Saturday, 24 September 2022

Sutra of the Pearl

 by Lee Kaiser

This is another book I bought on impulse at Chapters.  It is supposed to be by a local author but the bio is very brief.  I think the book is self-published.

At first I didn't think much of the book but by the end I felt that maybe I should read it again.

Page 193 "Do you know a pearl starts as a parasite?  Over time these foul innards inside the oyster release a protective coating around the poison.  That becomes the pearl.  If nature can create the strength and purity of a pearl from such ugliness , why not believe that people can change no matter how far they've strayed..

At first I didn't like the book.  The main character, Julie was a bit of a hysterical, dependent person. The first sentence in the books is "Julia Paglia was a crackerjack of a liar, just like her mother".

The book seemed a bit disjointed at first.  Julia travels the world as a travel writer.  Her goal is to be published in National Geographic.  Julia hates her drug addict mother who is dying of lung cancer.  She believes her mother killed her young brother years ago.  She thinks of turning her mother in to the police.

She goes to India because she found an article that says that Jesus spent some time in India.  She thinks if she can find proof she could get rich and famous.  But when she gets to India she gets obsessed with saving all the diseased dogs she finds in the street.  She frantically tries to save them or at least give them a peaceful death.  

She hears about an underwater city and finally finds a group of people who will take her out in a boat to look at it at night.  The area is in a goverment restricted area, that is why they have to do the dive at night.  She gets some good pix and sends some to National Geographic.  She is shocked to learn that the people who took her out are really terrorists who want to destroy a nuclear plant that is on land near where she was diving, that is why there is a restricted zone.

She develops a relationship one particular Indian man and a few other people.  A friend from Canada also comes to join her.  The authorities eventually find out she was in the restricted area and they put out an arrest warrant for her.  Her friends remove the images from her computer so that should be no evidence against her.  

Her boyfriend is estranged from his brother (one of the terrorists) and his father.  She eventually meets the man's father and likes him.  She can't understand why her boyfriend doesn't get on with him.  The man gives her a book of Buddhist prayers/thoughts. 

She is eventually located and deported.

However, a few years later she sneaks back into India thanks to a back door into India and bribes to officials by her boyfriend. She learns that the father was very poor initially but became rich when he bought some land (from which others were evicted) from some officials who were re-allocating the land.  The father gives her a book and asks her to take it to someone he knew years before.

Disaster stikes when the terrorists take the brakes off a train loaded with fuel.  They think it will careen down a hill and into the nuclear plant but instead it crashes on a curve in a nearby village.  Much of  the village is destroyed and many people are killed or maimed.  The girl, her boyfriend and others, including his father rush to rescue the injured as police say emegency vehicles will not enter the area. The father is shot trying to rescue the injured.

The girl eventually gets the book to the man per her boyfriend's father's instructions.  She finds that the inscription in the book gives the recipient the father's share of the business.  The recipient is one of the people the father wronged years before.

Julia is devastated when she learns her boyfriend is leaving her to marry his mistress in Sweden who is pregnant with his child.  She and the man had planned to marry.  

Finally Julia decides to set out for Nepal to seek out the writings that would confirm Christ spent time in India.  She spends time at a monastery where in return for some help around the monastery, and promising to attend daily meditation, she is allowed access to the monastery's library.  The head monk is an American.  On her last day at the monastery he gives her the writings she is looking for.

She takes the writings or at least a copy and deposits them at the National Geographic office anonymously.

There was a lot going on in this book and a lot to think about -- unintended consequences for eg.  A lot of people did some bad things, the questions arose, can you change once you have done bad things? can you make amends for the wrongs you have done? The author seems to think yes and yes.

I will have to re-read it again to get all the details straight and also get a better understanding of the many complex issues.

 


Murder at the Book Club

 by Betsy Reavley

I picked this book up on impulse at Chapters.  It is about a very disfunctional bookclub. Some people met on an online bookclub and decided to start meeting in person.  They invited others to join.  One of their bookclub members is killed and as police investigate they find that the people in the book club don't like each other and often squabble with each other.  It makes you wonder why they belong to the club as it is so stressful.  

When a second member of the book club is killed the police suspect it really has something to do with the book club.

This wasn't a very interesting book.

Friday, 9 September 2022

State of Wonder

 by Ann Patchett

This is the second book I have read by this author.  The first book I read, Bel Canto, is one of my favourite books.

This book is about a woman researcher who is sent into the Amazonian jungle to find out 1)why/how one of her colleagues who was sent down died 2)how the research is going to find a product to extend women's fertility later in life.

The woman arrives in a city and eventually makes contact with people who are looking after the apartment of the Head Researcher.  They won't take her to see the researcher and say they don't know when the woman will come back to town for supplies.

Eventually the researcher does show up and the other researcher insists on going back into the jungle with her.  The pilot on their boat is a native boy, about 6 years of age, who is deaf.

The women and boy arrive at the spot where the Lakshmi live.  The second researcher's luggage disappears and she is eventully coaxed out of her last clothing and put in a dress the local women wear.  She is introduced to the trees that the local women visit in the forest.  The women chew the bark.  It is thought that chewing the tree keeps the women fertile and also prevents malaria. The head researcher is wanting to work on the fertility discovery but she also wants to pursue a cure for malaria, something she knows her company won't be interested in so she keeps stalling with her researcher.  There may be some kind of connection between the trees, mushrooms that grow at the base of tress and a moth that is attracted to the bark where women have chewed.

The second researcher is shocked to learn that the Main Researcher, her former mentor, is pregnant at 73 years of age.  The researcher is shocked at what her mentor has done and eventually has to perform a c-section on her boss to remove her deformed fetus which has died (the fetus had a mermaid tail rather than legs).  While there the researcher does a c-section on another woman, saves the deaf boy from an anaconda so she has a lot of status in the community.

Eventually she figures out that her co-worker is not dead but is at another village of cannibals.  She and the deaf boy go to rescue him.  The only way she can rescue her co-worker is to give up the boy to the cannibals.  The Mentor is furious with her for having done this.  

The woman and her co-worker return to the U.S. in the next couple days.

This was an interesting story with lots to think about.  One review I read said the book is not as good as some of her other works but I really enjoyed it.