Wishful Drinking, Carrie Fisher

Wishful Drinking, by Carrie Fisher


I grew up with Princess Leia. As a child born in the mid-1970s, I was a Star Wars Kid. I had an older brother and a younger brother and both were obsessed with Star Wars. They had almost all the original figures from the first few years. We had the Star Wars soundtrack on 8 Track. My older brother read the novels. My younger brother had the first movie memorized word for word and would change costumes repeatedly as we watched it on those big laser disc things that were inside a cardtridge---I don't know what they are called. My cousin had the Princess Leia 12" doll and I was so jealous. Yes, I played with my brothers' action figures, but I really liked Princess Leia. She was one of the handful of women in the movie, and she could hold her own with the male leads. She wasn't a princess in need of rescue. She knew how to use a blaster. Princess Leia was an amazing role model.

That's what I knew of Carrie Fisher growing up.  I did not know much about Carrie Fisher other than through Star Wars. I never saw her in many other movies. I knew she had written a couple of books and they had been turned into movies. 

This book is not an in-depth comprehensive autobiography, but was made after an autobiographical show she did. It is meant to be a humorous and snarky look at her life. We read about her super famous mom and dad, and growing up  as the child of celebrities. We learn about some of her love interests, as well as her daughter. We come to understand the strong bond of love she had for both her mother and her daughter, and we learn a bit about her addiction. 

The shocking thing about her drug addiction is that her own mother introduced her to addiction. She thought they would try pot together when Carrie was a young teen. Her mother got over it and forgot about it, but it awakened the monster of substance abuse in Carrie...which eventually took her life.

Boy if you get nothing else out of this meant-to-be-humorous book, it's that a parent has an imporant responsibility to keep their children safe and protected from harm. Trying to drink or do drugs or smoke at home "under your watch" is not safe. You're hurting your kids. Just don't.

So Carrie Fisher wasn't Princess Leia in real life. Such is the way with actors. We know that, yet are disappointed to find that our favorite characters are just fiction. However, despite the rest of the problems she had in life, I would like to say that her choice to portray a strong female lead in a groundbreaking sci-fi saga truly has positively influenced a lot of women in the world today, giving them someone to look up to, encouraging them to be strong, eloquent, feminine, and able to hold their own in a man's world. 


 

Her Mother's Hope, by Francine Rivers


Her Mother's Hope,
Francine Rivers

I picked this one up at a rummage sale along with its sequel---SCORE! I really enjoy Francine Rivers' writing. She seems to really research before writing her stories and I think I have enjoyed each one so far. 
This story is a generational series, starting with a young girl who is abused and controlled by her father, who seeks to enslave her to keep his business going, but she has other plans, and she leaves and ends up travelling through Europe and settling in America. 
Eventually she marries and has children, and in order to keep something she feels was a terrible mistake from happening to one of her children who she considers weak, she goes overboard in her tough-it-out attitude towards her child, and becomes unknowingly like her own father in some ways. 
The second half of the book is about her daughter, who doesn't understand why her mother has always hated her, and her struggles she has to overcome .

It is based on Rivers' own family, the division she saw but could never understand between her own mother and grandmother.

 

A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson


A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson

I have been a big fan of Bill Bryson's for years. I really enjoy his style, and he makes pretty much everything he writes about interesting. 
This book, however, I had some issue with. Yes--it was interesting and he did a great job writing it. My issue is with the blind acceptance and treating as fact some of the popular theories, such as the big bang theory, evolution (one kind of creature turning into a completely different kind), that all dinosaurs died from a meteor hitting the earth etc. 
Yes, I believe in creation by intelligent design and it makes more sense than blindly accepting that nothing magically exploded and created the building blocks of everything which magically and randomly came together into the exact proportions of elements etc to create and sustain life. I just can't get past the blind acceptance of that.
Whether you are an evolutionist or not, though, I think this is a good read. If you don't believe in the theories in this book, it still gives the explanation of how they came to be accepted and what they all entail. I think it's important to know the history of the ideas. And for all the other stuff in the book, it is quite fascinating and put in a way that the lay man can grasp and enjoy, even.

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Creating Art at the Speed of Life, Pam Carriker


Creating Art at the Speed of Life, by Pam Carriker

This is the second art journaling book I have picked up, and like the first one, it's a mixed media collage type of book, with 30 days of exercises. However, each day explores a different aspect of design, such as exploring the color wheel, or composition, line, or texture. I haven't actually done this type of art, as I am an oil painter, but I do like the book and the ideas, and I think it would be fun to explore when I have time to create just for fun rather than for commission. And this book might be good to use if one wanted to teach a class. It's very well thought out.

 

Flower Net, Lisa See


Flower Net, by Lisa See

I am so glad I stumbled upon Lisa See's books. She writes about Chinese and Chinese American culture, and she comes from Chinese stock herself.
Flower Net is the first book in the Red Princess Mysteries, about a Chinese detective, Liu Hulan, seeking to solve the mysterious deaths of two young men, one found in China, one found off the coast of California, both with similar deaths. 
This book, being a mystery rather than just historical fiction, is a little different than her other writing, but can still be appreciated for its authenticity of writing about the culture. I have two other books in this series, looking forward to reading them.

Would you like to buy me a book, or help keep my little free library stocked and maintained? You can donate here: paypal.me/AmyVanGaasbeck 

 

The Blue Tattoo, The Life of Olive Oatman, by Margot Mifflin


The Blue Tattoo, The Life of Olive Oatman
Margot Mifflin


When I first picked this up at a rummage sale, it looked interesting, but I thought it was historical fiction. However, it's an accurate gathering of information and the history of Olive Oatman.

Olive was a young girl whose family was from a Brewsterite family of pioneers (a branch of Mormonism), they were seeking a "promised land" out west. They branched off from the party they were traveling with, and were attacked by Yavapai Indians. All of them were massacred except for Olive, a younger sister, and a brother. Olive and her sister were taken by the Yavapais as slaves, and the brother was left for dead, and later came to, and found his way to some friendly natives who nursed him back to health.

The girls lived as slaves with the Yavapais for a year and were then sold to the Mohave Indians, and that tribe welcomed them in as family. They were well taken care of, and inducted into the tribe with tattoos on their chins. 

They were happy with the Mohaves, and had assimilated. They expected to spend the rest of their lives with them, and loved their Mohave family. A time of famine came, and the younger sister, who was fragile, died.

All this time, a search had gone on for the missing Oatman girls, and when word came that they could be with the Mohaves, steps were taken to get them back. Threats were made to the Mohave tribe, and so they gave Olive back to the white men, even though she did not want to leave.

She then had to re-learn the English language and white man's way of life, grieving and mourning the loss of here Mohave family.

Eventually a preacher heard of her story and wrote it down, embellishing it, making the Mohaves out to be heartless savages, romanticizing her ordeal. He had it published, and it became a sensation. Olive became a public speaker, but instead of telling it how it was, she was coerced into telling the romanticized version. She pretty much betrayed her Mohave family out of fear of being an "Indian lover"

This book discusses the historical events of the Oatman ordeal and the surrounding circles, and also discusses the discrepancies in the book that was written, along with how her story has influenced books and media. It also follows her life from birth to death.

I really enjoyed this book, a fascinating glance into a life that I had never heard about before. I highly recommend it.


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Thunder from Jerusalem, Bodie and Brock Thoene


 Thunder from Jerusalem, Bodie and Brock Thoene

This is the second book in the Zion Legacy series, this is based in the era immediately after World War 2 when many Jews chose to go back to Israel when Israel became a nation, and the terrible battles that were fought there in the midst of those decisions.

This is a good series but I do have a hard time reading it, it feels like there are so many different characters and sub stories it's a little hard for me to track sometimes. However, I do learn history better if it is told in story format, so it has been good for me to read this and understand at least a glimpse into what life was like in post-war Israel and how the war did not end for them with the end of WWII.

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Sons, Pearl S. Buck

Sons, Pearl S. Buck Sons is the second book in the House of Earth trilogy by Pearl S. Buck. The first book is about a Chinese man who works ...