“Last Kiss” by Luanne Rice

It’s Spring and to quote Tennyson, “a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.” Our Jen, however, is busy thinking about summer days and beach books, but love is never far away from such novels and her pick for this week, “Last Kiss” by local author Luanne Rice is no exception. In case you missed it last year, click to read our interview with Luanne Rice.

Happy First Day of Spring.  Let’s put our faces to the sun and pick out beach books early … here’s a good one.

I love to read local authors and Luanne Rice is no exception.  The familiarity is refreshing … especially the familiarity of warm summer days at the beach when my toes are frozen.

“Last Kiss” is set in Old Lyme, down by the beach.  Griswold Point, Hallmark, and the beach clubs all play an integral part – under assumed names of course.

But we know better.

Hence the fun of a local author.

A young man from town is killed in New York City.  He leaves behind a tortured mother and girlfriend who cannot get past the event.  Both Sheridan and Nell are trapped in a holding pattern hoping the nightmare of Charlie’s death will end.

Nell calls Sheridan’s old lover to come home and solve the mystery.  The unfolding story involves love between many people and pain between others.  Luanne Rice is very good at creating an easily believable world and the joys and horrors within.

Will Gavin and Sheridan rekindle their decades old love or is it not to be?  Can Nell’s father and Stevie work out their differing opinions on marriage?  Does Sheridan’s family really have magical powers and are they enough to repair the damage done by decades of heartache caused by a nasty man?  He is nasty – you’ll hate him.  Everyone else is quite likable so it’s alright.

It is a page-turner and I highly recommend you put it on your beach reading list.  Sitting at the Point, iced tea at hand, this is the book you will be reading.  Put sunscreen on first because you won’t put it down for awhile.

“The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society” by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

This 50th column is a landmark for our indomitable book reviewer Jen Mann. We’re delighted to announce that she will be starting a new venture for us soon, but don’t worry, she’ll still continue with her book reviews.  More on this to follow, but in the meantime, enjoy this week’s review of ‘The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society’ by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows.

I wish I were packing in lieu of writing this review.  Packing for Guernsey.  How I love that part of the world and thrilled to the familiarity.

The title may be long and odd but the book is not long enough. I would still be happily ensconced in Guernsey with the marvelously likable cast of characters.

I read another book this week, The Emperor’s Children* that did not have one honorable, amusing or otherwise engaging character.

In contrast, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society barely had any I did not love.  It was the complete opposite.  Every, almost every, member of the story is someone you would love to know.  They are strong, compassionate, amusing and honorable.

Set in the aftermath of World War II, an authoress from London finds herself drawn to the story of Guernsey’s German occupation and how the islanders stayed strong.  Despite the horrors of war, they carried on with their lives.  They formed a Literary group to maintain morale and keep their first and only pig roast a secret.  They made do with Potato Peel Pie afterwards, but kept reading.
The books and their friendships kept them from the edge of grief.  As the London authoress, Juliet Aston, comes to know the islanders, they form close friendships.  We see their lives through letters.  Letters to one another are a comforting form of communications and we view the atrocities of the concentration camps through others’ eyes.  We see the pain of a close knit island community turned on end.
The pain of the war is evident in both the islanders and the German soldiers, but the faith in humanity keeps the book from extreme melancholy.  The fact that these people can get up and keep getting up; that they do not lose hope in the human condition is a testament in itself.  The further fact that there is humor and love abundant in their lives gives hope to us all.
Despite the recounting of a grim scenario, the book is just wonderful.  From the ravages of war grow new lives and the island is awash in well-being.  There is laughter and good-will in spades and I thoroughly enjoyed being with these people.  Juliet finds her life vastly improved by their proximity and the ending is just what you hope.
* This book by Claire Mussud was a New York Times Best Book of the Year.  Just goes to show you, don’t believe everything you hear about a book … unless it’s from me … then it’s gospel.

Alex and Me

Jen treats us to a review this week of Alex and Me by Irene Pepperburg.  An extraordinarily clever woman, Greenburg sets out to discover just how smart the African Gray Parrot – in this case, Alex – is.  Greenburg establishes Alex as “a beacon in a world that underestimated him,” and, as is always the case in Jen’s reviews, makes us think about the bigger animal picture.

“Be Good. I love You.”  These were the last words a 30-year-old African Grey parrot named Alex said to his owner, Dr. Irene Pepperberg, before he died.  Get out the Kleenex now.  What a wonderful bird.

I have a special place in my heart for African Greys.  My Aunt had one and he was a piece of work.  Nathan scared the pants off me the first time we met.  He was in a cage in the sunroom when I walked through and he started making fire alarm noises.  Then he started yelling, “Hat trick! SCOOOORE!”  He sounded exactly like some strange man and I thought I was losing my mind.
He also made the sound of a ringing phone to get people to jump up and run for it.  He mimicked the sound of my Aunt’s voice so perfectly that he’d call the dogs in her voice and watch them race around in a frenzy searching for her.  Needless to say, I loved him.Pepperberg’s parrot learned to do more.  After MIT and Harvard, she began an intensive study with Alex that changed the way people view bird brains.  He could reason, he could grasp multiple ideas, he used humor and petulance to make his needs and desires known to all.  He continually amazed people with his cognitive abilities that were highly unexpected in the scientific world of animal intelligence.

Alex taught his fellow parrots language and he became a beacon in a world that underestimated him.  When Pepperberg began her studies, the closest brain to man was assumed to be the chimp.  Because their brains resembled ours physically, it was presumed that other animal brains could not match their capabilities.

Wrong.

Alex may have had a brain the size of a walnut but he surpassed the chimp and proved he had abilities akin to a 5-year-old human child.Pepperberg’s experiments were groundbreaking and Alex became a wonder.  An amazing creature.  If he could exercise heretofore unknown gifts, what else can?

We are very wrong in our presumptive superiority.  The animal world is as much a part of our world as we are.  It would be a vast underestimation to assume we are alone in our ability to think.  Man is part of a web and the more we understand about all creatures the better.

“I Feel Bad About My Neck” by Nora Ephron

Jen is back and her book choice this week is a must-read for every woman over 40.  It’s a disquietingly brilliant series of essays on the joys (or otherwise) of being female and aging.  At the LymeLine office we are dominant in both characteristics, so this book was not only meaningful but also had us in fits of laughter, which, as Jen stresses, is a good thing … at our age!

Reading Amy a few weeks ago reminded me how much I like all of the Ephron sisters. Nora, who wrote the scripts for Sleepless In Seattle,Heartburn, and When Harry met Sally, among others is a riot.

I read a few books last week, but this one made me laugh out loud and in the bleak mid-winter we all need a good laugh.

Maybe when the birds are chirping I’ll get more serious.  Really, isn’t the price of home heating oil morose enough for right now?

Let’s have a laugh that isn’t crazed and maniacal.

I Feel Bad About My Neck is a group of essays.  Some previously published in tomes like Vogue and The New Yorker.  Each one is funnily introspective.  Nora discusses her life post middle age.  She is over 60 and she thinks women who say, “This is YOUR time!” are crazy.

She is convinced her time was eons ago.  I would not agree.  She gets funnier.  She mourns her youthful neck, her old apartment, her bad marriages, and her flat stomach.  She celebrates her non-conforming purse, her cooking, her current neighborhood and her friendships.

Describing the gates-of-hell type scenario that is her purse had me staring into the void of my own with shuddering recognition.  Why do they fill up so fast with items you could swear you didn’t even own?  I have matchbox cars and reading glasses by the pound in mine.  Unless, of course, I am actively looking for either one.  Her wanderings around her apartment looking for glasses, keys and even a piece of cheese are a hoot.

My kids are still laughing about a dill pickle that went missing in our old house.  Sorry Peter and Gerard …

Her essay on her “incident” with JFK and her essay on the amount of people and money it takes to keep her looking exactly one year younger than she is are equally classic.

Each essay is full of Ah-Ha moments of recognition.  Even at 40 I can see where this neck issue is going to end up.  I too should have worn a bikini for the entire year of 23.  Hindsight is 20-20 ( … well, when the eyes are working) and Ephron makes you appreciate the parts of life that inevitably change.

Wherever you are on the great Age Ladder you should stop and smell those proverbial roses.  Who knows what ravages time will bring?  If we can keep laughing, it will all be fine.

“Dating Jesus: A Story of Fundamentalism, Feminism, and the American Girl” by Susan Campbell

Jen Mann is taking a well-deserved vacation this week.  Actually, being the dedicated individual that she is, she tried to email in her review but was beaten by a computer malfunction.  So, we’re delighted to welcome our friend David Holahan as her stand-in and he offers a wonderful commentary on, “Dating Jesus.  A Story of Fundamentalism, Feminism, and the American Girl,” written by Hartford Courant columnist Susan Campbell.

When she was growing up in Missouri, hard by Route 66 and in the shadow of the Ozarks, Susan Campbell was completely immersed in that old time religion.  In fact, she took the full-body plunge twice to make sure she got it right.

She noticed early on that you could never tell for certain if you had this religious business right.  There were so many rules, prohibitions and great expectations.

Thank you for not dancing, one.

The author went to church three times a week, and the Sunday morning service was a three-hour marathon.  Summers she attended church camp.In her family’s eventual house of worship, the church (yes, lower case “c”) of Christ, she was taught many things.Women were to keep silent in the assembly.  It said so in the Bible.

Boy, did they have the wrong girl.At 10 she was rewriting divine scripture, punching up the parts that women played, and selling the result to her grandmother for cold cash.  When Campbell’s older brother ascended to the pulpit at the tender age of 12, she should have been happy for him but she wasn’t.The highest level a grown woman could aspire to was the title of “baptized believer.”  They let her teach Sunday school, but not to pubescent boys.  They told her that she couldn’t instruct boys once they reached 12 years of age, just the girls.

So she stopped teaching Sunday school.

“Dating Jesus” is a mesmerizing, funny, impressionistic memoir of a spiritual and thoughtful person, one who has spent her life wrestling with religion, the meaning of faith and her feelings for the Divine.  In her first book, Susan Campbell, a columnist for the Hartford Courant, has not come to bury religion.She is trying to understand it and the effects it has had on her and on others  (She gives credit where credit is due, such as the myriad good works that churches brought to bear in New Orleans after Katrina). The process of discovery involves not only her life experiences, but also intermittent discourses on religious history, Biblical scholarship and politics.Unlike many devout people, she knows her Bible, chapter and verse.

In straightforward, down-to-earth prose Campbell stalks her past like a prizefighter cutting the ring in half before launching short, telling jabs.  To inflict punishment she is willing to take her lumps as well.After fleeing north to Connecticut, and now churchless, she returns to Missouri for a visit with her brother.  They attend services with his new “religion lite” congregation.  There are instruments (gasp), clapping and even some swaying.  Most tellingly, the parishioners appear blissfully happy.

“The treacly sweet love of God coats everything here like cotton candy, and I hate myself for thinking that way,” she writes, adding a bit further along: “I know I am mean and judgmental, but this religion doesn’t seem real to me if they feel so damn happy about it.  I don’t feel that happiness.  My God is not smiling.  My God is pissed.”As she starts to cry, her brother, who is now simply a congregant himself, says to her, “Fundamentalism broke off in us, didn’t it?”  She writes in reply, “Yes, it did.  Like a sword, fundamentalism was plunged into our bodies, and then it got broken off in us so that we will never, ever heal from the wound.  Like Perpetual Jesus on the Perpetual Cross, we are the walking wounded.”

But all is not pain and anguish.  The author recalls with fondness experiences like “knocking doors” for Jesus, going house to house soul searching.  And once she even gets one gentleman half-converted to the True Way before he backslides.The effort isn’t about the destination, though, it’s about the quest, about the big one that always gets away: “Bagging a Methodist would be nice, but a Roman Catholic – or a Jew, if we could find one! – is even better … with Catholics’ bells and smells and standing up and sitting down and rote memorization of man-made words?  Now that’s a soul.”

As Campbell goes to the mat with organized religion, her tag-team partner is none other than Jesus Himself.  She still loves Him and to untangle her life, to find out who she is, or should be, she has to figure out who the real Jesus is.  In her amply-footnoted ruminations on the true meaning of the Christ, Campbell is at her best.In addition to caring for the sick, the poor, and the dispossessed, Jesus, she insists, was a feminist.  Though relegated to lowly status akin to slaves or children, women felt comfortable with Jesus, approaching Him, talking with Him, following Him.And He felt comfortable with them in return, often to the consternation of his chauvinistic disciples, Campbell points out.  He consorted with harlots, touched a woman who was bleeding (a big taboo), drank from a Samarian woman’s water jug (a double faux pas), and spoke with women as he spoke with men.

As even the disciple Paul, known for his misogynistic musing, conceded, “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Jesus Christ.”

Jesus had come to change everything, Campbell asserts, or at least to try like hell.  It is enough to make a lapsed Catholic cry.

Editor’s Note: David Holahan is a churchless freelance writer living in East Haddam.