Archive for August, 2011

Everything Beautiful Began After

Thoughts    Everything Beautiful Began After by Simon Van Booy, Harper Perennial 2011, 402 pages

MOTIVATION for READING:  Oh boy. I can blame all of this on my good friend Nancy the Bookfool. She’s the one who first told me about SVB and I think she may have even sent my the story collection which I fell hard in love with (for?) and gave a whopping big 5 stars to. AND THEN?! Why she tells me that our SVB will be in Boston in September! OH JOY! So I suggested that she should just come and go WITH me to see Mr. Van Booy at the Boston Public Library and lo-and-behold, she bit. She will be my guest that week as I drop her off in the center of old towns to take millions of pictures of buildings and flowers (and dogs since I don’t have any cats), make her run errands with me, be a taste tester for my wonderful husband’s creative cooking, and who knows what else.

But WAIT!  There’s MORE!

Since all the stuff is being planned to go SEE the author, I suggested to my book club that we READ the book for our September choice (it was my month to pick and since I had to read it anyway…)  I was hoping to invite any/all of my sister-clubbers to attend with us but alas, it is first week of school so I don’t think anyone has the energy to blip in something like this that week. Of course, they are still invited to meet us there. Nancy and I have to take a little detour to Boston College that morning and hurry in for lunch plans.

AND? Yep, more. My parents will be visiting during the week of my book club meeting so I will make Mom read the book and bring her along! My mother is a hit at these things. Should be a quite fun. Right, Mom?  :)

Which brings me to the part about this book. In one word, EVOCATIVE.

evocative |iˈväkətiv|adjective – bringing strong images, memories, or feelings to mind : powerfully evocative lyrics| the building’s cramped interiors are highly evocative of past centuries.

Quickly, it is about a girl who goes to Athens because Athens is a city with a personality that calls to lost souls.  She befriends one man who falls for her and yet she falls for another man and in the meantime, these two gentlemen become friends and don’t realize their connection and then stuff happens and time goes on and there is MUCH traveling which was one of my favorite parts even though the style of writing was different. Overall? It is short by epic. It is emotional, beautiful, philosophical, quiet and powerful. Then POW!  We are back at the beginning and the urge to start reading it again right away is huge.

I’m now going to pull Nancy’s words off her post first mentioning this novel:

It seems to be a love triangle, at first, and it begins a little slowly. Apart from the beauty of his writing, you may even be tempted to think it’s not going to be anything special. And, then Simon yanks the rug out from you and turns the story on its head. Suddenly, what you thought was a love triangle becomes a story of grief and hope. It’s almost a tapestry — about love and death and friendship, the fleeting nature of life and how much every single moment counts. Everything Beautiful Began After is awe-inspiring, uplifting, authentic, hopeful, beautiful. It’s everything I hoped Simon’s first novel would be. Prepare to have your heart broken and then put back together with sparkles and rainbows. Everything Beautiful Began After is a book you simply must read.

Also, I must bring you to Literate Housewife’s words AND photos her experience reading this book.   Any blogger that brings up John Cusack in a review is tops with me.   So click on the link and read what she has to say.    My favorite?   When she says the important theme is “The hope of love returning.”    Yes.

Sigh…

and finally, I must say again that I am VERY excited to meet Simon Van Booy.  

For my review of SVB’s Love Begins in Winter, click here.

It is likely that I will not post between now and then.   I’ll be back, don’t worry.    Happy Back to School!  Happy September!   Happy Labor Day!   Happy Happy Happy.

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.

Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand

Thoughts    Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand  by Helen Simonson, Random House Trade Paperbacks 2011 (orig 2010), 368 pages

I was hoping to enjoy this novel as a light romantic read and I was not disappointed. Actually, the term ‘light’ is most apt when considering the terms of bright and hopeful and engaging and not to describe a novel as superficial and/or easily digested.   With themes of social injustice and prejudice and defying cultural expectations, this story is quite weighty yet handled with aplomb.

So if you want a book of romance and a bit of farce and great witty dialogue and retort, plus you enjoy Britishisms and settings of small towns and village living, then this is a good choice. I recommend.

FOUR slices of pie!    Raspberry Pie.     

“To be once again in a sanctuary far from the voices of women is balm to the anguished soul.”

“I can’t promise it will last,” said the Major. “My neighbor Alice Pierce is rather fond of singing folk music to her garden plants. Thinks it makes them grow or something.”  The Major had often wondered how a wailing rendition of “Greensleeves” would encourage greater raspberry production but Alice insisted that it worked far better than chemical fertilizers, and she did produce several kinds of fuit in pie-worthy quantities.  ”No sense of pitch, but plenty of enthusiasm,” he added.

For other opinions and more thorough ‘reviews’, do check out these results for this title at Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search Engine.

Clicking on the book cover above will take you to goodreads.com…

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.

Eyes Like Stars

Thoughts   Eyes Like Stars by Lisa Mantchev, Square Fish / Macmillan 2009, made it to 58 of 356 pages.

WHY I CHOSE THIS:    I was a YA Judge for Book Blogger Appreciation Week one year and I adored the enthusiasm in the reviews of this book that I happened to read. And I love the blue stripe in the hair on the cover. Yes, I was captured by a pretty cover. Sometimes it happens.

WHAT I LOVED:   The dedication:  ”For my mother, who left a half-crimped pie crust on the kitchen counter to take me to my first audition.”   (Pie!  *smiles*)

WHAT I didn’t LOVE:   I couldn’t get past the slightly petulant obnoxiousness of the protagonist.   ooops.   Please don’t send me YA-HATE bombs.   I do like YA.  BUT.   This book is not a good match for my sensibilities, sorry.

WHAT’s it ABOUT:    Fantasy?  about a 17 yo girl who lives in a theatre trapped with characters from famous plays.  I do think I was attracted by the unique style and creativity of the narrative.  She is the only one who lives there who is ‘human’, or at least has the ability to leave the theater. Don’t let me tell you any more; please search out some nicer truer real reviews rather than this ‘reaction’. Thank you.  Here’s the link to Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search for this title.  Have fun.

I have offered this to my niece who is under 20 years old.    If she doesn’t want it, I will add it to BookMooch.com.

AND NOW for a public service announcement! It’s time to be aware of Book Blogger Appreciation Week!  Sept 12-16    <– Click on this pretty button to learn all about it.

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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.

Books and Places to Put Books

I would be most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves.
                                                                                                              – Anna Quindlen

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.

A Good Man is Hard to Find

Thoughts    A Good Man is Hard to Find and Other Stories by Flannery O’Connor, A Harvest Book • Harcourt Inc. 1981? (orig 1955), 265 pages.

First, I am only commenting on the first story, the title story of this story collection. I may or may not comment on any others. I may or may not have even read any of the other stories. The title story was only 23 pages.

Second, I will share little tidbits of random thoughts. or THOUGHT.

Third, this might be very short.

Fourth? go forth?  hmmmm.

I read this now because I am not sure I have ever read anything by Ms. O’Connor.  It’s likely I read this in High School but I’m not sure. I was inspired to read this by the Southern Lit Challenge.

All this story does is remind me that EVERY TIME PERIOD IN HISTORY had bad people.   That EVERY TIME PERIOD IN HISTORY had people pining for the ‘GOOD ol’ DAYS’ when we could trust people and crime was unheard of.   That there never was and never will be any GOOD ol’ DAYS and whenever people start yapping that CRIME IS RAMPANT!  blahblahblah, well.

CRIME was RAMPANT yesterday and ten years ago and fifty years ago and can we please stop watching sensational TV already?

Chilling.

It reminded me that In Cold Blood by Truman Capote had me thinking these same thoughts.     Which NOW reminds me that if you want to read an amazing review of In Cold Blood by Truman Capote just click over to LitLove’s recent review on Tales from the Reading Room.

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That’s all I got.   Have a great 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.


I prefer pi.

pieratingsml

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