5. opprobrium (“Rather than disapproving opprobrium and diatribes, this debut occasions celebration.”–reviewer Major Jackson)
6. iconoclasm (“Iconoclasm begins as one–the loneliest number.”–reviewer Rachel Kushner)
7. elegiac (“If Patti Smith’s recent memoir, ‘Just Kids,’ detailing her own start in downtown New York, is a more controlled and elegiac enterprise, it is also a final burnish on Smith’s past.”–reviewer Rachel Kushner)
8. capacious (“In this capacious, frank and warm-hearted memoir…”–reviewer Louisa Thomas)
9. pullulations (“What seizes [the character]…, what claws at his brain, are the pullulations of all the world’s evils.”–reviewer Cynthia Ozick)
10. fructify (“He sees how pain and wickedness fructify, even as his mother’s increasing skills proliferate into the busy contradictions of a garden teeming with blooms and larval infestation.”–reviewer Cynthia Ozick)
11. venal (“There are dishonest cops, smug prosecutors, a feckless defense lawyer (now a judge) and venal witnesses.”–reviewer Abbe Smith)
12. polemic (“Notwithstanding the book’s unfortunate title, which suggests a polemic, ‘The Injustice System’ is really a love story.”–reviewer Abbe Smith)
13. solipsism (“Solipsism reigns unfettered in North Korea, alongside gross poverty, fear of imprisonment and a growing dissident movement that’s managed to smuggle out what little we know about the travesties prosecuted in this loneliest of states.”–end-page essayist Fiona Maazel)
14. misanthropy (“In essence, how to breach the misanthropy of a country just for getting its street names right?”–end-page essayist Fiona Maazel)
15. demesne (“I happened on Google Earth a few years ago while reading up on Scientology and, O.K., John Travolta and his demesne, which apparently can accommodate two private planes.”–end-page essayist Fiona Maazel)

‘Fess up in the Comments, please. Or gloat. I can take it.

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The Future of Books According to Ann at the Dentist’s Office

heart thru bkstor tumblr_ma463krSfj1rafgujo1_500At the dentist’s office yesterday, Dr. Jenny White’s assistant, Ann, declared that printed books would definitely cease to exist. She may have put a “by year __” on her statement, but I was already lying there with my mouth open and the fight-or-flight part of my brain buzzing. I couldn’t bear hearing the first part of Ann’s claim let alone absorb a deadline date. Happily, Dr. White seemed equally perturbed by the prediction.

You wouldn’t think the concept of a world without physical books (just digital books) would upset me so much anymore. Ann’s not the only one making the prediction; I’ve been reading it for at least a decade. But I still have a visceral reaction when I imagine not being able to leaf back and forth and caress the pages as I go in search of exactly where the mood shifted or the character tripped. Ann said, “You could still have used books,” which made me feel better.

Then this morning I saw the picture shown here and knew its truth. No wonder a number of romantic stories are set in bookstores. I love, too, that the artist included a cat. (If anyone knows who created this art, please tell me so I can include a proper credit line–or delete it because it requires payment. I grabbed it off Pinterest, where someone posted it on a Literary Inspiration group board.)

The talk of books prompted Dr. White to tell me she sees Stephen King all the time because they live near each other on Casey Key. She’ll be out jogging and he’ll be driving down the street–in a car, Jenny pointed out, that someone of far, far lesser means might drive–and he’ll extend his long arm out the window and give her a wave. I told her what a nice person he is and how I want to be his friend. She said she’d get to work on that. This was all in jest because she doesn’t really know him, just has that sweet interaction now and then.

Can you imagine a more satisfying trip to the dentist than I had yesterday? All that and clean teeth, too.

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My Submission to an Essay Contest – Results

I feel like such a dumb-ass.

I feel like such a dumb-ass.

The mind is a wondrous place. My mind, for instance, thought I’d posted eleven days ago the outcome of my submission to the essay contest. Today I checked on that posting for a different reason and found it was still in the “draft” section of my WordPress dashboard. And it’s a good thing, because what I had written and not posted was a very dumb piece of poetry. Now I’ve deleted that, and today I post without further flourish that my essay was rejected. They said no to me.

Reasons were not given. I strongly suspect a role was played by “the ick factor,” the term one of my readers used to explain her own reaction to the essay I’d written. The judges’ decision may have been influenced by how graphic they thought a piece on genital labeling and STDs really needed to be. (You think?) But it was the sixties and seventies, man…

Oh well, I had fun writing it, and I’ve no doubt it will see print in some other context someday. Perhaps a bit toned down, or hidden within a novel somewhere.

In the meantime, I’ve entered a different contest with an unrelated short-short story. I’ll let you know…

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“Yours In Books” Gets Some Respect

This blogsite has been listed as one of the top 100 book-related blogs to follow in 2013. I’m not sure what criteria determined the order, but I’m sure it’s appropriate that Yours In Books just made it in at number 96. There are many things I’m not doing (yet?) to increase readership. It’s an honor to be included. (Scroll on down…)

Top 100 Book related blogs to follow

An infographic by the team at CouponAudit

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My Submission to an Essay Contest – Update 1

As an update to my February 11 posting, I’ve now had a grand total of six people read and react to the essay I submitted to the “Times They Are A-Changing” contest. Among my six readers, the results are extreme. They love it or hate it. Maybe “hate” isn’t the right word. The disappointed readers had different reasons for their reactions. One found it a turn-off for “the ick factor” (which I shan’t share with you at this time); one found it confusing; one thought it was less emotional than the topic demanded. I think all six respondents have made excellent points, some of which I can do something about if I get the opportunity. The “ick factor,” however, must stay, being one of the major points of the essay.

In one week, I’ll know what the anthology editors have decided. I imagine they (there are three of them) are arguing even as I post this. If they say yes to me, I’ll hope to do a bit of editing. If they say yes to me.

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My Submission to an Essay Contest

Harvard Square commentaries, circa 1969 (photo image (c) Meredith Ann Rutter)

Harvard Square commentaries, 1969 (photo image (c) Meredith Ann Rutter)

On January 10 I learned about an intriguing essay competition with a January 15 deadline. The call for entries had gone out in November, I think, but I just learned about it in January thanks to whatever Internet surfing I was doing.

The rationale behind the contest, according to the three women running it, is to gather enough worthy essays to create an anthology titled Times They Were A-Changing: Women Remember the 60s & 70s. Since that covers twenty years of my youth, my first thought was, Oh where to begin!? The anthology planners helped the early thought process by providing descriptions of the five themes they anticipated would organize the book. The theme that spoke loudest to me was “You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby: Feminism and Women’s Rights.” Other themes include the early 60s, the hippies counterculture, political movements, and spiritual/human potential movements.

My first draft happened quickly, the memories flying through my typing fingers. But then I knew I’d be smart not to read it again for a while. It’s wise to wait a day or two, or a month or more, to move to a revised draft, and then wait again to revise again. I had only five days, though. So I revised a bit on each of the five days and uploaded my entry with under an hour to spare. The last time I met a tight deadline (not to mention a midnight deadline) was — well, I can’t remember when. I could barely think straight, and had no idea if what I’d submitted made any sense.

I’ve asked a few trusted readers to give me their reactions while I wait to learn what the contest judges decide. Most of my readers have weighed in now, and overall I think I stand a chance of getting into the anthology. If I do, and if the anthology actually gets published, it will be my first published piece as a writer. Also, in addition, there’s a first prize of $300, a second prize of $150, and a third prize of $75. Entrants get the word March 15.

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Adding to the “Favorites” Tab

One truck-owner's approach to literature on Monhegan Island, Maine (photo copyright by Meredith Ann Rutter)

One truck-owner’s approach to literature on Monhegan Island, Maine (photo copyright by Meredith Ann Rutter)

Boy, I’ve read some pretty bad books lately. Of course, that’s just my opinion. But I think I enjoyed a higher percentage of my reads when I was younger because I still had so-o-o much to learn. Nowadays a book really has to tickle my funny bone or give me a look into some utterly fascinating other life to keep my attention.

I read a book a short while back that was a terrible turn-off because the narrator was shallow and annoying and never improved during the book. Not a whit. It was a book I’d agreed to do a review on, but when I finished it and realized I hated it even more than when I started, I had to beg off. The author does have a legion of fans, and so I knew it was my own reaction and not fair to the publisher or the author to vent against the book. The publisher (happily?) let me off the hook. I won’t name the book or author here. Again, just wouldn’t be right.

Now that I’m reading more and more as part of my life as a writer, I’m getting better at picking the right books for me to read. And so I do have some new recommendations for you. Some of these I read a bit longer ago but am just now thinking to add to the list.

The following books have now been added via the “Favorites” tab in the horizontal menu above. There, each comes with a brief comment from me. You can click on the book cover to see the rest of my comment (if it has ended in dot-dot-dot) and also to read Amazon’s description of the content of the book before you might choose be thrown onto Amazon’s selling page.

Memoirs: I added Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid.
Nonfiction: I added Personal History, Savage Beauty, and The Man Who Loved Books Too Much.
Novels: I added Sarah’s Key, Room, The Pleasure of My Company, and By Nightfall.

Have you read any of these? Care to share your opinion? Use the Comments feature below!

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Books Recently Given or Received

This is kind of a dangerous post to write, because I didn’t keep a list of books I gave or received over the holidays. Therefore, I’m probably going to forget one or two, and perhaps offend someone in the process. But one must soldier on.

Books Given

Kitty Kelley at signing for her latest book, Capturing Camelot

Kitty Kelley at signing for her latest book, Capturing Camelot

Capturing Camelot by Kitty Kelley: This is a glossy and wonderful picture/reminiscence book by the (in)famous Kitty Kelley, known for her unauthorized biographies of Frank Sinatra, Elizabeth Taylor, Jackie Onassis, Oprah, and more. She’s an entertaining speaker with lots of stories to tell, and still going strong at seventy years old. The book’s subtitle is Stanley Tretick’s Iconic Images of the Kennedys. Kelley has combined photographs, many not seen before, taken by her friend Stanley Tretick. He had been the Kennedys’ photographer and her own dear friend, and he left her the photos as part of his estate. She combines her own stories about Stanley or the Kennedys as prose threading through the photos.

I enjoyed hearing Ms. Kelley’s stories at a luncheon given by the Women’s Resource Center of Sarasota County in December. When I stood in line after the lunch for her to sign a book I’d be giving my sister, she wrote a wonderful statement on the title page and posed for the picture above. She was high energy and gracious, and I was impressed.

Other books I gave to several people included two of my personal favorites in 2012:
The Wives of Henry Oades by Johanna Moran (earlier posting here)
Little Miss Merit Badge by Ronda Beaman (earlier posting here).

I gave five books based only on reviews but with content that seemed especially suited to the recipients:
Heads on Beds by Jacob Tomsky (given to my former sister-in-law who would be traveling…)
More Baths Less Talking by Nick Hornby (given to a friend who reads voraciously)
I Could Pee on This by Francesco Marciuliano (poems by cats, given to another cat lover)
Why Does the World Exist? by Jim Holt (given to my husband and another friend who ponder such questions)
The Art of the Sale by Philip Delves Broughton (given to my younger brother, a master salesman even though he’s pondering other avenues for income these days)
Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass and Plot & Structure by James Scott Bell (two books on writing, given to my younger brother, who will give them back to me if they convince him not to take up writing novels)

I look forward to hearing down the road what all the giftees thought of all their books. (But no pressure.)

Books Received

It is great fun to receive a book from someone who knows you. It’s fun to see what they think you’ll like, and to learn what their own experience with the book was like. This year, I received these:

Black Swan Green by David Mitchell (published in 2006, written by the author of Cloud Atlas, which I just finished reading and which, I have been assured, the gifted book is nothing like; whew, because C.A. was one tough read)
The Round House by Louise Erdrich (2012 National Book Award Winner)
Wild by Cheryl Strayed (extremely well-received memoir in 2012, and I’ve just learned Nick Hornby [of More Baths Less Talking mentioned above] will be writing the script for the screen, and Reese Witherspoon will be the lead)

Most people dare not give me books, since they don’t know what I’ve already read or own. The above three came with Gift Receipts, the perfect solution for local gifters. Now please excuse me, but I have to go finish reading my current book (King’s 11/22/63), which I began in early December and have had to put up with its pawing the ground all through the holiday season. Time to give that horse free rein.

What book(s) did you give or receive?

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Gift Giving to Self

Stockings on doorknobI’m looking forward to letting you know, dear readers, what I am giving as books this year. I cannot say now because the recipients may see! In the meantime, I wish for you all a wonderful holiday week, whatever you have planned. For my part, today, I have given myself a couple of gifts:

(1) I’m starting to read Stephen King’s highly touted 11/22/63, which I would call a guilty pleasure if he didn’t also keep teaching me how to write well.

(2) I’ve given my Yours In Books page on Facebook an easy-to-use URL, namely, facebook.com/yours.in.books. Check it out. I wish I had used those separating periods in the blog address as well, instead of learning that a lot of people think “yoursinbooks” means “Your Sin Books.”

(3) I’m asking anyone who uses Facebook and who follows my blog but hasn’t yet “Liked” my Yours In Books Facebook page to do so at this time. There are many items I communicate via FB that never make it into my blog. You will be entertained more often.

I keep learning that if you don’t ask for something, people are less likely to give it to you. I have always liked getting Christmas presents. Please “Like” my Yours In Books Facebook page.

Have a wonderful holiday!

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