Plain words, uncommon sense

Month: June 2025

The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride | Book Review

The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store opens with a mystery that quietly disappears into the background of the story. We are told upfront that workers in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, digging the foundation for a new housing development, have uncovered a skeleton. But the one person who may know anything about it disappears after being questioned by police. For the most part, this is inconsequential as the story skips back in time to the early days of the Jewish and Black residents who shared their lives on Chicken Hill, the neighbourhood adjacent to the wealthier, white part of Pottstown.

This is a lively, winding tale of Chona and Moshe, who own the grocery store, and their kindness towards their neighbours. It’s a story of race, religion and history, with an eclectic mix of characters. Addie and Nate, a Black couple, are Chona’s closest friends. Dodo is their nephew, who Chona hides from the authorities who want to send him to a special school for the deaf (but it’s really a dreadful asylum) . There’s also Malachi the dancer, Fatty, and Big Soap (an Italian immigrant who’s friends with Fatty), Rusty, Irv and Marv the Jewish Lithuanian shoemaker twins, and Doc Roberts whose deep-seated racism affects them all.

The general idea of America as a melting pot is challenged throughout the novel. One of the musicians speaking to Moshe, who owns the grocery but also a theatre, has this to say when Moshe says, “I didn’t know there were so many Spanish people around here.”

Mario smiled. “To you, they’re Spanish. To me, they’re Puerto Rican, Dominican, Panamanian, Cuban, Ecuadorian, Mexican, Africano, Afro-Cubano. A lot of different things. A lot of different sounds mixed together.”

The backstories of these Pottstown residents are presented in clever ways—and you understand the struggles between immigrant communities since the German Jews have different values than the Romanian, Hungarian, or Polish Jews; and the Blacks from the South likewise have different experiences and practices—but the overarching story is that of Chona and how she sees the good in people and pushes past their emotional barriers. She helps when others turn away, and when injustice is done to her, the community steps up.

The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah | Book Review

Kristin Hannah is the author of The Women, which I really enjoyed. The writing here is also exceptional. The Nightingale is the story of the Rossignol sisters who struggle to survive in France during the German occupation in WWII.

Vianne is the elder sister, married, and with a young daughter. Her husband is a prisoner of war and she has a German officer billeted in her home. Not by choice.

Isabelle is the defiant younger sister whose ideals lead her to play a key role in the Resistance. Rossignol means nighingale and she is the Nightingale, a sought after thorn in the side of the Germans. The Nightingale is helping Allied pilots, shot down in France, escape over the Pyrenees.

One sister has everything to lose and the other has nothing to lose. The difference drives them apart, but they each risk their lives for the other.

Having just been to Northern France to the D-Day beaches and through the towns south of there that were occupied, The Nightingale illuminated my experience of those bombed out villages and the stories of resistance that remain at the heart of French culture.

This is a great audiobook if you want to hear the pronunciation of the French villages and character names.

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green | Book Review

Hank Green — co-creator of Crash Course, Vlogborhters, and SciShow, plus brother to John Green — has written a funny and poignant story about two 20-somethings who stumble into fame.

April May is coming home from work, late one night, and stumbles across a giant sculpture. It’s New York. Things like that happen. But this installation captivates her. It’s a 10-foot-tall Transformer style figure in a suit of armour. April convinces her friend Andy to meet her at the sculpture with his video camera, and they film April introducing “Carl” and upload it to video.

April has a rude awakening the next day when she learns that “Carls” have appeared around the world and every news media wants to interview her and Andy. The news is spreading so quickly that it’s tricky to deal with their new celebrity. But, Andy’s dad is a lawyer and since the news channels have used their video without permission, he is getting them, not only coverage, but cash. A lot of cash.

The novel is about the pressure April and Andy (although mostly April) have to deal with, the way it changes how they interact with other friends, and how they move through the world and make money. It’s a great social commentary on the vilification and adoration that influencers face.

Friendships are formed and lost. Great puzzles are solved. Good intentions devolve. An Absolutely Remarkable Thing is a great novel and a cautionary tale.

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