Tuesday, February 24, 2015

An Update in Reading

This month has been so busy that routine, along with all of the wonderful things that routine maintains including laundry and blog posting, has disappeared from my life completely.
Not surprisingly, I've still managed to read a few books. Because that's the second to the last thing to go (the last thing would obviously be breathing).
So here is a quick survey of my reading last month:

The Sandman: Preludes and Nocturnes, 4 stars. This is the first comic book/graphic novel that I've ever read! Reading comic books is difficult for me. My mind keeps trying to create the setting, the mood, to draw the characters and it gropes for information about these details - "Why is there so much dialogue! Why won't they stop and tell me where they are and what the air smells like and what the weather is doing?" Then I remember that it's all in a picture behind the words. So weird. But eventually I got into a good rhythm and didn't have to remind myself to slow down and look at the pictures. When I finished this collection, I had a few thoughts: That was a weird place to stop the story. Holy cannoli that was gruesome and creepy. There might have been a few sections that were pure genius. I wasn't instantly enthusiastic about it. I had to let it stew in my brain. I had to strain out the gruesome (I'm not prudish usually about violence, but for some reason, probably since there were pictures, it creeped me out) and absorb the great. Because there were two issues (I think they are called issues?) that Blew. My. Mind. One of them was an issue that switches to the point of view of a very minor character, a waitress at a diner who is a writer. She sees her customers as fuel for her writing. That's all I will say, but if you only read one issue, that would be the one to read. Neil Gaiman is extraordinary. If I was still teaching, I would seriously consider adding a lesson where we analyzed one or two issues of this text.

Anne of Green Gables, 5 billion stars. (The exaggeration is in in honor of Anne, of course.) I never realized that L.M. Montgomery was one of my favorite authors until a week ago. I got a sudden urge to reread Anne of Green Gables and now all I want to do is read Anne of Green Gables or watch Anne of Green Gables. Also, I plan on moving to Prince Edward Island. Seriously. My husband said he would do it.

Carry On Warrior, 3 stars. I can't enjoy nonfiction as much as fiction and so I always find it difficult to rate and recommend and talk about at all. Also, I have a weird voice in my head that is super judgmental when I read nonfiction. I haven't the slightest idea why. Anyway, this book was pretty hilarious, especially the anecdotes about the author and her children. I know it's cliche of me to enjoy reading about how a child threw a temper tantrum at Target just because I too may one day get to experience that joy, but what can I say, it's funnier on this side of things. The author of this text, Glennon Doyle Melton, is well known for her brutal honesty. I found this very refreshing and challenging. Sure, she had some ideas that were strange and that I disagreed with (which the voice in my head demands that I tell you), but I'd totally be friends with her. I read a review on Goodreads that said the prose was terrible. It wasn't. It was really funny. It was blog-prose or thinking-out-loud prose. But it worked for the book stylistically.

What are you reading currently?

2 comments:

  1. How funny! Kate's reading ANNE OF GREEN GABLES for school! We are loving it! What's made it especially wonderful for me is that the girls have no prior exposure to Anne and so it's all fresh through their eyes. Kate has loved Anne's names for everything and has felt such empathy for such a poor little orphan. The girls were so mad at Mrs. Barry yesterday for forbidding Anne to see Diana! And Anne makes me think of Kate...I'm just glad I haven't had the problem of a mouse in the pudding sauce...yet. ;)

    When I was a teenager, I wanted to live on Prince Edward Island. But then this California girl realized she'd never handle a Canadian winter. So, someday, maybe we'll take a warm spring or summer vacation there. :)

    As for what I'm reading, I just finished THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO last night. "Wait and hope." :)

    Now, to decide what to read next...hmmm....

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    Replies
    1. Beth - I can't WAIT to read Anne to Madelyn! I'm glad the girls are loving it. You have a very good point about Canadian winters...Hmmm, maybe I will only live there the other three seasons...
      I love The Count of Monte Cristo, though I accidentally read an abridged version, for which I've been mortified most of my life...but the unabridged is HUGE! I've never gotten around to reading it.

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