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What I'm Reading DECEMBER 2013
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Beth
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Dec 25, 2013 02:46PM

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I've enjoyed that series.

I've enjoyed that series.
..."
I think I will as well, I'm already wondering what happens with Rita. :)

https://www.goodreads.com/photo/group...

My aunt gave me FELICIA'S JOURNEY a long time ago. While I think Trevor is a wonderful writer, his stories have often left me with a feeling of hopelessness. I never read this book because I..."
Although Trevor can be very dark, I felt that in both FELICIA'S JOURNEY and THE STORY OF LUCY GAULT the final impact was a hopeful one. Think of Felicia meditating on her pro bono dental work and the mystery of good. And Lucy Gault, in spite of the life she has lived (no spoilers!), is glad she didn't die when she might have, because she values what she did have--life itself.

I've enj..."
I think I'd like to re-read these at some point. It's been many years since I read them.

My aunt gave me FELICIA'S JOURNEY a long time ago. While I think Trevor is a wonderful writer, his stories have often left me with a feeling of hopelessness. I never read this bo..."
SPOILER: In The Story of Lucy Gault, I felt this was almost tragedy for tragedy's sake. Lucy wouldn't marry waiting for her father to return, yet once he returned, she couldn't connect with him. I became frustrated with all the unfulfilled longing.



I loved it.





I enjoyed THE MASTER, and also Author, Author, by David Lodge, which is also about James's life.






The six Herdman kids are a handful – and then some. They lie, steal, smoke cigars, hit little kids, cuss their teachers, and even set fire to a tool shed. When they take over the Sunday School Christmas Pageant everyone is sure it will be a disaster. But the Herdman’s take on the Christmas story leaves everyone moved by the wonder and joy of Christmas. Elaine Stritch does a great job narrating the audio.
Line to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I've read and enjoyed at least the first 5 books of Wool Omnibus. I think there is a lot more out there though.

My review. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


(Audio book performed by Donada Peters) - 4****
This is a wonderful parody of the late 18th-centry Gothic style, with haunted medieval buildings, unrequited love, misunderstandings, secret engagements, and parental disapproval. Our main character, Catherine Morland, has a rampant imagination fueled by over-the-top romantic suspense novels. It is the first novel Austen completed, though one of the last to be published. It clearly shows the writer she will become. The dialogue is witty and clever.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



My review. https://www.goodr..."
Catline, if you get a chance, you may want to try Salter's memoir, Burning the Days: Recollection. I read it twice, and lent it to two friends, both of whom like it a lot. I know that some people have problems with it ... but Salter evokes strong reactions.

Thanks, will do. Both my husband and I are Salter fans. :)


The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
- Barbara Robinson (Audio book performed by Elaine Stritch) 5*****
The six ..."
Thanks, B.C. Just checked and my library owns this. I love Elaine Stritch so this should be fun.


I've also done my reading for Washington Square and Stoner.



I'm slowly making my way through this too, my first book by Collins. I'm struck by so many of his words and phrases. They make me stop and pause and re-read.





Joan, that's a good way of putting it. I remember discussing Billy Collins with a friend with likes a lot of poetry--and knows a lot more about poetry than I do-- but doesn't particularly appreciate Collins' poetry. He said it was just too "simple and easy." I agree that it's simple; but to write poems like he does is not easy. If it were, others would be doing the same and selling thousands of books of poetry.

Joan, that's a good way of putting it. I remember discussi..."
I think that brings up an interesting question: Is the best literature (whether poetry or prose) hard to understand? Must truly great literature have meaning hidden below, where it has to be dug for? That certainly seemed to be the view decades (if not centuries), and is still shared by many. I think I've been influenced by it, or maybe digging is just one of the pleasures I get from literature that I miss when I don't get it. Today I sometimes hear this view challenged--I'm thinking esp. of an interview I read with Richard Powers some years ago. I'm curious if other people have opinions on this?

Joan, that's a good way of putting it. I rem..."
I think there's room for both views. If a work is so dense that it's impenetrable, then who benefits? But if a work has no meaning beneath the surface, it probably won't last very long.

Is it any wonder that I have never made it through Ulysses?

Literature is like life isn't it. We interact superficially with others in the beginning of a relationship;, on the surface, if you will. Then, slowly, the layers start to unfold and meanings come to the surface, exposed to our understanding.
Literature, like people, can be enjoyed on different levels, superficial or deep. But delving gives us more satisfaction in both as well.
So, I don't know about "hard" to understand, but I'd say more like allowing ourselves to delve deeper, opening up to the possibilities.
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