Summer in the Garden

Summer in the Garden
Summer in the Garden

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Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Sprotbrough Local History Group

Sprotbrough History Group

Presents

A Slide Presentation Evening

The Trams and Trolleybuses 
of Doncaster

Tuesday 15th October at 6 PM

At Sprotborough Library

Tickets on sale at the Library
£2
All proceeds to Sandtoft Transport Museum

Saturday, 14 September 2013

BOOK REVIEW 3

‘The Boy Who Said No’ by  Patti Sheehy
Published by Oceanview Publishing 2013


 A personal family history can be either mundane or fascinating and that of Frank Mederos certainly falls into the latter category.  Related to the author over a period of about a year, Frank told of his birth and upbringing in a suburb of Havana, Cuba, during the overthrow of  Batista’s government by Fidel Castro and how he and his family suffered by finding themselves on the wrong side of the divide. 

Loved and educated in the culture of the old Cuba, thanks mainly to the attention and wisdom of his grandfather, Frank found himself transported at the age of 13 to an unknown destination in the mountains with the instruction to teach a family to read.  This was all part of Castro’s plan to eliminate illiteracy; the schools were closed and children were dispatched to the remotest parts of the countryside to educate Cuba’s poor citizens.  The Haitian family were unwelcoming to Frank who realised he would have to prove himself before they would accept him.  Giving away his blanket to one of the children was a start and learning to fend for himself in this alien environment was essential.  Working from dawn to dusk, he had to make his own shoes out of rubber tyres and pick a range of vegetables as well as sort coffee beans.    Trying to teach the family to read came after work to the light of a candle and as the days dragged on he missed his family more and more. 

Returning to Havana after ten months, the ‘alfabetizadores’ were welcomed home with a great celebration at supposedly having achieved their goal; whilst the children in Frank’s family had benefited, the parents were still unable to read and write.  Forty-two ‘Martyrs of the Revolution’ had died in the campaign.

In the meantime, America had failed to subdue Castro in the Bay of Pigs and it was now considered necessary to train more soldiers in the art of warfare with weapons supplied by Russia.  Frank’s reward for his success in the literacy programme was to be sent away, the day after his return, to a government-run scholarship school where he would be indoctrinated with revolutionary zeal and military prowess.  He was devastated to be parted from his family once again, but whilst achieving the latter during his time there, he resisted the former.

Many Cubans were unhappy with Castro’s regime and left for America after either obtaining visas or risking dying at sea in fragile boats.  The family of a girl who had become very close to Frank applied for visas and Frank looked for ways of escaping by sea.  It was a long and frightening time, trusting unknown men and hiding in the homes of loved ones who risked their lives to help him, but Frank survived the sea journey and eventually began a new life in America with his girlfriend.

A good read which describes the personal journey of a dissident and his determination to escape a revolutionary political regime with which he could not agree.




Thursday, 5 September 2013

BOOK REVIEW 2


‘The Cheesemaker’s House’ by Jane Cable
Published by Matador, part of Troubador Publishing Ltd

This book won the Suspense & Crime category of The Alan Titchmarsh Show’s People’s Novelist competition in 2011 and I am not surprised as it has several merits in its favour.  Jane Cable has written her story in the first person, present tense, which draws readers into the story so that they feel involved with the characters and the situations in which they find themselves.  The chapters are also very short and the main characters few, which is always a good thing for anyone who is unable to read a book all in one go, though an added plus is that it can be read in a long afternoon if one has nothing else to do.

The fact that it won the Suspense & Crime category is in fact a bit misleading as there is no great criminal activity and the suspense element of the story is very quietly portrayed.  Alice, the storyteller, has recently separated from her husband and moved up north to live in their holiday cottage in the hope of building a new life, but finds herself entangled in a mystery surrounding both the cottage and a coffee shop owner who, whilst being a perfect gentleman, is also acknowledged as being a bit of a ‘charmer’ in several meanings of the word, by some of the other villagers. 

Alice is attracted to him, but is also worried by sightings of him in unexpected places and it is this aspect that provides most of the suspense.

I enjoyed it and it would be a good book for the holidays.  Reading groups might enjoy it, though it is not particularly thought-provoking and they might struggle to find much to talk about afterwards.


Wednesday, 4 September 2013

BOOK REVIEW 1


History’s Greatest Scandals: Shocking Stories of Powerful People
Ed Wright, San Diego, California
Pub: Thunder Bay Press

A catalogue of 28 stories of people brought low because they either thought they were above the law or were so arrogant they flouted it anyway.  It’s interesting that only three of these were women and begs the question as to why.  The easy answer, of course, is that those of the male sex have generally been the ones to attain power, whilst women have been more easily preyed upon.   The exceptions quoted are Catherine the Great, quite amazingly accused of sex with her horse; Imelda Marcos, whose love of shoes is well known; and Therese Humbert, a con woman of the first degree who created great wealth out of nothing, except the stupidity of those who believed her without asking to see the evidence.

The book is divided into six sections, each recognising one or more of the seven deadly sins.
In fact many of the political scandals occurred in my own lifetime, but details are easily forgotten when so many people given the trust of a nation disappoint one, so it was interesting to look back on them and be reminded how fragile the asserted good intentions of the human race are when it comes to obtaining and holding power.  There are those, of course, who aver no such good intentions and these depraved human beings who distort reality deserved the ignominy they received.