tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-45056091654316148422024-03-13T13:34:20.596-07:001000 Novels I Must ReadAfter reading a daily supplement in the Guardian newspaper entitled "1000 Novels Everyone Must Read", I realised that, as a keen bibliophile AND English literature graduate, I had read (in my opinion) a shamefully small amount of the recommended 1000. Therefore, this blog will track my journey as I attempt to read the remainder of the 1000 novels, hoping to be enlightened, enthralled and empowered along the way.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.comBlogger52125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-22505557468901051332010-03-09T06:10:00.000-08:002010-03-09T06:16:42.107-08:00Back In BusinessOK....<br /><br />Many apologies for the long hiatus. <br /><br />For some reason, I just didn't feel like disciplining myself to read books on a set list for the past few months. <br /><br />However, recent events have inspired me again and I am ready to start again. <br /><br />Might make a few changes to the layout of the blog...so please check back for updates. <br /><br />Up next: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning by Alan Sillitoe.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-73465990972933121982009-12-06T05:57:00.000-08:002009-12-06T06:00:28.829-08:00A Thousand ApologiesHello all who have been following/reading my blog....<br /><br />SO sorry I haven't been writing on here....the last month has been one of major transition...I haven't had the time or inclination to read anything new (have been seeking comfort in well-read books...like old friends).<br /><br />Tried getting into Great Apes by Will Self, but (apologies to Mr Self, of whom I'm a big fan) just couldn't do it.<br /><br />Back on the horse again and up for some serious holiday reading (it's definitely that time of year to be hunkering down with a good book and a comforter...it's WINTER out there!)<br /><br />Up next (I promise): The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-28381470472914974292009-10-29T09:26:00.000-07:002009-10-29T09:38:25.481-07:00A New WorldHello...sorry, it's been too long. Finished Call It Sleep by Henry Roth last week, but have been caught up in the whirlwind of moving/settling in/starting a new life.<br /><br />Anyway...I had said in my previous post that I had very much been looking forward to reading this novel, and it didn't disappoint.<br /><br />Told in two languages (although both are English), the story of David and his immigrant family is powerful, heartbreaking and profoundly moving. I have always had a bit of a fascination with New York City history and how the millions of immigrants who came to the city made their way in such an unfamiliar and intense environment.<br /><br />David's street language (English) is rough and coarse, but the language he speaks at home (Yiddish, translated into English for the reader) is beautiful and elegant. What happens in his home is a different world to what happens on the street, but violence rears its ugly head in both.<br /><br />The reader not only gets David's experience of life in New York at the turn of the century, but also his parents' individual experiences. His angry father and loving mother both have their reasons for secrecy, but David is able to piece together their sad history and their reasons for coming to America. The struggles that both face are emblematic of the struggle that most immigrants faced.<br /><br />Roth's voice in this novel is sympathetic, of course, and his prose invites the reader to feel the same sympathy without pity. A strained and fractured family experience in the wider context of harsh immigrant life: brilliant.<br /><br />Next up: Great Apes by Will Self.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-18945882091285695612009-10-13T11:09:00.001-07:002009-10-13T11:17:46.438-07:00Future ShockFinished The Children Of Men by P.D. James yesterday.<br /><br />A sobering and fascinating look at our nearly immediate future - even though this book was written about ten years ago.<br /><br />James' prose speaks eloquently of a time when human beings can no longer reproduce, and the human race begins to slowly die out.<br /><br />The protagonist, Theo, is a professor and scholar who feels as if his life work is all now rather pointless. It does beg the question - what is the point of history when there will be no one there to remember/study it? Would we keep honoring the past if we knew that the future didn't exist?<br /><br />I would like to think that I would still want to read, look at art, listen to music, visit foreign countries, fill my mind with all that I could. Why wouldn't I? I don't think I would want to wallow in the hopelessness of the situation.<br /><br />James also writes of a government which treats its elders with contempt, its youth with indifference and its immigrants with a complete lack of respect. She definitely draws parallels with contemporary society.<br /><br />All wrapped up in a suspense-filled drama, with sympathy, apathy, and nobility.<br /><br />Up next: Call It Sleep by Henry Roth - a book I have been wanting to read for AGES. Very much looking forward to this one.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-83410001571774345492009-10-06T05:51:00.001-07:002009-10-06T05:59:03.153-07:00Curious, IndeedFinished The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon a couple of days ago (been busy - now blogging about it, finally).<br /><br />An easy read - as in quick - but touching and profound.<br /><br />The story is told from the perspective of Christopher, a British teenager who suffers from Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism. Christopher's condition renders him unable to process emotions and feelings like the average person, but this doesn't mean he doesn't have them himself; he just deals with them in a very different way.<br /><br />The story begins with the murder of a neighbor's dog, but takes on the shape of a complex and heartbreaking family drama, all seen through Christopher's analytical and seemingly emotionless eyes.<br /><br />To me, however, it seemed that Christopher DID experience great tides of emotion and feeling (hence him feeling ill and agitated when confronted with an unpleasantness); his mind is simply unable to handle the extremity of feeling - so he retreats into the logical and cold world of mathematics and science to deal with what is happening to him.<br /><br />Christopher's family situation is desperately sad, but it is because he is the way he is that allows him to deal with it in a detached manner - but with a very deep-down well of feeling that he is unable to show.<br /><br />Sweet, sad, funny, heartbreaking. A good read.<br /><br />Up next: The Children of Men by P.D. James.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-32981777872155213702009-10-01T12:35:00.000-07:002009-10-01T12:40:52.943-07:00WhoaFinished Foucault's Pendulum yesterday.<br /><br />Whew. My mind is still wrapping itself around this one. This book needs to come with a dictionary, encyclopedia and Cliffs Notes. SO much to discover and digest.<br /><br />I don't even know if I can talk about this book coherently, so I will just say this: It was one of the most complex, byzantine, labyrinthine, brilliant books I have ever read.<br /><br />I think my IQ has gone up by a few points just for finishing it.<br /><br />Seriously, not sure I can say too much else without living up to its unbelievable size - in all senses. Will come back to discuss in a later post.<br /><br />Up next: A break needed, so some lighter fare: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-5093675917823671972009-09-23T09:02:00.000-07:002009-09-23T09:10:25.529-07:00Very Talented, IndeedFinished The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith yesterday.<br /><br />A tense, taut thriller. I had seen the film, so knew the outcome of the novel, but really, seeing the film didn't make the novel any less suspenseful or colorful or enjoyable.<br /><br />Tom Ripley is a great anti-hero - insecure, malevolent, conniving, clever. His distaste for boring, rich, inane and vapid society people leads him to commit the acts that he does. I didn't condone his actions, but I did not feel an anger or disgust for what he did either.<br /><br />Tom survives by fooling others to the best of his ability, and it is this ability to deceive that keeps him alive, or at least one step ahead of the others.<br /><br />There is a constant air of menace throughout the entire novel...the reader doesn't know from page to page if Tom will be caught for his crimes. I felt as if I was along for the wild ride that Tom takes throughout Europe, with the knowledge of what he had done, and secretly hoping that he would get away with it. For what's the fun in getting caught?<br /><br />A great book - I look forward to more of Highsmith's work.<br /><br />Next up: Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-865269766104670642009-09-13T13:28:00.001-07:002009-09-13T13:39:54.446-07:00On "Atoning"Just finished Atonement by Ian McEwan about an hour ago. Felt compelled to write about it asap.<br /><br />A beautifully crafted and achingly sad novel...and if I hadn't seen the film adaptation, I would never have guessed the ending (I won't "spoil" it for anyone who hasn't read it yet).<br /><br />I think it is the idea that McEwan introduces of a lie corrupting and destroying whole lives that resonated with me most. Speaking personally, lies have undone my life in certain ways. I could see how a childish and rash decision to lie can affect not just one life, but many.<br /><br />The limpid beauty of the Tallis family home is breathtakingly realized by McEwan...the reader can feel the heat, literal and metaphorical. The love between Cecilia and Robbie is touching, tender, sensual and real - their first sexual liaison is all of these and one of the most provocative things I've ever read - and in a good way.<br /><br />Briony (the Tallis sister whose horrific lie sets the main story in motion) realizes her mistake and tries to "atone" for her transgression. It comes to pass that she has been "atoning" her entire life. To know that she has done wrong and tries to right that wrong doesn't excuse her appalling behavior - and it made it hard for me to sympathize with her. Cecilia and Robbie's stories are much more deserving of mention.<br /><br />Gorgeous book.<br /><br />Next up: The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-29036541581983626232009-09-08T12:03:00.001-07:002009-09-08T12:12:10.633-07:00That's Not SexyFinished Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller a couple of days ago.<br /><br />Sorry it's taken a bit of time to write, but had to get to the library first to get my next round of books.<br /><br />Ok...back to the novel. Did NOT enjoy this book. The sheer amount of sex, references to sex, talking about sex....I'm no prude, but it grew rather tiresome.<br /><br />I realise that at the time it was written, it was quite a groundbreaking and titillating read. The liberation expressed by the author in early 1930s Paris (post WWI, pre WWII) was seen to be scandalous, but just what a staid and reserved society needed. Miller's incessant references to sex, types of sex, the women he has sex with was most likely PERCEIVED as sexy, but to my cynical, 21st-century eyes, it all seems a bit dated and quite misogynistic.<br /><br />I will say that Miller's descriptions of his friends, girlfriends, colleagues and Paris itself are worthy of a read - faded glamour, seedy bars, volatile moods, strange behaviours. Interesting.<br /><br />However, Miller himself (and I am sure this was on purpose) comes across as a self-loathing, manipulative, downtrodden, selfish dilettante. His own self-descrption didn't make me admire him, or want to live in that city at that time with him and his equally disagreeable mates.<br /><br />Hmmm.<br /><br />Next up: Atonement by Ian McEwan.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-55991324022625560732009-08-30T13:52:00.000-07:002009-09-08T12:13:28.686-07:00Family TiesFinished The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy yesterday.<br /><br />I don't know what it was about this novel, but it just left me cold. I understand the underlying thematic elements - race, family, prejudice, love, etc etc etc...but I really did not connect with any of the characters.<br /><br />Ammu (the mother of Estha and Rahel, the two main characters) was probably the most sympathetic - marginalized by her parents and brother (and indeed her husband) and forced to give up her only son when family pride is at stake, when all she was guilty of was falling in love. I felt for her plight.<br /><br />However, the character and attitudes of her two children made me resent them, in a way. I found Estha's voluntary muteness selfish and unnecessary, and Rahel's remote and distant nature inexplicable.<br /><br />Perhaps I need to know more about Keralan history and their way of life, but I am familiar enough of caste systems and family hierarchies to know that this book was slightly ambiguous in its treatment of the aforementioned way of life.<br /><br />A "meh" novel for me then. Even the descriptions of the houses, atmosphere, and characters were limpid.<br /><br />Ah well.<br /><br />Next up: Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-6660156599521960162009-08-22T11:08:00.000-07:002009-08-22T11:18:36.791-07:00Terrible BeautyFinished The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison this morning.<br /><br />In her afterword, Morrison tells the reader that, like the character of Pecola, this novel was dismissed, ignored and unloved - until its rediscovery. How shameful that a book of this significance and importance in the American literary landscape was passed over for so long.<br /><br />This book, for me, was all about the concept of beauty and the modern obsession with it - and what the idea of beauty is to one person as opposed to another.<br /><br />Pecola believes herself to be ugly - she has never been told otherwise. She is neglected, or rather, treated as if she doesn't exist by her family, neighbors, schoolmates, etc. Her belief that she could be beautiful if only she had blue eyes, just like the little girl whose family her mother works for, is both profound and tragic in its simplicity.<br /><br />The novel is told from the perspective of several characters - Pecola (in the third person), Pecola's schoolmate Claudia, Pauline and Cholly (Pecola's parents), and Whitcomb - a disturbed elderly healer who "gives" Pecola her blue eyes. Each character struggles with the concept of his/her identity in the smalltown terrain of 1940s Ohio. The reader learns of Pecola's tragedy - and possibly how it could have been avoided, if only Pecola had been valued, cherished and loved.<br /><br />In these characters' eyes, beauty IS only skin deep - and therein lies the real sadness of this novel.<br /><br />Up next: The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-67939741243981685872009-08-20T08:26:00.000-07:002009-08-20T08:38:40.714-07:00More Than WordsFinished The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx yesterday.<br /><br />Beautiful novel. Achingly so.<br /><br />The emotions experienced by the characters in this novel are so vibrant and heartfelt, yet they are so difficult for the characters to express. It seems to be the Newfoundland way to hide one's feelings behind simple and stark language.<br /><br />Love, betrayal, death, abuse - all of these are experienced by Quoyle and his fellow townsmen and women, one way or the other, but they find it very difficult to communicate how they deal with these trials and tribulations.<br /><br />Emotions are handled by gesture and looks, not words. This makes the expression by words all the more profound when they are eventually expressed.<br /><br />The rough beauty and harsh nature of the Newfoundland coast is a perfect backdrop to this restrained and touching story. The relentless weather and unforgiving coastline has made its residents resolute and determined, but emotional and passionate as well.<br /><br />I loved a particular line from the novel - it is in the context of Billy Pretty's (a lonely and elderly Newfoundland bachelor) thoughts - "All he knew was that women were shaped like leaves and men fell." Sigh.<br /><br />Up next: The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-90738965328548880602009-08-13T10:31:00.000-07:002009-08-13T10:40:54.524-07:00So It GoesFinished Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. yesterday.<br /><br />What a book. I confess that I have not read much Vonnegut (only this and Breakfast of Champions), but am very ready to read more.<br /><br />Humour, sadness, profundity, poignancy. Each chapter of this novel is imbued with these things. Billy Pilgrim's (self-professed) journeys through time and space connect him to the us, the readers, as a simple man with profound beliefs.<br /><br />The Guardian list classifies this as an anti-war novel - I agree with this, but would also class it as an anti-ignorance novel as well. The idea that if we ignore something, it will disappear is a dangerous and irresponsible one. We must face what is before us and not be afraid. Billy is not afraid of anything, even death, which makes him an unusual character.<br /><br />Vonnegut also tackles the subject of fate...we cannot change our fates, but can live our lives to the best of our capability nonetheless. I feel that this is an important idea, especially for me right now.<br /><br />There is nothing to be afraid of - so it goes.<br /><br />Up next: The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx...I am also reading a non-list book (The Story of Edgar Sawtelle), so might be a bit delayed in posting. Somehow, I doubt that, though. :)Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-60169175504320099212009-08-10T09:42:00.000-07:002009-08-10T09:49:45.071-07:00Northern GothicFinished The Secret History by Donna Tartt yesterday.<br /><br />I said in my previous post that I had really enjoyed her second novel and was looking forward to reading this one (her debut)...and I was not disappointed.<br /><br />An amazing read...one of those "unputdownable" ones. I had to forcibly separate myself from the book to do other things...but I really wanted to read it all in one sitting.<br /><br />Suspenseful, lyrical, haunting, funny, harrowing, wistful, enchanting - all of these words can be used to describe the story that takes place in this novel. The characters are drawn with such clarity and beauty (beauty being a major theme running throughout the novel...the main characters are students and teachers of Greek and its literature, art, mythology, etc.)<br /><br />Tartt uses the students' education as a backdrop to the mystery that unfolds...it is what and how these characters learn that make them who they are and how they behave.<br /><br />As a former liberal arts major, I can feel the pull of the intimacy of the classes in this novel, but can see also how this intimacy breeds isolation and alienation...another facet to the intriguing mystery that unfolds.<br /><br />Highly recommended. I love this mystery stuff!<br /><br />Up next: Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-67676644443005991392009-08-04T11:19:00.000-07:002009-08-04T11:29:27.209-07:00Let's Move On, Shall We?Finished The King Of Torts by John Grisham this morning.<br /><br />Eh. It's a John Grisham novel. What can I really say? I read a few of his books a long time ago, and apart from his first novel (A Time To Kill, which is also on this list), the formula stays the same.<br /><br />I know how the characters will be described; I know how the plot will eventually play out. All variations on a theme. Nothing new or inspiring here. I could describe the protagonist and his story, but really - both are nothing unique.<br /><br />The only interesting thing I could take from reading this novel was the subject matter - the idea of lawyers getting richer from suing multinationals (and smaller companies), while the clients they're supposed to be representing get virtually nothing for their trouble. Makes one think twice about becoming an attorney (although I'd like to think that if I did, it wouldn't be for the reasons most prevalent in this book. I am all about helping others.).<br /><br />Honestly, I don't know why this novel is on the list. Perhaps the subject matter is currently relevant. I can't think of any other reason.<br /><br />How disappointing.<br /><br />Up next: The Secret History by Donna Tartt. I read her second novel, The Little Friend, and really enjoyed it - so I'm looking forward to reading this debut.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-82461357282848744582009-07-31T08:45:00.001-07:002009-07-31T08:57:12.866-07:00PossessedHave finished Possession by A.S. Byatt.<br /><br />An incredible, gorgeous, sumptuous, dive-right-in-and-wallow novel. Such fun to read.<br /><br />I loved the structure of this book - it reminded me very much of A Suitable Boy (another novel on the list - one of my all-time favourites) in the author's use of epigrams and literary sophistication. I admire an author who can go from prose to poetry and back again. It only enhances the reading experience.<br /><br />The parallel tales of Randolph/Christabel and Roland/Maud were touching, profound and deeply romantic. These romances were treated with dignity, subtlety and the appropriate amount of longing - at no point did either romance seem trite or salacious.<br /><br />The idea of possession is woven throughout the novel - who possesses who, who possesses what, what belongs to one person and not another, etc. The idea of possession brings out the best and worst in these characters...but it is possession and not obsession. Two very different things.<br /><br />A line that Christabel speaks (in the diary of her cousin) affected me deeply, and seems entirely fitting to my ultimate goal. Her cousin speaks of a longing to be a good writer, and Christabel replies that to be a good writer, one must practice and practice and have patience - the writing will come. Indeed.<br /><br />Next up: The King Of Torts by John Grisham. Yes, John Grisham. Hmmm.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-76013312103732508882009-07-24T08:57:00.000-07:002009-07-24T09:04:40.064-07:00Going Back To My RootsFinished The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen.<br /><br />Wow. I don't know if it is because I am now back in the American Midwest, or what...but this book had a powerful effect on me.<br /><br />Sprawling yet intimate, this novel really captured the hopelessness and futility and facades that many families (in this case, a Midwestern one) possess. Yet there was also a feeling of longing and belonging. We may not like to admit where we come from, but we also feel that inevitable pull towards our roots.<br /><br />Each member of the Lambert family is deeply flawed in his or her own way, but there is profound sympathy to be felt for each character - even in their most pathetic and needy moments.<br /><br />I feel about this book as I felt when I watched the film Fargo...a heightened and/or distorted view of Midwestern reality. There is the similar feeling of gentle mockery - but no savagery. It is because we love where we are from that we can critique and analyse it to our heart's content.<br /><br />Highly enjoyable...and for me, a very appropriate re-beginning.<br /><br />Up next: Possession by A.S. Byatt.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-49829771075803690292009-07-17T03:36:00.000-07:002009-07-17T03:39:02.645-07:00Back In BusinessNormal services resuming. Settling and ready to read again.<br /><br />Next: The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen.<br /><br />Analysis in a few days' time.<br /><br />Thanks for staying tuned.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-35736233716908601282009-07-08T22:43:00.000-07:002009-07-08T22:44:47.918-07:00A Small HiatusSorry folks...<br /><br />Having a life shift at the moment...so don't really have the time or inclination to read much.<br /><br />Normal service will return in about two weeks.<br /><br />Keep reading, though! I'll be back soon!<br /><br />xxxSarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-35797668916303872232009-07-03T01:54:00.000-07:002009-07-03T02:02:56.047-07:00A Very British CaperFinished The 39 Steps by John Buchan yesterday.<br /><br />A fast-paced thriller...and a lot of fun to read. Not very heavy intellectually, but a good story. The reader, like the protagonist Richard Hannay, is immediately thrown into the action.<br /><br />Hannay, bored with his London life (Dr. Johnson would have loved him), is unexpectedly caught up in an "intrigue", as they used to say - murder, espionage, false accusations, international conflict. He survives by his wit and moral courage - he feels he must do right by the stranger who confides in him.<br /><br />Setting this novel on the eve of World War I gives the story its feeling of ominous tidings...the reader knows what Hannay is up against...and the inevitability of world conflict. Hannay cannot prevent certain events, but he can definitely clear his own name and do justice to the strange American who inexplicably puts all of his trust into Hannay.<br /><br />Like I said, this novel is rather light due to its pace, but the subject matter is serious, and Hannay's earnestness and sense of what is right and what is wrong gives it a much-needed dose of gravitas.<br /><br />Highly enjoyable - and very, very British. What fun, sport.<br /><br />Next up: Villette by Charlotte Bronte.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-57065098855456576342009-06-29T23:57:00.000-07:002009-06-30T00:16:25.252-07:00All In The FamilyFinished As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner.<br /><br />This novel has been called Faulkner's masterpiece - the introduction of the "stream of consciousness" novel; the start of Southern Gothic, if you will.<br /><br />I enjoyed this novel, but couldn't put out of my head something I had read years earlier in The Onion (a satirical newspaper) - a spoof advice column entitled "Ask A Faulknerian Idiot Man-Child". The dialogue spoken by the "idiot man-child" very cleverly mirrors the style of speech Faulkner uses for most of his characters.<br /><br />Once I got past this (for the most part), I found As I Lay Dying to be moving, tragic, poetic. What seems to be a simple gesture to honor a family member's dying request is revealed through the many narrators (including the dying woman herself) to be a smaller part of a complex and tangled family web.<br /><br />Nobody is perfect in the Bundren family - actually, far from it - but sympathies still run high even after secrets are revealed - infidelity, pregnancy, betrayal, even faking an illness. These characters' weaknesses only make them more human; more palpable; more real.<br /><br />Faulkner's words bring the settings as well as the characters to life - one can feel the heat, smell the sweat, hear the rain. Stark beauty.<br /><br />Up next: The 39 Steps by John Buchan.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-65816528874826119072009-06-23T23:42:00.000-07:002009-06-23T23:51:04.965-07:00To Be Or Not To BeFinished The Outsider by Albert Camus.<br /><br />This novel is considered to be one of the classic existentialist pieces of literature. I would agree with that consideration, to be sure.<br /><br />It's strange, but I actually finished this book fairly quickly, but found it difficult to muster up the energy and drive to write about it. I would say that Camus definitely succeeded in making me not care very much - how odd that a novel can have such an effect.<br /><br />Meursault (the protagonist) lives life for the moment - not because he is ill or a thrill-seeker, but because it's just the way life is to be lived for him. He cares nothing for the past, present or future. Life is what it is to him; he chooses to glide through it, untouched by anything, including the death of his mother.<br /><br />This lack of emotion expressed by Meursault isn't due to his callousness or coldness; it is just who he is. He just....is.<br /><br />The novel is, despite the main character's static being, quietly moving and beautifully detailed. Passion is there to be had, but just not by Meursault. Interesting.<br /><br />Next up: As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner. My first foray into Faulknerian Americana.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-13052700201109520382009-06-17T00:51:00.000-07:002009-06-17T01:05:06.488-07:00Wishy-WashyFinished The Lost Estate (Le Grand Meaulnes) yesterday.<br /><br />Meh. It was all right - I didn't really FEEL this one. Supposedly one of France's most revered novels (on a par with The Catcher in the Rye for Americans) - a tale of lost love, lost adolescence, lost innocence.<br /><br />(SPOILERS) For me, although the imagery of the novel was quite striking, the plot and characters were thinly drawn - and improbable. Why would Meaulnes pursue this girl, whom he had seen only once, for years and years? And why, when he at last found her, and find her willing to return his infatuation, abandon her to pursue righting a wrong that wasn't his to begin with?<br /><br />I felt very little sympathy for the character of Meaulnes, and found myself getting a bit angry with the narrator, Seurel, for making concessions for Meaulnes' erratic and sometimes selfish behaviour. Seurel, when he meets Yvonne (the object of Meaulnes' obsession), finds her to be a lovely, kind and selfless woman who truly deserves better than the overgrown child she surrenders herself to.<br /><br />I suppose one could argue that this was a portrayal of teenage impetuousness and the quest to right wrongs - but the misguided sympathies for characters who deserve none undermines that portrayal.<br /><br />Maybe something was lost in translation, but I found this novel to be a bit of a damp squib. The French would be horrified!<br /><br />Up next: The Outsider by Albert Camus. A bit of existentialism.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-19747770808109397802009-06-12T23:38:00.001-07:002009-06-12T23:49:25.718-07:00It's All In Your HeadFinished A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess yesterday.<br /><br />Loved it loved it loved it. Such a different concept...and I really had to adjust my brain while reading it (Burgess's narrator, Alex, speaks mostly in a made-up dialect based on Russian...you will have to read it to see what I mean).<br /><br />Alex is a teenager (shockingly young) who get his kicks - literally - by behaving in a nihilistic, ultra-violent manner. He is eventually caught, and an experimental treatment is imposed upon him - perhaps equally as violent, but one designed to "cure" him of his violent ways.<br /><br />However (SPOILER)...to me, Alex didn't need to be "cured" - he needed to be taught and cared for. His jailers and doctors think that Alex is uncaring, unfeeling - but this is untrue: Alex cares, but for violence and beauty and destruction.<br /><br />To me, Burgess was making a savage comment on teenage society at the time, but also on the state, and how criminals were rehabilitated.<br /><br />Burgess apparently was upset at the amount of attention that this book of his received, even though he had written many others. It was the extreme nature of this novel - and the classic depiction of an anti-hero in Alex - that made it such a draw to readers - and ultimately movie-goers. Must get this film!<br /><br />Up next: Have already started The Lost Estate (Le Grand Meaulnes) by Henri Alain-Fournier.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4505609165431614842.post-85977481123518320012009-06-03T23:50:00.001-07:002009-06-03T23:58:10.876-07:00Breakfast For OneFinished Breakfast at Tiffany's by Truman Capote in just one day.<br /><br />What an enchanting little slip of a novel. A bit darker than the movie version (which, of course, has its Hollywood ending), the novel focuses on the narrator's point of view. Holly is an enigma to him, and thus completely fascinating, with her nocturnal comings and goings, her bizarre acquaintances, her ability to appear immaculate despite chaotic surroundings.<br /><br />Capote's novel is a bit of a love letter to New York in the early 1940s...interesting to see a description of a town almost completely untouched by the world war raging around it. These characters are focused on their immediate surroundings, and Holly's escapist tendencies are regarded as enviable in difficult times.<br /><br />And I HAVE been to Tiffany's, and can understand completely what Holly means when she describes it as a place to escape to; to feel calm and right with the world. It's a wonderful place.<br /><br />I definitely want to read more Capote now...and read more about him. The Black and White Ball? Fabulous, darling.<br /><br />Up next: A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess.Sarah Hansenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00010077360892947981noreply@blogger.com1