Monthly Archives: October 2010

Checking In

I haven’t read much more than the Wirehaired Pointing Griffon book in the last two weeks.   I think it is because I’m afraid to not have an eye on the puppy.   She’s not quite grasped the idea that I want to know when she needs to go outside.    Or just doesn’t care that I want to know.   Sometimes she tells me with a whimper by the door, sometimes it’s all “Hey look at me and what I can do right here, pssssssssss.”  The litle $&%#.  But she’s adorable and that’s why they make puppies so darn cute.

So I have given up on The Woman in White even though I am really enjoying it.   I just cringe every time I look at the heft of this chunkster and realize it’s been 3 weeks and I’m not even to page 100 yet.     My doctor just emailed me to ask how I’m enjoying her book Menopause Matters; I really need to dive into that before my (just a check up) appointment in 2 weeks.    And I recently lost my brain and signed up for two review copies!    SIGH.    A friend loaned me the book A Dog’s Purpose and I hate to hold on to such for too long and…   I’m overwhelmed by all my books.   Makes me want to sit and watch TV and/or play Sudoku instead.

I just found out a few bookblogger-friends have exciting news and really feel bad that I missed their joyous announcement posts.   Like being late to a party.   So CONGRATULATIONS, J and T!!     But what else have I missed?     Feel free to let me know if I need to visit and share the celebrations…

I’m not finishing my challenges.   SAD-FACE.    I’m not even looking at upcoming challenges!!    FRUSTRATED-FACE.

I’m subbing tomorrow for AP and Honors Senior English classes at the H.S.;  I’m both terribly excited and fearful.

That’s it.   Gotta run,

.

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Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Frankenstein

Thoughts   Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Dover Publications 1994 (orig pub’d 1831), 166 pages  (or 9 CDs)

Genre:  Classic?   Horror?!    Challenge:  RIP V.

I was listening to the audio* of this but it was due back to the library before I made it even 2/3 of the way.   I returned it.   I was having trouble focusing on it anyway or I was laughing at all the “WRETCHEDNESS!!!”-esses so floweryly** expressed.

I still own the book so maybe, someday, I’ll pick it up again.   I have this funny feeling that in a class with the right teacher, this would be a fascinating look at ‘humanity.’

DNF = Did Not Finish.

* If you missed my bad poetry review that I wrote awhile back, you didn’t really miss anything.
** What?  Don’t like floweryly?   flowerily?  oh well.   It seems to be the best word I could invent that fit.

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Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Boston Book Fest 2010

Saturday, October 16th, was the second annual Boston Book Festival and I was proud to be able to attend.   Last year’s was so fun, I knew I couldn’t miss it.    My friend Holly was also able to go with me and this year, we had a new friend Diane come along.   None of us had a plan and were very happy to just make it a day of discovery.    I forgot to take Copley, my blog mascot lobster along and I didn’t want to bring my camera, so this will just be a quick wordy photoless run down of what we did.

Finding out that President Obama was going to be only a few blocks away convinced us that we didn’t want to drive in;   we hopped onto the Red Line of the T from Braintree, exited at Boston Common and walked over to Copley Square.   More than a few minutes late, we entered the first event we came to:    First Time’s A Charm at the Church of the Covenant featured authors Justin Cronin (latest book The Passage), Joshua Ferris (latest novel The Unnamed), and Jennifer Haigh (debut Mrs. Kimble, latest The Condition) and hosted by Helene Atwan.     I was impressed with everyone – I have not read any of their works, but Holly has told me Mrs. Kimble was VERY good and so I think I will possibly recommend it for our next book club choice.   They all discussed how the writing of a novel and the marketing of it are so disconnected by time, that it is a difficult process to balance.    Many of the questions from the audience were about “HOW to be a WRITER” and scheduling and all the blahblahblah that I wonder about people who think all they have to do is pick the brain of a successful writer and then apply the advice.   Just write and practice the craft and be good.    And persevere.   Am I right!?   NO formula, no get-rich-by-being-a-writer schemes.    Lots of luck and lots of skill.    Typical of any success story, really.

We then wandered over to the Boston Public Library to show photos I have taken of a 1960 edition of To Kill A Mockingbird.    Unfortunately, the book MUST have “First Edition” printed or else you can’t get the thousands of dollars.    I was told mine was hardly worth the 50¢ I paid at the Beatrice NE Library Book Sale.   Still, it’s in good shape and I pass it along to a niece who I hope will cherish it.

After that, we found an early seat at the Global Hotspot:  The Middle East event at the Trinity Church Forum.    I had never heard of any of the authors but I’ve already added their books to my tbr.    Haleh Esfandiari was a gorgeous  ‘grandmother’ (her self description) who had spent 105 days in an Iranian prison on suspicions of being a spy and wrote about it all in My Prison, My Home. Along with freelance journalist Nir Rosen who writes about the relationship between the U.S. and Iraq,  Thanassis Cambanis (new book, A Privilege to Die) and host Noah Feldman (Harvard Law professor), the authors discussed Lebanon and Israel, the Hezbollah, and other topics concerning this troubled area of the world.    This was one more example of how complicated everything seems to be;  the event was well-attended and we listened to respectful and interesting questions from the audience.  I feel smarter for attending.

“Assume everyone in power lies.”    -Nir Rosen

We walked the booths and looked for fellow bloggers;  I was only able to *find*  the Book Club Girl at the Harper Perennial booth – so fun to have real live person / faces to attach to Tweeters that I follow.    I really meant to go back and buy some books but …    oh, ok – I’m trying to limit how many books I have unread in the house!   Other finds of interest were a braille alphabet book mark and a digital talking book machine that would be awesome for our Special Ed students (I often substitute teach in this department at our high school) and a flyer about how/when to donate books for prison libraries.

I also submitted a sentence to the Union Park Press creative writing project.   Have yet to see how that story turned out but am sure that my contribution was not anything impressive.    It will be online soon, though.   woo hoo!

We tried to attend the Internet or Not session featuring Nichaolas Carr, Eric Haseltine, William Powers and Andrew McAfee but it was full.  We failed to take not of the time and forgot that the afternoon crowds are HUGE!    We had this same problem last year.  Se we slipped in to a session on Justice featuring Dambisa Moya (wow!   Very impressive speaker, she wrote Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa), Nobel Prize Winner in Economics Amartya Sen, and Harvard prof Michael Sandel (I got the impression his classes would be amazing), host Joel Z Hyatt.

“We are caught in a trap of political imperatives.”  – Dambisa Moya

Another session a bit over my head but intellectually stimulating nonetheless.     We had to laugh at the volunteer who was encouraging us to crowd in so others would have a place to sit, “Please scoot and make room!  Do it for BOOKS!  Do it for the sake of READING!  Please scoot!!   Yay BOOKS!”

Authors I missed (if only I had had a better plan) are Tyler Florence, Daphne Kalotay, and Francisco Stork.  and many others!  Next year?!     I was flipping through the author pages of the program guide and saw Jerald Walker and was thinking, “Hey!  He’s that professor at Bridgewater State College that my English teacher friends all rave about!”  but the blurb says he is at Emerson College.   Come to find out – yep, same guy.   I’m looking forward to reading his latest book, Street Shadows:  A Memoir of Race, Rebellion, and Redemption.

Maybe this year, the BBF wasn’t quite as exciting as last (mainly due to last year I met Dawn of She is Too Fond of Books and she’s just the kind of gal who really knows how to zing up an adventure), but I had a great day with friends, enjoying the big city, and talking about books.   You can bet I will be going again to the next one.

“Yay BOOKS!”

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Lady’s Maid

Thoughts   Lady’s Maid by Margaret Forster, 1991 by Doubleday (first published 1990), 548 pages  |  0385417926 (ISBN 13: 9780385417921)

Genre:  Historical Fiction.   Challenge:   None, personal referral, BBAW 2010 Forgotten Treasure.   Source:  Community Library

When I was last in the hospital for a quick in/out procedure, I asked the prep nurse if she had read any good books lately.   She said, “Yes, Lady’s Maid.   I can’t remember who wrote it but it was really good!”    Somehow, I managed to remember the title and later put it on my goodreads.com TO BE READ list.     When we were prompted with the post idea for the BBAW Forgotten Treasure, this is the book that came to my, even though I had not yet read it.   I do recall thinking it odd that I could not find many if any reviews online in my corner of the book-blogosphere so that is why I chose to highlight this.   Doing this prompted me to search the interlibrary loan service and reserve it.    I tend to read my library books right away – I’m not one to check out a ton of books at one time.   I’m quite monogamous in my reading habits.

I also tend to ramble on posts like this when I fail to write a review in a timely manner.   Yep, I turned the book in already.   DARN.   I also think that I failed to read the Introduction!   I meant to do that.

If you’re still here reading this (wouldn’t it be interesting to have stats tell us how many people skim a first paragraph and then wander off?) then I can only tell you a bit of plot, that I enjoyed it very much, and point you to a better blog’s review.   And then call it a day.   I have a new puppy, you may recall, and she is a cute little time suck…

This novel introduces the reader to the imagined life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s maid, ‘Wilson’.    Historical facts have shown when she first became employed and that she never (quite) left her mistress.   She was a witness to EBB’s elopement with poet Robert Browning, travels with them to Italy and had a super-dooper relationship with their son, Pen.  (READ the END NOTES.)   Lots more happens, of course.

Margaret Forster gives a fascinating (if not long, ahem) look at the life and employment practices in the mid-1800’s,  England AND Italy.

I enjoyed it.    I have no clue how or what to say more.    Honestly, I’m not all that impressed by Ms. Elizabeth.    She comes off a tad on the bitchy manipulative side of the fence when it comes to being her maid’s BFF and then so easily dismissive.    But alas, such were the times?

Amanda of Zen Leaf has reviewed a book that also looks at the life of Mr. and Mrs. Browning, but through the adventures of their dog, Flush.   oh!  and Flush is written by Virginia Woolf!! I can’t tell you how much that intrigues me.   Maybe I just did.    I’m wishlisting this for a read someday and I also want to tackle Aurora Leigh by EBB.   I don’t have much interest in Robert Browning, actually.

Well-written, engaging, lively, with depth.


Do read Litlove’s review, Masters and Servants, at Tales From the Reading Room.    I’m telling you, again.  GO READ LITLOVE..   🙂

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Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Fizzythoughts Cheerleading Mini-Challenge

Oh I wish I were a full participator,
That is what I truly want to be-e-e
cuz if a I was a REAL readathonner,
Then everyone would come and cheer for me.

but I own a boat and we’re out being social,
And I’m catching flack for wanting to read inste-eh-Ed
I’m reading a page every so often
And logging into Twitter when I can.

I just now got yelled at…
I’m hiding from the crowd.
I am so thankful for 3G
But it’s time to run off to dinner and end this rhyme.

Oh I wish I were a REAL read a thonner
That. Is what I ‘d truly like to be e e
I’m reading Woman in White when I can
And envious of all you rea – eed – ding!!!!!!

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Read-A-Thon Oct 2010

hour 8 update – Am on page 28 of The Woman in White by WilkieCollins.

🙂

Since this is the last weekend for using the boat before we pack it up, pull it out of the water, shrinkwrap it and wistfully look forward to NEXT year,

I won’t be full-on participating in Read-A-Thon this Fall.   😦    Nope, I’ll be partying with friends at Octoberfest in Newport RI.    SO, I thought I would post this big cheer for everyone who will be setting aside time and stacks of books to read and blog and blog and cheer and read and tweet and do all that other fun stuff.

CHEERS!

Please turn off cumbersome sign-in forms, (ie take off word verification?)   🙂     Here’s a little ditty to get you in the proper frame of mind:

The books are stacked carefully, alongside the comfy chair.

Snacks and favorite teas – at the ready; excitement is in the air.

Kids&dogs are dropped off elsewhere, spouses paid to go away,

What heavenly bliss, to sit around and only read for 24 hours this day!


DEWEY’s 24 Hour Read-A-Thon

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Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

New Books In the House

The Witch of Hebron by James Howard Kunstler – Thank you Alix!

Virginia Woolf bio by Hermione Lee – for Women Unbound Challenge – #fridayreads prize!

Neon Vernacular by Yusef Komunyakaa – Thank you, Lu, for a convincing BBAW Forgotten Treasures post) – #fridayreads prize!

D.V. autobio by Diana Vreeland – #fridayreads prize!

Bob Dylan’s CHRONICLES Volume One – for the  John Cusack Challenge (bookmooched)

How To Grill by Steven Raichlen – with encouragement from BermudaOnion, gift for my husband #fridayreads prize!

I want to especially thank @thebookmaven for giving out prizes to the Twitter “Friday Reads” participants!    If you are on Twitter on Fridays, just use the hashtag #fridayreads (and/or #fridaylistens for audio books) and you just might win a prize!   I did!!    With my Amazon gift certificate plus only a few dollars of my own, I purchased the Raichlen Grilling book, D.V., the Woolf bio and the poetry book.

Read all about Twitter’s #fridayreads here as explained at The Book Maven’s blog.

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Tis October… or “Livid With the Hue of Death”

An original poem penned (typed?  digitally created?) by yours truly on a late afternoon while wishing I could call and yap about this book to someone:

Between and betwixt
the cartwheeling leaves flee down the street at dusk
on a cruel sharp breeze.
yet bouts of calm sinisterness seem in hiding,
in waiting between breathes to inflict upon the senses.

Oh woe is me, this confusion these horrors!
of listening to the self-important ramblings and prolongations of the start of a story
that is the listening experience
of an audio book
called Frankenstein.

♦  

So.   Earlier this afternoon; it’s raining.   I’m on my way to Plymouth Mass to go to the nearest Petco dog-washing station to give Oscar a bit more scrubbing and deskunking and I’m listening in the car, right?   Are you with me?   And I’m only three quarters paying attention wondering if I probably shouldn’t have the cruise-control on since the road is wet and  it’s blowing pretty good and how to get this rambling old dude to just hurry up already about the studies of the ancient silly scholars and just tell me about the creature when my mind must have wandered off and then, I’m listening to …

“I had worked nearly two years, for the sole purpose of infusing life into an inanimate body.  For this I had deprived myself of rest and health.  I had desired it with an ardour that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart.”

Um wait.  Just like that?  you study this and that and work in your lab and all the sudden you have a real live IT-thing wake up on you and you’re…    UPSET about it?

OK.

I must tell you that when I first began this audio, I had to pop out the CD and make sure I was really listening to Frankenstein.   What’s with the Russia stuff and planning a trip, and expedition to the North Pole?      I was confused.

Why is the year “Seventeen ____ (pause/blank line/dash)” on the correspondence?  Which character is narrating this?

Finally, I figured out that the sailing Captain wasn’t Frankenstein but that they picked up Mr. Frankenstein near death and certainly without chance of survival/rescue, but.

We aren’t really even told the guy is Frankenstein until further in and quite gently ‘dropped in’, in my opinion.

Actually, I’m having fun with the language – all a bit flowery and pretentious to my ears but then I’m not ‘of’ the early 1800’s.   I’m of the late 1900’s.    Groove on, dude.

Have you ever wondered about the word CREATive and the word CREATure?     Interesting, no?   no?

Help me if I begin to start talking like this:    (I almost told my husband when he called just now that)

“Yes, the rain is falling, yet at varying intensities;  I dare say it does not seem to threaten harm to our abode.  Still, do take care when embarking on your journey homeward.”

The narrator of my audio book is Jim Weiss.  He’s good; very dramatic.   He reads lots of classics.

So I play with the forward and retreat or rather the de-advance of the audio to hear what I miss and I get to:

“It was on a dreary night of November, … With an anxiety that almost amounted to agony, I collected the instruments of life around me, that I might infuse a spark of being into the lifeless thing that lay at my feet.”

Well DON’T DO IT  if you don’t want to!!!!

And my title?    Don’t you just love the imagery “livid with the hue of death”?  Here’s the full quote on page 35 (yes, I have the book in hand right now, but not while I’m listening in the car, don’t worry.)

“Delighted and surprised, I embrace her, but as I imprinted the first kiss on her lips, they became livid with the hue of death; her features appeared to change, and I thought that I held the corpse of my dead mother in my arms; a shroud enveloped her form , and I saw the grave-worms crawling in the folds of flannel.”

Now if THAT isn’t a R.I.P. worthy quote, I don’t know WHAT is!

Got any creepy-crawly quotes gathered from YOUR RIP experience so far?

And so we begin the month that is October.   Dewey’s Read-a-thon is coming up! (Oct 9) Boston Book Fest is the weekend after that!  

I’m currently reading a library book Lady’s Maid by Margaret Forster which was my BBAW Forgotten Treasure but golly is it long – at 548 pages, hardback, not tiny font but small enough.     Luckily, it is just the right amount of captivating.

My September Summary is SIX books, most for RIP (4), two being for my Real Life Book Club, The Bookies.   No nonfiction.    I think my nonfiction count is down from last year.   I just ordered Hermione Lee’s Virginia Woolf which I want to read to finish up the Women Unbound Challenge, which is winding down (and miserably ignored of late) and due to end on November 30, 2010.    REMIND ME to post something over there…

I’m rather bummed that I didn’t read a Banned Book for this week’s Banned Book Week (whoa – was that redundant?) especially when my niece asked me on Facebook if I did.     Surely some idiots with too much time on their hands banned The Maltese Falcon at some point, right?  But I couldn’t find it on any list during the 10 minutes I searched.   Happy BBW if you are celebrating.

This should give anyone more than enough fodder for something to comment on.   or I’ve overwhelmed you all!    Blog at you next week…

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Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.