I am enjoying "My Beloved World" by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. After a brief introductory chapter by the Justice, Rita Moreno takes over and she is terrific. Sotomayor, is humorous, but very, thoughtful as she talks about her judicial philosophy. She is also has some very funny scenes from her childhood in the Sooth Bronx with countless relatives. I am about halfway through it, when she was an assistant D.A. in Manhattan. She relates that the first time she ever saw a couch that was not covered in plastic was at her admissions interview at Harvard. She actually ended up at Princeton. near the end of her senior year, a friend fished a crumpled letter out of Sonia's wastebasket. Sonia said "Oh, that's some organization that wants me to pay to join and they give you some little trinket with your name on it. I'm not interested." The friend pointed out that it was an invitation to join Phi Beta Kappa.
I am new to audio books, but with my vision deteriorating, I think I better try some. Massachusetts makes free recorded books available to the visually impaired from the Perkins school in Boston, where Annie Sullivan received her training. I can also have newspapers and magazines read to me online or over the phone. I really have to take time to go through all the catalogs they send, but I just ordered "Bring UP the Bodies " by Hilary Mantel. Looking forward to that one after Wolf Hall.