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text 2020-07-18 19:38
John Lewis, R.I.P.
March: Book Three - John Lewis,Nate Powell,Andrew Aydin
I had planned last night to start reading Hannah Arendt's The Origins of Totalitarianism for my buddy read with T-A and BT, but news of John Lewis's death pushed me instead to finish reading his great March trilogy. I was broadly familiar with its outlines, but reading and re-reading the volumes gave me an opportunity to reflect on what his life meant.
 

John Robert Lewis was born in Alabama in 1940. His parents owned a farm, yet still struggled to make ends meet. Young Lewis grew up in a South still fully governed by Jim Crow laws; the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education did nothing to change the impoverished and segregated school he attended. Much, much more needed to be done.

 

And this is what Lewis did. While attending the American Baptist Theological Seminary he participated in the Nashville Student Movement, taking part in their sit-ins at local businesses to pressure them to desegregate their facilities. In 1961, Lewis was one of the original Freedom Riders, and he and the others were attacked repeatedly for engaging in perfectly lawful activity. He was also arrested numerous times, and was even imprisoned at Parchman Farm for a month. Yet his sacrifice and the sacrifice of his fellow protestors had an effect. People everywhere were paying attention.

 

In 1963, as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Lewis was one of the “Big Six” who organized the famous March on Washington. He spoke that day, though he toned down his speech under pressure from the others. The following year, he organized as well the Mississippi Freedom Summer, and in 1965 participated in the march at Selma, where he and hundreds of other protestors were attacked by state troopers. He carried the scars he received on his head from their beatings for the rest of his life.

 

When I consider everything he went through, I cannot helped but be moved by the enormous moral strength and personal courage that he demonstrated. It was a fight that he never gave up on waging personally, even after he won a seat in Congress. Just this year he shared his lessons with the BLM protestors, who have experienced much the same treatment he did six decades ago. Instead of despairing about the slow pace of change, he expressed his optimism for how others were exercising their moral power, saying to one interviewer, “It was so moving and so gratifying to see people from all over America and all over the world saying through their action, ‘I can do something. I can say something’. And they said something by marching and by speaking up and speaking out.” His words reminded me of the lesson contained in Dr. King’s famous quote about the the long arc of the moral universe bending towards justice. Fighting for change is a lifelong struggle and we may not enjoy its fruits, but we will leave our world a better place than it was when we were born into it. That is certainly what John Lewis showed us.

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review 2020-04-30 14:51
Tucker - Emily March

It was a cute story, a bit slow at times, but overall a cute romantic story.  I had a hard time sticking with it. There was some passion, the story line was alright- nothing over dramatic- Gillian was engaged to a guy that really didn’t respect her dreams and he breaks things off shortly before the wedding, and Tucker is a rough-around-the-edges guy that just retired from the military who sets his eyes on her as his forever and works towards that end.  It was sweet, just a bit slower than I like. I made it to chapter 12, which is 57%, before I had to start skimming through it to get it done, which I never do. If you like sweet home-town romances without a lot of drama or emotional turmoil to get through, this is a Romance for you! It is on the tamer side for those who don’t like too much sex scenes. If you prefer stories that have more steamy scenes from start-to-finish (not necessarily sex just chemistry) than you will find this more on the tame sweet side, nothing wrong with that, just go in expecting it. I did like Jackson more than I did Tucker.

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text 2020-04-07 18:07
Top Reads for March

 

A wee bit late with this but my Top Four Reads for March. The Shape of Family just barely edged out the other three as my top read.

 

What were your standout reads of March?

 

Links to review

 

4 stars The Shape of Family by Shilpi Somaya Gowda 

 

3.5 stars Highland Sword by May McGoldrick

 

3.5 stars Beast by Judith Ivory

 

3.5 stars Claimed by a Scottish Lord by Melody Thomas

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text 2020-04-02 03:11
March Books

I saw myself with a lot more time than usual in March since most things got cancelled, closed, or delayed. I also began working from home, so I had a lot fewer interruptions when listening to audiobooks while I worked. Add in the fact that I live alone and I've had a lot of time to fill. So my reading went up a bit.

 

I read 44 books in March with an average score of 3.76. 12 were graphic novels and 22 were YA. My most-read genres were contemporary, romance, fantasy, and mystery.

 

My favorite book was actually my very last read of the month - You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington - Alexis Coe. I never thought a biography of George Washington would be a top book of the month, but here we are. My least favorite book was Bone Crier's Moon - Kathryn Purdie. It had a great opening and a lot of potential, but devolved into a disappointing insta-love romance with characters making nonsensical decisions.

 

I made more progress on my 2020 Reading Plans list. I got through 4 books, so now I'm at 15/38.

 

 

5 Stars

A Good Girl's Guide To Murder - Holly Jackson You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington - Alexis Coe  

 

4.5 Stars

Ascendance of a Bookworm: Part 1 Vol. 1 - Miya Kazuki,You Shiina,quof  We Were There, Vol. 1 - Yuki Obata  All the Things We Do in the Dark - Saundra Mitchell  The Art of Breaking Things - Laura Sibson  Never Contented Things - Sarah Porter  Deathless Divide - Justina Ireland  Seven Days: Monday → Thursday / セブンデイズ - Rihito Takarai,Venio Tachibana  

 

4 Stars

We Unleash the Merciless Storm - Tehlor Kay Mejia  Zatanna and the House of Secrets - Matthew Cody,Yoshi Yoshitani  Five Dark Fates - Kendare Blake  Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know about the People We Don't Know - Malcolm Gladwell  The Hand on the Wall - Maureen Johnson  Catwoman, Vol. 6: Keeper of the Castle - Genevieve Valentine,Garry Brown  Anna K - Jenny Lee  

Funny, You Don't Look Autistic - Michael McCreary  The Unexpected Everything - Morgan Matson  The Fire Never Goes Out: A Memoir in Pictures - Noelle Stevenson  Reputation - Sara Shepard  

 

3.5 Stars

Shadow of the Batgirl - Sarah Kuhn,Nicole Goux  To Be Honest - Maggie Ann Martin  Followers - Megan Angelo  All the Stars and Teeth - Adalyn Grace  Lying in Wait - Liz Nugent  A Delicate Deception - Cat Sebastian  Let's Call It a Doomsday - Katie Henry  

The Wife: A Novel of Psychological Suspense - Alafair Burke  Startup - Doree Shafrir  Catwoman, Vol. 7: Inheritance - David Messina,Genevieve Valentine  Anonymous Noise, Vol. 1 - Ryoko Fukuyama  Kissing in America - Margo Rabb  Hello girls - Emily Henry,Brittany Cavallaro  All Eyes on Us - Kit Frick  

Dreadnought - April Daniels  The Gentleman’s Guide to Getting Lucky - Mackenzi Lee  RePlay - Saki Tsukahara  

 

3 Stars

Comics Will Break Your Heart - Faith Erin Hicks  Young Justice 1 - Brian Michael Bendis,Patrick Gleason  The Last to Die - Kelly Garrett  Poison Ivy: Cycle of Life and Death - Ethan Van Sciver,Scott Hanna,Art Thibert,Dexter Vines,Jay Leisten,Al Barrionuevo,Cliff Richards,Jonathan Glapion,Sandu Florea,Clay Mann,Ulises Arreola,Janice Chiang,Seth Mann,Robson Rocha,Steven Segovia,Amy Chu,Julio Ferreir  Come Tumbling Down - Seanan McGuire  Dekoboko Sugar Days - Atsuko Yusen  

 

2.5 Stars

Bone Crier's Moon - Kathryn Purdie 

 

 

 

 

Books by author gender:

  • Male: 4
  • Female: 38
  • Unknown: 2
  • Male/Female Mix: 0

 

Books by format:

  • Physical: 16
  • Audio: 28

 

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review 2020-02-19 04:36
Book Review: The Violets of March
The Violets of March - Sarah Jio

Book: The Violets of March

 

Author: Sarah Jio

 

Genre: Fiction/Mystery/Romance/Historical

 

Summary: In her twenties, Emily Wilson was on top of the world: she had a bestselling novel, a husband plucked from the pages of GQ, and a one-way ticket to happily ever after. Nearly a decade later, the tide has turned on Emily's good fortune. So when her great-aunt Bee invites her to spend the month of March on Bainbridge Island in Washington State, Emily accepts, longing to be healed by the sea. Researching her next book, Emily discovers a red velvet diary, dated 1943, whose contents reveal startling connections to her own life. -Plume, 2011.

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