Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts

Over the End Line Review

Over the End Line
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Over the End Line ReviewA teen boy Jonny, not very popular, plays soccer, not that well. He's usually warming the bench because he folds under the pressure of the game. His best friend, Kyle, is the star soccer player, straight A student, and is invited to all the cool parties and has all the cool friends. All season, Jonny works hard to improve his playing and makes the big score in the championship game. Afterwards, he's finally invited to "The Circle" for a party -- but something horrible happens. A girl gets raped -- a girl Jonny is friends with -- and Jonny saw it happen. And his best friend was involved.
This is a good book for those who are into sports as there are a lot of detailed descriptions of soccer games and practices. But even for those who aren't into sports (like me), this is a good story of determination. The other strand running through the story -- about the rape -- seemed to not fit so well. Though it adds tension as we wait to find out what happened and who was involved, I didn't see any foreshadowing that the kids were capable of this or that that kind of thing happened at The Circle. That part of the story seemed kind of tacked on to me. In any case, I did enjoy the story and Jonny as a character.Over the End Line Overview

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The View from Brindley Mountain: A Memoir of the Rural South Review

The View from Brindley Mountain: A Memoir of the Rural South
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The View from Brindley Mountain: A Memoir of the Rural South ReviewI am a reviewer with Pinnacle editing. I give this book five stars because of the vivid recollection of memories it gave me.
This book is subtitled, A memoir of the rural south. The title is well chosen, but the subtitle speaks to this reviewer quite personally. I was born and reared within thirty miles of the places the author describes in loving--mostly--detail.
Scruggs grew up just outside the small town of Cullman, Alabama. The city is named for Johann Gottlieb Cullmann, a Bavarian immigrant who, at first, settled in Cincinnati. He formulated a plan to build a "Deutche Kolonie" to be a haven for Germans who immigrated to the United States. After several missteps, Cullmann met a former governor of Alabama who introduced him to a land agent of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company (L&N). The railroad was seeking people to inhabit land along a newly laid stretch of railroad in north Alabama. Cullmann was made a Colonel and given the authority to act as agent for L&N to sell 349,000 acres of land. From this, sprang the city of Cullman, Alabama.
Scruggs has researched the pioneer days of the city and recounts the growth of Cullman without becoming overwhelmed by detail. He then takes the reader through a section that recounts some of the difficulties faced by the German immigrants in the face of two world wars, because of their heritage and clinging accents.
The author moves the clock forward, bringing us along as the little town grows and begins to develop. Some of the day-to-day business in a southern town during the forties and fifties now seem antique and, except for a book such as this, are forgotten by all but older readers. An example is the trip, faithfully described, by farmers in their mule-drawn wagons to the cotton gin--sights and sounds from a bygone era, clearly recreated.
The chapters devoted to old time (some of them still exist) comics ("funny papers," they were called then), and old time radio programs were doorways into the past. The time spent lying on the couch reading "Alley Oop," and laughing at the escapades of Dagwood flashed back like summer lightning. Hours spent sitting on the floor listening intently--through the static--to The Lone Ranger and Sky King came back as if they were only yesterday.
Scruggs devotes a chapter to farm animals and tells a hilarious, though painful to imagine, story of a young mule, Queenie, who bit. Not just people but other mules, too. Stories of animals on a farm are particularly appropriate. Telling about life on a "hardscrabble farm" in Alabama in the forties would be incomplete without describing the animals that shared the place with the people.
I enjoyed reading The View from Brindley Mountain for several reasons. Mr. Scruggs and I have several memories in common (the dentist he describes was mine, too),
I've eaten hamburgers in the same café and shopped in the same "dry goods" store. The value of the reminiscences in this book are not limited to people who, like me, shared them; they are like a virtual slideshow for younger people who have never--and now, will never--experience some of the happy and unhappy times from those days.The View from Brindley Mountain: A Memoir of the Rural South Overview

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Marie Blythe (Hardscrabble Books-Fiction of New England) Review

Marie Blythe (Hardscrabble Books-Fiction of New England)
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Marie Blythe (Hardscrabble Books-Fiction of New England) ReviewIn his eponymous novel Marie Blythe, Howard Frank Mosher proves again why he is one of my favorite writers. French Canadian Marie, the book's heroine, is truly a remarkable woman. She survives the loss of her parents, life with a clan of gypsies, an unmarried pregnancy and loss of her child, and near death by exposure to change her identity. Over time, she goes on to learn to read, go to normal school, and become a teacher. Oh, yes, she is nearly murdered in the end by her crazed ex-lover. While all of this may sound somewhat melodramatic, it is not; Mosher makes it merely the stuff of a captivating, totally engaging story. Set, as all of Mosher's books are in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, Blythe vividly evokes both a time (post-Civil war to early twentieth century) and place (Vermont village of Hell's Gate). Above all, though, this is a novel of character, and Marie's combination of bullheadedness, naivete, energy and faith carries the day. Recalling the French Canadian priest who counseled her as a child, Marie in a time of crisis "remembered his advice to maintain a little faith in something, if only in fishing." Mosher, for his part, renews my faith again in great writing.Marie Blythe (Hardscrabble Books-Fiction of New England) Overview

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