Monday, May 14, 2012

Behind the Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo ✔✔✔

I read this book over a couple of months, then finally finished it - not because I didn't like it, but I was reading a couple of others at the same time.

This is non-fiction, but the author spent so much time "Behind the Beautiful Forevers" ( a slum are behind the Beautiful Forevers Airport in Mumbai) that it reads like a novel - one of the most effective approaches I've seen to non-fiction investigative reporting that I've read in a long time.

What a life these people lead.  There are no rescues, like those in "Slumdog Millionaire" - it's just everyday garbage picking as a slum industry, living packed in like sardines, with  scary descriptions of brushes with the law, being kicked or beaten at will..... sometimes hard to read, but very well-done.

Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children ✔✔

I hope this makes it to my blog - I hate it when things are changed.
I bought this book in New Liskeard - seduced by the title and cover yet again.  It's a book for young adults - interesting because there are photographs that the author collected from all over the place and used in the book to illustrate the story.
It was a bit fantastic, but imaginative, and, most importnat right now, it was short!
I'll probably donate it to the Library.

Monday, May 7, 2012

The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley

I first read this book over 10 years ago, since it was given to me by the host of a B&B where Mike and I had stayed. She just didn't like it, but had been assured it was a good one, so I gladly brought it home with me, read it, and declared it a real favorite.

I've always been intrigued by the Arthurian legends, since my mother introduced me to the books of Mary Stewart, which were all based on Merlin and his magical powers. Mists of Avalon presented the story from the point of view of the Lady of the Lake, and emphasized the goddess philosophy, the struggle between Christianity and the religion of the goddess, within the story of Arthur, so I just lapped this up. I've since loaned the book to several other people, and all of them enjoyed it too.

Our last theme in Book Club is the Arthurian legend, so I decided to re-read Mists, and I enjoyed it once again, although not as deeply as the first reading. First of all, I've read several VERY long books this year, and I guess I'm just tired of them. The stories in the book are interesting, and Bradley presents a much different view , for example, of Morgaine, Arthur's sister,than the TV series on CBC earlier this year, but the in-between parts were just too tedious, and I found myself skipping sections or skimming, which of course resulted in a headache the next morning - my eyes just don't like skipping.

Anyway, that's all I have to say. about that - I'll save my viewpoints and such for Book Club this Saturday! Just out of interest, and also to put my head in place for the discussion, I'll be talking about the differences between this interpretation of the legend, and that of both Thomas Malory, who wrote La Morte d'Arthur - which I have on my Kindle - and the CBC production of Camelot, which refreshed it all in my mind this past summer. I'll also talk about how Guinevere is such a prig! And compare this legend to those of the Greeks and the Christians.