Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Finished!

I finally finished Democracy in America today. I've been reading it since June. This is a red letter day. I also read Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon, and Aunt Dimity Down Under, but that's all. I honestly don't know when I've been busier than I have this last month, including when I was in college and somehow found time to read Les Miserables during finals week, just for fun. I despise not having time to read. I do like some of the other things I've been doing though, like Christmas Present crafting, making Streusel Kuchen, and playing "balling" (rolling or kicking a ball, for those who don't get toddler speak) with Hy. Come back soon for my deep and insightful comments on de Tocqueville. I'm sure it's something you won't want to miss. Right.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Around Again

spring8

I finished reading the book a few weeks ago, but I haven't had time to write about it, or figured out exactly what I wanted to say. I may not have figured it all out yet, but I found a little time.

This is the third novel I've read by Suzanne Strempek Shea, and not my favorite. I loved Finding Finola, but I haven't been able to find the same rhythm and feeling in the other two books I've read. Finding Finola was a hopeful, inspiring book for me. Around Again was a little depressing.

What I've decided about Around Again, is that it is a lot about fear. Mostly about how fear can rule our lives. And it's a little bit about love, and how love can change us and maybe even dispel the fear.

The protagonist, Robyn, is torn between fear and love, but she allows her fears overcome love. She basically cuts herself off from everything she loves for thirty  years because of fear. The whole conflict is born out of fear. Fear of social rejection, fear of the unknown, fear of something that isn't even real.

But the saviors in the novel, Robyn's aunt and uncle, are driven completely by love. And although Robyn says throughout the novel that she knows what is real, it turns out that she was completely mistaken and what is real is the love that she ultimately rejects.

Although I probably won't read the book again, I have enjoyed thinking about it and the reminder that most of what I fear is in my own imagination (the future), and that what I love (family, God) is what will save me from my fear.