• Home

Still A Dreamer

Life, art, animals, writing, children's books, dreaming …

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« Better Late than Never
It Doesn’t Owe Me A Thing »

From One Novel to the Next

July 9, 2016 by still a dreamer

While I have been rather remiss in blogging, at least I have been reading. Life can pull us in many directions, and some take our blogging time. So be it.

ByTheLight-FathersSmile-AWalker2As I am beginning a new book – chosen from among the many that sit on my shelves waiting to be read – I remember exactly why I picked it up at the big book sale awhile back. I’d read a short story titled am i blue? by Alice Walker over 20 years ago in a magazine. It was about a horse in a meadow alone, bored, betrayed. The meadow was outside a home where Walker was living, and her experience of Blue told me volumes about her appreciation of the hearts and souls of animals. This story was later banned, I found, by the California School Board in 1994, as was, of course, The Color Purple, by all those who feel they know best what you and I should read and think. (You can read am i blue? and some commentary on the The Westcoast Post blog.)

At some point later in time, I came across this (now very famous) quote by Alice Walker, “The animals of the world exist for their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more than black people were made for whites or women for men.” And though it was not a period in my life when I had the time to read novels, I simply liked her even more.

Fast forward to a few years ago, and I came upon her novel, By the Light of My Father’s Smile. How could I not pick up a book with a title like that?  Knowing that, if nothing else, she and I shared something so important in common – a respect for, and appreciation of, animals.

LayItOnMyHeart-APneuman2I’m looking forward to starting this novel by Alice Walker, but admittedly, my heart is still half living with Charmaine Peake in Kentucky. I just finished Lay it on my Heart by Angela Pneuman, a novel about a 13 year-old girl whose father is, or believes himself to be, a prophet. Living in a small town crammed with churches of every faith possible, where one third of all the men are preachers or studying to be one, Charmaine and her mother Phoebe have been barely getting by in the year while her father has gone to the Holy Land, instructing them to live by their faith alone. This is a coming of age story where Charmaine must come to grips with all that is implied in having the father described, a mother who has felt compelled to honor his wishes, and a growing awareness that perhaps she isn’t and cannot be the holy and God-fearing person that has always been expected of her.

Charmaine’s relationship with her mother is best-described as that beginning struggle for independence, yet she feels constrained by her father’s beliefs of how she should behave as defined by the Old Testament and her desire to please him. Charmaine makes her own way in this story slowly, finding hypocrisies and truths all along the way. She grows to find friendship where she would have least expected it and a willingness to look at life in a way she would have never thought possible. The characters and relationships in this novel are very well-defined, so much so, that you are almost unaware at times of the truly impoverished state she and her mother are forced to live in because of her father’s choices. My one criticism of this book, even though I understand why they’re there, is the seemingly never-ending quotations from the Bible in the first third to half. I have no doubt that this is indeed the reality for the population written about (especially since the author is from Kentucky), but it often felt excessive, and made me wonder should I continue on. I’m glad I did, and I’m still digesting it all. Alice may have to wait just a wee bit.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Posted in Animals, Authors, Books, Creativity, Good Reads, Life, Novels, Reflections, Spiritual, Writing | Tagged Alice Walker, Angela Pneuman, By the Light of My Father's Smile, coming of age, Kentucky, Lay it on my Heart, novel | 6 Comments

6 Responses

  1. on July 11, 2016 at 8:39 am Cynthia Reyes

    They all sound like intriguing books, Jeanne. Wishing you a nice week.

    LikeLike


    • on July 11, 2016 at 9:33 am still a dreamer

      Cynthia, thanks so much and the same to you!

      LikeLiked by 1 person


  2. on August 2, 2016 at 2:31 am 47whitebuffalo

    Hi. Interesting reading material. Personally it does not appeal to me for several reasons–which have no place here. But it is revealing what we select and when we find the time to read. Enjoy.

    LikeLike


    • on August 2, 2016 at 9:50 am still a dreamer

      Hiya! Well, I gave up on the Alice Walker within a chapter or two as it soon included an extremely graphic and very lengthy description of a sexual encounter — not at all what I expected or was interested in. Done with that book. So I’d say – right author, wrong book. The other – Lay It On My Heart – was one in a short stack one of my reading friends shared with me after she was done. She’s my buddy I go with to the big annual book sale. I almost gave it up, too, but it had some promise so I finished it.
      Sometimes I read with definite purpose and other times I kind of let the fates guide me, and thus, these choices. 🙂

      LikeLiked by 1 person


      • on August 2, 2016 at 1:04 pm 47whitebuffalo

        Ahh now that’s some unexpected common ground for giving up on a book. Lately I’ve been wondering if it’s some sort of publishing marketing gimmick to require sexuality in books in order to sell them. It doesn’t work for me. But apparently it does sell trash books like Fifty Shades of Grey and other pulp fiction that makes it onto bestseller lists. Heavy sigh.

        LikeLike


        • on August 2, 2016 at 1:16 pm still a dreamer

          And I do understand that, but Alice Walker, as a Pulitzer Prize winner and a National Book Award winner for The Color Purple doesn’t fall into that category of author. The book may have been fabulous beyond that long scene, and the beginning, which was written from her father’s POV as he watched her reaction at his funeral, was actually pretty interesting, but then it went where I didn’t want to go … sighing right with you.

          LikeLike



Comments are closed.

  • My 1st Picture Book!

  • What I’m Reading Now

  • What I’m Also Reading …

  • Like what you see? Sign up and get an e-mail when I've posted something new.

  • Recent Posts

    • The Man Who Saved 669 Children from Nazis
    • A Love Poem – I dreamt that …
    • My New Website – Tada!
    • Always learning …
    • Missing Writing
    • The Season
    • Unexpected
    • Happy Halloween!
    • Where We’re Going
    • Creative Life
  • I write about ...

    Animals Art Authors Books Cats Children's Books Creativity food French Bulldogs Good Reads Helping Out Holidays Home Stuff Illustration Inspiration Just Fun Life Metaphysical Nature Novels Photography Reflections Society Spiritual Writing

WPThemes.


  • Follow Following
    • Still A Dreamer
    • Join 151 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Still A Dreamer
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: