Sunday, May 25, 2014

Book Reviews: A Long Way Gone and When I Was Puerto Rican

Here's a hopeless romantic quote that all librarians and teachers seem to love: “The man who reads lives a thousand lives before he dies; the man who never reads lives but one.” Ahhh, beautiful.

To be totally and completely cliché in such an English teacher kind of way, the last two books I have read have done just that by allowing me to step into two very different pairs of shoes than my own. But they gave me two other important lessons:
  1. These books made me realize how incredibly ignorant I am about the “thousand lives” of people in my world, and
  2.  In some way, made me incredibly grateful for the one life I actually do have.
A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah is a memoir from a former child soldier during the Sierra Leone Civil War. Do you know where Sierra Leone is? Africa is as close as I could pinpoint it before reading this book.



Like many civil conflicts, the Sierra Leone War was incredibly violent with innocent civilians unfortunately receiving much of the brutality. Ishmael Beah is one of those civilians, and this book chronicles his journey from his hometown in Sierra Leone to his wandering of the countryside after losing touch with his family, to his being picked up as a child soldier for the national army, and finally to his rehabilitation through UNICEF. A traumatic and sometimes grisly story, I’m thankful to this story for giving me a glimpse into a world and culture I knew nothing about.

When I Was Puerto Rican by Esmerelda Santiago made me realize how incredibly ignorant I am of an area of the world that is relatively close to the United States and is, in fact, a territory of the U.S.A. This memoir follows the life of Esmerelda and her family, particularly her mother, as they move from country to city to back again in Puerto Rico; eventually, they make their way to New York City. I would not have picked up this book on my own, but am grateful to my colleague Betsy for putting this read into my hands!

Why you might like these books: Although both books at times are incredibly depressing and nerve wracking, they give you such a perspective of the world around you. So when I get mad that a student left his homework on his desk, or that I forgot to rinse out my oatmeal bowl in the morning, these stories offer me a reality check of what real problems and situations are like. Voila! – instant perspective.

But stories like these were NOT written to make me feel better about my first world problems. Rather, they are told to raise awareness about parts of the globe that are sometimes ignored. More people need to read books like these in order to become more culturally aware and more sensitive to the world’s problems. After all, our community no longer extends to our city, state, or even country; the whole world is our community and we need to be aware of its trials, transformations, and triumphs.

Why you might not like these books: As recounted in a previous post, I started A Long Way Gone as an audiobook. I would not recommend this, as it is a pretty depressing and violent story and made me sad as I drove from place to place.

Truthfully, I liked A Long Way Gone more than When I Was Puerto Rican because there is more of a plot. At times during Puerto Rican, I wanted to throw down the book and scream at Esmerelda’s parents for putting her in such dangerous and unfair situations. Both of these books were hard to read at times, but I’m thankful to have read them.

Similar Titles I’ve Read: Never Fall Down by Patricia McCormick, Night by Elie Wiesel, The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan, Sold by Patricia McCormick, The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls

I would recommend these books to: People who care about our global community; history buffs; and my dear friend Kirsten.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Thoughts on a Reading Slump and Book Abandonment

For whatever reason, in the month of April my reading hit a slump. I read four books, one of them a reread (In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan- see my last post!). While this is impressive by my 2013 standards, it’s the least amount of books I’ve read in a month in 2014, and I completely ditched audiobooks. Here are some possible causes:
  1. The weather has been unusually awful for April and the TV has been calling my name
  2. I bought a road bike and have been dedicating some time to a new hobby
  3. Grading and school has been getting the better of me
Most likely though, I think I’ve hit a wall because I haven’t been EXCITED about the books I’ve chosen to read. At the beginning of the year, I made a list of all the books I have been recommended or wanted to read and I have been steadily making my way through them. However, my most recent books have just not been making the cut. Here are some books I have abandoned  in recent weeks:
  • The Group by Mary McCarthy: this is the book club choice from my college book club (hi guys!). I didn’t get too far into it when I heard many people were either a) not reading it or b) hating it, so I promptly decided not to make it a priority. The incredibly tiny font didn’t help either!
  • Cooked by Michael Pollan: I love Michael Pollan and I love food, but I just wasn’t in the mood for this book. I’m much more interested in the process of growing food and eating food (thus, my recent Michael Pollan read), but over 500 pages of how cooking works just was not doing it for me.
  • Endurance by Alfred Lansing: I actually do want to read this book still, reading about a ship crew trudging through snow and ice in Antarctica and it was snowing in April this year just made me angry! When I’m sweltering hot and baling hay in July, I think this book will be a much better fit.
  • A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah: This memoir of Ishmael Beah, who was a boy soldier during the civil war of Sierra Leone, is extremely powerful and fascinating, and I would like to finish reading it. However, I had checked it out from the library as an audiobook. Although the narrator has a strong, calm voice, the contents of the book were so depressing that I hated listening to it in the car. I want to read this book, but I think this is better suited as a “read this and be depressed for one week,” not a “read in short spurts and be reminded how awful the world is all over again for weeks” selection.
So what’s a girl to do with all of this book abandonment and indecisiveness? I feel incredibly guilty when I abandon books, but as I’ve learned from Donalyn Miller, reader and teacher extraordinaire and author of my teaching bible The Book Whisperer, there are too many wonderful books in the world to read ones that don’t interest you. Reading should be fun, engaging, and an escape from your current world; the real world should not be an escape from books you are dreading to read.

So with that, I am picking myself up from April and setting out to salvage my reading in May. Luckily, I have wonderful friends who make my life so much better and have given me books and recommendations. Here are some books and ideas that are spurring me forward:
  • What Teachers Make by Taylor Mali: Given to me by a dear childhood friend who also teaches, I have been reading a little of this each night and especially when teaching has been rough recently. A nice little reminder of why we teach.
  • Reading in the Wild by Donalyn Miller: Another gift from a lovely colleague. As previously admitted, Donalyn Miller is my idol in a totally dorky reader and teacher sort of way. Can’t wait to get some ideas for next year from this book!
  • Other things I have done: Without too much guilt, I cleaned out books from my list that I do not really want to read and have added in new recommendations after browsing my library website and GoodReads. Hopefully, six new books and two audiobooks will await me at the library soon! On May 22, I will also be attending a Young Adult Literature Conference with some of my buddies from school. Always a fantastic way to get the latest YAL titles and give me a huge summer booklist!
Spring is here and I can’t wait to share with you some of my newest book finds of May soon J