Saturday, May 16, 2009



Dear Book Club Ladies … and Cyber Book Club Ladies, and all those men who corner me privately and whisperingly tell me they read along with us….

This month we met at Anne Clark’s home… it’s such a cozy, warm house, and bless her heart, she has hosted it twice. Afterward she served a delicious Apple Betty with ice cream on top … many asked for the recipe… She said I could share it..
Anne Clark’s Apple Betty



• 4 cups thinly sliced apples
• 1/4 cup orange juice
• 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
• 1 cup white sugar
• 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
• 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
• 1 pinch salt
• 1/2 cup butter
• DIRECTIONS
1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees
2. Mound sliced apples in pan … Sprinkle with orange juice.
3. In a medium bowl, mix the flour, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt. Cut in butter until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Scatter over the apples.
4. Bake 45 minutes. Serve warm. .. add ice cream on top



This was a Steinbeck night.. We discussed both of his short novellas: Of Mice and Men and The Pearl. I’m only reviewing Of Mice and Men here, which is more famous and has more depth, but it is dark and is a bit hard to read with its colloquialisms and salty language (which define the two main characters, Lenny and George). There have been six Of Mice and Men movies made: the latest and best in my opinion is with Gary Sinise and John Malkovich.



We touched on all these areas below……it is so interesting, as Joan said, that we can see many different things in the same novel, referencing our own experiences in life. I had to defend the fact that I felt some sympathy with Curly (yes, really!). But I was outnumbered. Gotta love the debate.

The Impossibility of the American Dream Most of the characters in Of Mice and Men admit, at one point or another, to dreaming of a different life. Before her death, Curley's wife confesses her desire to be a movie star. Crooks, bitter as he is, allows himself the pleasant fantasy of hoeing a patch of garden on Lennie's farm one day, and Candy latches on desperately to George's vision of owning a couple of acres. Before the action of the novel begins, circumstances have robbed most of the characters of these wishes. Curley's wife, for instance, has resigned herself to an unfulfilling marriage. What makes all of these dreams typically American is that the dreamers wish for untarnished happiness, for the freedom to follow their own desires. George and Lennie's dream of owning a farm, which would enable them to sustain themselves, and, most important, offer them protection from an inhospitable world, represents a prototypically American ideal. Their journey, which awakens George to the impossibility of this dream, sadly proves that the bitter Crooks is right: such paradises of freedom, contentment, and safety are not to be found in this world.

The Corrupting Power of Women The portrayal of women in Of Mice and Men is limited and unflattering. We learn early on that Lennie and George are on the run from the previous ranch where they worked, due to encountering trouble there with a woman. Misunderstanding Lennie's love of soft things, a woman accused him of rape for touching her dress. George berates Lennie for his behavior, but is convinced that women are always the cause of such trouble. Their enticing sexuality, he believes, tempts men to behave in ways they would otherwise not. A visit to the “flophouse” (a cheap hotel, or brothel) is enough of women for George, and he has no desire for a female companion or wife. Curley's wife, the only woman to appear in Of Mice and Men, seems initially to support George's view of marriage. Dissatisfied with her marriage to a brutish man and bored with life on the ranch, she is constantly looking for excitement or trouble. In one of her more revealing moments, she threatens to have the black stable-hand lynched if he complains about her to the boss. Her insistence on flirting with Lennie seals her unfortunate fate. Although Steinbeck does, finally, offer a sympathetic view of Curley's wife by allowing her to voice her unhappiness and her own dream for a better life, women have no place in the author's idealized vision of a world structured around the brotherly bonds of men.

Loneliness and Companionship Many of the characters admit to suffering from profound loneliness. George sets the tone for these confessions early in the novel when he reminds Lennie that the life of a ranch-hand is among the loneliest of lives. Men like George who migrate from farm to farm rarely have anyone to look to for companionship and protection. As the story develops, Candy, Crooks, and Curley's wife all confess their deep loneliness. The fact that they admit to complete strangers their fear of being cast off shows their desperation. In a world without friends to confide in, strangers will have to do. Each of these characters searches for a friend, someone to help them measure the world, as Crooks says. In the end, however, companionship of his kind seems unattainable. For George, the hope of such companionship dies with Lennie, and true to his original estimation, he will go through life alone.

Strength and Weakness Steinbeck explores different types of strength and weakness throughout the novel. The first, and most obvious, is physical strength. As the novel opens, Steinbeck shows how Lennie possesses physical strength beyond his control, as when he cannot help killing the mice. Great physical strength is, like money, quite valuable to men in George and Lennie's circumstances. Curley, as a symbol of authority on the ranch and a champion boxer, makes this clear immediately by using his brutish strength and violent temper to intimidate the men and his wife. Physical strength is not the only force that oppresses the men in the novel. It is the rigid, predatory human tendencies, not Curley, that defeat Lennie and George in the end. Lennie's physical size and strength prove powerless; in the face of these universal laws, he is utterly defenseless and therefore disposable.

George and Lennie's Farm The farm that George constantly describes to Lennie, those few acres of land on which they will grow their own food and tend their own livestock, is one of the most powerful symbols in the book. It seduces not only the other characters but also the reader, who, like the men, wants to believe in the possibility of the free, idyllic life it promises. Candy is immediately drawn in by the dream, and even the cynical Crooks hopes that Lennie and George will let him live there too. A paradise for men who want to be masters of their own lives, the farm represents the possibility of freedom, self-reliance, and protection from the cruelties of the world.

Lennie's Puppy Lennie's puppy is one of several symbols that represent the victory of the strong over the weak. Lennie kills the puppy accidentally, as he has killed many mice before, by virtue of his failure to recognize his own strength. Although no other character can match Lennie's physical strength, the huge Lennie will soon meet a fate similar to that of his small puppy. Like an innocent animal, Lennie is unaware of the vicious, predatory powers that surround him.

Candy's Dog In the world Of Mice and Men describes, Candy's dog represents the fate awaiting anyone who has outlived his or her purpose. Once a fine sheepdog, useful on the ranch, Candy's mutt is now debilitated by age. Candy's sentimental attachment to the animal—his plea that Carlson let the dog live for no other reason than that Candy raised it from a puppy—means nothing at all on the ranch. Although Carlson promises to kill the dog painlessly, his insistence that the old animal must die supports a cruel natural law that the strong will dispose of the weak. Candy internalizes this lesson, for he fears that he himself is nearing an age when he will no longer be useful at the ranch, and therefore no longer welcome.


Next month the book will be:
Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years by Carl Sandburg.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Steinbeck next month


8th Wedding Anniversary


Three Cute Chicks


The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society





Hello Again My Shadow Mountain Book Club Lady Friends… and all lurkers,
I’m quite late getting this review and next-book information out. My excuse is a good one, however… as it is hayfever/allergy season my only desire is to lie on the sofa with a tissue box and feel sorry for myself till June. Any commiserating sufferers out there? Life could be worse…..I could have been a resident of the Island of Guernsey during WWII .. shunned by the English and occupied by the Germans. but at least they had a book club
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society was our book for the month of April…..a departure from our classic’s list, but it worked out fine! Claudia Elliason stepped out of the mother-of –the-bride- mode long enough to offer her wonderful home and yummy refreshments. We sure appreciate her! It’s not every bookclub that has the Mother of the Year for the State of Utah as a member…
This book was highly recommended by Margaret Tribe, and I’m glad she did. Sometimes I need to be forced out of my comfort zone (rut) and read different genre. She gave a thoughtful overview using her marked passages and handouts.
It was a story told through letters from journalist In England to a group of odd, loving, funny and eccentric people on the quazi-English-owned island of Guernsey, near the English Channel.

The central figure in this novel is Juliet Ashton, a World War II London columnist. In early 1946, just as England and Europe are beginning to rebuild from the War, Juliet receives a letter from a Guernsey pig farmer, Dawsey Adams. Her curiosity is piqued when she learns that the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, mentioned in Dawsey's letter, played a huge role in saving its members’ lives. Juliet begins to correspond not only with Dawsey but also with other members of the Society. Eventually, she takes up residency on the island herself in order to research and write a book about the German occupation of Guernsey and how the Islanders survived it. Juliet is drawn into the world of this man and his friends.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society was born as a spur-of-the-moment alibi when its members were discovered breaking curfew by the Germans occupying their island. Julie begins to correspond with Dawsey and the members of his book club, the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and arranges to visit them, although a handsome American publishing tycoon wants her to stay in London. As she becomes enmeshed in the islanders’ lives, she learns she can’t escape the effects of war as she had once longed to do: “The war is now the story of our lives, and there’s no subtracting it.”
Authors Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows tell well the hardships of islanders who made do with wartime rations of one candle a week and cooked their vegetables in seawater for lack of salt. The authors also offer many well-chosen quotes and anecdotes about an eclectic group of poets and writers: Chaucer, Wilkie Collins, Agatha Christie, the Brontë sisters. And in the age of Dr. Phil and Twitter, it’s refreshing to meet characters like the book-club member who finds comfort in the words the Roman orator Seneca: “Light griefs are loquacious, but the great are dumb.”
The one great thing this book did for me is teach me about the occupation of the island by the Germans….and not everything is easily defined as black and white or enemy and friend. There are good Germans. There are insufferable Islanders…There is a tremendous scene where the islands have to ship their children off to England for safety…I can’t imagine it.
I had to reread Wuthering Heights because of this book. There references made to that book wetted my appetite to revisit it. If you didn’t read it with us, I challenge you to pick it up and read it. You’ll enjoy.