The Fortune Teller's Kiss, by Brenda Serotte (2006)
Read: July 27, 2017
3 Stars
This site will focus on books that are set in various places of the world. If you have read one of the books listed, please feel free to leave your comments.
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Books Set in Europe: Spain and Portugal
The Mapmaker's Daughter, by Laurel Corona (2014)
Read: July 25, 2017
3 Stars
Labels:
Europe,
Historical Fiction,
Inquisition,
Jewish Themed,
Laurel Corona,
Portugal,
Spain
Sunday, July 9, 2017
Books Set in the United States
Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination that Changed America, by Will Haywood (2015)
Showdown, by Wil Haywood describes the
nearly month-long confirmation of Thurgood Marshall to the United States
Supreme Court. In 1967, President Lyndon
Johnson was determined to appoint a Black man to the High Court. Thurgood Marshall had made a name for himself
as being a highly-talented attorney who had argued many civil rights cases
before the High Court.
The Civil Rights were a hot button
political issue in the United States in the 1960s. As determined as Johnson was to appoint a
Black to the Supreme Court, were the several Southern arch-segregationist
senators equally as determined to keep Marshall off the Bench. The Senate Judiciary Committee was headed by Mississippi
Senator James Eastland. Other senators
recognized Marshall’s talents. The
battle by the segregationists, however, waged for nearly a month before Marshall
was ultimately confirmed.
The author gives plenty of background
into the players. Several of the events
that are recounted in the book occurred in Louisiana, although these are less
well known than the bombings in Birmingham, and the sit-in in Greensboro. The author also describes the events in
Johnson’s life that led him to be a champion for civil rights.
I highly recommend this book as it gives
a portrait not only of the events leading to the confirmation of a Supreme
Court Justice, but of race relations in America during the 1960.
Read: July 9, 2017
5 Stars
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Books Set in the United States: Connecticut
Small Great Things, by Jodi Picoult
(2016)
Like so many of Jodi Picoult’s novels,
this book tackles social issues that have been in the news. This time the theme is racism and white
supremacy.
Ruth Jefferson is a nurse in the
maternity ward in a Connecticut hospital.
She is the daughter of a woman who was a domestic and the first in her
family to go to college. She worked her
way through college to earn her nursing degree.
She has worked at the hospital for 20 years and is only African-American
nurse on staff in the maternity ward.
While working in the hospital, she is
also a widowed mother, raising a studious teenage son. She is saving her money to send her son to
college.
Enter Brittany and Turk, a couple of
white supremacists. Brittany has just given
birth to a baby boy. They name their son
Davis in honor of Jefferson Davis. Ruth
meets the couple and performs a routine checkup of the newborn. The parents are taken aback that a Black
nurse would touch their son, so insist that that a note be included in the
baby’s file stating that no African-Americans are to treat the baby. The hospital agrees to the parent’s request
and Ruth is ordered not to touch the baby.
Nearing the end of a double shift, and
when the ward is short-staffed, Ruth is called in to monitor the baby. When the baby goes into cardiac distress,
Ruth is faced with the dilemma of whether to let her nursing instinct to take
over or obey orders not to touch the baby.
Soon other medical personnel are called in and a doctor orders Ruth to
perform CPR. When the baby dies, Ruth is
charged with murder of the baby.
Ruth is assigned a public defender (I am
not convinced that she would be considered indigent for purpose of being
assigned a public defender, but …), a well-intentioned white woman with a young
daughter, with no concept of racial prejudice.
The prosecutor, however, is a Black woman. How will this play out before a jury?
As with many of Picoult’s books, there is
a twist near the end. Maybe I have read
enough of her writings to look for clues throughout the book. At any rate, I guessed the twist. That didn’t take away from the important
conversation of this novel.
Small Great Things was a page-turner. I thoroughly enjoyed it and felt the
characters really came alive.
Read: July 4, 2017
4.5 Stars
Labels:
Connecticut,
Fiction,
Jodi Picoult,
New England,
Race Relations,
Social Issues
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