Archive for July, 2011

Broken Colors

With soaring lyricism, Zackheim limns an exquisitely haunting portrait of an indelibly scarred, yet deeply passionate, woman.”         – Booklist

Thoughts    Broken Colors by Michelle Zackheim, Europa Editions 2007, 318 pages

FIRST SENTENCE:   Sophie Marks never knew her parents.

MOTIVATION for READING:    Europa Editions Challenge.   Picked up at BEA 2010.

WHAT’s it ABOUT:    An artist woman’s life story of growing up an orphan in England, going to art school and falling in love (with consequences), being the lone survivor of a WWII bombing of her home, running away to Paris to paint, marrying another artist and living in Italy, fleeing that situation and hiding in the American desert while becoming famous for her art and finally realizing true love back in Italy with the Italian husband.  Hope that’s not too spoilerful.

WHAT’s GOOD/NOT so good:    Some sentences are truly beautiful.  However.   It all fell flat for me and I was so bored and non-impressed that I almost gave up on it 5/6 of the way through.   I slogged on anyway to give it:

RATING:  TWO slices of pie.

FINAL THOUGHTS:   Zackheim also wrote a NONFICTION book called Einstein’s Daughter  and I am intrigued enough by the premise/history/subject of this to give the author’s glimpses of glorious prose one more chance.   Someday maybe.

RECOMMENDED?     Possibly quite lovely for anyone who enjoys lyric prose, lush descriptions, and references to art technique.

OTHER REVIEWS:    Coffee Stained Pages gives a beautiful description (and less plot than I did) of this novel.   I’ll be watching for more on the Europa Editions Challenge.  If you have read this, please let me know and I will add the link.
HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Help Me Pitch Titles to My Book Club

********* updated after book club vote to let you all know that we chose EVERYTHING BEAUTIFUL BEGAN AFTER!!!    ***********

 

I will be pitching the following titles to my club on Thursday.   Which would YOU vote for?  The blurbs are from goodreads.com and I am including the Kindle pricing because almost all of my friends have that eReader.   Clicking on the book cover will take you to goodreads.

Everything Beautiful Began After    by Simon Van Booy.   A huge favorite of those bloggers who adore Mr. Van Booy.   I have read a short story collection and I must say, his writing IS beautiful.   I purchased a copy at the first day of the Borders-Is-Going-Out-Of-Biz sale.  #sob   Paperback 416 pages, Kindle $9.99

Simon Van Booy brings to the page his unique talent for poetic dialogue and sumptuous imagery in this his remarkable debut novel of love and loss, dependence and independence. Rebecca has come to Athens to paint. Born and raised in the south of France, Rebecca’s mother abandoned her and her sister when they were very young, left to be raised by her loving yet distant grandfather. Young and lost, she seeks solace in the heat of Athens. George has come to Athens to translate language. Dropped off at a New England boarding school when he was a child, he has close to no relationships with anyone, except the study of ancient language and alcohol. Henry has come to Athens to dig. An archaeologist, Henry is on-site at Athens during the day, and roams the Agora on the weekend. Three lost and lonely souls whose worlds become inexorable enmeshed with consequences that ripple far among the ruins of ancient Athens.

Two Rivers    by T. Greenwood.   I know absolutely nothing about this (and will TRY to not even even read the blurb I’m about to cut and paste!)   My friend just loaned this to me and it was included in the Reading Group Choices 2010 edition.     Paperback 367 pages, Kindle $9.60

“Two Rivers is a convergence of tales, a reminder that the past never washes away, and yet, in T. Greenwood’s delicate handling of time gone and time to come, love and forgiveness wait on the other side of what life does to us and what we do to it. This novel is a sensitive and suspenseful portrayal of family and the ties that bind.” –Lee Martin, author of The Bright Forever and River of Heaven

How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe     by Charles Yu.    I read a review of this at Ti’s BOOK CHATTER blog and knew that I must read.  I also think the idea of a book club is to read something one might never ever pick up without a nudge.   Hardcover 234 pages, Kindle $11.99

National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 Award winner Charles Yu delivers his debut novel, a razor-sharp, ridiculously funny, and utterly touching story of a son searching for his father . . . through quantum space & time. 

and finally, NOT that I have a favorite but this one excites me:   The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb   by Melanie Benjamin.    The subject of this historical fiction novel grew up in the town I now live in.   WICKED COOL!   And the reviews so far are GUSHING-good.   Hardcover 448 pages $15.44, Kindle $12.99

She was only two-foot eight-inches tall, but her legend reaches out to us more than a century later. As a child, Mercy Lavinia “Vinnie” Bump was encouraged to live a life hidden away from the public. Instead, she reached out to the immortal impresario P. T. Barnum, married the tiny superstar General Tom Thumb in the wedding of the century, and transformed into the world’s most unexpected celebrity.

A barnstorming novel of the Gilded Age, and of a woman’s public triumphs and personal tragedies, The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb is the irresistible epic of a heroine who conquered the country with a heart as big as her dreams—and whose story will surely win over yours.

OK!  Time to vote!   I will be sending my club the link to this so they can vote as well.   I have the power to dictate WHICH book to read but not yet sure which one I would pick.   Thank you. And have a nice day.

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Pi Approximation Day

Today, July 22nd, is PI APPROXIMATION DAY!  [Clicking those words will take you to Wiki for the full explanation.]

And I promised you a pie to celebrate.  

Even though it was forecasted to be one of the hottest days of the year, I still went ahead and turned on the oven to BAKE.    I made you this PLUMCOT Pie with Oatmeal-Walnut Crumb Topping per the Deep-Dish Pluot Pie recipe from Ken Haedrich’s PIE book.

The plumcots were on sale at my favorite grocery store;   I bought a few apricots,too, because I don’t recall the last time I ate a fresh apricot.   It was sweeter than I expected.

Photo Essay of the Process:

For Chris:   I made a single pie crust of 1.25 flour, 3/4 stick unsalted butter, 1/4 salt pulsed in the food processor.  Then mixed while slowly adding 3 Tblsp water, chilled 15 min, next rolled round to my pie plate, and chilled again.   Filling was 2 apricots, 6 or 7 plumcots, sugar, lemon juice and zest, nutmeg (let sit for 15 min) and then a sugar + cornstarch mix with all of this filling the pie crust.   I baked that for 30 minutes at 400 while I assembled the oatmeal-walnut crumb topping (which also had sugar and cinnamon and salt) to tamp onto the fruit of the pie, baked for 30 minutes more at 375.   It dripped a lot!  But I had a pan to catch it.   Page 120 of Haedrich’s awesome book.   I recommend.

I have vanilla ice cream to accompany.     I made a Banana Cream Pie, as well.

Happy Pi Approximation Day!

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Happy Birthday Miss Esther Isabella Sunshine!

My puppy turns ONE today.

 Esther, age 3 months

Esther, age 6 months

Looking festive.

This was taken July 4th, 2011, two weeks shy of her first birthday.

.

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Somebody Help Me Remember

So, next week has July 22, Pi Approximation Day.     I hope to be ready with a cool pie to share with you.    Last March, I forgot and the 14th snuck up on me.     I can’t let it happen again so I am scheduling this so my (today’s) self will help my future self remember!

I guess I could take requests…   What kind of pie would you like to see here next week?

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.

I’m Joining the BAND

The Blogger’s Alliance of Nonfiction Devotees

or BAND for short…

What is one of your favorite types of nonfiction to read? OR What is one of your favorite nonfiction topics to read about?

I haven’t really thought about what types of nonfiction I like to read…    I like memoirs sometimes, biography often but not often enough, easy-to-understand science-y stuff, narrative nonfiction and …   um, I guess I need to check the definitive list.   [One second, please while I look again at my Sophisticated Dorky friend Kim's post that explains the BAND.]

travelogues – though I show little evidence, and even some self-help.   Even that self-help category is broad!   I own books to inspire creativity, how to write a letter, keep a journal, reference texts and quote books, etc.   And cookbooks!    Cookbooks are self-help, right?

I have a few essay books on my tbr. I love most anything penned by Tracy Kidder. I like books on feminism and want to explore further the topic of women and technology.

I ENJOY NONFICTION.    Do you?  

The Days of Abandonment

Thoughts    The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante, Europa Editions 2005 – 4th printing 2008 / original 2002, 188 pages, translated from Italian by Ann Goldstein

WHY this now/then:  For the Europa Editions Challenge.  Picked up at BEA 2010 upon the urging of Softdrink*.

FIRST Sentence:  ”One April afternoon, right after lunch, my husband announced that he wanted to leave me.”

WHAT’s it ABOUT:  This is the story told by a mother of two children ages ten and seven of how she handled the first months after being left by her husband.    It is a psychological tightrope of conflicting emotions;   confusion, rage, disorientation, desperation and grief.   Finally, she arrives at something that might be called acceptance — but wow!  what a ride it is to get there and the ending is one that left me unsure.

It is not for the weak of stomach.

Did I like her?  Would we have been friends?   Did I agree with anything she did?   Could I understand?   Could I even guess if I would have had any of the same feelings or reactions?   At the end, was she really moving on or what exactly?

Would this make a good book club discussion book?  Oh yes.

Did I curl up beside my husband, hug him and tell him** to never ever leave me?   Um, yea.  I did.   And that was before page 30.

The author was skilled at keeping that tightrope taught, the pacing unforgiving, the descriptions both succinct, sharp and yet at times, hazy and vague. At many points, I too was lost in her thoughts only to be jolted with questions of WHAT?!  Where am I? The writing kept me reading on, marching word after word;  disoriented and lost just like Olga and her mind-wandering experience.    I would not hesitate to read another novel by Ferrante.

RATING:   Four slices of pie. Blackberry. With seeds that catch in your teeth, and no ice cream.  And a crust slightly more salty than sweet.

Other REVIEWS:   I recommend clicking on the cover image above to go to goodreads and read the Community Reviews.

QUOTES:

“I had taken away my own time and added it to his to make him more powerful.   I had put aside my own aspirations to go along with his.  …   I had disappeared into his minutes…” p.63

“… starting at a certain point, the future is only a need to live in the past.” p.92

“I thought of beauty as a constant effort to eliminate corporeality.” p.97

“But enough, I had to tear the pain from memory, I had to sandpaper away the scratches that were damaging my brain.” p.101

“I read and reread, but my eyes ran over the questions without understanding.  Something in my senses was not working.” p.107

“A broken clock that, because its metal heart continued to beat, was now breaking the time of everything else.” p.107

WORDS:
p.69 – prehensile – “As if it were prehensile, my eye grasped the letters of the of a plaque on the building opposite.” – SEIZING, TAKING HOLD OF SOMETHING.   Other good definitions for this new to me word:  able to perceive quickly, having keen mental grasp -and- greedy, grasping, avaricious.   Actually, maybe this last definition fits the sentence better.
p.151 – tisane – “He prescribed … tenderness for the children, tisane of normality and repose for me.” – AROMATIC TEA.

.

* Jill was influential for bringing me to the Europa booth at the Expo more than pointing me to this book.   Not sure anymore why I picked up this exact one.

** and my husband’s nonemotional answer?  ”Uh huh, ok.”

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Europa Editions Challenge

I own but have not read two books published by Europa Editions.   What the heck, let’s join another challenge!

<– click to go to it…

o

o

I have Elena Ferrante’s The Days of Abandonment.     At 188 pages, this will be my first to read.

and

Michelle Zackheim’s Broken Colors.    I picked this one up at BEA 2010 because I liked the cover.

Have you read these or anything by Europa?

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

Still Missing

Thoughts    Still Missing by Chevy Stevens, eBook St. Martin’s Press; 1 edition (July 6, 2010), 352 pages

In three words:   uncomfortable, unsettling, tense

FIRST SENTENCE: “You know, Doc, you’re not the first shrink I’ve seen since I got back.”

WHY I read this:     Chosen for July’s BOOKIES Book Club Selection.

WHAT’s it ABOUT:   A Realtor is abducted while closing up an Open House on a beautiful day.    She tries to put her life back to some kind of normal when it can never be ‘normal’ again.   She is obsessed with finding answers to the questions that haunt her and has a difficult time knowing how to trust anyone ever again.    The answers she does find are shocking and upsetting and heart-breaking.

WHAT’s GOOD/NOT so GOOD:    I appreciated the set up of hearing Annie’s thoughts by way of what she tells her therapist.   We rarely have any feedback from the therapist except through what Annie tells her.   The unfolding of her experience in both the past and how she handles the present is extremely unsettling and heart-wrenching.    I was on edge through the whole book and pay kudos to the author in setting a consistent tone and sympathy without being melodramatic.   But I did not ‘enjoy’ the reading of this and am hesitant to rate it more than the obligatory 3 star rating which means ‘Yep, I read it and it was OK – for me.’

FINAL THOUGHTS:  It is a fast-read and is hard to put down, so I can recommend this to people who like thrillers of this nature.

RATING:   Three slices of pie.   Key Lime Pie, maybe? because I am not a fan of Key Lime Pie.   Too tart. 

I recommend the following REVIEWS:   Lenore HIGHLY recommends this, I agree with Rhapsody In Books, Michelle at  That’s What She Read calls it an amazing debut, S.Krisha’s Books gives it 4 out of 5 in a concise review, and Staci at Life in the Thumb recommends this AND Stevens’ latest Never Knowing “She did it again!!”

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, Part 2 (the regular laptop with internet access version)

Thoughts    The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami, Vintage Books/Random House 1998 (orig 1997), translated from the Japanese by Jay Rubin, 607 pages

.

There is a cat.  And it is missing.

- Maree of Just Add Books – my readalong partner for this novel and for the Murakami Reading Challenge

This part is for my friend Jimmi who complimented me once on my reviews giving ‘just enough’ information.  (I hope!)

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is an easy read if you just go along with the the ride.  I honestly thought I would encounter a lot of Japanese ‘stuff’ and really, the only culture wall I hit was when something had a price in yen rather than dollars and I had no idea if that was a lot of money or not.   Truly, the similarities to my own US culture – the stopping at Dunkin’ Donuts for coffee, for example – was almost TOO relatable for a book translated from another language!    AND that it was set in the 80′s was even more remarkable for its relatability factor in that even then, it was not too foreign.

I don’t read much ‘magical realism’ and wouldn’t be very good at defining it?  but this book is ODD.    and matter of fact.   Which is probably the realism part because as you encounter the magic, you wonder why no one else in the story seems particularly struck by how weird this is getting…

It’s about a guy who is out of work but only slightly bothered by the situation.  He is easy-going and compliant.   And yet, when he acts, he does so with strong conviction.  He meets all sorts of interesting people and makes a few odd friends.    The book covers some of the war between Japan and Russia leading into World War II.   It has gore and violence and tragedies of said war and prison life.      It’s got LOVE!    and mother-son affection.  And family dysfunction – quite a lot of family problems and secrets, really, but not explored in depth.

Back to our protagonist….   His wife leaves him and he sets the goal to get her back.  To rescue her — or, at the very least, get an explanation for her leaving.

And, well.   I guess that’s about it.    All sorts of crazy bat shit happens on the way.

I liked him. I was yelling at him at some points in the story and shocked beyond all expectations in one scene (WTF?!?!)   and finally, I think, the whole nutty tale boils down to LOVE.   Love conquers all.  Love. Reigns. Supreme.

Love is all there is.     And a few unexplainable strange evil threads of time or other worlds and stuff.

I’m so glad the cat came back, too.   (If it was the same cat…)

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2007-2011. 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.

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