SISTERCHICKS Down Under, by Robin Jones Gunn,2005, Multnomah Publishers, Inc.

This light (235 p.) read takes the protagonist on a life-changing trip from California which is her home to New Zealand and Australia and back.  What makes it life-changing is not so much the places themselves but, as she puts it, “It’s the people, it’s the people, it’s the people.”

Not many books I’ve read are in first person, but this one is.  The effect seemed to make me wonder whether I could actually identify with her or not.  She is a light-hearted and compassionate middle-aged woman.  She has accompanied her husband who is working on a project in New Zealand, and initially she feels very bored until she meets another woman who is a widow and they have all kinds of fun together.

They inspire and teach and encourage each other, the whole while letting loose like a couple of kids and lightening up life for themselves and others.  It is an ideal healthy friendship of the type I do enjoy with several of my own female friends.

I also enjoyed learning bits about New Zealand and Australia.  Maybe I’ll get to go there someday too!

Silk, by Linda Chaikin, Bethany House Publishers, 1993

Set in the late 1700s, this novel centres around a teenage girl named Coral, of English descent who was born in India.  Her parents own a large silk plantation and export the silk to other countries including their homeland where the silk is made into beautiful fashions.

The story is full of intriguing characters and plots, starting with a young Indian woman from a low caste who converts to Christianity but dies during childbirth.  Coral, with her parents’ permission, adopts the baby.  She is warned against the adoption by Jace, a young soldier who knew the baby’s father.  The baby’s father is mysteriously killed either by insurgents or possibly by his own relatives as an honour killing.  Later the young boy is kidnapped and seems to have been killed, but Coral receives secret information that he may actually be alive.  She is determined to find out.

Jace buys a ship and sails to China and Spain and England.  Coral goes to England where she lives with her grandmother for a few years.  She becomes friends with some Christian dissenters who have broken off from the very traditional Anglican church.  They are the rebels of the day, writing and singing hymns together as a congregation, which the traditional church frowned on.

I enjoyed learning about life and expectations in that era and in those countries.  This is book one in a series.  My curiosity is piqued as to what will happen next.  Will Coral find her adopted son?  Will the mysteries concerning several of the characters be solved?  Will Coral and her mother be healed of the tropical fever that they suffer from?  Although the book is complete on its own, I hope I someday find a copy of book two.

The Septembers of Shiraz, by Dalia Sofer, 2007, HarperCollins

Iran, early 1980s, the Shah recently deposed.  Muslim terrorists have taken control of the country.

The author was a young girl at this time, and writes of the era she lived through.  The central characters are a family and Sofer tells of each family member’s unique experiences, giving the reader a realistic insight into the kinds of things that took place in the lives of real people.

Sofer’s writing is easy to follow and she draws the reader in so that you can hardly wait to find out what happens to each family member and you dread the worst and hope for the best.  She does not disappoint.

The reader comes out having learned about this time and place, and also a lot about the multifaceted sides of human nature.