Friday, April 15, 2016

Lab Girl by Hope Jahren


This is the story that asks the question, “Can this girl, from a little mining town in the west, find happiness as the wife a wealthy and titled Englishman, Lord Henry Winthrop?”

Wrong story.  This story tells the tale of a little girl from Lake Woebegon, who moves away from the land of Norwegian bachelor farmers, to seek fame and fortune as a scientist in a Berkeley biology laboratory. 

This is a brilliantly inspirational book for any budding, young scientist.  In a quietly unassuming way, Hope interweaves her memoir (how she got there), with what being a scientist really is really all about, and this, interspersed with those personal perspectives, she tells us the story of earth-based plant life on this planet. 

The tri-theme is an accepted approach these days for authors.  It’s done in order to be considered by the broadest of readership markets.  In Hope’s case, and she’s done a great job of this, she’s blended the memoir category by every fifth chapter or so, including an early childhood remembrance of her mother or father.  She’s captured the novel segment, by mixing in her philosophical musings on what it takes to be a scientist [extreme devotion and boringly hard work], along with her predictably non-sex life, almost monastic life-style.  But getting back to inspirational, she paints this monastic picture akin to some sort of Nun’s biography, devoted to a passionate cause, a greater cause, and one, in the end, which supersedes thoughts of a big kitchen, lots of rug rats, the PTA and a bridge club.

I’ve been focused this past year, on books that I can strongly recommend for Sonoma County teens.  These have generally been for younger teens.  This is a book I recommend for middle to older teens.  The author, Hope, wrote it to inspire girls, but everything she says is equally relevant to boys, some of whom likewise feel alone, different, and more thoughtful than the others.  This is for any teen who is interested in learning.  It’s for those who recognize that they are passionate about a subject.

Doesn’t matter what the subject is, the subject will change over time.  If the passion to learn is burning, it will survive the wanting and getting more education.  This could lead possibly to a career in science, or the arts, or who knows, politics.

Das LavendelZimmer by Nina george


I was hooked once the author’s protagonist recommended, “The Elegance of the Hedgehog”.  This took place ten pages into the story, after the book seller is introduced to us.  Not a normal bookseller at all.  He has converted a river barge into an “Apothocary Library” on the River Seine, in the middle of Paris.  His homeopathic apothecary has the cures for modern life’s travails

A cast of loveable characters is quickly added to the ship, which hasn’t moved away from the dock in twenty years.  That fact introduced as a hint that the reader would soon be joining the crew in a long journey of literary exploration. 


 
We got hints early on that while the bookstore proprietor was possessed of the unique ability at “transperception”, this did not apply to his own problems, which seemed to revolve around a woman.
 

I need say no more.

It’s a little schmaltzy, but that goes without saying for any romantic comedy.  Just like a stage play from the 1920’s, by the end, after many zany adventures, all the characters pair up, and live happily ever after.