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Friday, September 25, 2009

The Princess Bride

What to say about The Princess Bride by William Goldman? I know everyone has seen this movie and so might overlook the book, but I have read this book many times and love it more every time. All the wit and humor that was present in the movie is in the book ten fold! Of course many scenes vary from the movie, so expect that, but if you are looking for a light humorous read... PICK THIS UP!! No matter how many times I read it, I never get tired of it!

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Host by Stephenie Meyer


I had to post this because everyone gets all giddy over Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series (I did too, don't get me wrong), but I think her best work so far is overlooked. The Host is a far superior book in regards to character development, underlying themes and plot line. It is also Meyer's first novel intended for an adult audience.
The Host is set on Earth after a massive takeover by an alien parasite species (don't run away yet), but there is a small human resistance that hides from the "souls." The problem is that the "souls" have created the perfect society. There is no violent crimes, no stealing, no currency even. They have made a better world, so are the humans justified in taking back our planet when we lived so violently? What does it mean to be human? Should we suppress free-will to make a better society? Is that society really better? There are so many thinking/talking points of this book that I find fascinating and that is just in the underlying story.
Of course, in true Meyer fashion, there is a love triangle. This one is complex and quite unique to any other that I have read, which makes the story even more enjoyable. Altogether a great read and I highly recommend it.
After you read it, I found so interesting discussion questions at the following site. WARNING: Do not go to this site if you have not read the book. It will spoil it!

The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett


The concept of this book intrigued me. I mean, why would people who were destitute and routinely struggling for survival commit so many resources and so much personal labor to the building of these massive cathedrals? Most people during this time period (1100s) were poor in a way we now only see in third-world countries and still they aspired to build incredible monuments to their faith. Many of these building stood the test of time and are still standing today, which is a testament to their workmanship. I doubt my house would last a fifth of that time. When you also consider the amount of time put into building these cathedrals (sometimes 50-100 years) it is a miracle they are even completed, if you consider that these must have been built through famine, the changing of those in power, wars and various other problems. These were ideas I never really considered until I read the preface of this book. I found Follett's interest and life-long love of cathedrals very captivating and I couldn't wait to get into the rest of the book.
Now, 973 pages later... I can't say that I recommend this book beyond its preface. Do I think it was a masterful work? Yes, but it left me feeling unsettled and disgusted. I think there is enough in the world to bring you down that you don't need a book to do it for you too. To be honest, the only reason I kept reading is because I wanted the villain of the book to die so badly that I kept going. Follett's villain rapes, kills and destroys all around him, the descriptions of which are not likely to leave me soon. That alone makes it not worth it. Trust me, unless you enjoy being depressed and angry for 973 pages, read the preface in the bookstore and leave it on the shelf.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The Traitor

Up until now I have only mentioned books that I have enjoyed, but here is an exception: Stephen Coonts' The Traitor. This was intended to be a suspense/thriller novel where you don't know what is going on until the very end. This kind of writing is more common now, but I think very few writers are good enough to pull it off. The plot was patchy and scattered and there were so many characters who could be other characters, it was a bit like reading King Lear. (Except the vocabulary was far from varying. On one page there might be three different things he describes as "delicious." It was annoying... get a thesaurus, PLEASE!) Most of the time I was wondering "What the heck is going on?" and not in a good way. I am very surprised I finished the book at all. I can't even give you a summary of the novel that would seem coherent at all, so I won't even try.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

The Robe

I read this book last year, but it is perfect for the Easter season, so I decided to review it now.

This book is a masterpiece! Lloyd C. Douglas's "The Robe" follows a Roman solider through the years before and after Christ's crucifixion. The Roman solider is present at the Crucifixion and is deeply affected by this experience. "The Robe" follows the political and social times that Christ lived in and illustrated the changes that started from Christ's life and resurrection.

What Douglas believes occurred right after Christ's crucifixion was very interesting and plausible. The historical context was well researched and believable. I enjoyed understanding this story in greater depth than we normally give it, even during Easter. My heart broke my times for all in the story... How those around the crucifixion of Christ must have been haunted! Highly recommended reading!

My husbands favorite quote (because he hates clutter):

"Hoarded things might easily become a menace; a mere fire-and-theft risk; a breeding ground for destructive insects; a source of worry. Men would have plenty of anxieties, but there was no sense in accumulating worries over things! That kind of worry destroyed your character. Even an unused coat, hanging in your closet; it wasn't merely a useless thing that did nobody any good; it was an active agent of destruction to your life." p. 275

Other favorite quotes:

(Referring to Christ) "How often he talked about generosity! In his opinion there was nothing meaner than a mean gift. About the worst thing a man could do to himself or a fellow creature was to bestow a grudged gift. It was very hard on a man's character to give away something that should have been thrown away! That much of Jesus' teachings you could accept, my friend, without any difficulty." p.251

"This faith is not like a deed to a house in which one may live with full rights of possession. It is more like a kit of tools with which a man may build him a house. The tools will be worth just what he does with them. When he lays them down, they will have no value until he takes them up again." p. 347

(This is referring to the new Christian movement and it's relation to Rome. It is an interesting perspective on how the opposing forces could have viewed Christ and His followers.) "You mean - they might try to overthrow the Empire?"

"Not by force. If some foolhardy fellow were to stand up on a cart and yell at these captive people to take up arms against their masters, they would know that was hopeless. But - here comes a man without an army: doesn't want an army; has no political aspirations; doesn't want a throne; has no offices to distribute; never fought a battle; never owned a sword; hasn't a thing to recommend him as a leader - except - except that he knows how to make blind men see, and cripples walk; and, having been killed for creating so much excitement, returns from the dead, saying, 'Follow me - and I will set you free!' Well - why shouldn't they follow him - if they believe all that? there is more than one kind of courage, my child, and the most potent of all is the reckless bravery of people who have nothing to lose...

"...They have no fear. Now - you set a thing like that in motion - and there'd be no end to it!" p. 407-408

(I love this quote about slavery.) "...you don't rob a slave of his divine character when you buy him and hitch him to a plow, between an ox and an ass. He has had no choice in the matter. It isn't he who has demoted mankind: it is you! He is still free to believe that God is his spiritual Father. But you aren't! ... his slavery has made you a relative of the beasts, because that is your conception of a man's value." p.172

"The Romans will be crushed, but not because they are too fat (because of slave labor). It will be because they have believed that all men are beasts. Enslaving other men, they have denied their own spiritual dignity." p.172

The Hunger Games


Ok, a disclaimer right off: I had no idea that this was the first book in a series that is not finished yet. That was extremely disappointing since this book was so good. From the moment I opened it, I couldn't put it down. I read all in one day which meant I stayed up until 2 or 3 am.

"The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Collins is a story of a 16-year-old girl living in a post-apocalyptic America. She is selected by lottery to participate in "The Hunger Games" which is a televised contest of survival between 24 contestants. Winner is the last one standing.

Very "Lord-of-the-Flies" in some ways, but a gripping read. I'd wait for the entire series to come out first since I hate waiting.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

The Blue Castle


This is a book that I wouldn't normally pick up to read but I am glad I did. The author L.M. Montgomery wrote the Anne of Green Gables series and I remember being a fan of those books as a girl. FYI: This book is geared definitely to an adult audience. No giving it to your nine-year-old.
This is a story about a 29-year-old woman named Valancy. She is not the classic heroine of a novel. Valancy is not liked by her family, she talks very little and is considered plain (and told so to her face). Because reality is so painful and unhappy for Valancy, she creates an imaginary world for herself which she calls The Blue Castle. When she is told that she is dying, she decides to live in a way that would make her happy without reference to her disapproving family.
I thought it was an excellent story. There are some wonderful moments in this book as Valancy tries to create a happy life for herself in her last year of life. It is also a quick read at 218 pages!

Monday, February 9, 2009

The Walking Drum

Ok, so I read this book last year, but so I often think about it that I just have to mention it. I finished this book and thought: "This is everything a novel should be!" It is thought-provoking, action-packed, and full of interesting historical references. Oh yea, and The Walking Drum is by Louis L'Amour! Louis L'Amour the author of all the book about the old west... but this novel is nothing like his other books (except for the insights, perhaps).

The story takes place all over Europe, Russia, and Asia in the 12th century. The hero, Kerbouchard, is driven to find his father's kidnappers and it leads him on a decade long search through many cultures and different streaks of fortune for our hero. It was nice to read about a hero that was continually seeking to be educated because, he knew, that knowledge was the only possession would ever remain his. He had many reversals in fortune, but because of his knowledge he could always better his circumstances. I don't always agree with L'Amour or his hero, but it is definitely an interesting ride.

Favorite quotes (there are a lot of them:

"The wider my knowledge became the more I realized my ignorance. It is only the ignorant who can be positive (certain), only the ignorant who can become fanatics, for the more I learned the more I became aware that there are shadings and relationships in all things..."

"In knowledge lay not only power but freedom from fear, for generally speaking one only fears what one does not understand." p.85

"What kind of scholar was I? Or was I a scholar at all? My ignorance was enormous. Beside it my knowledge was nothing. My hunger for learning, not so much to improve my lot as to understand my world, had led me to study and to thought. Reading without thinking is as nothing, for a book is less important for what it says than for what it makes you think." p.201-202

"Civilization was born of curiosity, and can be kept alive in no other way." p.251

"To die for what one believes is all very well for those so inclined, but it has always seemed to me the most vain of solutions. There is no cause worth dying for that is not better served by living." p.254

"Evil comes often to a man with money; tyranny comes surely to him without it." p.346

"The goods of this world... are soon lost. Fire, storm, thieves, and war are ever with us, but what is stored in the mind is ours forever. I have lost my sword. All that remains is what I have learned and some discretion in how it is to be used." p.362

"Up to a point a man's life is shaped by environment, heredity, and movements and changes in the world about him; then there comes a time when it lies within his grasp to shape the clay of his life into the sort of thing he wishes to be. Only the weak blame parents, their race, their times, lack of fortune, or the quirks of fate. Everyone has it within his power to say, this I am today, that I shall be tomorrow. The wish, however, must be implemented by deeds." p.373

"To survive? What is that? A mouse lives, a fly lives; one flees in terror, another lives in filth. They exist, they are, but do they live?
To challenge the fates, that is living! To ride the storm, to live daringly, to live nobly, not wasting one's life in foolish, silly risks..." p.419

And so many more quotes, I can't count....

The Girl Who Could Fly

This book is geared to a younger audience, but I heard such good reviews that I was intrigued. The Girl Who Could Fly by Victoria Forester was her first book and I am definitely putting her on my "authors to watch" list. The story is about a plain girl who grew up in a small farming community with little exposure to life outside her farm. As the book obviously gives away, she finds that she can fly and this sets off a series of events that take her far from her farm. That is where I am going to leave it since I was surprised, especially given the cover, where this book leads. Usually a reader can predict the twists and turns of the book but I'll admit I was pleasantly surprised that I didn't always know where it was going to lead. That alone made it worth the read, but I also like the heroine of the novel. She is a honest and courageous character that doesn't give in to the cynicism of those who surrounded her. She really transcended her environment and circumstances. This book is a definite keeper for when my daughter is old enough to read it.

The Measure of a Man


I read The Measure of a Man by Sidney Poitier despite it being an Oprah Book Club pick. (She is taking over the world!) Sidney Poitier has always had such a presence and a peace about him that I was intrigued what he would have to say.
I really enjoyed the first half, which described how Mr. Poitier grew up. It was incredibly interesting since he grew up on Cat Island in the Bahamas. There was no electricity or any modern conveniences and he did not leave the island until he was 15 years old. How many of us grow up like this in modern times?! Due to his unusual youth, he has a unique perspective, insights and reactions to our modern lives. It made me take a second look at what I expose my children to and what my children need from me.


The second half of the book was a little slower for me since he was writing about him breaking into the film industry, which didn't interest me much. He also frankly discussed how he cheated on his first wife and how his children felt completely betrayed. While I do admire his forthrightness, I can't help but get turned off by that part of the story.


All in all, I thought it was an insightful and honest autobiography that didn't shy away from the blemishes that inevitably occur in life.


Some of my favorite quotes:


"Poverty notwithstanding, I was lucky... I wasn't bombarded with contravening images and influences that really didn't have any direst connection to my nurturing. I didn't have to digest television..." p.5


"These kind of simulations come at today's American kids on a daily basis, but the mental and emotional apparatus for sifting through them, for processing them, for dealing with them in some meaningful way, simply isn't there."

"But children still have to try to make some sense of everything they're bombarded with. They have to assume something, correctly or incorrectly, factual of otherwise. They have to encode all these distractions into the self that they're slowly, day by day, building." p.6


"We put our kids through fifteen years of quick-cut advertising, passive television watching, and sadistic video games, and we expect to see emerge a new generation of calm, compassionate, and engaged human beings?" p.6-7
"We're going to have to decide for ourselves what we are and what we're not. Create our own image of ourselves. And nurture it and feed it till it can stand on its own." p.78

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

My First Review!

Oh, I feel so official! I can just put up my own blog and pretend that I am a legit critic with something to say! No wonder there is so much misinformation out there!


My first review is of William J. Bennett's The American Patriot's Almanac: Daily Readings on America. This book is one I will be reading all throughout the year since it is arranged to have interesting stories of happenings in American history on each day of the year, so I read a page and day and I already love it! In the first four or five pages, William Bennett writes about what it means to be a patriot and a citizen. Those first pages alone make the book worth the purchase and the read. It is something every citizen of the USA needs to read. I LOVE this book and look forward everyday to read the page for that day. I have a feeling that I will finish the book before the end of the year because the stories are so compelling that I often read ahead.