I love reading. I read more than three hours a day. I hope to encourage someone to read the books I discuss. My favorite genres are classics, plays, children's books, and short stories.
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Lucy by Catherine Storr
This was an ok book by Catherine Storr about a girl who wants to be a boy and a detective. Her dream kind of comes true. She catches a couple of thieves and because of it gets accepted by the neighborhood boys. This wasn't essential reading. It was just an ok way to pass an afternoon. Still it was better than Storr's Vicky.
Friday, September 13, 2024
Vicky by Catherine Storr
I consider Catherine Storr to be an underrated children's writer. I read her book The Chinese Egg twice. It was an imaginative adventurous book with likable characters. Then I learned it had a sequel which was very out of print. I tracked it down for a reasonable price. Then I read it and was let down. It was about Vicky finding her biological mother and father. Not much happens in the book. There's no adventure involved in the search either. The characters Stephen and Chris were barely in the book. Then there was a hint of an inappropriate romance that pretty much destroyed the book for me. I suggest you read Marianne Dreams or The Chinese Egg again instead.
Sunday, September 1, 2024
No Clock in the Forest
I decided to give this out of print fantasy book a chance. It's a Christian book influenced by Narnia. There's nothing wrong with being influenced as long as you try to bring something of yourself to the table. It wasn't my thing.
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
The Chinese Egg
Catherine Storr was a children's writer most known for her awesome Marianne Dreams which was later made into the movie Paperhouse. Marianne Dreams was by far her masterpiece but I liked The Chinese Egg as well. This is more young adult though. It's about a boy who finds an egg in an antique like place. Only he ends up breaking it but by doing so he unleashes its magic. It gives him and another local girl Vicky supernatural powers. I like the dynamic between Stephen and the sister Chris and Vicky. Chris is the beautiful one and the one he is drawn to at first but by the end of the book he is falling for Vicky. Through Vicky and his foresight they are able to see into events concerning the kidnapping of a baby. The kidnapper is an abusive man and I couldn't help but feel for Maurren, the dumb overweight girl who is there to take care of the baby and along for the ride. She hates living wtih him but doesn't have the guts or the brains to leave the situation. I like how the police force is handled, their skepticism of the situation but in the end how they decide to take a chance on the teenagers. I didn't expect the ending. Overall it was a good read.
Saturday, August 17, 2024
The Knight from Olmedo
This was a play from the Spanish 1600's playwright Lope de Vega. Like his play Fuenteovejuna this was loosely based on a real life story. It's a typical love story about a man in love with a woman engaged to another. But then it takes a more interesting turn he starts to get premonitions of his murder. We think it is going to be the bull fight coming up but really it's the jealous fiance of the girl he is loved with. He wants revenge. This was a pretty cool play. Why haven't I heard of this playwright?
Saturday, August 10, 2024
Jakob von Gunten
I tried reading this in my 20's and lost interest. I'm in my 40's and now finally did. It's always been a book I've been meaning to read. It's weird how time can change things. It's dreamlike. This boy joins a school for servants. The writer himself joined a school for servants and was a butler once. The headmaster falls for him. Actually I need to read a biography of Robert Walser because he spent some of his life in mental institutions. He sounds like an interesting guy. I thought the writing was unique and wonder if he continued this atmopshere in his other writings. The Brothers Quay did a movie of this except it's called Institute Benjamenta.
Saturday, August 3, 2024
Poor Deer
For some reason I got this from the library thinking this was a children's book which it definitely is not. It's disturbing, grim, but it was well written. It's about a young girl whose friend dies in a cooler when she is four. The relationship with her mother worsens as her mother more or less blames the girl Margaret for it. (The mother's love interest turned on her with the death of the young girl. That is just one of the many reasons.) The real problem is Margaret trying to rationalze it. She does this with a mythical creature a poor deer that talks to her who is more or less a bully. This carries into her teenaged years when she steals a car and goes on a journey to try to make sense of it all. What the author really got down was the rationalizing the girl has with religion, trying to make sense of it all. I've done it myself with some of the trauma of my life. It's not a light story but it was worth a read.
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