CHECK IT OUT
- Share via
In a digitally driven age, when many are turned off by anything they
can’t turn on, 198 book lovers older than 18 participated in the Newport
Beach Public Library’s 2001 adult summer reading program. Whether
motivated by the sheer joy of reading, the opportunity to win prizes and
be a role model for their children, or the chance to discuss books with
others, they enjoyed virtual adventure, fiction, biographies and
self-improvement selections.
From Michelle Natan comes a recommendation for “Back Roads,” an
Oprah’s Book Club pick narrated by a 19-year-old struggling to raise his
siblings after Mom goes to jail for Dad’s murder. “Tawni O’Dell’s first
novel is witty, poetic and compelling . . . one of the best I’ve read,”
Natan writes.
For lighter diversion, Judy Booth suggests “Julie and Romeo,” Jeanne
Ray’s debut novel about rival families in the florist business. In this
contemporary twist on the Shakespeare-inspired tale, the hero and heroine
are professional adults in their 60s who ignite family enmities when they
start seeing each other romantically.
It’s real life that inspires Melinda and Robert Blanchard’s “A Trip to
the Beach,” a favorite of Gloria Noelke. Of the couple’s story about
leaving Vermont to open a restaurant in the Caribbean, Noelke says,
“Reading this book was like going on vacation.”
For more stimulating armchair escapism, Chris Cramer suggests “Two For
the Summit,” one of the newer adventure-as-personal-milestone sagas on
library shelves. What sets Geoffrey Norman’s tale apart is insight
gleaned from celebrating his 50th birthday by scaling a 14,000-foot peak with his 15-year-old daughter. “Having teenagers myself, I wasn’t sure
which was going to be the bigger challenge: climbing the Grand Teton or
raising his daughter,” Cramer reflects.
Relationships with friends, family and oneself also form the core of
Anna Quindlen’s “A Short Guide to a Happy Life.” For Janet Lochead, “this
short book was truly a treasure: an instructional guide written in
lyrical prose, that touched my heart deeply.”
A plethora of tips for finding gateways into the heart are in “Lessons
in Love.”
“Guy Corneau helps us discard outdated methods of relating, dictated
by outside pressures from religion, economics, society and family,”
writes Grace Wickersham. “He offers creative solutions for dealing with
change that will help us move toward personal fulfillment.”
The approach to self-improvement is holistic in “The Food-Mood-Body
Connection,” covering vitamin deficiencies, food allergies, hormonal
imbalances and environmental factors. Of this bestseller, Ruth McBain
observes, “Health and fitness expert Gary Null frequently lectures on PBS
and makes it all sound very plausible.”
Reviews by these and other adult summer reading program participants
are published in “Great Reading from Make Space for Books,” due soon at
all Newport Beach public libraries.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at o7
https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.f7
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.