Friday, August 14, 2009
Our August Meeting is Almost Here!
August 25th at 6:45 in Willow Books Cafe
The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life of Frances Perkins, FDR'S Secretary
of Labor and His Moral Conscience by Kirstin Downey
8:17 pm est
Sunday, July 12, 2009
July Meeting
Join League friends for a great discussion! July 21st at 6:45 in Willow Books Cafe
Our latest "summer read":
Dreams
from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
by Barak Obama
All are welcome bring a neighbor or friend.
4:30 pm est
Friday, May 29, 2009
Summer Book Group! Join Us.
To make the summer meetings easier to plan for, they have been planned out before
annual meeting. The usual “vote for
the next book at each meeting” will begin again in September.
June 16th at 6:45 in Willow Books Cafe
Traffic:
Why We Drive the Way We Do (and What It Says About Us)
by Tom Vanderbilt
July 21st at 6:45 in Willow Books Cafe
Dreams
from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
by Barak Obama
August 25th at 6:45 in Willow Books Cafe
The
Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life of Frances Perkins, FDR'S Secretary of Labor and His Moral Conscience by Kirstin Downey
6:32 am est
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Next meeting in May- Tuesday, May 26th @ 6:45
Founding Faith: How Our Founding Fathers Forged a Radical New Approach to Religious Liberty (Paperback)
by Steven Waldman
8:27 pm est
Friday, March 20, 2009
We will meet at Willow Books,on Tuesday,
April 14th, at 6:45 p.m.
Please consider bringing choices to discuss for
the next book.
If you have suggestions I can post them, email n.duggan@verizon.net .
2:35 pm est
April Book:The Two-Income Trap, by Elizabeth Warren
The Two-Income Trap (Paperback)
by Elizabeth Warren (Author), Amelia Warren Tyagi (Author)
From Publishers Weekly
Warren,
a law professor at Harvard (The Fragile Middle Class) and her daughter Tyagi, a former McKinsey consultant, have joined forces
here to argue here that the two-parent middle-class working family is on the brink of financial disaster. The number of families
declaring bankruptcy or receiving a foreclosure against their house has shot up dramatically. Presenting carefully researched
economic data to support their arguments, the authors contend that, contrary to popular myth, families aren't in trouble because
they're squandering their second income on luxuries. On the contrary, both incomes are almost entirely committed to necessities,
such as home and car payments, health insurance and children's education costs. When an unforeseen event such as serious illness,
job loss or divorce occurs, families have no discretionary income to fall back on. The authors recommend a number of useful
societal solutions to get families out of this trap, such as legally prohibiting credit card companies from charging grossly
unfair interest rates and exposing banks that employ a loan-to-own strategy that steers minority customers to higher mortgage
rates with an eye to future foreclosures. Warren and Tyagi point out that families buy homes they cannot afford in order to
live in a neighborhood with better schools. Their proposed solution, however-to institute a public school voucher system with
wider choice-is less carefully thought out. Overall, however, this is a needed examination of an emerging social problem.
Copyright
2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
2:32 pm est
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Consider these titles:
Little Pink House: A True Story of Defiance and Courage (Hardcover)
by Jeff Benedict (Author)
I just saw a piece
on Emily Rooney's show with an author and I thought the book might be a good one for Book Club - Little Pink House. It has
just come out, so it is only in hardback - I think. Suzanne S
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Benedict (The
Mormon Way of Doing Business) has taken a complicated court case centered on eminent domain and turned it into a page-turner
with a conscience. In 1997, an EMT named Susette Kelo left her husband, bought a cottage and started over in the economically
depressed Ft. Trumbull neighborhood of New London, Conn. In February 1998, the New London Development Corporation began trying
to muscle the neighborhood into selling homes to make way for a Pfizer research complex. Benedict's passionate account is
rife with heroes and villains—he delights in pillorying Kelo's foil, Claire Gaudiani, the president of Connecticut College
who lured Pfizer to consider New London. The fight escalated when the city tried exercising eminent domain to seize the homes
of Kelo and others who refused to sell, leading to the case, Kelo v. City of New London, reaching the Supreme Court in 2005.
Raising important questions about the use of economic development as a justification for displacing citizens, this book will
leave readers indignant and inspired. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
Also reccomended but I've forgotten by whom...
The Two-Income Trap (Paperback)
by Elizabeth
Warren (Author), Amelia Warren Tyagi (Author)
From Publishers Weekly
Warren, a law professor at Harvard (The Fragile
Middle Class) and her daughter Tyagi, a former McKinsey consultant, have joined forces here to argue here that the two-parent
middle-class working family is on the brink of financial disaster. The number of families declaring bankruptcy or receiving
a foreclosure against their house has shot up dramatically. Presenting carefully researched economic data to support their
arguments, the authors contend that, contrary to popular myth, families aren't in trouble because they're squandering their
second income on luxuries. On the contrary, both incomes are almost entirely committed to necessities, such as home and car
payments, health insurance and children's education costs. When an unforeseen event such as serious illness, job loss or divorce
occurs, families have no discretionary income to fall back on. The authors recommend a number of useful societal solutions
to get families out of this trap, such as legally prohibiting credit card companies from charging grossly unfair interest
rates and exposing banks that employ a loan-to-own strategy that steers minority customers to higher mortgage rates with an
eye to future foreclosures. Warren and Tyagi point out that families buy homes they cannot afford in order to live in a neighborhood
with better schools. Their proposed solution, however-to institute a public school voucher system with wider choice-is less
carefully thought out. Overall, however, this is a needed examination of an emerging social problem.
Copyright 2003 Reed
Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
12:36 pm est
Monday, March 2, 2009
WBUR discussed "our " next book and A Change in Meeting Time!
Recently on WBUR:According to new neuroscience studies, emotion has a strong influence on how the human brain makes decisions.
Jonah Lehrer, the author of How We Decide, joins Fresh Air to discuss the latest research. You can listen on the website
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=101334645
Willow Books has changed their hours and we will start
at 6:45 for the March 17th meeting. Don't forget your ballots!
10:55 pm est
Saturday, February 21, 2009
March Meeting Planned for a Tuesday, the 17th. Congratulations Book Group, Our First Year!
Our next meeting will be Tuesday, March 17. The next book is How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer. Please join us.
To celebrate
completion of our first year of LWV Book Group we will vote on the year's best book group book and rate the books we've read.
Please see the bulletin or email Nancy Duggan at n.duggan@verizon.net if you need a ballot!
9:59 pm est
Thursday, February 12, 2009
The Forgotten Man, by Amity Shaels is chosen as the February book.
Join us February 18th for our next sellection. The Forgotten Man examines the New Deal policies of the 30's and 40's.
10:02 am est