October 8, 2012

Long Lists - What You Are Thinking About Pitching?

Suzanne

The Robber Bride, Margaret Atwood

Margaret Atwood's The Robber Bride is inspired by "The Robber Bridegroom," a wonderfully grisly tale from the Brothers Grimm in which an evil groom lures three maidens into his lair and devours them, one by one. But in her version, Atwood brilliantly recasts the monster as Zenia, a villainess of demonic proportions, and sets her loose in the lives of three friends, Tony,  Charis, and Roz. All three "have lost men, spirit, money, and time to their old college acquaintance, Zenia. At various times, and in various emotional disguises, Zenia has insinuated her way into their lives and practically demolished them.

The Cat's Table, Michael Ondaatje

In the early 1950s, an eleven-year-old boy in Colombo boards a ship bound for England. At mealtimes he is seated at the “cat’s table”—as far from the Captain’s Table as can be—with a ragtag group of “insignificant” adults and two other boys, Cassius and Ramadhin. As the ship crosses the Indian Ocean, the boys tumble from one adventure to another, bursting all over the place like freed mercury. But there are other diversions as well: they are first exposed to the magical worlds of jazz, women, and literature by their eccentric fellow travelers, and together they spy on a shackled prisoner, his crime and fate a galvanizing mystery that will haunt them forever. By turns poignant and electrifying, The Cat’s Table is a spellbinding story about the magical, often forbidden, discoveries of childhood, and a lifelong journey that begins unexpectedly with a spectacular sea voyage.

The Imperfectionists, Tom Rachman

One of most acclaimed books of the year, Tom Rachman's debut novel follows the topsy-turvy private lives of the reporters and editors of an English-language newspaper in Rome.

"This first novel by Tom Rachman, a London-born journalist who has lived and worked all over the world, is so good I had to read it twice simply to figure out how he pulled it off. I still haven't answered that question, nor do I know how someone so young…could have acquired such a precocious grasp of human foibles. The novel is alternately hilarious and heart-wrenching, and it's assembled like a Rubik's Cube. I almost feel sorry for Rachman, because a debut of this order sets the bar so high." Christopher Buckley, New York Times.


The Hare with Amber Eyes, Edmond de Waal

Edmund de Waal is a world-famous ceramicist. Having spent thirty years making beautiful pots—which are then sold, collected, and handed on—he has a particular sense of the secret lives of objects. When he inherited a collection of 264 tiny Japanese wood and ivory carvings, called netsuke, he wanted to know who had touched and held them, and how the collection had managed to survive.

And so begins this extraordinarily moving memoir and detective story as de Waal discovers both the story of the netsuke and of his family, the Ephrussis, over five generations. A nineteenth-century banking dynasty in Paris and Vienna, the Ephrussis were as rich and respected as the Rothchilds. Yet by the end of the World War II, when the netsuke were hidden from the Nazis in Vienna, this collection of very small carvings was all that remained of their vast empire.

Winner of the 2010 COSTA biography award.


God of Carnage, Yasmina Reza (play)

What happens when two sets of parents meet up to deal with the unruly behavior of their children? A calm and rational debate between grown-ups about the need to teach kids how to behave properly? Or a hysterical night of name-calling, tantrums, and tears before bedtime? The International Herald Tribune calls it “an expert piece of stagecraft, and savagely funny.”









Steph

The Mists of Avalon, Marion Zimmer Bradley

Here is the magical legend of King Arthur, vividly retold through the eyes and lives of the women who wielded power from behind the throne.

It won the 1984 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel.

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction notes that the victory of Christianity over the "sane but dying paganism" of Avalon "ensures eons of repression for women and the vital principles they espouse."

"[A] monumental reimagining of the Arthurian legends . . . Reading it is a deeply moving and at times uncanny experience. . . . An impressive achievement." New York Times book review.

"The Mists of Avalon is a beautiful book. The characters are alive, multi-dimensional; I really care about them."  Madeleine L'Engle

Pale Fire, Vladimir Nabokov

In Pale Fire, Nabokov offers a cornucopia of deceptive pleasures: a 999-line poem by the reclusive genius John Shade; an adoring foreword and commentary by Shade's friend/neighbor, Dr. Charles Kinbote; a darkly comic novel of suspense, literary idolatry and one-upmanship, and political intrigue.

Published in 1962, Pale Fire is an experimental synthesis of poetry and prose that displays Nabokov's mastery of unorthodox structure.

I started this, just to get a feel for whether it would be good for book club, and I can't put it down.  THIS is writing.

Red Dog, Louis de Bernieres

Stories about a dog, in the hands of my favorite author.  What could be better?!

In 1998, Louis de Bernieres came upon a bronze statue in a town on Australia’s northwestern coast and was immediately compelled to know more about “Red Dog.” He did not have to go far: everyone for hundreds of miles in every direction seemed to have a story about Red Dog. Dubbed a “professional traveler” rather than a stray, Red Dog established his own transportation system, hitchhiking between far-flung towns and female dogs in cars whose engine noises he’d memorized and whose drivers he’d charmed.  Everyone wanted to adopt him (one group of workers made him a member of their union), but Red Dog would be adopted by—or, more precisely, he would adopt—only one man: a bus driver whose love life quickly began to suffer and who never quite recovered from Red Dog’s relentlessly affectionate presence.

American Gods, Neil Gaiman

American Gods is a blend of Americana, fantasy, and various strands of ancient and modern mythology, all centering on a mysterious and taciturn protagonist, Shadow.

The book won the 2002 Hugo, Nebula, Locus, SFX Magazine and Bram Stoker Awards, all for Best Novel, and likewise received nominations for the 2001 BSFA Award, as well as the 2002 World Fantasy, International Horror Guild and Mythopoeic, and British Fantasy awards. It won the 2003 Geffen Award.

The Edge of Sadness, Edwin O'Connor 

In this moving novel, Father Hugh Kennedy, a recovering alcoholic, returns to Boston to repair his damaged priesthood. There he is drawn into the unruly world of the Carmodys, a sprawling, prosperous Irish family teeming with passion and riddled with secrets. The story of this entanglement is a beautifully rendered tale of grace and renewal, of friendship and longing, of loneliness and spiritual aridity giving way to hope.

Winner of the 1962 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.  (This was the year after To Kill a Mockingbird won -- just to give a sense of the literary era.)


The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Victor Hugo 

One of the first great novels of the Romantic era, Victor Hugo’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame has thrilled generations of readers with its powerfully melodramatic story of Quasimodo, the deformed hunchback who lives in the bell tower of medieval Paris’s most famous cathedral.

Feared and hated by all, Quasimodo is looked after by Dom Claude Frollo, a stern, cold priest who ignores the poor hunchback in the face of his frequent public torture. But someone steps forward to help—the beautiful gypsy Esmeralda, whose single act of kindness fills Quasimodo with love. Can the hunchback save the lovely gypsy from Frollo’s evil plan, or will they all perish in the shadows of Notre Dame? An epic tale of beauty and sadness, The Hunchback of Notre Dame portrays the sufferings of humanity with compassion and power.

Hugo introduced with this work the concept of the novel as Epic Theatre. A giant epic about the history of a whole people, incarnated in the figure of the great cathedral as witness and silent protagonist of that history. The whole idea of time and life as an ongoing, organic panorama centered on dozens of characters caught in the middle of that history.

Despair, Vladimir Nabokov

Despair is the wickedly inventive and richly derisive story of Hermann, a man who undertakes the perfect crime: his own murder.

“A beautiful mystery plot, not to be revealed.” - Newsweek












Katherine

The Marriage Plot, Jeffrey Eugenides

A National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist

It’s the early 1980s. In American colleges, the wised-up kids are inhaling Derrida and listening to Talking Heads. But Madeleine Hanna, dutiful English major, is writing her senior thesis on Jane Austen and George Eliot, purveyors of the marriage plot that lies at the heart of the greatest English novels. As Madeleine studies the age-old motivations of the human heart, real life, in the form of two very different guys, intervenes—-the charismatic and intense Leonard Bankhead, and her old friend the mystically inclined Mitchell Grammaticus. As all three of them face life in the real world they will have to reevaluate everything they have learned. Jeffrey Eugenides creates a new kind of contemporary love story in "his most powerful novel yet" (Newsweek).

Falling Upward, Richard Rohr

Franciscan priest Rohr (The Naked Now) is a big-picture kind of thinker when it comes to characterizing the human journey. Life has two halves; life follows the pattern of a hero/heroine's journey; life is disorderly and inherently tragic. Elders and mystics are more inclined to such sweeping and subtle observations, and Rohr, born in 1943, fits in both categories. Rohr writes about spirituality in broad terms, but is deeply grounded in the writings and thinkers of his Catholic religious tradition. His discussion of familiar theological concerns—the necessity of suffering, the opportunities provided by mistakes—is fresh because imaginative and vigorous. His metaphors ("discharging your loyal soldier"), paradoxes (see the book's title), and arguments are not, however, easy to follow or even easy to summarize. They will frustrate some readers, but delight others who are attentive enough to follow the connections Rohr makes. This small, provocative book will make a particularly good gift for a thoughtful, spiritually open man.

Kerry

The Bram Stoker Bedside Companion, Bram Stoker

Ten short stories


The Lair of the White Worm, Bram Stoker

In a tale of ancient evil, Bram Stoker creates a world of lurking horrors and bizarre denizens: a demented mesmerist, hellbent on mentally crushing the girl he loves; a gigantic kite raised to rid the land of an unnatural infestation of birds, and which receives strange commands along its string; and all the while, the great white worm slithers below, seeking its next victim...


Dreams of Joy, Lisa See

In her most powerful novel yet, acclaimed author Lisa See returns to the story of sisters Pearl and May from Shanghai Girls, and Pearl’s strong-willed nineteen-year-old daughter, Joy. Reeling from newly uncovered family secrets, Joy runs away to Shanghai in early 1957 to find her birth father—the artist Z. G. Li, with whom both May and Pearl were once in love. Dazzled by him, and blinded by idealism and defiance, Joy throws herself into the New Society of Red China, heedless of the dangers in the Communist regime. Devastated by Joy’s flight and terrified for her safety, Pearl is determined to save her daughter, no matter the personal cost. From the crowded city to remote villages, Pearl confronts old demons and almost insurmountable challenges as she follows Joy, hoping for reconciliation. Yet even as Joy’s and Pearl’s separate journeys converge, one of the most tragic episodes in China’s history threatens their very lives.


Peony in Love, Lisa See

In the garden of the Chen Family Villa, amid the scent of ginger, green tea, and jasmine, a small theatrical troupe is performing scenes from an epic opera, a live spectacle few females have ever seen. Like the heroine in the drama, Peony is the cloistered daughter of a wealthy family, trapped like a good-luck cricket in a bamboo-and-lacquer cage. Though raised to be obedient, Peony has dreams of her own.

Peony’s mother is against her daughter’s attending the production: “Unmarried girls should not be seen in public.” But Peony’s father assures his wife that proprieties will be maintained, and that the women will watch the opera from behind a screen. Yet through its cracks, Peony catches sight of an elegant, handsome man with hair as black as a cave–and is immediately overcome with emotion.

So begins Peony’s unforgettable journey of love and destiny, desire and sorrow–as Lisa See’s haunting new novel, based on actual historical events, takes readers back to seventeenth-century China, after the Manchus seize power and the Ming dynasty is crushed.

Steeped in traditions and ritual, this story brings to life another time and place–even the intricate realm of the afterworld, with its protocols, pathways, and stages of existence, a vividly imagined place where one’s soul is divided into three, ancestors offer guidance, misdeeds are punished, and hungry ghosts wander the earth. Immersed in the richness and magic of the Chinese vision of the afterlife, transcending even death, Peony in Love explores, beautifully, the many manifestations of love. Ultimately, Lisa See’s new novel addresses universal themes: the bonds of friendship, the power of words, and the age-old desire of women to be heard.

Shanghai Girls, Lisa See 
In 1937, Shanghai is the Paris of Asia, a city of great wealth and glamour, the home of millionaires and beggars, gangsters and gamblers, patriots and revolutionaries, artists and warlords. Thanks to the financial security and material comforts provided by their father’s prosperous rickshaw business, twenty-one-year-old Pearl Chin and her younger sister, May, are having the time of their lives. Though both sisters wave off authority and tradition, they couldn’t be more different: Pearl is a Dragon sign, strong and stubborn, while May is a true Sheep, adorable and placid. Both are beautiful, modern, and carefree . . . until the day their father tells them that he has gambled away their wealth and that in order to repay his debts he must sell the girls as wives to suitors who have traveled from California to find Chinese brides.

As Japanese bombs fall on their beloved city, Pearl and May set out on the journey of a lifetime, one that will take them through the Chinese countryside, in and out of the clutch of brutal soldiers, and across the Pacific to the shores of America. In Los Angeles they begin a fresh chapter, trying to find love with the strangers they have married, brushing against the seduction of Hollywood, and striving to embrace American life even as they fight against discrimination, brave Communist witch hunts, and find themselves hemmed in by Chinatown’s old ways and rules.

At its heart, Shanghai Girls is a story of sisters: Pearl and May are inseparable best friends who share hopes, dreams, and a deep connection, but like sisters everywhere they also harbor petty jealousies and rivalries. They love each other, but each knows exactly where to drive the knife to hurt the other the most. Along the way they face terrible sacrifices, make impossible choices, and confront a devastating, life-changing secret, but through it all the two heroines of this astounding new novel hold fast to who they are–Shanghai girls.

Mary, Vladimir Nabokov 

In a Berlin rooming house filled with an assortment of serio-comic Russian émigrés, Lev Ganin, a vigorous young officer poised between his past and his future, relives his first love affair. His memories of Mary are suffused with the freshness of youth and the idyllic ambience of pre-revolutionary Russia. In stark contrast is the decidedly unappealing boarder living in the room next to Ganin’s, who, he discovers, is Mary’s husband, temporarily separated from her by the Revolution but expecting her imminent arrival from Russia.



Glory, Vladimir Nabokov 

Glory is the wryly ironic story of Martin Edelweiss, a twenty-two-year-old Russian émigré of no account, who is in love with a girl who refuses to marry him. Convinced that his life is about to be wasted and hoping to impress his love, he embarks on a "perilous, daredevil project"--an illegal attempt to re-enter the Soviet Union, from which he and his mother had fled in 1919. He succeeds--but at a terrible cost.










Despair, A Novel, Vladimir Nabokov -- see entry under Steph's above

Pnin, Vladimir Nabokov

Pnin is a professor of Russian at an American college who takes the wrong train to deliver a lecture in a language he cannot master. Pnin is a tireless lover who writes to his treacherous Liza: "A genius needs to keep so much in store, and thus cannot offer you the whole of himself as I do." Pnin is the focal point of subtle academic conspiracies he cannot begin to comprehend, yet he stages a faculty party to end all faculty parties forever.
Readers meet one of Nabokov's funniest and most heartrending characters: Timofey Pnin, a professor of Russian at an American college, who lectures in a language he cannot master.

The Original of Laura, Vladimir Nabokov
When Vladimir Nabokov died in 1977, he left instructions for his heirs to burn the 138 hand-written index cards that made up the rough draft of his final and unfinished novel, The Original of Laura. But Nabokov's wife, Vera, could not bear to destroy her husband's last work, and when she died, the fate of the manuscript fell to her son. Dmitri Nabokov’s decision finally to allow publication of the fragmented narrative—dark yet playful, preoccupied with mortality—affords us one last experience of Nabokov's magnificent creativity, the quintessence of his unparalleled body of work.


Laughter in the Dark, Vladimir Nabokov 

Albinus, a respectable, middle-aged man and aspiring filmmaker, abandons his wife for a lover half his age: Margot, who wants to become a movie star herself. When Albinus introduces her to Rex, an American movie producer, disaster ensues. What emerges is an elegantly sardonic and irresistibly ironic novel of desire, deceit, and deception, a curious romance set in the film world of Berlin in the 1930s.

A malicious comedy of desire, deception, and denial played out against the background of the film world of 1930's Berlin.






Gayle

Plague of Doves, Louise Erdrych

2009 Pulitzer Prize finalist (Winner in 2009 was Olive Kitteridge)

The unsolved murder of a farm family still haunts the white small town of Pluto, North Dakota, generations after the vengeance exacted and the distortions of fact transformed the lives of Ojibwe living on the nearby reservation.

Part Ojibwe, part white, Evelina Harp is an ambitious young girl prone to falling hopelessly in love. Mooshum, Evelina's grandfather, is a repository of family and tribal history with an all-too-intimate knowledge of the violent past. And Judge Antone Bazil Coutts, who bears witness, understands the weight of historical injustice better than anyone. Through the distinct and winning voices of three unforgettable narrators, the collective stories of two interwoven communities ultimately come together to reveal a final wrenching truth.

Round House, Louise Erdrych

2012 National Book Award finalist

One Sunday in the summer of 1988, a woman living on a reservation in North Dakota is attacked. The details of the crime are slow to surface as Geraldine Coutts is traumatized and reluctant to reveal the details of what happened, either to the police or to her husband, Bazil, and thirteen-year-old son, Joe. In one day, Joe's life is irrevocably transformed. He tries to heal his mother, but she will not leave her bed and slips into an abyss of solitude. Increasingly alone, Joe finds himself thrust prematurely into an adult world for which he is ill prepared.

While his father endeavors to wrest justice from a situation that defies his efforts, Joe becomes frustrated and sets out with his trusted friends, Cappy, Zack, and Angus, to get some answers of his own. Their quest takes them to the Round House, a sacred place of worship for the Ojibwe. And this is only the beginning.

Karen

State of Wonder, Ann Patchett 

In a narrative replete with poison arrows, devouring snakes, scientific miracles, and spiritual transformations, State of Wonder presents a world of stunning surprise and danger, rich in emotional resonance and moral complexity.

As Dr. Marina Singh embarks upon an uncertain odyssey into the insect-infested Amazon, she will be forced to surrender herself to the lush but forbidding world that awaits within the jungle. Charged with finding her former mentor Dr. Annick Swenson, a researcher who has disappeared while working on a valuable new drug, she will have to confront her own memories of tragedy and sacrifice as she journeys into the unforgiving heart of darkness. Stirring and luminous, State of Wonder is a world unto itself, where unlikely beauty stands beside unimaginable loss beneath the rain forest's jeweled canopy.



October 22 is BOOK PICKING NIGHT!

We'll meet at Kathy's house for book-picking night.

We will pick about half of our books from the pool of books written by authors we've enjoyed during our first 10 years.  The other half of our books will be our usual free-for-all.  (We haven't worked out whether we will have a classics slot and, if we do, whether it will be within the Fave Authors category or the free-for-all.)  Our favorite authors (2005-2012):

Top 1-14
1) Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird) -- No other books
2) Mary Doria Russell (Thread of Grace; also read The Sparrow and Dreamers of the Day) -- Doc, Chlldren of God
3) Toni Morrison (Sula; also read Beloved) - The Bluest Eye, Tar Baby, Jazz, Paradise, Love, A Mercy, Home
4) Ann Patchett (Bel Canto; also read Truth and Beauty) - Run, State of Wonder, Taft, The Patron Saint of Liars, The Magician's Assistant
5) Zora Neal Hurston (Their Eyes Were Watching God) - LOTS
6) Louis de Bernieres (Birds Without Wings; also read Corelli's Mandolin and The War of Don Emanual's Nether Parts) Senor Vevo and the Coca Lord; The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman, Red Dog, Partisan's Daughter, short stories 
7) Abraham Verghese  (Cutting for Stone) - My Own Country, The Tennis Partner
8) Willa Cather (My Antonia, One of Ours) - O Pioneers and LOTS of others
9) Bram Stoker (Dracula) - LOTS
10) David Wroblewski (Edgar Sawtelle) - No others books
11) Wendell Berry (Fidelity and others) - LOTS

Two of those authors don't have other books (as far as I could tell from a quick search).  Our next top authors are:
12) Elizabeth Strout (Olive Kitteridge) - Amy and Isabelle, Abide With Me
13) Jhumpa Lahiri (Interpreter of Maladies also read Unaccustomed Earth and The Namesake) - we've read both of her short story collections and her one novel. No other books.
14) Lisa See (Snow Flower) - On Gold Mountain, Peony in Love, Shanghai Girls, Dreams of Joy, Dragon Bones, The Interior, Flower Net

Top 15-35

15) Margaret Atwood (Alias Grace; also read The Handmaid's Tale) - LOTS
16) Per Petterson  (Out Stealing Horses) - It's Fine By Me, To Siberia, I Curse the River of Time
17) Vladimir Nabokov (Lolita) - LOTS
18) Robert Penn Warren (All the King's Men) - LOTS
19) Andrea Levy (Small Island) - Every Light in the House Burnin', Never Far from Nowhere, Fruit of the Lemon, The Long Song
20) T. S. Eliot (Murder in the Cathedral) - LOTS of nonfiction, plays, poetry and short stories
21) Richard Adams (Watership Down) - LOTS
22) Jhumpa Lahiri (Unaccustomed Earth) -- see above
23) Gustave Flaubert (Madame Bovary) - several
24) Kazuo IshiguroA Pale View of Hills (1982); An Artist of the Floating World (1986);The Remains of the Day (1989); The Unconsoled (1995); When We Were Orphans (2000)
25) David Guterson (Snow Falling on Cedars) - Several
26) Charles Dickens (Tale of Two Cities) - LOTS
27) Willa Cather (One of Ours) - see above
28) Sara Gruen (Water for Elephants) - Ape House, Riding Lessons, Flying Changes
29) Muriel Barbery (The Elegance of the Hedgehog)
30) Ernest Hemingway - LOTS
31) Erik Larson (Devil in the White City) - The Naked Consumer: How Our Private Lives Become Public Commodities (1992), Lethal Passage: The Story of a Gun (1995), Isaac's Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History (1999), Thunderstruck (2006), In The Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and An American Family in Hitler's Berlin (2011)
32) Sattareh Farmaian (Daughter of Persia) - No other books
33) Olive Ann Burns (Cold Sassy Tree) - No other books
34) Michael Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay; also read The Yiddish Policeman's Union) - Wonder Boys, Telegraph Ave., The Mysteries of Pittsburgh, Gentlemen of the Road, The Final Solution
35) Stacy Schiff (Cleopatra) - A Great Improvisation: Franklin, France and the Birth of America; Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov): Portrait of a Marriage; Saint Exupery: A Biography

Feel free to nominate favorite authors from our first years (2002/3 through 2004/5) before we surveyed.  If I were to nominate some authors from those years that I think were well-loved, I'd add these to the list:

June 18, 2012

The History of Love - June 25, 2012

We'll meet June 25 at Karen's house to discuss The History of Love by Nicole Krauss.

Supplemental materials:
  • NYTimes review (that I don't think is fair)
  • New York magazine interview with Krauss
  • ReadingGroupGuides.com discussion questions
  • eNotes questions (and sparse answers)
  • Wikipedia entry (with comparison to Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, discussion of literary allusions and of graphic design)
  • GoodReads discussion
  • Some notes by a prof at Univ. of Texas Arlington:  Critical Approaches to The History of Love, (includes some excellent identification and discussion of major themes)
  • Nicole Krauss's website (including interviews and essays, under "Press")
Awards:
  • Winner of the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing 
  • Winner of the Borders Original Voices Award 
  • Finalist for the Orange Prize 
  • #1 Booksense Pick 
  • Winner of the Edward Lewis Wallant Award 
  • Winner of France's Prix du Meilleur Livre Ėtranger Award

May 23, 2012

Death Comes for the Archbishop - June 4, 2012

We'll meet Monday, June 4, at Steph's house to discuss Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather.

April 2, 2012

April 23, 2012 - The Maples Stories

Our next meeting is April 23, 2012 to discuss The Maples Stories, a collection of John Updike short stories.
[T]hese eighteen classic stories from across John Updike’s career form a luminous chronicle of the life and times of one marriage in all its rich emotional complexity.

January 26, 2012

Murder in the Cathedral - January 30

We'll meet on January 30 to discuss Murder in the Cathedral.

December 25, 2011

Ordinary Wolves - Jan. 9

We'll meet January 9 to discuss Ordinary Wolves, by Seth Kantner. Location TBD.

Supplemental materials:

November 8, 2011

November 28 - The Elegance of the Hedgehog

We'll meet at 6:30 on Nov. 28 at Connie's to discuss The Elegance of the Hedgehog, by Muriel Barbery.

Supplemental materials:

October 24, 2011

Slate for 2011-2012

Our books for 2011-2012:

Nov. 28:  The Elegance of the Hedgehog, Muriel Barbery
Jan. 9:  Ordinary Wolves, Seth Kantner
Jan. 30:  Murder in the Cathedral, T.S. Eliot
Feb. 27:  Links, Nuruddin Farah
Mar. 26:  Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens
April 23:  The Maples Stories, John Updike
June 4:  Death Comes for the Archbishop, Willa Cather
June 25:  History of Love, Nicole Krauss
July 23:  Cleopatra, Stacy Schiff
Aug. 27:  Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro
Sept. 24:  Cutting for Stone, Abraham Verghese

Other books pitched:

The Good Earth, Pearl S. Buck
Angle of Repose, Wallace Stegner
Middlemarch, George Eliot
State of Wonder, Ann Patchett
Road from Coorain, Jill Ker Conway
The Art of Racing in the Rain, Garth Stein
Blindness, Jose Saramago
Atonement, Ian McEwan
The Tiger's Wife, Tea Obreht
Freedom, Jonathan Franzen
Hummingbird's Daughter, Luis Alberto Urrea
God of Carnage, Yasmina Reza
A Novel Bookstore, Laurence Cossa and Alison Anderson
Zeitoun, Dave Eggers

October 19, 2011

Let's Pick Books! Julie's House on Oct. 24



BOOK-PICKING NIGHT, OCT. 24, 2011 at JULIE'S HOUSE



Long lists are in the post immediately below.

Also: PLEASE GO HERE to TAKE THE SURVEY IF YOU HAVEN'T ALREADY

September 27, 2011

Long Lists for Possible Pitches for 2011-2012

Connie

Blindness, José Saramago
From Amazon review: "In an unnamed city in an unnamed country, a man sitting in his car waiting for a traffic light to change is suddenly struck blind. But instead of being plunged into darkness, this man sees everything white, as if he "were caught in a mist or had fallen into a milky sea." A Good Samaritan offers to drive him home (and later steals his car); his wife takes him by taxi to a nearby eye clinic where they are ushered past other patients into the doctor's office. Within a day the man's wife, the taxi driver, the doctor and his patients, and the car thief have all succumbed to blindness. As the epidemic spreads, the government panics and begins quarantining victims in an abandoned mental asylum--guarded by soldiers with orders to shoot anyone who tries to escape. So begins Portuguese author José Saramago's gripping story of humanity under siege, written with a dearth of paragraphs, limited punctuation, and embedded dialogue minus either quotation marks or attribution. At first this may seem challenging, but the style actually contributes to the narrative's building tension, and to the reader's involvement."
I think it's a challenging read, but have heard it's fascinating. Won the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature.
The Hummingbird's Daughter, Luis Alberto Urrea
From Amazon review: "Her powers were growing now, like her body. No one knew where the strange things came from. Some said they sprang up in her after the desert sojourn with Huila. Some said they came from somewhere else, some deep inner landscape no one could touch. That they had been there all along." Teresita, the real-life "Saint of Cabora," was born in 1873 to a 14-year-old Indian girl impregnated by a prosperous rancher near the Mexico-Arizona border. Raised in dire poverty by an abusive aunt, the little girl still learned music and horsemanship and even to read: she was a "chosen child," showing such remarkable healing powers that the ranch's medicine woman took her as an apprentice, and the rancher, Don Tomás Urrea, took her—barefoot and dirty—into his own household. At 16, Teresita was raped, lapsed into a coma and apparently died. At her wake, though, she sat up in her coffin and declared that it was not for her. Pilgrims came to her by the thousands, even as the Catholic Church denounced her as a heretic; she was also accused of fomenting an Indian uprising against Mexico and, at 19, sentenced to be shot. ...An astonishing novel set against the guerrilla violence of post–Civil War southwestern border disputes and incipient revolution. ...Urrea effortlessly links Teresita's supernatural calling to the turmoil of the times, concealing substantial intellectual content behind effervescent storytelling and considerable humor."
Freedom, Jonathan Franzen
From Amazon review: "Nine years after winning the National Book Award, Franzen's The Corrections consistently appears on "Best of the Decade" lists and continues to enjoy a popularity that borders on the epochal, so much so that the first question facing Franzen's feverishly awaited follow-up is whether it can find its own voice in its predecessor's shadow. In short: yes, it does, and in a big way. Readers will recognize the strains of suburban tragedy afflicting St. Paul, Minn.'s Walter and Patty Berglund, once-gleaming gentrifiers now marred in the eyes of the community by Patty's increasingly erratic war on the right-wing neighbors with whom her eerily independent and sexually precocious teenage son, Joey, is besot, and, later, "greener than Greenpeace" Walter's well-publicized dealings with the coal industry's efforts to demolish a West Virginia mountaintop. The surprise is that the Berglunds' fall is outlined almost entirely in the novel's first 30 pages, freeing Franzen to delve into Patty's affluent East Coast girlhood, her sexual assault at the hands of a well-connected senior, doomed career as a college basketball star, and the long-running love triangle between Patty, Walter, and Walter's best friend, the budding rock star Richard Katz. Franzen pits his excavation of the cracks in the nuclear family's facade against a backdrop of all-American faults and fissures, but where the book stands apart is that, no longer content merely to record the breakdown, Franzen tries to account for his often stridently unlikable characters and find where they (and we) went wrong, arriving at--incredibly--genuine hope."
Gayle

Angle of Repose, Wallace Stegner
Angle of Repose tells the story of Lyman Ward, a retired professor of history and author of books about the Western frontier, who returns to his ancestral home of Grass Valley, California, in the Sierra Nevada. Wheelchair-bound with a crippling bone disease and dependent on others for his every need, Ward is nonetheless embarking on a search of monumental proportions - to rediscover his grandmother, now long dead, who made her own journey to Grass Valley nearly a hundred years earlier. Like other great quests in literature, Lyman Ward's investigation leads him deep into the dark shadows of his own life.
Art of Racing in the Rain, Garth Stein
If you've ever wondered what your dog is thinking, Stein's third novel offers an answer. Enzo is a lab terrier mix plucked from a farm outside Seattle to ride shotgun with race car driver Denny Swift as he pursues success on the track and off. Denny meets and marries Eve, has a daughter, Zoë, and risks his savings and his life to make it on the professional racing circuit. Enzo, frustrated by his inability to speak and his lack of opposable thumbs, watches Denny's old racing videos, coins koanlike aphorisms that apply to both driving and life, and hopes for the day when his life as a dog will be over and he can be reborn a man. When Denny hits an extended rough patch, Enzo remains his most steadfast if silent supporter. Enzo is a reliable companion and a likable enough narrator, though the string of Denny's bad luck stories strains believability. Much like Denny, however, Stein is able to salvage some dignity from the over-the-top drama.
Ordinary Wolves,  Seth Kantner
A first novel, a Milkweed National Fiction Prize winner, offers an unsentimental yet very passionate take on the collision of Eskimo and white culture, as well as the encroachment of materialistic civilization on Alaska's unspoiled wilderness at the end of the 20th century. After his mother flees back to the Lower 40 never to return, Cutuk (Calvin) is raised along with his older sister and brother by his father, Abe, in an igloo in northern Alaska. Abe's attempt to live intimately with nature, with as few civilized distractions as possible, makes him an oddity not only among his educated peers but to the native Inupiaq residents of the nearby village of Takunak, who are happy to accept accouterments of modern life like TVs and snowmobiles. Under his father's tutelage, Cutuk grows up steeped in knowledge of and love for the natural world but also finds himself wanting to fit in with a community. After home-schooling, Cutuk finishes high school in Takunak, where he falls in love with Dawna, the granddaughter of his idol Enuk Wolfglove, who disappeared while hunting wolves. But, in the village, Cutuk feels like a second-class citizen because he's white. As a lonely young man, he decides to explore the city life that has drawn away his siblings. His brother has moved to Fairbanks, while his sister has attended college in Anchorage (though she ends up a teacher in Takunak). While the myriad details, complete with glossary, about surviving in the Alaskan wilderness and the daily village life among the Inupiaq are engrossing, Kantner's description of Anchorage through Cutuk's innocent yet intelligent eyes is equally compelling. After years in the city, Cutuk, with mixed results, returns toTakunak. He eventually finds himself back on the land, alone but with Dawna's future companionship a possibility. Richly poetic and emotionally engrossing. (Kirkus Reviews)

Julie

The Good Earth, Pearl S. Buck
This 1932 Pulitzer Prize winning novel is still a standout today. Deceptive in its simplicity, it is a story built around a flawed human being and a teetering socio-economic system, as well as one that is layered with profound themes. The cadence of the author's writing is also of note, as it rhythmically lends itself to the telling of the story, giving it a very distinct voice. No doubt the author's writing style was influenced by her own immersion in Chinese culture, as she grew up and lived in China, the daughter of missionaries.

This is the story of the cyclical nature of life, of the passions and desires that motivate a human being, of good and evil, and of the desire to survive and thrive against great odds. It begins with the story of an illiterate, poor, peasant farmer, Wang Lung, who ventures from the rural countryside and goes to town to the great house of Hwang to obtain a bride from those among the rank of slave. There, he is given the slave O-lan as his bride.
Something/anything by Jane Austin or the Brontes.

Karen
The History of Love, Nicole Krauss
A long-lost book reappears, mysteriously connecting an old man searching for his son and a girl seeking a cure for her widowed mother's loneliness. Leo Gursky is just about surviving, tapping his radiator each evening to let his upstairs neighbor know he's still alive. But life wasn't always like this: sixty years ago, in the Polish village where he was born, Leo fell in love and wrote a book. And though Leo doesn't know it, that book survived, inspiring fabulous circumstances, even love. Fourteen-year-old Alma was named after a character in that very book. And although she has her hands full—keeping track of her brother, Bird (who thinks he might be the Messiah), and taking copious notes on How to Survive in the Wild—she undertakes an adventure to find her namesake and save her family. With consummate, spellbinding skill, Nicole Krauss gradually draws together their stories. This extraordinary book was inspired by the author's four grandparents and by a pantheon of authors whose work is haunted by loss—Bruno Schulz, Franz Kafka, Isaac Babel, and more. It is truly a history of love: a tale brimming with laughter, irony, passion, and soaring imaginative power. 
Janet Maslin: There are also two kinds of writers given to the verbal tangents and cartwheels and curlicues that adorn Ms. Krauss's vertiginously exciting second novel: those whose pyrotechnics lead somewhere and those who are merely showing off. While there are times when Ms. Krauss's gamesmanship risks overpowering her larger purpose, her book's resolution pulls everything that precedes it into sharp focus. It has been headed for this moment of truth all along.
Links, Nuruddin Farah
Farah is a Somali novelist, who won the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1998, lives in exile in South Africa but, in his fiction, regularly returns to probe the “Dantean complexity” of his homeland. In his ninth novel, an exiled Somali dissident named Jeebleh goes back to Mogadishu after more than twenty years to search for his mother’s grave and to settle old scores in the noxious hodgepodge of clan-based militias, warlords, and trigger-happy American soldiers. Jeebleh, now a university professor in New York with an American wife and two daughters, expects that his voyage will reinforce the great divide between his new life and the violent inhabitants of the “city of death.” Instead, after the abduction of a friend’s daughter, he discovers his own capacity for violence and his thirst for “justice, by any means possible.”
Katherine

The Elegance of the Hedgehog, Muriel Barbery
[Renee Michel and Paloma Josse] provide the double narrative of The Elegance of the Hedgehog, and you will—this is going to sound corny—fall in love with both. In Europe, where Muriel Barbery's book became a huge bestseller in 2007, it has inspired the kind of affection and enthusiasm American readers bestow on the works of Alexander McCall Smith. Still, this is a very French novel: tender and satirical in its overall tone, yet most absorbing because of its reflections on the nature of beauty and art, the meaning of life and death. Out of context, Madame Michel's pensees may occasionally sound pretentious, just as Paloma might sometimes pass for a Gallic (and female) version of Holden Caulfield. But, for the most part, Barbery makes us believe in these two unbelievable characters. (Washington Post)
Unbroken, Laura Hillenbrand
From the bestselling author of Seabiscuit, comes Unbroken, the inspiring true story of a man who lived through a series of catastrophes almost too incredible to be believed. In evocative, immediate descriptions, Hillenbrand unfurls the story of Louie Zamperini--a juvenile delinquent-turned-Olympic runner-turned-Army hero. During a routine search mission over the Pacific, Louie’s plane crashed into the ocean, and what happened to him over the next three years of his life is a story that will keep you glued to the pages, eagerly awaiting the next turn in the story and fearing it at the same time. You’ll cheer for the man who somehow maintained his selfhood and humanity despite the monumental degradations he suffered, and you’ll want to share this book with everyone you know. --Juliet Disparte
Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens
Set in London and Paris before and during the French Revolution. With well over 200 million copies sold, it ranks among the most famous works in the history of fictional literature. The novel depicts the plight of the French peasantry demoralized by the French aristocracy in the years leading up to the revolution, the corresponding brutality demonstrated by the revolutionaries toward the former aristocrats in the early years of the revolution, and many unflattering social parallels with life in London during the same time period. It follows the lives of several protagonists through these events. The most notable are Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton. Darnay is a French once-aristocrat who falls victim to the indiscriminate wrath of the revolution despite his virtuous nature, and Carton is a dissipated British barrister who endeavours to redeem his ill-spent life out of his unrequited love for Darnay's wife, Lucie Manette.
Murder in the Cathedral, T. S. Eliott
A drama in verse that portrays the assassination of Archbishop Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170, first performed in 1935. Eliot drew heavily on the writing of Edward Grim, a clerk who was an eyewitness to the event. The play, dealing with an individual's opposition to authority, was written at the time of rising Fascism in Central Europe, and can be taken as a protest to individuals in affected countries to oppose the Nazi regime's subversion of the ideals of the Christian Church.


Kathy

Kerry

The Tiger's Wife, Tea Obreht
Winner of the 2011 Orange Prize 
Weaving a brilliant latticework of family legend, loss, and love, Téa Obreht, the youngest of The New Yorker’s twenty best American fiction writers under forty, has spun a timeless novel that will establish her as one of the most vibrant, original authors of her generation. 
In a Balkan country mending from years of conflict, Natalia, a young doctor, arrives on a mission of mercy at an orphanage by the sea. By the time she and her lifelong friend Zóra begin to inoculate the children there, she feels age-old superstitions and secrets gathering everywhere around her. Secrets her outwardly cheerful hosts have chosen not to tell her. Secrets involving the strange family digging for something in the surrounding vineyards. Secrets hidden in the landscape itself. But Natalia is also confronting a private, hurtful mystery of her own: the inexplicable circumstances surrounding her beloved grandfather’s recent death. 
Cutting for Stone, Abraham Verghese
Marion and Shiva Stone are twin brothers born of a secret union between a beautiful Indian nun and a brash British surgeon. Orphaned by their mother’s death and their father’s disappearance, bound together by a preternatural connection and a shared fascination with medicine, the twins come of age as Ethiopia hovers on the brink of revolution. Moving from Addis Ababa to New York City and back again, Cutting for Stone is an unforgettable story of love and betrayal, medicine and ordinary miracles—and two brothers whose fates are forever intertwined.
Middlemarch, George Elliot
One of the best-loved works of the nineteenth century, Middlemarch explores the complex social relationships in a town that moves and breathes with a life of its own.Strangled by the confining terms of her late husband's will, an idealistic young woman throws herself into the struggle for medical reforms advocated by a visionary doctor. Considered by many to be Eliot's finest work and one of the best novels in English ever written.

Ruth

Steph

Death Comes for the Archbishop, Willa Cather
There is something epic -- and almost mythic -- about this sparsely beautiful novel. . . In 1851, Father Latour comes as the Apostolic Vicar to New Mexico.  What he finds is a vast territory of red hills and tortuous arroyos, American by law but Mexican and Indian in custom and belief.  In the forty years that follow, Latour spread his faith in the only way he knows -- gently, although he must contend with derelict and sometimes openly rebellious priests and his own loneliness.
The Three Mustketeers, Alexandre Dumas
The three muskateers -- Athos, Porthos, and Aramis -- are the most daring swordsmen in France, bodyguards to the king who fight to the death.  When d'Artagnan, a brash young man from the countryside, comes to Paris to join their ranks, they become the greatest friends of his life.  And when a villainous plot is hatched against the queen by the sly Cardinal Richelieu and the seductive spy Milady, the four dashing blades must save them -- at any cost.
Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro
Man Booker Prize Finalist from the author of Remains of the Day (which was made into one of my all-time favorite movies starring Emma Thompson and Anthony Hopkins).  Never Let Me Go tells the story of people who became friends in boarding school, a place of mercurial cliques and mysterious rules where teachers were constantly reminding their charges of how special they were.  Years later they reunite. 
A Gothic tour de force . . . . A tight, deftly controlled story . . . . Just as accomplished as The Remains of the Day and, in a very different way, just as melancholy and alarming.  (New York Times) 
Cleopatra, A Life, Stacy Schiff
Best Book of the Year, New York Times 2010.  Stacy Schiff is a Pulitzer Prize winning author.  Nonfiction.
At the height of her power, Cleopatra controlled virtually the entire eastern Mediterranean coast, the last great kingdom of an Egyptian ruler.  She was a shrewd strategist and an ingenious negotiator.  She was married twice, each time to a brother.  She waged a brutal civil war against the first and poisoned the second; incest and assassination were family specialties.  She had children by Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony, two of the most prominent Roman commanders of the day.  With Anthony, she would attempt to forge a new empire, in an alliance that spelled both their ends.   She died at 39, a generation before Jesus' birth.
Hamlet, Shakespeare


Life, Keith Richards








Susan

Suzanne

On Chesil Beach, Ian McEwan
Ian McEwan's emotionally charged novel follows an inexperienced young couple through their disastrous wedding night at a Dorset hotel in 1962. Very much in love, Edward and Florence are predictably nervous, but for different reasons. He longs to consummate the marriage; she is repelled by the very idea. Locked in their inhibitions and utterly unable to discuss their fears and needs, they are victims not only of personal experience but of a distinctively British brand of repression destined to crumble in the sexual revolution. "This breathtaking novel takes on subjects of universal interest -- innocense and naivete, self-delusion, desire and repression, opportunity lost of rejected -- and creates a small but complete universe around them. McEwan's prose is as masterly as ever, here striking a remarkably subtle balance between detachment and sympaty, dry wit and deep compassion. It reaffirms my conviction that no one writing in English surpasses or even matches McEwan's accomplishment." (Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post)
Case Histories, Kate Atkinson
The best mystery of the decade. (Stephen King)
A triumphant new novel from award-winner Kate Atkinson: a breathtaking story of families divided, love lost and found, and the mysteries of fate. Breaking detective-thriller form, Case Histories is told from multiple points of view, reducing the burden on Jackson to "solve" the crimes for us and letting each character bloom in the light of the author's sharp, observant prose. That's something that the genre's hard-boiled forefathers would never have don; for them, the rationcinative novel was a one-man job, and sympathetic characters just gummed up the works. Atkinson, though, seems to have intuied that hte most compelling mystery of all isn't necessarily whodunit, but rather howtodealwithin. (Jeff Turrentine, Washington Post)
Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys
Jean Rhys's reputation was made upon the publication of this passionate and heartbreaking novel, in which she brings into the light one of fiction's most myterious characters; the madwoman in the attic from Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. A sensual and protected young woman, Antoinette Cosway grows up in the lush natural world of the Caribbean. She is sold into marriage to the coldhearted and prideful Rochester, who succumbs to his need for money and his lust. Yet he will make her pay for her ancestors' sins of slaveholding, excessive drinking, and nihilistic despair by enslaving her as a prisoner in his bleak English home. In this best-selling novel Rhys portrays a society so driven by hatred, so skewed in its sexual relations, that it can literally drive a woman out of her mind.
God of Carnage, Yasmina Reza
What happens when two sets of parents meet up to deal with the unruly behavior of their children? A calm and national debate between grown-ups about the need to teach kids how to behave properly? Or a hysterical night of name-calling, tantrums, and tears before bedtime? Christopher Hampton's translation of Yasmina Reza's sharp-edged new play The God of Carnage premiered at Wyndham's Theatre, London, in March 200 and at Bernard B. Jacobs Theater, New York City, in March 2009. The International Heral Tribune calls it "an expert piece of stagecraft, and savagely funny.

September 25, 2011

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