Category Archives: Book Reviews

New Local History Book Coming To East Side Books!

We are excited to bring the new book Children of Manzanar, edited by Heather Lindquist and published by Heyday Books and our friends at Manzanar History Association.  The books are ordered,  so let us know if you want to reserve a copy.  It is filled with historic photos, and will bring  to light the unique perspecitive of the youngest camp residents.  I know I can’t wait to read it!  If you really can’t wait, stop by the lovely gift shop at the Manzanar National Historic Site for a copy.

Books to Renew Your Faith

In his book, How God Changes Your Brain, neuroscientist Andrew Newberg writes that the best way to exercise your brain is to practice faith. Faith develops optimism and reduces the stress-eliciting cortisol levels in your body. Psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, who was held in a Nazi concentration for five years, said that faith was the single most important thing that kept a survivor alive. “If a prisoner lost faith in the future, he was doomed, because the will to live seldom returned.”

People find their faith in all kinds of places and in all sorts of ways. One source of faith for many is their relationship with God or their church. East Side Books has an extensive Christian section that may offer inspiration and hope for those looking to renew or strengthen their spirituality.

East Side’s Christian collection is so extensive that it is divided into a number of different categories such as Christian Theology, Prayer/Devotionals, Saints, and Life of Christ to name a few. We also have Bibles available.

There are a number of books by popular Christian leaders shelved under the category of Christian Living. We have a title by Desmond Tutu called No Future WIthout Forgiveness as well as a number of titles by former President Jimmy Carter. Also on the shelf is Billy Graham’s book Peace with God, and several copies of Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue by Neale Donald Walsch.

Sometimes it helps to learn about your own faith by reading about the faith journey of others. In the category of Christian/Biography we have a number of interesting Christian memoirs by such diverse writers as Rick Warren and Mary McCarthy. Anne Lamott in her book Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith puts a humorously yet poignant spin on her day-to-day struggles with faith. Tony Hendra has written an intriguing bestseller entitled Father Joe: The Man Who Saved My Soul.


I have found a number of helpful titles on the shelves containing the categories of Christian Women, Christian Parenting, and Christian Relationship. One of my favorite reads was Mitten Strings for God by Katrina Kenison. Wise and honest, Kenison even shares a number of recipes with her readers. I am intrigued by the book entitled Power of a Positive Mom by Karol Ladd. I also want to check out Sisters Singing: Blessings, Prayers, Art, Songs, Poetry & Sacred Stories by Women.


Our Christian Literature section is housed separately in the Literary room next to the Poetry shelves.  We have a number of titles by popular Christian writers such as Beverley Lewis, Karen Kingsbury, Neta Jackson, and Tracie Peterson.  We also have a large selection of novels by Dr. Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins who authored the bestselling Left Behind series.

We all can use a little faith-boosting now and then, and I encourage you to browse our large Christian section and see what kind of inspiration you can find.  If you need any assistance, please ask one of our staff.  We are always happy to help.

Staff Pick: Sherman Alexie

Even if you happened to miss last year’s Community Reads visit by author Sherman Alexie, it isn’t too late to pick up a copy of his award-winning book The Absolute True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Besides having a great title, this powerful book artfully tells the journey of a Native American boy as he straddles life on the reservation and enrollment at a primarily white high school. We have several very gently used copies of The Absolutely True Diary of  Part-Time Indian on our front table. This book appeals to both young adult and adult readers.

We also have copies available of 127 Hours by Aron Ralston, the current Community Reads book. Ralston is the young climber who, after several days spent trapped between a boulder and rock wall, severed his own arm. Please contact the Inyo Council for the Arts for more information regarding the ongoing Community Reads events.

Staff Pick: To Be Sung Underwater by Tom McNeal

When my friend Mary showed up at my doorstep with a copy of To Be Sung Underwater by Tom McNeal clutched to her chest and told me I HAD to read it, I was skeptical. Who was this Tom McNeal? I’d never heard of him, and I read A LOT.  But Mary has a fine eye for excellent writing, so I promised to give McNeal a try.

Let’s just say that before I’d even finished To Be Sung Underwater, I was searching online to see what other books McNeal had written. His writing is beautiful and fresh, and the storyline unpredictable to the very last page.  A love story.  A story of growing up and growing away. A story of finding yourself again.

We have two new copies of To Be Sung Underwater on our front table. If you want a great read by the best author you’ve never heard of, come on down to East Side Books today.

Staff Pick: When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead

If you or your favorite young adult is a fan of Madeline L’Engle’s classic A Wrinkle In Time, I suggest you rush down to East Side Books and pick up our copy of the wonderful book When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead. Winner of the 2010 Newbery Award, When You Reach Me combines the ordinary with the mysterious. Throw in a few unsigned notes that predict the future and you have a fresh, thoughtful book that appeals to middle readers, teens, and adults.

Come and check out our shelf full of other Newbery Award winning books in our Children’s Section.

Jill Kinmont Boothe and Others Who Inspire Us

This past month, Bishop lost one of our most inspiring locals. Jill Kinmont Boothe, at the age of 75, died of complications after a surgery. As a young girl, Kinmont Boothe was destined to become a world-class ski racer, but a crash during a race in Utah left her paralyzed from the shoulders down. She spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair.

But her life did not end there. The same spirit that drove her on the ski hill served her well during her recovery. Despite several more devastating losses–the deaths of three close friends–Boothe created a life for herself. She became a remedial reading teacher, first in Southern California and then later here in Bishop. She also became a passionate painter, rendering the landscapes of our area onto canvas.

Husband John Boothe was quoted in the Los Angeles Times as saying, “I think the thing that impressed me most the first time I met her was that after a few minutes you forgot all about her being in a wheelchair. She obviously isn’t preoccupied by it and pretty soon you’re not either.” (See Dave McCoy’s photo tribute to his friend Jill Kilmont Boothe. http://www.davemccoyphoto.com/247-a-tribute-to-jill-kinmont-boothe/)

Kinmont Boothe is deeply missed in our community by those who knew her and also by those who only knew of her.  Her tenacious spirit was captured in the book Other Side of the Mountain by E. G. Valens, and is a reminder to us all that we can do more than we think we can. In honor of Kinmont Boothe, we have on display in the story an original 1955 Sports Illustrated with her lovely cover shot, the week before her accident, along with a read-to-death and discarded copy of  The Other Side of the Mountain Part 2 from the Bishop Elementary Library.  Inside the front cover, in a wobbly childish print, is written “She is great”.  Documentation of yet another admirer, another young person she touched and inspired.

If you’ve missed reading it, we have a number of copies of Other Side of the Mountain available for purchase and always try to have them available.  Boothe’s ability to inspire us will continue thanks to this biography and the many lives she’s touched.

Overcoming challenges is often the theme of biographies and memoirs. Whether you are needing courage, solace, or a good dose of gratitude for all you haven’t had to go through, pick up a copy of the following books from our Biography and Memoir Sections:

 

*Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

This coming-of-age memoir reveals the fierce spirit of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, one of the foremost champions in the fight for rights of Muslim women. Raised in a strict Muslim family, she withstood civil war, female circumcision, and beatings. She sought asylum in the Netherlands and continues to be a controversial yet inspiring political figure.

*Blindsided by Richard M. Cohen

Cohen was blindsided at the age of twenty-five by a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. He would later endure two bouts of colon cancer. His memoir is the tale of living with illness and still managing to be a husband and father, and find enough hope to celebrate life.

*Left to Tell by Immaculee Ilibagiza

There are some books you read that you never forget. This is the case with Ilibagiza’s tale of the genocide that ripped apart her country of Rwanda. Ilibagiza’s family was brutally murdered, but she was miraculously spared and hid for ninety-one days with seven other women in a small bathroom. Unbelievably, she emerged stronger in her faith in God and her believe in the power of unconditional love.

*A Beautiful Mind by Sylvia Nasar

John Nash was a mathematical genius who at age thirty descended into mental illness. With the help of a his wife and the loyalty of the math community, he emerged later to win a Nobel Prize. An inspiring and triumphant look at a life affected by mental illness.

Please ask one of our staff for assistance if you need help finding any of the above mentioned titles.

Three Reasons to Read Behind the Beautiful Forevers

The early reviews of Behind the Beautiful Forevers are declaring it THE book of the year. Slate.com called it “spellbinding.” Oprah picked it as a must-read for February. The New York Times published a glowing profile of author Katherine Boo, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and winner of a MacArthur “Genius” grant. A review in The Washington Post opened with the line, “This is an astonishing book.”

Despite all the accolades, I approached Behind the Beautiful Forevers with trepidation. Boo reports on the people who live, work, and survive in Annawadi, a makeshift slum in India that sits on the edge of the Mumbai airport. Boo’s brother, Tom, who happens to be a family care physician at our local Rural Health Clinic, emailed me the following. “Hope you like the book. The people’s stories are compellingly told and the writing good, but it can still be a tough read.”

Tom is right. Behind the Beautiful Forevers, and books like it, are hard to read. They make us feel guilty about our bright and shiny lives of privilege. They make us feel powerless to loosen the complicated ropes of poverty, hunger, and suffering that have a stranglehold on much of humankind.

So why do it? Why read Behind the Beautiful Forevers?

After finishing the first two chapters, I can give you three reasons.

First, Behind the Beautiful Forevers is exquisitely written. Boo weaves words with such tenderness and beauty that her book reads like a novel, which is part of the reason why it delivers such an emotional wallop. Her descriptions are at once lyrical and gritty, firmly planting each character in your mind. Before you know it, they’ve made a space for themselves in your heart, and that makes it all the more painful when you remember that this is not a made-up tale. Their experiences are very real, and are continuing to unfold halfway across the world even after we close the covers of the book.

Which leads to the second reason why you should read Behind the Beautiful Forevers. It is a book that can change everything.

I read the line “Every house was off-kilter, so less off-kilter looked like straight. Sewage and sickness looked like life,” and I began to see my own world differently. When I broadened my perspective to include the slums of Mumbai, petty irritations instantly dissolved. Minor misfortunes became easily manageable. In the days after beginning Behind the Beautiful Forevers, I was humbly grateful for the conveniences and Levitra 10mg privileges that cushion my life. I complained less. I appreciated more.

I have to wonder if an appreciation for this broader perspective is what compels Boo to do her work. Although she rarely speaks of it publicly, Boo was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in her late teens. It affects her mobility and compromises her immune system. She used the money from her MacArthur grant to help pay for a surgery to repair her hands so she could continue to type.

Author photo by Heleen Welvaart

But despite what she refers to in her Author’s Notes as her “lousy health,” Boo spent months at a time over a four-year period among the residents of Annawadi conducting interviews, recording video footage, and snapping photos. She hired interpreters to bridge the language barrier. She raised the ire of the local police. She hung around so much that she says the residents became bored with her. She even took a tumble into the nearby sewage lake. But Boo persisted, even when the stories she was recording tore at her heart. She told National Public Radio, “There were so many times when I was reporting in Annawadi that I would just come home and cry, because I didn’t think that I was going to be able to bring the stories to the page in a way that would make other people care.”

And that is the last and most important reason for reading Behind the Beautiful Forevers. In spite of her doubts, Boo wrote a book that makes us care. A book that renews our compassion and empathy. As challenging as it is to look suffering in the eye, it is of the utmost importance that we attach a face to the rising poverty statistics, that we humanize the poor. If we don’t, it is too easy to close our heart, snap shut our perspective, and shrink our compassion to a pitiful thimbleful. It is simpler to forget, but it is crucial to remember. To remember is to connect us as human beings.

And that is why I am deeply thankful to Katherine Boo for pushing past her own challenges to beautifully shape a vivid portrayal of a life in Annawadi. And that is why I will read Behind the Beautiful Forevers to the last page. Because even as painful as it is, I don’t want to forget. Ever.

East Side Books has signed copies of Behind the Beautiful Forevers for sale while supplies last.

Armchair Travel

The sky is gray and the days are short. Mid-winter is upon us and spring is yet a far-away dream. You want to escape, but money is tight and time is short. Here at East Side Books, we may not to be able to send you on the trip of your dreams, but we can transport you to far away places for an hour or two.  All you have to do is pick up one of the great travel memoirs in our Travel Memoirs section, and you will be whisked away to a whole new world.

For example, pick up a copy of Bill Bryson’s Notes from a Small Island and not only will you know every thing there is to know about England, but you will find yourself laughing aloud at Bryson’s witty writing. On a more serious note, you might want to read The Songlines or What Am I Doing Here by Bruce Chatwin who is most well known for his tales of travel.

A personal favorite of mine is Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes. Mayes tells the story of buying a house in Italy and discovers herself along the way. This title was made into a popular movie staring Diane Lane. I was also inspired by One Year Off by David Elliot Cohen. This father of three traveled around the world with his family for twelve months. Their tale was refreshing and, at times, very entertaining.

If you are looking for something a little more exotic pick up a copy of The Lost Heart of Asia by Colin Thubron. This author explores the worlds of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, and Kirghizstan. Or, for something a little different, read Glynis Ridley’s Clara’s Grand Tour: Travels with a Rhinoceros in Eighteenth-Century Europe.

If you want to travel, but don’t want someone else’s experience shaping your adventure, check out our wide selection of travel guides. We have guides for destinations as far away as Korea and Egypt, and as exotic as Costa Rica and Indonesia. We also have travel guides for most of the fifty states.

And if you can carve out a day or two of real time travel, check out our California Travel section for guides on quick weekend trips. You can’t go wrong with Adventure Guide to Southern California by Don and Marjorie Young, or A Traveler’s Guide to Historic California by Lynne Schaefer.

So come on down to East Side Books and plan your travel destination–imaginary or real. If you need any help locating one of these titles, please ask our staff for assistance. Bon Voyage!