Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

"DRIVING WITH DEAD PEOPLE" by Monica Holloway



More than ten years ago, I heard about a memoir published with a similar subject, domestic violence, and I wanted to find out how the author and her sisters dealt with it for so long and why their mother didn’t know about it. But I didn’t read it. I think the story took place in Texas.
              Then I read part of this story, DRIVING WITH DEAD PEOPLE nine years ago or so in the memoir-writing workshop I was in with the author, so I knew it was published seven years ago. I wanted to read it but didn’t.
Why do I avoid difficult subjects? Come to think of it, I have a history of avoidance. For example, just before I left Japan in 1970 for the first time, I read a book about Japanese feminists’ struggles and was shocked to find that many Meiji women in kimono fought for women’s rights, and some went to jail. Many female authors died young in the Meiji era (1868-1916). I felt guilty because I knew I was a coward. Those women didn’t escape as I did, but they tackled the fundamental problem of our world. They’ve been on my mind.
Racism is another subject I didn’t know if I could ever challenge head on. At the bottom of my heart, I wanted to be the kind of person who does not walk away from problems that are in front of or around me.
So I read DRIVING WITH DEAD PEOPLE slowly. I enjoyed reading chapter by chapter for the culture was totally different from mine, growing up. For instance, no guns lay around our house or on the floor of any cars I rode on. I probably wouldn’t be able to truly understand the culture and all the issues.
 But I trusted the narrator for her adventurous mind, braveness, and sense of humor. She was the story.
I also read the reviews on Amazon about this book, and I thought some bad reviews meant most of us, including old me, were not ready to read the book. But, I believe, those readers benefited from the reading. If we encountered a strange situation in our lives or heard about one, we could possibly see another dimension to human nature because of the reading, so it might help us act on it.
Suicide is like racism, which adults teach children their prejudice. I was drawn to Wendy’s death. She appeared only briefly in the story but left a strong impression on me. After her death, the narrator tried to eulogize and honor her by setting up something memorable in a display case along the school hallway. Her teacher happens to pass by the hallway. He tells her to remove the display she was working on.
The teacher seems very cold. What will the narrator do or say next? Japanese teachers would say something comforting to her no matter what was the situation of her friend’s death. The narrator is a brave person but she doesn’t protest a word and obediently follows the teacher’s instruction. She wonders what the teacher meant by “epidemic.” We surely need to avoid the epidemic of suicide.
But Suicide is a death of a human. I think we can still honor our friends, without honoring suicide.
This story contains complex issues: domestic violence, female struggles, racism, and suicide. I believe they are all connected. I won’t write about the connection here to make this review short.

As all the good books, this book doesn’t lecture. The issues are global. The author of DRIVING WITH DEAD PEOPLE shows how it was from her viewpoint at the time she wrote. I honor her work because hers is not an easy task.  

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

A Journey Interrupted: Being Indian in Pakistan by Farzana Versey




It took three weeks to receive this book, but it was worth it. I was very excited to read and finished the book. I truly enjoyed it.


Through the scenes and narrative, I felt closer to the characters and situations although I didn’t even know any of the Pakistani writers or other well-known people in India and Pakistan. But, all the more, the narrator drew me into her world. This reading was truly special to me. Out of all the elements, politic, religion, history, travels, and personal accounts, I trusted the narrator’s wisdoms and sensitivity in language.

From this book, I learned many facts. First, I knew many Muslim people live in India, but I didn’t know more Muslims in India than in all of Pakistan. I thought most of the people I know probably didn’t know that. And I was even more surprised to find that 3 millions Hindu people live in Pakistan. I thought to myself, “What a simplistic imagination I used to have!” Second, Goa, India, was occupied by Portuguese until 1961. That wasn’t too long ago.

About the terms the narrator used, I thought them interesting, such as atheist Muslim or secular government because I thought governments are to operate independently away from religion. Obviously, I’ve been taking this kind of things for granted because I’m Japanese. So, reading this book, I started to understand the needs of such terms even though I understood the narrator was against labeling. It made me think.

About Urdu, I enjoyed reading dialogues. Even though I don’t know the language at all, I read each dialogue with much interest. I appreciated the narrator’s deep knowledge of the language and culture.

About honesty, the author/narrator’s voice seeped through, and I just loved when her honesty spilled humor. It was like Flannery O’Connor, my favorite American author. The narrator made me chuckle more than a dozen times, but I would give just two examples. On her first visit to Pakistan and about to be deported, her Pakistani driver says, “When you return home you can at least tell people you saw the best sight in Karachi.” Haven’t we all had such experience? Then, the narrator says, “I did not know what I had ‘seen’ since my back was turned to it.” I imagined the seriousness of her situation, a famous ancient site in Pakistan, and the driver’s concern for tourists, I started to giggle reading late at night. Second example, a fortune teller said to the narrator, “Men will cause you troubles.” She said, “You could tell this to any woman in any part of the world and she would agree.” Ha ha. I couldn’t agree more!

I learned a lot from this book and very satisfied with it.

 


Do you mark sentences and write comments on the book as you read?  I do especially the book I really enjoy.   This book turned very used looking already.