Monday, April 17, 2017
How to Love by Thich Nhat Hanh
How to Love by this Buddhist monk is truly delightful and would make a good gift. Although the book itself can be read in one sitting, the truths it presents could take quite a long time to put into practice. For one thing, the author assumes that we are willing to look within ourselves and learn to love ourselves before thinking we are ready to love another. In many ways the outlook of the author is quite refreshing!
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Talk to the Snail by Stephen Clarke
If you need a laugh, this would be a good book to read. Stephen Clarke, an Englishman, wrote this book about living in France. We Americans think of the French as stylish and reserved, but this book details many of their low down human faults and flaws, which seem hilarious by contrast with our image of them. For example, did you know that the French hate to wait on lines and will push and shove with their elbows to get to the front? Usually they are so civilized!
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Anita Diamant, The Boston Girl
I enjoyed this book, and I think you will, too. It is about an immigrant girl who step-by-step creates a successful life for herself in the United States. It takes place mainly in the early twentieth century and has a particularly good chapter on the Spanish flu, which was really a modern plague. This book is remarkably well-written, a pleasure to read.
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
There is a River by Thomas Sugrue
This book is the biography of Edgar Cayce, America's famous medical intuitive. His clairvoyant powers came alive when he went into a sleeping state. In his lifetime he diagnosed and prescribed treatments for approximately 14,000 patients, including his own wife and son.
He himself found it hard to believe that his psychic powers were good and beneficial. As a person, Edgar Cayce was known as a particularly modest and down-to-earth man, a loving husband and devoted father to his children. Deeply religious, he doubted his gifts. As his life unfolded, many of these doubts disappeared, and he was at one time running a large hospital in Virginia Beach, Virginia. The hospital has been rebuilt today and is run by the organization Cayce founded, the Association for Research and Enlightenment.
He himself found it hard to believe that his psychic powers were good and beneficial. As a person, Edgar Cayce was known as a particularly modest and down-to-earth man, a loving husband and devoted father to his children. Deeply religious, he doubted his gifts. As his life unfolded, many of these doubts disappeared, and he was at one time running a large hospital in Virginia Beach, Virginia. The hospital has been rebuilt today and is run by the organization Cayce founded, the Association for Research and Enlightenment.
Sunday, July 10, 2016
Anu Partanen: The Nordic Theory of Everything
This book helped me see the big picture of life in the United States as opposed to life in a Nordic country. We Americans like to say that the U.S. is the best country in the world, but Anu Partanen shows us at great length why this is not true anymore. The chaos of our healthcare system, our convoluted tax system, and rising school tuition are just a few of the obstacles to our success and happiness.
The author also explains why the Nordic countries enjoy being what she calls "well-being states," as opposed to what we often hear-- that they are undesirable socialist "nanny states," stifling creativity and enterprise. She explains that Finland is not a socialist state, but an advanced capitalist state.
I thought her chapter on education was stimulating and her chapter on heath care systems was passionate and extraordinary. You would think a book about social structures would be weighed down with heavy language, but that is not so. It is very simply and clearly written.
The author also explains why the Nordic countries enjoy being what she calls "well-being states," as opposed to what we often hear-- that they are undesirable socialist "nanny states," stifling creativity and enterprise. She explains that Finland is not a socialist state, but an advanced capitalist state.
I thought her chapter on education was stimulating and her chapter on heath care systems was passionate and extraordinary. You would think a book about social structures would be weighed down with heavy language, but that is not so. It is very simply and clearly written.
Friday, June 24, 2016
Erika Robuck: The House of Hawthorne
Sophie and Nathaniel Hawthorne fell in love at first sight and stayed in love forever afterwards. This novel takes place in the mid-1800s, before the Civil War in the U.S.A. Yet the story does not seem old-fashioned. Nathaniel Hawthorne, of course, is the famous author of House of Seven Gables and The Scarlet Letter. This is not a biography but rather a lively reimagining of Nathaniel and Sophie's lives. Other American literary figures also appear in the book, including Emerson and Herman Melville. This is a good book for summer reading. The English is not difficult.
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Daniel Goleman: A Force for Good
Daniel Goleman, the bestselling author of Emotional Intelligence, is a scientist who has been collaborating with the Dalai Lama for many years. I think it is interesting that the Dalai Lama is not pushing people to become Buddhists, but rather encouraging them to become more compassionate human beings, whatever their beliefs. I also think it is interesting that this book is taking on global social issues. The time scale is definitely longer than one generation in which to witness the positive changes we would all like to see in the world. The Dalai Lama thinks that changes in how children are educated will be very important to the way things develop into the future.
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