1. True Grit by Charles Portis
2. I Await the Devil's Coming by Mary MacLane
What do you do when, like Mary MacLane, you are born with the heart and mind of a warrior, a conqueror, but are also the butt of the cruel joke that made you a woman and confined you to the late nineteenth century when your only outlets are likely to be marriage and child-rearing? You rail against fate as well as you can. But it is ever enough?
3. Alone: The Classic Polar Adventure by Admiral Richard E. Byrd
I love a good polar adventure and this is almost that. I love a well-written nineteenth century narrative and this is also that. Byrd spent almost six months (March through August) alone in a small cabin in the Antarctic, cut off from anyone by the inhospitable polar winter. Only a few weeks in, the heater in the cabin malfunctioned and poisonous carbon monoxide gas became his constant companion. He survived, just barely, by going without heat for much of the day (even when temperatures dropped below -170) and living with the effects of carbon monoxide poisoning the rest of the time. He was eventually rescued by a group of men who risked their lives to save his.
4. An Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett
Cute, I guess. A quick read.
Scott was kind of a jerk, but these journals have been edited with an eye toward crafting a more inspiring explorer. Lots of nuts and bolts stuff about the expedition, but also some interesting stories. (One of my favorites is about a group of eight killer whales that broke through a two-foot thick ice floe while hunting a group of staked sled dogs). Scott of course died on his quest to be the first to reach the South Pole, but his greater disappointment was probably the news that reached him only days before sailing for Antartica: Roald Amundson, a Norwegian explorer, had planted Norway's flag at the pole. Scott went anyway, died there anyway, and his journals were retrieved and sent to his widow. I bogged down in this book and abandoned it about 300 pages in, when they hadn't even started for the pole. I'll pick it up again though, I'm sure.
I bought this because it won a Pulitzer Prize. (That'll teach me.) It is a collection of very well written but not very interesting stories that reminded me of the British TV show that starred Martin Clunes, Doc Martin. I abandoned this book about a third of the way in.
5. Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times,
6. Call the Midwife: Shadows of the Workhouse,
7. Call the Midwife: Farewell to the East End by Jennifer Worth
Worth's trio of autobiographical books have recently been turned into a hyper-nostalgic series on the BBC that I watched based on the recommendation of an online stranger. (I like the series, despite the sometimes sappy sentimentality.) The books are, of course, far better than the TV series. They paint an unfamiliar picture of a familiar time in history: Just after WWII a young woman becomes a nurse and midwife and goes to work with a group of similarly trained nuns in the overcrowded, poverty-stricken East End of London. We hear many stories about the after-effects of the last world war on young men, but we almost never hear about how it affected young women. This book gives a glimpse of that. I'm also ever-curious about London's East End as it existed in that time in history, as a Cockney stronghold.
8. Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail by Cheryl Strayed
I loved it in so many ways, but I think Cheryl Strayed must be (must have been then?) kind of hard to take in person. A relatively quick read--I stayed up all night to finish it--but I will admit that I skipped right over the part where she and her brother have to kill her dead mother's aging, ailing horse.
9. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald*
Yes, of course I've read it before, many, many times. In fact, had a great love affair with the works of Fitzgerald when I was in my late teens/early 20s. Still, it's been almost 20 years since I read it. Fitzgerald can turn a phrase and do it deftly enough that if you follow the curve of the sentence you might almost miss the deeper sentiment behind it. I still like him, despite his fascination with the amoral rich. (That mirrors our own generation's fascination with the amoral rich, I guess.)
10. The Enchanted April by Elizabeth Von Arnim^
I'd seen the movie (twice, actually) and really liked it. I had no idea it was a novel though and was pleasantly surprised to find that out--and also to find that it was a free download from Amazon. I'm about half-way through it now, but it is a quick, pleasant read.
*-Re-read
**-Finishing a previously shamefully abandoned book
***-Begun and shamelessly abandoned
^-Kindled
2 comments:
Someone loaned me Wild a long time ago... have yet to pick it up... have heard mixed reviews (not that that has ever stopped me before). Funny, all the books I have lying around, the ones I read and the one's I don't. The timing just has to be right I guess.
I LOVED True Grit too.. the original John Wayne version. Now that I've been reminded, I feel the need to go find the book in the library!
Treasure Island is despicable. But somehow I like it. xo
Hola, Laurita! Yeah, I think whether or not your love Wild is dependent on how many stupid (and sometimes near-fatally so) mistakes you made in your 20s--? CS walks her own path for sure. That can be frustrating if you're the type (like me) who wants everyone to live right. A worthy read anyway, I thought!
Despicable but likeable...hmmm...probably describes some of the best friends I've ever had! :D
Post a Comment