Tuesday, July 20, 2010

“I can’t do chatting”


#72

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

EW Grade: A
Excerpt from EW review: “Haddon, a veteran children's-book author who used to work with autistic individuals at an adult training center, never goes for cheap poignancy or facile irony…. Christopher [the protagonist] ….. a British boy with autism …. narrates a short period in his life with brisk logic and rollicking or heartbreaking humor that in either case reflects the solemn literal-mindedness of his condition (when a train-ticket seller asks him how long he plans to stay in London, he replies, ''Until I go to University''). Christopher solves a mystery or two, just like a favorite fictional hero of his, Sherlock Holmes. While the only initial crime to be solved is learning who killed a neighborhood dog named Wellington, the novel eventually encompasses Christopher's quest to determine whether or not his mother is dead, which his father has told him but the teenager cannot quite believe. " Full Review

This one lived up to the hype. What a fabulous book! I am sure there are many people like me out there who have no real understanding of autism….man, did this book open my eyes. Enlightening….sad, funny… a truly beautiful book.

Loved it! Would highly recommend

Comparisons to Anton Chekov?


#8
Selected Stories

EW must have disabled the link for this review; I can’t seem to find it. I love short stories and this one is beautifully written, but bleak, sad and dreary. Stories of suicide, child abuse, jilted lovers….just a little too much for me…

Not a fan

Friday, July 16, 2010

Troubled Childhood Story #1


#4
The Liar’s Club


EW grade: A

EW Review: Poet Mary Karr's The Liar's Club, a memoir of growing up in a '60s Texan refinery town, is nothing short of superb. Raised by an alcoholic Gulf Oil union man and a failed artist, Karr resolves her love for her dysfunctional parents with her tragicomic take on them, quarrying from a past a less courageous author might have played for sympathy.

I chose to read this book because of the accolades in Stephen King’s book and her romance with David Foster Wallace. People have mixed feelings about this memoir and I have to admit, my expectations were high. What is really sad is that I think the reason I didn’t like it is because I relate to it. Not so much that the events of my childhood mirror hers but because of the similarities in the way she dealt with her issues, focusing on the small, seemly insignificant “assaults” rather than the larger crisis which would ultimately shape her life.


I liked it... somewhat

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

And But So Then....


#66
A Supposedly Fun Thing I Never Do Again


EW grade: A-

EW Review: "Despite the success of last year's Infinite Jest, some suspected that the bricklike 1,079-page novel was propping open more doors than minds. Happily, the publication of Wallace's new collection should change all that. The author forgoes his usual irony in favor of seven surprisingly earnest appreciations of everything from being a kid in the geometrically precise Midwest to postmodern critical theory. A Supposedly Fun Thing is a heady, often hilarious tour of American diversions — state fairs and cinema, cruise ships and tennis, six hours of TV a day. Wallace fans will recognize favorite preoccupations, quirks, and, of course, footnotes (137 in the title essay alone); new readers will discover a remarkably talented, fluid, and arresting young voice."

So sad this man is gone, sooo sad. So funny and brilliant. I personally feel that Infinite Jest should be on this list as well but I am comforted by its inclusion on Time’s list. This book is lighter in tone and has some real laugh out loud moments. No one can put together a sentence like Wallace could. Here he justifies a man murdering his wife for using Jif rather than Skippy peanut butter: ".... the guy's got a point, that if you've developed a sophisticated peanut-butter palate and that palate prefers Jif theres simply no way Skippy's going to be anthing like an acceptable facsimile, and that a wife who fails repeatedly to grasp the importance of Jif is making some very significant and troubling statements about her empathy for and commitment to the sacrament of marriage as bond between two bodies, mind, spirits, and palates..." He makes it sound almost reasonable, right?

Loved it! I would highly recommend

Any Anthropologists out there?

#71
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down

EW Review: "Clear-eyed, warm-hearted, and eloquent, Fadiman tells a transfixing story of clashing cultures, in this account of a sick Hmong immigrant girl and the San Joaquin Valley doctors who tried to treat her."


EW's comments regarding this book are a little misleading. Yes....the story is about Lia Lee, a Hmong girl with a complicated seizure disorder; however, a great deal of this book is about the Hmong people, their struggles, their culture, etc. I was riveted by the story of Lia but this book is really an anthropological study....




My feeling are divided on this one...




Tuesday, June 29, 2010

...the Master of Horror....

#21
On Writing


EW grade: A-

Here is an excerpt from the EW review:"....King can often be his own harshest critic. He questions his qualifications to pen a primer on writing, comparing his monstrously successful novels to fast food: ''Colonel Sanders sold a hell of a lot of fried chicken, but I'm not sure anyone wants to know how he made it.'' As he recounts his career and provides insight into his technique, he calls Insomnia and Rose Madder ''stiff, trying-too-hard novels,'' Maximum Overdrive ''a stinker,'' and himself ''a vulgar lowbrow.''
This elegant volume proves that self-characterization wrong. Blissfully brief at 288 pages (''I figured the shorter the book, the less the bulls---''), On Writing opens with ''C.V.,'' a mini-memoir so finely seasoned that it whets your appetite for a full-scale autobiography. Raised by a single mom after his dad abandoned the family, he grew up addicted to B movies: ''Never mind Snow White and the Seven Goddam Dwarfs. At thirteen I wanted monsters that ate whole cities." Full Review

(Quick Note: I have already read 20 or so of the books on this list ...some I look forward to reading a second time and others....well, not so much. This one falls into the first category. I am a big fan of Stephen King..... I was 13 when I first read The Dead Zone and I have been in love ever since...)

I think at first glance, some people have scoffed at the fact that this book is #21 on this list. First off, it's Stephen King, a horror writer for God's sake. Secondly, its about writing.....what could be more boring? Well they couldn't be more wrong. I have always known what a great writer he is - but this book helped to convert the non-believers out there. Nothing about this book is boring, not the autobiographical section nor the "on writing" section. How many writers can make you laugh out loud during a discussion of the passive tense?

I loved it! I would highly recommend!

hmmm...a murder........


#69
The Secret History


EW grade: A
Here is an excerpt from the EW review: "This is actually a good, even profound novel. It's the story of a group of pampered and precocious students at a small New England college who devote themselves to ancient Greek culture and get more than they bargained for-tragedy, fate, Furies. It's as gripping as a murder story should be, even though the murders and murderers are no mystery; as in Greek tragedy, it's mainly a question of retribution. But what is most remarkable about the book is its own classical poise-its sovereign style and moral assurance." Full Review

Yes, this one was good. On the first page, the reader knows who was murdered and who did it…. but the story is intense regardless….you can feel the suffering of each of the characters as you read it. I agree with the review…it is profound…a story about friendship, trust (or lack thereof) and remorse…

I liked it...I would recommend