MarBlo – The end

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Yep, that’s me. Overachiever in all things inconsequential. If I were a super hero, that would be my special power.

I think I’m going to pass on the April NaBlo but I’ll keep an eye out for future themes that look interesting. Congrats to everyone else who participated and succeeded this month! And good luck to the April BloPo’ers!

I changed my theme again. Like it? And is it just me, or do you see the little smiley face over in the right hand margin, beside the calendar? I have no idea why or how it’s there. But at least it’s happy!

Status update – 1Q2008

I can’t quite believe it but the first quarter of the year is over. And that means I should take a quick look at where I am with my “Resolutions 2008“.

Giving
Goal 1: Make 18 trips to long-term care facilities in 2008.
Status: Made 6 trips in 1Q.

Goal 2: Volunteer at least one weekend a month as a medical advocate.
Status: The Center recently lost the volunteer coordinator who had all my information so I need to schedule a meeting with the new person.

Goal 3: Take call on the crisis hotline at least two nights a month.
Status: I’ll talk about this in my meeting too.

Goal 4: Increase charitable giving by 50% and make quarterly donations.
Status: Donated one-fourth of my goal.

Fun
Goal 1: Join a “fun” volunteer organization.
Status: No, and might be rethinking this one.

Goal 2: Take a full week vacation, preferably out of state.
Status: Still haven’t been given the go-ahead for this.

Reading
Goal 1: Read 52 books, or an average of one per week, in 2008.
Status: Completed 17 books in 1Q/13 weeks.

Goal 2: Read primarily biographies/memoirs and the works of John Steinbeck in 2008.
Status: Completed 14 bios but haven’t read a Steinbeck yet. I do have three of his books here waiting.

Okay, I have some work to do here. I’m sending an email to the new volunteer coordinator at the Center this week.

And although I haven’t been given the green light on taking a vacation, I feel better about it actually happening this year. I just don’t know how soon it will be. Oh well, more time to think about it and plan, right? And isn’t that the best part? Tell me that it is, just in case that’s all I have.

MarBlo 2008 – List #15 – Feeding my habit

When I updated my To Be Read page yesterday, I started to hyperventilate. I was down to only 36 books yet to read. Thirty-six! That’s hardly any. And I’ve already started reading two of those so…aaagh!

I had to go out and buy a few more. I tried to restrain myself because I still haven’t received my new bookcases so I stopped at just nine. Even 45 isn’t quite up there at my comfort zone but it’ll do for another week or two. :)

The books I bought:

My first three John Steinbeck’s, as per my reading goals this year

  • East of Eden
  • The Grapes of Wrath
  • Of Mice and Men

More biographies and memoirs, also per my reading goals

  • Death be not Proud by John Gunther
  • On the Couch by Lorraine Bracco
  • Luncheonette: A Memoir by Steven Sorrentino

And some new fiction

  • Eleanor Rigby by Douglas Coupland
  • Whistling in the Dark by Lesley Kagen
  • Mantrapped by Fay Weldon

Okay, I’m breathing easier now.

On the bookshelf, #2008-17

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Jokes My Father Never Taught Me: Life, Love, and Loss with Richard Pryor, by Rain Pryor

From the bn.com site:

The loving yet brutally honest memoir of the daughter of comedy legend Richard Pryor.Rain Pryor was born in the idealistic, free-love 1960s. Her mother was a Jewish go-go dancer who wanted a tribe of rainbow children, and her father was Richard Pryor, perhaps the most compelling and brilliant comedian of his era.

In this intimate, harrowing, and often hilarious memoir, Rain talks about her divided heritage, and about the forces that shaped her wildly schizophrenic childhood. In her father’s house, she bonded with Richard’s grandmother, Mamma, a one-time whorehouse madam who never tired of reminding Rain that she was black. In her mother’s house, and in the home of her Jewish grandparents, Rain was a “mocha-colored Jewish princess,” learning how to cook everything from kugel to beef brisket.

It seemed as if Rain was blessed with the best of both worlds, but it didn’t quite work out that way. Life at Mom’s was unstable in the extreme, while at Richard’s place Rain was exposed to sex and drugs before she had even learned to read. “Daddy,” she told her father one day, sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner at the advanced age of eight, “the whores need to be paid.”

Jokes My Father Never Taught Me is both lovingly told and painfully frank: the story of a girl who grew up adoring her father even as she feared him–and feared for him–as his drug problems grew worse. In 1980 Pryor tried to kill himself by setting himself on fire, then joked that it had been an accident: “No one ever told me you couldn’t mix cookies with two types of milk!” In his later years, Pryor succumbed to multiple sclerosis, and Rain watched in tears as her father became a shell of his former self. Once, in an unusually introspective mood, Pryor asked his daughter, “Why do you love me, Rainy, when I can be so mean?”

Jokes My Father Never Taught Me answers that poignant question and many more. It is an unprecedented look at the life of a legend of comedy, told by a daughter who both understood the genius and knew the tortured man within.

This book doesn’t pull any punches. It was graphic. The violence, drugs, and endless parade of hookers and other women that Rain grew up around seemed endless but the fact that through it all, she and her father loved each other and maintained a relationship until his death says a lot about her and him.

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On the bookshelf, #2008-16

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Digging to America, by Anne Tyler

This is the book that spawned the ‘too old to parent?’ question of a few days ago. Remember when I said how much I loved this book and couldn’t wait to see how it ended?

Well. I could have waited.

I was disappointed in the ending of this book. I loved it all the way through and stayed up way too late reading it, I was enjoying it so much. But I really don’t know now whether I would recommend it or not. Maybe if you read it without any expectations, it would be a great read. But I went into thinking it was going somewhere in particular and when it didn’t…and didn’t even go anywhere remotely as compelling…well, it disappointed.

From the bn.com site:

Anne Tyler’s richest, most deeply searching novel–a story about what it is to be an American, and about Iranian-born Maryam Yazdan, who, after 35 years in this country, must finally come to terms with her “outsiderness.”Two families, who would otherwise never have come together, meet by chance at the Baltimore airport – the Donaldsons, a very American couple, and the Yazdans, Maryam’s fully assimilated son and his attractive Iranian wife. Each couple is awaiting the arrival of an adopted infant daughter from Korea. After the instant babies from distant Asia are delivered, Bitsy Donaldson impulsively invites the Yazdans to celebrate: an “arrival party” that from then on is repeated every year as the two families become more and more deeply intertwined. Even Maryam is drawn in – up to a point. When she finds herself being courted by Bitsy Donaldson’s recently widowed father, all the values she cherishes – her traditions, her privacy, her otherness–are suddenly threatened.

A luminous novel brimming with subtle, funny, and tender observations that immerse us in the challenges of both sides of the American story.

You would think that a book about friendships and families being born from three different countries, three different cultures would have more…I don’t know. Edginess? I was just certain that 9/11 would play a part in how the two couples interacted but it was only mentioned in passing. And when that didn’t happen, I guess I expected something even more insightful and deep and sensitive would emerge. But no. It ended without really exploring any of the things I thought it would. So I suppose it is my own fault if I’m disappointed.

But maybe I found the kernel of a novel of my own making here? Where is my notebook so I can write all this down?