All Consuming


Items ggchickapee consumed in…

May, 2008



  1. Sunday 4
    0393328627

    Finished consuming…
    The History of Love — 145 people

    Worth consuming!


  2. Monday 5
    0140057463

    Finished consuming…
    How Far Can You Go? — 7 people

    Worth consuming!


  3. Wednesday 7
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    Beethoven Was One-Sixteenth Black — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  4. Thursday 8
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    Jeeves and the Old School Chum Collected Stories — 1 person

    Worth consuming!

    ?

    Finished consuming…
    Jeeves and the Old School Chum (85150) — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  5. Monday 12
    01u-tuwanzl

    Finished consuming…
    The Suspect — 2 people

    Worth consuming!


  6. Thursday 15
    ?

    Started consuming…
    Ten By Maugham — 1 person



  7. Sunday 18
    41zbkaq3-8l

    Finished consuming…
    Franklin and Lucy — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  8. Wednesday 21
    0679600175

    Finished consuming…
    The Sound and the Fury — 31 people

    Worth consuming!

    B000bpg2em

    Finished consuming…
    Dear Zoe, — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  9. Thursday 22
    11j4dj3hj5l

    Finished consuming…
    The Size of the World — 1 person



  10. Wednesday 28
    1179myrgv2l

    Finished consuming…
    Boomsday — 4 people

    Worth consuming!


Entries about these items

    41zbkaq3-8l

    A review of "Franklin and Lucy: President Roosevelt, Mrs. Rutherfurd, and the Other Remarkable Women in His Life" — 9 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Franklin and Lucy is an intimate look into the personal life of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the women close to him. Joseph Persico examines the roles played by Roosevelt’s mother, wife, dearest lover, closest companion, daughter, and a cadre of others. While Persico occasionally makes assumptions based on no more than reasonable speculation, most of his conclusions are well-supported and persuasive.

    The title is somewhat misleading in suggesting that the book focuses primarily on Lucy Mercer Rutherford, who became Franklin’s lover while working as Eleanor’s personal secretary during World War I, but then played only a peripheral role in his life until late in his third term as President. Persico’s point seems to be that Lucy was Franklin’s true love. However, the same point could have been made about Missy LeHand, Franklin’s long-time secretary and best friend, who lived with him for decades. Although the timing is fuzzy, a case could be made that, had Franklin not discarded Missy when she suffered a series of mental and physical breakdowns, she, not Lucy, would have deserved top billing in the book’s title.

    Just to describe this minor flaw in the book is to demonstrate its absorbing appeal. Persico keeps the tone personal rather than prurient, but the intimate details are thoroughly discussed. He shows Franklin’s domineering mother Sara using the family purse strings to direct Franklin’s life. He explores Eleanor’s complex relationship as simultaneous inspiration and aggravation, as well as describing her own personal intrigues as she led her parallel life as an international do-gooder. He considers Franklin’s lifelong appeal to women and his delight in their company, despite being crippled by polio.

    Although designed to fit a niche in collection of FDR biographies, Franklin and Lucy provides enough context to provide a good introduction to the man’s life. The book is entertaining, thorough, and readable.

    0140057463

    How Far Can You Go? — 11 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    How Far Can You Go? is a fascinating, anthropological novel following the lives and religious development of a group of English Catholics from their days in a college church group in the 1950s, through the tumultuous years of the sexual revolution. The friends question their religious tenant and traditions as they face marriage, families, religious callings, sexual identity, and mortality. At the same time, the Catholic Church wrestles with Vatican II, the battle over contraception, internal reform efforts, and the charismatic movement.

    More on www.rosecityreader.blogspot.com.


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