Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts

Friday, September 30, 2011

Snow Falling on Cedars

by David Guterson, 460 pages

When local fisherman Carl Heine is found dead in his own net, the unnerved, wary eyes of his 1950s Washington community quickly fall on the head of another fisherman, Kabuo Miyamoto. Local newsman and war veteran Ishmael Chambers doggedly follows the ensuing trial, but his motives are soon revealed to extend far beyond mere journalistic interest. As one man's life hangs in the balance, another's reaches a crossroad.

I enjoyed this quiet, lyrical tale of racism, lost love, and war's lasting effects set in the Pacific Northwest in the years following World War II. As the links between the variously scarred characters are slowly revealed, a picture of a dark, often-neglected chapter in American history takes shape alongside a very personal journey through adolescence, first love, and the often bitter, character-shaping lessons that come with growing up. A puzzling mystery, tense courtroom drama, bittersweet love story, and snapshot of cultural history all rolled into one atmospheric tale, Snow Falling on Cedars reminds me a little of Faulkner's Intruder in the Dust and Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird with just a pinch of Rose's Twelve Angry Men. Very nice.

The book also has the distinction of having been banned (it was our in-house book discussion title in celebration of Banned Books Week!) as well as of winning the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Coop: a year of poultry, pigs and parenting by Michael Perry



Wonderful book!  Michael Perry makes raising pigs to slaughter, building a chicken coop, and staying up late with a screaming child seem poetic and lovely!  Fond of short titles, this author's last book was Truck: a love story about his courtship of the wife who shows up on Coop, pregnant and eventually giving birth at home.  Perry looked at all the women surrounding his wife and decided he needed a dhoula, so he asked his friend, Mills (a guy) to help him out!   A nice read for anyone who just wants a relaxing, bucolic tale in the tradition of The Good Good Pig and James Herriott's books..with a little more edge.
Kim F