Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Anna Karenina

When I was 13 the teacher said that we could only choose books from the school library to read.  I looked at all the books and it was a bad selection.  I purposely picked the hardest book to read which was Anna Karenina.  The teacher took me aside and said that I was special and didn't have to listen to that rule. :) Anyway I was talking to my brother in law and I told him that I thought it was just ok.  He said to me "You're just 13."  So I gave it another try now in my mid-30's.  Yeah, it's better than I remembered.  I still don't think it's the best book of all time.  What I really liked about it was the relationship between Kitty and Levin which is poorly represented in film.  I liked reading about their love.  I know Anna's the one with the tragic love and the bad reputation but still, I was involved with both love stories. 

Friday, April 24, 2020

The Turn of the Screw

Sparknotes had a new section of unreliable narrators and they mentioned The Turn of the Screw. I hadn't read it for years so I thought I'd give it another go.  We're dealing with Henry James, an author people either like or dislike.  I'm one of the few that like.  This is one of his better works.  It doesn't drag and gets to the point.  It's the story about a governess who thinks she's seeing ghosts of the children's past governess and others.  It's either that or she's losing it.  The boy Miles has been kicked out of school.  We don't find out why but she thinks he's an angel.  We aren't particularly sure if she's crazy or not.  Still, it's a fascinating story.  I need to watch The Innocents again, which was a movie version of this novella. 

Friday, April 17, 2020

The Sixth Heaven

This was ok.  I thought the book before it The Shrimp and the Anemone was better.  The characters were more interesting when they were children.  There's little plot in this.  In The Sixth Heaven Eustace tries to get a scholarship he worked for.  People don't think it's fair that he can get a scholarship and be in someone's inheritance.  Hilda works for a clinic for cripples.  I liked The Hireling and The Go-Between a lot.  I do recommend L.P. Hartley but it's probably going to take me a while before I read the third book of the Eustace and Hilda trilogy. 

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

The Rover

I found this play written in the 1600s just to be ok although many people on Goodreads don't like it. What I find most interesting about the play is the fact that it was written by a female playwright. She made her living off her writing and that was definitely groundbreaking for its time.  She's most known for her book Oroonoko though.  The plot concerns a girl Florinda who is arranged to be married but has fallen for another man Belville. It also is about her friend Hellena who is going to become a nun but falls for the main character the rover Willmore.  However a prostitute Angellica likes him too. Everything wraps up nicely by the end though.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

The Other

I was introduced to the talents of Thomas Tryon in the movie I Married a monster from outer space.  Tryon was a versatile man.  He was not only a good actor but a good writer also.  This is the second time that I've read this.  It was also made into a pretty good horror movie in the 70's although the book is better.  If you're not into the evil kid genre then you won't appreciate this.  This is about a set of twins and a game that their grandmother Ada plays with them when they can get into the mind of other creatures, etc.  The game turns sinister.  Tryon also wrote the excellent Harvest Home which was made into a cool tv movie with Bette Davis.  I need to read more of his stuff.  The man was writing some of the best horror books in the 70's.  Tryon wasn't given his due.  I'm glad though that the New York Review Books collection has reissued this.  Hopefully, that will encourage a new generation of fans.  I'm also a twin so it's refreshing to see something different in the genre and not just another imitation of The Parent Trap