Saturday, November 30, 2013

What i'm Reading: My Backyard Jungle

For my birthday this year, a friend gave me the book "My Backyard Jungle" by James Barilla.  My husband and I bought a home about a year ago with a large backyard.  We are in the process of making it a bird paradise, a garden and making it ours.  This book and the description seem to be about this very thing, making your backyard co-habitable with wildlife.  However, this book was not at all what I expected.  And probably not what my friend expected when she bought this for me.  You can see more about our adventure in taming a yard for ourselves and the birds (but not the squirrels) here.  To be honest, I was disappointed with the way this book was marketed.  I  really was looking forward to a book that was going to give me tips and side notes and a to do and don't list for my own little "jungle".  The fact that Barilla currently resides in my current city was perfect, we'd have the same wildlife to work with!

However, the disappointment comes because this book doesn't  even go into specifics of turning your backyard into a jungle.  Besides a funny tale about his battle with squirrels and rats, there's really nothing that connects his story with my wishes for our backyard.    I was expecting something like Barbara Kingslover's "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle"--a diary of this man and his family's adventures turning the backyard into a wildlife area.  I was hoping to be inspired!!

Instead you get Barilla's adventures discovering how the urban and the wild collide, how the domestic and untame intersect, and how we as people are connected and disconnected from the animal kingdom.  He explores how humanity simultaneously longs for closeness to our animal friends but also fearfully disrupts the natural order of things in our quest be near (or far) from nature.

So during the second chapter when this guy goes on an adventure to Florida to look at monkeys (who knew, right?!), I wondered where this was going.  But the Barilla's writing style, subtle humor, gritty but not overly "TMI" descriptions, kept me interested. The stories of Brazil, India, and elsewhere were fascinating.  And by the end of the book I was only a little bit disappointed I didn't learn something about how to make my backyard more habitable with animals.  In the end,  Barilla was getting at something bigger than wanting birds on your backyard.  He embarks on a quest to find out how we impact wildlife for the better and worse, but does so without ever being preachy.

There's also a real "human" aspect to this "nature book" in the relationships he forms with people along the way--the guides, the "natives", the scientists, and the everyday Joes.  Not only are we connected to the wildlife we encounter everyday big and small, but we are also connected with our fellow man all across the world.

It also reads very quickly, so I would recommend it to anyone who'd like to spend a weekend reading a jonfiction book about urbanization and wildlife.

Monday, November 11, 2013

What I'm reading--Hard Times

Whenever it starts to cool off, I get the urge to read Dickens.  There is nothing in this world I love more than opening up one of my Nonesuch Dickens Copies (check them out here: http://nonesuchdickens.com/ ) by a roaring fire with a cup of hot Earl Grey Tea and some Chopin Nocturnes on the record player.  I know, I know...I sound all fancy. 

There is something about the heaviness of these Nonesuch Dickens volumes and the grittiness of these stories that remind me of winter.  

So this year I decided to read Hard Times.  It's not quite as long as many of Dickens' famous works, and though it is not my favorite and doesn't have the best of those great Dicken's characters, it is still a great book and a poignant read.

Stephen Blackpool is our saddest tale of the story--dear Lord, his starlight prayer after being pulled from the pit is the reason why I love Dickens.  It's like Jo's prayer in Bleak House.  If you don't cry, you need to go talk to Ebeneezer Scrooge for a moment or two...

Louisa's story is heartbreaking as well, but at least with Louisa she can find rest and resurgence back in her home with her family, her father and dear Sissy Jupe.

Ultimately, Hard Times is a story about why we need more than facts, figures and work in our lives.  Important all these things are, yes, but if left alone, they suck life out of people.  Love, affection, sympathy, charity and imagination: all these make up the life that is worth living.



A few business matters: I've had some trouble lately keeping up with the blog being weekly and with keeping the blog theme into the week it's supposed to go with.  So I'm going to do away with the weekly themes.  I'll still try to mix it up with food, nature, stuff I've done/want to do, and things I'm reading but without the limitations of having to do these themes in a certain week and without the pressure of having to produce a blog post weekly.  I just don't have that much time--and going into the holiday season (and my work busy season) I do not need that kind of pressure!

'Til next time!