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

The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway

cellist.jpgThe Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway is a moving story based on fact. It chronicles the few days in Sarajevo during 1992 when the real “Cellist of Sarajevo,” Vedran Smailovic, played his cello for 22 days in the exact spot where 22 people had been killed while waiting in line for bread.

In the novel, a counter-sniper, Arrow, is assigned to keep the cellist from getting shot and killed. Arrow is the best at what she does but still wrestles with the moral dilemma of having to take another’s life. She wonders if she is any better than the men in the hills trying to destroy her city.

We also meet Kenan, a man on his way to fetch water for his family, and we follow his life-threatening journey as well as his thoughts, fears, and hopes for the future. Another character, Dragan, misses his family, whom he helped to get out of the country. All of them are waiting. Waiting for help that never comes.

Told in a simple but unforgettable style, Galloway captures this unfortunate moment in history in a way that will break your heart for all victims of war.

This book will be released on May 15 from Riverhead Books.

2008, 231 pp.
Rating: stars4.gif

Sunday Salon A-Z

sundaysalon2.pngI’ve seen several people do this lately, but I’m copying Jill who used it for a Sunday Salon. Here’s my list of some of my favorite authors from A-Z. I’ve got a fairly good start to an author index on my site if anyone’s interested. Just go to “Index” in the tabs above.

A - Jane Austen – Persuasion is my favorite
B – Ray BradburyFahrenheit 451
C – Paulo Coelho – The Alchemist and Veronika Decides to Die
D – Kate DiCamillo - The Tale of Despereaux
E – George EliotSilas Marner
F – Jasper FfordeThe Eyre Affair
G – Neil GaimanCoraline
H – Mark HaddonThe Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
I – Kazou IshiguroNever Let Me Go (I plan on reading Remains of the Day soon and expect to like it even better)
J – Henry James – Daisy Miller
K - Sue Monk KiddThe Secret Life of Bees
L – Lois Lowry – everthing I’ve read by her, but especially The Giver
M – L.M. MontgomeryAnne of Green Gables
N – Irene NemirovskySuite Francaise
O – Scott O’Dell – Island of the Blue Dolphins, Zia, and The Black Pearl
P – Sylvia PlathThe Bell Jar
Q – Anna Quindlen – How Reading Changed My Life and Blessings (I’ll be done soon)
R – Marilynne Robinson – Gilead
S – Betty Smith - A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
T – Tolstoy – Anna Karenina; I also love his short stories
U – Sigrid UndsetKristin Lavransdatter I: The Wreath
V – Sheldon VanaukenA Severe Mercy
W – Edith Wharton – Ethan Frome
X – Gao XingjianBuying a Fishing Rod for my Grandfather. This is the only ‘X’ author I’ve read. I’m reading Xinran later this year and suspect I’ll like Sky Burial a little better than this one.
Y – Taichi YamadaStrangers
Z – Markus Zusak/Yevgeny ZamyatinThe Book Thief and We

Review: The Mayor’s Tongue

mayorstongue.JPGEugene is a mover in New York City whose favorite author is Constance Eakins. While doing a job one day, he runs into a biographer of Eakins who also happens to have a beautiful daughter, Sonia. Everyone else in the world believes Eakins is dead — that he just disappeared in Italy quite a few years back and never showed up again. He’s legally declared dead by the Italian authorities. Sonia’s father, the biographer, demands that it isn’t so — that his daughter speaks to Eakins regularly. But, no one has heard from her after her latest trip to Italy. Eugene decides to look for Sonia.

Meanwhile in a parallel story, an elderly Mr. Schmitz, also a New Yorker, is grieving the loss of his friend Rutherford who has just moved to Italy. He receives lucid letters from Rutherford at first, but then they become more and more incomprehensible. Schmitz also decides to take off for Italy to look for his friend.

This was a bizarre story that was unique enough to keep me reading and wanting to find out more. The book has quite a few fantasy elements too, and that was unexpected, but it certainly added to the story. It’s definitely a different book.

This is Nathaniel Rich’s first novel. It was released on April 17.

2008, 310 pp.
Rating: 3.5/5

Things Fall Apart

thingsfallapart.JPG“Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”

Okonkwo commands respect from his community, his three wives, and his children through both hard work and intimidation. He rises to prominence despite and perhaps due to his father’s laziness in community and family matters. He stands firm to his culture and traditions. So he is outraged when some of his people start converting to Christianity. A power struggle ensues and ‘things fall apart.’

I’m intrigued by Achebe’s history and background.  I’d like to read the sequel to this book, No Longer at Ease, at some point.

1959, 209 pp
Rating: 4/5

Expanding Horizons Challenge Complete!

expandinghorizons.jpg

Thanks, Book Nut, for hosting this challenge!  None of these were easy reads, but I’m glad I read them all.

I chose to read 4 books from Category 1:

  1. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
  2. The Translator by Daoud Hari
  3. Beloved by Toni Morrison
  4. Things Fall Apart by Achebe

Review: Beloved

beloved.JPG“I will call them my people, which were not my people; and her beloved, which was not beloved.”

Very uncomfortable reading for me. Disturbing and (literally) haunting. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and written by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison, Beloved tells the story of a family’s life before and after their escape from slavery. Sethe and her daughter Denver live in isolation at 124 in the countryside near Cincinnati. Also ‘present’ in the house is the ghost of Sethe’s other daughter, nicknamed Beloved, who died when she was two. Sethe fled to Ohio from Kentucky many years before after escaping from her owners at ‘Sweet Home.’ Also at Sweet Home was Paul D., who has now come to Ohio to look for Sethe. Soon after Paul D.’s arrival at 124, he drives the baby ghost out; however it’s not long before a strange young woman is found near the house and who calls herself Beloved.

I had a very difficult time following the story at first, and I’d probably understand it much better if I re-read it at some point. The storyline unravels as it goes along, and we see bit by bit the horrors that Sethe escaped from. Her actions are also called into question. Her mental state is dubious. But whose wouldn’t be after undergoing the ordeals she has gone through?

“Other people went crazy, why couldn’t she?”

I didn’t enjoy this book, but I don’t think readers are supposed to. The subject matter is difficult, and I don’t like hearing the horror stories of Beloved or Maus. At the same time, I realize they are necessary and I’ll continue to force myself to read them.

1987, 275 pp.
Rating: 4/5