Bookish Sunday

January 14, 2008 at 3:02 am (Reading Groups)

The Bridge of San Luis ReyI’ve just read this wonderful book by Thornton Wilder, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1928.  It’s a beautifully written account of a priest who is searching for the answers to why God chooses certain people for disaster/pain/suffering….or whether such things are just accidents.  In other words, “Why did this happen to those five people?..Either we live by accident and die by accident, or we live by plan and die by plan.”  In the larger sense, Wilder poses the central question of all mankind:  Why do we exist?

Thornton Wilder deftly leads us into an infatuation with each character.  We see them through the eyes of a narrator who sits by our shoulder quietly sharing each detail of the character’s psychological, emotional and spiritual makeup.  Then, just as they seem very dear to us, they are quite abruptly gone.  The bridge snatches their lives from us, as it did from the association of all the other earthly beings they knew.

This is a perfectly beautiful book.  Every word is a treasure of meaning.  Every sentence is telling, and epiphanies abound.  It is well worth a read on a quiet weekend, and well worth a good conversation over wine, cheese and crackers with a friend whose mind and spirit you respect.

I see that it’s been made into a DVD, as I’ve shown above.  Now that I’ve read the book, I’ll be curious to see how DeNiro and Bates work some magic with it!!

Thanks for stopping by.  I’d love to read any comments you have, if you’ve read it or are thinking about reading it! 

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TBR Challenge 2008

January 11, 2008 at 11:44 am (Reading Groups)

Here finally is a great reading challenge for me!  The one that gets the books in my “To Be Read” pile whittled down this year.  I have so many want-to-be-read books that just haven’t gotten into my hands in the past year.  This group allows us to make a list of 12 books to read, with an alternate list of books for 2008.  We read them in any order…hopefully, one a month, and give a review for our group.  I love it!  Here’s my list:

  1. War and Peace  -  Tolstoy
  2. Silk  -  Alessandro Baricco
  3. The Invention of Truth -  Marta Morazzoni
  4. Daughter of Fortune – Isabel Allende
  5. I Capture the Castle – Dodie Smith
  6. An American Tragedy – Theodore Dreiser
  7. Kept – DJ Taylor
  8. The Birth House – Ami McKay
  9. The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen – Syrie James
  10. Heyday – Kurt Andersen
  11. The Sleeping Doll – Jeffery Deaver
  12. Bridge of San Luis Rey  – Thornton Wilder

Alternatives:

  1. The Poe Shadow – Matthew Pearl
  2. Snow Flower & Secret Fan – Lisa See
  3. Mansions of the Dead  – Sarah Stewart Taylor
  4. My Sister’s Keeper – Jodi Picot
  5. A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies – Ellen Cooney
  6. Eye Contact – Cammie McGovern
  7. Crow Lake – Mary Lawson
  8. The Tortilla Curtain – T.C. Boyle
  9. Loving Frank – Nancy Horan
  10. Papa Married a Morman – John Fitzgerald
  11. The Kite Runner
  12. A Thousand Splendid Suns

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Bookish New Year

January 2, 2008 at 7:55 pm (Russian Authors Reading Challenge 2008)

war-peace-tolstoy-new-transl-2007.jpgMy long time goal of reading “War and Peace” is coming to fruition in 2008!  I’m joining the Russian Reading Group and reading 4 books either by, or set in, or about Russians this year.  Many of you who know me from my http://lavenroseramblings.blogspot.com/  blog know my love of books and my promise to read W&P with its new translators, but now that I’ve found this Russian Reading Group I’m delighted to be able to share the read with others!  Russia has long been a fascination to me as a reader. I’ve read several books about Tsar Nicolas and Alexandra, their children, Rasputin, Peter the Great, histories of Russia, Russian fairytales….as well as stitching needlework of Russia.  I’m currently working on one called, “White Nights of St. Petersburg,” by Martina Weber of Chatelaine Designs, which you can find an image of through Google.  It’s an amazing fantasy of crystals, beads and gorgeous colored silk threads showcasing St. Petersburg Square.

Anyway, before I make this too long a first blog entry, here are my 4 Russian Reading books:

1)  War and Peace   by  Tolstoy –   Collaboration of these translators, Larissa Volokhonsky and Richard Pevear make both “W&P” and “…Karenina” must reads of 2008–

2)  Anna Karenina   by Tolstoy   (reread!)

3)  The Russian Concubine  by Kate Furnivall – A novel of Russia at the dawn of the 20th c., of pre-Revolutionary China, the 1920’s and love in the face of impossibility

4)  Russka  by  Edward Rutherfurd –  An epic novel of Russia’s history and the lives of four families

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