We survived our 50 books in one year challenge. In 2009 we are still reading...

Monday, February 23, 2009

Voyager by Diana Gabaldon (#8, Fiction)

Yay for guilty pleasures!

I started out a moderate fan of the Outlander series, and was kind of "eh" about the second book. But Voyager has definitely brought me back on board! I think the amount of soft porn from book 1 and 2 was replaced in book 3 with more adventure and gore.

With books like this I'm never really sure what to write in review. It's not taking home any prizes, but I was able to tear through close to 1100 pages in about five days.

I have never recommended the series to anyone, but now I think I will.... with many asterisks of course! :)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Blindness by Jose Saramago (#7, Contemporary Literature)

I think I need to institute a new rule with the books I read. NO MORE DEPRESSINGNESS. Seriously, why do all "good" books have to be depressing? Personally, I don't believe that, but pick up a Nobel prize winner and the chances of it being uplifting are basically nil.

I don't watch the news because I find it sad and full of death, destruction, and despair. I really don't want to spend my free time reading books about people sloshing through their own excrement and rationing food and drinking muck water. no gracias.

Normally when I read a book and I learn that there is a movie adaptation I want to see it to find out how closely it follows the book and what the characters could look like. Blindness, though.... I don't think I need to have a visual of the horribleness that I already read. I don't mean horribleness in the sense that it was a bad book or poorly written, because that is certainly not the case. Horribleness in the sense of the atrocities that humans will force onto each other, and the base conditions that people can somehow manage to survive through.

Next up... something a little lighter and able to cause a blush to rise to my cheeks... Voyager!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Jitterbug Perfume by Tom Robbins (#4, Contemporary Literature)

I love love love this book. It's just so weird and quirky and well written. My first Tom Robbins novel was Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas and when I compare Jitterbug Perfume to it, I must say that I wish I had started my Robbins love affair with this one instead. The characters in this one are so much more likable and the four separate yet interwoven storylines are so much more interesting and riveting.

Jitterbug Perfume smacks of wisdom and reminds me of tarot cards. There is so much symbolism and history and folklore. Immortality is what the characters are searching for and it is through the sense of smell that we learn about death and the ancient figure Pan. This book inspires me, not to look for immortality, but to create something as vivid and layered and funny as this book was.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Face by Dean Koontz (#6, Fiction)

I haven't read a Dean Koontz book since I was 13 years old. I can't remember the name of the book, but it scared the sh*# out of me! (After a little google searching, I believe the name of the book was Cold Fire.)

I try not to read "scary" books because I am often left wide awake and terrified, unable to fall back to sleep, but sometimes I just can't help myself. My mom suggested The Face as a decent Koontz book and I was due for an easy read, so I thought, what the heck?

It is what it is--and I was entertained. I don't know that I would recommend it to people--maybe as a spooky beach read, but that is about it.

Like Stephen King, I wonder about Dean Koontz... how do you come up with these psycho killers and crazy sci-fi themes? I'm pretty glad my mind does not come up with that sort of imagination!

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger (#5, Classic)

I swear I have read this book before. Yet, as I read, nothing felt familiar. Did I just think I read it, or did I read it so long ago that I have completely forgotten it? I take issue with either option. If I never read it, shame on me! And if I read it so long ago that I don't remember it, shame on whoever made me read it because clearly I was not ready for it!

With this pocket sized book I was able to carry it with me all about town, which inevitably caused many people to either rant or rave (mostly rave) about the book to me. I think at least three people told me it was their "favorite book of all time". I got one "I hated that book"! All this made me think, if I saw someone reading it, what would I say?

I think I fall somewhere in the middle. I can vaguely relate to Holden. Growing up in New Hampshire, I had siblings, as well as many friends who attended boarding school. If you thought high school was bad, boarding school is a whole other breed of awful! But, I didn't hate high school, it wasn't the best years of my life, but I was happy, so that leaves me at a huge impasse with Holden. I have known people like Holden, those people DRIVE ME CRAZY. Wah, wah, wah. Holden's issues with people are the ironic (still trying to figure out how to use this word) part about the book. He goes on and on about all the phonies in the world, and all the liars, yet he is the phoniest and biggest liar of them all!

So, when asked about The Catcher in the Rye what would I say? It's worth reading but most definitely not my favorite book of all time. I really need to go back to the folks who told me that because I would really like to know what they loved SO MUCH about it.