where creative minds can interact
Comment
we can be quite barbaric, and the world knows it. we need to take a cold hard look at ourselves..how we treat those in prison, how we treat the poor, how we treat children, how we treat women, how we treat the sick, etc. we need to make changes
At this point it seems as if the US would rather create profit enterprises than working Americans. Unfortunately, we ARE "judged as a society by how we treat those without a voice" -- by Europeans and Asians. They're usually amazed when they come here and see peace rallies.
YES, pamela!...and how about that judge that was just put away in pennsylvania for jailing kids for money? we have a serious "jailing for profit" problem, and the more it is exposed the better. we should be judged as a society by how we treat those without a voice!
Thanks for the heads up Cindi, and thanks for the acknowledgement, Wiffle! We are the greatest maker and filler of jails in the Western world and it's time Americans started recognizing that and discussing solutions!
thanks for sharing this, cindi! i wouldn't have known it was out there. books like this do sometimes take all our strength to read. but what is the opposite of not learning about injustice? i think it's turning a blind eye. and that is what makes the injustice happen in the first place. so not only thanks for sharing, but thanks for reading!!!
After buying it months ago, I'm FINALLY about halfway through The New Jim Crow-- Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. Hardly a page goes by that I'm not picking up my highlighter and marking a sentence o two that moves me to the core. It's an incredible read-- just wish I didn't feel so overwhelmed by the complete enormity of the injustice. Where does anyone even begin to work towards reform?
what are you reading, folks?
If any of you like design books (far from fiction, i realize)...i recommend interior designer nate berkus' book "the things that matter". nate is extremely honest about what losing his partner in the tsunami has done to him and for him. the book is about surrounding our environment with "the things that matter" and not just "stuff"
Maryann, you'll have to let me know what you think if you read either of them. I just finished rereading Anne Rice's Witching Hour Trilogy (The Witching Hour, Lasher and Taltos) cause I hadn't read them for a few years. Sometimes I want to read for pure escapism and Rice does that well for me. I do get kinda irritated at her abundance of purple prose at times. She writes such gorgeous sentence but sometimes I swear she's getting paid by the word as she meanders and repeats herself. But she's a hell of a storyteller, really good at creating a world and drawing the reader into it.
Now I need something new to read, and am casting about for a book to fall in love with. I love Dickens and my favorite modern authors are John Irving, TC Boyle and Marge Piercy, among others. I love historical fiction too. I've been thinking about reading Herman Wouk's Winds of War (and then War and Remembrance, which I've never read. I'm not sure Wouk's style is for me though...Anyone have suggestions?
welcome to the group, cindi! i'm so happy you are reviewing anna quindlen. se is one heck of a writer, isn't she? how is it that she is so good at writing fiction AND amazing essays! so much talent in one honest and wise woman. i really like her. did you happen to see her on one of those 3 hours with the author things on cspan's book thingies? she was amazing!
© 2024 Created by wiffledust. Powered by
You need to be a member of What Are You Reading Right Now? to add comments!