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Tag Archives: spirituality

H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald

29 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in Biography, Non-fiction

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Tags

grief, hawks, spirituality

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Suddenly Helen’s world caves. She is numb with grief.  Not a stranger to the world of falconry, Helen has raised small birds of prey.  But to honor her deep loss, she raises the stakes.  She decides to immerse herself in the training of a goshawk  – one of the fiercest and largest birds of prey.  Enter a world most of us know little about.  An extraordinary execution of nature writing and memoir that will have you sitting on the edge of your chair and holding your breath!

“To read Helen Macdonald’s new memoir is to have every cell of your body awake and alive.” —Robin Young, Here and Now

“In this profoundly inquiring and wholly enrapturing memoir, Macdonald exquisitely and unforgettably entwines misery and astonishment, elegy and natural history, human and hawk.” —Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)

“Breathtaking . . . Helen Macdonald renders an indelible impression of a raptor’s fierce essence—and her own—with words that mimic feathers, so impossibly pretty we don’t notice their astonishing engineering.” —Vicki Constantine Croke, New York Times Book Review (cover review)

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My Accidental Jihad: a Love Story by Krista Bremer

01 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in Biography, Non-fiction, Travel

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faith, feminism, interethnic marriage, Libya, Muslim, North Carolina, spirituality, surfer girl

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I just finished a good 2014 memoir about an American woman who falls in love, marries, and raises a family with a Libyan man.  I found it interesting to read about their cross-cultural marriage and how they blended their beliefs and traditions together. I was also touched by how the relationship challenged Bremer’s ideas on feminism and spirituality. Sometimes your life turns out very different from what you imagined it would be!

“My Accidental Jihad is a bold piece of writing (and thinking) by an incredibly brave woman.” —Elizabeth Gilbert, author of The Signature of All Things

“Told with rare honesty, My Accidental Jihad is the story of Krista Bremer’s lifelong quest for insight and understanding, a search that leads her out of the Pacific surf to journalism school in North Carolina and through the complex challenges and unexpected joys of a cross-cultural marriage and family. This book is a powerfully personal account of the courage and hard work necessary to open one’s heart and keep it that way.” —Maggie Shipstead, author of Seating Arrangements

“A moving, lyrical memoir about how an American essayist fell in love with a Libyan-born Muslim man and learned to embrace the life she made with him. Sun associate publisher Bremer was a wayward former California surfer girl just starting to build her life in North Carolina when she met Ismail. He was 15 years older than she and different from her in almost every possible way. Yet his gentle simplicity made her feel as though she could “finally exhale…and [open] up to [herself]” in ways she had not been able to with anyone else.  When she unexpectedly became pregnant not long after they met, she faced a difficult choice: terminate the pregnancy and continue her pursuit of a promising career in journalism or keep the baby and accept Ismail’s heartfelt offer of marriage. Unable to resist the mysterious allure of the future she “never intended—or even knew how much [she] wanted,” Bremer chose to “stitch [their] mismatched lives together to make a family.” Among the many challenges she encountered was coming to terms with Ismail’s loving but traditionalist family in Tripoli. To them, she was a woman “weighed down by so much individualism, impatience, and desire.” Yet through her visits with them, she also learned to temper the Western individualism she came to realize had been the source of the “creeping despair that comes from doggedly chasing the elusive dream that women can be everything at once.” As she gradually came to accept a different way of living—and eventually, worshipping—in middle-class America, Bremer grew to appreciate Ismail, her extended family and the struggle they brought into her life more than she even imagined possible. A sweet and rewarding journey of a book.”  From Kirkus Reviews

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