Non-Fiction

Claudette Colvin: Twice Towards Justice

Claudette Colvin: Twice Towards Justice was a good book. Finally a book about bus segregation that digs deeper than MLK and Rosa Parks. Oh I know there are other books out there but they are rare – and they are rarely written for school age kids. Breath of fresh air, that’s what this book is. I’d like to see it win the Cybil. Colvin and the others who are often overshadowed by Parks and King deserve more attention.

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I Can’t Keep My Own Secrets

I vaguely remember the 6 Word Memoir meme that went around the internets, awhile back. It came, it was interesting, it disappeared. After reading I Can’t Keep My Own Secrets, I’m kind of sorry that it did disappear. I found the 6 word memoirs written by teens to be moving, interesting, and funny – all at the same time, sometimes.  I found myself remembering how that felt, thankful that I never felt THAT way, laughing because I saw myself or my kids in another six words.

I’m not sure this is Cybil win worthy BUT, it might be. And if it somehow won, I wouldn’t be sad. This is a book I’d like to own. To just have it sitting around the house, to pick up, read, and think about for the rest of the day. It’s that kind of book.

(By the way, the 6 words written by the teen stars were pretty boring compared to the regular kids’ writing.)

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The Madame Curie Complex

It was awesome to meet Julie Des Jardins (Jory’s sister and Joy’s daughter) last year at BlogHer 09. I’d heard an awful lot about her and seen a lot of photos of her and her children. It was fun to take her photo with Mrs Potato Head. And it was interesting to hear her talk about her book, The Madame Curie Complex.

I’m not a science nerd but is that because when I was a kid, I was discouraged from pursuing math and science interests? Possible but as with any nature over nurture question, impossible to know for sure.  I didn’t know exactly what Julie was going to write or who she’d include in her pages but any book that talks about invisible women is my kind of book.

When my signed review copy arrived (thanks Julie!) I was thrilled by the names of the women I saw inside. I have always been interested in Marie Curie, haven’t we all?  I’m a huge Roslind Franklin fan, (Watson, Crick and Wilkins… ugh, don’t even get me started… I think I almost drove off of the road the day I discovered The Rosalind Franklin College right next to the Great Lakes Naval Station.)  And, I remember wanting to do a report about Lillian Gilbreth way back when and not being able to find enough information, all I could find was stuff about Frank.

I was really looking forward to reading it but work and kids and life in general kept me from diving in. (Imagine Lillian Gilbreth or Marie Curie making those kinds of excuses…hah.) I decided the Readathon would be the perfect time to sit down with it but I planned poorly and didn’t start it until very late in the Readathon day. I struggled with the intro, though it started beautifully, and ended up putting it down in favor of Nancy Drew – hoping to revitalize a bit. It worked because when I picked it back up, I was hooked – exhausted but hooked.

We’ve all heard the reasons why women didn’t enter (or achieve) in math and science, Julie’s book digs in differently. As she placed these women into historical context, right next to their male counterparts, I found myself thinking about the stories I already knew – in a different way.

The pieces about Gilbreth, the Manhattan project, and the “computers” in Astronomy were fascinating – I suspect I’ll go back and re-read those sections again. I’ve also never been very interested in the Trimates – the primate studies of Fossey,  Galdikas and Goodall- but after reading about them in The Madame Curie Complex, I’ve begun to regret that. I might just end up with a book or two about Primatology – particularly Galdikas and Fossey.  Thanks Julie!

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Everyday is a Good Day

Just finished my first book on the iPad, Everyday is a Good Day (by Wilma Mankiller.)  I’m so glad I read it and just wish I’d read it before Mankiller passed away.  Interesting essays and observations from Mankiller and other women from various tribes. Highly recommend this one.

(Pages – 256)

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This Book is Overdue

I loved This Book is Overdue. I loved it more than her book about obituaries, which I liked quite a bit. I’m a fan of obituaries. And librarians. But I like librarians more. A lot more.   Anyway, this is a nice look at what libraries and librarians have to offer – it isn’t JUST old fashioned books, it’s info of all kinds and all types.

I loved her looks at some of my favorite librarian bloggers, especially the Happyville Library blog. I miss it so much… but I love If I Ran the Universe, too. It was nice to see a writer feature my favorite bloggers – and really get it, get them, get what it’s all about.

Thank you Marilyn Johnson. And thank you librarians.

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When Everything Changed

It’s a good thing I’m still super busy at work. If I’d been able to read When Everything Changed nonstop and tweet my way through it, I’d have been blaming the patriarchy all over the place. And I know some of y’all get tired of that. Because you don’t want to think about all of the ways that you’re still bowing to the patriarchy – that we all are bowing to the patriarchy.

Everything did change – kind of – but we never got quite to where we should have been – on women’s rights or race.

PATRIARCHY. Bah.

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Yes!

I wasn’t sure I was going to read Yes! 50 Scientifically Proven Ways to Be Persuasive. My to be read list was long and it seemed like one of those books you read bits and pieces of while reading other things – and I wasn’t in the mood to do that.

But, TW had provided a bit of commentary about it when she read it – so a couple of days before it was due back to the library, I picked it up. I assumed I’d read a couple of sections and then just take it back. Instead, I found myself reading it all of the way through. It was interesting.

Interesting to think about yourself, your managers, your coworkers and how they use (or don’t use) these smart methods of persuasion and management. Very interesting.

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Traveling with Pomegranates

Traveling with Pomegranates is part travel book, part mother-daughter exploration, part coming of age book (for young women and older women), part spiritual exploration. At times it seems like it’s a bit too much mix of too many things, but overall – it works.

It’s also a wee bit disconcerting to read Sue Monk Kidd (and her daughter) while listening to Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower. The two books mingle and mix with mixed results.

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