Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade—Historical Fiction about Jessie Carson

Miss Morgan’s Book Brigade  

By Janet Skeslien Charles

Published 2024

Read Nov 2024

This book came on this reader’s reading list via a book discussion group at a local library.  This reader read the entire 486 pages over a three-day period—clearly it was engaging.

The book primarily is set in 1918 and is a fictionalized account of Jessie Carson, a librarian who joined the American Committee for Devasted France (French name abbreviated CARD) in 1918 and brought books and libraries to an area in France very near the front of the war.  The CARD work was initiated by and overseen by Anne Morgan, daughter of financier J.P. Morgan and his second wife, Fanny.   Readers learn about the CARDs, as members of the committee call themselves and their work to support the local civilians whose villages have been nearly destroyed.  They also play a role in evacuating these folks when the front moves towards them again. 

There is a second narrative line set in 1987 and appears to be a purely fictional account of Wendy Peterson who works in the Remembrance department at the New York Public Library while attending a graduate workshop on writing.  Over the course of the book, she moves from discovery of Jessie Carson and the CARDs as part of her assignment to prepare electronic scans of original documents to committing to write their story.  Of course there is a love story in this narrative.

This reader was midway through the book before confirming that Jessie Carson was a real historical figure whose story was being fictionalized and not someone who was a fictional character who worked with the CARDS and observed their actions.  The latter is this reader’s preferred approach which is exemplified in Dreamers of the Day.  While I enjoyed the concept of a “private library of the mind” that the Jessie character uses to help her through challenges—-remembering favorite phrases from various books, this reader does not favor the approach of making up such thoughts nor telling the reader of her thoughts of intimacy with the presumed fictional character, Tom.  Certainly, this brings the historical figure to life for the reader and the literary phrases are enjoyable for readers, lack of proof of this particular “life” for this historical figure grates this reader, but certainly not all readers. 

The author provides in her twenty-page Author’s Note section biographical sketches of each of the actual historical figures she fictionalizes.  She also describes how she created characters that are not real historical figures but were suggested by actual historical figures.  This was much appreciated by this reader. 

This reader recommends this book to learn about the heroic efforts of the CARDs to support French victims of the war, of its creator Anne Morgan, and of Jessie Carson’s heroic efforts to bring reading back into their lives and especially to overcome the then view of how libraries should be run and for whom.  Jessie Carson certainly revolutionized libraries in France through her work as a CARD and her subsequent work in Paris to establish new libraries and new library education programs.  This reader is much more informed about these significant figures.  This reader only adds the caution that it is a fictionalized account of Jessie Carson and several other historical figures.  However, given the apparently very limited primary records about her (in contrast to the personal correspondence available for Gertrude Bell:  Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations) it may be difficult to provide any account of her beyond that provided at the end of the book and this fictionalized account is more engaging reading.

Clear–Concise and Impactful

Clear

By Carys Davies

Published 2024

Read Nov 2024

Although this is the 3rd book published by this author, Clear is the first one for this reader. 

Davies sets the story in 1843, the year of the Great Disruption in the Scottish Church and a year in which the Clearance of the Scottish Highlands and the Shetland Islands, both of which are important elements of the story. 

Davies’ language is very economical—this reader was reminded of Claire Keegan in this regard.  Her story construction slowly reveals information about the three main characters (John Ferguson, Ivar, and Mary Ferguson).  Using a shifting Point of View, each character tells the reader of their past, their hopes and fears, and their challenges.

We first meet John Ferguson when he is swimming from a boat to a shore.  Eventually we learn that he is a minister in the Scottish State Church who has joined about 450 of his fellow ministers in the Great Disruption of of Scottish Church to break away from the state church to form the Free Church of Scotland.  A significant consequence of this decision is loss of his salary as well as his home and church building for his congregation.  To make ends meet temporarily, he has taken a job to journey to a distant island somewhere between the Shetland Islands and Norway to survey the property of a landowner and move the sole resident off the property (part of the Clearance when landowners displaced tenants on their property to replace them with a sheep farm).  The day after he survives the swim from the boat to the shore, he slips and falls on rocks while still naked after taking a bath in the sea and is struck injured and unconscious.

We meet Ivar, the sole resident on the property.  His father and brothers were lost many years ago in an accident at sea.  His mother and brother’s wife left some years ago to find a better life.  He remained and has eked out an existence with a now blind cow, some chickens, and a garden.  He has paid rent to the landowner from bird feathers he collects, from knitted goods he makes, and from crops he works at growing.  He hasn’t seen the landowner or rent collector for 3 years, which is good as he’s been ill and his ability to produce anything of worth has greatly diminished. 

Ivar finds John Ferguson unconscious and takes him to his small abode where he tends to his wounds and hopes he’ll recover.  John Ferguson does regain consciousness and finds himself in a bit of a pickle.  This kind man is nursing him to health (he has much recovering left to do) and is providing him food and shelter despite clearly having little for himself—how can he tell him what he’s come to do.  An additional and huge complication is that Ivar speaks only Norn, a language that has since essentially died out. 

As part of the fall John Ferguson lost his “papers” including his translation of the gospels into Scottish—a mission he’s been working on for many years.  The paper remains, but the words have disappeared after their bath in the sea.  He uses this paper to write down words of Norn that Ivar is teaching him.  After a few weeks, this dictionary has reached 55 words (actual Norn translations although with Ferguson’s spelling) and the two men have formed a significant bond despite their lack of language.

Meanwhile, Mary Furguson decides she needs to fetch her husband as she becomes increasingly convinced that he’s not fully up to this rude task.  While she’s travelling, we learn about her life, her courtship with John Furguson, and her life with him. 

This reader won’t provide more details about John Ferguson’s stay on the island with Ivar or Mary’s arrival on the island.  In a spare 185 pages Davies packs quite a number of significant events and the various characters’ take on them.  In addition, her descriptions of the island enabled this reader to feel the mist, see the fog, see the fields, feel the cold water through which John Ferguson and later Mary Ferguson travel from the ship to the island.  The environment of the island, both the natural surroundings and Ivar’s home, are vividly presented.

Themes of loneliness, love, perseverance, faith, pursuit of a calling are all part of this slender volume.  The ending has an unexpected twist which this reader won’t reveal.  This reader found it to provide a hopeful ending considering the task John Ferguson has been employed to accomplish.

Davies provided this reader incentive to learn more about the Great Disruption and the Clearance as well as a desire to read her other books and to look forward to future ones.   

Machines Like Me–Speculative Fiction from McEwan

Machines Like Me

By Ian McEwan

Published 2019

Read July 2024

This reader has only read one Ian McEwan novel previously: Atonement.  This reader was underwhelmed by that book and irritated at the author for a device he used.  Thus, this reader picked up Machine Like Me with some hesitation but it’s on this reader’s book club’s schedule, and this reader does enjoy speculative fiction and some sci-fi so this reader was ready to be wowed by this apparently highly literary author.

The author sets the book in London in an alternate 1982.  Some reviewers have speculate this year was chosen so that Alan Turing could be an important character if he hadn’t been punished for his sexuality.  Alternate aspects of this 1982: self-driving cars are common, Margaret Thatcher is practically in hiding for losing the war over the Falkland Islands, and other changes.  It seemed to this reader the author may have enjoyed this aspect of the novel more than his characters. 

Charlie Friend is the narrator of the story.  He is unemployed and makes enough money to pay the rent by day-trading stocks.  He invests all his inheritance from his mother, some 86,000 pounds, on one of 12 Adams that Turing and his company have released into the market. (All 13 Eves were purchased ahead of Charlie’s purchase.)  He has a crush on his upstairs neighbor, Miranda, who is ten years younger than Charlie and a doctoral student of social history.  She has different views on what sex does or doesn’t mean compared with Charlie and she carelessly falls into a relationship with Charlie seemingly because there isn’t much reason not to do so.

Charlie has big dreams of using his Adam to build a life with Miranda.  He foists 50% of the responsibility for creating Adam’s personality of Miranda without anticipating how this could possibly go wrong.  But lack of thinking about decisions is par for the course for Charlie—an example being spending the entire inheritance on Adam when he barely makes his rent.

Whether planned or not, Adam is the most interesting character in the book.  He has access to the entire internet in his head.  He uses it to learn how to write haikus, to warn Charlie about Miranda’s past, etc. 

McEwan tries to focus us on some big philosophical questions which are interesting—what makes a human “human”, can a robot love like a human (yes he can have sex but what about the emotional aspects of love) for starters.  Unfortunately for this reader, the plot involving Miranda’s past and the plot involving her desire to rescue a young boy from his terrible parents don’t enable these questions to be explored as much as the author may think they do.  

This reader enjoys speculative fiction and sci-fi, especially when they deal with broader philosophical questions.  The authors of the best of these books don’t try to run away from the genre and say they what they write is literary fiction, not that sci-fi stuff.  That attitude dismisses some great books unnecessarily and unfortunately.  This author has experience an outcome of this trashing—needing to justify why serious book discussions can be had for speculative fiction and science fiction.   This reader replies:    Rubbish!

Reasons that this reader participates in three book discussion groups include being exposed to books that wouldn’t come onto her reading list otherwise altering this reader’s perception of books.  This reader looks forward to discussion of this book; will her views of this book be altered and how?

Heaven and Earth Grocery Store–Worth Being Patient

Heaven and Earth Grocery Store

By James McBride

Published 2023

Read May 2024

McBride’s book starts with the discovery of a body in an old well in 1972 near Pottstown, PA.  Little remains with the skeleton.

But we don’t hear anything about this situation for most of the book.  Instead, McBride takes us back to about 1925 and introduces us to Moshe Ludlow, a Jewish immigrant from Romania, who runs a theatre and dance hall in Pottstown that books musical acts catering to Jewish people.  He meets Chona, the daughter of a Jewish grocer on Chicken Hill, a neighborhood of Pottstown where Blacks and European immigrants dwell.  They fall in love, marry, and live upstairs from the grocery store which Chona inherits from her father.   Mosha expands his business to cater as well to the Black population while Chona runs the grocery store.  Moshe’s decision to expand his business causes some concern in the town.  Chona’s store doesn’t make a profit as she gives credit to the residents of Chicken Hill who need the help, and she rarely receives payment back.  Mosha wants to move down the hill, closer to downtown and closer to many Jews who have moved there but Chona will have nothing of it, so they stay.

As we read further, we are introduced to a whole variety of characters from Pottstown and Chicken Hill—Black, white, and Jewish-all of whom are well developed with strong points and flaws.   Impatient readers may find this frustrating as it’s not clear what these characters have to do with the main story which we might think is about Moshe and Chona.  But we’re told patience is a virtue and it certainly pays off in this book.  The connections between complicated web of multiple stories and their various characters slowly becomes clear when Nate, a Black man who often works for Moshe and whom isn’t originally from the area asks Moshe to hide Dodo, a boy who was hurt in an accident which left him nearly deaf and dumb.  Dodo is being pursued by the state to be taken to an institution for the feeble minded and disabled (it actually existed in the area for 79 years and closed in 1987).   By the end of the book we understand the connections, see some resolution of the various stories and have an answer about the identity of the skeleton and how it came to be there. 

 This is an absolutely delightful book.  Be patient!  Let yourself seep into the world McBride’s characters live. Enjoy the vibrant characters McBride creates.  Experience various prejudices that plague various parts of the community and the distrust each group tends to have for the others.    You will be hooked by this complicated community and likely, like this reader, you won’t quickly leave it.