From Here to the Great Unknown
by Lisa Marie Presley, Riley Keough
This was a fantastic audiobook which includes Lisa Marie Presley narrating her memoir, her daughter, Riley Keough, adding details to Lisa Marie’s narrative, and Julia Roberts providing the bulk of the narration.
From Here to the Great Unknown is a very open
and honest memoir, based on audiotapes recorded by Lisa Marie. She had been
working on her memoir for years accumulating her life story and recording it on
audiotapes. In 2022, Lisa Marie asked her daughter, Riley, to help her finish
her memoir. Sadly, a month later, Lisa Marie was dead.
From Here to the Great Unknown is raw and
unflinching in its depiction of life as the daughter of Elvis Presley. There is
no sugar-coating the hard times and poor choices of Lisa Marie and her father. You
can hear Lisa Marie’s life-long grief and, at other times, emotional numbness in
her voice as she describes her life. In particular, the retelling of Lisa
Marie’s son, Ben's, suicide is devastating while her marriage to Michael
Jackson is described with frank, almost apathetic detail.
It's not a long audiobook, but it covers everything most
people will want to know and then some. This is not a celebrity memoir in the
traditional gossipy sense, though. Mainly it is about the grief and trauma
experienced by the daughter of “The King of Rock and Roll.” Don’t look for
proposed solutions to the many difficult topics described, instead this memoir
simply documents honest recognition of their existence.
The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
The God of the Woods is about the disappearance of a 13-year-old girl in 1975. Barbara Van Laar, the daughter of the prominent Van Laar family of Albany, New York, disappeared from her cabin one morning in the summer camp founded by her family and located on the family’s estate. This mystery also includes a parallel plot about the disappearance, years previously, of Barbara’s brother. He was never found.
The God of the Woods starts out compelling and
then turns into a meandering mystery. The longer the story went on, the more
unfocused it seemed. There are seven different perspectives, and every time
something was about to happen, the plot immediately switched to a different
perspective, effectively losing momentum. When the plot returned to the
original climatic event, the exciting scene had already happened off-page and
it's mostly glossed over. There were also moments where I could not believe yet
another character had disappeared or that some characters were acting so dumb
and weak. I would sigh and roll my eyes in exasperation.
Magpie Lane by Lucy
Atkins
Publisher’s Description: “When the eight-year-old daughter of an Oxford College Master vanishes in the middle of the night, police turn to the Scottish nanny, Dee, for answers. As Dee looks back over her time in the Master's Lodging—an eerie and ancient house—a picture of a high achieving but dysfunctional family emerges: Nick, the fiercely intelligent and powerful father; his beautiful Danish wife Mariah, pregnant with their child; and the lost little girl, Felicity, almost mute, seeing ghosts, grieving her dead mother.
But is Dee telling the whole story? Is her growing
friendship with the eccentric house historian, Linklater, any cause for
concern? And most of all, why was Felicity silent?
Roaming Oxford's secret passages and hidden graveyards,
Magpie Lane explores the true meaning of family—and what it is to be denied
one.”
There are plenty of creepy and ghostly moments in this novel.
Magpie Lane is engaging to read, both in terms of its setting and
characters. The centuries old Masters Lodging has a long and unsettling history,
it plays a pivotal role in unfolding events. The well-developed characters drew
me into the mystery since I could sense they all some secret that needed to be
exposed. Felicity’s parents were especially appalling! Of course, their
narcissism appalled me immensely, which is evidence of the author’s skill.
Murakami T: The T-Shirts I Love by Haruki
Murakami
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I made this quilt from some of my T-shirts. It basically reveals that I couldn’t think of anything else to do with the T-shirts! |
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One of my favorite running books! |
Nonfiction: History, True Crime
Murder in a Mill Town: Sex, Faith, and the Crime That
Captivated a Nation by Bruce Dorsey
I viewed a talk by Bruce Dorsey on C-Span and had to read his book. Dorsey became interested in this case while a history graduate student. His advisor assigned him this case for research to demonstrate how history isn’t one singular event – it has multiple ripples throughout time and culture.
Publisher’s Description: “In December 1832 a farmer found
the body of a young, pregnant woman hanging near a haystack outside a New
England mill town. When news spread that Methodist preacher Ephraim Avery was
accused of murdering Sarah Maria Cornell, a factory worker, the case gave the
public everything they found sexually charged violence, adultery, the hypocrisy
of a church leader, secrecy and mystery, and suspicions of insanity. Murder
in a Mill Town tells the story of how a local crime quickly turned into a
national scandal that became America's first ‘trial of the century’.
After her death--after she became the country's most
notorious ‘factory girl’ - Cornell's choices about work, survival, and personal
freedom became enmeshed in stories that Americans told themselves about their
new world of industry and women's labor and the power of religion in the early
republic. Writers penned seduction tales, true-crime narratives, detective
stories, political screeds, songs, poems, and melodramatic plays about the
lurid scandal. As trial witnesses, ordinary people gave testimony that revealed
rapidly changing times. As the controversy of Cornell's murder spread beyond
the courtroom, the public eagerly devoured narratives of moral deviance,
abortion, suicide, mobs, ‘fake news,’ and conspiracy politics. Long after the
jury's verdict, the nation refused to let the scandal go.”
What makes this case so compelling, beyond the tensions of a
married religious leader accused of murdering his pregnant lover, is its
recorded details that exemplify a time of transition during the early 1800s. In
the workplace, the measuring of time was transitioning from approximation by
daylight to the mechanical measure through watches and clocks. Meanwhile, the
more traditional barriers of gender roles were eroding as women were beginning
to enter the workforce to earn their own money, and male doctors were
overtaking the traditional role of female “healers” and midwives. Murder
in a Mill Town describes how the rise of capitalism transformed the
most intimate aspects of American life.
Nonfiction: History, True Crime
Scotland Yard: A History of the London Police Force's Most Infamous Murder Cases by Simon Read
The London Metropolitan Police, established in 1829, was the world’s first professional, centrally organized police department. The name, in case you were wondering, comes from the fact that its headquarters were built on a piece of land facing a small street called Great Scotland Yard. The Yard grew into a respected organization employing new professionals, known as detectives, who were eventually armed with revolutionary crime solving skills like fingerprinting, blood splatter analysis, and firearm ballistics.
In addition to the history of The Yard, I learned about the
gory details of 19 notable cases that span the course of a century. The author utilized
official case files, newspaper reports, trial transcripts, and detectives’
notes to write evocatively. He gets right to the heart of the matter, which is
usually bloody and includes foggy nights as well as a cavalcade of shady
characters. There are a surprising number of dismembered bodies, many
discovered in trunks. And, of course, the Jack the Ripper case is discussed.
Reading Across the Seas Book Club: Singapore, Contemporary Fiction
Sugarbread by
Balli Kaur Jaswal
At its heart Sugarbread is a coming-of-age tale about family secrets, religion, tradition, and the mother-daughter relationship. The key to understanding Pin’s relationship with her mother and grandmother is a family tragedy from the past which still casts a shadow on the family. The author aptly portrays dysfunctional relationships in the context of the family’s traditions and customs. Within this family’s story there are important issues that afflict people around the world.
Nonfiction: History, Conspiracy Theories
Voodoo Histories:
The Role of the Conspiracy Theory in Shaping Modern History by David
Aaronovitch
I know people, seemingly sane, who believe in conspiracy theories. Voodoo Histories describes and then dismantles several of the most well-known Western conspiracy theories from the last 100 years. Who killed JFK, RFK, Marilyn Monroe, and Princess Diana? Were the mob, the CIA, and the Royal Family responsible? Did astronauts visit us 10,000 years ago and is the DaVinci Code true history? Did Jesus screw up faking his own death? (I hadn't heard that one before.) All these questions and more are answered in painstaking detail.
The book starts with The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
and its role in launching the age of the modern conspiracy theory that is still
believed today. This conspiracy theory states that Jews had planned and caused
WWI as war profiteers and to disrupt world governance. Even though there was
undeniable proof at the time (1919) that the book was a forgery (it was
originally a French satire about Napoleon's lust for power that was later
edited to implicate Jews instead), the fact that it seemed to make sense of
the devastating war made it irresistible. This acceptance of shadowy theories
despite proof to the contrary is a recurring theme in Voodoo Histories.
“Conspiracy theory may be one way of reclaiming power and
disclaiming responsibility.”
People believe in conspiracies for a variety of reasons,
namely how they help explain their worldview. People find it easier to believe
in a conspiratorial social media post or meme to justify their worldview rather
than researching to discover the facts themselves. Revisionist history, people
believing what they want to believe, rather than what is documented also plays
a role in conspiracy theories. When presented with evidence and documents,
conspiracy believers refuse to accept the truth. Conspiracy theorists still
believe that 9/11 was “an inside job” and that President Obama “wasn’t born in
the USA.” No matter how much, even mountains of evidence, they will refuse to
acknowledge the truth.
“The believer in a conspiracy theory or theories becomes,
in his own mind, the one in proper communion with the underlying universe, the
one who understands the true ordering of things.”
Even long after conspiracy theories are exposed as the
nonsense they are, believers cannot accept the truth because it doesn't make sense
the way they want it to – it doesn’t fit their worldview. Conspiracy
theory believers believe because they want to believe, neither
facts nor the truth matter!
Does it matter if people believe in false conspiracy
theories? Do conspiracies influence politics? Aaronovitch says yes. Specifically,
he says "the belief in conspiracy theories is harmful in itself. It
distorts our view of history and therefore of the present and - if widespread
enough - leads to disastrous decisions." This is the core theme of the
book, and it is argued very well.
Persuasive and detailed, Voodoo Histories requires
a great deal of concentration. It is a thorough and thoughtful book that is great
for those who want to examine history and current events in a more thoughtful
way. Unfortunately, those who really need this book will not give it a second
glance and Aaronovitch explains why that is true too.
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