Masterpiece
*****
Excellent
**** 1/2
Very good
****
Good
**** 1/2
Just okay
***
Not for me
**
Definitely not for me
*

Gogol stories #4 through #6

gogol.gifThe Lost Letter, Christmas Eve, and A Terrible Vengeance, stories from Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka, which is contained in The Complete Tales of Nikolai Gogol, Vol. 1.

Of these three, “The Lost Letter” is the weakest. Grandfather must take a letter to the Czarina. He stops by a tavern, gets side-tracked, and loses the letter. The tavern owner tells him how to get the letter back by going into a certain area of the forest. When he gets there, he has to play a card game with some witches and win the game to get the letter. Impossible task, or maybe not. I wonder who outwits whom. . .

“Christmas Eve” once again has the devil in human form being used to get a girl. This time, though, it is the most pious man in the village “using” (outwitting) the devil to do it. Another witch is involved, as well as a snowstorm, and the Czarina’s slippers. Oh, yeah, and some sacks full of other “devils,” too.

“A Terrible Vengeance” was the creepiest of the three stories. A Cossack and his wife try to fend off the wife’s father, a sorcerer. What the father wants to do is the creepy part, along with some scary cemetery imagery.

All in all, these have been great for the RIP II Challenge. I have 4 stories left to review in Volume 1, and after that I’m looking forward to reading more of Gogol next year for the Russian Reading Challenge.

Half of a Yellow Sun

A beautifully told story of a savage civil war, Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun definitely deserved the 2007 Orange Prize.

They sat on wooden planks and the weak morning sun streamed into the roofless class as she unfurled Odenigbo’s cloth flag and told them what the symbols meant. Red was the blood of the siblings massacred in the North, black was for mourning them, green was for the prosperity Biafra would have, and finally, the half of a yellow sun stood for the glorious future.

I resisted reading this book because I really just don’t like war stories at all. I wanted to give it a chance, though, because so many bloggers had said they appreciated it. They were right; it’s a very special book. Based on the conflict in Nigeria in the late 1960′s, it not only depicts the horrors of war, it also hauntingly and lovingly depicts the lives of the participants. biafra_flag.jpgApparently many of the characters were based on real people in Adichie’s family history, and this authenticity very much shines through.There were some content issues for me in the book, but I’m very glad I read this story. I look forward to reading Purple Hibiscus and other books of hers to come. If you decide to read the book (and I highly encourage it), afterwards you might want to go to her website http://www.halfofayellowsun.com where you can find a lot more information about the true story.

2006, 541 pp.
2007 Orange Prize
Rating: 4.5

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Read-a-thon

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I think I’m all set to go at 8 am Central time. I ordered 2 DVD’s from Netflix for my husband and kids to watch–that’s 8 episodes of Season 2 of Star Trek: The Next Generation. That should keep them busy for awhile!

I will be taking a break in the afternoon to watch the Kentucky-Florida football game. I have TiVo, though, so I can skip all the commercials and the half-time show.

List of potential books I want to read from during the read-a-thon:

Lisey’s Story (RIP Challenge)
Gossamer (RIP Challenge)
Picture of Dorian Gray (RIP Challenge)
A Scanner Darkly (Dystopian Challenge)
Never Let Me Go (Dystopian Challenge)
Veronika Decides to Die (Reading across Borders, 2nds, Armchair Traveler’s)

I expect to finish Gossamer and make great headway on Lisey’s Story. I also hope to get to A Scanner Darkly as I have the movie from Netflix and want to read the book before I see the movie.

I’m looking forward to it!

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