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Showing posts from April, 2025

The Story of a Heart by Rachel Clarke

Sam Bush gave me this book for Christmas-- I believe it was a blind recommendation from a bookstore employee-- and I'm grateful to them both for a memorable read. Written by a doctor, this book pieces together the story of a heart transplant from one child to another. It introduces readers to the families, the tragedies, the hospital stays, the medical challenges, and the sweeping developments in medicine that culminated in a few tense hours in an operating room, saving one life by sharing another.  While parts of this book are all history and do well explaining complex medical procedures in lay person's terms, the heart of this book is very human. Clarke always brings us back to the two kids involved, one donor and one recipient. She includes their parents and siblings and the very hard truth at the heart of transplant medicine; part of one person's body goes into another and in a heart transplant, this means one person is dead. When both the donor and the recipient are ch...

Dogland by Tommy Tomlinson

Barb and Kooch gave this book to Josh and I for Christmas because we love dogs now. Dogland is less about dogs in general and more about the very specific dog-centered world of dog shows. It's accessible, funny, does not take itself too seriously, and a fun read. It's also meaningful because it affirmed to me one of the things I work hard to hold true as I continue with my dog-loving life: there are many ways to love a dog and a good life for a dog can mean many different things and look many different ways.  Tomlinson is an outsider to dog shows and writes the book for an audience of other outsiders: we get a history, vocabulary 101, and some of the more outrageous (for an outsider) aspects of dog shows (like sperm collection) are described with humor and lightheartedness. There are plenty of serious moments, too, and the passages that stick with me include Tomlinson reminiscing about late nights with his own beloved dog, his critique of "breed standards" that dock a...

An American Marriage by Tayari Jones

 I read this whole book in one weekend which should be a testament to it's captivating plot and easy to care about characters. The story alternates from different characters' points of view and every character is one to root for. With a few minor exceptions, each character presents their best self to the reader, leaving the reader unclear who is right and wrong and unsure what should or will happen next. This, of course, is the point: life is messy and so is this story.  I've heard criticism of this book that it skips over too much; the story does take place over many years and there are important events we only learn about when the characters refer back to them. This was not a flaw in my experience of reading it. Instead, I read it as a sign of a talented writer. We move effortlessly through different tenses, points of view, and time frames. We sit with characters in real time and also listen as they reminisce.  A compelling story deserves skillful writing and this is to...