While We Wait: Fiction Books

The Ladies of Missalonghi by Colleen McCullough Recommended by Pastor Katy

Colleen McCullough is probably best known as the author of The Thorn Birds (another good quarantine read), but this small book is one of my favorites. Missy Hurlingford lives at home with her mother and sister, all existing in a genteel (but very real) poverty at the edge of a small Australian town. When a mysterious (and handsome) stranger moves into town, Missy sees her chance to break out of a drab and dreary life – and changes the whole town as a result.

Harry Potter Series by JK Rowling Recommended by Becky Cole & Pastor Rita & Pastor Mary-Alyce

This series is the story of a boy who grew up not knowing he was a wizard and how famous he is in the wizarding world. Each book is one year of his life through his teenage years. The books show the value of friendship, working together, and being honest with each other. Each teenager (and their family) have struggles and this series also includes the interactions of teenagers with adults. I also love that although Harry lives with his aunt, uncle, and cousin, his parents never ending love go with him throughout his life.

American War by Omar El Akkad Recommended by John Sparkman 

The first novel by Canadian-Egyptian journalist Omar El Akkad, American War is set in a near-future US, one which has been ravaged by climate change and disease, leading to a second Civil War, with similar regionalisms as the first, over the continued use of fossil fuels. Following one family’s ordeal to move through a devastated Mississippi River valley to reach a refugee camp after their home in Louisiana is flooded, the novel ponders the political and social upheavals that the climate crisis may bring about, and the difference between a terrorist and a freedom fighter, if there is one.

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Recommended by Danielle Dadashi

This felt like a real cheat on my part—who doesn’t know and love Pride and Prejudice? I still remember reading this book for the first time in ninth grade, dreaming of life as Elizabeth Bennett while feeling oh-so-sophisticated for reading a true classic for fun! This book doesn’t need my recommendation, only a gentle reminder that sometimes a quarantine is the perfect time to reread a classic book and then binge the many mini-series, movies, and adaptations (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, anyone?) available everywhere.

A Gentleman in Moscow Recommended by Pastor Rita

It is a historical novel written by Amore Towles. It takes place at the beginning of the 20th century in the Hotel Metropol. A fun fact, this hotel happens to be a very real hotel that is across the street from the Kremlin. Maybe some of you have actually seen it. The main character, is Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov and he has been sentenced by a Bolshevik tribunal (aka a Communist Russian court) to live the remainder of his life under house arrest in the Hotel Metropol. His crime is being an unrepentant aristocrat. This man learns many things about people, life and the importance of relationship as he lives out his many days of confinement. There is romance, humor, wit and well developed characters.  Enjoy!

Women’s Murder Club Series by James Patterson Recommended by Becky Cole

This collection of books is based on four women – a police office, a reporter, a medical examiner, and a district attorney. They have been friends for a long time and routinely work together in their respective jobs. The club gets together to talk about life, discuss clues, and enjoy each other’s company – typically over a meal and drinks. These women value friendship and make time in their lives for each other.

Big Little Lies by LIane Moriarty Recommended by Danielle Dadashi

Liane Moriarty is one of my favorite authors, and her most famous book, Big Little Lies, is one of her best. Following the lives of several upper middle class families in suburban Australia, the story jumps forward and backward in time unraveling a mysterious death in their community. While the death looms large in the background, the elements that intrigued me the most were the inner lives and everyday issues of the main characters. I have made an effort to seek out books written by women about the complex lives of women, and this one fits the bill! This book has also been adapted into an award-winning HBO miniseries. Check it out!

Betsy-Tacy series, by Maude Hart Lovelace Recommended by Ruth Hanley

Books about three friends at the turn of the century and the relatable adventures and misadventures they get into, age 5 through adult.  Its based on Hart-Lovelaces childhood.  If your child age 5 and up wants a playdate during this time of social distancing, this is the perfect book of friends to play with!

 

The Beautiful Not Yet: Poems, Essays and Lyrics by Carrie Newcomer Recommended by John Sparkman

With words, music and soul-deep creativity, Carrie Newcomer transforms everyday conversations and ordinary experiences into something precious and rare. In this varied collection of writings, she shares through poetry, prose and the lyrics of some of her songs the beauty of everyday life before it comes into view, seeing it before many of us are able. Underneath our broken facades, Newcomer manages to get a look at what Thomas Merton called the 'hidden wholeness,' then shares what she's seen so we can see it too.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows Recommended by Pastor Katy

When I need a comfort read, I head straight for my favorite genre: British people having romantic problems during war time. (It makes me feel better. I don’t know why.) But this book is the best of the bunch. It’s written as a series of letters, primarily from Juliet – a young woman struggling to find her way as a writer after WWII – to her newly discovered friends on Guernsey, an island just off the coast of England. Juliet discovers what life was like on Guernsey during the war, as the only piece of Britain occupied by Germany. And she discovers why she might belong there rather than in her London apartment. (Yes, there is romance too. Read and see!)

County of the Pointed Firs by Sarah Orne Jewett Recommended by Ruth Hanley

 A woman writer comes to live with a mysterious and kind healing woman.  Its the 1900s and she comes to the small town as a stranger, an outsider, but she learns so much about the little east coast seaside village and the people who reside there.  One of my favorite books to "live" in.

The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster Recommended by Ruth Hanley

Charlotte and I read this and laughed and laughed at all the funny parts, of which there are many.  It combines a love of letters and numbers with an exciting adventure that stands the test of time. 

 

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides Recommended by Pastor Rita

It is a psychological thriller. A woman, who is an artist, is accused of killing her husband but will never speak about what actually happened. In fact she just doesn’t speak at all.  She is therefore sentenced to a mental institution. A therapist becomes obsessed with breaking her silence and . .  well . . . I won’t say more because I don’t want to give away the ending. It’s a surprise ending that is chilling.

The Ladies of Missalonghi by Colleen McCullough Recommended by Pastor Katy

Colleen McCullough is probably best known as the author of The Thorn Birds (another good quarantine read), but this small book is one of my favorites. Missy Hurlingford lives at home with her mother and sister, all existing in a genteel (but very real) poverty at the edge of a small Australian town. When a mysterious (and handsome) stranger moves into town, Missy sees her chance to break out of a drab and dreary life – and changes the whole town as a result.

 

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows Recommended by Pastor Katy

When I need a comfort read, I head straight for my favorite genre: British people having romantic problems during war time. (It makes me feel better. I don’t know why.) But this book is the best of the bunch. It’s written as a series of letters, primarily from Juliet – a young woman struggling to find her way as a writer after WWII – to her newly discovered friends on Guernsey, an island just off the coast of England. Juliet discovers what life was like on Guernsey during the war, as the only piece of Britain occupied by Germany. And she discovers why she might belong there rather than in her London apartment. (Yes, there is romance too. Read and see!)

 

Still Life by Louise Penny Recommended by Pastor Katy

This is the first in a series of mysteries by Louise Penny featuring Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, of the Quebec police. There is nothing better than finding the first in a series of books you love – and knowing there are so many more to look forward to! Each story stands on its own, but as the series progresses, a longer narrative begins to unfold as well (so it’s best to read them in order). Along the way, Inspector Gamache must confront his spirituality, mortality, and the ups and downs of life in Three Pines, the small town in which most of the series takes place. Best of all, Penny is still writing new additions to the series; the next is scheduled to come out in September.  

While We Wait: TV Shows

This time is filled with waiting. What shows do Holy Spirit employees love to watch?

Friday Night Lights—Recommended by Danielle Dadashi & Marjorie Buchanan

When I recommend this show, I always speak quickly. “It’s about a football team…but don’t worry I hate football and I still love it. It’s set in high school…but don’t worry it’s smartly written for adults. And it’s starring a bunch of complete unknowns, some of whom have never acted before…but don’t worry they are amazing!” This show is about the small moments in life. It takes seriously the concerns of regular people, and tackles tough issues without ever veering into the saccharine or trite. Aside from some serious missteps in season 2, it is one of the most beautiful, heartfelt, raw, and moving shows on television. I watch it on Amazon Prime.

Black-ish—Recommended by Pastor Katy

The Johnsons are my favorite TV family. Dad, Dre Johnson, is an ad executive; Mom, Bow Johnson, is an anesthesiologist. Their four kids – Zoey, Junior, Jack, and Diane – and Dre’s parents, Earl and Ruby, live with them in the suburbs (Diane and Ruby are my very favorites). The show is partly about a family dealing with busy schedules, growing kids, aging parents, and marriage – in much more hilarious ways than most of us. It’s also about the realities of living as a black family in an overwhelmingly white neighborhood. This show makes me laugh harder than anything else I watch, and also challenges me to think differently. And Jenifer Lewis (who plays Ruby, the grandma) is the funniest person on TV. Hands down. Watch OnDemand, or on Hulu

Chernobyl—Recommended by John Sparkman

When i was a kid, there was a nuclear power plant near the beach we usually visited. It was finished in 1975, so recent enough to still feel new when i was first discovering science in the early 80s. I remember being slightly obsessed with understanding how it worked, why the water in its long cooling channel was all weird and frothy, and why the fish liked what my dad called “the hot hole,” the spot where the waste water drainage pipe from the plant emptied just a little out into the Atlantic, where he often pulled me along to fish until that just couldn’t be abided anymore. About the same time, the Chernobyl accident happened. I remember hearing about it on the news and reading about it — i think in National Geographic or maybe Scientific American. It fascinated me as well and stirred up quite a bit of anxiety around the Brunswick plant near where i lived. I’m curious how your thoughts around nuclear power might have shifted when you learned of the accident too. 

Back story aside, HBO’s Chernobyl, a historical fiction mini-series takes a detailed, if dramatized, look at the accident, its aftermath, all while exploring the Soviet system of silencing whistleblowers who speak up by stripping them of their livelihoods, distancing them from family and friends, or even having some killed. Still, even in the face of such a broken system, many ordinary citizens stepped up to help. Well written and engaging, while it’s grim through most of the five episodes, the series ends with the hope that bravery and tenacity in the face of even overwhelming injustice is not without its positive outcomes, even if those who show the most courage are at the most risk. Watch on HBOGo

The Crown—Recommended by Becky Cole

The story telling of a current royal family is engaging and captivating. It begins with Queen Elizabeth first finding out she was queen moving forward through time. There are lots of things about this part of history I have learned through watching the show. Watch on Netflix

I am Jazz—Recommended by Tammie Zarfos

This is about a young girl who knew from  a very young age that she was assigned the incorrect gender at birth. The show is the story of her life and her struggles as she goes through all of the changes to her body and becomes the girl she always knew she was.  Watch on TLC

Schitt’s Creek—Recommended by Danielle Dadashi

When I need a good laugh I watch Schitt’s Creek on Netflix. The show follows a rich family who lose all their money and are forced to live in a roadside motel in a small town they purchased long ago because the name made them laugh (Schitt’s Creek). It’s hilarious, irreverent, and at times sweet. 

Grace and Frankie — Recommended by John Sparkman

Though (and also because) there are hilarious situations and what some might think is a smidge of crude humor along the way, i love Grace and Frankie. First, just look at Jane Fonda and enough said. Jealousies aside, looking deeper, i love how the storyline shows the arc of a grand journey from Good Friday to Easter for a number of the relationships in the show.  In the pilot, we see a simultaneous Easter—as two men decide to live in the open about their love for one another—while the women they’ve been married to for multiple decades and thrown into a tomb that will last well longer than three days. However, as Grace and Frankie slowly and cautiously chip around the rock enclosing them, on the other side develops an unexpected, hilarious, deep, and touching friendship. Grace and Frankie is available on Netflix. Watch on Netflix

This is Us—Recommended by Marjorie Buchanan and Becky Cole

I love how this show winds and turns and brings amazing writing forward and backward in time.  Watch from the beginning! Watch on NBC and Hulu

 

Project Runway—Recommended by Marjorie Buchanan

It’s fun to watch people create and design in this competition. I grew up sewing a ton—clothes, home décor, bags and cannot believe how creative they are. Some seasons are a bit silly with the people-drama. But great escapism viewing. Watch on Bravo and Netflix

Father Brown — Recommended by Pastor Mary-Alyce

Friday night is “Father Brown” night at my house. It is a zany British detective drama, featuring a slightly crumpled, shambling, and mild mannered Catholic Priest in the village of Kembleford in the Cotswolds, who much to the dismay of the local police manages to solve mysteries (more than you would think a village might have).  His vocation as a priest often gives him insight to the truth, so that justice (but sometimes not the letter of the law) may be served. It is set in the mid-50’s with with a variety of stereotype characters such as the Bishop whom Father Brown drives to distraction for his unorthodox behavior and the bumbling police detective .  I enjoy the British humor and its setting in a typical English village that reminds me of places I have been.  Channel 9 at 8:00 p.m. on Fridays

Durrells in Corfu — Recommended by Pastor Rita

A widow moves her large family of young children to Corfu after her husband died in England.  It’s on PBS and is based on a true story.  The youngest son has a love for all creatures and is very scientific as he goes about exploring, collecting and learning about them.  There are many themes in series:  love of family, the struggles of growing up and coming to age as well as finding meaning and purpose in life after great loss. Enjoy! Watch on PBS

Call the Midwife—Recommended by Pastor Katy

The series began with midwives in East London, in the years following WWII. Midwives provide care for women and families before, during, and after giving birth – but they also encounter the realities of poverty and struggle in the poorer neighborhoods of London. The show doesn’t shy away from big topics: health care, reproductive rights, sexuality, racism, domestic violence. It’s also heartwarming and lovely, with just enough quirky British humor to make me laugh on a Sunday night. Watch on Netflix

My Big Fat Fabulous Life—Recommended by Tammie Zarfos

This is the story of a young adult named Whitney who struggles with her weight due to PCOS (Poly Cystic Ovarian Syndrome). She is very gifted at dancing and has developed and teaches dance classes for others who struggle with their weight. Whitney is a huge proponent of the body positivity movement and works hard to let people know that fat people can do great things too. Watch on TLC

While We Wait: Podcasts

While We Wait: Podcasts

Our lives are filled with in-between times. Times when we are sitting and waiting. Waiting for our kid to be finished with soccer practice, waiting for our name to be called at the doctor’s office, waiting for the light to turn green, waiting for our spouse to come home from work, waiting the email to be returned. It seems like we are waiting more than ever right now. What do we do with those in-between times? What are doing while we wait?