JARS… a book club

December 17, 2009 at 10:20 pm (JARS)

JARS… a book club…
January 2010: Darwin!
The Origins of Species – Charles Darwin – science/evolution
The Origins – Irving Stone – historical fiction

Already read by JARS:

Foucault’s Pendulum – Umberto Eco – general fiction                                             The Templars – Piers Paul Read – history/ religion/ secret societies

The Fountainhead – Ayn Rand – general fiction/literature
On Art and Life – John Ruskin – essays

City of Dreaming Books – Walter Moers – young adult/fantasy
Time Was Soft There – Jeremy Mercer – traveling memoir/bookstores

French Pressed: A Coffeehouse Mystery – Cleo Coyle – mystery
Coffee and Coffeehouses: The Origins of a Social Beverage in the Medieval Near East – Ralph S. Hattox – history/sociology

Nefertiti – Michelle Moran – historical fiction
The Search for Nefertiti – Joanne Fletcher – archeology/egyptology

East of Eden – John Steinbeck – fiction/literature
Journal of a Novel: The East of Eden Letters – John Steinbeck – journals/letters/lit.crit

Suite Francaise – Irene Nemirovsky – general ficiton
Hermit in Paris – Italo Calvino – memoir

Arlington Park – Rachel Cusk – general fiction
The Seduction of Place: The History and Future of the City – Joseph Rykwert – Urban Studies/Architecture

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Unclean Spirits by M.L.N. Hanover

December 17, 2009 at 7:10 am (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , , , )


Book One of the Black Sun’s Daughter Series

Unclean Spirits is a  fun adventure filled fantasy to veg out with your favorite snack and a comfy pillow.  Hanover did a good job of taking an overused theme (vampires and metaphysical ghosties verses the good guys fighting evil) and turning it into something fresh and fun and not too plot heavy with romance.  Jayne Heller makes for a great escape fiction heroine and I’ll be interested to see how the rest of the trilogy turns out.

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Fantasy vs. Reality, Bella Swan Meet Emma Bovary

December 14, 2009 at 1:28 am (Reviews, The Whim) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

I just finished reading Madame Bovary by Gustav Flaubert, yet another piece of literature addressing the theme of fantasy versus reality.  This piece of work should join the ranks of Cervantes’ Don Quixote and Austen’s Northanger Abbey as all the main characters read novel after novel and for some reason become all goofy stupid because of it.  Don Quixote is quite funny, though annoying, in all his follies and delusions; Catherine visits the Abbey and acts quite the silly little girl.  Emma Bovary on the other hand is a different kind of delusional altogether, she is not funny in her silliness, there is no part of her antics that bring any kind of nostalgic giggle to my heart.  Emma Bovary has confused the fruitless passion of romance novels with what she wants for her life, and unfortunately for all involved, that kind of love is not realistic, long-lasting, or even truly desirable.  There is so much more to love than what she sells herself short for.

Kristen Stewart, actress, as Bella Swan in the Twilight Saga movies

While reading Madame Bovary and coming to these conclusions, I couldn’t help but compare this theme to the realities of today – to the fad that is known as the Twilight Saga.  Since I first read Stephenie Meyer’s books I have told people the story-line of the Twilight Saga is terribly frustrating because it sets unrealistic and pitiful standards on the beautiful thing that is love.   Not to say the books are inherently bad, they were entertaining and held my attention until the end, but there are so many things young men and women should understand when sitting down to read these novels.  Well, one thing specifically: Edward is not real.  Jacob is not real.  These boys do not exist, they will never exist.  And truth be told, they don’t act like real men, and in the end, even if they did exist, you would be unsatisfied.  Beware of expecting the wrong things and becoming the next Madame Bovary, wench of all wenches.

Below is a review of Twilight my sister Nikki Dawn Bratton wrote:

As a woman, I am captivated by the emotional suspense that Stephanie Meyer artfully crafts as this classic romance unfolds.
Classic, you say? Falling in love with a vampire? Yes, classic. As Bella Swan’s desperate desire builds and unravels, it is increasingly clear that the imminent danger in this novel is not so specifically falling in love with a “vampire”. If it were, then the plot would be too fictional to strike so much fear in my heart. It would be too fictional to draw in so many female fanatics ready to ride the thrilling emotional roller coaster.

No, vampires don’t make this story scary – it’s the classic romance driven by the understanding that love is some uncontrollable force that you “fall” into. A young reader being shaped and impacted by this novel will gain the following detrimental (and false) insights on life and love:

True love is uncontrollable. Like Romeo and Juliet, Edward and Bella are drawn to each other. For Bella the mystery behind Edward Cullen is so intriguing that she cannot help but be drawn to him. By the time she finds out who he really is, she states simply “It doesn’t matter” because she is already hooked.

Love is about risk; therefore, the greater your willingness to risk, the greater the love. Bella’s desire to be close to Edward supersedes all her inhibitions. The danger he presents becomes irrelevant to her.

A woman’s emotional attraction and sensual stimulation are the best tools she has for determining how much risk is right for her to take. This is the only determining factor in how much she should “love” a man who has caught her attention. Bella seeks no counsel from her family, her friends, or anyone else. Her response to Edward is purely and solely based on her own inward thoughts, desires, and emotions.

The understanding that it is right for a woman to give as much as she deems correct. Bella constantly reminds Edward that it is her choice and her desire to be with him despite the danger. To this end, Edward concedes.

The scariest thing about this book is that it is shaping the hearts of young readers because culture largely already agrees with the underlying elements of classic romance novels. When you break it all down, it’s another story of an ordinary girl who notices something extraordinary in a man and offers him her whole heart for the desperate desire to be something other than ordinary to him – regardless of the cost. There is nothing fictional about such a scenario. Just the happy ending that satisfies our feminine longings.

The problem with this is what those insights lead to:

Women being unprotected and willing to enter secret relationships when they are captivated by something they see as extraordinary.

In this “fictional” love story, Bella’s inside information and personal experiences with Edward, unknown to all others, play out thrillingly. However, real life rarely packs the same sort of thrills. Just as Bella’s life hangs on Edward’s ability to control his own temptations, so are the lives of so many young ladies. They secretly place their hearts in the hands of young men who are struggling with their own secret addictions and temptations.

Men taking advantage of young girls willing to give themselves away out of emotional desire.

Although Edward knows and states that he is not good for her, she insists on being with him regardless of what logic or self-preservation dictate. Although our fictional hero, Edward, is able to resist the temptations that he feels, this is often not the case in the real world.

Women who cannot be satisfied with a real man, full of all the human flaws, not crafted on the pages of a romance novel. With this picture of romance in her head, will any man every really be worthy of a woman’s life long devotion? Edward’s captivating smile and chiseled body are immortal. Edward’s emotional attraction to her is a mirror of her own feelings. The total package is not reproducible outside the pages of a fictional romance.

Therefore, your chief concern when analyzing the cultural impact of Twilight should not be teens intrigued by vampires. It’s the “love” story that will eat them alive.

In short, read Twilight and New Moon, Eclipse and Breaking Dawn to your hearts content.  Inwardly swoon all you want, but please, please, please, read Flaubert’s Madame Bovary as soon as you do.  Get acquainted with Emma Bovary and understand her weakness for all affairs and selfishness, and remember that is not a road you want to take.  Real love, real passionate and blissful love is patient, kind, does not envy, does not boast, is not rude or self-seeking, is not easily angered and keeps no record of wrong.  It’s also a daily choice and a lot of hard work.   Do it right and you will see the fruits of your labors.  Do not expect butterflies and tingles every time you look at the object of your affection, but don’t be so certain that they ever completely desist either.

I love my fantasies, but I know I cannot be so involved in them to find reality boring.  Books are awesome, but real life is the ultimate treat.

Buy Madame Bovary from Amazon.com

(And for fun, because I love this guy… http://musingsofahighschoolvampire.wordpress.com/2009/06/13/musings-of-a-high-school-vampire-cursing/)

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Lady Susan by Jane Austen

December 4, 2009 at 5:19 am (Reviews) (, , , , )

Lady Susan is by far my least favorite of Austen’s work, to no fault of Austen herself but rather to my own reading preferences.  I am not a fan of reading stories by way of letters between characters, I find it difficult for characters to really have their own unique voice.  The only books I have read in which the viewpoint is in constant flux and was done exceedingly well have been Barbara Kingsolver’s Poisonwood Bible and Audrey Niffenegger’s The Time Traveler’s Wife.  I appreciate Austen’s change from her typical storytelling routines, but I much prefer the titles I have re-read since I was a kid.  We’ll see how I feel about Lady Susan in ten years when I have re-read her a few times, as of now, I don’t much care for her.

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My Life All Mapped in Names:

December 3, 2009 at 5:30 am (The Whim)

I’m related to a Nikki.

I climbed trees in a field with a Lauren.

I sat in the lap of an Aleeta.

I grew up with a J.R.

I sparred with a David.

I had a crush on an Ian.

I got kissed on the cheek by Jon.

I adopted an Alex.

I stood in a celtic wedding for a Stefany.

I made eyes at a Ray.

I wrote letters to a Mark.

I was friends with a Danielle.

I held hands and couldn’t let go of Jon.

I pissed off a Ricky.

I played Warlords in the cafe with a Chris.

I got drunk with a Seth.

I sat in a truck with a Justin.

I took long walks with a Ryan.

I got my very first kiss from Jon.

I gallivanted with a Jasper.

I went running with a Jared.

I made out with another Ryan.

I dated two Adams.

I stood up a Derek.

I finally got a chance to be with Jon.

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Collegiate Moments

December 2, 2009 at 5:47 am (In So Many Words, The Whim) ()

“I love his butt dimples, babe, you know what I’m talking about?”

“Yeah,” I responded, not paying attention as I typed words into a book people would probably never read.

“Butt dimples,” JJ Golightly snickered.

We were talking about the dog, as my husband playfully slapped him around and JJ pretended to complete her homework assignment, “You are not beautiful,” she muttered to a textbook picture of a naked British man. I wondered if the picture featured his butt dimples, I never took my eyes off my computer screen long enough to notice. I thought about my butt dimples.

We continued to discuss the fat Asian children also featured in the same textbook. “We should adopt Asian children, we could have our own fat Buddhas!” We quickly got over the excitement of the chubby Chinese kids and proceeded with a discussion of flopping genitalia when hanging out in the nude, and whether it hurt or not.

I have a “Love Buddha” on my night stand that Davey Barnes gave me with my wedding gift.  I love him, and his little mahogany belly. At Honey Tree he was perched a top a fountain, those kind they sell at Hippie nature stores that “soothe and relax your senses.”

Buddha always makes me think of butt dimples now, I’m sure he had quite a few.

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Gift Ideas for the Masses

November 30, 2009 at 8:02 pm (The Whim) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

Half Price Books has these fabulous little polar bear reuseable bags for $1.98 and all these cool odds and ends (like cards and calendars) to go with them.  My idea: buy the bag and stuff it with goodies and put a big matching bow on the top.  You’ll probably save lots of money (only buy one bag per person on your list) and you wont have to wrap a thing.

What I plan to do with the bags I buy (shhh, don’t tell my friends and family – good thing they don’t read this!):

Find a book at Half Price that you think they might enjoy, its Half Price – so it wont cost you much!  Find a movie to match the theme of the book.  Ie: if you buy them a copy of Atonement by Ian McEwan, buy them the movie with Kiera Knightley as well!; if you buy them a Civil War Coffee Table book, get them a documentary too!   For kids, maybe get books that have Polar Bears in the story or on the cover: Pullman’s The Golden Compass series and maybe the movie to go with.  Obviously, there’s still space in these reuseable bags.  Bake some cookies, fudge, or candies (don’t know how, I bet Half Price or Amazon has a book on that too!).  You might also want to add a small bit of artwork from Bryan Collins, he has small easily frameable prints for sale at bryandrinkscoffee.com.  This will make these gift bags more personalized and family friendly – and you’ll still save lots!

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Have You Read Goodell’s Zenith Rising?

November 30, 2009 at 6:30 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

As most people know, I am a shelfari.com addict.  It makes sense, as shelfari is a book site for book people and I am quite certainly a book person.  In my shelfari hunting and pecking for great reads and cool recommendations, I ran across an author named Michael Goodell who has since been a fun shelfari friend to engage in the banter of book talk.  One day, a group of us decided to read his book Zenith Rising (available for purchase on amazon) and discovered quite a treat.

I found Zenith Rising to be an interesting read and great first novel for Goodell.  It was slightly reminiscent of an old classic with a mix of John Grisham’s The Rainmaker, but unique and very much an original piece full of life and art and the raw thoughts of humanity.  I also believe that its a good shelf companion to Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead.

Goodell has said about his work,

[…] one message I want people to walk away with after reading Zenith Rising, it would be the transformative effect that the pride of accomplishment and the sense of ownership can have on people who have never accomplished anything, (nor been told that they could or should), and never owned anything that wasn’t given to them. On that last point, when I was working with a nonprofit housing group, I was struck by the similarities between the lives of trust fund babies, and those of welfare babies. They both are born into lives with no demands and no expectations, and both engage in self-destructive behaviors, often culminating in wasted lives. I tried to point out that connection through some of the characters and their antics.

I think Goodell has succeeded in his goal, as most people I have talked to about the book feel a twinge of nostalgia towards the work as a whole.  I cried like a baby through chapter nine, the way I cried in Wall-E.  People should read this book before finishing school, high school or college, I don’t think it really matters which, just before they go out into the world. Inspire them to not let money go to their head, and not let their cities become pieces of crap. We’re always taught about the problems in other countries. Growing up, I always heard the glories of mission trips. Did we ever do activities in our own cities that were helpful? Not really. The closest we came was a yearly trip to Dallas four hours away. We got a lot done and it was amazing, but anything that can be done in Dallas could have certainly been done in Houston.

I truly believe that Goodell’s book has a bit of simple brilliance about it and cannot wait to read his second book which will also be set in the city of Zenith.

An excerpt from the book (pg.82-83):

One of the men stood with back to the viewer, in the lower center of the painting, where the mountain sloped down to a ridge, gazing out across a valley or vast plain stretching to the horizon. Often painted at dusk, with mist rising from the ground, or the sunset colors reflecting in the myriad streams snaking their way across the valley floor, the paintings gave the attorney an aching desire to step into that long lost world. He stood beside the adventurer at the edge of a precipice. The world unfolded at his feet, waiting for a man courageous enough to carve a life from its untamed wilds.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?lt1=_blank&bc1=000000&IS2=1&bg1=FFFFFF&fc1=000000&lc1=0000FF&t=anakawhims-20&o=1&p=8&l=as4&m=amazon&f=ifr&ref=ss_til&asins=1607037327

Information from the Zenith Rising Website:

From its stunning opening scene of a police raid gone tragically awry, to its heart-breaking conclusion, “Zenith Rising” tells the story of a dying city. Yet once that city was a world leader in manufacturing and technological innovation.

Once Zenith’s future was limited only by the size of its dreams.

Though the years stripped away its promise, the people of Zenith didn’t share equally in its decline. For some, the wealth garnered during the glory years insulated them from the city’s struggles. Others sought to suck the last bit of life, and profit, from the dying city, while a few, a lonely few, saw things as they were and vowed to change them.

Michael Goodell has given us a compelling tale ripped from today’s headlines. By means of a riveting plot and vivid characters, he presents a challenge every American must confront.

You can learn more about itat http://www.zenithrising.webs.com
The list price is $24.95.

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The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx

November 30, 2009 at 6:01 pm (Education, Reviews) (, , , , , , , , )

communist_manifesto-large1The Communist Manifesto changed the face of the twentieth century beyond recognition, inspiring millions to revolution, forming the basis of political systems that still dominate countless lives and continuing to ignite violent debate about class and capitalism today.” – Penguin

For that reason, I think everyone should read this book and grasp a greater understanding of the world around them. At the risk of ‘igniting violent debate’ I’ll let it be known that I disagree with the concept. I am especially opposed to the idea of the abolition of a right to inheritance, as I would love to pass my library down to the future generations of my family. Perhaps some things should be a little more equal, but I like the individuality we have in being able to select what we purchase and accumulate. I enjoy the right to educate our own children, having the privilege to opt out of public education in order to give our children more – more knowledge, more quality time, more love.

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The Ghost and Mrs. McClure by Alice Kimberly

November 29, 2009 at 8:53 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , )

The first of the Haunted Bookshop Mystery Series is adorable.  I want to shop Buy the Book (a small bookstore that reminds me of Houston’s Murder By the Book), hug Penelope McClure, and exchange witty dialogue with her resident ghost P.I. Jack Shepard.  Like her Coffee House Mystery Series (written under the name Cleo Coyle), Alice Kimberly’s bookshop murders are fun, endearing, and most importantly, cozy.

Buy it Here!

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