Author: Pat (Page 1 of 2)

Get to Know Pat

FullSizeRender (9)How long have you worked at Lemuria? 25 years, I think.

What do you do at Lemuria? Inventory, sales, talk to customers, to myself and to anyone who will listen, yoga.

What’s currently on your bedside table (book purgatory)? Man in the Woods by Scott Spencer, Nepo’s Book of Awakening, Jesus Calling, Daring Greatly, H is for Hawk, Circling the Sun, Time magazine, We are Completely Beside Ourselves, Natchez Burning, Ted Kooser’s Splitting an Order, Silence by Thich Nhat Hahn, and Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis.

I know it’s difficult, but give us your current top five books. H is for Hawk by Helen MacDonald, We are Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler, All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, the Bible, and Circling the Sun by Paula McClain.

Any particular genre that you’re especially in love with? Fiction with strong moral dilemma.

What did you do before you worked at Lemuria? Raised children, went to nursing school, took lots of enrichment classes, and played lots of tennis.

If we could have any living author visit the store and do a reading, who would you want to come? Thich Nhat Hahn

If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be? Easy question for me. Dogs galore.

 

National Poetry Month: Feet Soaked in Gooey Earth

tumblr_ms5c76TZoM1qa785bo1_500Hurray for April.  Yes, April is the ideal month to celebrate poetry, especially that poetry that raises the roof beams, making room for all the fresh, blooming air, pressing the bleak winter away while standing ankle high in mud puddles.  Puddles are the playground for spring madness and feet soaked in gooey earth just like e. e. cummings said in his poem In Just:

n Just-
spring          when the world is mud-
luscious the little
lame balloonman

whistles          far          and wee

and eddieandbill come
running from marbles and
piracies and it’s
spring

when the world is puddle-wonderful

the queer
old balloonman whistles
far          and             wee
and bettyandisbel come dancing

from hop-scotch and jump-rope and

it’s
spring
and

         the

                  goat-footed

balloonMan          whistles
far
and
wee

 

Then came my senior year at Murrah High School, in 1965, with my great, good, four-leaf-cloverful luck having Bee Donley as my English teacher. She taught us that poetry mingled all the great issues of life in such a profound poem as Dylan Thomas’ The force that though the green fuse drives the flower (1934):

 

The force that through the green fuse drives the flower

Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees

Is my destroyer.

And I am dumb to tell the crooked rose My youth is bent by the same wintry fever.

[Stanza One]

 

So as a young child I adored the pure innocence of e. e. cummings (not to mention the cool way he spelled his name in lower case). As a teenager, I was mesmerized by Ms. Donley’s eloquent teaching of Dylan Thomas and the depth and width and height of “real” life as captured in the great green force. Then as a mature adult (in years but not in heart), I was introduced to Mary Oliver at Lemuria mainly through our children’s manager at the time, Yvonne Rogers. Ms. Oliver became my official priestess of the higher arts, a word magician, and a most spiritual priestess who kindled the scared beauty of the earth and animals and filled my imagination with wonder as in this poem from her collection Dog Songs:

 

Every Dog’s Story by Mary Oliver

I have a bed, my very own.
It’s just my size.
And sometimes I like to sleep alone
with dreams inside my eyes.

But sometimes dreams are dark and wild and creepy
and I wake and am afraid, though I don’t know why.
But I’m no longer sleepy
and too slowly the hours go by.

So I climb on the bed where the light of the moon
is shining on your face
and I know it will be morning soon.

Everybody needs a safe place.

Spoiler Alert: Erik Larson actually makes history super interesting

Jacket (1)This won’t be a spoiler if you know anything about history.  The luxury ocean liner Lusitania was torpedoed out of action on May 7, 1915, killing 1,195 passengers and crew including 27 out of 33 infants on board.  Of those killed, 123 were Americans.  The Lusitania was the most luxurious ship in service.  Wasn’t America, a neutral country in a war already ravaging Europe, exempt from the targets of unseen German U-boats skirting the underseas of the Atlantic? No one in his or her right mind would have booked tickets on this fastest and biggest of ships if they had thought otherwise. Once again, Erik Larson has plopped us right down in the middle of an historical tragedy and beguiled us with stories of the Lusitania’s passengers–with their intrigues, their treasures, and celebrities like the Vanderbilts–all aboard a doomed ship, in the freshly released Dead Wake. He’s done it before in his widely acclaimed books In the Garden of BeastsIsaac’s Storm, and The Devil in the White CityLarson succeeds in describing individuals on both sides of the war with similar hopes and fears.  He renders the captain of the Unterseeboot-20, Walter Schwieger, not only as a man with a mission from the highest levels of German admiralty, but also as a human being, burdened by grief and empathy after seeing the damage and suffering he has inflicted on the passengers of the ill-fated ocean liner.
While Larson so easily engages us in the lives of the passengers, he adeptly describes the lives of those on land who are central to the politics of the time.  He casts Woodrow Wilson as a melancholic widower whose black moods often trumped his interest in a world at war.  But Larson, seemingly an exuberant writer and optimistic sort, doesn’t let us drivel in the mire of the strictly personal for long.  He has a history to tell and the facts galore keep us grounded, moving forward, and educated in such a way that we hardly realize we’ve come to understand such scientific things as, say, how a boat floats.

Historically, we see the blunders made by governments on both sides of the Atlantic, the significance of the Lusitania as a deciding factor in entering WWI, secret codes intercepted and decoded by the British in equally secret places, lifeboats that kill rather than save as they are loosened from their moorings.  Larson is one of the best writers of our time at making history come alive through facts and personalities woven together.  I finished this book in just three days.  And I only read before going to bed.

 

Written by Pat 

The Children Act by Ian McEwan  

Jacket (5)A “matter of extreme emergency”: whether or not to allow a leukemic child of 17 and his parents to refuse life-saving blood transfusions is the dilemma for Fiona Maye, a Justice in Family Matters of the High Court. Heady stuff for any philosopher or writer, indeed. From the deft McEwan imagination comes our protagonist Fiona, a 59 year old intelligent, childless, still beautiful, married woman of the law who sensitively addresses the dilemma by interviewing both parents and Adam. The parents’ religion prohibits the use of blood products. Adam, rational, sensitive, and articulate, agrees with them. But the High Court can overrule Adam and his parents’ decision since Adam is not yet 18. It’s relatively easy to guess how Fiona will decide, especially for frequent readers of legal thrillers; but The Children Act is a tense story of moral conflicts that can teeter either way when life, death and religious freedom intersect. The aftermath of Fiona’s decision is where we get hooked into the narrative and befriend Fiona, who has presided over equally painful issues in her judgeship in the High Court.

This reader did balk at McEwan’s rendering of Fiona’s husband as man who would announce to his wife that he intends to have an affair but hasn’t done so yet, but the author succeeds with other strategic characters like Adam and his parents with much greater subtlety and discretion.

McEwen deals with quite a few issues in this book that, to this reader at least, require a thicker or longer narrative.  Raising children versus professional ambition, open marriage versus a stagnant monogamy, adolescent infatuation with a much older woman bordering on obsession in a story already driven by religious choice versus the state’s responsibility toward minors.  In spite of this, the book keeps us entertained, guessing and surprised because McEwan can turn ideas into literary magic just as he did in Atonement and Amsterdam, some years back.

The Children Act by Ian McEwan will be available to purchase in paperback on April 28, 2015.

Written by Pat

Let’s Talk Jackson: Pat’s blog-not edited

Sometime back, around 1996, Willie Morris emceed a dog show and adopt-a-thon right in Banner Hall’s own Lemuria Bookstore. 10 dogs with colorful bandanas sashayed over the green carpet to the easy crooning of our dear Willie, a ham of a performer and a dog-lover himself. Most of the dogs got adopted that day, and mostly to the employees. It was a feel-good event for everyone and for dogs sheltered at the city of Jackson Animal Shelter, located across WLBT at the time (now located at 140 Outer Circle).

WilliePete-720x480

It’s amazing how much sheltering and rescuing is going on around this city. Jackson has two no-kill shelters, CARA and ARF. Then we have the Mississippi Animal Rescue League in a beautiful almost new building housing everything from dogs and cats to pigs, birds and horses or anything else brought their way. Of course, there is my own volunteer group, Jackson Friends of the Animal Shelter, the support group for the city pound or City of Jackson Animal Shelter. There is Cheshire Abbey, a foster and rescue group without a building of its own. And if you go to www.petfinder.com, you will find quite a few small groups doing what they can to save specific breeds. It’s totally amazing how many more animals are being saved due to these shelters, the tireless volunteers, the individuals who pick strays up off the streets, vet them and find them homes.

My favorite phone calls are those that go like this: “I’m looking for a dog for my mother who lives alone or for a family whose kids are looking for a four (or three) legged best friend”. It’s a heartwarmer to see a family meet their new best friend at the city shelter on Sunday afternoons when all the volunteers are there from 1 to 3, washing, bathing, playing with, feeding dogs and cats. And the volunteers keep coming, new ones every week. The fellowship is extraordinary.

So talking about Jackson to me is sharing the good news that homeless furry friends stand a much better chance of a second chance than they did, say, just 10 years ago. There’s still a lot to do. And doing it together gathers so many people of all races and ages throughout our city. All for the love of dogs. . .and cats, too.

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Handsome Caesar is one dog that constantly has us scratching our heads. From his cuddly demeanor to his silly prancing, he is one of the most charming dogs at ARF. Unfortunately, he has also spent every day of his life – NEARLY EIGHT YEARS – sitting in the confines of a shelter pen. Caesar was born in February 2007, in the midst of chilling cold spell. His mama was a street dog, but she was resourceful: the pups were delivered under the hull of a boat at the Jackson Yacht Club! Two of the four puppies born that winter day have been adopted, but Caesar and his brother, Augustus, remain at ARF. Caesar is an active pup who is full of curiosity; the way he prances around the play yard with his tail curled high reminds us of a show pony! Despite his silliness, there’s no forgetting his handsome, regal face. He is good with dogs, good with people, and good to cuddle at all times. With many years left, this bright-eyed, medium-sized (~40 lbs.) dog is ready for a home NOW. He’s been a joy to have at ARF, and loved his volunteer walks and play time, but it’s time for Caesar to find a new home — help us find one for him today! For more information, call 769-216-3414.

It’s not too late to give a home to an animal who needs some love this Christmas!

Written by Pat

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com.

Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up No. 1

Jacket (1)The Life- Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo is brimming over with a treasure-trove of wisdom.  What can I possibly say to convince you that it is a gem of a book that may be the pick of the non-fiction crop of best books of 2014-2015?  Moreover, it is a call to action that can make anyone’s life better.

It’s all about getting your house in order, both literally and figuratively; by following a set of perhaps counter-intuitive steps.  Rather easy steps if you want to start your again life feeling fresh, transformed, and light as a dust bunny.  Ms. Kondo’s mantra is “discard anything that doesn’t spark joy.”  Are you truly ever going to wear that t-shirt that made you feel like Superman? Touch it.  Does it still give you a spark of joy?  If not, discard it.  She says discarding things is a letting go, that frees you up for your passions and your purpose.  Are you holding onto letters from old boyfriends who are now just pleasant memories of things past?  Throw them away.  That was then.  Now is now.  Make room for yourself.

Ms. Kondo is a self-professed lover of tidiness, a love kindled as early as age 5 when she was left to her own devices and imagination by a well-meaning mother whose nurturing centered around a younger and an older sibling.  While other kids played on the playground, our gentle author tidied up the bookshelves and janitor’s closet; not for recognition, but out of a passion for putting things in their rightful place.  Now she is a consultant around the world and her book has sold more than 2 million copies, having been particularly embraced by the Japanese, German and British.

So take my word for it.  Read it, act on it, then pass it on.  Ms. Kondo says of practicing the principles in this book, ”A dramatic reorganization of the  home causes correspondingly dramatic changes in lifestyle and perspective.  It is life transforming.”

Here’s a fun Christmas idea that we book movers at Lemuria can do for you, except for the bow:  Buy 5 or 6 books, just enough to stack without them toppling, starting at the bottom with Jackson by Ken Murphy, and then top it off with The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up.  Secure with flat, thick strands of gold ribbon leading to the fluffy generous bow right on top of Ms. Kondo’s book.  All tidy and nice.

Marie Kondo  213 pages, $16.99 Ten Speed Press

 

Written by Pat

Casebook by Mona Simpson

Being on facebook has at least one very good advantage. My friend from high school Becky H. Parrish is a recently retired art professor at the University of Texas at El Paso; she is a fantastic artist, an outspoken Democrat, and a bibliophile. When she posts on facebook about books she has read, I usually find them at Lemuria and read them, too. A few weeks ago, she posted that she was enjoying a day outside, under an umbrella, reading a great book that made her laugh and cry; and what’s more… it is fantastic. It’s Mona Simpson’s new creation Casebook.

Jacket (17)

A teenage boy named Miles and his friend Hector jerryrig a listening device in the basement that somehow (don’t ask me how) picks up the conversations on the upstairs phone. In the meantime, his parent’s marriage is quietly falling apart, a fact that wouldn’t be apparent if it weren’t for that piece of detective equipment in the basement. Miles has two sisters, younger twins he affectionately calls the Boops. As a matter of fact, there’s a lot of affection in this book even though marriages are dissolving and people are moving to new neighborhoods to live on divided goods once shared by the intact families.

The two self-proclaimed detective friends Miles and Hector start to notice new phone calls and grow suspicious enough to engage the services of a private detective who lives far enough away for them to jump on their bikes and cycle over. Of course, there’s the matter of money and how to pay when they are just in middle school. How they do this is part of the fun and pathos of the gentle story which, like the art professor from UTEP says, will make you laugh and cry in this well crafted book seen through the eyes of a boy coming of age in California.

 

Written by Pat

 

Casebook by Mona Simpson

Being on facebook has at least one very good advantage. My friend from high school Becky H. Parrish is a recently retired art professor at the University of Texas at El Paso; she is a fantastic artist, an outspoken Democrat, and a bibliophile. When she posts on facebook about books she has read, I usually find them at Lemuria and read them, too. A few weeks ago, she posted that she was enjoying a day outside, under an umbrella, reading a great book that made her laugh and cry; and what’s more… it is fantastic. It’s Mona Simpson’s new creation Casebook.

Jacket (17)

A teenage boy named Miles and his friend Hector jerryrig a listening device in the basement that somehow (don’t ask me how) picks up the conversations on the upstairs phone. In the meantime, his parent’s marriage is quietly falling apart, a fact that wouldn’t be apparent if it weren’t for that piece of detective equipment in the basement. Miles has two sisters, younger twins he affectionately calls the Boops. As a matter of fact, there’s a lot of affection in this book even though marriages are dissolving and people are moving to new neighborhoods to live on divided goods once shared by the intact families.

The two self-proclaimed detective friends Miles and Hector start to notice new phone calls and grow suspicious enough to engage the services of a private detective who lives far enough away for them to jump on their bikes and cycle over. Of course, there’s the matter of money and how to pay when they are just in middle school. How they do this is part of the fun and pathos of the gentle story which, like the art professor from UTEP says, will make you laugh and cry in this well crafted book seen through the eyes of a boy coming of age in California.

 

Written by Pat

 

Let’s Talk Jackson: My Spiritual Home

St Andrews

My spiritual home is the cathedral of St. Andrew’s Church which is built from the floor to ceiling to represent an upside down boat.  It was where all my children were baptized in the mid 70’s and where Hinky and I continue to worship and share in its communal life.  I am proud of its rich history, especially in the 60’s, when it stood tall and strong in the move toward racial reconciliation.  It continues that tradition as we join other groups and people in a new program called Growing Together Jackson, to revitalize and re-energize our beloved city.  It is a place where it is safe to question anything and celebrate the great mysteries of life.

Written by Pat

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com. Please join us in celebrating Jackson on August 5th at 5:00 in Banner Hall!

Flying Shoes

Jacket (11)The first images that come to mind about Mississippi weather are usually ones that conjure sweat out of our pores just thinking about the hot and hottest of July and August.  Next are probably the historic hurricanes and swooping spring tornadoes that render us paralyzed by fear.  After spring and summer, we can usually just lean back and be glad autumn and football have arrived.  Yet there was the devastating ice storm of 1994 that plunged Oxford, Ms, into a finger and toe freezing no man’s land.  That is the major setting of Lisa Howorth’s entertaining and newly released novel Flying Shoes.

Mary Byrd Thornton is our middle-aged protagonist mother of two, wife of a respected Oxonian gallery owner Charles Thornton, and lover of her neglected garden spilling onto her porch. She can spout off the names of growing things like any master gardener, is an intelligent woman whose musings range from wittily described people and places living in Oxford all the way to Richmond, Virginia, where she had attended William and Mary. While there, she immersed herself in its history and a particular diary written by one of Charles’ ancestors.  Her story is dotted with references to significant events in Mississippi, too, ranging from the University Greys to politics to racism.  She’s a woman whose friends are all male, she’s spunky, edgy, sarcastic and deeply caring, especially toward her children.  She’s the kind of woman who can “play, drink and clean the bathroom sink” (thank you, Marie Lambert,  these lyrics from your album Platinum).  All that, and she’s tried to bury a terribly sad event in her life.

She has enough sass, wit and psychological distance from Oxford, Mississippi, to poke fun at her university home town where “its smattering of BMWs and Mercedes that belonged to new people- those who had recently moved in from Memphis or Jackson or the Delta, in search of the town’s crime-free, arty, sports-possessed, boozy barbecued college-town life; where white people were enlightened but still in charge.”

The story begins with Mary Byrd alone in her kitchen, kids at school, husband at work, when she gets a telephone call that causes her to throw her everyday Corelle plate (she would never hurtle her good China into oblivion) across the room.  It’s not supposed to break.  It does.  Then she gets another similarly disturbing call from a detective from Richmond, Virginia, claiming to have opened a cold case murder that occurred about 30 years ago.  The murder victim was her own 8 year old step-brother, a brutal event that had profoundly wounded Mary Byrd and her family in spite of the fact that the ones still living are living, at least on the surface, rather successful lives.

After analyzing and almost rejecting the thought of opening those old wounds, Mary Byrd decides she will meet her mother and brother at the Richmond office. She knows the storm is coming and equips her family for power outages and her absence.  Some of the great fun in this book is her description of the household: her two children who are sacred in her life, her husband who drifts mostly in the background and the 4 legged pets whose names and pecking order add a sort of kitchen sink humor to the book.  There are the dogs, Puppy Sal and Quarter Pounder, and the cats, Mr. Yeti and Ignatius.  And there is her son William who reads mythology before going to bed. His mother asks him one night which character he would like to be if he were a Greek god. William answers Mercury, who has wings attached to his sandals, enabling him to fly away from anything painful or scary.  William, like her murdered brother, is just 8 years old.

Most people would take a plane or drive a car to get from Oxford to Richmond.  But Mary Byrd, riddled with a fear of flying even Erica Jong couldn’t imagine, arranges a spot on a large truck, eight feet off the ground, with a man named Crowfoot Slay, the VI, otherwise known as Foote.  Foote drives for Valentine Chickens and is a friend of a friend of Mary Byrd’s.  He “believed in white supremacy, the right to bear arms, and the superiority of black women.”  Our protagonist thinks a trip with Foote will help her keep her mind off her destination and the news there that could lead her into a profound desperation.

The trip to Richmond moves the story along as any journey would.  But the real thickening agent and readability of the book is the host of characters that surround Mary Byrd and further define her.  One such character not mentioned before is Jack Ernest- a wannabee writer living with his two elderly co-dependent aunts. Jack lusts after Mary Byrd while supplying her with the occasional Xanax.  The more important journey though, for this reader is the internal journey Mary Byrd takes; the one of self-discovery and integration, where she confronts what has made her impulsive, fearful and edgy, the unbearable truth of things.

Mrs. Howorth has created a keen sense of place as Greg Iles has done in his books about Natchez.  She has looked clearly at the racial situation still brewing in the south just as Kathryn Stockett does in The Help.  Most of all though, she has shared an intimacy and vulnerability in Mary Byrd that is really a thinly veiled Lisa Howorth.  That is a great act of courage.  And the book works quite well without knowing that Ms. Howorth’s own young brother was murdered when they were children and that case was never solved.  This is a highly readable, entertaining, and provocative book by a new novelist and it works because of its raw honesty and integrity.

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This is Lisa’s first novel.  She grew up in Washington, D.C., married Richard Howorth, former mayor of Oxford, where they settled down and grafted Square Books onto the Square, straight into the proud heart of Mississippi’s rich cultural history.  Her essays have appeared in Gun and Garden magazine.

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