Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Julie's Journal : Non-Fiction Recommendations

On average, over the last five years, I have read about 14:1 fiction to non-fiction.  I just love fiction and the escape from every day life that it offers me.  However, I do enjoy non-fiction and learning about many different things.  I have three non-fiction recommendations for you today.  Two I've read recently and one I am still in the process of reading.


The Neuroscientist Who Lost Her Mind was fascinating.  Barbara Lipska has spent all of her career and a lot of her considerable energy studying the brain and mental illness.  Ironically, when her metastatic melanoma surfaced in her brain she begin to exhibit and experience symptoms of dementia and schizophrenia, the very same diseases she studied. The book chronicles her diagnosis, treatments, and descent into madness.  A strong Type A personality, some of her natural traits such as leadership and assertiveness crossed the line from strong to obnoxious and she lost her ability to empathize with her family in their struggles.  She became angry and completely self-centered and was unable to recognize the changes in herself.  She writes of the trauma her family experienced and how loath they are to speak of it to her, even since she's recovered.  I was interested in the book partly because I, like almost everyone, have seen a family member suffer from dementia. In my case, my grandfather had Alzheimer's disease and it is such a horrible, horrible disease.  This book lets the reader see a little of how the afflicted person's brain is working.  While not necessarily comforting, the book is informative, and I hope that Dr. Lipska will be able to use what she learned from her personal experience in her research.  Maybe someday we will have a cure for these diseases.


On a much lighter note, I absolutely loved Wild Things by Bruce Handy.  A trip down memory lane from beginning to end, I was able to revisit many favorite books from my childhood.  Mr. Handy discusses pre-school level books such as Goodnight Moon, elementary favorites like Ramona Quimby, Age 8, and classics like the Narnia series, Charlotte's Web, and Little Women.  My only gripe was that he didn't give Anne of Green Gables much of a chance, giving up on her far too soon!  I have never really grown out of the enjoyment of reading children's literature, but this book has inspired me to dig up some of my old favorites and read them again!


I am still reading Into the Planet by Jill Heinerth.  It is giving me a glimpse into a world and a life completely different than my own.  I have absolutely no desire to experience diving into an underwater cave.  My claustrophobia makes me tense just reading the book.  However, Dr. Heinerth has made a career out of studying and filming these unseen places.  I just finished a chapter on an expedition into the mountains of Mexico, where a crew spent weeks diving into submerged caves inside a mountain.  I have nothing but admiration for people who wish to risk their lives in the pursuit of discovery (Dr. Heinerth says that more people have died cave diving than climbing Mt. Everest), but reading a book about it is as close as I'm going to get!

I read all three of these books using the Overdrive/Libby apps, but we will be getting a physical copy of Into the Planet in the next few days.  I hope you'll check them out!

Friday, October 4, 2019

Julie's Journal : Creepy Reads

It's October, which means all things Halloween and Fall are coming to the forefront, even if the thermostat hasn't quite gotten the message yet!  In keeping with the season, I have a few recommendations for books that are a bit creepy and spooky.  I'm not a fan of gore or true horror, but I do love a book that makes a shiver run up my spine!


Louise meets David and sparks fly, but alas, David is already married to Adele and it turns out he is also Louise's new boss.  Louise gets drawn into David and Adele's strange world when she meets Adele and begins a friendship.  But not all is as it seems and Adele is using Louise to further a strange plan.  I really don't want to say too much about this book.  For one thing it just can't be described well, and for another, it needs to be experienced without preconceptions.  If you are like me and tend to read the end of the book first, you really need to refrain to get the full effect.  The last couple of pages will change everything you think you know about Louise and David and Adele. 


Eight people receive invitations to a small island off the coast of England.  When they arrive they are met by a cook and butler, but their hosts have not yet arrived.  It soon becomes clear that they are all, including the cook and butler, being accused of murder, and a nursery rhyme alludes to all of their deaths.  Very soon, people are being killed and we are trying to figure out who the murderer is.  I did not figure out who the killer was and had to wait for the reveal at the end.  It's a masterful book!


Idlewild Hall was a boarding school for troubled girls.  For the girls who lived there in the 1950's, the place was spooky and there were rumors of hauntings from troubled events even before their time.  In 2014, the Hall is being restored.  Fiona's sister was found murdered on the grounds 20 years before and Fiona decides to write a story about the place.  Even though her sister's boyfriend was tried and convicted for her murder, Fiona feels like the story is unfinished.  She will eventually uncover all the secrets of Idlewild - the recent and the ancient.  I have recommended Simone St. James before.  Her books are almost too scary for me, with angry ghosts who have the ability to influence the world around them.  St. James is very good at writing atmosphere and mood and she inevitably causes that shiver to run up my spine!


Shirley Jackson is the queen of the Gothic horror novel.  The Haunting of Hill House is another story where a group of strangers arrives to spend time at an isolated location.  Dr. Montague is investigating the supernatural and invites others who have had experiences with the paranormal.  Theodora and Eleanor accept and travel to Hill House along with Luke, who is the heir to the house.  After their arrival, they all begin to experience unexplained noises, writing on walls, and other odd events.  The house seems to not only be haunted, but also seems to be trying to possess them, particularly Eleanor.  The brilliance of this book is that we are never sure whether the hauntings are real or just the imaginings of already disturbed minds.  Even at the end, after tragedy strikes, we aren't sure.  I was first introduced to Shirley Jackson in Junior High when The Lottery was included in our reading curriculum.  It was my first experience with the thrill that can be achieved with reading disturbing books while safe at home.  I didn't discover her longer works until adulthood and have enjoyed both Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle

Jack and Grace have the perfect marriage.  Jack is wealthy and Grace is charming, but their friends have a hard time getting to know them better.  Again, I don't want to give too much away about this book.  I have told single friends that they probably shouldn't read it because they would never trust anything a potential romantic interest said ever again!  Even after years of marriage, I still looked sideways at my husband as I was reading it.  Do we ever truly know what someone else is thinking or what their motivations are?  I generally don't like to give "trigger warnings" but I will say that the premise of this book is very disturbing.  I did enjoy reading it, but beware!

What are your favorite spooky, creepy reads?  I need something new to make my spine tingle this year.