Sunday, 31 January, 2010

It's Monday! What are you reading?

Hosted by J. Kaye at J. Kaye's Book Blog.

A good week for reading despite being a truly bad week health wise. Books completed last week:

RANDOM PASSAGE by Bernice Morgan is a very good historical fiction about a family in Ireland who are forced into exile to Newfoundland's most isolated outpost two hundred years ago. A truly great read. I cannot wait to read its sequel WAITING FOR TIME. Both books are bestsellers here in Canada and I can see why.


NIKOLSKI by Nikolas Dickner is a French Canadian story about three Montrealers that David Mitchell (author of Cloud Atlas and Black Swan Green) called “Stylish, offbeat, poignant and perceptive.” A very enjoyable read.

WHAT THE BIRDS SEE by Sonya Hartnett will break your heart. The original title in Australia is OF A BOY. A shy but obedient little boy who feels unwanted tries to interpret the world around him and finds it a daunting task. Don't miss this one if you can get your hands on it.

THE HOUSEWIFE AND THE PROFESSOR by Yoko Ogawa is a wonderful story of a mathematician with brain damage, and how the maid deals with the fact that he does not recognize her every morning when she arrives at his home.

Books I gave up on:

TO THE LIGHTHOUSE by Virginia Woolf felt like too much work. I have pain control issues right now and am barely able to concentrate on some things. It will have to wait.

Book in hand...

BLACKLANDS by Linda Bauer is a psychological suspense and the premise alone gives me a chill. A boy writes anonymously to a child killer in prison hoping the man will help him find the body of one of the local boys he's murdered. Eventually the man figures out that he's communicating with a twelve year old boy...

Up Next:

GOOD TO A FAULT by Marina Endicott
THE COMEDIANS by Graham Greene

THE PRACTICE OF PERFECTION by Mary Frances Coady
CUTTING FOR STONE by Abraham Verghese


Books I Still Need to Write Reviews On:

Those my readers request. Just ask.
***********
What are you reading?

Friday, 29 January, 2010

Book Awards, Do You Follow?

Why do I follow literary awards? Because several experienced readers, usually including booksellers and librarians, read it and bother to go through the process of nominating it. Several other people, who are well read enough to be thought good judges, read it very carefully. They weeded out any poorly written or not well constructed stories, staking their reputations (or friends laughing at them) on their final choices after much discussion among themselves. Most of the work has been done for me already. I'm still very circumspect; there are subjects and themes I do not wish to read about for pleasure. I consider all that made the longlist as equals, even the winners are only someone else's preferences. I still have to decide for myself. But I rarely read a bad book so I'm sticking with award lists, past and present. I follow them everywhere but here are a couple of recent ones closer to home for many of you:

The National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists for fiction:

American Salvage by Bonnie Jo Campbell (short stories)

The Book of Night Women by Marlon James

Blame by Michelle Huneven

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Lark and Termite by Jayne Anne Phillips

I avoid all reviews, jacket information, blurbs etc. before reading novels. They tell too much. But I usually have good instincts. Those I will read and why:


Lark and Termite by Jayne Anne Phillips - What I know: the Korean war. Even if I weren't yet another whose father was changed in terrible ways by his experience there, Tim O'Brien gives it his endorsement. I have read In the Lake of the Woods***** so that's good enough for me.


Blame by Michelle Huneven - What I know: alcoholism, manslaughter, remorse, redemption, forgiveness. Again, a personal element is involved that makes this a must read for me.


Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel - What I know: Not a thing, except that it's winning awards, big ones; so it must be well written; and someone said "Thomas Cromwell" so it has to be interesting.


The Book of Night Women by Marlon James - What I know: Slavery in Jamaica 200 years ago. Language, sexual content, and brutal violence (people talk) which would normally put me off. But this is history, as it was. Therefore a possible read- when I am in the mood.

American Salvage by Bonnie Jo Campbell - rarely in the mood for short stories, so not likely.

Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association

2010 Nominees for Fiction

The Crying Tree by Naseem Rakha - What I know: nothing at all, but I can't resist a lyrical title so you never know.
I'll wait until I heard good things.

Hotel On Corner of Bitter & Sweet by Jamie Ford - What I know: Japanese internment camps. It had me at "Japanese". A favourite cultural subject. And I won a copy. It doesn't get easier than that.

A Better View of Paradise by Randy Sue Coburn - What I know: A beautiful cover which I featured on Cover Attraction here (would you believe the author left a comment!). Hawaii, a dying father, and a veterinarian are all I know, and that it's her third book. But it looks a lot like chick lit to me - I don't touch the stuff - ever. I feel bad about this because the author is a sweetheart, I'm reserving judgment until I hear different.

The School of Essential Ingredients by Erica Bauermeister - What I know: recommended by a blogger I trust and I won a copy so most likely will read.

Financial Lives of the Poets by Jess Walter - What I know: absolutely nothing, but if the title relates to the story, it has to be bleak.


The PNBA awards recognize excellence in writing from the Pacific Northwest. region (Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia) The Awards Committee is made up of booksellers representing the PNBA region.

2009 Book Award Winners:

The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein - Dog stories don't do it for me - too light.

Guernica by Dave Boling - Read it, reviewed it here, loved it. What I knew: The title says it.


2009 Shortlist


The Eleventh Man by Ivan Doig (Seattle, WA) - What I know: he's an awfully good writer from what I've heard, so maybe one day.

The English Major by Jim Harrison (Montana) - What I know: roadtrip with ruminations and reflections. I've only read Harrison's non fiction, but I enjoyed every word. How could I go wrong.

The Jewel of Medina by Sherry Jones (Spokane, WA) - What I know: nothing, sounds like historical fiction/chick lit. Not for me, unless I hear otherwise from someone I trust.

Shopping for Porcupine: A Life in Arctic Alaska by Seth Kantner (Kotzebu, Alaska) non fiction - Ashamed to admit that I have an ARC and I owe it a review. A male friend is dying to borrow it and I just might let him have it since I can't seem to face non fiction lately. The book is doing really well even without my review.

Do you follow fiction awards? Have you had good experiences with them or negative ones? Are there any books mentioned here that you can recommend? No spoilers though please.

Do posts on fiction book awards interest you? I'd be happy to write up more if anyone is interested.

Thursday, 28 January, 2010

The Blue Flower by Penelope Fitzgerald



The Blue Flower
by Penelope Fitzgerald


Paperback: 240 pages


Publisher: Mariner Books (April 15, 1997)



The Blue Flower
is set in Saxony, Germany during its Romantic period at the very end of the 18th century, and based on the life of Friedrich von Hardenberg (1772-1801) before he became known as the poet Novalis. Historical figures of the time such as the poet Goethe and philosopher Karl Wilhelm Friedrich von Schlegel are also present. It's a detailed and sometimes wry look into the daily life and thinking of the times and this young poet in his courtship of his beloved. The object of this highly intelligent philosophy student's passion was to everyone else a mere dullard of a child, one Sophie von Kuhn. The setting has an incredibly real feel to it, right down to what they wore and what they ate. A good day at the fair for example would be topped off by your heart's desire buying you a pig's ear or snout boiled in peppermint schnapps to munch on.

Each short chapter is like a set piece, every detail and character entirely believable and real. You feel as if you're there. While the romance, or the lofty ideal of it at least, is central to the story, for me, it was just the form to set this amazingly original historical and biographical fiction around. The blue flower is an important symbol of Romanticism. It stands for desire, love, and the metaphysical striving for the infinite and unreachable. At just over 200 pages, The Blue Flower is a comfortable read, a perfect way to spend the day in a very different place and time. Highly recommended.

Source: Bookmooch
Why I Picked Up This Book: Orange Prize nominee (1996)

Other Books Read By This Author: Offshore***** (Booker Prize winner 1979) and The Bookshop**** (Booker Prize shortlist 1978)


Author note:
Penelope Fitzgerald (1916-2000) was an award winning English novelist, poet, essayist and biographer. She wrote her first novel at the age of 59. The Blue Flower was her tenth book.

CymLowell

Sunday, 24 January, 2010

TSS I Can Dream Can't I?

Salon Sunday may be found here.

Amazon is so nice-they send me personal emails just to tell me that there's a book I don't know about that I really want to have! Usually I think blindfolded monkeys have matched me to the books but this time they were actually right.


Jewish Poet and Intellectual in Seventeenth-Century Venice: The Works of Sarra Copia Sulam in Verse and Prose Along with Writings of Her Contemporaries in Her Praise, Condemnation, or Defense by Don Harran

(Hardcover)
632 pages
Publisher: University Of Chicago Press (Nov 15 2009)
Language: English


Product
Description

"The first Jewish woman to leave her mark as a writer and intellectual, Sarra Copia Sulam (1600?–41) was doubly tainted in the eyes of early modern society by her religion and her gender. This remarkable woman, who until now has been relatively neglected by modern scholarship, was a unique figure in Italian cultural life, opening her home, in the Venetian ghetto, to Jews and Christians alike as a literary salon."


Imagine my excitement.
But my book purchasing has to be judiciously based on personal value for price paid. I'm going to let you in on what goes through my head when I see a book like this that I would truly love to own. I think and read at warp speed so imagine this all happening in a few seconds. Italics are mine, all mine.

"Hardcover List Price $109.50"(!?) Your price " $68.99 & this item ships for FREE.(!) You Save: $40.51 (37%)."(!) (I don't know whether to laugh or cry that they do they math for me but that's another topic.) The remainder of my thoughts were directed toward the publisher, not the bookseller.

But 632 pages of "The Works of Sarra Copia Sulam in Verse and Prose"! That just might be worth taking out a small loan. I love bilingual books, I own a few. But I don't read the second language here. They don't say which it is but I'm betting Hebrew or Italian. So I'm personally paying for half a book that I can't use. Oh well, happy that others can compare the texts, more money for U of C, maybe. Okay, 316 pages of such a rare treasure will be plenty for me!
But wait.

"Along with Writings of Her Contemporaries in Her Praise, Condemnation, or Defense"?! That worries me greatly. I can only imagine how many of her contemporaries (all of them) were riled up and had something to write about a Jewish female writer/thinker of the times (that's at least four strikes against her already). Don Harrán has collected " all of Sulam’s previously scattered writings—letters, sonnets, a Manifesto—into a single volume". Doesn't sound like a tome of material to me. "Harrán has also assembled all extant correspondence and poetry that was addressed to Sulam, as well as all known contemporary references to her...Featuring rich biographical and historical notes that place Sulam in her cultural context, this volume will provide readers with insight into the thought and creativity of a woman who dared to express herself in the male-dominated, overwhelmingly Catholic Venice of her time."

Now that sounds like a tome and a half.
But just how many pages of this book does the Italian lady get in which to "express herself", gentlemen? Fifty? Less, I'm betting. Even at 316 pages this book is beginning to sound like one very small part Sarra and too many parts of what everyone and their ancestors thought about this nervy upstart. You already have an almost misleading title there that will take up two pages every time you write it. I know why you published this volume, the secondary reason I mean. To sell for women's studies. But how much of the woman do I get to study for my $68.99? And no, I am not overlooking the possibility that some of those who wrote "correspondence and poetry that was addressed to Sulam, as well as all known contemporary references to her" may have been women. One or two perhaps, but they are not Ms. Sulam.

No sale here. You publish all of her own words in English and I'll pay a reasonable price for that. I'm no academic but I can get a lot out of reading her for myself because I'm a woman and a writer and not much has changed. Four hundred years on and I'm still reading female writers who have to use male names to get their work picked up (e.g. Lionel Shriver). If what the rest of them have to say in this book is really worth it, word will get around. I'll spring for the Big Book of Interpretations and Opinions by Everyone Who Ever Knew or Even Heard of the Lady when I'm ready-and I'm not talking money now.


Have a good Sunday everyone. I'll see you at Mailbox Monday-yes, I broke down and bought some new books again. The monkeys talked me into it.

Tuesday, 19 January, 2010

Waiting on Wednesday:Special Edition

Hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine.

"Waiting On Wednesday" is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.

This week's, er year's pre publication can't-wait-to-read selections:





A Riot of Goldfish by Kanoko Okamoto Jan. 01, 2010









Ransom by David Malouf Jan.5, 2010










The Blue Orchard by Jackson Taylor
Jan.12, 2010











Three Days Before the Shooting by Ralph Ellison
Ja
n. 26, 2010









Secrets of Eden by Chris Bohjalian Feb.2, 2010








February by Lisa Moore Feb.2, 1010









The Changeling by Kenzaburo Oe March 1, 2010










Solar by Ian McEwan March 30, 2010






Blueeyedboy by Joanne Harris April 1, 2010








An Unfinished Score by Elise Blackwell April 6,
2010








The Hand that First Held Mine by Maggie O'Farrell
April 12, 2010










The Singer's Gun by Emily St. John Mandel May 4, 2010








In the Company of Angels By Thomas E. Kennedy
June 7, 2010









The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de
Zoet by David Mitchell
June 29, 2010











I Curse the River of Time by Per Petterson August 3, 2010




and...Sunset Park by Paul Auster Nov. 2010, no cover available

Happy reading in 2010.

Monday, 18 January, 2010

Mailbox Monday

Hosted by Marcia at The Printed Page.

I haven't done an MM post since July because I haven't been accepting arcs. This post is different. You read it here first. I purchased books, brand new books. My last book purchase was in June, 2008. When I go about two years without finding a book that I really want, through a library, book swap, beg, borrow, or...well not that far, I am forced to buy them. I spend just enough to get free delivery. So...


In my mailbox this week:

Purchased (and completed):


Ticknor*** by Sheila Heti 2005 Canada, 109 pages Hardcover, House of Anansi Press.Inc.

Recommended by Mark Sarvas at The Elegant Variation.

I think I needed to know more about these prominent, wealthy American historians and their writings to appreciate what Sarvas called "a mordantly funny anti-history", a novel "as dense and textured as a truffle". The story consists of an inner dialogue by George Ticknor, while walking to dinner (carrying a pie) to William Prescott's home on a rainy night in Boston in the mid nineteenth century. I think dense is on the part of this reader for biting off more than she could chew. Why Heti, according to the back cover, "has taken their story and twisted it into an original tale of jealousy and heartache in the lifelong friendship between two men" I couldn't say. She does tell us in an author's note that "Ticknor was inspired by the "Life of William Hickling Prescott" by George Ticknor (Philadelphia, PA: J. P. Lipincott Company 1863). Certain phrases have been borrowed from that book, and from the work of other writers, including Florence Nightingale, Marie Stopes, and Sofia Tolstoy." Well, that explains everything. A story, even about real people, needn't be true, but it needs to be interesting in some way- even to someone who doesn't already have the history, biography, and Cliff Notes under her belt. It was okay, but not the delightful read it was for Sarvas and company. With109 pages, and told in simple language, Ticknor was certainly no struggle to read, but it wasn't much fun either. Having just finished Mrs.Dalloway and reading 25 reviews and all the comments on said reviews, I now appreciate that literature needs more than one reading. Or a special interest. But I'm going to leave that to some else and pass thisbook on to any reader who thinks this might be up their alley. Claim it in the comments and it's yours.

The Luzhin Defense**** by Vladimir Nabokov 1964 US, 256 pages Paperback, Vintage International, first English edition. Originally published 1930 France, in Russian

I saw the filmed version once with John Tarturro in the lead and he was brilliant. I didn't know then that it was a Nabokov novel, which they now publish under the title "The Defense" but I had to read it.

Not in the library, not available in swaps, etc. Worse, I couldn't even find one to purchase
with the original title. Harrumph, as they say in books. It's about a young chessmaster in whose "obsessive mind the game of chess gradually supplants the world of reality". I loved reading it, but now I have to take back my assertion that no film is ever equal to the book for me. Mind you, I never see a film before reading a book, unless I don't know it's already a book. I love stories about genius social misfits. This was Nabokov's third book, he published 25 that I know of. The title comes from a chess strategy that the main character, Luzhin (rhymes with illusion) creates in the story to beat his greatest rival. Reading about Russians and Russian emigres or the world of chess is already interesting for me, so I enjoyed the story very much.

C
urrently reading:

Moby Dick by Herman Melville 1851 US, 707 pages Paperback, Barnes & Nobles Classics

For Moby Dick Monday hosted by Ti at Book Chatter.

I read the first 150 pages in a library copy that had a terrific 50 page in
troduction and extras like maps, diagrams, explanatory notes, and a "Glossary of Nautical Terms", etc. It was a Penguin Classic. This one has a much shorter introduction by a different author, but that gives me something new to read and learn from anyway. There are no maps or diagrams in this edition but there is a "Dictionary of Sea Terms" (are we dumbing down the classics now?). I've had a ball reading this high seas adventure of whaling and terror. Here are my thoughts on Moby Dick from last Monday. Reading it with a group is the perfect way to experience what is for some a more difficult book. We are proceeding at four pages per day so there's still time to join us if you're thinking about it. I will be posting my thoughts again on the book next Monday.

To Be Read:

The Waves
by Virginia Woolf 1925 UK, 241 pages Paperback, My Penguin


For the Woolf in Winter reading group. I found the other three novels for this challenge in my stacks but needed this one. I ordered a Penguin paperback and I was so looking forward to it. What I got was a UK Penguin- with a blank cover. I'm supposed to do my own cover art! I kid you not. I featured it in Wednesday's Cover Attraction. You have got to go take a look. I'm thinking of writing up a whole post about it since I've found out more a
bout this goofy idea in recent days. If there's any interest in this topic let me know in the comments and I'll whip a post about it.

Rain and Other South Sea Stories by W. Somerset Maugham 1921 UK, 164 pages Paperback, Dover Thrift Edition

I read Maugham stories a lot when I was young. I've wanted to join some of the challenges like Short Story Monday at The Book Mine Set but I've never reviewed short stories and thought I probably wouldn't be very good at it. The truth is I had to make my book order total $39 by purchasing one more book.

I do like to read really good short stories so I naturally fell back on those I know but haven't read in 30 years. Rain came immediately to mind and I don't own any of Maugham's collections. You probably know the title story through one of the three American filmed versions, starring Gloria Swanson, Joan Crawford or Rita Hayworth. In those days it had what they call a
surprise ending. I was shocked. I got this new edition for no more than The Waves cost me- and they even threw in a cover. When I'm done with Woolf and Melville I am going to savour this collection, pretending I'm hiding in the loft of the barn where my sisters can't find me, on a long lazy summer afternoon, reliving the memories.

Won, also for the first time in months:


The Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk
2008 Turkey, 536 pages; first English translation 2009 UK Faber and Faber


From Kim at Reading Matters.

I am so thrilled to have such a beautiful tome to sit and relax with. That very book, an unread library copy due the next day and not renewable, was sitting on my desk when she emailed me that I'd won it. Serendipity do da. Pamuk is a Nobel author
(2006). I have read his Snow and enjoyed it very much. Thank you Kim, I don't want to even think about what it cost you mail to book that heavy but I will cherish it.

What came in the mail that's got you excited about reading?

Saturday, 16 January, 2010

The Swan Thieves by Elizabeth Kostova - Audio Giveaway



Hachette Books has generously offered to send three audio copies of The Swan Thieves by Elizabeth Kostova to readers of Fresh Ink Books. Thank you to Hachette and Anna Balasi for making this possible.


The giveaway is open to U.S. and Canadian residents only and Hachette does not mail to P.O. boxes. Entries accepted until midnight Monday, February 1 and winners announced as soon as all have been contacted.

Description:

"Richly told, beautifully imagined, The Swan Thief takes us across centuries, from American cities to the coast of Normandy, from young love to last love. Elizabeth Kostova deftly explores the painter's universe- passion, creativity, secret, madness- and, with a gift for storytelling that made The Historian an international sensation, conjures a world that lingers long after the last page is turned."

Listen to an Excerpt

To enter:

1. Go to Books Reviewed or Recently Reviewed at the top of the sidebar and post a relevant comment on any review on my blog.
2. Then comment on this post indicating that you'd like an audio copy of The Swan Thieves and that you are a follower or subscriber.*
3. Provide your email address.

Entries not following the rules will be not qualify.


I look forward to listening to it myself when my copy arrives and to selecting the winners.

My giveaways are for my readers. If you become a new follower/subscriber for the duration of the giveaway I have no problem with that. I am confident that a few visits will make you want to stay. 

*Updated: Feb.4: Winners were Amused,Wanda, and Kelly. Thank you to everyone for participating.

Friday, 15 January, 2010

Mrs. Dalloway by Virgina Woolf

I read this novel for the first time as part of the Woolf in Winter reading group. Discussion of this book is hosted today by Sarah at what we have here is a failure to communicate. There you will find the reviews and opinions of the other book group readers. I thought a second perspective on the book might clarify some things about the story for me. So I invited John Mutford of The Book Mine Set to do a guest post and give us his take on this modern classic. My thoughts on the book are at the end of this review. Here's what John had to say.

Mrs. Dalloway by Virgina Woolf

"It was okay. This is not the glowing review that I'm sure many English profs would give it.
While I can't say that such a scant plot enthralled me, it isn't as boring as one might think.

I think I have a better handle on this stream-of-consciousness style. Quite like reading a daily-journal-entry-type blog, it has the appeal of being let into someone else's world and the realization that most thoughts are actually quite mundane. But what keeps Mrs. Dalloway from slipping into the back of your brain too much, is the occasional glimpse into her troubles and especially her desires. When Woolf sticks to one character at a time, I'm fine. I'm not sure I grasp everything at those moments but my attention doesn't waver off leaving me trying to figure out what so-and-so is talking about. I read about the luncheon party that Richard Dalloway (Clarissa's husband) was invited. If Woolf had let go the stream-of-consciousness thing here, or still had it contained within a single person (say Richard) perhaps I could have followed. But it jumps from one person to the next and I simply couldn't attend to anyone. I found myself thinking about a time I went to an arena full of people with my hearing impaired grandfather. His hearing aid was rendered useless and he simply had to shut it off, explaining later that it couldn't focus on or isolate one conversation and just magnified all the noise in the room. See the connection?

At the end of this book, I have a theory. But going along with that theory, I have to question why Woolf chose Mrs.
Dalloway as the title character and not Peter. I saw Clarissa Dalloway as being on one end of an unhappiness spectrum, with Septimus on the other, and Peter finding his place in between. Clarissa's unhappiness seemed to stem from dwelling on trivial things (such as parties with her elite friends) while Septimus' unhappiness seemed to stem from dwelling on global, intangible things (such as human nature). Peter walked back and forth between the two, trying to find happiness, leaving him a fragment of a man (represented quite nicely with his constant fiddling with his pocketknife. (Freud anyone?). It is only at the end that he thinks he has found the answer through a conversation with Sally. Basically, he seems to resolve the question of how to find happiness- not through thinking at all (whether trivial or global) but by following his heart.

I've never heard anyone debate whether Mrs. Dalloway has a happy ending or not, but I'd have to say not. While it looks like Peter has found his answer, I'd have to say not really. Following his heart would have led him to Clarissa and almost certain heartbreak. Furthermore, if the adage were applied to Clarissa, she would have been led into the arms of Sally (and most likely heartbreak too, unless you feel a lesbian couple could have found happiness in 1920s England). And applying the adage to Septimus wouldn't even make sense. So all in all, I somewhat enjoyed a pessimistic book with nary a plot to be found."
__________________________________________________

Thank you John.
John Mutford is a reviewer who lives in the far north of Canada and has been blogging since 2005 He has had articles published in several places. This man reviews everything; literature, poetry, short stories, Shakespeare's plays, even books of the Bible, he's fearless. he also hosts interesting challenges, author polls, and other original book features that are a lot of fun. Do stop by at The Book Mine Set and take a look. __________________________________________________

My opinion is not much different than John's. I am glad that I finally read it, I will no longer feel left out and clueless when people discuss it. I have read several of Woolf works and enjoyed them all immensely ; A Room of One's Own, The Death of The Moth and Other Essays, some of her letters and diaries, Orlando, and Jacob's Room, which I reviewed here. Her intelligence and wit shines through everything she writes. Mrs. Dalloway was Woolf's fourth novel, published in 1925, and it was immediately recognized as a major achievment. My edition states "With this book she finally broke from the form of the traditional English novel, establishing herself as a writer of genius."

Basically she turned the novel of manners on its head, using the interior monologues of the main characters to give us deeper insights into their thoughts and lives. But not enough happens in Mrs. Dalloway to arouse any real interest for me. I'm not averse to stream-of-conscience writing at all. Jacob's Room in 1923 was Woolf's first experiment with it and I had very little trouble. And I always enjoy writing that let's me inside a character's head. In this story Clara (Mrs. Dalloway) plans and hosts her party, a thing she's known to do, and except for Peter's unexpected visit nothing much happens. His sudden presence does stir up strong emotions, bringing back memories of an important time in Clara's life when she made the decisions that she now lives with. All of us at times wonder how our lives would be now if we'd made different choices, married a different person, etc. But inconvenient timing prevents Clara from contemplating her thoughts for long. She is after all preparing for a huge and important party (even the Prime Minister is invited). She has little chance to sit and ruminate. Clara and Peter are the same people in the same situation at the end of the story as at the beginning. Perhaps there's more subtlety in Woolf's writing here than I am picking up on and a second reading would show me more. I know many people love this book and consider it to be her best work. I think I just need more in a story.

I look forward to the next novel in our Woolf in Winter reading group, To the Lighthouse, hosted by
Emily at Evening All Afternoon. We will be posting our reviews on January 30.
_________________________________________________

Have you read Mrs. Dalloway? What are your thoughts?









Wednesday, 13 January, 2010

A-Z Wednesdays


Hosted by Vicky at
Reading at the Beach who says:

"Go to your stacks and find a book whose title starts with the letter of the week.


Post:


1~ a photo of the book

2~ title and synopsis

3~ link (Amazon, Barnes & Noble etc.)

4~ Come back here and leave your link in the comments.

If you've already reviewed this book you can add it also.
Be sure to visit other participants to see what book they have posted and leave them a comment.
You may find your next "favorite" book.

THIS WEEKS LETTER IS "W ".

My book is:
"In this gripping novel of motherhood gone awry, Lionel Shriver approaches the tragedy of a high-school massacre from the point of view of the killer's mother.In letters written to the boy's father, mother Eva probes the upbringing of this more-than-difficult child and reveals herself to have been the reluctant mother of an unsavory son. As the schisms in her family unfold, we draw closer to an unexpected climax that holds breathtaking surprises and its own hard-won redemption. In Eva, Shriver has created a narrator who is touching, sad, funny, and reflective. A spellbinding read, We Need to Talk About Kevin is as original as it is timely."

My thoughts on We Need to Talk About Kevin. Five stars. Highly recommended.

Cover Attraction

Hosted by Marcia at The Printed Page who says:

"I love beautiful, or interesting, cover art so every Wednesday I post my Cover Attraction for the week along with a synopsis of the book. Everyone is welcome to stop by and post a link to their favorite weekly book cover."

This week's edition is about copycat covers.


The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry (2008)

The Pra
ctice of Perfection by Mary Frances Coady (2009)

I loved The Secret Scripture and I love the cover. I love the second cover too. But Barry's book is so well know since winning the Costa Prize only a year before Coady's book was published, that I wouldn't want the same cover on my collection of linked short stories if I were this Canadian author. What say ye?
______________________________________
And then there's no cover:

The Waves by Virginia Woolf

I ordered this title from Amazon and this is what they sent me. I'm supposed to make my own cover!? I'm too old and too old fashioned for this monkey business. Now I have to read a book, a classic no less, with no image in my head, no sense of the story-none. Obviously I hit the button to order what they are calling a "My Penguin". On the back of the book is a boxed space to fill in "Cover by:" for your own name. Then this silliness: "What's on your cover? Send your masterpiece to gallery.com.uk and we'll put up a selection of designs for book covers everywhere to enjoy." I don't own a camera and I can't draw. I feel like I've been robbed.
Anyone know about this? When did it start? Do you like the idea?

Tuesday, 12 January, 2010

Moby Dick by Herman Melville

Hosted by Ti at Book Chatter

Moby Dick by Herman Melville (1851)

707 pages, Barnes&Nobles Classic

Introduction by Carl F. Hovde

I'm about 150 pages in, 100 pages behind the group. I joined last week and got my book this week but I will be up to them soon. Bloggiesta took my full attention since Thursday night, I needed to do it, but my reading went out the window.

Ishmael and Queequeg are on the ship and sailing now at this point. It's obvious from the start that poor Ishmael has little or no idea of what whaling is really like, despite all the stories and signs. Reminds me of childbirth-no one tells what it's really going to be like. Ahab is still a mystery 100 pages further along according to our group leader Ti's post today. I really look forward to when he finally opens up then. It takes me a moment to figure out what Ishmael is talking about sometimes, "orchard thieves" for example (Adam and Eve) but that's part of the fun. He sounds quite educated, at least in the sense of well read, referring to ancient Classics, mathematicians, the Bible etc. I wonder if there's more to him than experience in the merchant marines? Descriptions of what they ate and drank at the time are always fascinating, "pea coffee" for instance. Ishmael's knowledge of geography seems prodigious but he is a sailor. I love the humour in how Ishmael speaks and reacts to things. At the pub, "In rolled a wild set of mariners, like an eruption of bears in Labrador." Queequeg hasn't spoken much, I suspect that's his true nature and not just a language problem, but he's fascinating. Scary looking to most but steadfast in principle. I look forward to seeing them both in action and learning about whaling, at least as it was then, (although it's not much different today from what I've seen) and from a sailor's perspective.

You do need to concentrate when you read this book but I'm having a ball. Lots of words to look up in the dictionary, "arrantest taper", "immortal by brevet", "anxious gapnels", and others. There is a decent glossary of Nautical Terms, and sixteen pages of Explanatory Notes in the book, so many are explained. Included are maps, and detailed diagrams of the parts of ships, whales, and the weapons used in the pursuit of them. The Introduction is not to be missed, and there's a section of Extracts from other works appropriate to the theme of Moby Dick. Anyone who completes this novel will have quite an education under their belt. Don't let these extras intimidate you. You can always just read the text of the story, which is 600 pages and a bit and you won't regret finishing this book.
At the very least it will be good for your self esteem.

I'm very glad I finally got around to this classic. If I'd known it was this much fun I'd have tried it sooner. Between thinking it was more for boys (as opposed to girls, I read adult literature as a kid ) and English majors spouting on about it's symbolism in the grand manner too many of them have, I thought it was not for me, maybe I wouldn't "get it" as they say. I've known for decades now that that was rubbish but just didn't get around to the book.
Reading it along with a group is very encouraging. Best yet, a brand new copy arrived in this morning's mail; I now own a copy and don't have to worry about getting the library edition read on time. And I have a new Introduction to read as the library edition was A Penguin Classic, Introduction by Andrew Delbanco.

I will be posting every Monday about my progress throughout the reading of the book.

Have you read it? Tell us your thoughts? Have you thought about reading it? There's still time to join us for Moby Dick Monday, we're not too far along. Our hosts set the pace to read only four pages a day, easy enough for anyone. Any questions or aspects of the story you want to know about? Ask away.
If you've reviewed it, leave a link, I'd love to read it.

Sunday, 10 January, 2010

Bloggiest Ole 2 The Middle

My progress after 8 hours of work:

Original goals on Bloggiesta Ole 2 The Beginning

***Make a Reviews by Author page. - DONE - Also have alphabetical Reviews by Title on the same page. Oy did I find some scam posts on my old reviews-so much extra work.

***Answer all comments, and visit every commenter's blog (I'm faithful about the latter part but do not always comment when books or subjects are out of my areas of interest). DONE (including visit several new to me blogs) Must continue the habit.

***Fix labels- simplify, reduce number of labels on posts, fix labels on review posts, set up labels for 2010- don't know how that last would be done. WORKING ON IT- what a rikrfrakn mess this is.

******Clean up links to reader/followed blogs. HALF WAY DONE- not many defunct, happy to say. Caught one I thought I had listed and didn't - shame on me, since she reads my blog.

To my readers, and lurkers too:


*** If you deal with literary fiction on your blog and think I might want to read it - let me know. I will take a good look around your blog when I have time and bookmark you if you have something to offer. I may decide to follow you but there's a waiting list (it's very short at the moment), because my link reader is full.
(A link or button to a list of all your reviews on one page is a really good idea to make things easier for me - and everyone else, so please consider it if you don't have one)

***Invite people to guest post. I did this before and it helped me so much when I was not up to writing reviews. Consider yourself invited. Email me if you're interested, I have lots of ideas. - GOT ONE

John Mutford at The Book Mine Set is a reviewer who's been blogging since 1982 and has had articles published all over. This man reviews everything; literature, poetry, short stories, Shakespeare's plays, even books of the Bible, he's fearless. I'm over the moon to think he'd do that for me. We are hammering out negotiations by email now.


Invitations to guest blog are still open. One of the things I like to do is use older reviews of books that I've read myself. Usually only a few people have seen these posts you worked so hard on and then they're almost forgotten for the all new ones that come along. You'll get full credit and a link to your blog. Just leave a comment or email me. Address is right at the top of the page.

I am pooped so off to bed - the sandman is beating me to death.

Friday, 8 January, 2010

Bloggiesta Ole 2 The Beginning

Hosted by Natasha at Maw Books Blog.

Fiesta:

Five hours of re
ading blogging suggestions and mini challenges, and deciding on goals. Too much work involved in mini-challenges for me I'm afraid but I'd love one of those copies of The Swan Thieves. The results of all that thinking?

Ma
nifesta:

***I will only do features I can reasonably keep up with at least cost to health and time, are best at doing, or get the most readers appropriate to my blog interest - literary fiction.

To wit:

-Library Loot Wednesday - family schlepps home library books every week anyway
-My Favourite Reads Thurday - can use older reviews, save energy
-The Sunday Salon - include books read and tbr that week and current read, covers whole week in one post-sorry J. Kaye. I'll do What Are You Reading Mondays when I don't get a Sunday Salon done.

***Post memes much earlier than I have been-the night before at least. Leaves time and energy to get around to all links posted the day of.

***Link all reviews to challenges and other generous bloggers (Semicolon's Saturday Review of Books etc.) immediately after posting them. Otherwise I will forget.

***Answer all comments, and visit every commenter's blog (I'm faithful about this part but do not always comment when books or subjects are out of my areas of interest).

***Make a Reviews by Author page.


This is where my readers come in:

***Invite people to guest post. I did this before and it helped me so much when I was not up to writing reviews. Consider yourself invited. Email me if you're interested, I have lots of ideas.


***Find a style of writing short but informative reviews that I can do during periods of lucidity and effective pain relief. Show Me 5 Saturday for example. I'm open to suggestions.


***Find a blogging buddy. I want spelling or grammar errors pointed out, even clumsy wording. I'm open to constructive criticism from anyone about aspects of blog content or appearance. So feel free everyone please, at any time. In the comments are fine unless you prefer email. You can all be my blogging buddies-as if you don't have things of your own to do.:)

Fiddley things:

***Fix labels- simplify, reduce number of labels on posts, fix labels on review posts, set up labels for 2010-don't know how that last would be done.

***Clean up links to reader/followed blogs. Eliminate defunct blogs and those of other interests who have never responded. I am desperate for space, Blogger has a limit and I continually find new good book blogs with no where to put them-unless someone knows a trick I don't. Bookmarking is just not handy enough for me.

After Bloggiesta:


*****Mail out book prizes (and profound apologies) to those still waiting.

*Think about making an About Me page.


and Siesta...





Wednesday, 6 January, 2010

Library Loot

Hosted alternately by Eva at A Stripped Armchair this week, and by Marge at Reading Adventures.

This week's loot:


3.So Many Ways to Begin**** by Jon Mcgregor UK 2006

Completed during The New Year Read-a-thon, also for the Typically British challenge. I loved If Nobody Speaks of remarkable Things so I just had to have more by this author. So Many Ways is a good story, well written. I enjoyed it very much. It did not have the emotional impact of If Nobody Speaks but that was a perfect five star for me. I recommend this one too.


4.Black Swan Green****by David Mitchell UK 2006

Completed during The New Year Read-a-thon, also for the Typically British, Colorful Reading,
LibraryThing Authors and Booker Challenge.

An older reader from my previous litblog said
it was the best thing she'd read in ages, and like me, she is particular about what she reads. His second novel, Number9Dream, was shortlisted for the 2001 Booker Prize as well as the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. His third novel Cloud Atlas was shortlisted for the 2004 Booker Prize. And Black Swan Green was longlisted for the 2006 Booker Prize. Thirteen year old male protagonists don't often click with me but this one did so bravo to David Mitchell for pulling that off. It takes place in the 1980's, Thatcher's era, and follows a boy through one year of his life. This book has won or been nominated for so many awards I don't know what I can add except to say I'm sure you'll enjoy it.


5.The Blue Flower***** by Penelope Fitzgerald UK 1995


Completed. This is the third of her books that I've read, after The Bookshop**** (Booker Prize shortlist) and Offshore***** (Booker Prize winner 1979). Highly recommended. My next Fitzgerald book will probably be The Gate of Angels, but I am open to suggestions. I'm considering writing a brief review of The Blue Flower (Orange Prize longlist nominee 996). If any one is interested, just say the word. Completed for Orange January, the Colorful Reading, and the Typically British challenges.

Loot TBR:

The Land of Green Plums by Herta Müller Germany/Romania 1993/English
translation 1996


I enjoyed The Appointment**** by this Nobel 2009 author very much and had to read more. The Land of Green Plums is probably her best known if not her best novel from what I've read. I'm hoping for a good experience with this one. Also part of the Read the Nobels, Global Challenge, and the Colorful Reading challenges.



The Unit by Ninni Holmqvist Sweden 2006/English translation 2008



I became intrigued by this story after reading a review by my friend Mark David at Aborbed in Words. He has such a nice way with words.



Harry Revised by Mark Sarvas US 2009


Some of you will recognize the author as the host of the litblog The Elegant Variation. I've been reading it daily for three years now. I find some good reading recommendations there. This is his first book and it is is doing well. I thought it was time I read it myself.

Currently reading:


Moby Dick by Herman Melville US 1851

Somewh
at verbose, as some say, but I happen to enjoy long descriptions and very detailed prose. I'm just barely into the story as I spent some time perusing the 51 page introduction (I love those). But I'm so glad I finally got around to this 19th century classic.
My opinion on this book will be posted next Monday for Moby Dick Mondays hosted by Ti at Book Chatter. The book is also part of the 1% Well-Read Challenge (1001 Books You Must read Before You Die). A real doorstopper at 664 pages so it will be part of the Chunkster Challenge too.

What did you pick up at the library this week that's got you excited?

Comments, questions, opinions, reading recommendations, or links to reviews are welcomed. I'd love to read them. No Spoilers though please. And I am always open to writing up a brief review of any book mentioned, for any reader who asks.

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