Friday, October 3, 2014

SWE Detroit - Royal Oak Book Club Book Reviews

Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris
Book Review by Michele Marion
David Sedaris seems to get into the most interesting situations both real and what he makes of them in his head.  In Me Talk Pretty One Day, we find out about his adventures in going to speech therapy, drug fueled contemporary art, learning French and seeking medical care while in France.  I found the stories to be funny and entertaining.  A few of them even had me laughing hard.  I would recommend listening to the audiobook as it is read by the author and hearing him tell the stories really brings them to life.

The Great Bridge: The Epic Story of the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge by David McCullough
Book Review by Ashley Lesser
McCullough's "The Great Bridge" is an outstandingly well-written, sweeping history of the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge.  If you don't like histories, you will find it long.  However, its many digressions are key to telling the story of the bridge.  It delves deeply into the politics of Tammany Hall and the fall of Boss Tweed, and the discovery of caisson disease (the 'bends') during the sinking of foundations. By the end of the book, one really appreciates the remarkable feat of engineering and political will that the Brooklyn Bridge represents.  Comparing the scale of the Brooklyn Bridge to its predecessor, the Roebling Bridge in Cincinnati, helps to illustrate the magnitude of the technical achievement.  That it remains a major thoroughfare after 130 years, without substantial alteration, is a testament to its success.

To me as a civil engineer, the most unexpectedly interesting part of the story concerned the management of the bridge enterprise, from funding to procurement, because the challenges are not so different today.  I recommended this book for SWE, however, because of the key role of Emily Roebling in the bridge's construction after her husband, Chief Engineer Washington Roebling, became increasingly bedridden from caisson disease.  Emily may be considered the “first woman field engineer,” as she relayed messages between her husband and his assistants and developed a strong working knowledge of strength of materials and structural analysis from his dictations.  Washington Roebling monitored the bridge's progress by telescope from his apartment for a decade, but never did visit his completed bridge.  Emily Roebling, instead, was the first to cross it on its opening day, riding in a carriage and carrying a rooster as a sign of victory -- what a wonderful image!  Unfortunately, Emily's part in the story comes well into the second half of the book.  Few of us got that far before our book club meeting...

The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker

Book Review by Irina Sullivan

Wecker’s “The Golem and The Jinni,” hailed by numerous review lists as a must-read debut, was nevertheless a disappointment to us as a group.  Doubtless the author deserves praise for conducting careful research into the folkloric history of the main characters and the powers and weaknesses that determine their choices.  The setting chosen for the book, New York City at the end of the 19th century, also seemed an intriguing place to stage an encounter between the Jewish and the Arabic characters.  However, the praise largely ends at those two points as the author did not pursue any of the multitude of tensions this combination creates - ethnic, gender, immigration - and instead settled for a simple love story and a very predictable one at that.  Golem, the female protagonist, was the responsible, devoted, and loyal one and Jinni, the male character, was having all the fun of a young, unattached man until, of course, falling in love with Golem forced him to do some soul-searching.  Neither did the other characters bring in enough to the novel to distract from the sure happy ending that was to follow.  The general outline of the story - initial animosity between the two characters that turns into the feelings of passion - is so tired that indeed it hardly deserves the pages of another book.  But Wecker chose this very path of least resistance in placing her characters, who are otherwise products of great imagination and potential, on predictable rails of a romance.

Gallo Be Thy Name by Jerome Tuccile
Book Review by Beth Nunning
Gallo Be Thy Name tracks the history of the Gallo Wineries family beginning with the parents of Ernest and Julio Gallo, Joe and Susie Gallo, through the present day. It is an interesting story of not only how one of the largest wine producers began and built their business, but also of the personalities of and interactions between the members of the family.
During Prohibition, Joe Gallo sold grapes and jellied “wine juice” to Al Capone and his lieutenants, and eventually trained his oldest son, Ernest, to be the person who accompanied the product to Chicago and collect the money. As Ernest excelled in those dealing, Joe sent Julio to expand the business in New Jersey, but Julio did not have the desire to deal in that side of the business. It quickly became clear that Ernest would run the business and Julio would make the wine.
The two brothers inherited the business upon the murder of their mother and death of their father, the circumstances of which was never resolved. They took care of their younger brother, but cut him out of the wine business. Julio wanted to make great wines, but was in conflict with Ernest who wanted to appeal to a mass market that preferred sweeter wines. The mass market direction was the way the company went and market wines under more labels than most wine connoisseurs are aware.
Most of the book club enjoyed the book, learning of the history of a wine corporation and the personalities behind it, but it was commented that the way the book jumps around in time was an issue.

South of Superior by Ellen Airgood
Book Review by Tina Poquette
South of Superior was written by Ellen Airgood who owns a cafĂ© in Grand Marais, Michigan, on the south shore of Lake Superior next to the Pictured Rocks National Park.  She writes with ease the fictional story of thirty-something Madeline Stone who moves from Chicago to a small town on Lake Superior to take care of a distant relative.  She experiences the hardships of living in a remote town on the unforgiving lake where many people now find it difficult to make a living.  The people are tough but resilient.  Over the course of a year, some old wounds heal and she discovers something to be passionate about to give her life purpose. 
I enjoyed the book and felt the author portrayed an accurate picture of life on the shores of Lake Superior.   You have to ask yourself if you would be as gracious as Madeline Stone in her circumstances.  I lived with the characters in my head long after I finished the book.  It’s a good fiction read by a Michigan author.


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