Friday, July 1, 2011

Book Review: American Pastoral

 
American Pastoral: Phillip Roth: Vintage: Fiction: 432

Roth's landmark novel takes on the insurmountable task of capturing what it means to be American through the lens of the turbulent sixties and seventies.  What Roth arrives at is not a bulleted list of characteristics and flashpoints (a seemingly American way to understand the world) but the reality that both personal and national identity are products of our perception and personal experience anyway. 

America represents tyrannical fascism and morally bankrupt violence to Seymour Levov's weather-underground-vietnam-war-protesting daughter but for himself, a Jewish business man in search of the American dream, it means freedom, industry, and wealth.   

For me, a good book asks more questions than it answers.  Nothing interests me less than a work of fiction that says "here is what the world is and how you should understand it".* **  Roth's book is the anti that book.  For some that's frustrating, but to explore the shifting paradigm of American identity during this time and how it caused us to question the construction of identity itself, it's perfect.  But make no mistake, this novel isn't about a twenty year period in America's history - it's about narrative and national identity.   It's about all the stuff that came before 1968 and what will come after it. 

I have been thinking a lot about what it means to have honest relationships with other people.  Trying to really understand them for who they are and not for what you'd like them to be or who you imagine them to be because that's the kind of person you fancy yourself having a relationship with.  It's a hard thing to be really know someone and have your interaction be true - have it be about their reality and not your perception of yourself.  How much harder, then, is it to understand a national identity, to form a relationship with it, when it is composed of such diverse people and experiences?  




*Interesting...that's probably why I don't really like fantasy...hhmm

** But I do love non-fiction.  That's the kind of "this is the world" I'm into :)

Monday, May 30, 2011

Book Review: One Hundred Years of Solitude

One Hundred Years of Solitude: Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Perennial: Fiction: 464


One Hundred Years of Solitude chronicles the multi-generational Buendia family in the fictional town of Macondo. After founding the town, familial patriarch Arcadio Buendia sets the blueprint for an inescapable pattern of obsession, selfishness, and vice that plagues the generations of his family throughout the book. Different familial incarnations temporarily triumph and escape their history, but it is almost always short lived. Told in seamless magical realisim, this novel is at once visceral and dreamlike.

Sometimes my favorite books are ones I don't quite know what to do with when I'm finished - I don't know what to make of it or how to fully understand its themes. One Hundred Years of Solitude was a bit of that for me. All the same, I enjoyed its fantastical story telling and the way it touched on issues of nostalgia, obsessiveness, family, and the power we have over our own history - or don't as the case may be. After reading more about the history of Columbia, for which Macondo is said to be a substitute, I understood the book a bit better in terms of a critique of Latin American history.

Not really an upper... and a bit of a "must...slog...through...this... section" at times, but I'm glad I read it.    

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Open Access Journals

A little presentation I made for my reference class last semester.

Forgive the poor sound quality.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Technology + Ancient Art = Awesome

Read the full article here, but the gist is, a music artist and a Turkish paper marble artist, having never met, put together a music video for the band's new song.


"Lucky Me" by Project Jenny, Project Jan from sammy rubin on Vimeo.

This is why technology and ancient arts can and should have a long and healthy marriage together. 

 

Friday, April 22, 2011

Me, a Master?

I submitted my master's thesis project from a hotel room in New York in the week hours of the night a few days ago and I just found out that I passed!  Barring any catastrophe with my reference class this semester and its remaining two assignments, I am finished with grad school!!!!

It has been a wonderful program and a great experience.

Yahoo.  

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Best Article Ever

My sweet cousin Jentry sent me a link to this NPR article titled "In Which, Emphatically And Forever, I Decline To Care About How Books Smell."


It says it much better than I attempted to and it's funny to boot.

Monday, March 28, 2011

SShhh, don't tell him about the Kindle

or the host of other very successful e-readers on the market today. In preparation for my thesis project I have been going back over my old notes from my coursework.  I read this article entitled "10 reasons why the internet is not a substitute for the library" and this reason got me riled about my favorite soap box topic.

#6 Hey, Bud, You Forgot about E-book Readers

Try reading an e-book reader for more than a half-hour. Headaches and eyestrain are the best results. Besides, if what you’re reading is more than two pages long, what do you do? Print it. Where’s a tree hugger when you really need one? Moreover, the cost of readers runs from $200 to $2,000, the cheaper ones being harder on the eyes. Will this change? Doubtless, but right now there’s no market forces making it change. Will it change in less than 75 years? Unlikely! A-freakin-men!

How silly must he feel right about now when Kindle sales exceeded 8 million last year?

I don't disagree that libraries are very important for many reasons, but I reject the idea that libraries are at war with technology.  In fact, if you work in a library or have ever been in one, you know that is just plain silly.   

Have you seen those "I pledge to read the written word" icons on blogs?  As if to suggest that printed words are better, more enlightened than digital ink and that authors need our tactile observance to survive and write good books.  My husband and I have contemplated creating an "I pledge to only read cuneiform on stone tablets" icon for my blog, but that seemed a bit too snarky.  

The point is, reading is reading and one form, as long as it works for you, is not superior to another.  But what about potentially loosing your e-books?  E-books don't really let you own titles.  What about the feel of a book in your hands? I love a real book for those reasons - but they are not about reading; they are about having, owning and touching - not bad things - but not about content consumption.

Luddites and techies - we are all in this together.  Buy or check out, download or pull back the cover, paper or digital, whatever.  Just read.    

Monday, February 28, 2011

Book Review: Jerusalem Reading

I snatched this from something I wrote when we were in Jerusalem but never publicly posted.  It's a bit outdated, but useful for readings related to our time there.    

I reread Everything is Illuminated.  It's one of my favorite books, and this time I got about 2/3rds through it before I lost the thread.  It's much further than I got last time, so that's something.   It's a beautiful, thought provoking, heart breaking, and life celebrating book...that is difficult to entirely "get".  Maybe that's why I like it.  If you want to think about something or be completely baffled, you should read it.   It's about family, history, religion, identity (specifically Jewish Identity), what it means to "love" someone, and a host of other things.

I reviewed Foer's second novel "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" in earnest on the Provo City Library Staff Review Blog (when I was employed there, wipe a tear). 

I had never heard anything about this author or this book and it was a pleasant surprise.  It told the story of four generations of women living in Jerusalem through the war of 1948, the Jordanian Occupation (48-67) and then the 6 day war in 1967.  It was epic and sad (two things I love) and did  a great job of fleshing in the un-thought-of details of history.  Great storytelling.

I actually didn't finish this book. It is a series with several books following that detail the lives of Rashi's daughters.  (Rashi is an actual well known Jewish Medieval Rabbi.)  At first I loved the slow reveal of what life was like for this Jewish group in Medieval France, but after a while it just didn't hold my attention.  It would be great for a YA historical fiction read, but I just wasn't in the mood.  I might try it again later.   

Owf.  That's how I feel about this book. There were moments of genius, but most of the book was a little pretentious and a little contrived.  One moment of genius occurs near the end where the story of Job is retold backwards through the familial history of one of the main characters.  As if to say that the parameters of our present are the product of our our ancestor's tragedy.  When we choose good and happiness despite every historical reason not to we are confirming God and refusing to deny him.  That part stole my heart, but the rest of it just irked me.  Horn didn't give reader's the chance to read between the lines before shoving the obvious down our throats.  Take it or Leave it.

Karen Armstrong is really something.  A historian, a religious historian who still thinks that religion is good is hard to come by and she is the perfect balance of skeptical historian and good willed faith affirm-er.  This book is a readable history of Jerusalem and the Holy Land in general.  Fabulous.

Another repeat.  Last night I almost put it away, but then It reminded me of how good it is.  Similar themes as "Everything is Illuminated" (the authors are married afterall....) and similarly bizarre and thought provoking.   

You might have noticed that every single book I'm reading is about Jews or Jewishness.  Well, when in Rome!  (er Israel)  It's been a good cultural exercise along side living here.  I've also read a slew of travel books - I can't get enough of them.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Book Review: The Lotus Eaters




The Lotus Eaters: Tatjana Soli: St. Martin's Press: Fiction: 386

I am often frusterated with fiction because there is so much telling and so little showing, but I have to say, Tatjana Soli's debut novel "The Lotus Eaters" is a triumph of fiction - vividly showing us the lush landscapes of Vietnam and the devastating realities of war. On a micro scale this book is about the relationships a female war photographer creates during Vietnam and the way she is forever changed at its end, but it is also a much larger narrative about the depths of destruction encountered in war and its slow seduction. It's about "going native" and becoming placeless after the intense experiences of life.

This novel is beautiful, gripping, and utterly transportive. A great adventure and eye opener about war on a personal level.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Book Review: My Life in France



My Life in France: Julia Child, Alex Prud'homme: Kindle Edition: 2006: 336 pages print length.

I didn't know much about Julia Child before reading this book and I wasn't very interested to know more, but this delightful memoir just stole my heart.  The book begins as newlywed Child moves to Paris for her husband's new position in the cultural affairs section of the Paris embassy.  What begins as a whim to occupy her time quickly grows into a lifelong obsession as Child cooks her way through classic French dishes.  Culminating in the publication of her first cookbook and the subsequent success of her television series, The French Chef, this novel is truly a Tour Du France, culinarily and geographically speaking.  

I really came to admire Child's fearlessness and the way she looked life's dissapointments in the face while embracing its joys.  She was certainly uncoventional and describes life long political sparring with her conservative father and being "cold blooded" when one of her cookbook's co-authors wasn't taking on her fair share of the work.  But she was also hardworking, intellectually curious, and fully devoted to her husband.  In fact, this novel is in part a very sweet love story.  At times I wondered if there was more to the events than what she revealed, but her telling of them was marvelous none the less.  

As a traveler, food lover, and wife of a Public Affairs diplomat I was smitten with this book from the first chapter.   

(This was my first completed Kindle book and I can't say how much I love my kindle!)   

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Jerusalem Gems

I made several books during our days in Jerusalem that I am just now getting around to blogging about.

rounded spine with hand sewn end bands
three signatures with boards attached directly to the spine cloth

rounded spine with Chines rice paper and "Jerusalem" in Hebrew hot foil pressed into cover

Monday, January 17, 2011

Derby Square Bookstore: Salem, Massachusettes

On our itty trip to boston this weekend Max and I took even an ittier trip to Salem.  We stumbled upon a delightful little bookstore at the corner of Essex and Derby with a most enigmatic owner.  When I asked if I could take a picture of the floor to ceiling stacks of books, a voice coming from a small space between two mighty stacks answered

"If you buy a book, you can take all the pictures you like."
Max ponied up and purchased World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War  by Max Brooks.  Zombies and Witches and Bookstores - oh my!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Book Review: The Woman Who Fell From The Sky



The Woman Who Fell From the Sky: An American Journalist in Yemen: Jennifer Steil: Broadway: 2010: Non-Fiction/Biography: 336 pages

Yemen.  Not really a place an American woman imagines visiting, much less taking up a permanent residence.  But perhaps American journalist turned author Jennifer Steil is no ordinary woman.  Accepting a short term work assignment in Yemen to train the staff of the Yemen Observer Steil braves the female free streets of Yemen alone and doesn't let an institutionally sexist work environment or the time wasting Qat addictions of her staff slow her down.   (Qat is a very popular amphetamine like stimulant that plagues Yemeni society - it turns teeth brown, is highly addictive, and basically incapacitates its users form doing anything productive)  

This book depicted a Yemen I couldn't have imagined.  Steil gets the inside scoop, if you will, on women's roles in Yemeni society, the Qat addiction that cripples the country, family life and sex, the government loyalty that dominates the field of "journalism", and blatant unfairness in the workplace.  But her book is also several parts travelogue of the best kind - detailed, sensory, and fantastic while still being relatable and realistic.  The prehistoric island of Socotra sounds enchanting and other worldly, but we all know someone like her cantankerous co-editor and just needing a well deserved night off is something we can all relate to.  Although the ending sat a little askew with me (Steil and the British Ambassador to Yemen start a relationship that causes him to leave his wife and daughter) the book as a whole was very enjoyable.