Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Classics Challenge January Prompt


As part of the Classics Challenge, I have started reading Walden, by Henry David Thoreau.  I just now discovered he was actually born David Henry Thoreau.


He was born July 12, 1817, and for a while lived on Walden Pond (below), where he built himself a little cabin.



Other books he wrote include:   
    Resistance to Civil Government, or Civil Disobedience (1849)
    Slavery in Massachusetts (1854)
    The Maine Woods (1864)
    A Yankee in Canada, with Anti-Slavery and Reform Papers (1866)

Interesting/random fact about Thoreau:  His father was a pencil maker, and for some years, Thoreau worked at his family’s pencil factory.

*Note:  Pictures and facts from Wikipedia.
   

Friday, December 30, 2011

2012 Challenge!

I have decided to sign up for a challenge, and I'm very excited!  I'm signing up for the Classics Challenge hosted by November's Autum. 

Here’s a list of some classics I hope to read this year.  I know there are more than seven.  I will choose seven from this list, depending on which ones I find first.   And who knows, I may end up reading them all.
  • The Scapegoat (D. du Maurier) – I bought this at a book sale and it’s been sitting on my bookshelf for far too long! 
  • Crime and Punishment (F. Dostoevsky) – I read The Brothers Karamazov when I was in high school.  It’s about time I read another book by this author. 
  • A Passage to India (E.M. Forster) – I’ve heard some mixed reviews about this one and want to see what I will think about this book.  I've read and enjoyed other books he's written, so we’ll see. 
  • Lady Susan (J. Austen) – I love Jane Austen!  I’ve read her other six novels several times, so it’s about time I read this one! 
  • Walden (H.D. Thoreau) – This book was mentioned in Rules of Civility, a book I really enjoyed reading.  I’ve been curious about Walden ever since then. 
  • Excellent Women (B. Pym) – I read Some Tame Gazelle and enjoyed it, so I want to give another of her books a try. 
  • Miss Marjoriebanks (M. Oliphant) – It’s been on my TBR list for a really, really long time.  
  • Daniel Deronda (G. Eliot) – I like George Eliot and have already read most of her books, but still haven’t read this one.  
  • The Last Chronicle of Barset (A. Trollope) – As the title suggests, it is the last book in the Barsethire series.  I’ve already read the previous ones, so I should really read this one. 
  • Can You Forgive Her? (A. Trollope) – This is the first book in the Pallisers series, and I thought it might be a good one to try once I finished with the Barsetshire ones. 
  • Lady Anna (A. Trollope) – I really, really liked the other stand-alone novel I read by Trollope (The Way We Live Now), so I wanted to try another of his stand-alone ones.

Reviews, short and sweet (part 2)

So since the last time I posted, I have moved apartments, and gone on two trips.  Needless to say, I’ve been pretty busy.  I have three short reviews here.
 
My Life with the Saints, by J. Martin

I read James Martin’s The Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything and really, really liked it (see previous post).  So, I looked up what other books he had written, and decided to start with My Life with the Saints. 

 
A quick summary: In this book, every chapter is dedicated to a different saint who inspired Martin.  He talks about the saint and his/her life, and also shares stories from his own life. 

This is the first time I read anything that talks about saints – this is a topic I pretty much knew nothing about until I read this book.  I have to say I was pleasantly surprised.  Martin talks about the saints as people, and describes how they came to follow God and how they have helped him deepen his faith in various ways.  As a Christian, I’m always interested in learning about other people’s paths in the faith – how they came to know God, what (if any) obstacles they faced, and how they learned to completely rely on God.  One of the reasons I liked this book was that each chapter in a way introduced me to another Christian, and from each one, I could learn something about what it means to follow and love God.  Reading this book has made me want to try to find other books that talk about other Christians’ paths to God.  Luckily, Martin provides a nice list of book suggestions – I may start by reading some of those.

The Marriage Plot, by J. Eugenides

I enjoyed reading this book, although somehow the ending didn’t really feel like an ending to me.  I’m not sure what ending I was expecting, but I felt like I wanted something more. 

A quick summary:  Madeleine, Leonard, and Mitchell are undergraduates at Brown, in the 1980s.  The book starts out on graduation day, but has some flashbacks that tell you what happened to the characters throughout the four years of their studies.  The book then goes on to tell what happened after graduation. 

I thought overall, the book was well written, and I definitely enjoyed that.  Madeleine is an English major, so there are references to books that I think book lovers will enjoy (I know I did!).  There were some R-rated scenes throughout, which I did not like.  I never understand why authors think those are necessary, but maybe that’s just me.  Besides that and my issue with the ending, I did enjoy the book.  Once I started it I wanted to keep going until I finished it. 

Three Men in a Boat, by J.K. Jerome

I had never heard about this book until recently, when I started to read about it in other people’s blogs.  I enjoyed it very much!

A quick summary:  Three friends and their dog decide they want a little vacation, in the form of sailing along the Thames.  The book talks about their preparations for this trip and describes the things that happened on this trip.  The narrator also shares stories of things that had happened to him and his friends at different points in their lives.

Even though the different bloggers seemed to enjoy the book, I was a bit skeptical.  But once I started reading, I realized why the book had such positive reviews.  It’s really entertaining!  The narrator talks about his friends and their experiences in a way that’s interesting for the readers.  He was also, in my opinion, pretty funny.  It really was a good read, and it’s a book I would recommend.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Reviews, short and sweet


I am a bit sad to be back from vacation.  Luckily, Christmas is only a few weeks away.  Besides still being tired from traveling, I’m moving next week, so every free minute needs to be spent on packing! So, today’s reviews are short and sweet.   I read three books on my trip:

Crossing the Threshold of Hope, by Pope John Paul II
In this book, a journalist/author asks the Pope some questions, and the book is set up so that typically, each chapter is the Pope’s answer to one of the questions.  I enjoyed this book very much, and I definitely learned a lot.  There were several quotes I liked, but will only include two in this post:

“It is also necessary that the young know the Church, that they perceive Christ in the Church, Christ who walks through the centuries alongside each generation, alongside every person.  He walks alongside each person as a friend.  An important day in a young person’s life is the day on which he becomes convinced that this is the only Friend who will not disappoint him, on whom he can always count.” (p.126)

“In the very search for faith an implicit faith is already present, and therefore the necessary condition for salvation is already satisfied.” (p.193)


Every Living Thing, by James Herriot
The last of the Herriot books!  Great, as always.  The stories are always either funny or heartwarming, always enjoyable.  The animals and people we read about are such that I wish I could actually meet them! 

A Study in Scarlet, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
This is the first Sherlock Holmes I have read, and I liked it.  The first and third portions of the book are narrated by Dr. Watson, and the middle portion is an omniscient narrator.  I found the mystery to be entertaining, and I was definitely curious to find out both who the murderer was and how Sherlock Holmes solved the mystery.  Overall, I thought it was a nice read.  It’s also a very quick read, it didn’t take me long to finish it.  I think I will definitely try some other Sherlock Holmes novels.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Surprised by Joy - by C.S. Lewis


A quick summary:  C.S. Lewis talks about his life (in a memoir-ish type of way), and how he eventually converted to Christianity.

This is the second time I read this book.  The first time I read it was several years ago, before I had read any of his nonfiction.  I didn’t enjoy it much back then.  This time, I enjoyed it a lot more, and I think it is because I’ve already read and enjoyed many of his nonfiction books.  This time, reading about his life has helped me better understand him as a person and as a Christian author, and has made me better understand his books and his approach to writing about Christianity.  His books are always so rational – he seems to always try to prove every point he makes, approaching Christianity and faith from a very logical (for lack of a better word) standpoint.  I think this is great, as sometimes we want (and need) to learn about faith from this perspective.

Some quotes I liked:

“Hence while friendship has been by far the chief source of my happiness, acquaintance or general society has always meant little to me, and I cannot quite understand why a man should wish to know more people than he can make real friends of.”  (p.32-33) – I totally agree.  For me, friends and acquaintances are very different things, and while there may be many acquaintances, there are only a few friends.

“What I like about experience is that it is such an honest thing.  You may take any number of wrong turnings; but keep your eyes open and you will not be allowed to go very far before the warning signs appear.  You may have deceived yourself, but experience is not trying to deceive you.  The universe rings true wherever you fairly test it.” (p.177)

“For the first time I examined myself with a seriously practical purpose.  And there I found what appalled me; a zoo of lusts, a bedlam of ambitions, a nursery of fears, a harem of fondled hatreds.  My name was legion.” (p.226)

“Doubtless, by definition, God was Reason itself.  But would He also be ‘reasonable’ in that other, more comfortable, sense?  Not the slightest assurance on that score was offered me.  Total surrender, the absolute leap in the dark, were demanded.  The reality with which no treaty can be made was upon me.  The demand was not even ‘All or nothing.’  …Now, the demand was simply ‘All.’” (p.228)

“I did not see then what is now the most shining and obvious thing; the Divine humility which will accept a convert even on such terms.  The Prodigal Son at least walked home on his own feet.  But who can duly adore that Love which will open the high gates to a prodigal who is brought in kicking, struggling, resentful, and darting his eyes in every direction for a chance of escape?...The hardness of God is kinder than the softness of men, and His compulsion is our liberation.” (p.229)  Awesome!!

What I’m reading next: I haven’t decided yet…I’m actually leaving for a two-week vacation this week (yeah!), which means I will either read a lot, or not read much at all.  But I will bring some books in case it turns out to be the former.