30 August 2013

18 August 2013

Y-Dine @ Flemings

It has been said before, but again .....lovely and literary!

16 August 2013

September Selection

First Family

(click for his website)
first-family

Following the instant #1 New York Times bestsellers Split Second, Hour Game, and Simple Genius, Sean King and Michelle Maxwell return in David Baldacci's most heart-pounding thriller to date...

 A daring kidnapping turns a children’s birthday party at Camp David, the presidential retreat, into a national security nightmare.
Former Secret Service agents turned private investigators Sean King and Michelle Maxwell don’t want to get involved. But years ago Sean saved the First Lady’s husband, then a senator, from political disaster. Now the president’s wife presses Sean and Michelle into a desperate search to rescue a kidnapped child. With Michelle still battling her own demons, the two are pushed to the limit, with forces aligned on all sides against them – and the line between friend and foe impossible to define…or defend.

 Baldacci's first novel, Absolute Power, tells the story of a fictional American President and his Secret Service agents who are willing to commit murder in order to cover up the accidental death of a woman with whom the President was having an affair. It was made into a film, Absolute Power (1997), starring Clint Eastwood and Gene Hackman.
In addition to writing novels, Baldacci wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of his novel Wish You Well; the movie was shot on location in southwest Virginia in the fall of 2012 with Academy Award winner Ellen Burstyn, Josh Lucas, and Mackenzie Foy in the lead roles. Baldacci is a consulting producer on King & Maxwell, a TNT television series based on his characters Sean King and Michelle Maxwell.

(Two book club members highly recommend his Camel Club series! Spell binding read!)

12 August 2013

BBC News Flash 7 August 2013



Henrietta Lacks: Family win recognition for immortal cells



1940s photo made available by the family shows Henrietta LacksHer story was made famous by 2010 best-seller The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks



The family of a US woman whose cells revolutionised medical research have been granted a say over how they are used, six decades after her death.

Go to the site for the full story:
 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23611189

Good catch Kelly P - thanks!

07 August 2013

The coolest, smartest book clubbers in town!
(Show this to your friend who thinks we are old gray-haired ladies!) 


Comments from our host Roz:

 "Man's inhumanity to man...around  forever, sadly.  Casual antisemitism of the German middle class in the 1930's is transformed into state-sponsored persecution.   What would you do? Would you be complacent?  Show humaneness?  Have moral commitment to become actively engaged and try to save some of those who are being persecuted?  Sigrid Schroder made a choice.    

(vocabulary to note)                                                                                
MISCHLING-less than 100 percent Aryan offspring. 
CATCHER-Jews working for the Gestapo. Who turned-in other Jews, for benefits and privileges. 
U-BOATS-Jews who have submerged beneath the surface of the city's daily life."                                  
            A good read about moral responsibility!  ROZ


Comments from Kelly P - always insightful:

"The beginning of the book was slow but I felt the plot picked up about halfway through. The story and setting were very interesting and I appreciatedseeing WWII through German citizens' eyes. We read that the author wanted to provoke conversation and the "what would I do?" question.
I believe he succeeded in that and I think our group would agree. It was interesting to hear our members' thoughts on that topic!

My biggest problem with the book was with the characters. My favorite books have well developed characters, but in this book, I had trouble connecting with any of them. I wanted to love Sigret and feel close to her, but I never did. Her actions were admirable and thought-provoking, but I would have liked to know more about what she was thinking that led her to make the very difficult decisions she made throughout the book. 
All in all, a good read and discussion."


Many thanks to our virtual book club member Robynne for her comments!

 "I thought of the "what would you do if" with a patient today, who had a Sigrid of sorts in her life. Basically, it was an angel father-figure neighbor, who took her out of an abusive situation as a teen and let her come live with him. Had he not "done the right" thing, her poor spirit might have been crushed. So we have examples of this in our lives, too."