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

Orbis Terrarum Challenge 2009

Click for more infoThis challenge is a no-brainer for me. I love reading ‘around the world’ so of course I’m participating. Challenge lasts from March 1 through December 31 and requires 10 books by 10 different authors representing 10 different countries.

I don’t know all the countries and titles I’ll read from, but the possibles on my list are here:

  1. The Full Cupboard of Life by Alexander McCall Smith (UK/Scotland)
  2. The Devil and Miss Prym by Paulo Coelho (Brazil)
  3. Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories by Isaac Bashevis Singer (emigrated from Poland to US at 33)
  4. Q & A by Vikas Swarup (India)
  5. Petropolis by Anya Ulinich (emigrated from Russia to US at 17)
  6. Natasha and Other Stories by David Bezmozgis (Canada)
  7. The House of Paper by Carlos Maria Dominguez (Uruguay)
  8. Ravel by Jean Echenoz (France)
  9. The Angels Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (Spain)
  10. Siddhartha by Herman Hesse (Germany/Switzerland)
  11. Brooklyn by Colm Toibin (Ireland)
  12. Vampire Knight Vol 1 by Matsuri Hino (Japan)
  13. The Unit by Ninni Holmqvist (Sweden)
  14. The Good Women of China by Xinran (China)
  15. Kristin Lavransdatter III: The Cross by Sigrid Undset (Norway)
  • The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson (Sweden)
  • With Borges by Alberto Manguel (Argentina)
  • ? by Allende (Chile)
  • ? by Saramago (Portugal)
  • ? by Paz (Mexico)
  • ? by Llosa (Peru)
  • ? by Marquez (Columbia)

I’ll also be participating in the foreign film mini-challenge.  Easy-peasy for me as I adore foreign films.

Netflix Net-a-thon (TSS)

(This post is book-related as the movies I’ve watched have mostly been book adaptations.)

Anyway, I thought my internet provider was going to start limiting my monthly usage to an unreasonably and ridiculously low amount (5 GB – are you kidding?) in January, so in December I started my own Netflix Net-a-thon and started watching as much stuff as I could ‘instantly’ online.  It’s unlimited through Netflix but of course not necessarily through your internet provider.  I keep going to my provider’s site to see if they’ve implemented the limit, but they haven’t yet so I keep on expanding my ‘instant’ watching.  Let me tell you, I’ve watched some gems!

Where to start?  How about:

Bleak House by Charles Dickens – 450 minutes – A+

Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell – 375 minutes – A

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte – 159 minutes – A

Where Angels Fear to Tread by E.M. Forster – 112 minutes – B

Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens – 351 minutes – A-

I really adored all of these, but especially Bleak House.  Excellent!  Where Angels Fear to Tread just felt like it had an abrupt ending, but perhaps it’s because the other ones I viewed were so long and well-developed.

I also viewed two Japanese language films because I’m doing the Japanese Literature Challenge.  I love foreign films.  I started watching them when my kids were small and would be noisy playing whenever my husband and I would rent DVDs.  The kids could be as loud as they wanted to when we were watching the subtitles!  I truly hate dubbing.  I want to hear the original language of the film.  I don’t mind sub-titles at all.  Hearing the original language is part of what makes foreign films so wonderful.

The two I viewed:

After Life -118 minutes – A
Last Life in the Universe – 103 minutes – B+

In After Life, after they die, people go to what looks like an abandoned school of sorts and they get to choose one memory of their lives to be re-enacted.  This is a slow, but beautiful movie.  I’m just the geeky sort to love slow, thoughtful movies, though, so I loved it.

In Last Life in the Universe, a Japanese neat-freak librarian is living in Bangkok and is constantly thinking of committing suicide.  After a tragic event, he meets a Thai girl who is a total slob.  Opposite attract, though, right?  Very weird but interesting movie.  It would have received an ‘A’ except there was quite a bit of bad language.  In Japanese, Thai, and English.

I’m really having fun with these and will probably be watching more.  I’ll keep you posted with any interesting titles.

Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair

Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair was written in 1924, when Chilean poet Pablo Neruda was only 19.  It went on to sell millions of copies over the years and was translated into multiple languages.  Neruda won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971 and died two years later in 1973.

Neruda’s poems definitely have a sensuousness about them, and they also evoke the poet’s passion and pain.  I only wish I knew Spanish so I could understand the poems in their original.  Poetry must be one of the most difficult of writings to translate, but this dual language edition was penned by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet W.S. Mervin.

An interesting note — the cover of the book is Heart by Andy Warhol.

A portion of “Every Day You Play”:

Mis palabras llovieron sobre ti acariciándote.
Amé desde hace tiempo tu cuerpo de nácar soleado.
Hasta te creo dueña del universo.
Te traeré de las montañas flores alegres, copihues,
avellanas oscuras, y cestas silvestres de besos.
Quiero hacer contigo
lo que la primavera hace con los cerezos.

My words rained over you, stroking you.
A long time I have loved the sunned mother-of-pearl of your body.
I go so far as to think that you own the universe.
I will bring you happy flowers from the mountains, bluebells,
dark hazels, and rustic baskets of kisses.
I want to do with you
what spring does with the cherry trees.

1924, 80 pp.
4/5

The Housekeeper and the Professor

‘Math has proven the existence of God, because it is absolute and without contradiction; but the devil must exist as well, because we cannot prove it.’

Absolutely wonderful — I loved this book!!

Have you seen the movie 50 First Dates?  It’s one of my favorite movies, and a very similar situation occurs in this book. A mathematics professor has only 80 minutes of short term memory due to a car accident, but he remembers everything clear as a bell that happened before his head injury.  He continues to solve mathematical proofs and has an uncanny ability to know exactly where the North Star is in the sky, even when there’s no visibility.  He is kind and has a great love for children.  But, he remembers only 80 minutes at a time in the here and now.  His sister-in-law lets him live in a cottage next to her main house, and she has hired a ninth housekeeper to cook and clean for the professor.

The housekeeper does her best to please the professor and works around his disability.  She tells him about her 10 year old son, and he insists on letting the son come to his cottage after school, even though it’s against the cleaning agency’s rules.  The professor writes notes to himself to help remind him of the housekeeper and her son.  The boy and the professor both have a love of baseball, and the professor uses this to teach the boy mathematics.  Soon a strong bond is formed among the three of them.

There is quite a bit of math in this book, and of course I enjoyed those references tremendously.  I have an engineering degree, and mathematics has always been a love of mine.  I don’t think you have to know math like I do to enjoy this book, but you will certainly appreciate the beauty of it a bit more if you do.

‘Eternal truths are ultimately invisible, and you won’t find them in material things or natural phenomena, or even in human emotions.  Mathematics, however, can illuminate them, can give them expression — in fact, nothing can prevent it from doing so.’

Very highly recommended!!

2003, 2009 for the English translation by Stephen Snyder, 180 pp.
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[Disclaimer: This copy was received from the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program.]

The Little Giant of Aberdeen County

From wikipedia:

As a medical term, gigantism can refer to “pituitary gigantism”, which is due to prepubertal growth hormone excess. This is sometimes equated with acromegaly, but more precisely, an excess of growth hormone leads to “pituitary gigantism” (vertical growth) if the epiphyseal plates have not yet closed, but it leads to “acromegaly” (lateral growth) if they have closed.

Even before I emerged from my mother’s womb in 1953, people began warning my mother that the infant she carried was going to be huge.

I really enjoyed this debut novel — particularly the first 3/4 of it.  Tiffany Baker has created a very extraordinary character in Truly Plaice. First called a ‘little giant’ by her teacher Miss Sparrow, Truly is the exact opposite of her very petite, pretty, and perfect sister Serena Jane.  Teased and humiliated by her classmates and community, Truly actually copes fairly well with her large size.  Her genetics have treated Truly unfairly, but there are some positives in her life as well.  She has the love of three very special people in her life, and she is thus able to tune out the mean-spirited ones who torment her.  Not afraid of hard work either, Truly only sometimes feels sorry for herself and tries to make the best of every situation she’s in.  (I always think it’s best not to know too many plot points before reading a book so I’ll stop there to avoid spoilers.)

The book covers the first 35-40 or so years of Truly’s life, and as said previously, I very much enjoyed the first 3/4 of the book.  I actually read through the first part very quickly, but I did feel that the last 1/4 of the novel dragged a bit.  There are also some ethical decisions made by the characters that are quite controversial, and I’m not quite sure how I stand on those issues myself so my thoughts about the ending are mixed.  However, I’ll definitely be looking out for Tiffany Baker’s next book.  She is a promising new novelist who knows how to craft unique characters and a unique story.

A special thanks goes to Hachette Book Group for sending me this book for review.  The Little Giant of Aberdeen County is being released today (January 8th).

2009, 341 pp.

4/5

Chunkster Challenge 2009

Dana has come up with some hilariously fun options for the 2009 Chunkster Challenge.  You can check them out here.

I am going with the option of 3 mega-chunksters of 750+ pages.  The leading chunky contenders are:

  1. Drood by Dan Simmons
  2. Middlemarch by George Eliot
  3. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy