Reading to Remember

For the past three springs and summers, I have read books about World War II.  I’m not sure why exactly.  I know it is partly because I love history, and it is partly because I want to identify with my grandfathers, both of whom fought in World War II in the Pacific, one in the army, on the ground in the Philippines, and one in the Navy, on a ship in the Pacific.  The War fascinates me because it was so vast.  I think it’s hard for us today, especially people as removed from it as my generation is, to grasp how far the war reached.  It spanned Africa, North America, Asia, and Europe.  Australia, New Guinea, tons of tiny Pacific atolls and wakes and islands.  It’s just incredible really.

And the atrocities.  Staggering and unbelievable Japanese brutality towards POWs.  The bombing of London.  And the sickest of all, the Holocaust.

Last year I read a book that really changed me.  It broke my heart and put a permanent marker on it.  A memorial if you will, engraved there.  I will never think of the War without thinking of it.

It is the best book I have ever read, hands down. When I say “it changed me” I’m not being dramatic.  I will never be the same person I was before I read it.  It wasn’t the easiest read, it wasn’t a feel-good read, but oh – I think it is a must-read.  It is called, simply, The Lost.  The subtitle is: A Search for Six of Six Million.

In this book, the author, Daniel Mendelsohn, a secular, non-observant Jew born and raised in the United States, goes on a quest to find out what happened to his great-uncle, his beloved grandfather’s brother, along with his wife and four daughters.  They were killed by the Nazis in Ukrainian Poland – a part of Poland that sort of bounced back and forth between being part of Poland and being the Ukraine  – but that’s all any of his family knew.  Just that they were killed. Not when, or how, or by whom exactly.  They didn’t know if they were together or separated.  They didn’t know.  They just knew they had been killed.  And so a generation later, Daniel set out to find out what his older relatives whispered and wondered about in hushed tones during his childhood.

He didn’t even know all of his great-uncles’ daughters’ names when he started looking.  His joy, in the book, when he finds out the last name that he had been missing – to put a name to that life- it’s tremendously touching.

Mendelsohn’s years of dogged research and thousands of miles traveled paid off, and the resulting memoir is heart-breaking, eye-opening, and hopefully life-changing to all who read it.  I know I’ll never forget this incredible story.  I think I am going to close out my summer by reading the book again.  There’s so much about it I already don’t remember, and I never want to forget.

What books have you read that you’ll always remember?

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Wake up, jerk face

I’ve had a terrible time, as of late, keeping my eyes open. Particularly while driving. This, as you might imagine, poses a problem.

It’s bad, people. I snapped back into reality this morning to discover I had dropped my speed from 60 to 40 without noticing it… because I was about 70% asleep.

I literally cannot keep my eyes open. It is such a terrible feeling, and it’s obviously extremely unsafe. But I’m not sure what to do about it. I don’t know what my deal is, but I really don’t think I could possibly get enough sleep to stop this from happening. I think it’s more than that… a chemical imbalance or something? I don’t know. I’ve started taking my vitamins again, and I’m hoping that will help.

This is pretty miserable, though. And I’d really rather not wrap my car around a tree.

I need your help! Any suggestions for what I can do to stay awake?

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Insta-Friday!

Hey there! TGIF! Today I am going to combine my obsession with Instagram and my stalkerishness of Jeannett at Life Rearranged and participate in her Insta-Fridays carnival.  I L-O-V-E Instagram, do you? I hope you will follow me over there, my username is “jennyitup”.  I’ll follow you back!

Here are some things I insta-grammed this week!

My 87-year-old grandmother and my 5-year-old daughter on the swings at the park.  I LOVE that my Grandma enjoys my kids and vice-versa!  What a blessing!

I made my first successful grocery run this summer with all THREE kids along  (and  no makeup!)  They were SO good!

Like everyone else in the entire world, I took a pic of my car thermometer to show how RIDICULOUSLY hot it is!! We braved the pool yesterday to beat the heat and it was great. We didn’t go til after 3 pm thought.

And of course,  took many, many self-portraits – I’m kind of obsessed with documenting my makeup looks.

This one was neutral pinks on the cheeks & lips with gray & black on the eyes.

Here I did my eyes with brown & blue.

This is the same makeup after sweating it out at the pool in 100-degree heat. I thought it held up really well. Go Mary Kay!

And, Jonah had enough of my vanity by the end of the day, so he kept shoving this on my face.  My favorite self-portrait of the week:

(My brother may find this ironic as I was terrified of the Hulk as a kid & he wasn’t allowed to watch it because of me. Sorry, dude.)

And that’s what I’ve got for Insta-Friday! Check it out at Life Rearranged and don’t forget to follow me on Instagram – I’m “jennyitup”!

What have you been snapping cell phone pics of this week?

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