Posts Tagged ‘challenge’

Brideshead Revisited

November 25th, 2009

Back to School Reading Challenge Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh was published in 1944.  The novel, subtitled “The Sacred and Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder,” seems to be about the wealthy and colorful Marchmain family.  However, as the subtitle suggests, it is as much about the narrator’s passions and desires. While Charles casts himself as an impartial observer of his friend, Sebastian Flyte, and their family, his own desires make the book an intriguing read.

The novel begins at the end.  Charles, an army captain in World War II, is stationed in England.  His unit is transferred to Brideshead, an ornate and lavish country home.  Another officer describes the house and sums it up, “you never saw such a thing.”  Charles says that he has. The officer replies:

“Oh well, you know all about it.  I’ll go and get cleaned up.”

I’d been there before; I knew all about it.

Brideshead RevisitedWith that, we are sent back some twenty years to Oxford where Charles, an upper middle class student meets Sebastian quite by accident. However, the two become close friends.  During the summer break, Sebastian suffers a minor accident and sends for Charles.  Mostly left alone, the two share a golden summer that Charles wants to fix in his mind:

It is thus I like to remember Sebastian, as he was that summer, when we wandered alone together through that enchanted palace; Sebastian in his wheel-chair spinning down the box-edged walks of the kitchen gardens in search of alpine strawberries and warm figs, propelling himself through the succession of hothouses, from scent to scent and climate to climate to eat the Muscat grapes and choose choice orchids for our buttonholes.

The first two-thirds of the novel focus on the friendship between Sebastian and Charles.  Charles, unhappy with his dull father and searching for his life’s purpose, wants to embrace the Marchmain family, including Sebastian’s beautiful sister, Julia.  However, he can never quite penetrate their inner circle, partly because of the family’s Catholicism.  Sebastian too starts distancing himself from Charles, sinking into an alcoholic stupor.  In the final section of the novel, Charles reunites with Julia, in a complicated affair.

While the novel does not follow a traditional love plot, desire is certainly the central theme.  As the subtitle suggests, there is tension between the sacred and the profane. At first glance, it seems to be the tension between the Marchmain’s Catholic faith and Charles’s atheism. However, I came to think the tension is more between the Marchmain’s wealth, as embodied in the house, and Charles’s desire to posses that wealth. Charles earns his living painting mansions; his paintings of Brideshead launch his career.  Since Charles is the narrator, and quite a sophisticated one at that, he will never directly admit his passion for the house.  However, throughout the novel, his most passionate descriptions are of the architecture of the home, not really of the people who live there.  What makes the novel fun to read is sorting out what Charles really wants beneath what he claims to want.

Women Unbound Reading Challenge

November 11th, 2009

Women Unbound I’m very excited to join in this reading challenge!  I love how it organically developed between a group of women bloggers on Twitter.  Here’s a blurb from the Challenge website:

The challenge runs from November 1, 2009-November 30, 2010, but you may join in the fun whenever you wish!   Participants are encouraged to read nonfiction and fiction books related to the rather broad idea of ‘women’s studies.’  . . . For nonfiction, this would include books on feminism, history books focused on women, biographies of women, memoirs (or travelogues) by women, essays by women and cultural books focused on women (body image, motherhood, etc.).

Of course, I’m always reading books by and about women, so this should be a great challenge!  There are already a wealth of reading lists posted.  After skimming a few, I’ve decided to join in at the “Bluestocking” level, which calls for reading five books, including two non-fiction.  Here are my choices:

  • Grace (Eventually) by Anne Lamott.  I’ve read several of her books, but haven’t read this one.   I’ve been think a lot about my own faith lately, so I think this will be a valuable read.
  • The Sisters: The Saga of the Mitford Family, by Mary S. Lovell.  Here’s a blurb according to Caribousmom: “The Mitford sisters were women who defied the traditional roles of the women of their time. Jessica became a Communist, Debo became the Duchess of Devonshire, Nancy was a best selling novelist, Unity became a close friend of Hitler, and Diana married Fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley.”
  • Anne of Greene Gables by L.M. Montgomery.  This was one of my all-time favorite childhood books, but I haven’t read it as an adult.
  • The Grass Is Always Greener Over the Septic Tank by Erma Bombeck.  I always remember my mom loving Erma Bombeck.  Now that I live near her hometown and may attend the writer’s conference bearing her name, I decided it’d be fun to read some of her work.
  • The Curse of the Good Girl by Rachel Simmons.  I’ve loved some of the recent reviews and am interested in reading this one.

Who else is joining this one?  What will you be reading?

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

November 4th, 2009

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanWho knew that Harry Potter could help me realize just how great my husband is?

Over the summer, my stepdaughter started reading the series, and my husband wanted to read along with her.  Now, Dan is a man with great focus; when he does something, he commits to it completely.  He’ll stay at his office until 10:00 at night to make sure he finishes networking his computers properly.  He never forgets to clean and refill the bird feeders.  He always rinses out the little filter for the Dustbuster.  He’s that kind of guy.  So, when he started reading the series, he went all in.  He read one book right after the other and finished the series in about six weeks.

While reading, he also watched all the films.  When he got to the film version of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, he was enthralled.  Dan confidently declared that the film was way better than the book. He urged me to finish the book so that I could watch the film.  Now, I had just started this book blog and didn’t want it to be all Harry all the time, so I kind of ignored him and slowly read one book a month.

The poor guy has been waiting three months to share the movie with me. Over the weekend, he finally got to show it off to me.

You know what? He’s right. . .the movie version IS way better than the book. There’s no clunky exposition during the climatic scene, and the director gives us just the right amount of visual cues to figure out who the bad guy really is.  I even got all teary at the end.

In their third year at Hogwarts, Harry and the gang must watch out for the murderous Sirius Black.  Black has escaped from the wizard prison, Azkaban, and everyone assumes he’s out to get Harry.  To protect him, Dumbledore stations the vile Dementors at the gates of Hogwarts. Harry has to learn how to resist the Dementors, but, more importantly, he has to learn who really betrayed his parents.  In the book, all of this comes out in the final scene beneath the Whomping Willow.  In the scene, Ron has a broken leg and must just sit there as everyone explains who’s who and who betrayed Harry and why.  Having just watched my thirteen-year old stepdaughter suffer through a torn ACL and surgery, I can guarantee that no teenager is going to quietly suffer a broken leg while we learn who did what to whom back in the day at Hogwarts. The film version gives us the clues earlier so that the Whomping Willow scene is much tighter.

This is just one example; I could go on and on, but I’d urge you to see the movie if you haven’t.  I know!  It’s a rare occasion where the film really is better.  Can you think of a film you enjoyed more than a book?

Shelf Discovery

November 2nd, 2009

Shelf DiscoveryFirst off, a big thank-you to Florinda at The 3 R’s Blog for sending me a copy of Shelf Discovery: The Teen Classics We Never Stopped Reading.

Lizzie Skurnick’s book was a lovely dip into my own past.  Skurnick, a columnist and author of ten Sweet Valley High novels, has pulled together a comprehensive set of essays about the books we passionately adored and why. I enjoyed her tounge-in-cheek look at classics like Little House on the Prairie and Ramona Quimby and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, but, of course, I jumped straight to the last chapter: “Panty Lines: I Can’t Believe They Let Us Read This.”  Even reading the summaries of books like Flowers in the Attic brought back memories of reading under the covers, late at night, and making sure to tuck the books out of sight during the day.

If you were an avid reader who came of age in the 1980s, I know you’ll love leafing through some long-forgotten favorites like Ghosts I Have Been by Richard Peck and Go Ask Alice and Caroline by Wilo Davis Roberts.  In fact, you can now go even further and re-read your favorites for Booking Mama’s new Shelf Discovery Challenge.

I’m happy to pass this fun book onto someone who wants to participate in the challenge.  Just leave a comment by 5:00 EST Wednesday, and I’ll pick one avid 80’s reader. Enjoy the challenge!

Lucy

October 14th, 2009

btsbutton1 It’s that time again!  I’ve got to stay on top of my homework. I just finished the second of the four books that I picked for the Back to School Reading Challenge. After the big, thick Wives and Daughters that I read last month, I went for a slimmer volume: Jamaica Kincaid’s Lucy.  Lucy is the main character, an au pair from the small island Antigua.  She’s hired by a prosperous couple, Lewis and Mariah, to take care of their four daughters. The book elegantly captures Lucy’s desire to separate from her home and her mother and her complicated homesickness for a place she does not want to see again.

LucyIt was interesting to read Lucy after reading A Gate at the Stairs.  Each novel traces the life of a young woman who is taking care of another woman’s children.  However, the styles couldn’t be more different.  Where Moore revels in language, playing with variations and themes, Kincaid strips the language bare.  Her famous style is sparse and yet evocative.  With a carefully selected detail, she can call forth a whole range of emotions.  Here’s an example from a scene between Mariah and Lucy.  Mariah wants to feel compassion for Lucy’s difficult past:

Even now she couldn’t let go, and she reached out, her arms open wide, to give me one of her great hugs.  But I stepped out of its path quickly, and she was left holding nothing.  I said it again.  I said, “How do you get to be that way?” The anguish on her face almost broke my heart, but I would not bend.  It was hollow, my triumph, I could feel that, but I held on to it just the same.

Lucy’s refusal to put Mariah at ease is central to the novel.  Through it, we see the lasting ways that privellege can blind some and force others to see all too clearly.