Around the World through Books

"Celebrating Our Differences and Similarities"

A Free Public Forum

Sponsored by the Book Subcommittee of JSRCC Multicultural Enrichment Council

Book Subcommittee members: Priti Barua, Lisa Bishop, Atalissa (Bitsy) Gilfoyle, Barbara Glenn, Kristen Gregory, Ghazala Hashmi, Norma Hijaz, Marian Macbeth, Randy Pittman (Chair), Kelly Plantan, Maria Ramos, Karen Steele, Laurie Weinberg, Hong Wu,

Book Discussion Series 2006-2007


Upcoming Event

Thursday, April.5, 2007
Professors Laurie Weinberg, Randy Pittman & Bob Lyle will lead discussion on

The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific 

When: Thursday, April. 5, 2007, 7-8:30 pm
Where: The Gallery -JSRCC Parham Campus
Georgiadis Hall, Room 101
1651 E Parham Road, Richmond, Va 23228

Print out a FLYER for distribution.

 


Schedule of Events 2006-2007

Title

Author

Discussion Leaders

Date and Time

Location

Izzy's Fire: Finding Humanity in the Holocaust

Nancy Wright Beasley

Nancy Wright Beasley

Thurs., Sept. 28, 2006   7:00 - 8:30 pm

*Auditorium, North Run

When the Emperor Was Divine
 

Julie Otsuka

Wayne Knight

Thurs., Nov. 9, 2006
7:00 - 8:30 pm

*Auditorium, North Run

The Known World

Edward P. Jones

Ghazala Hashmi, Maria Ramos, Eve Davis

Thurs., Feb. 22, 2007  7:00 - 8:30 pm

*Auditorium, North Run

The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific

J Maarten Troost

 

Laurie Weinberg

Thursday, April 5, 2007   7:00 - 8:30 pm

TBA

*J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College North Run Corporate Center, 1630 East Parham Road, North Run Business Park, Richmond, Virginia 23228


About the Authors and the Books:

Izzy's Fire: Finding Humanity in the Holocaust
 by Nancy Wright Beasley

Izzy's Fire; Finding Humanity in the Holocaust

 

 

 

 

Nancy Wright Beasley

About the author:

"Nancy Wright Beasley’s seven-year journey that led to this book began when she heard Alan Zimm, a Buchenwald survivor, recite names of family members who died in the Holocaust. Beginning to understand the significance of recording survivor history, she read memoirs, interviewed survivors and discovered the miraculous journey that finally led Edna Ipson and her family from the heel of the Nazis to "the other side of hell." She tells of their journey in Izzy’s Fire.

Beasley's journalistic career spans 25 years, beginning with seven years as a state correspondent for The Richmond News Leader. She has been a personal columnist and contributing editor for Richmond magazine since 1997. Beasley has written several national award-winning columns and articles for the magazine, as well as other publications.

A recipient of a master’s degree from Virginia Commonwealth University’s School of Mass Communications, Beasley now teaches there."
- From Amazon.com
 

About the book:

"Izzy’s Fire: Finding Humanity in the Holocaust tells the harrowing yet hope-filled true story of five Lithuanian Jewish families during the Holocaust who escaped Kovno Ghetto and were ultimately hidden -- and saved -- by a Catholic farm family. All 13 Jews ended up living in a 9’x12’x4’ underground hole as World War II raged around them. Some lived underground for about seven months.
Beasley draws from personal interviews, research and numerous memoirs, including extensive memoirs from Israel "Izzy" Ipson, who helped his family escape from Kovno Ghetto, one of the most notorious killing fields for Jews in Lithuania. The Ipps, as they were known then, relocated to Richmond following their liberation and later changed their name to Ipson. The story has been re-created at the Virginia Holocaust Museum in Richmond, Virginia." - from Amazon.com

 

Izzys Fire Front Cover


When the Emperor Was Divine 
by Julie Otsuka

Julie Otsuka

About the author:

Julie Otsuka was born in Palo Alto and studied art at Yale University. After pursuing a career as a painter, she turned to fiction at age 30. One of her short stories was included in Scribner’s Best of the Fiction Workshops 1998, edited by Carol Shields. When the Emperor Was Divine is her first novel. - from "Random House."

 

 

About the book:

"This heartbreaking, bracingly unsentimental debut describes in poetic detail the travails of a Japanese family living in an internment camp during World War II, raising the specter of wartime injustice in bone-chilling fashion. After a woman whose husband was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy sees notices posted around her neighborhood in Berkeley instructing Japanese residents to evacuate, she moves with her son and daughter to an internment camp, abruptly severing her ties with her community. The next three years are spent in filthy, cramped and impersonal lodgings as the family is shuttled from one camp to another. They return to Berkeley after the war to a home that has been ravaged by vandals; it takes time for them to adjust to life outside the camps and to come to terms with the hostility they face. When the children's father re-enters the book, he is more of a symbol than a character, reduced to a husk by interrogation and abuse. The novel never strays into melodrama-Otsuka describes the family's everyday life in Berkeley and the pitiful objects that define their world in the camp with admirable restraint and modesty. Events are viewed from numerous characters' points of view, and the different perspectives are defined by distinctive, lyrically simple observations. The novel's honesty and matter-of-fact tone in the face of inconceivable injustice are the source of its power. Anger only comes to the fore during the last segment, when the father is allowed to tell his story-but even here, Otsuka keeps rage neatly bound up, luminous beneath the dazzling surface of her novel." - From Publishers Weekly

 

When the Emperor Was Divine


 The Known World

Edward P. Jones

 

 

 

 


Edward P. Jones

About the author:

"Edward P. Jones was born and raised in Washington, D.C. Winner of the Pen/Hemingway Award and recipient of the Lannan Foundation Grant, Jones was educated at Holy Cross College and the University of Virginia. His first book, Lost in the City was originally published by William Morrow in 1992 and shortlisted for the National Book Award. Mr. Jones was named a National Book Award finalist for a second time with the publication of his debut novel The Known World which subsequently won the prestigious 2004 Pulitzer Prize for fiction." - From http://www.harpercollins.com/

About the book:

"Set in Manchester County, Virginia, 20 years before the Civil War began, Edward P. Jones's debut novel, The Known World, is a masterpiece of overlapping plot lines, time shifts, and heartbreaking details of life under slavery. Caldonia Townsend is an educated black slaveowner, the widow of a well-loved young farmer named Henry, whose parents had bought their own freedom, and then freed their son, only to watch him buy himself a slave as soon as he had saved enough money. Although a fair and gentle master by the standards of the day, Henry Townsend had learned from former master about the proper distance to keep from one's property. After his death, his slaves wonder if Caldonia will free them. When she fails to do so, but instead breaches the code that keeps them separate from her, a little piece of Manchester County begins to unravel. Impossible to rush through, The Known World is a complex, beautifully written novel with a large cast of characters, rewarding the patient reader with unexpected connections, some reaching into the present day."  - From Amazon.com
 


The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific
by J Maarten Troost

J. Maarten Troost

J Maarten Troost

About the author:

"J. Maarten Troost's essays have appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, the Washington Post, and the Prague Post. He spent two years in Kiribati in the Equatorial Pacific and upon his return was hired as a consultant by the World Bank. After several years in Fiji, he recently relocated to the U.S. and now lives with his wife and son in California." - From http://www.bookbrowse.com/.

 

About the book:

"At 26, Troost followed his wife to Kiribati, a tiny island nation in the South Pacific. Virtually ignored by the rest of humanity (its erstwhile colonial owners, the Brits, left in 1979), Kiribati is the kind of place where dolphins frolic in lagoons, days end with glorious sunsets and airplanes might have to circle overhead because pigs occupy the island's sole runway. Troost's wife was working for an international nonprofit; the author himself planned to hang out and maybe write a literary masterpiece. But Kiribati wasn't quite paradise. It was polluted, overpopulated and scorchingly sunny (Troost could almost feel his freckles mutating into something "interesting and tumorous"). The villages overflowed with scavengers and recently introduced, nonbiodegradable trash. And the Kiribati people seemed excessively hedonistic. Yet after two years, Troost and his wife felt so comfortable, they were reluctant to return home. Troost is a sharp, funny writer, richly evoking the strange, day-by-day wonder that became his life in the islands. One night, he's doing his best funky chicken with dancing Kiribati; the next morning, he's on the high seas contemplating a toilet extending off the boat's stern (when the ocean was rough, he learns, it was like using a bidet). Troost's chronicle of his sojourn in a forgotten world is a comic masterwork of travel writing and a revealing look at a culture clash." - From Publishers Weekly.
 


Back to Book Discussion Series Home

Created by the Book Subcommittee of Multicultural Enrichment Council on 4/27/06. Updated on 10/5/2006.  For more information, contact Hong Wu at hwu@reynolds.edu or 804-523-5324.

The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific Cover