Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts

February 17, 2012

Lily, Duchess of Marlborough (1854-1909) A Portrait with Husbands by Sally E. Svenson


         This is the biography of (born) Lily Price from her childhood, through her three marriages, and through to her death.  Lily was originally from Troy, New York but spent much of youth in Washington DC.  She married Louis Hamersley and lived in New York City making her way up through high society.  He left her a young, wealthy widow at the age of 28.  In what seemed like a marriage of convenience and arrangement for both parties Lily married the eighth Duke of Marlborough, becoming a Duchess and giving her a foot in the English aristocratic door.  The marriage benefited the Duke due to her money, though it wasn’t so easy to access as there were years of court battles as to her inheritance from her first husband.  It is believed they did grow very fond of eachother, despite the fact that the Duke’s past kept Lily from the level in London society she sought after.  Not long after he also left her a widow, but once again in a not too distant future Lily married for a third time.  Her final marriage to Lord William de la Poer Beresford finally granted her a son.  But as with the others, Lord Beresford also left Lily a widow after several years of marriage.
                The book details much of Lily’s circumstances from prior to birth and beyond her passing.  There is a lot of information concerning her surroundings, but more particularly on her relationships with her husbands and those who became important roles in her life.  Some of these included her sister-in-law Jennie Churchill and her beloved nephew Winston Churchill.  There is also much discussion of her estates both in America and England.
                This is an incredibly well written, extensive research paper.  If you want to know detailed family tree lines and accurate accounts of moneys and estates that passed by and through the Duchess than this is the book for you.  For me, on the other hand, it was incredibly hard to read.  I expected more of a novel and was overwhelmed by facts and details that was just too hard to keep up with.  It did give me a feel for the English aristocracy in the late nineteenth century, but this book just wasn’t my cup of tea.
2 stars
I received a copy of this book for the purpose of review.
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February 8, 2012

Black Mahler: The Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Story by Charles Elford

This is the life story of turn of the century English composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Coleridge was born in 1875 to a black father and white mother but raised by an adoptive mother in the London suburb of Croydon. He started playing the violin at a very young age and turned out to be an exceptional musician. By the time he was 15 an opportunity arose for him to go to the Royal College of Music and with the help of his teacher and some others looking out for him he was able to attend and there turned his focus to composing. At the Royal College is where he met his best friend William Hurlstone, a fellow composer, and his future wife Jessie. After college Coleridge had a very busy life filled with teaching, conducting, but mostly composing. He always sold his work outright and though he managed to pay the bills, he always struggled financially. His chance at success came when he composed ‘Hiawatha’, which was an instant hit. But being a great artist didn’t mean he always made the best business decisions, and so this too he sold outright to the gain of the publisher and his tremendous loss. For the rest of his life Coleridge tried to outdo himself as a composer leaving some great works along the way.

I absolutely loved reading this man’s story! In fact, I immediately had to go listen to his music. He was a great influential person not just in the music world, but also as a face for blacks all over the globe. I felt terrible for him when he got cheated out of the success of his greatest work, even when laws changed because of him. I also liked the back and forth style of the book. The author goes between a concert held in his honor where family, friends, others along his life were present and participating to the chronological story of his life. The only issue I had with this book is that though sometimes the transition between present and past were seamless and obvious, other times it was random and awkward. 3.5 stars
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January 19, 2012

The Discovery of Jeanne Baret: by Glynis Ridley


At first glance, “The Discovery of Jeanne Baret” seems to be just another nonfiction novel, detailing the events that occurred in a deceased female’s lifetime. However, Glynis Ridley evolves this seemingly simple story and breathes life into Baret’s impressive life. At the end of the introduction to this novel, Ridley makes a statement that sets the tone for the rest of the book: “one human being, irrespective of the hand dealt by fortune, can have as much curiosity about the world as another. And that, like race and class, gender should pose no barrier to satisfying that curiosity and discovering how far it may take you.” Talk about a declaration for gender equality and the power of women!

But, the story of Baret is more than just a giant banner advocating women’s strength and determination. The reader first meets Baret as she grows up in her humble hometown in the Loire valley of France. Her parents were in the lower class of individuals during the mid-1700s and worked as day laborers. While Baret should have been subject to the same fate as her parents and expected to die in her early twenties, she possessed a skill that allowed her to escape this fate. Knowledgeable about plants, seeds, and their medicinal uses, Baret belonged to an ancient order of herb women who were often secretly sought out for their knowledge by doctors, surgeons, and sometimes students of botany.

Also in France, Philibert Commerson grew up in completely different conditions. Pampered by the success of his father, Commerson was given the chance to succeed in education and prompted to enter law by his parents. However, Commerson, known for his stubbornness, pursued a different course in life. Through his determination and risk-taking demeanor, he was able to fill his days with his one true love: botany. Commerson eventually married an even richer woman and settled down in Toulon-sur-Arroux, only a couple of miles away from Baret’s location. It was through a chance meeting that these two characters joined forces, exchanged knowledge, and set off on a journey that would allow Baret to become the first woman to circumnavigate the globe. Filled with adventure, romance, and a testament to the mental, emotional, and physical strength of a singular woman, this novel allows the reader to adopt Jeanne Baret as their new role model.

While the facts are fascinating and the plot intoxicating, Ridley continues to counter facts previously assumed about Jeanne Baret and her expedition around the world. Not possessing any prior knowledge about the events surrounding Baret’s life, I was not surprised by any revelations made by Ridley. However, the novel was still compelling and allowed me into the life of a truly remarkable woman. “The Discovery of Jeanne Baret” is not your typical biography and if you are not familiar with Baret’s story and accomplishments, I highly recommend reading this novel.

4 stars

**Note: If purchasing the paperback edition, do not forget to read Ridley’s afterword. It truly allows you to appreciate the ending of this remarkable story.

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August 15, 2011

Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand

I first heard about this book from my boss who doesn't read a lot. It's not the kind of book that I would typically pick up because well, I like fiction. I prefer to lose myself in a story that isn't real rather than reading about one that is. I've missed out on a lot of good books because of that and this book has made me rethink my perspective on non-fiction.

Unbroken is the newest book by the author of Seabiscuit. It's the story of Louie Zamperini, an Olympic runner turned WWII airmen whose plane crashed in the Pacific Ocean on a mission.The story follows his journey immediately after the crash and for the subsequent years as he faces Japanese POW camps and treatment that no one should ever have to endure.

This story is so far-fetched at times that you find yourself thinking there is no way this is a true story. But it is. And it is an incredible one at that. Laura does a fantastic job of telling Louie's story in a way that makes it as readable as a general fiction novel while being as informative as any biography out there.

This is my favorite book of the year by far. I loved it and would recommend it to anyone regardless of what you typically like to read.

July 8, 2011

Heaven is for Real by Todd Burpo

You've probably heard of this book, maybe you've even seen the author and his son interviewed on TV. In case you haven't, it's the biographical account of a boy who claims to have visited heaven during an operation. As someone that struggles with doubt I was eager to read it. Not eager enough to spend money on it, but certainly eager enough to put it on hold at the library.

Todd Burpo is a Wesleyan pastor in a small Midwestern town. The first part of the book paints a picture of his family's life there, and the events that preceded his three year old son Colton's emergency surgery for a burst appendix. A few months after the surgery Colton startled his family by making comments about sitting in Jesus' lap and hearing the angels sing to him during the operation. He said he'd left his body and could see what his mother and father were doing in other rooms, things they'd thought they'd done in private.

In the time after he made those comments, the Burpos attempted to gently extract more information from their son about his miraculous visit, finding themselves astounded over and over as Colton described things outlined in scripture he hadn't yet been exposed to. He also claimed to have met a sister that had been miscarried (he hadn't been told about the miscarriage) and a grandfather. When shown different portraits of Jesus he said none of them were accurate until coming across the one by Akiane Kramarik, a girl from an atheist family who paints from dreams and visions of heaven she claims to experience.

I wanted this book to inspire me and to erase doubts from my mind, but unfortunately I can't say that happened. Maybe I'm overly skeptical, but some of the things Colton describes just seem too trite, like he's just describing cartoon scenes from a flannel board in Sunday School. The wounds he described on Jesus' hands and feet were not accurate as Science demands. The way he described the Trinity was not the complex mystery we try to wrap our minds around, but rather the actual division that compels Muslims to accuse us of polytheism.

At the same time, I've always felt that Heaven is likely a subjective experience. Maybe Colton saw things that way because that was how he understood them. Maybe an adult would see things different, more complex and less Nickelodeon. We can't really know, can we?

As a skeptic I also have to wonder how much of this was truly Colton's original experience and how much of it was generated by a desire to please or get attention. In his interviews he seems very bored with the whole thing, just muttering the answers he knows are expected of him, certainly understandable after having an experience like this dominate his childhood. Throughout the book Burpo recalls that he was very careful not to plant ideas or ask leading questions when discussing this with his son, but then went on to do exactly that more than once, and those are just the times he wrote about. I do believe there is a large core of truth, I'm just not so sure how much of it has been re-interpreted or overplayed as it has been extracted from the mind of a small child via his parents.

Who would I recommend this to? I would hesitate to recommend it to a non-believer because I'd be afraid it would come across as more cheesy than revolutionary. At the same time, it could very well open up a closed mind to new possibilities, I guess it depends on the mind. Here is a short interview with the Burpos.



June 28, 2011

Title Intentionally Withheld

I am withholding the title of this book for the moment because I believe it is a confusing one. I will reveal the title shortly, I promise.

This book is a chronologically arranged collection of short biographies of Historical figures, 365 of them to be exact. Each biography is one page long, with footnotes of interest and occasional illustrations. From Khufu to Bhutto, they're categorized as Leaders, Philosophers, Innovators, Villains, and more. Many are familiar, some not so much, but all are fascinating. The writers were fairly objective with controversial and religious figures.

I keep this book on my nightstand. I don't read it daily, but I do pick it up frequently and often use it as a reference tool. It came in especially handy when I was watching the series Rome. I've found it to be fascinating, helpful, and enlightening.

So what is this book called? The Intellectual Devotional: Biographies, by David S. Kidder and Noah D. Oppenheim. I withheld the title because while it is technically a correct title, I'm afraid it gives the wrong impression. People are accustomed with seeing the word "devotional" attached to books offering religious meditations, and there is nothing religious about this book. I didn't want this aspect of the title to cause anyone not religiously inclined to skip this post.

I received a copy of this book for the purpose of review.

March 9, 2009

A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael by Elisabeth Elliot

This is a biography by a spiritual giant of the second-half of the 20th century about a spiritual giant of the first-half of the 20th century. Amy Carmichael, who remained single her entire life and made India home, has been one of my favorite people to read about.

Elisabeth Elliot spent a lot of time researching Amy Carmichael, one of her spiritual heroes. Amy was a prolific writer, even well into her 80s, writing poetry, true accounts, and many, many letters, but that's not really what's shes known for. She's known for creating and leading the Dohnavur Fellowship, which became home to her and hundreds of children, most rescued girls who were to be given to the temple to "serve" there.

Amy Carmichael with her strong Irish roots is an interesting character and a fascinating study. She had strong opinions on nearly everything, but more importantly was concerned with serving her Lord and others.

The last twenty years of her life were spent on bedrest from complications from a fall. Being an active woman, this must have been incredibly difficult, yet she sought to continue to love and encourage those in her fellowship by writing letters, having them visit her, and even selected people to serve her who she would be able to help herself.

I found this a very interesting and fast read, and would recommend it to anyone.




February 21, 2009

The Last Tsarina by Carolly Erickson

Jacki sent me another book by this writer, The First Elizabeth, awhile back. I really enjoyed it, but I never got around to reviewing it. I'll have to do that at some point. I think I've also read a biography of Josephine by this writer.

I am in awe of Erickson as a biographer and as an historian. Most biographers and historians like to speculate, or are very dry, or jump around too much. Erickson is very disciplined. Everything she writes is pure substantiated fact, not a bit of it is fictionalized or embellished. At the same time, she is able to write about these facts in a way that draws the reader in like a novel would. And she does it all in a perfectly linear fashion, never using phrases like "if only she knew what was to come," or "and ten years later this was shown to be a bad decision." Every moment is written as the subjects were experiencing it at the time, with all of the anticipation that comes with it. I found myself wondering if someone really would come and rescue the imperial family, even though I knew in advance they'd been martyred.

Like many, I've always been fascinated by the life of the last tsar of Russia and his doomed family, a fascination that was largely kindled when their graves were located in the 90's. Our school systems teach us very little about world history. All I really knew about this story was that the family had been martyred for some reason or other, that two of the bodies were never found, and that some shady figure called Rasputin was wrapped up in it all.

The most interesting revelations in my view are the circumstances that lead Russia into communism and the Romanovs into extinction. It's very true that those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it, and it was far too easy to see similarities between the troubled pre-revolutionary Russia and the current status of the USA. It was also interesting to learn more about Rasputin, who was not at all the sort of person I expected.

I highly recommend this book and others by this writer.


January 17, 2009

Rex by Cathleen Lewis

I started reading Rex by Cathleen Lewis a couple of days ago and had a hard time putting it down to do my other reading. I had no idea I would enjoy it as much as I did.

Cathleen Lewis is a gifted writer and has a wonderful story to tell, the story of her son, Rex. I felt along with her as she agonized over the realizations that her son not only was blind, but autistic. She and the team of specialists at his preschool for the blind struggled to get him to eat, to engage, and to walk. He was incredibly sensitive to every noise, every touch, yet this was all different when you put him behind a keyboard. There he was free to be himself, to express himself musically, playing songs from the Beatles to Bach. Through the help of several music teachers, his incredible natural talent was encouraged as he was able to learn and play complicated pieces as well as transpose key and style, creating wonderful new pieces.

The story isn't merely Cathleen's journey with her son, but her journey towards God. Through the incredibly hard years, God was continually drawing her to Himself. This testimony only adds to what was already a beautiful and emotional story.

September 2, 2008

Giveaway: After the Fire by Robin Gaby Fisher

I got an advanced reading copy of After the Fire for review and wasn't sure what to think until I opened it. I'd never be anything but honest, but you never know with new books if you have a winner or a loser.

After the Fire is definitely a winner. Robin Gaby Fisher tells the true story of the Seton Hall University fire that killed 3 and injured 58 others. She focuses primarily one two of survivors with the worst burns: Shawn and Alvaro. She walks you through their struggles to live and their families' struggles to relate to them afterwards. In the end, this book is about the beautiful friendship between the two young freshmen.

The only problem I found with this book is that a couple of the story lines were a little choppy: the story of the burn unit staff and the story about the fire investigator. I think it might have been better to leave this out and focus exclusively on those that had regular interactions with the two men, and the men themselves.

I recommend this book, especially if you would like to learn more about what it would be like to be a burn victim or have someone you love become a burn victim. This story makes me very thankful to God that I nor my roommate were hurt in our own fire last year. It also highlights the importance of knowing what to do in case of fire.

This giveaway is closed. Comments will remain open for book discussion.

August 8, 2008

The Legacy of Sovereign Joy by John Piper

The Legacy of Sovereign Joy is the first in the Swans are Not Silent series, John Piper's series of biographies. Each contains short biographical summaries of three important people in church history.

The Legacy of Sovereign Joy covers the lives of Augustine, John Calvin, and Martin Luther. While I found many of the details of their lives fascinating and pertinent, I felt like this book was aimed at pastors, not laymen. I hadn't gotten that to be the intent from the back cover so that was surprising. Even though I'm in seminary, I was wanting more of a general introduction to their lives and what we can learn from them, not a detailed this-is-how-you-apply-this-lesson-to-your-pastoral-ministry kind of thing.

Regardless, I have the other 3 books in this series and will be reading them. They really do a great job of giving you a feel of these important characters in a short amount of time, as the whole book is only 150 pages.

June 27, 2008

Night, by Elie Wiesel


Night, by Elie Wiesel, it one of the most powerful books on the Holocaust that I have read to date. It's his story of the year he spent in the concentration camps that killed off his parents and sister, yet somehow he survived. It is important to note, however, that this is not a memoir. He is not the narrator of the book, it is a boy named Eliezer. Weisel tells his story through the eyes of Eliezer.

This book is sometimes uncomfortable to read since, as he puts it, he is describing "man's inhumanity to man." The scenes of starvation, cuelty, "selections" and senseless death are hard to get through. So why would I recommend it? It's hard to put into words, all I can say is, I think it is a must-read.

I love his writing style...it is simple yet you feel that you are right there with him in the concentration camps and box cars. You feel his pain, humiliation, guilt and hopelessness. And it is short, just over 100 pages, but yet you find yourself reading it slowly. No speed-reading here!

Overall, it is an excellent book, and excellent reminder of what has happened, how the world after that vowed to never let another genocide happen again, yet the world has turned it's back on people time and time again, most recently the people of Darfur.

This is actually the first in a trilogy, the other two are Dawn and Morning. I look forward to reading those, too.

May 14, 2008

Tramp for the Lord by Corrie Ten Boom

First off, I should say a word about the title. She's using the traditional understanding of the word "tramp" meaning a vagrant vagabond, not someone who sleeps around. Just thought that I should clarify.

I couldn't wait to read Tramp for the Lord. It's billed as the sequel to The Hiding Place, which was one of the best books I've read in a long time. I definitely had high hopes for this book.

But those hopes were set too high. This isn't a horrendous book, but it was a disappointment. It reads nothing like The Hiding Place. Instead of being one narrative, it is essentially a series of essays, with little flow between them. It appears that they were each written at separate times and then a third party came along and attempted to put the puzzle together, but wasn't quite sure what the puzzle was supposed to look like. Not only that, I found several things that Corrie Ten Boom was defending that I didn't agree with theologically.

While I still have great respect for her and all she went through and how she was able to serve God until the day she died, I just wouldn't recommend this book.

May 12, 2008

Black Dahlia

I've always been interested in the story of The Black Dahlia without actually knowing too much about it. This version was written by James Ellroy, who also wrote L.A Confidential. This book was also turned into a movie that did not do very well, for the following reason.

While this is a great book, those expecting a true crime novel or much biography concerning the Black Dahlia herself will be very disappointed. Ellroy probably should have chosen a different title in order to prevent this misunderstanding, but in truth no other title was really possible.

In this book Ellroy merged the character of his mother with the body of the Dahlia. The real Dahlia was not actually all that interesting except as a tragic victim, but his mother had led an extraordinary -and short- life that had haunted him to the degree that he needed to write about it somehow. Having grown up only three blocks from the scene of the murder, which happened when he was a baby, Ellroy's life was profoundly effected by this case. In this book he fulfills two purposes: to get his mother out of his system and to show the many ways in which the death of one simple girl had such an incredible impact on the Los Angeles of his time.

It is also written as a stereotypical detective novel, full of cigarettes and burnt coffee and insomnia. It is a very masculine book, in which women are either idolized or despised, colorful language abounds, and every physical movement is detailed complete with flying spittle and sweat and blood. Why men dwell so much on bodily fluids is beyond me.

It took a long time to get used to the language, which is heavily laced with profanity and the slang of the time. There is also quite a bit of graphic sex and violence. So this book is definitely not for everyone, but it was definitely a good read for me.

May 2, 2008

To The Golden Shore by Courtney Anderson

To the Golden Shore is the biography of Adoniram Judson, one of the first missionaries from the United States. Though he originally sets sail to India, he winds up spending his life in Burma, only coming back to the States once.

Unlike today, there wasn't a well-organized sending organization to put him through the process. Judson and his wife were pretty much on their own when making decisions on how to carry out their ministry. It would have been impossible to wait for a letter to get all the way to the US and an answer back before taking action. They must have felt quite alone. Besides that, they originally were unable to find a place to minister. The British government and the East India Trading Company who were in power were hostile to them as Americans, and the one place in that part of the world that wasn't controlled by the British, Burma, was controlled by a native despot that was hostile to all foreigners and other religions.

What I enjoyed the most about this book is the tale of his first wife, Nancy (several years after her death, he remarried, and then remarried again after the death of his second wife). There were several times when it was not possible for Adoniram to be with her and she was by herself, alone in a foreign land. She did translating work of her own as well, and though none of her children survived past infancy (one was stillborn, and the other two, Roger and Maria, died of tropical diseases at 1-year and 2-years respectively), she taught and raised several children as her own.

This is a long book, but I learned a lot. It has encouraged me that God is truly faithful, no matter what we go through!

March 30, 2008

Book Review: 90 Minutes in Heaven

90 Minutes in Heaven by Don Piper is a true story about the time he was in a car accident, died, went to heaven, and then returned to life on earth. I am always suspect with stories about near death experiences but had heard great reviews about this book. I was actually really excited to get to read it after my grandmother told me how great it was. Unfortunately, in the end, I was disappointed.

Based on the title, I expected the entire book to be about Don Piper's account of his time in heaven. Rather, only one chapter was dedicated to his time in heaven and the rest of the book deals with Don Piper's recovery after the auto accident.

While it was an inspiring story, hearing how Don Piper overcame his injuries and depression, I felt a lot of the information was just repeated in each chapter, just a little differently.

Description of the book:

As he is driving home from a minister's conference, Baptist minister Don Piper collides with a semi-truck that crosses into his lane. He is pronounced dead at the scene. For the next 90 minutes, Piper experiences heaven where he is greeted by those who had influenced him spiritually. He hears beautiful music and feels true peace. Back on earth, a passing minister who had also been at the conference is led to pray for Don even though he knows the man is dead. Piper miraculously comes back to life and the bliss of heaven is replaced by a long and painful recovery. For years Piper kept his heavenly experience to himself. Finally, however, friends and family convinced him to share his remarkable story.
I know a lot of people really enjoyed this book and were inspired by it, but I wasn't one of them.

February 1, 2008

Book Review: Twelve Extraordinary Women

This past summer, I read John MacArthur's Twelve Extraordinary Women as a part of a class at church. It's an easy, insightful read.

MacArthur details the lives of twelve women in the Bible and tells us what we can learn from them, including Eve, Sarah, and Mary, the mother of Jesus. He doesn't stop there, however, but also encourages application of what you are learning.

I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in learning more about the women in the Bible.
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