All Consuming


Items ggchickapee consumed in…

July, 2008



  1. Tuesday 1
    0812975049

    Finished consuming…
    The Cossacks (Modern Library Classics) — 4 people

    Worth consuming!


  2. Wednesday 2
    0312979770

    Finished consuming…
    The Seven Dials Mystery (St. Martin's Minotaur Mysteries) — 17 people

    Not worth consuming


  3. Thursday 3
    0143038419

    Finished consuming…
    Eat, Pray, Love — 238 people



  4. Friday 4
    01gw1gpfi9l

    Finished consuming…
    Errors and Omissions — 1 person



  5. Tuesday 8
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    Resistance Fighter — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  6. Wednesday 9
    0060954949

    Finished consuming…
    The Fracture Zone — 2 people

    Worth consuming!


  7. Thursday 10
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    Ten By Maugham — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  8. Saturday 12
    51dwpkccz6l

    Finished consuming…
    The House of Mondavi — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  9. Sunday 27
    ?

    Finished consuming…
    America America — 1 person

    Worth consuming!

    11fz4sz9etl

    Finished consuming…
    John Paul The Great — 1 person

    Worth consuming!


  10. Monday 28

    Started consuming…
    Short Stories — 1 person


    ?

    Started consuming…
    John Stuart Mill — 1 person



Entries about these items

    ?

    America, America by Ethan Canin — 14 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    America, America is Ethan Canin’s masterful portrait of American political life on the cusp of Watergate, balanced between the relative naiveté of amateur-driven, old school politicking and the cynical, scandal-worn future of professionally-run campaigns driven by instant access to information.

    The story of Senator Henry Bonwiller’s 1972 campaign for President is told by Corey Sifter, son of working-class parents who is taken under the wing of the powerful Metarey family. The derailment of Bonwiller’s campaign (with its heavy tones of Ted Kennedy’s Chappaquiddick adventure) is more morality play than murder mystery. Through Sifter’s first-hand participation as a minor campaign worker and his later reminiscences touched off by the Senator’s death, Canin unfolds the parallel stories of how Bonwiller’s downfall played a key part in the country’s and Sifter’s political maturation.

    This is not a fast paced book, but it is beautifully told, pitch perfect, and, particularly for readers who came of age prior to Watergate, poignantly captures the last glimmers of an earlier political era.

    ?

    Resistance Fighter — 18 weeks ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Resistance Fighter by Jorgen Kieler is a commanding, first-hand account of the Danish Resistance movement during World War Two. After Germany invaded Denmark in April 1940 and a collaborationist government took control of the country, resistance fighters organized an underground opposition to occupation and collaboration.

    Kieler, a medical student when the Nazis invaded, began his involvement by operating an underground press in Copenhagen with two of his sisters, his brother, and others. As the war intensified, they expanded their efforts – first by ferrying Jews and other refugees to neutral Sweden, then through increasing acts of sabotage against Danish factories producing Nazi war materials.

    Kieler’s straightforward account of this unfamiliar part of the war is as interesting as it is inspiring. The efforts of Keiler’s group and others resulted in over 90% of Denmark’s Jews escaping to Sweden and the hampering of German war efforts. While Keiler is thorough in his identification of the key players in the resistance movement, the book does not become bogged down in exhaustive detail about the inner workings of the various resistance factions.

    Eventually, the Nazis cracked down on the Danish resistance fighters, leading to the arrests of Keiler, his brother, two of his sisters, and their father. He and his brother spent six months as slave laborers in a concentration camp in Porta Westphalica. The camp was not one of the infamous death camps used for the mass execution of the Jews, but housed political prisoners, captured soldiers, and common criminals all being worked to death building bomb-proof underground factories for the Nazis. Keiler’s unadorned description of life in the camp is heart wrenching.

    After surviving the war, Keiler became a doctor and spent years studying the effects of starvation and the stress-related disorder he labeled “Concentration Camp Syndrome.” He also testified at several war criminal trials and researched archival materials for this and an earlier history book.

    His intimate chronicle is tribute to those involved in Denmark’s struggle against the Nazis. But it is much more than that. By focusing on a lesser-known aspect of World War Two, Resistance Fighter also provides a fresh perspective on the harsh facts of German occupation and concentration camps, and the related ethical and political issues of collaboration, resistance, liberty, and citizenship.


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