"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
The well-researched
Women of Faith in the Latter Days series, edited by
Richard E. Turley Jr. and Brittany A. Chapman, has published the
third volume of the planned seven-volume set (Deseret Book 2014, 378
pages in hard cover, 29.99). Volume 3 presents the lives of 23 LDS
women born 1846-1870, each of whom knew pioneer life firsthand.
As noted in the
preface, “They also experienced the gradual transition to
modern life, some of them living into the 1950s and 1960s. Missionary
work caused the Latter-day Saint body of believers to expand
throughout the globe.” Hence, the stories extend beyond Utah.
One tells how Anna
Gaarden Wditsoe, widowed mother of John A. Widtsoe, and her sister
took the gospel to their native Norway when they were in their 50s.
Another is the story of Tsune Ishida Nachie, cook for the Tokyo
Mission home, who was baptized in a local stream in 1905 and became
the first native Japanese temple worker in Hawaii.
Still another recounts
the story of Cohn Shoshonitz Zundel, a member of the Shoshone in
Utah’s northeast Bear River region when she was baptized at age
9 in 1873. Generations of Latter-day Saints have come from such
faithful women.
A strength of this
series is that the entries rely heavily on the words of the women
themselves, often from their journals and letters, and always from
primary sources. The text is enhanced by a scattering of
black-and-white photos. A timeline aids understanding of context, and
end notes and an extensive index are also helpful.
Diary of Two Mad
Black Mormons, by Zandra Vranes and Tamu Smith, is a
delightful read from Ensign Peak, Deseret Book’s imprint for
books that appeal to an audience beyond Latter-day Saints.
The two have a blog and
a radio show as “Sista Beehive” and “Sista Laurel”
(“Nobody was interested in being the Mia Maid ‘cause with
maid in their name, they might get mistaken for the help”).
Now they have a book.
Their wit and wisdom is
accurately subtitled “Finding the Lord’s Lessons in
Everyday Life” (221 pages in hard cover, $21.99). It’s a
refreshing read, with chapter titles like “Finding Jesus in
Jail,” “Service Makes Me Nervous,” “Despicable
Me,” and “Dysfunctional Families are Forever.”
They share their own
stories, along with plenty of smiles and out-loud laughs, as they
promote embracing diversity and dealing with adveristy. Plus, they’re
kind enough to offer an asterisk and an explanation of phrases not in
my Utah vernacular as well as some LDS words not found in others’.
If you are short on
patience and/or time, pick up Two Mad Black Mormons for an
instant fix.
What began as an
unofficial assignment to write a monthly Relief Society message for
the sisters in her ward has turned into a sweet, inspirational little
book by Marilynne Todd Linford.
As a mother,
grandmother and now great-grandmother of one, she has much life
experience and wisdom to offer a younger generation of LDS women in
Sisters Forever: Inspiration for Women (Covenant 1014,
160 pages in softcover, $12.99).
Drawing on scriptures,
anecdotes, literature, history, and personal experiences, each of the
50 messages is about two pages in length — short enough to read
and digest, yet meaty enough to spark thoughts and discussion.
Laurie
Williams Sowby has been writing since second grade and getting paid
for it since high school. Her byline ("all three names, please")
has appeared on more than 6,000 freelance articles published in
newspapers, magazines, and online.
A
graduate of BYU and a writing instructor at Utah Valley University
for many years, she proudly claims all five children and their
spouses as college grads.
She
and husband, Steve, have served three full-time missions together,
beginning in 2005 in Chile, followed by Washington D.C. South, then
Washington D.C. North, both times as young adult Institute teachers.
They are currently serving in the New York Office of Public and
International Affairs
During
her years of missionary service, Laurie has continued to write about
significant Church events, including the rededication of the Santiago
Temple by President Hinckley and the groundbreaking for the
Philadelphia Temple by President Eyring. She also was a Church
Service Missionary, working as a news editor at Church Magazines,
between full-time missions.
Laurie
has traveled to all 50 states and at least 45 countries (so far).
While home is American Fork, Utah, Lincoln Center and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art have provided a comfortable second home.
Laurie
is currently serving a fourth full-time mission with her husband in
the New York Office of Public and International Affairs. The two
previously served with a branch presidency at the Provo Missionary
Training Center. The oldest of 18 grandchildren have been called to
serve missions in New Hampshire and Brisbane, Australia.