Saturday, April 14, 2012

CHANGE!!!

Yes, you read the title correctly, CHANGE IS HERE!

As you may or may not have noticed, I have changed a few things about the blog. There's a new "about me" section. I also changed the header. Best of all, I've changed the entire purpose of this blog!!

No longer is this blog focused exclusively on the BBC's Big Read. I've broadened the horizons and will be including all the books I read. This will truly be an amazing book adventure! For those of you who don't particularly like change and are wondering why I would do such a thing , here are my 2 reasons.

1-The BBC's Big Read list was published in 2003. Thousand upon thousands of books have been published since then and hundreds of them are worth reading. Think about it: Only 4 Harry Potter books were published when the list came out. The 7th Harry Potter is my favorite of the entire series. If I only read and review the Big Read Books, you and I will both be missing out on hundreds of great books, some of which are yet to be published!

 2-I love to read lots of different kinds of books. This means that while I am constantly reading, I can go months without reading any of the BBC Big Read books. If I only review those books, it may mean I don't post for several months at a time (note my last post date). If I only post once every few months, what we have is a very boring blog.

I'll still keep track of the BBC Big Read books, and that will still be one of the big focuses of the blog, but my reading and reviewing will not stop there! No, my friends, you are about to see how seriously addicted to reading I really am. I expect I will be posting about once a week, if not more.

My first non-BBC Big Read post will be up by the end of next week. Here's a hint: It's young adult fiction about a dystopian society and it was was written by a friend of mine. No, I don't know Suzanne Collins, even though I wish I did, meaning the post will not be about the Hunger Games.

Included in the post will be some special content you won't be able to find anywhere else. No joke.

Stay tuned for details...

Thursday, January 5, 2012

BBC # 47, A Christmas Carol

Once again, evidence of Charles Dickens' Genius is displayed in A Christmas Carol. The story follows Scrooge, a man who believes Christmas is foolish and serving others pointless as he is visited by ghostly visions that teach him the true meaning of Christmas and even our life on earth.

This story is one of the most widely known Christmas stories. More movie variations of it have been made than I can count. Every year thousands of theaters across America show off local and professional talent portraying Scrooge and Tiny Tim. It is a classic by definition.

This year I read it with my husband just before Christmas, finishing with the last chapter on Christmas Eve. I was amazed again by Dickens' greatness. He masterfully had me laughing and then close to tears in a single page. Without the need of a question mark he asked poignant questions about the meaning of life, our interpretation of God's will, and the consequences of our choices.

I've read it before and watched at least 4 of the movie versions, but never have I been so moved as I was this time! Maybe it was reading it just before Christmas or my own loss of a family member in the last couple years or a sign that I'm finally maturing, but this book held meaning for me that I will cherish.

And as Tiny Tim says, "God Bless us, Everyone!"

BBC # 52, Of Mice and Men

One of the most challenged books of the 20th century is Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck. The story is about 2 bindlestiffs (migrant workers) named George and Lennie. George is smaller but with brains to spare. Lennie is big but has the mind of a child. Together they travel the country side trying to find work and dreaming of a piece of land for themselves.

The book goes in detail about the difficulties a mentally handicapped adult would face in the early 1900's. No one understood what was really going on with Lennie. The society they lived in had no rules for caring for handicapped adults, no acceptance of their problems, and no sympathy for their lack of compliance to social norms.

It also talks about a wealthy woman's role during that time period. She was expected to stay home, visit with other female friends, and spend her time on domestic tasks. Curly's wife (that's all she's ever called in the book) does not like the role she's been given. She's vain and self serving, but pitiful at the same time. She gave up dreams hoping for a better future and instead ends up being a rich man's plaything. Not getting the attention from him she wants, she attempts to get it from the hired hands. By refusing to comply to social norms, she instigates the main dilemma of the book.

It's a very quick read, I did it one afternoon, but is profoundly thought provoking. I understand why many people have a hard time with the book but I see it as a way to address the underlying social currents of the great depression.

Frankly, the book depressed me and I have no desires to read it again any time soon, but I would recommend others read it to gain a bigger understanding of the country we used to be and the profound power of dreams lost.

BBC # 51, The Secret Garden

I've read this book at least 3 times so it won't surprise you that I highly recommend it to anyone!! Especially girls. For some reason girls seem to like it more--Probably because the main character is a girl.

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett is a classic that I plan on reading to my children. The main character is Mary, a sour, spoiled little girl who cannot understand when everything doesn't go her way. After her parents deaths in India, she is sent to live with her uncle in England. England is nothing like India and she has to adjust to a different culture and climate as well as learning the world is larger than herself.

Mary becomes friends with sour old gardener Ben Weatherstaff, the robin redbreast, Dickon--the boy who can talk to animals, and eventually even with a child more spoiled and sour than even she was.

The book is one of wonder, of mystery, of taking life as it is and making it better. I loved it even more this read through than I did as a little girl.

This book belongs on every little girl's bookshelf (and pretty much everyone else's too!)

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

BBC # 16, The Wind in the Willows

I'm really not sure how I feel about The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame. Honestly, I'm torn.

I couldn't focus on it. I would read maybe a chapter and be done. It took me 2 months to read. I've finished books I've hated faster. I didn't hate the book. Maybe that's why it was so hard for me to read.

It evoked no strong emotions in me.

Being a children's book, I expected an easy read. It was easy enough I guess. I read half of the book today. I had to force myself to read it that long, but it wasn't because it was hard. Just because I wasn't interested.

I kind of feel like Grahame took weighty ideas, tried to simplify them for children, and made them less deep and interesting. Maybe if I was still a kid it would be deep enough for me. But I'm not.

The only character I really cared about was Mole. I had minor interest in Ratty's well being. Toad just irritated me. The rest of the characters I was apathetic about. If the book had been about Mole, I think I could have read more of it faster. Instead it talked about all the animals and especially towards the end, it focused a lot on Toad. It also bugged me that Toad got away with so much--though the ending kind of made up for that.

I vaguely remember reading the book as a kid and I vaguely remember liking it, so take my review with a grain of salt. I don't think the book is bad. It just didn't hold my interest.

So, my final opinion on the book is: Good for kids, not good for me.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

BBC #8, Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984)

THIS ENTIRE POST WILL PRETTY MUCH BE A SPOILER. If you're ok with that, keep reading.

Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell is one of the most thought provoking books I've read so far. I finished it today and since the moment I finished it, I've found myself contemplating what it says.

This book was first published in 1949 as a warning of where the world was headed if something didn't change. According to Orwell's "vision", we were headed for continuing World Wars (can't really blame him since the one he'd just come out of was the second in only a matter of decades) until 3 large totalitarianism states emerged. The nature of the wars would change, but it would continue indefinitely. These totalitarianism states would rule under the guise of "socialism" and protecting the people, but really be lead by the elite, power hungry, political leaders of the day simply as a means of achieving the ultimate power--complete control of human thought. As is written near the end of the book "Power is God." These leaders didn't care one whiff about the people in their countries. They simply cared about becoming "gods."

The main character in the book is a man named Winston Smith. My guess is the name Winston came from Winston Churchill as the character was supposedly born in the late 1940's, right after WWII. Smith is simply the most common last name. In other words, he's a normal man named after one of the most influential exponents of freedom during his time. Winston, like his namesake, is a believer in freedom. The novel follows his discoveries of lies and untruths behind the totalitarian party (Ingsoc), his search for freedom, and his ultimate failure.

I have several problems with the positions Orwell takes in the book, however many of these issues are derived from the fact I'm reading this book in 2011 (17 years after the story "happened"), not in 1949 when it was written (34 years BEFORE it "happened"). For example, in the countries that make up the fictional "Oceania", there is a far greater middle class than is depicted in the book. The book depicts an upper elite--the Inner Party, a middle class--the outer party, and the lower class--the proles (proletarians). The Proles make up 85% of the population. They are the uneducated, the poor, the ones who do the basic jobs of society. Going back to original Roman usage, and supported by statements made by Orwell ("the woman down there had no mind, she had only strong arms, a warm heart, and a fertile belly"), The proles were the nothings of society. They had nothing to offer but menial labor and a continuous supply of new children to grow up and become more proles.

In today's society, in America, and in Britain where the book is based, the poor of the poor--the true proletarians--are a rather small percentage of the population. It's only by expanding the word proletarian to include the working class, as Marx did, that we come even close to that number. Still, the middle class is larger than the book says, making the number of proletarians smaller--and most of these proletarians are fairly well educated. If all of the working class of today is included as proletarians then Orwell's assumption that the proletarians don't have the consciousness to rise up is false. However, the level of education that existed for the lower class in 1949 is completely different. Also, more "middle class" (intellectual, not manual labor) jobs have been created since that time due to increases in technology.

"If there is hope it lies in the proles".

Unlike the end of the book concludes, I agree with Winston's statement. The proletarians, the working class, are truly where the hope of society springs from. The elite do not "hope" for change. Change may take them out of their seats of power. The middle class may dream of change, but they are generally content enough to not force a change. They have "enough". It's the people on the bottom, the people who have nothing that will make the changes.

Of course Orwell didn't have past experiences showing him the hope the proles themselves offered. He hadn't seen the Berlin Wall fall. He hadn't seen the Soviet Union collapse. Why did these nations do that? Because the proles had enough.

Another good example is what's happened in the middle east lately. First Tunisia, then Egypt and now Libya. The proles have had enough. And they're fighting for themselves.

Unlike the books statements, my fear isn't that the proles won't ever stand up for themselves. It's that the proles will take their cause too far. We don't need another French Revolution.


**Edit August 31, 2011: So, most of this was written on June 25, 2011. I finished the book and felt crazy motivated to write it. Then I got tired, didn't know how to finish and put it aside for later. And forgot. Until today. I finally decided to post it. Since I'm probably going to finish another book in the next few weeks, I figured I'd get this out before I forget I read it!!

Monday, June 20, 2011

BBC #17, Great Expectations

The first time I read Great Expectations by Charles Dickens was in 9th grade for my English class. The problem with books assigned by school teachers is you read them with the teacher's expectations in mind. We had in class discussions and had to write an essay on the book. My teacher expected us to focus on the symbolism in the book first and foremost. That's really not my style of reading, and while I can find symbolism, I hated having to focus on it. I had a good opinion of the book, but I don't think I got it and I never expected to read it again--or enjoy it. I've always enjoyed books more when I read them because I want to.

This was true of this read of Great Expectations. I don't know that I would list this as one of my favorite books ever, but I thoroughly enjoyed the read. I read it in two spurts. First night I read it, I read for almost 4 hours. Then I left it at home, my job situation switched, etc. I kind of forgot about it. This weekend I picked it up again. I read almost half of the book today, finishing only minutes ago.

I love the story line, a poor boy is confronted by a change in circumstances and we read of the effects this unguided social change has on his character and the the character of those surrounding him. Charles Dickens always seems to address important social issues of the day and he does a very good job of turning the "bad guys" into the "good guys" and vise versa.

Charles Dickens is a literary genius. The way he artfully twists the story line around, connecting all the characters so masterfully together, interconnecting the beginning and the end so beautifully, it's impossible to understand the characters fully or appreciate their depth until the end of the book. If you put it down in the middle, you'll never really "get it".

I believe a lot of the social issues addressed in this book shed light on the social problems of our day. We have different problems, but reading this book leaves me with the same haunting questions.

I give this book 5 stars. There is no question in my mind why after almost 150 years this book is still being read and critically acclaimed. It's literature in the truest sense. Charles Dickens knew how to write. This is why 5 of his novels show up on the BBC's top 100 list and I bet in another 150 years, people will still be reading his books where many of the other books on the list will be long forgotten.