Sunday, January 25, 2009
Wuthering Heights
Am I ever glad to be finished with this classic! If anyone is reading my blog, I posted awhile back about feeling a "lack" of grounding in the classics so I am working my way through a "must read" list of same. I have had a copy of Wuthering Heights languishing on my bookshelf for years, so decided to have a go.
The beginning of this gothic novel is very good. The setting is perfect...the dank, dark bogs and moors, blinding snowstorms, a menacing house, sinister landlord, skulking servants. The characters are all demoralized. The plot unfolds around a theme of hatred, violence, and revenge. Pretty grim stuff, but kind of expected. One scene in particular gave me high hopes that this was going to be a good read, given the genre (I usually avoid "horror" stories). This was a dream sequence where our narrator has a nightmare involving a ghostly child.
After the dream, the story is told by Nellie, a servant. She uses flashbacks and time shifts to describe how the residents of Wuthering Heights and its surrounds came to be such a woeful bunch. Hundreds of pages of grim. I am still not sure why this book is considered such a classic. It was not the first gothic novel after all. So, I consulted the Oxford Companion to English Literature. Here is what it says:
"Early reviewers tended to dwell on the novel's morbid and painful aspects, but their neglect has been overtaken by what is now a general recognition of the mastery of an extremely complex structure, acute evocation of place, poetic grandeur of vision, and a highly original handling of Gothic and Romantic elements inherited from lesser works."
OK, now I get it. That said, I admit to a big sigh of relief as I placed Wuthering Heights back onto the bookshelf. Been there, done that.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
ON OUR OWN
I propose to send out my book that I chose because I have already purchased it and it's pretty darn cool. It will just be for you gals to enjoy.... it's not a regular book. And then, Maggie will keep up the BLOG so that we can all stay in touch and share what cool things we are reading at the time. Let's see if that works.... if folks fall by the wayside, well, so be it. It's been fun.... let's give it a break and we can always start again later.
I have loved getting to know you all, and that can keep right on keepin' on! All the best, Linda
Monday, January 19, 2009
These Are a Few of My Favorite Things.....
HISTORY
l. No Ordinary Time by Doris Kearns Goodwin About the US effort at home during World War II
2. Land of the Firebird by Suzanne Massie Easy to read history of Russia
3. Playing for Time by Fania Fenelone She played in the orchestra at Auschwitz
4. The Lost Life of Eva Braun by Angela Lambert Fascinating look at Hitler and those around him
TOUCHED MY HEART and SOUL
l. Harvest of Hope by Jane Goodall She took time out to write a book that she felt the world needed to read.
2. Into the Blue by Virgina McKenna Featuring "Flipper's" (dolphin) trainer who realized how much destruction his life's work had caused for other species.
3.Providence of a Sparrow If you love animals, you will LOVE this book. One man's extraordinary friendship with a little bird.
4. Expecting Adam by Martha Beck She completely rejects her Harvard education and teaching position, and her life's values when she gives birth to her son who is retarded.
BIOGRAPHY/ AUTOBIOGRAPHY
l. Act One by Moss Hart The great playwright entertains with his autobiography.
2. Portrait of Myself by Margaret Bourke White She gave up a "normal" woman's life to be a world class photographer. ( And she is an excellent and entertaining writer!)
3. Steichen by Penelope Niven Another photographer who changed the face of modern photography. (Who retreated to Paris for some years.)
4. Yamsi by Dayton Hyde He owned and ran a huge ranch in Eastern Oregon
5. Only When I Laugh by Gladys Workman Maybe the best autobiography I have read.... at least the funniest. She and "Norman" (her husband) move to Scottsburg, OR to start a new rural life.
PURE ENTERTAINMENT
l. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens My favorite book
2. The Shell Seekers by Rosamund Pilcher England, cooking and gardening fill the pages and embellish the wonderful life of the heroine.
3. The Mitford Series of books by Jan Karon The people are wonderful and the writing is charming
4. Girl of the Limberlost by Gene Stratton Porter An old book with immense atmosphere.
5. Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne The wisdom in this book rivals Socrates in my mind!!
Hope you had fun reading through these. I had fun gathering up the titles... Happy reading. Linda
Friday, January 16, 2009
New Book, New Year
Hi all,
I realize that not all reviews are in for Suite Francaise, or perhaps not everyone is even done with Suite Francaise (me in particular). This post is by no means meant to rush anyone. Review and read at your leisure!
But, here is the new book. Picked by Annelle, it is now in circulation among some of the readers.
For those of you that read and enjoyed Under the Tuscan Sun, here is another work by Frances Mayes. Myself, having enjoyed the movie Under the Tuscan Sun, I am equally as enthused to visit her European world!
Happy reading to all!
Magpie
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Unfinished Symphony
The framework for Suite Francaise, literally an "unfinished symphony", was written "real time", an incredible achievement considering the stress, personal and collective, Irene Nemirovsky was experiencing and observing. Not only was Irene a writer, she was a wife, a mother, and a Jew in Occupied France. Her achievement boggles the mind.
The first part of SF, "Storm in June", opens with the shelling of the outskirts of Paris by the Germans. This sets the scene and sets up an atmosphere of dread. "To them it began as a long breath, like air being forced into a deep sigh. It wasn't long before its wailing filled the sky." Poetry indeed... What would you do? You would probably do the same thing the Pericands, Charlie Langelet, and Gabriel Corte do. Panic, throw together a few possessions, and flee. This is where Irene shows real genius. She takes a few characters from across the "class" spectrum, and tells their stories using spare elegant prose. Her characters join thousands of others on the road headed "out of town". The few represent the whole.
Never again will you wonder how the "civilized" human animal responds to unbelievable stress. The thin veneer of civilization falls away. Would you forget your invalid father-in-law in your panic? Maybe you would. Would you steal gasoline from a young couple for your own selfish reasons? Maybe you would. I am sure we think we would not, but this is where Irene pushes through the veil and uncovers our naked fear for all to see.
Like Linda, I was having a little trouble at first keeping track of who was who. But as the story unfolded, the pages turned. Two characters stood out for me. Charlie Langelet, the gasoline thief, who stole to return home to his prize possessions ends up losing his most precious one...his life, in a random accident. No one can be prepared for life's endless possibilities, I guess.
My favorite character was the writer, Gabriel Corte. He is so full of himself, so superior, he oozes arrogance. I pictured him played by Max von Sydow in Linda's movie. Remember him in "Hannah and Her Sisters"? After Gabriel returns to Paris, "That winter Gabriel Corte's terrace was covered in a thick layer of snow; he and Florence put the champagne out there to chill. Corte would write sitting next to the fire, which still didn't quite manage to replace the lost heat of the radiators. His nose was blue; he could have cried from the cold. With one hand he held a piping hot-water bottle against his chest; with the other he wrote." But, he had champagne on the terrace! I wonder if the scene by the stove is Irene's own and the champagne is a dream.
The second part, "Dolce", is much more restrained. This is a story of interiors. We spend much of the time indoors or inside the minds of various characters. We are introduced to the German occupiers as individuals, undergoing their own traumas and dramas. We almost sympathize with the plight of these young men, away from home, lonely, disappointed by the war's intrusion into their lives. This is exactly the point of "Dolce". Irene gets to the nub of how easy it is to "sympathize", and then, eventually, to "collaborate".
I found "Dolce" less interesting than "Storm in June" but no less compelling. The young Madame Angellier, early on, while saying a rosary for her captive husband, Gaston, lets her mind wander and "Lost in thought, she let the rosary slip from her fingers and fall to the ground..." A portent of the familiar, the accepted, falling away in the Occupation. As Irene says in her notes, "People get used to everything..."
Finally, the Appendices. I was very interested in Irene's notes about the craft of the writing, her doubts and frustrations. I see her sitting alone in the woods, among the fallen leaves, reading Anna Karenina and writing in her tiny script to preserve paper. And, in the last Appendix, letters tell the sad story of Irene's final days and her husband's frantic efforts to find her.
As we know, the symphony was unfinished. However, its melodies will live on and that is the gift she left to the world.
Glad I Read It!!
At first I was starting to think that Suite Francaise was going to be another Marge Piercey debacle. Too many characters, nobody tied into each other and not time enough to get to know each character. After the first exodus part, I wasn't too excited to read Dolce. But I read on and I am certainly glad that I did. After the book about Eva Braun, that I recently read, Suite Francaise is the next best book I have read about World War II. It gives you the real feeling about what life must have been like under the Nazi Regime.
I consider Irene a poet. Her turn of phrase and her attention to odd details makes her writing some of the best that I have read. I realize after reading the entire book, that her idea was to write a "symphony". If she had been allowed to complete this 5 part epic, it would, in my mind, be a huge classic. What a shame, what a loss for all of us.
After reading the book, I continued on into the appendices. That actually gets a little eerie. And very sad. Her husband's search for her was heart breaking. The letters back and forth becoming more and more desperate..... it's a valuable part of the book. I am so glad that it was added because it "made" the book.
Originally, I thought that Suite Francaise was a book about Irene. I was a little disappointed when I figured out that it was just a work of fiction written by her. I now think that a book about her life would be as interesting as the work she wrote and hope someone sees fit to tackle that in the future. Or... wouldn't this make a good movie?? Linda
Sunday, January 11, 2009
What Is Kay Talking About???
Saturday, January 10, 2009
3 Books and a Poem
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The first book that really enthralled and excited me was Africa Solo by Kevin Kertscher. It's a travel memoir, set in the early 90's, about a man that hitchhikes across Africa. From Morocco to Kenya. I first read it when I was 13. My parents were out of town, so I blared the African music on the speakers, and read this book about a person taking a wonderful leap of faith. The book struck me. It made me realize that anything really is possible, even on limited funds. Granted hitchhiking across Africa doesn't exactly sound appealing now, but at 13, it sounded like the ultimate adventure...and still kind of does. It opened my eyes to this big, beautiful world we live in. And that people, everywhere, are essentially the same. Also, the same year I read this book, I hunted down the author and sent him a letter describing how much his book meant to me; and come 2 days before Christmas that year, he replied to my letter. A lovely handwritten response to my young idealism. He encouraged my love of Africa, and all her hidden treasures. His letter is still one of my most cherished possessions. I've included my favorite excerpt from one of his first nights camping in the middle of the Sahara.
"Outside, a blanket of stars swept above my head. Some blended together into clouds of light, while others loomed so large and so bright that they seemed within reach. I felt I might be able to grab a handful to hold in my pocket, and at the same time, I felt as tiny as the grains of sand around me. I was far away from the crowded cities. With sand around me. With the cover of my tent off so that I could see the sky through the screened roof, I lay down to think, nestled in my warm sleeping bag and enveloped in an infinite cradle of sand and stars."
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The second book to top my list is A Movable Feast by Ernest Hemingway. For those of us rich with idealism (I've got it bad), I think this book sums up the traveler/writer/poet/cafe sitter lifestyle. For those of us that loved our 'blankies' as kids, this book is about as 'blankie' as a book can get for me. Other Hemingway books I really don't regard with much ooh and ahh, but this work, seems to go within his soul, and capture the true human being. I think the 'blankie' analogy pretty much sums up why I love this book...it just makes me feel good, really good. So, naturally, here's one of my favorite excerpts.
"You expected to be sad in the fall. Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintery light. But you knew there would always be the spring, as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen. When the cold rains kept on and killed the spring, it was as though a young person died for no reason."
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The third, and final book I will include in my 'favorites' is The Devil's Picnic by Taras Grescoe.
An incredibly witty and educated look in to the world of 'forbidden' foods. Be it poppy seeds in Singapore, Epoisses cheese in the metros of Paris, or Pentobarbital Sodium in Switzerland. It's a fascinating look into the simple but intricate cultures around the world, and the hypocrisies. Viewed through the eyes of a cynical, sarcastic, Canadian, foodie (my kind of person :) ), Taras gives incredibly interesting factoids pertaining to each forbidden item. I actually felt after walking away from this book, enlightened. And wanting to know more. What other seemingly 'wrong' and 'not dones' are actually just that way, because the majority of the world want you to view it so, or they themselves think so. This book also brought to the forefront of my mind how sanitized our world has become...and in many cases that is not such a good thing (to know more check out Guns, Germs, and Steel). But in the overall, it was just refreshing to see the world through the eyes of an enlightened human being, and someone that doesn't just 'eat' what the system has to feed him.
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And the poem bit... The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes. A beautiful poem that jumps of the tongue in lyrical prose. I always find myself reading it with a Scottish accent. It again, is a 'blankie' of a poem for me. Comforting and lovely. Granted, it's haunting and eerie, but also poignant.
I've also included a small bit from my favorite E.E. Cummings poem. Happy reading!
"here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart
i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)"
Thursday, January 8, 2009
...and then there are the "others".
Select your 3-5 favorite books that had an impact on your life. It might be just that they entertained you tremendously. It might be that they changed the way you look at a part of life. They may have given you a skill, or an idea for a career.... whatever. List your picks and write a little (3 sentences) jot about each one.
I think it will be really fun to read everyone's. Hope you guys have a good time doing it too. Linda
P.S. January l5 is already next week. I think it's fair to write comments about Suite Francais anytime after next Thursday! Onward and upward troops!
Monday, January 5, 2009
New Year...New Outlook
I am about halfway through Sweet Francais, and thought I would comment on The Sharper Your Knife now that I am finished with it. It was a fast read, and although I thought it was good, there was nothing great about it. I wasn't compelled to pick it up. In my opinion, it read more like a journal, and I would have liked to have seen more on her interpersonal relationships...something to keep the story interesting. I did like hearing her account of what went on at the school, it brought me back to my many years working in restaurants, and I could really relate to some of the interactions with dishwashers, chefs, assistants, etc., so that gave me a chuckle :) I would love to someday see the dogs with their owners in restaurants also! Too bad we have too many health regulations in the US :) As I appreciate her career change, I was baffled at her real reason on wanting to attend LCB as she never did become a chef; I would have liked to have seen more development in that area. Maybe it was simply her love her cooking, or maybe it was a badge to wear. I do, however, understand now how she was able to financially achieve her lifetime goal, after visiting her website I found out she was not selling puppets :), but was, in fact, the head of editorial for Microsoft in London. Now I get it. I enjoyed reading her description of Rungis, the giant food market, even if it was a little heartwrenching to picture the animals hanging upside down with heads still attached (poor guys). My favorite part was when her sister Sandy is visiting her and gets to the steps of Sarbonne.
"This was the life that could have been Sandy's. But if it had been, would be she be a different person? Would she have her daughter, or her happy twenty-five-year marriage? Where would she be now? 'Mama, what are you thinking?' asks Sarah. Sandy thinks for a moment. 'Maybe you can go here one day' is all she says. With that, we turn and leave the university behind."
It was as if she was facing her dream, but was living it at the same time. She had all she wanted and her life was full. Even if she didn't have the degree from Sarbonne.
Which leads me to my final thoughts: For 2009 it is my endeavor to do things that are critical to my happiness. So many of us 'search' for 'things' that make us happy....they are most often right in front of us; smiles, laughter, family, fellowship...love. I recently read an article that I have heard of in the past about filling your jar. A professor filled a jar of mayonnaise with rocks and asked his students if it was full. They answered yes. Then he filled it with sand, and it sifted down between the rocks, again the students saying the jar was full. Then he filled it with water. Everyday we get the choice of what to put in our jar; if we at first fill it with the small things (laundry, dishes, cleaning for me) there is no room for the big things (family time, creativity, etc. for me). We only get so many days, so what do they matter if we are not filling them with the big stuff?? Maybe you are thinking 'Great, I already do that,' but for me I have to put forth effort to make time for myself and things that are important to me. I guess it's just a neat way to think about things. Hope everyone had a most wonderful New Year and many blessing for 2009!
Above is Alivia helping make cookies. We love to bake! Now cooking, on the other hand, that is something that may be added to my New Year resolutions :) I need to venture out beyond my comfort (or maybe it's creativity?) zone. I am getting better though!
Sunday, January 4, 2009
January... New Beginnings
This sure promises to be an interesting year! Hope you all have some new plans and new ideas for this new year. I have the next 2 book choices lined up, ready to mail out to everyone. I'm kinda thinking that maybe we should try to wrap up "Suite Francaise" by the middle of January. What do you guys think??? Kay is finished. Kay is always finished first. I am about halfway, but I haven't been reading anything for almost 2 weeks. (Lennie, have you even started the book???) I think I will plan on mailing out Annelle's choice (aka Lennie) around Jan. l5. She has selected Frances Mayes, "A Year in the World".
The next choice is mine and I have it ready to go also. And then I think it's Kay.... So.... Kay, you can begin thinking about your book choice. Hope you all have a good book, a coffee (even if it's not Starbucks) and a warm fire to sit and read by. Many happy returns of the new year!! Linda