Books Without Limits

“There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all.” ~ Oscar Wilde
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Archive for November, 2006

Oblivion: Peter Abrahams

November 30, 2006 By: Leslie Category: Books Comments Off

Detective Nick Petrov is an engaging character from the first page. We watch as he commits perjury to seal the deal in court, treats the people around him like dirt and goes on his smart, abrasive way to solve the next crime. As the story progresses and Nick deals with his memory loss we see him change drastically from a vibrant, angry man to one that is clinging to hope and life by a thread.

His personality changes and the blank spaces in his memory from his brain tumor are written in an entirely believable manner. From cynic to dying old man to someone who sees life in a new way and finds love, each nuance is covered. In a way the murder mystery itself takes a back seat to the mystery of Nick’s illness and how he chooses to handle it. His bargains with nature and God, the way he clings to completing a task as a way to achieve health, his struggling romance with the unlikely Billie – each step is enthralling agony.

Does he solve the murder mystery had set out to solve in the beginning? Absollutely, but not the way he (or the reader) expects. In fact, this story remains engaging from the first page while being nothing that I expected at all. I highly recommend the book. Sure, there are a few plot points that seem to get dropped, but you hardly notice so caught up are you in the character of Nick himself.
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The Prize Winner of Defiance Ohio

November 21, 2006 By: Leslie Category: Books Comments Off

How my mother raised 10 kids on 25 words or less…

This book caught my attention through the recommendation of a friend. I approached it cautiously, knowing that this particular friend loves stories full of pablum and sap. It turns out I was right to do so, as this book tends to beat you about the neck and head with it’s “message”. On occasion I had to put it down and walk away, thinking “we get it, we get it, she survived by her wit and still raised ten kids in the face of her husband’s alcoholism – enough already!”

This book reads as if more than one writer wrote it – at times mellifluous and at times pedestrian. I got the feeling throughout that parts were heavily edited by a third party and the writer never went back to make sure the “voice” of the piece was still their own. Heavy editing can kill a book’s flow if it isn’t written consistently with the tone of the book as a whole.

The most interesting aspect of the book for me was a glimpse into the lives of women in the era of “contesting”. Writing the advertising jingles for various companies kept more than one woman both sane and afloat in a time when options were few for women in general. Unable to work outside the home with as much freedom and choice as women can today, they seized this chance to be creative, to use their intellect and to make some money and earn much needed things for their children and homes.

One of the other flaws in this book was a tendency to drop characters. I hoped to read much more about the other contesters. The storyline of the bedridden contester was dropped all too quickly, for example. I was genuinely curious to know more about her fight against polio and how she got into contesting in the first place. Perhaps that’s an indirect way of saying I simply was not as drawn to the main character as I should have been.

The fact that I think of these real life women as characters, even knowing this is a non-fiction book, is a red flag that the development of the story didn’t ring true for me. It stayed on the surface, never delving into the simmering emotions and issues behind the piece. This book would have made a much better screenplay, and in fact has been made into a movie. I can tell you that I plan to see the movie because I believe that seeing the book acted out may give it the depth it lacked in the writing.

Recommended
Not really – I’d skip the torture of the heavy handed book and see the movie

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Cook Books for Thanksgiving

November 20, 2006 By: Leslie Category: Books, Our Pages Comments Off

Cook Books are an often overlooked source of reading material. Sure they have invaluable recipes for your holiday needs, but often they offer much more. A glimpse into a culture long gone, stories from other nations, even novels – Like Water For Chocolate was a cookbook surrounded by a beautiful story.

In honor of Thanksgiving, here are some of my perennial favorites for the holiday season:

• The Book Of Thanksgiving: Stories, Poems, and Recipes for Sharing One of America’s Greatest Holidays

• A Southern Thanksgiving

• I Like You: Hospitality Under The Influence

• The Joy of Cooking: 1931 Facsimile Edition

• The Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition

What are your favorite cook books for Thanksgiving? Do you have traditional dishes it just wouldn’t be Thanksgiving without?

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Game Of Thrones: George R R Martin

November 18, 2006 By: Leslie Category: Books Comments Off

I was first introduced to Martin’s epic world of politics, royalty, fantasy, love, lust, betrayal, war and power when tripping over it (literally) at a friend’s house. At over 900 pages, he had finished reading Game of Thrones and decided to use it as a doorstop – he was feeling frustrated at the two year+ wait for the next installment…. In spite of his frustration, he told me to go buy a copy and read it (he wouldn’t lend me his copy as he was planning to re-read it over and over again until the next book came out). I have never regretted taking his advice, as it introduced me to another world altogether.

This novel is a richly crafted, multi-layered, well thought out masterpiece of fantasy and politics. Not only does the book introduce you to enough characters to require a geneological tree, it gives each and every character depth and purpose, filling them out well throughout. One of my favorite aspects of Game of Thrones is the fact that you become so involved with each character you find yourself rooting for the “bad” guys just as often (and sometimes more) than the “good” guys. Another great thing about this book is that I have finally found an author who is not afraid to kill off a sympathetic character just because the reader likes them. If the character’s demise (or political exile, or lingering disease, or…) is the best thing for the plot as a whole, out they go, sympathetic or not.

Along with the fresh story line, vivid details of countries, worlds, cities, places and people, and fantastic character development, Martin has infused the novel with some of the most diabolical political maneuvering and scheming since Machiavelli’s masterpiece The Prince. I was consistently surprised and enthralled by the twists in the plot, which somehow managed to remain believable in spite of the amazing risks Martin was willing to take with the story.

In short, the novel was a hearty, satisfying escape from this world into Martin’s. I could not wait to read the next book in the series. Fortunately for me, as I came late to the series, I did not have to wait for long. Unfortunately for his other readers, they had to wait two years! Would I recommend this book to a friend? Absolutely. If you enjoy political maneuvering among gorgeous, vivid worlds ranging from colorful and decadent deserts to isolated worlds of ice and monsters while fully developed characters are constantly in motion, then you will love Game of Thrones.

Recommended:Yes

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The Bonesetter’s Daughter: Amy Tan

November 17, 2006 By: Leslie Category: Books Comments Off

Generations Flowing from the Mouth of the Mountain

These are the things I know are true…

Amy Tan has had my undivided attention since I first picked up a copy of The Joy Luck Club years ago. She does not capture her readers’ hearts and minds with building suspense, senseless murders, cops and robbers or any of the other standard “best seller” formulas. Instead, she chooses to expose a piece of her heart and traditions with every book, drawing you into her stories by sincere writing that sings from the page. That her stories center around women of individual strength only adds to their appeal.

As is usual in Tan’s work, the story centers around both the bringing of understanding between generations and the relationship of mother to daughter in Chinese and Asian-American culture. Women of all nationalities, races and creeds can empathize with Tan’s characters as they struggle to overcome differences in age, beliefs, cultures and traditions. The mother-daughter relationship is hard enough without the issues that arise in Tan’s novels when “old” Chinese traditions, superstitions and teachings come face to face with “new” American traditions, values and teachings in the form of an unruly younger generation.

This novel, like Tan’s previous work, does not fail to be intimately personal in it’s grief and joy. Even while being transported into the vivid world of China at the turn of the century through the memoirs of character LuLing Young, mother of ghostwriter Ruth Young, we are firmly rooted through the constant sense that we are privy to someone’s intimate family secrets. Perhaps that is one of the things that make this novel a success – the sense of voyeurism you have while reading the story behind the lives of these women.

LuLing, getting on in years, has begun to write the story of her life as she remembers it. At first both Ruth and the reader believe the story is for Ruth’s benefit, but it soon becomes apparent that in her growing senility she is writing the story of her life down as much for herself as anyone else. The tragedies that befell her from an early age in China rule her still, and she believes that only by remembering the name of her mother can she be at peace.

LuLing’s Chinese superstitions regarding ghosts are ironic when you realize that her daughter is a ghostwriter for other authors. Throughout the novel LuLing continues to attempt to exorcise her own ghosts by catching their words and wishes, while Ruth tries to exorcise the ghosts of others’ words. Eventually Ruth must face her own superstitions and beliefs in order to come to terms with her mother’s declining health.

The beauty in Tan’s work lies in her portrayal of each character as an individual and as a part of the other characters’ whole. In The Bonesetter’s Daughter we are treated to two stories simultaneously, one set in the present through Ruth, the other set in the past through LuLing. The other characters in the novel are whole, well-rounded and interesting, but they mainly serve as background or white noise against the rich tapestry of the lives of these two women.

Ruth

Ruth is a ghostwriter with a complicated sense of her relationship with her mother. In general, her memories are of a sharp-tongued woman who was ever critical of Ruth as a child, never satisfied with anything less than perfection. We are allowed glimpses of the mythic mother of Ruth’s memories through brief flashbacks showing instances of her harrangues, her perfectionism, her vast array of ancient superstitions (mainly an obsession with ghosts, especially the ghost of Precious Auntie), her desire to move up the social ladder to a better station in life, her well developed sense of competition. As Ruth develops more compassion and depth as a person, and as she reads her mothers memoirs and deals with her own life issues, the picture she paints of her mother changes ever gradually. We are slowly allowed to see Ruth’s other memories of her mother: the artist who did such beautiful calligraphy, the loving mom, the friend. Tan does a beautiful job showcasing Ruth’s personal growth even as she shows LuLing’s decline.

LuLing

Convinced her salvation in this time of declining memory lies in finding the name of her mother, LuLing writes the book of her life in hope that it will revive a memory long since past. Her struggle with dementia, portrayed side by side with her revelations about her origins, create a poignant picture of the decline of an incredibly strong woman constantly faced with and overcoming adversity. A child of misfortune in China, she is left to be raised by an aunt as if she were her aunt’s own daughter. When her aunt has a daughter of her own, LuLing becomes the forgotten child, comforted only by her Precious Auntie, and even that is not to last. LuLing’s tale is what drives this novel in compelling, near-voyeuristic fashion. As time passes and she finds love and companionship via the translator hired by her daughter, plus a renewed relationship with Ruth, we can see her character grow in spite of her declining health.

Ruth and LuLing are the leaders of a rich and varied cast of characters in Tan’s novel. The view into the lives of this fractured family is compelling. I highly recommend this book to those who appreciate the pageantry of life in all its forms, both misshapen and beautiful. Tan’s prose will sweep you away into the world of the Youngs, and you won’t regret the voyage.

Recommended:
Yes

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