Simple Genius by David Baldacci
Former Secret Service Agents Sean King and Michelle Maxwell become partners in solving the suicide of a scientist that happened on the property of Camp Peary, a CIA facility in Virginia.
Before partnering up, Michelle walks into a bar, searches for the biggest, toughest guy she can find, and picks a fight with him. She may even win but instead lets herself be beaten unconscious. Sean rushes to the hospital, but after learning what he can suggest, she voluntarily commits herself to a psychiatric facility where Horatio Barnes, a psychologist and old friend of Sean, treats her.
Sean gets started on the Camp Peary investigation while Horatio begins treatment to find the childhood roots of Michelle’s death wish,
The two mysteries eventually come together with secret codebooks, high-speed chases, and violence. The plot twists and turns as expected but isn’t as compelling as some of Baldacci’s others.
Quotes
“There’s a chromosome that goes haywire when you turn thirteen. It commands you to live in filth.” (ok, the truth is here that Michelle keeps her truck a little filthy)
“People who attempted to end their lives, no matter how amateurishly they might do so at first, often got better at it, with the result that on the third, fourth or sixth try, they ended up on a slab with a coroner poking around their remains.”
How To Read Literature Like A Professor, by Thomas C. Foster
In Thomas Foster’s book, “How to Read Literature like a Professor,” we are introduced to literary basics, symbols, themes, and contexts to show how to make your everyday reading experience more rewarding and enjoyable.
His focus on memory, symbol, and pattern claims that these features separate the professional reader from the rest of the crowd. It tells us the obvious that many books can be enjoyed for their important stories, but there are often deeper literary meanings interwoven in these texts. Foster suggests that seeing these hidden truths is natural to the professor.
· Memory. If the story seems familiar, it may be on purpose. It will add meaning if you consider how it is different.
· Symbols. An excellent example of a symbol could be the scar on Harry Potter’s forehead. Why is it on the forehead? Where else in literature was someone marked this way? What does its shape mean? Interpreting the symbols adds to the story.
· Patterns. If an author uses the exact phrases and words in different events, it may signal a connection. When certain characters follow a pattern, it tells us that an explanation needs to be looked for.
When the same ideas appear repeatedly, the concept’s repetition is likely a symbol. Foster tells us that repetition is intertextuality explaining that all texts depend on one another.
Foster’s book asks the broader questions of literature, how and why we react to it, the creative process, and the purpose of reading itself.
I have referred to the book several times over the years.
Quotes
“Education is mostly about institutions and getting tickets stamped; learning is what we do for ourselves. When we're lucky, they go together. If I had to choose, I'd take learning.”
“Always" and "never" are not words that have much meaning in literary study. For one thing, as soon as something always seems accurate, some wise guy will come along and write something to prove it's not.”
“We - as readers or writers, tellers or listeners - understand each other, share knowledge of the structures of our myths, comprehend the logic of symbols, largely because we have access to the same swirl of story. We have only to reach out into the air and pluck a piece of it.”
“Reading...is a full-contact sport; we crash against the wave of words with all our intellectual, imaginative, and emotional resources.
Becoming Michelle Obama, by Michelle Obama →
Michelle Obama starts her book, “Becoming Michelle Obama,” saying:
“I’m an ordinary person who found herself on an extraordinary journey. In sharing my story, I hope to help create space for other stories and voices to widen the pathway for who belongs and why.”
When Michelle started the Presidential campaign in Iowa, it turned out that how she saw herself became how she began to see the people who had turned out to listen to her. When she stood up to speak to a small group gathered in a home to her hear talk, she said:
“Let me tell you about me. I’m Michelle Obama, raised on the South Side of Chicago, in a little apartment on the top floor of a two-story house that felt much like this one. My dad was a water-pump operator for the city. My mom stayed at home to raise my brother and me.”
Michelle said she liked her own story and became comfortable telling it. She said that she realized that she was telling the people who had come to listen to her, despite the difference in skin color, that they reminded her of her own family.
In talking about her neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago, Mrs. Obama writes, “Failure is a feeling long before it becomes an actual result. It’s a vulnerability that breeds with self-doubt and then is escalated, often deliberately, by fear.” Maybe this insight is partly why we see her as a meticulous planner. It is reflected in her approach to her studies in high school and at Princeton and her approach to the various professional jobs she held. Being a planner was her method of pushing through potential failure.
Michelle wrote about her first impressions when she met Barack, telling us that she was fascinated with how different he was and how they were opposites in many ways. She said she was a planner obsessed with checking the boxes on her to-do list, and he was spontaneous. He must have also seen the differences and the story of their first kiss shows him seeking her approval carefully rather than just sweeping her off her feet.” She said about that event, “he was looking at me curiously, with a trace of a smile. “Can I kiss you?” he asked. And with that, I leaned in, and everything felt clear.”
Mrs. Obama writes about her critics. “I was female, black, and strong, which to certain people, maintaining a certain mindset, translated only to ‘angry.’ It was another bad cliché that’s been forever used to sweep minority women to the perimeter of every room, an unconscious signal not to listen to what we’ve got to say.”
The book surprised me with how much I enjoyed it—a different, must-read book.
Michelle’s Quotes
“Now I think it’s one of the most useless questions an adult can ask a child—What do you want to be when you grow up? As if growing up is finite. As if at some point you become something, and that’s the end.”
“If you don’t get out there and define yourself, you’ll be quickly and inaccurately defined by others.”
“Becoming isn’t about arriving somewhere or achieving a certain aim. I see it instead as forward motion, a means of evolving, a way to reach continuously toward a better self. The journey doesn’t end.”
“Do we settle for the world or work for it as it should be?”
“Failure is a feeling long before it’s an actual result.”
Four Past Midnight by Stephen King
Stephen King writes an introductory note in his book, “Four Past Midnight” explaining how he came up with the ideas for the four stories that covered 935 pages. He tells us, “Well look at this-were all here. We made it back again. I hope your half as happy to be here as I am. Just saying that reminds me of a story, and since telling stories is what I do for a living (and to keep myself sane), I’ll pass this one along.”
Read moreNo Man's Land, by David Baldacci
David Baldacci’s fourth novel in his John Puller book series was published in November 2016 and takes place 30 years after Puller’s mother disappeared from Fort Monroe in Virginia. A terminally ill neighbor has sent a letter to the CID accusing Puller father, now fighting dementia in a VA hospital, of having murdered his mother Jackie and an investigation begins again.
Read moreThe Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver
Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible is a story that unfolds in the Congo. The historical figures and events described are real, but the lives of the Price family are fiction. Nathan Price is a Baptist missionary who takes his family with him to the Congo in 1959 but it is through the eyes of the 4 daughters and their mother, Orleanna, that the story is narrated.
Read moreArt Before Breakfast, by Danny Gregory →
Danny Gregory made me Do it…… Art on the left by Brent M. Jones
