We survived our 50 books in one year challenge. In 2009 we are still reading...
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Monday, July 12, 2010
The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen (#8, Contemporary Literature)
It took me a loooooooooong time to finish this one. I started it after I got back from Portugal, but had to read book club books in between, and of course became obsessed with the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series.
Although it took a long time to finish, that doesn't mean that it wasn't good! It is not an "exciting" book, but I actually really liked it. It's bizarre, but just the perfect amount of bizarre for my taste. I feel like I knew all the characters by the end, and man were they all messed up! This is the perfect dysfunctional family book.
Somehow Franzen is able to take sad events, and completely depressing situations and make them funny. A very clever writer.
Although it took a long time to finish, that doesn't mean that it wasn't good! It is not an "exciting" book, but I actually really liked it. It's bizarre, but just the perfect amount of bizarre for my taste. I feel like I knew all the characters by the end, and man were they all messed up! This is the perfect dysfunctional family book.
Somehow Franzen is able to take sad events, and completely depressing situations and make them funny. A very clever writer.
The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson (#7, Fiction)
Little Bee by Chris Cleave (#5, Fiction)
Enjoyable overall. But a bit sad and depressing throughout. It is a present day story of a young African refugee who leaves Africa and illegally enters the UK. She spends her first two years in a refugee prison, then upon release calls the one person she knows--the young couple who happened to encounter evils happening to her and her family in Africa.
The story is quite sad, with lots of death and depression. After calling the husband following her release the reader finds out that he commits suicide the next day, and she shows up on the doorstep the day of his funeral.
The story had some potential, but I found some of the information superfluous, and the ending just kept going and going and going, and I really disliked how the author finally chose to end it.
The story is quite sad, with lots of death and depression. After calling the husband following her release the reader finds out that he commits suicide the next day, and she shows up on the doorstep the day of his funeral.
The story had some potential, but I found some of the information superfluous, and the ending just kept going and going and going, and I really disliked how the author finally chose to end it.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Ahab's Wife: Or, The Star Gazer by Sena Jeter Nasland (#1, Fiction)
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Pope Joan by Donna Woolfolk Cross (#42, Fiction)
I am posting this in 2010, but this was my final book of 2009. I had high hopes of beating 50 this year, and I definitely could have done it but as is natural, life intervened.
Another book club pick. I enjoyed Pope Joan, and if there is even the slightest truth in it, that women dressed as men in order to be educated or to join religious hierarchies, that is pretty amazing.
Historical fiction always makes me happy. The writing was decent, the characters were fairly well developed, but there was just no spark about the book for me. I wouldn't recommend this to someone, but also wouldn't warn against it.
Another book club pick. I enjoyed Pope Joan, and if there is even the slightest truth in it, that women dressed as men in order to be educated or to join religious hierarchies, that is pretty amazing.
Historical fiction always makes me happy. The writing was decent, the characters were fairly well developed, but there was just no spark about the book for me. I wouldn't recommend this to someone, but also wouldn't warn against it.
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