Book Club Selections for
June 2014
Book of Ages: The
Life and Opinions of Jane Franklin by Jill Lepore (2013) 464p:
From one of our most
accomplished and widely admired
historians, a revelatory portrait of Benjamin Franklin’s youngest
sister and a
history of history itself. Like her brother, Jane Franklin was a
passionate
reader, a gifted writer, and an astonishingly shrewd political
commentator.
Unlike him, she was a mother of twelve. Benjamin Franklin, who wrote
more
letters to his sister than he wrote to anyone else, was the original
American
self-made man; his sister spent her life caring for her children. They
left
very different traces behind. Making use of an amazing cache of
little-studied
material, including documents, objects, and portraits only just
discovered,
Jill Lepore brings Jane Franklin to life in a way that illuminates not
only
this one woman but an entire world—a world usually lost to history.
Lepore’s
life of Jane Franklin, with its strikingly original vantage on her
remarkable
brother, is at once a wholly different account of the founding of the
United
States and one of the great untold stories of American history and
letters: a
life unknown.
Love in the Time of
Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (English Version 1988) 348p: I
added this
book to my list because Gabriel Garcia Marquez passed away last week.
In their youth, Florentino
Ariza and Fermina Daza fall
passionately in love. When Fermina eventually chooses to marry a
wealthy,
well-born doctor, Florentino is devastated, but he is a romantic. As he
rises
in his business career he whiles away the years in 622 affairs--yet he
reserves
his heart for Fermina. Her husband dies at last, and Florentino
purposefully
attends the funeral. Fifty years, nine months, and four days after he
first declared
his love for Fermina, he will do so again.
The Good Girls
Revolt: How the Women of Newsweek Sued their Bosses and Changed the
Workplace
by Lynn Povich (2012) 292 pg:
It was the 1960s––a time of
economic boom and social strife.
Young women poured into the workplace, but the “Help Wanted” ads were
segregated by gender and the “Mad Men” office culture was rife with
sexual
stereotyping and discrimination. Lynn Povich was one of the lucky ones,
landing
a job at Newsweek, renowned for its cutting-edge coverage of civil
rights and
the “Swinging Sixties.” Nora Ephron, Jane Bryant Quinn, Ellen Goodman,
and
Susan Brownmiller all started there as well. It was a top-notch
job––for a
girl––at an exciting place. But it was a dead end. Women researchers
sometimes
became reporters, rarely writers, and never editors. Any aspiring
female
journalist was told, “If you want to be a writer, go somewhere else.”
On March 16, 1970, the day Newsweek published a cover story
on the fledgling feminist movement entitled “Women in Revolt,”
forty-six
Newsweek women charged the magazine with discrimination in hiring and
promotion. It was the first female
class action lawsuit––the first by women journalists––and it inspired
other
women in the media to quickly follow suit. Lynn Povich was one of the
ringleaders. In The Good Girls Revolt, she evocatively tells the story
of this
dramatic turning point through the lives of several participants. With
warmth,
humor, and perspective, she shows how personal experiences and cultural
shifts
led a group of well-mannered, largely apolitical women, raised in the
1940s and
1950s, to challenge their bosses––and what happened after they did. For
many,
filing the suit was a radicalizing act that empowered them to “find
themselves”
and fight back. Others lost their way amid opportunities, pressures,
discouragements, and hostilities they weren’t prepared to navigate. The
Good
Girls Revolt also explores why changes in the law didn’t solve
everything.
Through the lives of young female journalists at Newsweek today, Lynn
Povich
shows what has––and hasn’t––changed in the workplace.
On Canaan's Side: A
Novel by Sebastian Barry (2011) 269 pg:
A first-person narrative of
Lilly Bere’s life, On Canaan’s
Side opens as the eighty-five-year-old Irish émigré mourns the loss of
her
grandson, Bill. Lilly, the daughter of a Dublin policeman, revisits her
eventful past, going back to the moment she was forced to flee Ireland
at the
end of the First World War. She continues her tale in America,
where—far from her
family—she first tastes the sweetness of love and the bitterness of
betrayal. Spanning
nearly seven decades, Sebastian Barry’s extraordinary fifth novel
explores
memory, war, family ties, love, and loss, distilling the complexity and
beauty
of life into his haunting prose.
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