Katie.Loves.Books

Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed on and digested. -Francis Bacon

Happy New Year! January 2, 2008

Filed under: Books, News — Kate @ 11:21 am

I hope you all have had simply wonderful holidays.  I passed many fun hours with family, did much reading, and (obviously) did not do much blogging about said books.  Oops!  I did a little fun reading (Lee Child, Tami Hoag) and some great reading (The Sixteen Pleasures, Tallgrass) – I promise to write about the latter soon.

In the meantime, I wanted to share an excerpt from US News & World Report.  This magazine recently published a list of “50 Things You Can Do to Improve Your Life in 2008.”  Guess what one of the things was: READ!

Find a Book Worth Talking About

by Diane Cole

In his oh-so-ironic How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read, French Prof. Pierre Bayard has made an international bestseller out of something that a new study shows Americans don’t need instruction in: not reading. At all ages, we’re reading less often and less well, according to the National Endowment for the Arts’ “To Read or Not to Read,” and the consequences sting.

Richard Robb of Mayo helped develop this ‘vision dome’ to immerse doctors in a scan, letting them travel through the insides of a heart.

More than income, social class, or education, says NEA Chairman Dana Gioia, the more you read, the greater likelihood that you will do well in school, be successful in business, and become involved in your community. The bottom line, he says: “Reading allows us to achieve more of our personal potential than almost any other activity.”

Neuroscience further backs up those contentions, says Tufts University child development Prof. Maryanne Wolfe. “Reading not only creates its own circuitry within the brain; that circuitry gives us the capacity to go beyond the text to new thoughts of our own,” says Wolfe, author of Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain. “My worry is that our children’s and our societal immersion into the ever more immediate, digital presentation format for text will short-circuit” part of that ability.

The antidote: Read on. These acclaimed books of 2007 will teach you how to…

Talk about politics by talking about history. In American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the Republic, historian Joseph Ellis recounts six critical episodes between the cusp of the Revolutionary War in 1775 and the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. By illuminating the arguments, compromises, and competing ideas of that time, Ellis provides contemporary insight into why these same issues perplex us today, in the form of partisan bickering among the government branches.

Talk about journeys you wouldn’t dare take. Combine armchair travel with time travel, add a splash of history and a large dose of adventure, and you’ll have a notion of Shadow of the Silk Road by British author Colin Thubron. Starting in Xian, China (in the midst of the 2002 SARS virus epidemic), and ending in the Turkish port once known as Antioch—the intrepid Thubron chronicles a contemporary trip, some 7,000 miles long, on the antique Silk Road trade route leading from Asia to the Mediterranean. The result: a sweeping yet unsettling portrait of lands amid political, social, and cultural upheaval.

Talk about the Bible, whatever your beliefs. Ancient commentators interpreted the Bible through the lens of tradition and faith; contemporary biblical scholars, versed in the science of archaeology, construe different meanings and intent. Where does that leave the modern reader? In How to Read the Bible: A Guide to Scripture, Then and Now, former Harvard Prof. James Kugel explains the arguments from both sides and in so doing brings us back to the Bible itself.

Talk about war and peace, as well as War and Peace. Ten years of teaching future soldiers at West Point taught English Prof. Elizabeth Samet how necessary books are for helping these young men and women think about their future, she writes in Soldier’s Heart: Reading Literature Through Peace and War at West Point. One favorite that comes up for discussion: Tolstoy’s War and Peace—which was also favored this year by two new translations.

Talk about loss and being lost. In A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, Ishmael Beah tells the harrowing tale of how civil war turned his idyllic village childhood in Sierra Leone into a nightmare life as a marauding child soldier. He gives witness to horror—and provides proof that rehabilitation is also possible. Another extraordinary memoir, Edwidge Danticat’s Brother, I’m Dying, records the toll Haiti’s civil war took on the author’s family, both in their native land and in their country of refuge, America.

 

The Sleeping Beauty Proposal by Sarah Strohmeyer November 13, 2007

Filed under: Books, Chick Lit — Kate @ 1:01 am

When I was young, I read voraciously.  I read everything I could get my hands on… as long as it was an easy read, a great story, by a modern-day author, and something my Mom or Aunt Sue would label “Trash.”  (Yes, with a capital “T.”)

 My older self reddens as I admit that I was a romance-novel addict.  They were fun, quick, and easy to lose myself in their fantasty worlds of bodice-ripping rowdiness.

After reading a few “heavier” books, I’m still drawn to these chick lit books – not just romances, but mysteries.  I’m a love-to-dog-him reader of James Patterson, a huge Mary Higgins Clark fan, and noncommittal-but-always-willing-to-try anyone else with an intriguing dust jacket.

And yet, all too often these days I’m left disappointed with choices from this past favored genre.  The latest?  “The Sleeping Beauty Proposal” by Sarah Strohmeyer.  In this cute book, an admissions counselor watches her beau of four years giving an interview on TV and then proposing to the love of his life – imagine her surprise when she learns he didn’t mean her.  Our heroine of the hour decides to keep her mouth shut and enjoys being “engaged” while ex-boyfriend spends the summer and abroad.  Oh the hilarity that follows!

The plot had no holes and Ms. Strohmeyer’s heroine was comical and sweet – I don’t actually have anything bad to say about this novel.  It’s just that for me, I’m left feeling a little frustrated at myself that I wasted a few precious hours reading this instead of choosing to pick up “A Thousand Splendid Suns,” “Ireland,” or “Gone With the Wind” – all current choices on my “MUST READ” list.

It’s interesting how tastes change over time…  Happy reading!

 

The gift that keeps on giving August 19, 2007

Filed under: Books, Library, Ryan — Kate @ 6:19 pm

Last Christmas, Ryan & I decided we needed to be “creative” (read frugal) in our gift giving.  I’ve got to tell you – I can’t even recall what I came up with for him, but Ryan’s gift to me was (break: I’ve been sitting here for the last five minutes trying to find the right words to describe how the gift was so…) perfect.

Ryan got me a library card.

 Simple right?  Except that on a personal note, this was, as Meg Ryan said in ‘You’ve Got Mail,’ “Mr. 152 insights into my soul!”  Ryan knows how much I love to read and that I don’t read near as much as I’d like because we can’t afford every  book I want.  Plus, he knows that I can be a little lazy… so in addition to the card, the gift came with a promise that he would do all the picking up and returning for me!  My only responsibility (besides choosing the books) would be to make sure I keep track of when they’re due so we don’t get late fees.

So for the last eight months, you could usually find my nightstand piled with four, six, or even eight books at a time.  I’ve read more wonderful books than I can count – or sometimes remember.  And that’s the problem!  I’m reading so quickly that I want to make sure I take the time to think about what I’m reading and remember the details.  That way, not only do I retain the stories and lessons – but I also have more to pass on to YOU!

 So next time you feel like picking up a good book and would like a suggestion from a friend, drop by and take a look at what I’ve been reading.  And please – if you have any recommendations, pass those on, too!

 

Books I’ve read (2007) August 19, 2007

Filed under: Books, Reading List — Kate @ 3:39 pm

I’ll keep this post updated with titles as I finish each book this year.  Assume if there’s no comments that it was pretty decent – if it’s amazing or horrible, I’ll note that!

Lottery by Patricia Wood

The Other Mother by Gwendolen Gross 

The Sleeping Beauty Proposal by Sarah Strohmeyer

The Agony & The Ecstasy by Irving Stone 

Mad Dash by Patricia Gaffney

Dedication by McLaughlin & Kraus

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

Harry Potter & the Deathly Hollows by J.K. Rowling 

Gods in Alabama by Joshilyn Jackson

Beyond the Blonde by Kathleen Flynn-Hui

Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner

The Collectors by David Baldacci 

Skylight Confessions by Alice Hoffman

Ricochet by Sandra Brown

Wicked by Gregory Maguire

The Red Tent byAnita Diamant (goes into my top 5 booklist)

Queen of Babble by Meg Cabot

A Good Year by Peter Mayle

Can’t Wait to Get to Heaven by Fannie Flagg

Suite Fraincaise by Irene Nemirovsky

Bad Blood by Linda Fairstein

I Like Being Catholic edited by Michael Leach and Therese J. Borchard

Autobiography of a fat bride : true tales of a pretend adulthood by Laurie Notaro

The enemy : a Jack Reacher novel by Lee Child

The Ruins by Scott Smith (I really can’t let you read this one! Not a favorite.)

Body Surfing by Anita Shreve

Little Children by Tom Perrotta

Cesar’s way : the natural, everyday guide to understanding and
     correcting common dog problems
by Cesar Millan (Sorry, Riley still barks & jumps – but I think that’s more Ry & my fault than Cesar or Riley!)

Forever in blue : the fourth summer of the Sisterhood by Ann Brashares

Simple Genius by David Baldacci

The Good Guy by Dean Koontz

Bad luck and trouble : a Jack Reacher novel by Lee Child (this was my favorite Jack Reacher tale)

The Quickie by James Patterson (the fact that I read this further proves the glutton for punishment theory)

Persuader : a Jack Reacher novel by Lee Child

Case Histories: a Novel by Kate Atkinson

Love Walked In by Marisa de los Santos 

Natural Born Charmer by Susan Elizabeth Phillips

The Post-Birthday World by Lionel Shriver (I just finished this – will do a post about it this week)