This is the true story of Abdulrahman. Zeitoun and his
family in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina.
Their Kafkaesque experience demonstrates the ineffectiveness of
government assistance and the inherent bias in our law enforcement and military
societies against people who are of different faiths and ethnicities. Before hurricane
Katrina hit New Orleans, A. Zeitoun sent his wife and 4 children to Baton Rouge
to stay with her relatives. He chose to
stay in New Orleans to look after his business and several rental properties as
well as their own home. After the
hurricane Zeitoun recognized that he could be of help to the residents or
animals who were stranded. He found a
canoe and rowed around the city helping where he could. His wife begged him to leave after hearing
reports of the terrible damage and lack of services in the city. She also saw
the terrible flooding on T.V. However,
Zeitoun chose to stay in order to be of help.
His actions were at times heroic.
Unfortunately, the police and military suspecting him of looting,
arrested Zeitoun, his tenant and his Syrian friend while they were visiting in
the tenant’s house. Because Zeitoun was
a Syrian Muslim and because of military and police over reaction to the situation,
Zeitoun found himself imprisoned. He was never read his rights. He was not permitted to consult with an
attorney and he was kept incommunicado from the outside world for more than 2
weeks. His wife did not know what had
become of him and she feared the worst.
He was not permitted to phone her.
No one would phone her on his behalf.
In part this was because there were few working phones and no judicial
system in effect during the catastrophe.
Zeitoun was held in a dickinsonian prison. I understand the point this book was trying
to make. However, I felt it failed in
two respects. First Kathy came from a
dysfunctional family with 9 children.
Her conversion to Islam had more to do with that then her romantic
attraction to Islam. The book hints at
this but does not emphasize it. More
should have been made of this. She seems
to want to be singled out for discrimination because of her hijab. This is not normal behavior. Additionally, Kathy had a son from a prior
marriage. He is barely mentioned in the
book. Zeitoun speaks with great
affection and love for his three daughters, but he never mentions any feelings
for his stepson. I suspect there were
problems in the relationship, because when the stepson turns 18 he moves out of
the house to live with a friend. There
is no talk of his future or his further education being supported by
Zeitoun. So in the absence of any
information on the relationship, I suspect it was not good. Mentioning it would have taken away from the
heroic Pollyanna image of Zeitoun that the author wanted to create. I also do not understand why Kathy had to
stay with relatives in a crowded and difficult situation when she could have
stayed in a motel. I know that hotel
living can be expensive, but Zeitoun had a successful contracting business that
surely could have afforded a two week stay in an inexpensive motel. Instead Kathy drove to Phoenix to stay with
Yuko, her friend. She then had to drive back when she learned that her husband
was in prison in Louisiana.
I created this blog, because so many people have asked me for book recommendations. If you are looking at Amazon's customer reviews, I am "voracious reader" from Houston, Texas. I hope that you will get enough information from this blog, and you won't have to search the Amazon reviews. I have also included DVD reviews here too.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Whites by Norman Rush ( 5 Stars)
This is a masterful collection of short stories. I do not
normally love short stories and find “slice of life” stories boring. However, these charming tales each have a
beginning, a middle and an end. If you
are a fan of The No.1 Ladies Detective Agency Series by Alexander McCall Smith
which take place in Gaborone Botswana, you owe it to yourself to read about the
other Botswana portrayed in Rushes’ book. The characters are all distinct and
other than minor interactions they have little to do with each other’s
story. They also are impactful. Some are disturbing or frightening. It is
impossible to remain objective and the reader becomes involved. Perhaps, my two favorite were the stories
about Ione and Frank ,”Instruments of Seduction” and “Alone in Africa.” How can two people married to each other know
so little about their mates? I am now going to watch a video on how to string
sugar peas. I could not put this book
down and am going to seek out his other novel long book if it is in print. I do
not know the author, and I am not a shill for him. I read the kindle edition.
Flowers In The Blood by Gay Courter 3 Stars
This is an example of “chick lit”. I will probably be lambasted
for labeling this book “chick lit” and in particular by Jewish women. Let me begin by saying that I am a Jewish
woman who loves reading about the Jewish experience including the Holocaust.
Yet this book just did not do it for me.
It is very long (630 pages). My test to characterize a book as “chick
lit” is would a straight man read this book unless asked to do so by his female
significant other? My answer is a
resounding “No!”
We meet little 5 year old Dinah Sassoon, daughter of an
affluent opium trader and a pillar of the close knit Calcutta Jewish community
at the turn of the century. Her father
is on one of his lengthy sojourns during which he buys the poppies, has them processed
and sells them in Shanghai to the Chinese.
Dinah’s mother is young, lonely, and very beautiful. She is addicted to the opium her husband
sells and takes on two lovers. Her life
style was not one that was accepted in the Calcutta Jewish community. However, so long as it was kept behind closed
doors, no one paid it any mind. However,
one night one of Dinah’s mother’s jealous lovers murders her as she lay on her
chaise longue in her bedroom. Poor
little Dinah walks in on the scene of her mother covered in blood. She is heartsick. The hired help and the relatives do their
best to cover things up and protect Dinah from the horrors of her mother’s
sudden death. However, Dinah is bereft
and lonely and she cries bitterly for her mother. She has a two year old brother as well. Her father’s parents refuse to allow her
mother to be buried in the family cemetery plot. The entire community is aware of the
notorious death. Additionally, because Dinah’s mother has this history and
because of all the suspicion about such things, Dinah is marked as
unmarriageable in spite of her father’s great wealth. However, her father
remarries a much younger and somewhat dimwitted teenage bride with whom he has
a child and who dies shortly after she gives birth. He marries a third time to a Bene
Israel. The Jewish community believe
Bene Israel are Jews who have mixed with the native Indian people, are not 100%
Jewish blood, and who are therefore, not well accepted by the Calcutta Jewish
community. Yet Dinah becomes extremely
fond of the third wife and her father’s children with her.
Meanwhile, Dinah’s father though recognizing that Dinah may
be his brightest child begins to prepare his three sons to learn and takeover
the business. Dinah begs him to teach
her and he begrudgingly teaches her bits and pieces, but he will not teach her
the most critical business areas. She
begins to learn on the sly. Her father
plans to see her married and is sure her husband will provide for her.
However, when Dinah is old enough to have her marriage
arranged, no appropriate suitor can be found.
Year after year she is still single and without a match. Even a much
older gentlemen who Dinah did not want to accept backed out after giving the
proposal a second thought. Poor Dinah
may be forever a spinster because of the tragic circumstances of her mother’s
death and the superstitions that were prevalent in the era. Finally, Dinah manages to acquire a husband
named Edwin. He is from the distant Djaarling
Jewish community and is in the tea business.
Most people thought that he was willing to marry Dinah, because his
family was not so completely aware of her background since they lived so far
away.
However, Edwin’s family had a secret too. Edwin was a flagrant homosexual. The marriage is never consummated and though
Dinah and Edwin remain lifelong friends, the marriage is annulled. Dinah marries again to a sufficiently ardent
suitor but one who has no fortune or head for business. He becomes involved with a wily and dissolute
maharajah and loses whatever business interests he has including the shipping
investment he made with Dinah’s dowry.
In the end Dinah rescues herself and becomes head of the
family business. She runs the entire
opium trade and moves the family into more respectable and legitimate businesses. The rest of her family is happy to let her do
so. Throughout the book we see evidence
of the social strata in India. The
British Christians were at the top. The
Indian Jews came next and then the Indians.
The Indians were not welcome in the British clubs. The Jews while not offered membership were
often welcome guests at their celebrations and parties. There were few non-Indian Europeans there so
the British were willing to forge relationships, alliances, and friendships
with Jews when they might not have had they been living in The British Isles,
the U.S, Canada, or Australia. It was interesting to observe the different
strata.
These story lines could have made for heady reading, and I
typically love epic stories about fictional Jewish experiences. However, the characters are mere cardboard
cutouts. Dinah is shuffled from one
incident to another. I had a hard time
finishing this book and often thought of putting it down. It was tedious and mediocre. I do not recommend it.
All The Light We Cannot See by Doerr ( Five Stars)
Suddenly the Germans invade France and Marie and her father
flee to a coastal town in Brittaney called Saint-Malo where her now deceased
grandfather once lived and where his brother, Maire’s great uncle resides. They move into the house of her troubled
uncle. He suffers from shell shock from world war 1
and secrets himself up in an attic room where he fixes, builds and broadcasts
from radios. He regularly broadcasts science lessons about magnetic fields, the
brain, radio waves, magnetism and other subjects. Some days he locks himself in his room and
does not come out for 3 days. A woman named- cares for the house and the man. It is into this situation Marie and her
father find a sanctuary where they may live in more peace than would be
possible in Paris. Before leaving her
father is asked to carry with him a very valuable diamond held among the
museum’s mineral collections. He secrets
the stone into one of the buildings which contained a puzzle box.
Werner and his sister Jutta grow up in an unhealthy mining
town. Their widowed father dies and both
he and Jutta are placed in the local orphanage run by a French speaking nun
named Elena. The country is very poor
after the loss of WWI, and the children scarcely have enough to eat, enough
soap with which to wash, or proper bedding and clothing. Still Werner becomes engrossed in how radios
work. With cast off parts and jimmy
rigged supplies he builds a crude radio.
It is on that radio that besides beautiful music, they hear the lessons
broadcast by Marie- Laure’s uncle from Saint Malo. These lessons and the music keep their souls
alive.
Werner is selected to attend a brutal academy for Hitler
youth because of his precocious ability with radios. There he develops a method for triangulating
radio signals which is then used to identify resistance radio operators’ locations.
Germany is losing the war, and it becomes desperate for soldiers. Werner is inducted at age 16 and is
placed under the protection of a huge 18 year old he met at the academy. V is to protect this radio operator as he
scours the countryside searching for illegal radio operations in occupied
countries in Europe and the Ukraine.
Meanwhile a vicious Nazi is hunting for the diamond secreted
out by Marie’s father. The museum in an
abundance of caution in hiding this priceless gem, sends 4 or 5 of them into
hiding, but only one is genuine. This
Nazi hunts down each one. He is further
motivated by his own illness. He is
dying of a cancer that is in his throat or neck glands. The history of the diamond is that whoever
has possession of the stone will never die.
The Nazi officer hopes to find it to satisfy the German high command but
also as a way to save his own life.
Marie-Laure’s father is taken prisoner and she is left with
non-communicative great uncle Ettienne and his housekeeper. She is devastated by the loss and refuses to
leave her bed and then the house for weeks.
The housekeeper finally entices her with a trip to the beach. They begin walking the streets and become
part of the resistance movement.
Marie-Laure picks up messages hidden in loaves of bread and which are
then broadcast by Ettienne.
Of course, Werner comes across Marie-Laure when he arrives
in Saint-Malo. She is a red head, and he
is immediately reminded of a 6 year old red headed girl who he first saw in a
town walking down the street with her mother.
Next he sees her with a bullet in her head laying in water with her dead
mother nearby. The image of this
senseless killing of a pretty feminine little girl haunts him.
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