Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Next Selection Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff

Next Meeting: Wednesday, February 2, 2011 at 11:30 at the LRC Mezzanine

The next selection the book club will read is Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff. This was a unanimous vote.  Shortly there will be a copy available in the library of course you could borrow it from your local library or purchase it. It is too new to be borrowed through Interlibrary Loan. The next meeting of the Mezzanine Mavens will take place Wednesday, February 2, 2011 at 11:30 at the LRC Mezzanine. I hope you can join us.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Meeting Notes December 1, 2010

We had 10 members attend Book Club today. The discussion of Angela’s Ashes was animated and all who attended enjoyed the book very much. Suzanne Waddell brought in a Ham & Cheese Puff Tart see recipe below which she generously shared with all. For dessert we had assorted cookies, chocolate covered pretzels and apple turnover. Of course we had coffee, tea and assorted soft drinks.

We are looking for a selection for our next meeting February 2, 2011. Please choose from the choices below. All except Decipher are available in print, kindle and CD. Decipher is only available in print and kindle. Please vote by Friday, December 3rd. I will send the results of the vote next Monday. Thanks.

Cleopatra: A Life Stacy Schiff

 

Her palace shimmered with onyx, garnets, and gold, but was richer still in political and sexual intrigue. Above all else, Cleopatra was a shrewd strategist and an ingenious negotiator.

Though her life spanned fewer than forty years, it reshaped the contours of the ancient world. She was married twice, each time to a brother. She waged a brutal civil war against the first when both were teenagers. She poisoned the second. Ultimately she dispensed with an ambitious sister as well; incest and assassination were family specialties. Cleopatra appears to have had sex with only two men. They happen, however, to have been Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, among the most prominent Romans of the day. Both were married to other women. Cleopatra had a child with Caesar and--after his murder--three more with his protégé. Already she was the wealthiest ruler in the Mediterranean; the relationship with Antony confirmed her status as the most influential woman of the age. The two would together attempt to forge a new empire, in an alliance that spelled their ends. Cleopatra has lodged herself in our imaginations ever since.

Famous long before she was notorious, Cleopatra has gone down in history for all the wrong reasons. Shakespeare and Shaw put words in her mouth. Michelangelo, Tiepolo, and Elizabeth Taylor put a face to her name. Along the way, Cleopatra's supple personality and the drama of her circumstances have been lost. In a masterly return to the classical sources, Stacy Schiff here boldly separates fact from fiction to rescue the magnetic queen whose death ushered in a new world order. Rich in detail, epic in scope, Schiff 's is a luminous, deeply original reconstruction of a dazzling life.



The dramatic and chilling story of an Ebola virus outbreak in a suburban Washington, D.C. laboratory, with descriptions of frightening historical epidemics of rare and lethal viruses. More hair-raising than anything Hollywood could think of, because it's all true.


The appeal of McCourt as a reader of his own memoirs (Angela's Ashes flourished commercially on audio, in both abridged and unabridged formats) lies in his ability to express a sustained sense of wonder at the world around him. Also, his brogue is classic, an Irish species unto itself. Here he takes up where he left off in his last book, arriving in America. He is first guided by an Irish bartender who tells him to go to the New York Public Library and read Samuel Johnson. Thus assimilated, he becomes a supply clerk for the army, stationed in postwar Germany, then a warehouse laborer living in a rooming house, before earning a college degree at NYU and settling down as a teacher at a rowdy vocational high school in Staten Island. Along the way come romance and immigrant's-eye life observations aplenty, and a growing sense of knowingness develops even as McCourt's hopes are dashed against disillusions.

Decipher Stel Pavlou


In British screenwriter Pavlou's adolescent first novel, it's March 2012 and huge storms are raging around the globe, sparked by giant sunspots. The villainous U.S. Rola Corporation, drilling for desperately needed oil off Antarctica, discovers strange crystalline artifacts covered with a precuneiform script, while radiation detected under the antarctic ice portends the awakening of powerful alien forces. An unconvincing gaggle of scientists discovers they have only one unholy Holy Week to ship a nuclear device to Antarctica and bomb the underwater threat to smithereens. Pavlou builds his unlikely crescendo of Bad Things from nearly every major folklore, myth and religion, dizzyingly cutting between eye-popping disasters and eye-glazing capsule summaries of linguistics, geology, chemistry, mathematics, numerology, cryptology, archeology, ESP and Edgar Cayce. Stripped down to comic book proportions for the big screen, with a deafening soundtrack and a teenage audience anesthetized to a vocabulary largely dominated by four-letter cliches, this often gruesome tale might make a middling SF adventure flick. The often ludicrous dialogue and the ham-fisted handling of human relations and motivations, however, make for an unfocused novel, one patched together like Frankenstein, with every stitching line, every unnatural feature, unblushingly exposed to the most casual glance.

Recipe

Ham & Cheese Puff Tart

1 ½ tablespoons all purpose flour, plus more for rolling
2 sheets frozen puff pastry thawed
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 cup whole milk
Coarse salt and ground pepper
Ground nutmeg
6 oz. of thinly sliced deli ham
1 cup grated Gruyère cheese
1 large egg lightly beaten

On a floured work surface, roll each sheet puff pastry to a 10-by-13-inch rectangle. Transfer to two parchment-lined baking sheets and refrigerate. In a small saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add flour; cook, stirring, until golden, 1 minute. Whisking constantly, add milk and simmer. Stir until thickened, 5 minutes. Season with salt, pepper and pinch of nutmeg. Pour sauce in a bowl and let cool 30 minutes.

Pre-heat oven to 400°F, with rack in lower third.  Arrange ham evenly on 1 pastry sheet, leaving ¾-inch border; top with cheese and sauce. Brush pastry border with egg; top with second pastry sheet. Fold bottom edges over top and press to seal. Brush top with egg and cut vents in tart. Bake until browned and puffed, 30 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

From: Everyday Food, A Martha Stewart Magazine

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Next Meeting

The next meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, December 1, 2010 at 11:30 AM in the Mezzanine. The title Angela’s Ashes by Frank McCourt received the most votes. We have one copy available in the library. It may be possible to ILL in another format, for example in large print or audio. It is most likely available in your local library.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Meeting

We had our first meeting of the 2010/11 academic year Wednesday, September 29, 2010 at 11:30 AM in the LRC Mezzanine. The turnout was small. We did receive a few title suggestions at the meeting, via our blog and email. One of our new student members asked what we had read in the past. I explained that by going to the library webpage and selecting Mezzanine Mavens at the bottom you would find our webpage which has links to the previous year’s book lists.
The suggested titles are:

I’d Know You Anywhere  Lippman, Laura
From Publishers Weekly
Near the start of this outstanding novel of psychological suspense from Edgar-winner Lippman (Life Sentences), Eliza Benedict, a 38-year-old married mother of two living in suburban Maryland, receives a letter from Walter Bowman, the man who kidnapped her the summer she was 15 and is now on death row. The narrative shifts between the present and that long ago summer, when Eliza involuntarily became a part of Walter's endless road trip, including the fateful night when he picked up another teenage girl, Holly Tackett. Soon after Walter killed Holly, Eliza was rescued and taken home. Eliza must now balance a need for closure with a desire to protect herself emotionally. Walter wants something specific from her, but she has no idea what, and she's not sure that she wants to know. All the relationships, from the sometimes contentious one between Eliza and her sister, Vonnie, to the significantly stranger one between Walter and Barbara LaFortuny, an advocate for prisoners, provide depth and breadth to this absorbing story.

House Rules  Picoult, Jodi
Amazon Review
They tell me I'm lucky to have a son who's so verbal, who is blisteringly intelligent, who can take apart the broken microwave and have it working again an hour later. They think there is no greater hell than having a son who is locked in his own world, unaware that there's a wider one to explore. But try having a son who is locked in his own world, and still wants to make a connection. A son who tries to be like everyone else, but truly doesn't know how.
Jacob Hunt is a teenage boy with Asperger's syndrome. He's hopeless at reading social cues or expressing himself well to others, and like many kids with AS, Jacob has a special focus on one subject--in his case, forensic analysis. He's always showing up at crime scenes, thanks to the police scanner he keeps in his room, and telling the cops what they need to do...and he's usually right. But then his town is rocked by a terrible murder and, for a change, the police come to Jacob with questions. All of the hallmark behaviors of Asperger's--not looking someone in the eye, stimulatory tics and twitches, flat affect--can look a lot like guilt to law enforcement personnel. Suddenly, Jacob and his family, who only want to fit in, feel the spotlight shining directly on them. For his mother, Emma, it's a brutal reminder of the intolerance and misunderstanding that always threaten her family. For his brother, Theo, it's another indication of why nothing is normal because of Jacob. And over this small family the soul-searing question looms: Did Jacob commit murder? Emotionally powerful from beginning to end, House Rules looks at what it means to be different in our society, how autism affects a family, and how our legal system works well for people who communicate a certain way--and fails those who don't.

An American Childhood   Dillard, Annie
From Publishers Weekly
Dillard's luminous prose painlessly captures the pain of growing up in this wonderful evocation of childhood. Her memoir is partly a hymn to Pittsburgh, where orange streetcars ran on Penn Avenue in 1953 when she was eight, and where the Pirates were always in the cellar. Dillard's mother, an unstoppable force, had energies too vast for the bridge games and household chores that stymied her. Her father made low-budget horror movies, loved Dixieland jazz, told endless jokes and sight-gags and took lonesome river trips down to New Orleans to get away. From this slightly odd couple, Dillard (Teaching a Stone to Talk acquired her love of nature and taut sensitivity. The events of childhood often loom larger than life; the magic of Dillard's writing is that she sets down typical childhood happenings with their original immediacy and force.

Angela’s Ashes  McCourt, Frank
From School Library Journal
Despite impoverishing his family because of his alcoholism, McCourt's father passed on to his son a gift for superb storytelling. He told him about the great Irish heroes, the old days in Ireland, the people in their Limerick neighborhood, and the world beyond their shores. McCourt writes in the voice of the child? with no self-pity or review of events? And just retells the tales. He recounts his desperately poor early years, living on public assistance and losing three siblings, but manages to make the book funny and uplifting. Stories of trying on his parents' false teeth and his adventures as a post-office delivery boy will have readers laughing out loud. Young people will recognize the truth in these compelling tales; the emotions expressed; the descriptions of teachers, relatives, neighbors; and the casual cruelty adults show toward children. Readers will enjoy the humor and the music in the language. A vivid, wonderfully readable memoir.?Patricia Noonan, Prince William Public Library, VA

Elizabeth Street Fabiano, Laurie
From Booklist
First novelist Fabiano is dead-on in her portrait of the Italian-American immigrant experience. This engrossing cross-generational saga centers on the experiences of Giovanna Costa, from the small Italian fishing village where she is born to the bustling streets of New York's Lower East Side where she struggles to raise her family and make a living as a midwife after the death of her first husband. In America, the resourceful Giovanna and her second husband eventually open a fruit and vegetable stand, attracting the unwanted attentions of the notorious “Black Hand” crime organization. When Giovanni refuses to meet their demands, her daughter is kidnapped and held for ransom. Basing this story—including the kidnapping—on her own family's immigrant experiences, Fabiano provides a wealth of period detail, infusing the compulsively readable narrative with an authentic sense of time, place, and community.

In the Woods French, Tana
From Publishers Weekly
Irish author French expertly walks the line between police procedural and psychological thriller in her debut. When Katy Devlin, a 12-year-old girl from Knocknaree, a Dublin suburb, is found murdered at a local archeological dig, Det. Rob Ryan and his partner, Cassie Maddox, must probe deep into the victim's troubled family history. There are chilling similarities between the Devlin murder and the disappearance 20 years before of two children from the same neighborhood who were Ryan's best friends. Only Maddox knows Ryan was involved in the 1984 case. The plot climaxes with a taut interrogation by Maddox of a potential suspect, and the reader is floored by the eventual identity and motives of the killer. A distracting political subplot involves a pending motorway in Knocknaree, but Ryan and Maddox are empathetic and flawed heroes, whose partnership and friendship elevate the narrative beyond a gory tale of murdered children and repressed childhood trauma.

Every Last One  Anna Quindlen
From Publishers Weekly
In her latest, Quindlen (Rise and Shine) once again plumbs the searing emotions of ordinary people caught in tragic circumstances. Mary Beth Latham is a happily married woman entirely devoted to her three teenage children. When her talented daughter Ruby casually announces she's breaking up with her boyfriend Kirenan, a former neighbor who's become like family, Mary Beth is slightly alarmed, but soon distracted by her son Max, who's feeling overshadowed by his extroverted, athletic twin brother Alex. Quindlen's novel moves briskly, propelled by the small dramas of summer camp, proms, soccer games and neighbors, until the rejected Kirenan blindsides the Lathams, and the reader, with an incredible act of violence. Left with almost nothing, Mary Beth struggles to cope with loss and guilt, protect what she has left, and regain a sense of meaning. Quindlen is in classic form, with strong characters and precisely cadenced prose that builds in intensity.
Please vote for one title to read for the next meeting. Please cast your vote via email to ambruso@stevenscollege.edu  no later than 12 Noon Monday October 4, 2010 and I will publish the results via email and on our blog.

The next meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, December 1, 2010 at 11:30 AM in the Mezzanine. Thanks.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Reading Suggestions?

Hope you can make the meeting Wednesday, September 29, 2010, 11:30 AM in the LRC Mezzanine. Please bring a book title to suggest. Please plan to share something about the book and/or the author. And why you think it will be a good read for the book club. Thanks

You can also post suggetions to the blog.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Mezzanine Mavens - Wednesday, September 29th 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM in the LRC Mezzanine

I would like to revitalize the Mezzanine Maven’s Book Club. In the past we met once a month and for a number of years we had about 25 to 30 members with about 7-10 attendees per meeting. Over the last two years that has dwindled so much that frequently I was the only person attending. To try and re-interest our former members and hopefully gain some new members I would like to try a new format.
We will meet 2x’s a semester. This semester the first meeting will take place Wednesday, September 29th 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM in the LRC Mezzanine.  At this meeting we will choose a book and the date and time of the next meeting. Perhaps meeting in the afternoon/evening would work better. Please bring your lunch, the library will provide drinks and dessert.

Please put this on your calendar and join us for the first meeting of the 2010-2011 academic year:
Mezzanine Mavens - Wednesday, September 29th 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM in the LRC Mezzanine
Please RSVP so I have an idea of the number of drinks I need to provide.