Entries Tagged as ‘Literature’

November 9, 2009

October 2009 Books

The Tenderness of Wolves by Steph Penney and  One Thousand White Women – The Journals of May Dodd  by Jim Fergus were our two books for October.  Both take place in areas where white settlers are beginning to establish settlements on land where Native Americans live.  That these books were related in theme made the discussion about the [...]

July 8, 2009

Reading Lolita in Tehran

One of our two books for June 2009 was “Reading Lolita in Tehran” by Azar Nafisi.  The riots over the election results keeping President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in power were happening as we read this book. The passage quoted below from the book struck me as particularly enlightening about Iranian culture.
When reading this book, I thought time and time again [...]

March 13, 2009

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

In February, our book club read The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson (translated by Reg Keeland).  Everyone decided that it was “just what we needed.”  We usually read literary works — national book award winners, etc.  But sometimes you just need to read a mystery.  And this is a smart mystery.  We admired [...]

November 25, 2008

“Shadow Country,” book for January 2009

 
Our book club is reading Peter Matthiessen’s “Shadow Country: A New Rendering of the Watson Legend” for January 2009.
Judges for the National Book Award honored a comeback on November 19, 2008, giving the fiction award to Peter Matthiessen’s “Shadow Country,” a thorough revision of a trilogy of novels from the 1990s. Matthiessen, 81, last won [...]

November 22, 2008

Discussion about “American Lightning”

                                        What makes a book good?  That’s one of the questions we asked at book club last night (after we’d asked about what was on the menu at Yia Yia’s.)  We’ve asked this same question throughout the more than twenty years I’ve been in this book club, and I’m sure it was one of the [...]

November 18, 2008

Ghostwalk, the book for December 2008

Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. British historian Stott makes a stunning debut with this hypnotic and intelligent thriller, the first fiction release of a new Random House imprint. The mysterious drowning death of Elizabeth Vogelsang, a Cambridge University scholar who was almost finished writing a controversial biography of Isaac Newton, leads her son, Cameron Brown, [...]

November 10, 2008

Book A Minute

Our blogging friend at www.19thcentury.wordpress.com, a blog about the Victorian era, told us about a website that summarizes a long list of classics in just a minute each!  Go to www.rinkworks.com/bookaminute/classics.shtml.  Okay, so you’ll miss a few details and all of the romantic or dramatic touches.  But think of how much time you’ll save! Cathy

October 26, 2008

“American Lightning,” book for November 2008

The book for November 2008 is “American Lightning” by Howard Blum.
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In 1911, Iron Workers Union leaders James and Joseph McNamara plea-bargained in exchange for prison sentences instead of death after bombing the offices of the Los Angeles Times—killing 21 people and wounding many more. The bombing had been part of [...]

October 18, 2008

Jane Austen

Jane Austen never goes out of style.  Several new books and movies about her and her books have recently appeared.  To help us sort these out, Arti at Ripple Effects has posted two great articles about two Austen biographies and one Austen biographical novel. One is a biography by Carol Shields, called “Jane Austen,” which I’ve read and [...]

October 18, 2008

“The Little Book”

Here’s a review of “The Little Book” from The Washington Post:  Back to the Future. This is one of our two books for October.
One fun aspect this book for me was that the main character, Wheeler Burden, is descended from Myles Standish, because my sister-in-law Janet is a “nonfiction” descendant of Myles Standish.   The thousands of Standish descendants have [...]