Bookcrossing

Friday, February 25, 2011

11 in 11 - Category Change

Yep, being indecisive again, I keep wanting to tinker with my categories.  In some ways, having more choice (11) has made it harder to choose and then stick to that choice!  So here goes, Foreign Language books have been sacrificed for Mysteries.  This is because, as I am living in Spain, I will be reading more than 11 books in Spanish anyway, so thought it would be more interesting to slot these books into other categories.  I also have a load of mysteries, crime novels, etc., on my Mount TBR. 
That is the last change... well, until I decide to tinker again!




Category 6: Mystery

Mysteries, Crime, Detective Fiction.
1. The Poe Shadow
2. The Big Sleep ** 1001 Book
3. Raffles

Labels:

A time for reading

A book bonanza over the last few days. I have had books winging in via the Bookcrossing 1001-Library. The first to arrive were The Monkey and the Monk and Felicia's Journey, the latter I had been keen to read since I read The Story of Lucy Gault. Next up was Arabian Nights, and then a box of books from the States - Effi Briest (a book my brother has been talking about ever since he studied it at uni), Platero and I and The Pigeon. I couldn't resist and started The Monkey and the Monk straight away, I am about half way through, but this is a book to read in chunks, to give you time to let it sink in. This afternoon, with the sunlight streaming through my window, I read The Pigeon, a short, but thought-provoking book. This should help with my 1001 book slump, I just didn't fancy starting Invisible Man, so had been reading anything else I came into contact with.

I also returned my 3 books to the library, and picked up three new ones in Spanish. The first is El Capitan Alatriste, the graphic novel version of the first book in the series, I am curious to see how the illustrators have the characters, how they differ from my own thoughts. Second El Reino del Dragon de Oro, the second installment in Isabel Allende's series about Alexander Cold and his adventures with his rather unusual granny, Kate. Last up is Stardust, I loved the film, have the audiobook in English, but really look forward to reading it for myself.

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, February 21, 2011

1001-Library Books

 In a bid to get some of the 1001 books that I donated to the 1001-library  moving, I decided to organise two bookboxes for British readers.  The first was postal bookbox, the second a virtual bookbox.  Both started with 15 books and the idea was that people could choose what they want and then pass it on.  I must admit, I also like to pass on books I have enjoyed to a good home.  I look forward to seeing what others feel about these books.

This started with 16 books - 
1. Foucault's Pendulum - Umberto Eco's great book.  I read this a few years ago, tough going at time because of all the references, but worth it.
2. A Kestral for a Knave (Kes)  - better known as Kes, the name of the film.  A snapshot of English life, one that, despite the age of book, is easily understood.  
3. Brideshead Revisited  - another book I came to after seeing the adaptation (ITV), the decline of a British Catholic family.
4. The Nine Tailors (Lord Peter Wimsey Mysteries) great to see a mystery on the list.  Having lived across from a cathedral, I enjoyed this very much.  The bells, the bells
5. Sputnik Sweetheart this arrived in one of my bookboxes, I read it a while back, another good book from a great writer.
6.Sons and Lovers  - a freebie from The Times.  I was quickly drawn into the plot, very descriptive.
 - I read this about 5 years ago, having been given it by a friend and found it was on the list.  Twins separated by war, and their meeting, not one of the heavier reads on the list.
 - I loved this when I read it first as a child.  For me, one of the great children's classics that can also be enjoyed by adults. 
9.North and South and 10. Cranford   - 2 Gaskell books I put in the box.  I read both while travelling last year and really liked the way Gaskell comments on the life at the time, England on the cusp of great change. 
11. The Secret History - one of my favourites on the list.  I read this at uni, starting in the afternoon, and finishing at dawn.  Excellently written, the dark side of youth. 
 - this has to be one of my favourite books.  I reach for it to reread because I love its darkness, the human relationships.   
13. Schooling   - I had this on my shelf for ages, but now I don't know why I never picked it up.  As with other books on the list, this deals with the dark side of adolescence, in this case a girl at boarding school in England.
14. Fugitive Pieces  - another of my top recommendations from the list.  Again, I read this book in a day, mainly because I became very affected by the story.  Brilliant.
15. - The Unconsoled  - written by one of my other favourite authors, but very different to his other work.  Takes longer to get into, but good.
16. Birdsong  - the horrors of the trenches, told in a, at times, terribly descriptive style.


And the second was a VBB, so people could choose only what they wanted without paying loads of postage.  It started with 10 books I had registered and 6 from blackwidow1971 .
My books:
1.Alias Grace  - Atwoods tale of a murderous maid
2. The White Tiger   - a letter from an Indian businessman to the Chinese Premier
3. Of  Love and Shadows   - from the Chilean writer, Isabel Allende
4. Power and the Glory   - Greene takes his tales of intrigue to the New World
5. Tarka the Otter (Puffin Story Books) - another classic children's book.
6. The Kingdom of the World   - the Caribbean in turmoil, revolution in the air.
7. Pereira Maintains   - life under Salazar, an editor starts to question his life and what is happening around him.
8. Small Island   - West Indian immigrants in Post War London, trying to make a new life for themselves.
9. The Hound of the Baskervilles   - Conan Doyle's classic whodunnit.
 10. Sexing the Cherry - my first Winterston book, but certainly won't be my last.  Very thin book, but powerfully written.

5. The Unbearable Lightness of Being
6. Three Lives (Twentieth Century Classics)

Labels: , , , ,

Sunday, February 20, 2011

11 in 11 Challenge - 2nd Quarter

62 books now read for the 11 in 11 Category Challenge . I am doing better than I expected, as I have recently moved house and had to leave most of my books in the U.K.  On Friday, I joined the local library in Avila, opposite the cathedral.  They have a small selection of English books (some of which are on my TBR shelf at home), an even smaller one in German, but a good selection of fiction in Spanish.  This will help me actually read more in Spanish, which is easy to put off at home when you have lots of books in English!
 
I have tinkered a bit with my categories.  As I am trying to read as many books as possible from my almost out of control TBR pile, I have decided to ditch the Olympic Challenge Category as I had nothing at home for it.  I have changed it to Books in a Series, this was partially because I got The Somme Stations from the  Early Reviewer Programme from LibraryThing, and I already had the first 4 books on my shelves.  I managed to get 5 and 6 from Amazon and Greenmetropolis.  This means that I have juggled a couple of the books, something I might do again later.  Below are the second set of 31 books, and, in italics, the books I have moved into new categories.



Photobucket


Category 1:  Latin America



Photobucket

Category 2: 1001 Books




Category 3: History  (PhotobucketFiction and Non-Fiction)


Category 4: Books in a Series
A change of category, from Olympic Challenge to Books in a Series.


1. Wicked (moved from Films)
2. Son of a Witch part of Wicked series (moved from Links)
3. A Lion among Men part of Wicked series
(moved from Links)
4. The Necropolis Railway
5. The Blackpool Highflyer - part of the Jim Stringer Series starting with The Necropolis Railway

PhotobucketCategory 5: Asia


Category 6: Not in English

1. Golem: An Old Prague Tale in German

2. La Ciudad de las Bestias in Spanish
Photobucket

Category 7: German Speaking World
 3. Kleiner Werwolf (in Spanish)






Category 8: Film and Adaptations
Photobucket

8. The Day of the Triffids **1001 Book
9. The Big Sleep ** 1001 Book
10. The Graduate ** 1001 Book
 


PhotobucketCategory 9: Links
 



Photobucket 

Category 10: Travel

2. Ghosts of Spain








PhotobucketCategory 11: British Authors

One thing I really like about this challenge is the variety of books you read, it forces you out of your comfort zone and it is such fun finding books to slot in.  I am enjoying the Links Category immensely because this fits my personality.  When I find a subject or author I like, I tend to go on a reading binge.  

Top books for the second quarter:
Well, The North China Lover, was a great read.  Dumas' The Lover blew me away when I read it a few years ago, so I had to see how this differed.  It certainly measured up to the first book, but very different.  
I also enjoyed Day of the Triffids, I am no sci-fi fan normally, but in a world of GM products and experimentation, it was a scarily realistic possible vision of the future.
Another good Bill Bryson in Shakespeare: The World as a Stage, more a biography of what we don't know that what we know!
The Amazing Adventures of Kavelier and Clay was unputdownable, I just caught up in the very different cousins and their lives.
I would say, however, the book that affected me most was The Story of Lucy Gault, I was very moved by Lucy's tragic story, so sympathetically written.
Also tragic, but actually uplifting book was The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, this is a book that will stay with me.
Ghosts of Spain was also excellent, for a guide to modern Spain, this is a good start.  It talks about the ghosts and events that have shaped Spain, but what makes it good is that it is written by a foreigner who obviously loves Spain.

Disappointments:
The Understudy  What a pity, I loved Starter for 10!   Not a dreadful book, but not up to his usual standard.
Sundays at Tiffany's.  Oh Mr. Patterson, please stick to your mysteries!

As for the next quarter, I am sat on the sofa with a stack of books.  Shall I head to Nepal with Samrat Umadhay's short stories, or to Flanders with the swashbuckling Captain Altriste, or mourn the loss of Aunt Guadalupe in Mexico?  Better put the coffee pot on and choose ;)


Labels: , , , , , ,

Sunday, February 13, 2011

A week in France

I spent a week in France attempting to ski, my first time since a rather miserable day spent at Glen Shee on my backside when I was 9.  This time, I was better kitted out - a snazzy helmet lent to me by a friend to avoid nasty bumps - and also with the aid of a dishy instructor.  Amazing how much your concentration is when you have something nice to look at ;)
Apart from the occasional trips to the slopes, there was a lot of hot chocolate drinking and cake eating, affording me plenty of reading time.  I tried to take books with me that were related with France, and which I left with a friend working over there.

First up was  Five Quarters of the Orange.  A widow returns to her childhood home after many years, but doesn't want people to connect the child with the woman.
She lives in a small French village, one which was occupied during WW2, which has bearing on her family's story. The action flicks between the current day and the events leading up to her family's exile.
Boise opens a restaurant, using many of the recipes from her mother's handwritten notes. Along with the recipes are diary-like entries written by her mothers. Boise goes back through these entries to try and find our more about the mother who kept herself locked away from her children emotionally. She also sees herself in her mother's actions. One reason why her mother was distant were the spells she had, normally heralded by the smell of orange, hence the title.
A great blend of recipes, deceit, family problems and the far reaching actions of children. ( )

Next up was The Understudy, a book I found on the Chalet's bookshelf and one I had to read.  I somehow missed this book, having enjoyed Starter for Ten I had wanted to read more of his and was given One Day to read over the summer.
A struggling actor, Stephen, a divorced father of one, is understudy to British hottest new thing, Josh. He hopes that Josh will one day fall off the stage, so he can get his chance at the limelight. This failing is not only in his professional life, but also extends to his personal life, and Stephen's whining does not do him any favours.
This is not a bad book, but it does fall short of the other 2. It's biggest drawback is the main character, Stephen makes you want to slap and tell him to buck up. A good beach read. ( )

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, The life and thoughts of Bauby, editor of Elle, who, after suffering a stroke, ends up with Locked-in Syndrome. He is able to think and is aware of what is around him, but his only method of communication is blinking the alphabet, which is how he "wrote" this book.

This could be a depressing book, but actually I felt that it was more about enjoying the life you have or have had.
This is not his biography, though there are many biographical stories, but you can also read his thoughts, as well as his day-to-day life in the hospital. This is hell on earth, being trapped in your body, but understanding evrything going on, but Bauby doesn't come across as bitter.
This is well-written, one of those books that will stay wth you. I also found myself thinking about the people and events in my life that I would write about, which would warrant the tremendous effort. ( )

Always room for a trashy read, Sundays at Tiffany's 
I had no idea that Patterson was branching out into romance!
Jane has an imaginary friend, Matthew, who disappears when she's 9. Fast forward a few years and Jane still remembers him, and Matthew sees her.
This is a beach read, to be fair, if I hadn't been on holiday with a friend who had this and in the mood for some trash, I doubt that this would have been read. It's just too fluffy, a nice idea that wasn't really executed fully. ( )

Luckily, I had more Joanne Harris to keep me amused, Jigs and Reels

This is a collection of short stories from the writer of Chocolat. Having read a lot of her books, I was familiar with the style as well as the setting of some of Harris' stories.
There is something for everyone here, from fantasy to school tales, but the common factor is the human side, their situations and dilemmas.
Those I enjoyed most were the story about the witches' school reunion (Class of '81) because we all still have that schoolkid inside us, and so I could empathise with the pressures of that situation. There was also a great one (Faith and Hope go Shopping) about two old biddies breaking out of an old folk's home to get a pair of shoes. The Last Train to Dogtown was also funny, a very Harris nip in the tale.

A nice touch were the notes that Harris adds to the stories, giving us into where the inspiration comes from. As often happens with short stories, I did want to read more about some of the characters, but the collection did work well as a whole. ( )
 
The White Queen  I have read quite a few of Gregory's books, but was looking forward to reading the first in her new series.
The White Queen is Elizabeth Woodville, a young woman who so charms the young Edward, soon to be King Edward, that he marries her in secret, despite the furore that they know will ensue. Her first husband died on the other side of the lines to her second husband, but Elizabeth has married for love and is determined to safeguard her husband and her family.
There have been other books written about this period, indeed The Secret Alchemy deals with the death of Elizabeth's two sons with Edward in the Tower. Gregory's work is better, it has been well researched and, it seems to me, she enjoys filling in the gaps. The political machinations and family relationships can be dizzying at times, though the family tree at the front helps. I must admit though, that some imagination in terms of names would have been nice - Elizabeth herself has 2 sons named Richard!
An interesting side story in the book is that of Melusine, a river goddess, from whom Woodwille's family claim descendence. Through the book, Gregory includes Melusine's story piece by piece, and also ties in to real life accusations of witchcraft against both Elizabeth and her mother.
Gregory fans will enjoy this, as well as those who would like to know how the Tudors came to rule, and I look forward to reading The Red Queen. ( )

With the bus journey on the way home delayed by the smuggling of one of the drivers, I was happy to have  Pandora  to keep me entertained. I haven't read a Jilly Cooper since school, but soon felt right at home with Pandora. While the family at the centre of the plot are new, there are lots of familiar faces and scenery.
Pandora refers to a painting, one which was taken from a burning chateau in France during WW2. Art dealer Raymond has it on the wall of his home, which he shares with Galena, an emotionally damaged artist. The book follows their life together and that of their 4 children, to the arrival of a girl who claims to be part of the family.
Like the other books in the Rutshire Chronicles, this is a pageturner, you quickly get caught up in the petty squabbles, rivalries, relationships, and of course the sex, the only difference is that here the story centres around the art world.
Any Jilly fan will enjoy this, but it is a stand alone book, so you don't need to have read the others. ( )

Labels: ,

Librarything's Early Reviewer Programme

LibraryThing Early Reviewers

What a lucky girl I am!  I have been putting my hat in the ring for Early Reviewer books to review for a while, but this is the first time I have been successful three months in a go!  LibraryThing has been running this programme for a few years now and get some really interesting books.


From the September 2010 batch, I received  Pereira Maintains.  I read the previous translation a few years ago, but since then I have lived in Portugal and so the book has a different relevance to me.  This makes it hard to compare the books, as I am not the same reader.
The book takes place in 1938, Portugal is suffering under the dictatorship of Salazar, Spain is in the midst of a civil war and the Nazis are on the rise.  Pereira is a journalist, someone who should know the real news stories, but he is like many people living under a regime, scared to put his head above the parapit to ask questions.  This all changes one day when he reads an article about death, the article affects him so much that he has to find the author and meet him.  It is his meeting with Monteiro Rossi, a young dissident, which starts him on a new path, one on which he begins to question the world around him.
The book put me in mind of the famous poem, "they came first for the Communists ..."  As many others have done before and since him, Pereira could have continued on his path of ignorance, hiding in his translations of French literature.  Monteiro Rossi is young, passionate and the son Pereira never had, I think this is what inspires Pereira to rebel.
Tabucchi really captures 1930s Lisbon and life under Salazar, this is a well-deserved entry on the 1001 list.

Next up was Drive-by Saviours, from the October 2010 batch. I put my name forward for it because of the parallel stories in the blurb - frustrated social worker Mark in Toronto and OCD sufferer Buni in Indonesia.  Their meeting half way through the book changes their lives.

The action alternates chapter by chapter between telling the life story of Buni and Mark on the cusp of a crisis.  They are very different men from very different countries and having led very different lives.
Buni, somewhat of a child genius, is from Rilaka, a small Indonesian island and helps him father fish.  Buni finally gets his chance to go to school through one of Suharto's schemes, but it involves him having to relocate to Makassar along with many other young Indonesians.  Unfortunately, school doesn't live up to his expectations, and Buni is soon bored and looking for alternatives.  He makes friends with 2 beggars and gives them money in exchange for telling him stories.  As Buni grows up, he becomes more and more disenchanted with life under the regime, his suffering from OCD becomes more acute, as a kind of coping mechanism.
Mark is working as a social worker in Toronto, but it is not working out.  During a power outage, he experiences a sense of camaraderie which he tries recapture later in the book.  His growing frustration grows, causing problems with his work and relationship with Sarah, his girlfriend.  On meeting Buni, Mark thinks he finds what he has been missing, and soon develops a relationship with him, one which will help him to reconnect with his estranged sister.  I didn't really like Mark, I found him to be very selfish and he seemed to blame everyone else for his problems, but the character was well-written.

Last, but not least, was  The House of the Mosque, from the November 2010 batch.  The book follows the story of an extended family living in a mosque in Iran. Starting in the 1950s, the family's fortunes are intertwined with the changing religious and political scene in Iran, to such an extent that the family itself is driven apart.
The family in the mosque are a mixed bunch. First there is the Iman Alsaberi, a weak man obsessed with hygiene and rather negligent of his family. The household is kept together by Aqa Jaan, who also keeps the records of the mosque, as previous generations have done. Their brother Muezzin, a blindman, calls the people to prayer.
Times are changing, with the death of Alsaberi comes a vaccum, into which a new Iman steps, one that will change the path of the mosque. Aqa Jaan tries to keep everything together, but the political turmoil makes it harder and harder.
As an introduction to Iran, this is a good read, but will keep you turning the pages to find out what happens to the family. The author has taken care to show the reader the conflict and destruction brought upon the family, but at the same time showing, for me, a rather little-known side to life in Iran.

Labels: , , , ,