"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."
This week’s
selections touch on interests such as history and architecture and
take us to Berlin and New York City.
Thanks to being
featured in the movie Meet the Mormons and Americans’
continuing interest as World War II vets become fewer in number, many
people have heard Gail S. Halvorsen story of dropping handkerchief
parachutes filled with candy to delighted children during the Berlin
Airlift of August 1945.
Repeat trips to Germany
and other reenactments have bolstered Halvorsen’s reputation
since World War II.
Halvorsen tells his own
story in The Berlin Candy Bomber, published this year
by Cedar Fort Press ($18.98). Pretty much unedited, this is a
personal recounting of every detail of those events, plus previous
and subsequent others in his life — perhaps a little too much
detail that drags focus away from the main story.
Black-and-white photos
are sprinkled throughout the 306 pages, further documenting the
experiences of this true American hero who has ever been faithful to
God and country.
The Architectural
Guidebook to New York City may appeal to say, architects,
more than to the average LDS reader, yet the title is a good
indicator of the wide variety of interesting books under the
imprimatur of Gibbs Smith, Publisher, based in Layton, Utah.
As a New Yorker of one
year and counting, I’ve found longtime resident and
architectural expert Francis Morrone’s admittedly dated text
(2002) readable and enlightening, particularly as it relates to
earlier New York edifices and icons such as Citigroup Center and the
Chrysler Building. It’s nice to know the history behind places
I see frequently as my husband and I go about the business of the LDS
Church’s Office of Public and International Affairs.
The author has divided
the book into sections of Manhattan, all with accompanying maps.
Buildings are often hard to distinguish in the black-and-gray photos,
yet the lively writing is such that the reader never wonders what the
author thinks of any particular building or its designers.
Larger print and color
photos would improve the project, but for its $21.99 price, this
book’s a treasure trove of architectural history. It’s
inspired my own treks to see the buildings up close. Gibbs Smith’s
stated purpose is “to enrich and inspire humankind” with
a variety of books such as this.
Gibbs Smith offers
another kind of book for younger readers in its Doodles series,
designed to keep youngsters entertained as they travel — minus
headsets or batteries.
The pocket-sized City
Doodles New York (2013, $9.99) engages kids with Tom Bloom’s
partial drawings of New York scenes, such as Central Park. Author
Bill Zimmerman then invites them to add their own playground or ice
skaters.
The pages also take
young readers and their imaginations to Broadway, Greenwich Village,
the New York Public Library, and Times Square as well as onto a
subway platform, the “Nutcracker” stage, and into a pizza
parlor. The only extra equipment needed is a pencil.
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.