Tuesday, June 21, 2011

To Kill a Mockingbird

Dear Books 'n' Wine Club,

Last year (2010) marked the fiftieth anniversary of To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It has won the Pulitzer Prize, has been translated into more than forty languages, sold more than thirty million copies worldwide, and has been made into an enormously popular movie.  And so Sara has chosen this timeless classic for our book next month.  Google To Kill a Mockingbird will result in over 5 million hits, so to narrow it down here are the discussion questions and a nice link on Harper Lee. 


Looking forward to seeing you all at Sara's next month.

Happy Reading,
Jennifer

June Meeting Notes

Dear Books ‘n’ Wine Club,

On a lovely June evening in the pastoral setting of New Hampshire we were treated to a lovely meal by Marrie.  We dined on crusty bread with ham, orzo salad, green salad, sliced tomatoes and cucumbers and homemade pickle beets.  As mentioned in Kalish’s book Marrie made sugar pie…yummy!!!!  Marrie promises to post these delicious recipes soon!  Thank you Marrie for a lovely evening!  We missed Karin and hope she has a great visit with her family. 

Little Heathens by Mildred Kalish was the book of the night.  It was agreed that no matter where you’re from, Midwest, the South or from the North, readers could resonate with Millie’s stories as they conjured up memories from their own past.  Many of us remember our grandmothers and mothers having a button box/jar/tin and some of us still maintain that tradition today.  The chapter on home remedies got a few chuckles.  We discussed the recipes laden with lots of lard and butter, but back then people worked hard and exercise took place in many ways, from play to household chores to the back breaking work of running a farm.  We recalled grandparents who stored bacon fat on the stove top.  Millie’s family was fortunate; although she grew up during the great depression they had farm land and were not without food.  Not to undermine Millie’s family struggles through the great depression they were better off than most in terms of food and education.  Sara enjoyed learning more about Millie as a young woman and her experiences in the Coast Guard.  Certainly Millie carried her resourcefulness and independence into her adulthood.  At times for me the book was self indulgent and I never connected with Millie or her family.  What I did connect with were the nuggets within her stories that brought memories of my own family history forward.  Around the table last night we all made those text to self connections, where we shared stories of our past.  We even had some show and tell moments:  Allison brought in a medical book dating back from the 1800’s; Amy brought in some wall paper beads remembering making them with her grandmother; Susan brought in the fire bellows from the family camp and a beautiful old wooden bowl belonging to a former neighbor; Marrie shared her families’ piano and the egg collecting basket from the farm; and I shared my grandmother’s home economics book and my great grandfather’s Franklin Reader and school bell.  At one point in the evening we got into discussing chicken farms as many of us have had experiences with family or friends who raise chickens and sell eggs (Susan is going to give it a try, buying the eggs from a friend not raising chickens!). 

Ellen recommended a book entitled The Egg and I by Betty MacDonald.  Here is a quick summary “When Betty MacDonald married a marine and moved to a small chicken farm on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State, she was largely unprepared for the rigors of life in the wild. With no running water, no electricity, a house in need of constant repair, and days that ran from four in the morning to nine at night, the MacDonalds had barely a moment to put their feet up and relax. And then came the children. Yet through every trial and pitfall—through chaos and catastrophe—this indomitable family somehow, mercifully, never lost its sense of humor.” In looking up the summary for the book I came across the fact that The Egg and I was also made into a comedy/romance film in 1947 starring Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray and Marjorie Main.  Ellen you’ll have to check it out and give us a movie report next month! 

Overall it was a pleasant evening sharing our own stories thanks to Marrie (and Millie too).  Up next month is Sara’s pick, To Kill a Mockingbird. 

Until then I wish you all happy summer solstice.

Best,
Jenn

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Looking Ahead to Townie...

Ladies:  Looks like we're going to have another movie night based on one of our upcoming reads! 

NewburyportNews.com, Newburyport, MA
June 18, 2011

Movie based on book 'Townie' planned

By Mike LaBella
Staff writer

HAVERHILL — Newbury's own best-selling author Andre Dubus III said he has signed a contract to have his memoir "Townie'' about growing up in Haverhill and Newburyport made into a movie.
Dubus said he will write the screen play and expects to have much say over which actors play him and other people featured in the book, which recounts his teenage and young adult life in Haverhill in the 1970s.
He also said he wants much of the movie to be filmed in Haverhill, as well as Newburyport, where his family lived when he was a young child before moving to Haverhill.
Dubus told The Eagle-Tribune, sister paper of The Daily News, yesterday that two brothers who are actors and producers on the West Coast now have a one-year option on the movie rights because of the agreement he signed on Thursday.
"I really like how they talk about the book and that they want me to do the screenplay," Dubus said. "And the money is right. Sometimes you get the ... passion (from would-be producers), but they can't come up with any money."
He declined to say how much he was paid for the movie rights or identify the brothers, saying they plan their own announcement.
Dubus said he wants the movie to be true to his story and wants filming to take place locally. He also wants locals to be involved.
"I would insist that as many Haverhill people as possible serve as extras, especially some of the people in my book - my friends, and even some of my enemies who want to be in it," Dubus said.
Newburyport and primarily Haverhill serve as the prime backdrops to Dubus' memoir of growing up in the 1970s, a time when formerly bustling factory buildings in towns along the Merrimack River had been abandoned and downtowns struggled to survive and find a new identity in the wake of urban renewal of the 1960s. His family life wasn't an easy one, with a mom who struggled to feed him and his three siblings after she and their father divorced. The book also details an urge that drew him to a dark side — how he became a street fighter to protect family members and other people, and then broke out of that lifestyle to become a writer.
"Townie'' was released in February and was on the New York Times best-seller list for six weeks, rising as high as number four. Dubus spent five weeks touring 35 cities promoting "Townie,'' and since the release of the book he's made 70 promotional appearances. He said that at each event he meets someone who tells him his story resonated with their life.
"So many people identify with the childhood I had," Dubus said. "It could be a blue-collar town in Idaho, or New Jersey or Florida. A lot of people are identifying with the kind of scrappy, single-parent, low-income childhood I had. There are many people in this country who have had similar childhoods and grew up as stronger and more resilient persons.''
Dubus said it's far too early to tell which actor might play him in a movie based on his book, "Townie," or who might play friends and members of his family. But when it's time to choose the actors, he will be intimately involved to make sure they are the right people.
"There are a few actors I can see playing my father, but it's too early," Dubus said. "I'm still trying to get my head around writing this screen play."
His father, Andre Dubus, was a longtime professor at the former Bradford College in Haverhill. The elder Dubus was also a master fiction writer. He died in 1999 at age 62 of an apparent heart attack.
This will be the second of the younger Dubus' books to be made into a movie. His novel "House of Sand and Fog" was turned into an Academy Award nominated film. His novel "The Garden of Last Days" is under contract with actor Gerard Butler's production company, and his first novel, "Bluesman" has been in movie development for years.
Dubus said his film agent helped him narrow down the list of people who were interested in turning "Townie'' into a movie.
The men they chose have a year to put together the financing they will need to begin production, he said. But before that happens, they plan to visit the area soon to see the places Dubus describes in the book.
"They'll be coming out in a few weeks, and we'll spend a few days driving through Newburyport and mostly Haverhill," Dubus said. "I strongly hope they will be shooting in Haverhill."
He said that if they can't get financing together within a year, they have an option to pay him again for another six months for more time.
"Giving the writer an option fee means I can't shop it around to anyone else," he said.
Through the magic of Hollywood, today's establishments that were once Dubus' haunts could be made to look like they did 35 years ago, he said.
On Thursday night, Dubus was guest speaker at the Greater Haverhill Chamber of Commerce's annual dinner at DiBurro's function hall. He entertained the crowd with a humorous talk about where he gets his ideas for stories and how everyone is born with a great imagination. Then he made a surprise announcement — he had just signed contracts that day to turn "Townie" into a movie.
When it comes time to promote the movie, Dubus said he will make it his job to talk about Haverhill's transformation into the city it is today — a place with a resurgent downtown where long-vacant shoe factories have become apartments and condominiums with popular restaurants and bars nearby.
"I transformed myself and in many ways the city has, too," he said.