Sunday, June 25, 2023

My Side of the River: A Memoir by Elizabeth Camarillo Gutierrez

★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review. 
My view won't be popular, let's just say that up front. I'm the child of European immigrants, so this was fascinating reading.

This gripping memoir tells the story of current immigrants, legal and illegal. It shows how arrivals "work the system," not necessarily because they cannot stay in their own country but because they want more = what American citizens have worked hard for.

"Why should someone else be rich? Why should they be privileged to attend good schools? Why not me?" What these newcomers don't realize is that life is not easy for most citizens, either. Much of American wealth is generational - many past immigrants struggled for decades until they became part of the country.

In my parents' generation, you waited - often for years - until you got papers to emigrate and work. Some of your farmily or friends may have been killed while they waited. Many friends never got those papers and stayed behind.

It was not your right to be a citizen; it was considered a great privilege that you worked toward. There was no sense of entitlement. There were no handouts from the government, scholarships, or benefits based on race or language in previous generations. Our parents never taught us not to climb the ladder. The goal was to be good people. If you could, you became part of the new country. Some immigrants were returned to Europe or had to relocate elsewhere, but that was a chance you took.

Fellow immigrants even a few years ahead of you introduced the customs and cultures so you could blend in. You didn't bring your customs with you in a disruptive way. There was no trashing where you lived. No keeping your yard and the street a mess. No playing loud music or disturbing the neighbors.

Our parents had no whisper network to elude the law or run scams. They expected those in similar circumstances to share jobs, benefits, and how to save money honestly. They neither stole from work or shops or thought of dealing drugs at night. If someone broke the law, they were shunned or reported.

If and when you got to your new home, you worked brutal hours and began to save. You did without until you could afford better food or shelter.  There were no expensive parties or extravagant events to impress others. (Weddings and funeral were frugal, catered by friends in a yard or at church.) No one went to restaurants. Mothers sewed the family's clothes with cheap cloth. (No one expected or splurged on designer bags or shoes!) The minute they could afford a down payment, immigrants bought or built a house, not always in a great neighborhood. Then everyone in a family put their earnings together, scrimping to pay off the mortgage. They took care of what they had, repairing before replacing. It took decades for some but they valued becoming citizens.

My parents and their friends worked hard to assimilate into the community. They expected to benefit the city they lived in, not just to milk the system. Those with similar roots met at church or lived near each other.

Gutierrez tells a different story - of Mexicans who bring their culture and expectations to the USA without recognizing the values of the country they enter. They want benefits without assimilation, saving, or maintenance. Theirs is a day to day struggle for survival rather than a planned path of wealth or health. It's not popular to say that I did not gain any sympathy for those who game the system, trash their surroundings, and then whine about the consequences. Who'd want such neighbors?

Gutierrez understood even as a child that those kinds of immigrants would not reap the advantages of being in the USA. They were users who became the used. It was a dead end, frightening and never safe or secure. 

She chose another path for herself and her brother.

Going against most of your culture is difficult and the challenges are many. Gutierrez writes honestly and sometimes resentfully about the mental and physical strain of creating a new life in a new country. I admire her grit and her resourcefulness. I am glad she came to a country where the government provides a hand up and handouts to those willing to work for them.

Is making a new life competitive? Is it hard? Sometimes almost impossible? YES. But Gutierrez shows that it's not impossible. Just like my parents never expected to be wealthy, build Fortune 500 companies, or compete with the well-off, she is in the builder generation. The benefits will be for her kids and those behind her. That's normal. That's usual. That's neither discrimination nor cruelty.

For  Gutierrez to work hard for justice for immigrants, fair pay for fair work (with no theft please!), and to advocate for the poor and oppressed is admirable. 2nd generation immigrants like me can totally cheer her on and hopefully open doors for her and honest immigrants, just as citizens did for our parents. I want her to teach her own children generosity, honesty, helping others, and how to benefit the country they are part of, as my parents did for me.

That said, it's not a right to get into another nation. It's a privilege that will cost you big parts of your history. It will stretch you in the present. And it may earn you and your children a future. You - like Gutierrez - have to decide if it's worth it.

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Plant-Powered Protein by Brenda Davis, RD | Vesanto Melina, MS, RD | Cory Davis, MBA, P.Ag

★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review 

This book is about the nutrition required in the American food standards and how to meet those standards with a plant-based diet. Whether you're a vegetarian or vegan because of religion, eco-concerns, or health, the main question from people around you will be, "How do you get your protein."

The implication is that the high-protein meat-dependent Western diet is the healthiest. And surely, nobody who doesn't have "enough meat" will have a good diet. So, here come two nutrition experts (dietitians) to clear the murky waters with research, plant-based substitutes, and menus.

This belongs on your shelf if you have recipes you like and want to adapt, if you have questions about health and safety at any age, or if you just like to have your research on vegetarian options done for you.


Monday, June 19, 2023

High-Protein Plant-Based Diet for Beginners by Maya A. Howard

★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review. 
So you want to try a vegetarian diet but you're worried about getting enough protein? This should give you a place to start! 

Grab your kitchen tools, some basic foods, and off you go. You'll find familiar tastes as well as some fresh takes and information on hitting your target nutrition. 

This is a new one for your vegan and vegetarian bookshelf.

Vegan Barbecue: More Than 100 Recipes for Smoky and Satisfying Plant-Based BBQ by Terry Sargent


★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review. 

Ok, so you don't eat meat but it's summer and you're craving it anyway. Here's the book for you, with a lot of recipes that will satisfy your barbecue tastebuds. Get your picnic basket and your grill ready.

It's not just main dish "meat"-ish offerings, either. There are sides, desserts, and everything between. This is one to add to your library. I'm going to try the "meat"loaf this week. For vegans and those puzzled by their vegan friends ... this book's for you.

Preparing to Meet Jesus: A 21-Day Challenge to Move from Salvation to Transformation by Anne Graham Lotz; Rachel-Ruth Lotz Wright

★★★  The publisher has provided a copy for review.

Spiritual direction is all the rage. Spiritual formation is a buzz word. But is it transformational? Has your character or longing for the presence of God grown?

Lotz and Lotz-Wright offer a challenge to be changed by a worthy goal, preparing for the day when you will come face to face with the Savior. If that's not motivation, I don't know what is.

Sometimes you go on a journey with a group, sometimes by yourself. Sometimes you have a sabbatical or retreat coming up. Take this 3-week book with you. It offers a scripture, prayer, stories, questions, and a challenge for each day. If you do even half of this, you'll be changed. 

I recommend that you take it a week at a time and think about where you're headed after every week is done. Keep a journal of the trip - you'll be amazed at how scripture and the Way comes alive to move you to intimacy and action.

The Practice of the Presence of Jesus by Joni Eareckson Tada

★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review. 

Maybe your life has ceased to be creative or interesting. Maybe you face real challenges and insurmountable obstacles. Tada knows all about that. This daily meditation combines writings of Brother Lawrence, a lowly monk working in the kitchens of his monastery with Tada's own observations of life with severe human limits.

Tada encourages the reader to come near to Jesus, to draw strength for each day, and to look beyond what people assume our life looks like. She offers hope for the hopeless, perspective for the historically challenged Christian, and a daily meditation that will change your life. 

Sometimes followers of Jesus become bored because they are shallow in their faith. Sometimes there's not enough mystery in the tourney. Well, here's a solution to those assumptions! Dive in. Highly recommended for yourself or as a gift, whether for birthdays, Christmas, or the New Year.

HEIMAT by Paul Marzell


★★★★ ☐ The publisher has provided a copy for review. 

 As a descendent of German immigrants over several generations, this is especially interesting. The view of those on the ground makes for good and terrible stories. Hardly anyone went back to Europe if they made it to Canada or the USA or Brazil. But the homeland or Heimat never leaves you, no matter what generation you're in.

This was an interesting look at my past and how history is told and retold by those who experience it. Creative non-fiction, probably.

Would be especially interesting reading for those who went through WWII or are listening to stories from Grandma and Grandpa about those days, whether they were in Germany, the rest of Europe, or in the USA.