Eveline's bookshelf: favorites en-US Sat, 16 Dec 2023 09:54:13 -0800 60 Eveline's bookshelf: favorites 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg <![CDATA[My Private Property (Wave Books, 61)]]> 29363291 Madness, Rack, and Honey ("One of the wisest books I've read in years," according to the New York Times) and Trances of the Blast, Mary Ruefle continues to be one of the most dazzling poets in America. My Private Property, comprised of short prose pieces, is a brilliant and charming display of her humor, deep imagination, mindfulness, and play in a finely crafted edition.

Personalia

When I was young, a fortune-teller told me that an old woman who wanted to die had accidentally become lodged in my body. Slowly, over time, and taking great care in following esoteric instructions, including lavender baths and the ritual burial of keys in the backyard, I rid myself of her presence. Now I am an old woman who wants to die and lodged inside me is a young woman dying to live; I work on her.]]>
128 Mary Ruefle 1940696380 Eveline 0 favorites 4.33 2016 My Private Property (Wave Books, 61)
author: Mary Ruefle
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.33
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at: 2023/11/01
date added: 2023/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:

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The Ballad of the Sad Café 282646 The Ballad of the Sad Café, a tale of unrequited love, Miss Amelia, a spirited, unconventional woman, runs a small-town store and, except for a marriage that lasted just ten days, has always lived alone. Then Cousin Lymon appears from nowhere, a little, strutting hunchback who steals Miss Amelia's heart. Together they transform the store into a lively, popular café. But when her rejected husband Marvin Macy returns, the result is a bizarre love triangle that brings with it violence, hatred and betrayal.

Six stories by Carson McCullers also appear in this volume.]]>
141 Carson McCullers 0141183691 Eveline 5 favorites 3.78 1951 The Ballad of the Sad Café
author: Carson McCullers
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.78
book published: 1951
rating: 5
read at: 2011/11/07
date added: 2020/12/15
shelves: favorites
review:
My copy had "and other stories." Five stars to "The Ballad of the Sad Cafe," which was lovely and strange and austere in a way I find really resonant, 2-3 stars to the other stories, which lacked plot and felt more like sketches and notes for the beginnings of stories.
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Old School 753345
The agency of revelation is the school literary contest, whose winner will be awarded an audience with the most legendary writer of his time. As the fever of competition infects the boy and his classmates, fraying alliances, exposing weaknesses, Old School explores the ensuing deceptions and betrayals with an unblinking eye and a bottomless store of empathy. The result is further evidence that Wolff is an authentic American master.]]>
195 Tobias Wolff 0375701494 Eveline 5 favorites
That said, I wouldn't recommend this to everyone. I'd say maybe the first half is only interesting to pretty voracious writers/readers. It centers around a scholarship boy at a boarding school where everyone is obsessed with proving their worth through great writing, and is very much about writing and reading. It goes on at great length about Robert Frost, then Ayn Rand, then Ernest Hemingway, and the effect that reading those writers had on the narrator's outlook on and approach to life. I found it really engrossing but don't think everyone would. Actually it reminded me of "The Accidental Masterpiece" by the art critic Michael Kimmelman, which talks about different artists and ways of applying art to your life and demonstrating ways that it can serve as a sort of filter for experience. It felt like Wolff was doing the same thing here - talking about writers and demonstrating how reading could filter this boy's, and thus anyone's, view of the world.

By the second half, things take off - there's less explanation of the protagonists's interior thoughts and more plot, action, etc. Time speeds up and suddenly a million things happen in like ten pages and somehow the book is no longer simply about writing and reading, it's about EVERYTHING - all the fundamental questions of life, morality, truth, etc. etc. etc. (insert every other big abstract important word you can think of here.) I'm too overwhelmed by the amazingness to give a remotely coherent summary of it all but basically: yeah. Read this. Also Tobias Wolff is now my spirit guide.

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3.77 2003 Old School
author: Tobias Wolff
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.77
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2012/03/12
date added: 2012/03/13
shelves: favorites
review:
This was overwhelming. A punch to the gut, in the good way. And as seems to be typical for Wolff, based at least on the two books of his I've now read, so deceptively simple. There's so much happening, and it's so nuanced and complicated, and yet the language feels so plainspoken and straightforward and you have NO IDEA how it is he's doing so much with so little.

That said, I wouldn't recommend this to everyone. I'd say maybe the first half is only interesting to pretty voracious writers/readers. It centers around a scholarship boy at a boarding school where everyone is obsessed with proving their worth through great writing, and is very much about writing and reading. It goes on at great length about Robert Frost, then Ayn Rand, then Ernest Hemingway, and the effect that reading those writers had on the narrator's outlook on and approach to life. I found it really engrossing but don't think everyone would. Actually it reminded me of "The Accidental Masterpiece" by the art critic Michael Kimmelman, which talks about different artists and ways of applying art to your life and demonstrating ways that it can serve as a sort of filter for experience. It felt like Wolff was doing the same thing here - talking about writers and demonstrating how reading could filter this boy's, and thus anyone's, view of the world.

By the second half, things take off - there's less explanation of the protagonists's interior thoughts and more plot, action, etc. Time speeds up and suddenly a million things happen in like ten pages and somehow the book is no longer simply about writing and reading, it's about EVERYTHING - all the fundamental questions of life, morality, truth, etc. etc. etc. (insert every other big abstract important word you can think of here.) I'm too overwhelmed by the amazingness to give a remotely coherent summary of it all but basically: yeah. Read this. Also Tobias Wolff is now my spirit guide.


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Brooklyn (Eilis Lacey, #1) 4954833 Hauntingly beautiful and heartbreaking, Colm TĂłibĂ­n's sixth novel, Brooklyn, is set in Brooklyn and Ireland in the early 1950s, when one young woman crosses the ocean to make a new life for herself.

Eilis Lacey has come of age in small-town Ireland in the years following World War Two. Though skilled at bookkeeping, she cannot find a job in the miserable Irish economy. When an Irish priest from Brooklyn offers to sponsor Eilis in America--to live and work in a Brooklyn neighborhood "just like Ireland"--she decides she must go, leaving her fragile mother and her charismatic sister behind.

Eilis finds work in a department store on Fulton Street, and when she least expects it, finds love. Tony, a blond Italian from a big family, slowly wins her over with patient charm. He takes Eilis to Coney Island and Ebbets Field, and home to dinner in the two-room apartment he shares with his brothers and parents. He talks of having children who are Dodgers fans. But just as Eilis begins to fall in love with Tony, devastating news from Ireland threatens the promise of her future.]]>
262 Colm TĂłibĂ­n 1439138311 Eveline 5 favorites 3.71 2009 Brooklyn (Eilis Lacey, #1)
author: Colm TĂłibĂ­n
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.71
book published: 2009
rating: 5
read at: 2012/02/26
date added: 2012/02/26
shelves: favorites
review:
This was gorgeous. For the first 90% of the book I thought it was a well-written but pretty straightforward tale of immigration, and I enjoyed it but also didn't think it was anything special. Then I got to the end and it became so much more. I am wowed.
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This Boy's Life 11466 304 Tobias Wolff 0802136680 Eveline 5 favorites 3.97 1989 This Boy's Life
author: Tobias Wolff
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.97
book published: 1989
rating: 5
read at: 2012/01/01
date added: 2012/02/06
shelves: favorites
review:
This was amazing, and funny, and poignant, and yet so simple and plainspoken at all once - enough so that I have trouble even figuring out why it was so great. If I someday wrote a memoir that was about one-tenth as good as this then I could seriously die happy.
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A Pale View of Hills 28920 Librarian note: This a previously-published edition of ISBN 9780571225378.

In his highly acclaimed debut, A Pale View of Hills, Kazuo Ishiguro tells the story of Etsuko, a Japanese woman now living alone in England, dwelling on the recent suicide of her daughter. Retreating into the past, she finds herself reliving one particular hot summer in Nagasaki, when she and her friends struggled to rebuild their lives after the war. But then as she recalls her strange friendship with Sachiko - a wealthy woman reduced to vagrancy - the memories take on a disturbing cast.]]>
183 Kazuo Ishiguro Eveline 5 favorites 3.81 1982 A Pale View of Hills
author: Kazuo Ishiguro
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.81
book published: 1982
rating: 5
read at: 2011/12/12
date added: 2011/12/12
shelves: favorites
review:
Swoon. There is nothing new I can say about this. Just that I love Ishiguro, and this was beautiful and heartbreaking and yet so simple, all at once.
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<![CDATA[Becoming Americans: Four Centuries of Immigrant Writing: A Library of America Special Publication]]> 6927804
In nearly 100 selections—poems, stories, novel excerpts, travel pieces, diary entries, memoirs, and lettersâ€� Becoming Americans Ěýpresents the full range of the experience of coming to America: the reasons for departure, the journey itself, the shock and spectacle of first arrival, the passionate ambivalence toward the old country and the old life, and above all the struggle with the complexities of America. Arranged in chronological order by date of arrival, this unprecedented collection presents a history of the United States that is both familiar and surprisingly new, as seen through the fresh eyes and words of newcomers from more than forty different countries.]]>
850 Ilan Stavans 1598530518 Eveline 5 favorites 4.04 2009 Becoming Americans: Four Centuries of Immigrant Writing: A Library of America Special Publication
author: Ilan Stavans
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2009
rating: 5
read at: 2011/11/04
date added: 2011/11/03
shelves: favorites
review:
Fabulous and very wide-ranging collection of writings portraying both the negative and positive aspects of the immigrant experience, comprising fiction, poetry, and memoir. I was impressed too by the wide range of nationalities that were represented. Many of the memoir excerpts made me want to buy the full books.
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The Hours 11899 The Pulitzer Prize-winning novel that became a motion picture starring Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, and Nicole Kidman, directed by Stephen Daldry from a screenplay by David Hare.

In The Hours, Michael Cunningham, widely praised as one of the most gifted writers of his generation, draws inventively on the life and work of Virginia Woolf to tell the story of a group of contemporary characters struggling with the conflicting claims of love and inheritance, hope and despair. The narrative of Woolf's last days before her suicide early in World War II counterpoints the fictional stories of Samuel, a famous poet whose life has been shadowed by his talented and troubled mother, and his lifelong friend Clarissa, who strives to forge a balanced and rewarding life in spite of the demands of friends, lovers, and family.

Passionate, profound, and deeply moving, this is Cunningham's most remarkable achievement to date.]]>
230 Michael Cunningham 0312305060 Eveline 5 favorites Wow. 3.95 1998 The Hours
author: Michael Cunningham
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.95
book published: 1998
rating: 5
read at: 2011/11/02
date added: 2011/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:
Wow.
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<![CDATA[The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories]]> 49011 126 Angela Carter 014017821X Eveline 4 favorites 3.96 1979 The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories
author: Angela Carter
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.96
book published: 1979
rating: 4
read at: 1999/01/01
date added: 2011/10/23
shelves: favorites
review:
Angela Carter's prose starts getting waaay too ornate (I'm remembering lots of phrases that went something like, "inexorable spool of destiny" and the like) & you get sick of all the adjectives & she starts reusing some of the same metaphors in multiple stories, but overall I really like these.
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<![CDATA[Dreaming in Hindi: Coming Awake in Another Language]]> 6011287 An eye-opening and courageous memoir that explores what learning a new language can teach us about distant worlds and, ultimately, ourselves.

Ěý

After miraculously surviving a serious illness, Katherine Rich found herself at an impasse in her career as a magazine editor. She spontaneously accepted a freelance writing assignment to go to India, where she found herself thunderstruck by the place and the language, and before she knew it she was on her way to Udaipur, a city in the northwestern state of Rajasthan, in order to learn Hindi. Rich documents her experiences—ranging from the bizarre to the frightening to the unexpectedly exhilarating—using Hindi as the lens through which she is given a new perspective not only on India, but on the radical way the country and the language itself were changing her. Fascinated by the process, she went on to interview linguistics experts around the world, reporting back from the frontlines of the science wars on what happens in the brain when we learn a new language. She brings both of these experiences together seamlessly in Dreaming in Hindi, a remarkably unique and thoughtful account of self-discovery.
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384 Katherine Russell Rich 0618155457 Eveline 4 favorites 3.10 2009 Dreaming in Hindi: Coming Awake in Another Language
author: Katherine Russell Rich
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.10
book published: 2009
rating: 4
read at: 2010/02/01
date added: 2011/10/23
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[The Accidental Masterpiece: On the Art of Life and Vice Versa]]> 127629
Michael Kimmelman, the prominent New York Times writer and a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books, is known as a deep and graceful writer across the disciplines of art and music and also as a pianist who understands something about the artist's sensibility from the inside. Readers have come to expect him not only to fill in their knowledge about art but also to inspire them to think about connections between art and the larger world - which is to say, to think more like an artist. Kimmelman's many years of contemplating and writing about art have brought him to this wise, wide-ranging, and long-awaited book.
It explores art as life's great passion, revealing what we can learn of life through pictures and sculptures and the people who make them. It assures us that art - points of contact with the exceptional that are linked straight to the heart - can be found almost anywhere and everywhere if only our eyes are opened enough to recognize it. Kimmelman regards art, like all serious human endeavors, as a passage through which a larger view of life may come more clearly into focus. His book is a kind of adventure or journey.

It carries the message that many of us may not yet have learned how to recognize the art in our own lives. To do so is something of an art itself. A few of the characters Kimmelman describes, like Bonnard and Chardin, are great artists. But others are explorers and obscure obsessives, paint-by-numbers enthusiasts, amateur shutterbugs, and collectors of strange odds and ends. Yet others, like Charlotte Solomon, a girl whom no one considered much of an artist but who secretly created a masterpiece about the world before her death in Auschwitz, have reserved spots for themselves in history, or not, with a single work that encapsulates a whole life.

Kimmelman reminds us of the Wunderkammer, the cabinet of wonders - the rage in seventeenth-century Europe and a metaphor for the art of life. Each drawer of the cabinet promises something curious and exotic, instructive and beautiful, the cabinet being a kind of ideal, self-contained universe that makes order out of the chaos of the world. The Accidental Masterpiece is a kind of literary Wunderkammer, filled with lively surprises and philosophical musings. It will inspire readers to imagine their own personal cabinet of wonders.]]>
256 Michael Kimmelman 0143037331 Eveline 4 favorites
I guess I would say that judging it as a *book* I thought that some of the essays could have been organized a tiny bit better and that I wish the writer gave us just a tad bit more of himself. There's something a little bit removed about his tone, somehow, even in scenes where he's actually there IN the scene speaking about himself and the things he's doing.

But on the other hand, judging it as a guide to thinking about art, or more accurately as a jumping-off point for one's own thoughts and approach to art, it was pretty great. Or to put it another way, the editor in me would have pushed the author a little harder during the editorial process, the reader and art-seeker in me will totally reread this and has also added his previous book to my "to buy" list. ]]>
3.90 2005 The Accidental Masterpiece: On the Art of Life and Vice Versa
author: Michael Kimmelman
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2005
rating: 4
read at: 2011/01/13
date added: 2011/10/23
shelves: favorites
review:
I loved the first essay in this SO much that it made all the other ones pale in comparison. For that reason, it's hard for me to figure out how much I liked this book overall.

I guess I would say that judging it as a *book* I thought that some of the essays could have been organized a tiny bit better and that I wish the writer gave us just a tad bit more of himself. There's something a little bit removed about his tone, somehow, even in scenes where he's actually there IN the scene speaking about himself and the things he's doing.

But on the other hand, judging it as a guide to thinking about art, or more accurately as a jumping-off point for one's own thoughts and approach to art, it was pretty great. Or to put it another way, the editor in me would have pushed the author a little harder during the editorial process, the reader and art-seeker in me will totally reread this and has also added his previous book to my "to buy" list.
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<![CDATA[Out of Mao's Shadow: The Struggle for the Soul of a New China]]> 6624107
Out of Mao’s Shadow offers a startling perspective on China and its remarkable transformation, challenging conventional wisdom about the political apathy of the Chinese people and the notion that prosperity leads automatically to freedom. Like David Remnick’s Lenin’s Tomb, this is a moving story of a nation in transition, of a people coming to terms with their past and struggling to take control of their future.]]>
368 Philip P. Pan 1416537066 Eveline 5 favorites 4.25 2008 Out of Mao's Shadow: The Struggle for the Soul of a New China
author: Philip P. Pan
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2008
rating: 5
read at: 2011/07/01
date added: 2011/10/23
shelves: favorites
review:
somehow it seems weird to rate this book with stars, because you end it feeling dispirited about china, and it is strange to translate a negative feeling to 'four stars! i really liked it!' but, this is a really well-done and informative book. that's about as much as i can manage without feeling even more dispirited about china.
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Oranges 54983 160 John McPhee 0141182032 Eveline 5 favorites 4.06 1967 Oranges
author: John McPhee
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.06
book published: 1967
rating: 5
read at: 2011/07/01
date added: 2011/10/23
shelves: favorites
review:

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A Cold Case 235786 Philip Gourevitch 0330485059 Eveline 4 favorites 3.35 2001 A Cold Case
author: Philip Gourevitch
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.35
book published: 2001
rating: 4
read at: 2011/10/07
date added: 2011/10/09
shelves: favorites
review:
loved this. good mix of meditative/philosophical/abstract versus concrete/rooted in real details. also, one of those perfect joan didiaon-esque book lengths where you can read the whole thing in a day. and really inspiring, crystal clear, deceptively simple writing.
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Into the Wild 1845 Librarian's Note: An alternate cover edition can be found here

In April, 1992, a young man from a well-to-do family hitchhiked to Alaska and walked alone into the wilderness north of Mt. McKinley. His name was Christopher Johnson McCandless. He had given $25,000 in savings to charity, abandoned his car and most of his possessions, burned all the cash in his wallet, and invented a new life for himself. Four months later, a party of moose hunters found his decomposed body. How McCandless came to die is the unforgettable story of Into the Wild.

Immediately after graduating from college in 1991, McCandless had roamed through the West and Southwest on a vision quest like those made by his heroes Jack London and John Muir. In the Mojave Desert he abandoned his car, stripped it of its license plates, and burned all of his cash. He would give himself a new name, Alexander Supertramp, and, unencumbered by money and belongings, he would be free to wallow in the raw, unfiltered experiences that nature presented. Craving a blank spot on the map, McCandless simply threw away the maps. Leaving behind his desperate parents and sister, he vanished into the wild.]]>
207 Jon Krakauer 0385486804 Eveline 4 favorites
The book seemed to be a contradictory mix of forthcoming and not. I haven't read any of Krakauer's other books but I am guessing that he usually writes in a dramatic but invisible way (also guessing this based on one of the media quotes in the book praising him for the way he removes himself from the action.) In any case this book was written in a terse style that relied heavily on quotes and compiled evidence and would lay all these things out in a usually objective way so that they would speak for themselves, without the author coming forward to talk about his own opinion on the matter. Half reportage, half narration. But then over the course of the book the author's perspective/opinion comes more front and center, culminating in a couple autobiographical chapters where he talks about some early life experiences of his own and how they influence his view of McCandles. Which was really interesting, but there was a disjuncture between this sudden subjectiveness and the overall neutral tone he tries to take for most of the rest of the book. I also found his language to be an odd, also contradictory combination of terse and flowery. Everything moves along at a fast, straightforward clip, but at the same time there are tons of adjectives, for example, "The salt air carried the rich stink of tidal life," and lots of cliched phrases like "I was balancing on a house of cards" or "I imagined people watching baseball on television...drinking beer, making love." I even want to say there was a sentence I came across along the lines of "The mountain is a unforgiving mistress" or something like that.

Anyway I'm not sure what my point is...I guess maybe I wish he would have gone more with one approach or the other. The completely neutral, objective narrator approach or completely emotionally forthcoming and talking more about his own role and feelings in the action as he travels around interviewing all these people. I mean, it's just weird to throw out a super-dramatic, emotional paragraph like this -- "I was stirred by the dark mystery of mortality.... I caught sight of something in the glimpse, some forbidden and elemental riddle that was no less compelling than the sweet, hidden petals of a woman's sex" -- and then suddenly go back to writing in a pulled-back, "I'm invisible again," just-the-facts newspapery style. Also, less adjectives.

Anyway those were all the thoughts I was having about the writing and other boring technical stuff. The actual story itself, though, is superb. So overall my feelings about the book are very positive even though it probably sounds like I'm just dwelling on all the negatives.]]>
4.01 1996 Into the Wild
author: Jon Krakauer
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.01
book published: 1996
rating: 4
read at: 2011/10/10
date added: 2011/10/09
shelves: favorites
review:
I really enjoyed this and there were many parts that were incredibly moving, especially the chapter about the lonely old guy and his relationship to Christopher McCandles, whom he wanted to adopt as a grandson. But there was also something odd to me about the authorial voice, which I'm not sure I can quite articulate. Well here goes:

The book seemed to be a contradictory mix of forthcoming and not. I haven't read any of Krakauer's other books but I am guessing that he usually writes in a dramatic but invisible way (also guessing this based on one of the media quotes in the book praising him for the way he removes himself from the action.) In any case this book was written in a terse style that relied heavily on quotes and compiled evidence and would lay all these things out in a usually objective way so that they would speak for themselves, without the author coming forward to talk about his own opinion on the matter. Half reportage, half narration. But then over the course of the book the author's perspective/opinion comes more front and center, culminating in a couple autobiographical chapters where he talks about some early life experiences of his own and how they influence his view of McCandles. Which was really interesting, but there was a disjuncture between this sudden subjectiveness and the overall neutral tone he tries to take for most of the rest of the book. I also found his language to be an odd, also contradictory combination of terse and flowery. Everything moves along at a fast, straightforward clip, but at the same time there are tons of adjectives, for example, "The salt air carried the rich stink of tidal life," and lots of cliched phrases like "I was balancing on a house of cards" or "I imagined people watching baseball on television...drinking beer, making love." I even want to say there was a sentence I came across along the lines of "The mountain is a unforgiving mistress" or something like that.

Anyway I'm not sure what my point is...I guess maybe I wish he would have gone more with one approach or the other. The completely neutral, objective narrator approach or completely emotionally forthcoming and talking more about his own role and feelings in the action as he travels around interviewing all these people. I mean, it's just weird to throw out a super-dramatic, emotional paragraph like this -- "I was stirred by the dark mystery of mortality.... I caught sight of something in the glimpse, some forbidden and elemental riddle that was no less compelling than the sweet, hidden petals of a woman's sex" -- and then suddenly go back to writing in a pulled-back, "I'm invisible again," just-the-facts newspapery style. Also, less adjectives.

Anyway those were all the thoughts I was having about the writing and other boring technical stuff. The actual story itself, though, is superb. So overall my feelings about the book are very positive even though it probably sounds like I'm just dwelling on all the negatives.
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<![CDATA[The Best American Travel Writing 2007]]> 752066
The twenty pieces in this year’s collection showcase the best travel writing from 2006. George Saunders travels to India to witness firsthand a fifteen-year-old boy who has been meditating motionless under a tree for months without food or water, and who many followers believe is the reincarnation of the Buddha. Matthew Power reveals trickle-down economics at work in a Philippine garbage dump. Jason Anthony describes the challenges of everyday life in Vostok, the coldest place on earth, where temperatures dip as low as minus-129 degrees and where, in midsummer, minus-20 degrees is considered a heat wave.

David Halberstam, in one of his last published essays, recalls how an inauspicious Saigon restaurant changed the way he and other reporters in Vietnam saw the world. Ian Frazier analyzes why we get sick when traveling in out-of-the-way places. And Kevin Fedarko embarks on a drug-fueled journey in Djibouti, chewing psychotropic foliage in “the worst place on earth.�

Closer to home, Steve Friedman profiles a 410-pound man who set out to walk cross-country to lose weight and find happiness. Rick Bass chases the elusive concept of the West in America, and Jonathan Stern takes a hilarious Lonely Planet approach to his small Manhattan apartment.

A brief and awkward tour of the end of the Earth / Jason Anthony --
Lost in space / Rick Bass --
High in hell / Kevin Fedarko --
A kielbasa too far / Ian Frazier --
Lost in America / Steve Friedman --
Long day's journey into dinner / Elizabeth Gilbert --
Arieh / Reesa Grushka --
The boys of Saigon / David Halberstam --
Hutong Karma / Peter Hessler --
Miles from nowhere / Edward Hoagland --
Birth of a nation? / Ian Parker --
The long way home / Nando Parrado --
Do not disturb / Ann Patchett --
The magic mountain / Matthew Power --
Streets of sorrow / David Rakoff --
The incredible Buddha boy / George Saunders --
Brazil's untamed heart / Gary Shteyngart --
Circle of fire / Andrew Solomon --
The lonely planet guide to my apartment / Jonathan Stern --
Fantasy Island / Cynthia Zarin]]>
307 Susan Orlean 0618582177 Eveline 4 favorites 3.85 2007 The Best American Travel Writing 2007
author: Susan Orlean
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.85
book published: 2007
rating: 4
read at: 2011/07/25
date added: 2011/07/25
shelves: favorites
review:
The wonderful, funny, and oddly poignant Ian Frazier piece alone, about the Polynesian territory of Tokelau ("Birth of a Nation?"), makes this book worth reading.
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The Forever War 2517439
Through the eyes of Dexter Filkins, the prizewinning New York Times correspondent whose work was hailed by David Halberstam as “reporting of the highest quality imaginable,� we witness the remarkable chain of events that began with the rise of the Taliban in the 1990s, continued with the attacks of 9/11, and moved on to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Filkins’s narrative moves across a vast and various landscape of amazing characters and astonishing scenes: deserts, mountains, and streets of carnage; a public amputation performed by Taliban; children frolicking in minefields; skies streaked white by the contrails of B-52s; a night’s sleep in the rubble of Ground Zero.

We embark on a foot patrol through the shadowy streets of Ramadi, venture into a torture chamber run by Saddam Hussein. We go into the homes of suicide bombers and into street-to-street fighting with a battalion of marines. We meet Iraqi insurgents, an American captain who loses a quarter of his men in eight days, and a young soldier from Georgia on a rooftop at midnight reminiscing about his girlfriend back home. A car bomb explodes, bullets fly, and a mother cradles her blinded son.

Like no other book, The Forever War allows us a visceral understanding of today’s battlefields and of the experiences of the people on the ground, warriors and innocents alike. It is a brilliant, fearless work, not just about America’s wars after 9/11, but ultimately about the nature of war itself.]]>
342 Dexter Filkins 0307266397 Eveline 5 favorites pretty much incredible. 4.11 2008 The Forever War
author: Dexter Filkins
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.11
book published: 2008
rating: 5
read at: 2011/04/07
date added: 2011/04/07
shelves: favorites
review:
pretty much incredible.
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Stories I Stole 1727888
Stories I Stole is a wonderful example of a writer tackling an unconventional subject with such wit, humanity and sheer literary verve that one is unable to imagine why one never learnt more about Georgia before. Stories I Stole is a magnificent first book: erudite, engaged, candid and blissfully poetic. PROLOGUE: The author visits a bizarre “Stalin theme park� culminating in the eery viewing of Stalin’s death mask
SHASHLIK, TAMADA, SUPRA
The author visits Khaketi, where she is introduced to the tamada culture of “exaggerated hospitality; a point-of-honour hospitality.� During a marathon toasting session at dinner she realizes “It is a kind of aggression. When they did not know you well, they filled your glass and filled it again and carefully watched how you drank it� This was the Georgian way, friend or enemy with nothing in between. History was lost in tradition, drinking a way of remembering and forgetting at the same time.�


SHUKI
The frustration of living with unpredictable power and water supplies during extremely cold winters; the heat and/or electricity is often turned off due to reasons ranging from sabotage, corruption, non-payment, theft, “black clan economics,� and incompetence. Nevertheless this leads to a particular happiness when the light does come on. The author discovers the heavenly comfort of public baths. “Times were difficult; people had very little money. A lot of men were unemployed and all the old good professional jobs, teachers, nurses, police, engineers, were state jobs and paid less than $50 a month� Half Tbilisi owed the other half money.�

ETHNIC CLEANSING
The author visits Abkhazia, where a refugee has asked her to find the apartment that war caused him to flee. She finds a woman living there who is a refugee herself—after her own house was burned down, she discovered the fully furnished house in Abkhazia shortly after it was vacated, and has been living there ever since, proudly tending the garden of the previous occupant.

WHO ARE THE ABKHAZ
On the beach with Shalva, whom she suspects is “Abkhaz KGB.� He feeds her the party line about the Abkhaz occupation and she feels like screaming truths at him. “You won the war. You threw out all the Georgians. You have your homeland to yourselves (apart from the Armenian villages and the pockets of Russians) and what is this place? It’s a black hole. There are barely any cars, barely any petrol, no factories, nothing works, no private businesses, a curfew, no salaries, barely any pensions, a shell of a university, a terrible hospital, etc. etc.� But Shalva doubts that the West is paradise: “Here we have everything we need. The land is fertile.�

THE DUEL
The story of Dato and Aleko—they get into a car wreck and Dato’s face is horribly scarred. Aleko steals Dato’s wife and Dato challenges him to a fight. When Aleko beats Dato up, Dato pulls a gun and shoots the man until he is almost paralyzed. Dato, meanwhile, lives the rest of his life with his mother, hooked on heroin. “Not really Pushkin is it?�

LARGE ABANDONED OBJECTS
The author drives to Abkhazia with several journalists to see incumbent Ardzinba win the presidential election (the journalists rename it the “presidential farce,� since Ardzinba is the only one running. The author marvels over the abandoned relics of the USSR she sees along the roadside—rusting tractors, bits of pipline, lines of coal cars shunted and left along a rail line, etc. For her birthday, the author goes to Gorbachev’s dacha, a palatial house he built but never got to inhabit because of the collapse of the Soviet Union. The house is a metaphor for the USSR: “impressive only for its sheer size but actually full of empty space and tat.�

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288 Wendell Steavenson 080214067X Eveline 4 favorites 3.86 2002 Stories I Stole
author: Wendell Steavenson
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.86
book published: 2002
rating: 4
read at: 2011/02/01
date added: 2011/03/05
shelves: favorites
review:

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The Known World 67 The Known World is a daring and ambitious work by Pulitzer Prize winner Edward P. Jones.

The Known World tells the story of Henry Townsend, a black farmer and former slave who falls under the tutelage of William Robbins, the most powerful man in Manchester County, Virginia. Making certain he never circumvents the law, Townsend runs his affairs with unusual discipline. But when death takes him unexpectedly, his widow, Caldonia, can't uphold the estate's order, and chaos ensues. Jones has woven a footnote of history into an epic that takes an unflinching look at slavery in all its moral complexities.]]>
388 Edward P. Jones 0061159174 Eveline 5 favorites
Also I read a profile about the author and apparently he wrote this thing in 3 months, because he writes in his head first & pretty much has everything mapped out before he starts physically writing, which is just insane. Also, dude won a Pulitzer and a genius grant and apparently doesn't even own a mattress. ]]>
3.83 2003 The Known World
author: Edward P. Jones
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.83
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2011/02/06
date added: 2011/02/06
shelves: favorites
review:
Holy moly this was incredible. Very Faulkner in that he created an entire southern county & minutely detailed the ways everyone's lives were interconnected. And very Tolstoy in the completeness of the world he created. I definitely want to read his two short story collections now.

Also I read a profile about the author and apparently he wrote this thing in 3 months, because he writes in his head first & pretty much has everything mapped out before he starts physically writing, which is just insane. Also, dude won a Pulitzer and a genius grant and apparently doesn't even own a mattress.
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Prague 92488 400 Arthur Phillips 0375759778 Eveline 4 favorites
I would say it's like, you're given a set of characters who are all stereotypes of the American (or Canadian) abroad, & then you're given details of their backgrounds, and then they proceed do do things and it's all surface action from there, and it's left to the reader to use that information to fill in for themselves whatever family issues, world view, philosophy, etc. they think would motivate these characters to act the way they do, using the background information that we were given but that wasn't necessarily linked to their actions. I don't know if that made sense.

Also, painless fun vehicle for learning a little bit about Hungarian history and politics.]]>
3.05 2002 Prague
author: Arthur Phillips
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.05
book published: 2002
rating: 4
read at: 2011/01/28
date added: 2011/01/30
shelves: favorites
review:
I borrowed this from a friend of mine, who said as she handed it to me, "Actually, you can keep this - I kind of hated it. Everyone in it was so annoying - I was just like, stop whining." After reading it, I can definitely see what she was talking about, but despite all its flaws -- very wink-wink surfacey razzle dazzle without a whole lot of psychological depth -- I still really enjoyed it. I guess because just the surface alone was still impressive and amazingly detailed and entertaining, and showed a first-time writer playing around in his toolbox of tricks and really enjoying it, which was fun to witness. And it came off as smart enough that I would venture to guess that his subsequent novels pull back on the need to show what he can do, and allow more room for characters to slow down and think and get a little deeper. I haven't read any of his other books yet though, so I'm just guessing here.

I would say it's like, you're given a set of characters who are all stereotypes of the American (or Canadian) abroad, & then you're given details of their backgrounds, and then they proceed do do things and it's all surface action from there, and it's left to the reader to use that information to fill in for themselves whatever family issues, world view, philosophy, etc. they think would motivate these characters to act the way they do, using the background information that we were given but that wasn't necessarily linked to their actions. I don't know if that made sense.

Also, painless fun vehicle for learning a little bit about Hungarian history and politics.
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Love and Obstacles 6043922
Aleksandar Hemon earned his reputation- and his MacArthur "genius grant"-for his short stories, and he returns to the form with a powerful collection of linked stories that stands with The Lazarus Project as the best work of his celebrated career. A few of the stories have never been published before; the others have appeared in The New Yorker , and several of those have also been included in The Best American Short Stories . All are infused with the dazzling, astonishingly creative prose and the remarkable, haunting autobiographical elements that have distinguished Hemon as one of the most original and illustrious voices of our time.

What links the stories in Love and Obstacles is the narrator, a young man who-like Hemon himself-was raised in Yugoslavia and immigrated to the United States. The stories of Love and Obstacles are about that coming of age and the complications-the obstacles-of growing up in a Communist but cosmopolitan country, and the disintegration of that country and the consequent uprooting and move to America in young adulthood. But because it's Aleksandar Hemon, the stories extend far beyond the immigrant experience; each one is punctuated with unexpected humor and spins out in fabulist, exhilarating directions, ultimately building to an insightful, often heartbreaking conclusion. Woven together, these stories comprise a book that is, genuinely, as cohesive and powerful as any fiction- achingly human, charming, and inviting.]]>
209 Aleksandar Hemon 1594488649 Eveline 4 favorites 3.85 2008 Love and Obstacles
author: Aleksandar Hemon
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.85
book published: 2008
rating: 4
read at: 2010/10/01
date added: 2011/01/22
shelves: favorites
review:
Some of the stories, about being an awkward teenage boy getting into various humiliating situations on the edge of darkness/violence, I felt like I needed to be a guy to fully "get" emotionally, but this book also included two of the greatest and most moving short stories I've ever read - "The Conductor" and "The Noble Truths of Suffering," both of which are available online if you Google them. Wonderful combination of beauty, humor, quirkiness, and ordinary human pathetic-ness.
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<![CDATA[The Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories, China from the Bottom Up]]> 2880708
Here are a professional mourner, a trafficker in humans, a leper, an abbot, a retired government official, a former landowner, a mortician, a feng shui master, a former Red Guard, a political prisoner, a village teacher, a blind street musician, a Falun Gong practitioner, and many others–people who have been battered by life but who have managed to retain their dignity, their humor, and their essential, complex humanity.

Liao crafted the interviews (conducted between 1990 and 2003) with sensitivity and patience, working both from notes and from his own memory of these remarkable conversations. The result is an idiosyncratic, powerful, and richly revealing portrait of a people, a time, and a place we might otherwise have never known.]]>
336 Liao Yiwu 037542542X Eveline 5 favorites 4.20 2003 The Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories, China from the Bottom Up
author: Liao Yiwu
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.20
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2010/07/01
date added: 2011/01/17
shelves: favorites
review:
Hands down the most incredible, powerful, and moving book I've ever read. Strange, fantastical (but real), and sometimes heartbreaking oral histories told by people at the "margins" of Chinese society. A man whose wife was burned alive because the villagers believed she had been possessed by a dragon, a professional funeral wailer who battled over turf via a wailing competition with other funeral troupes with gang connections, men whose jobs were to "walk" corpses home to their ancestral villages, a monk, a man in prison who sold rural women into slavery, including his own daughter, and more recent oral narrations from a bathroom attendant, a dissident, a Falun Gong practitioner, etc.
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<![CDATA[The Russian Debutante's Handbook]]> 210817
TheĚýRussian Debutante's Handbook introduces Vladimir Girshkin, one of the most original and unlikely heroes of recent times. The twenty-five-year-old unhappy lover to a fat dungeon mistress, affectionately nicknamed "Little Failure" by his high-achieving mother, Vladimir toils his days away as a lowly clerk at the bureaucratic Emma Lazarus Immigrant Absorption Society. When a wealthy but psychotic old Russian war hero appears, Vladimir embarks on an adventure of unrelenting lunacy that takes us from New York's Lower East Side to the hip frontier wilderness of Prava--the Eastern European Paris of the nineties. With the help of a murderous but fun-loving Russian mafioso, Vladimir infiltrates the Prava expat community and launches a scheme as ridiculous as it is brilliant.

Bursting with wit, humor, and rare insight, The Russian Debutante's Handbook is both a highly imaginative romp and a serious exploration of what it means to be an immigrant in America.]]>
476 Gary Shteyngart 1573229881 Eveline 5 favorites
it was also witty enough to make me do really dorky things like transcribe a couple lines i liked. here they be:

"Real humor is not supposed to be funny," Baobab said. "It's supposed to be tragic, like the Marx Brothers."

All in all, Vladimir's American dreams formed a curious arc. During adolescence he dreamed of acceptance. In his brief days at college he dreamed of love. After college, he dreamed of a rather improbable dialectic of both love *and* acceptance. And now, with love and acceptance finally in the bag, he dreamed of money. What fresh tortures would await him next?

The Groundhog suddenly looked serious. "Volodya, let me speak from the heart. You and Kostya are the future of this organization. I see that now. Before it was fun, sure, run around, blow up a few diners, cut off some dicks, but we got to get serious. This is the nineties. We're in this . . . 'informational age' . . . we need 'Americanisms' and 'globalisms.' Do you know where I'm coming from?"

What was it with these disconsolate young men? Was being the cornerstone of Prava's elite not enough for them? Did they expect to lead meaningful lives as well?]]>
3.56 2002 The Russian Debutante's Handbook
author: Gary Shteyngart
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.56
book published: 2002
rating: 5
read at: 2008/02/01
date added: 2011/01/17
shelves: favorites
review:
this was awesome and clever and hilarious. i described it to someone as hipster nabokov, which might sound off-putting, & there are parts that are SO clever and witty and hip that it verges close to making you start to hate it for its cleverness, but in the end it managed to keep me on its side.

it was also witty enough to make me do really dorky things like transcribe a couple lines i liked. here they be:

"Real humor is not supposed to be funny," Baobab said. "It's supposed to be tragic, like the Marx Brothers."

All in all, Vladimir's American dreams formed a curious arc. During adolescence he dreamed of acceptance. In his brief days at college he dreamed of love. After college, he dreamed of a rather improbable dialectic of both love *and* acceptance. And now, with love and acceptance finally in the bag, he dreamed of money. What fresh tortures would await him next?

The Groundhog suddenly looked serious. "Volodya, let me speak from the heart. You and Kostya are the future of this organization. I see that now. Before it was fun, sure, run around, blow up a few diners, cut off some dicks, but we got to get serious. This is the nineties. We're in this . . . 'informational age' . . . we need 'Americanisms' and 'globalisms.' Do you know where I'm coming from?"

What was it with these disconsolate young men? Was being the cornerstone of Prava's elite not enough for them? Did they expect to lead meaningful lives as well?
]]>
<![CDATA[The Possessed: Adventures With Russian Books and the People Who Read Them]]> 6763627 n+1) will ever forget it. “Babel in California� told the true story of various human destinies intersecting at Stanford University during a conference about the enigmatic writer Isaac Babel. Over the course of several pages, Batuman managed to misplace Babel’s last living relatives at the San Francisco airport, uncover Babel’s secret influence on the making of King Kong, and introduce her readers to a new voice that was unpredictable, comic, humane, ironic, charming, poignant, and completely, unpretentiously full of love for literature.

Batuman’s subsequent pieces—for The New Yorker, Harper’s Magazine, and the London Review of Books� have made her one of the most sought-after and admired writers of her generation, and its best traveling companion. In The Possessed we watch her investigate a possible murder at Tolstoy’s ancestral estate. We go with her to Stanford, Switzerland, and St. Petersburg; retrace Pushkin’s wanderings in the Caucasus; learn why Old Uzbek has one hundred different words for crying; and see an eighteenth-century ice palace reconstructed on the Neva.

Love and the novel, the individual in history, the existential plight of the graduate student: all find their place in The Possessed. Literally and metaphorically following the footsteps of her favorite authors, Batuman searches for the answers to the big questions in the details of lived experience, combining fresh readings of the great Russians, from Pushkin to Platonov, with the sad and funny stories of the lives they continue to influence—including her own.]]>
296 Elif Batuman 0374532184 Eveline 4 favorites 3.72 2010 The Possessed: Adventures With Russian Books and the People Who Read Them
author: Elif Batuman
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.72
book published: 2010
rating: 4
read at: 2010/08/01
date added: 2010/10/31
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers]]> 7822182 An eye-opening investigation into china's communist party and its integral role in the country's rise as a global superpower and rival of the united states

China's political and economic growth in the past three decades is one of astonishing, epochal dimensions. The country has undergone a remarkable transformation on a scale similar to that of the Industrial Revolution in the West. The most remarkable part of this transformation, however, has been left largely untold—the central role of the Chinese Communist Party.

As an organization alone, the Party is a phenomenon of unique scale and power. Its membership surpasses seventy-three million, and it does more than just rule a country. The Party not only has a grip on every aspect of government, from the largest, richest cities to the smallest far-flung villages in Tibet and Xinjiang, it also has a hold on all official religions, the media, and the military. The Party presides over large, wealthy state-owned businesses, and it exercises control over the selection of senior executives of all government companies, many of which are in the top tier of the Fortune 500 list.

In The Party, Richard McGregor delves deeply into China's inner sanctum for the first time, showing how the Communist Party controls the government, courts, media, and military, and how it keeps all corruption accusations against its members in-house. The Party's decisions have a global impact, yet the CPC remains a deeply secretive body, hostile to the law, unaccountable to anyone or anything other than its own internal tribunals. It is the world's only geopolitical rival of the United States, and is steadfastly poised to think the worst of the West.

In this provocative and illuminating account, Richard McGregor offers a captivating portrait of China's Communist Party, its grip on power and control over China, and its future.

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320 Richard McGregor 0061708771 Eveline 4 favorites 3.99 2010 The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers
author: Richard McGregor
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.99
book published: 2010
rating: 4
read at: 2010/07/01
date added: 2010/07/18
shelves: favorites
review:

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A Journal of the Plague Year 128977
"Backgrounds" encourages comparison of 1665 documents with those of the early 1720s, when England feared a new outbreak of the plague.

Included are official government orders and newspaper accounts as well as writings by Defoe, John Graunt, the College of Physicians, and others.

"Contexts" includes eight comparative pieces united by the theme of a community in crisis.

From Thucydides to Boccaccio to modern accounts by Albert Camus, Michel Foucault, and Susan Sontag, this collection represents some of the most celebrated observers and critics in western civilization who have seen what plagues reveal about human nature.

"Criticism" reprints seven of the best essays on the novel, including interpretations by Sir Walter Scott, Maximillian E. Novak, John J. Richetti, and John Bender, among others.

A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are also included.]]>
384 Daniel Defoe 0393961885 Eveline 5 favorites 3.29 1722 A Journal of the Plague Year
author: Daniel Defoe
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.29
book published: 1722
rating: 5
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2010/04/19
shelves: favorites
review:
I feel like it's morbid to like this, but it was really great and fascinating.
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Crime and Punishment 7144 671 Fyodor Dostoevsky Eveline 5 favorites 4.26 1866 Crime and Punishment
author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.26
book published: 1866
rating: 5
read at: 2010/03/10
date added: 2010/03/10
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath]]> 11623
A major literary event--the complete, uncensored journals of Sylvia Plath, published in their entirety for the first time.

Sylvia Plath's journals were originally published in 1982 in a heavily abridged version authorized by Plath's husband, Ted Hughes. This new edition is an exact and complete transcription of the diaries Plath kept during the last twelve years of her life. Sixty percent of the book is material that has never before been made public, more fully revealing the intensity of the poet's personal and literary struggles, and providing fresh insight into both her frequent desperation and the bravery with which she faced down her demons. The complete Journals of Sylvia Plath is essential reading for all who have been moved and fascinated by Plath's life and work.]]>
732 Sylvia Plath 0385720254 Eveline 4 favorites 4.27 2000 The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath
author: Sylvia Plath
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2000
rating: 4
read at: 2009/10/05
date added: 2010/03/05
shelves: favorites
review:
it seems weird to rate someone's journal so i'm leaving it unrated. this was really fascinating but only because i've always been really fascinated by sylvia plath so unless you too were obsessed with the bell jar & have read all her poems it might not be that interesting. she simultaneously seems even more intense & melodramatic than i'd previously thought, esp. during the parts when she's in college, and much more "normal" and balanced than i would have thought. it's totally devastating when you get to the end and realize you've read some of a person's last thoughts before they killed themselves and that they were completely happy mundane everyday thoughts.
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The Scarlet Letter 102875 here.

Set two centuries from Hawthorne's own time, The Scarlet Letter (1850) sets its heroine, Hester Prynne, into the shaping early moments of American history. The mother of an illegitimate child, Hester is compelled both by her Puritan community and her awareness of her own moral autonomy to wear a scarlet letter "A", a symbol of her adultery, upon her clothes. Her child is seen as the evidence of her sin and her refusal to name her lover taken as a token of her moral perversity. However, Hester emerges from the novel a woman whose integrity is intact. Born from the heart of New England, The Scarlet Letter is as much about individualchoice and moral responsibilities as about the birth pangs of a nation. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.]]>
256 Nathaniel Hawthorne 0451523504 Eveline 5 favorites 3.21 1850 The Scarlet Letter
author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.21
book published: 1850
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2010/02/24
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[Leaving Mother Lake: A Girlhood at the Edge of the World]]> 518883 293 Yang Erche Namu 0316124710 Eveline 4 favorites 3.86 2003 Leaving Mother Lake: A Girlhood at the Edge of the World
author: Yang Erche Namu
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.86
book published: 2003
rating: 4
read at: 2007/07/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
this is the autobiography of this woman namu, who's kind of a popular singer in china. she is a moso, which is this tribe of people in a remote part of southern china who have a matrilineal society. property is passed from mother to daughter, both son & daughter live in their mother's home their entire lives, people don't get married ("women and men should not marry, for love is like the seasons - it comes and goes"), daughters are valued over sons, & women have many lovers throughout their lives. it's written in this dumb, totally exoticizing "oh the beauty of the noble, simple ethnic people" kind of way but it is still really fascinating to read about this society. it's also really satisfying because it's a super quick read.
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The Sound and the Fury 10975 366 William Faulkner Eveline 5 favorites I love this book. 3.86 1929 The Sound and the Fury
author: William Faulkner
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.86
book published: 1929
rating: 5
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
I love this book.
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The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter 5163 359 Carson McCullers Eveline 5 favorites 3.92 1940 The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter
author: Carson McCullers
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.92
book published: 1940
rating: 5
read at: 1997/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
I read this at a sort of formative age and it totally haunted me.
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Wise Blood 48467 This is an alternate-cover edition for ISBN 9780374530631)

The American short story master Flannery O'Connor's haunting first novel of faith, false prophets, and redemptive wisdom.

Wise Blood, Flannery O'Connor's astonishing and haunting first novel, is a classic of twentieth-century literature. It is the story of Hazel Motes, a twenty-two-year-old caught in an unending struggle against his inborn, desperate fate. He falls under the spell of a "blind" street preacher named Asa Hawks and his degenerate fifteen-year-old daughter, Sabbath Lily. In an ironic, malicious gesture of his own non-faith, and to prove himself a greater cynic than Hawks, Motes founds the Church Without Christ, but is still thwarted in his efforts to lose God. He meets Enoch Emery, a young man with "wise blood," who leads him to a mummified holy child and whose crazy maneuvers are a manifestation of Motes's existential struggles.

This tale of redemption, retribution, false prophets, blindness, blindings, and wisdom gives us one of the most riveting characters in American fiction.]]>
256 Flannery O'Connor 0374530637 Eveline 5 favorites 3.84 1952 Wise Blood
author: Flannery O'Connor
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.84
book published: 1952
rating: 5
read at: 1998/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
I have a soft spot for Southern gothic literature and themes about people being haunted by Jesus.
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Repair 488414 Repair is body work in C. K. Williams's sensual poems, but it is also an imaginative treatment of the consternations that interrupt life's easy narrative. National Book Critics Circle Award-winner Williams keeps the self in repair despite love, death, social disorder, and the secrets that separate and join intimates. These forty poems experiment with form but maintain what Alan Williamson has heralded Williams for having so steadily developed from French influences: "the poetry of the sentence."
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69 C.K. Williams 0374527067 Eveline 4 poetry, favorites 3.85 1999 Repair
author: C.K. Williams
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.85
book published: 1999
rating: 4
read at:
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
I love CK! But I must say, he's not for everyone, I think. I especially like the poem about looking into his baby grandson's eyes and the baby's brow knitting, knitting as he tries to process what he sees.
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<![CDATA[The Owner of the House: New Collected Poems 1940-2001 (American Poets Continuum)]]> 903455 416 Louis Simpson 1929918399 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites
The Redwoods

Mountains are moving, rivers
are hurrying. But we
are still.

We have the thoughts of giants--
clouds, and at night the stars.

And we have names--guttural, grotesque--
Hamet, Og--names with no syllables.

And perish, one by one, our roots
gnawed by the mice. And fall.

And are too slow for death, and change
to stone. Or else too quick,

like candles in a fire. Giants
are lonely. We have waited long

for someone. By our waiting, surely
there must be someone at whose touch

our boughs sould bend; and hands
to gather us; a spirit

to whom we are light as the hawthorn tree.
O if there is a poet

let him come now! We stand at the Pacific
like great unmarried girls,

turning in our heads the stars and clouds,
considering whom to please.]]>
4.14 2003 The Owner of the House: New Collected Poems 1940-2001 (American Poets Continuum)
author: Louis Simpson
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.14
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2006/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
Some of the poems bored me but this gets 5 stars since one of my favorite poems ever is in this collection, below:

The Redwoods

Mountains are moving, rivers
are hurrying. But we
are still.

We have the thoughts of giants--
clouds, and at night the stars.

And we have names--guttural, grotesque--
Hamet, Og--names with no syllables.

And perish, one by one, our roots
gnawed by the mice. And fall.

And are too slow for death, and change
to stone. Or else too quick,

like candles in a fire. Giants
are lonely. We have waited long

for someone. By our waiting, surely
there must be someone at whose touch

our boughs sould bend; and hands
to gather us; a spirit

to whom we are light as the hawthorn tree.
O if there is a poet

let him come now! We stand at the Pacific
like great unmarried girls,

turning in our heads the stars and clouds,
considering whom to please.
]]>
The Corrections 3805 After almost fifty years as a wife and mother, Enid Lambert is ready to have some fun. Unfortunately, her husband, Alfred, is losing his sanity to Parkinson's disease, and their children have long since flown the family nest to the catastrophes of their own lives. The oldest, Gary, a once-stable portfolio manager and family man, is trying to convince his wife and himself, despite clear signs to the contrary, that he is not clinically depressed. The middle child, Chip, has lost his seemingly secure academic job and is failing spectacularly at his new line of work. And Denise, the youngest, has escaped a disastrous marriage only to pour her youth and beauty down the drain of an affair with a married man - or so her mother fears. Desperate for some pleasure to look forward to, Enid has set her heart on an elusive goal: bringing her family together for one last Christmas at home.
Stretching from the Midwest at midcentury to the Wall Street and Eastern Europe of today, "The Corrections" brings an old-fashioned world of civic virtue and sexual inhibitions into violent collision with the era of home surveillance, hands-off parenting, do-it-yourself mental healthcare, and globalised greed. Richly realistic, darkly hilarious, deeply humane, it confirms Jonathan Franzen as one of our most brilliant interpreters of American society and the American soul.]]>
653 Jonathan Franzen 1841156736 Eveline 5 favorites 3.83 2001 The Corrections
author: Jonathan Franzen
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.83
book published: 2001
rating: 5
read at: 2004/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
I HATE Jonathan Franzen & think he's a total freak-show, but I LOVE this book.
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<![CDATA[Neon Vernacular: New and Selected Poems]]> 61204 188 Yusef Komunyakaa 0819512117 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites 4.19 1993 Neon Vernacular: New and Selected Poems
author: Yusef Komunyakaa
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.19
book published: 1993
rating: 5
read at: 2001/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
Yusef was my professor and he's amazing. I think I like his war stuff best. I'm not that into jazz poetry.
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Paradise Lost 19290 688 John Milton 0393962938 Eveline 5 favorites 4.17 1667 Paradise Lost
author: John Milton
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.17
book published: 1667
rating: 5
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2009/12/16
shelves: favorites
review:
Maya totally enhanced my experience of this book because everything she said about it was always so interesting and made it more colorful. Satan's character is so badass and cool in this. And there are some weirdly funny moments. The angels are pretty boring though.
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Housekeeping 11741 Housekeeping is the story of Ruth and her younger sister, Lucille, who grow up haphazardly, first under the care of their competent grandmother, then of two comically bumbling great-aunts, and finally of Sylvie, their eccentric and remote aunt. The family house is in the small Far West town of Fingerbone set on a glacial lake, the same lake where their grandfather died in a spectacular train wreck, and their mother drove off a cliff to her death. It is a town "chastened by an outsized landscape and extravagant weather, and chastened again by an awareness that the whole of human history had occurred elsewhere." Ruth and Lucille's struggle toward adulthood beautifully illuminates the price of loss and survival, and the dangerous and deep undertow of transience.]]> 219 Marilynne Robinson 0312424094 Eveline 4 favorites 3.82 1980 Housekeeping
author: Marilynne Robinson
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.82
book published: 1980
rating: 4
read at:
date added: 2009/08/13
shelves: favorites
review:
Lately I've been mentally categorizing everything I read into "I could write something like this" versus "I could write something like this after ten or fifteen or twenty years of working hard at my craft" versus "there is no way I could ever in my entire life manage to write something like this." All things Marilynne Robinson fall into the last category. Amazing and meditative and just freaking beautiful. I will say though that someone recently complained to me that literature has become way too solipsistic & cerebral & too much "in the head" & cited Robinson as a prime example of this, and I could see what he was talking about.
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Lost Girls and Love Hotels 58654 240 Catherine Hanrahan 0060846844 Eveline 4 favorites
biggest flaws: the characters are barely sketched out & not developed at ALL, and the big dark background thing that is supposed to be the protagonist's psychological motivation for acting the way she does is totally lame & not fleshed out. actually, beyond not being fleshed out, it's barely even mentioned. so we're basically asked to go with the idea that this thing that only gets a few lines in the book (okay that's an exaggeration, but it's so sketchy that it FEELS like it's only a few lines) is the crux of the character's personality. and the cover art is terrible.

why i love this book: really good, descriptive, vivid, and unique details. the author describes things in a way that's just a little different from how i feel like most people would describe them, and in a way that was just somehow super engaging. in particular i love this one little detail where the main character's co-worker at the japanese airline stewardess school, while i think comforting the main character (i think - it's been awhile) holds her elbow with her fingertips "like a doorknob."

basically i just really like tales of crazy girls spiraling out of control. for whatever reason, alcoholism and drug use and general self-destruction = instant lovability, in my book. (hmm now i'm trying to remember what rating i gave to elizabeth wurtzel.)

overall i would say the author is good at *writing* but not *crafting.* that is, good at describing and good at details and being plain old interesting to read, but not good at the big picture stuff like plot and storyline and motivation.]]>
3.34 2006 Lost Girls and Love Hotels
author: Catherine Hanrahan
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.34
book published: 2006
rating: 4
read at: 2006/08/01
date added: 2007/11/14
shelves: favorites
review:
this book is TERRIBLE from a writerly standpoint and yet i LOVE it.

biggest flaws: the characters are barely sketched out & not developed at ALL, and the big dark background thing that is supposed to be the protagonist's psychological motivation for acting the way she does is totally lame & not fleshed out. actually, beyond not being fleshed out, it's barely even mentioned. so we're basically asked to go with the idea that this thing that only gets a few lines in the book (okay that's an exaggeration, but it's so sketchy that it FEELS like it's only a few lines) is the crux of the character's personality. and the cover art is terrible.

why i love this book: really good, descriptive, vivid, and unique details. the author describes things in a way that's just a little different from how i feel like most people would describe them, and in a way that was just somehow super engaging. in particular i love this one little detail where the main character's co-worker at the japanese airline stewardess school, while i think comforting the main character (i think - it's been awhile) holds her elbow with her fingertips "like a doorknob."

basically i just really like tales of crazy girls spiraling out of control. for whatever reason, alcoholism and drug use and general self-destruction = instant lovability, in my book. (hmm now i'm trying to remember what rating i gave to elizabeth wurtzel.)

overall i would say the author is good at *writing* but not *crafting.* that is, good at describing and good at details and being plain old interesting to read, but not good at the big picture stuff like plot and storyline and motivation.
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The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle 284066
In a Tokyo suburb a young man named Toru Okada searches for his wife's missing cat. Soon he finds himself looking for his wife as well in a netherworld that lies beneath the placid surface of Tokyo. As these searches intersect, Okada encounters a bizarre group of allies and antagonists: a psychic prostitute; a malevolent yet mediagenic politician; a cheerfully morbid sixteen-year-old-girl; and an aging war veteran who has been permanently changed by the hideous things he witnessed during Japan's forgotten campaign in Manchuria.

Gripping, prophetic, suffused with comedy and menace, The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle is a tour de force equal in scope to the masterpieces of Mishima and Pynchon.]]>
607 Haruki Murakami Eveline 5 favorites 4.14 1994 The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
author: Haruki Murakami
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.14
book published: 1994
rating: 5
read at: 2005/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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Self-Help 56755
The publication of Self-Help introduced readers to Lorrie Moore's refined blend of humor and insight, and made her one of the best-loved writers of her generation. These stories, told in a voice that is at once witty, melancholy, and bravely honest, paint a tableau of lovers and family, of loss and pleasure, desire and memory. From the young secretary who by day hopes someone will notice her Phi Beta Kappa key and by night makes love to a married man she met at a Florsheim shoe store, to the shattering of a marriage by the shores of a tranquil lake, Self-Help is a unique, enduring work of short fiction.]]>
176 Lorrie Moore 0446671924 Eveline 4 favorites 4.24 1985 Self-Help
author: Lorrie Moore
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.24
book published: 1985
rating: 4
read at: 2003/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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Anagrams 19635 228 Lorrie Moore 0446672726 Eveline 4 favorites 3.95 1986 Anagrams
author: Lorrie Moore
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.95
book published: 1986
rating: 4
read at: 2002/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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Gilead (Gilead, #1) 68210 Housekeeping, Marilynne Robinson returns with an intimate tale of three generations, from the Civil War to the 20th century: a story about fathers and sons and the spiritual battles that still rage at America's heart. In the words of Kirkus, it is a novel "as big as a nation, as quiet as thought, and moving as prayer. Matchless and towering." GILEAD tells the story of America and will break your heart.]]> 247 Marilynne Robinson 031242440X Eveline 5 favorites 3.84 2004 Gilead (Gilead, #1)
author: Marilynne Robinson
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.84
book published: 2004
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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The Year of Magical Thinking 7815
From one of America's iconic writers, a stunning book of electric honesty and passion. Joan Didion explores an intensely personal yet universal experience: a portrait of a marriage–and a life, in good times and bad–that will speak to anyone who has ever loved a husband or wife or child.

Several days before Christmas 2003, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their only daughter, Quintana, fall ill with what seemed at first flu, then pneumonia, then complete septic shock. She was put into an induced coma and placed on life support. Days later–the night before New Year's Eve–the Dunnes were just sitting down to dinner after visiting the hospital when John Gregory Dunne suffered a massive and fatal coronary. In a second, this close, symbiotic partnership of forty years was over. Four weeks later, their daughter pulled through. Two months after that, arriving at LAX, she collapsed and underwent six hours of brain surgery at UCLA Medical Center to relieve a massive hematoma.

This powerful book is Didion's attempt to make sense of the "weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I ever had about death, about illness . . . about marriage and children and memory . . . about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself."]]>
227 Joan Didion 1400078431 Eveline 4 favorites 3.94 2005 The Year of Magical Thinking
author: Joan Didion
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.94
book published: 2005
rating: 4
read at: 2007/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze]]> 94053 In the heart of China's Sichuan province lies the small city of Fuling. Surrounded by the terraced hills of the Yangtze River valley, Fuling has long been a place of continuity, far from the bustling political centers of Beijing and Shanghai. But now Fuling is heading down a new path, and gradually, along with scores of other towns in this vast and ever-evolving country, it is becoming a place of change and vitality, tension and reform, disruption and growth. As the people of Fuling hold on to the China they know, they are also opening up and struggling to adapt to a world in which their fate is uncertain.

Fuling's position at the crossroads came into remarkably sharp focus when Peter Hessler arrived as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1996, marking the first time in more than half a century that the city had an American resident. He found himself teaching English and American literature at the local college, discovering how Shakespeare and other classics look when seen through the eyes of students who have been raised in the Sichuan countryside and educated in Communist Party doctrine. His students, though, are the ones who taught him about the ways of Fuling � and about the complex process of understanding that takes place when one is immersed in a radically different society.

As he learns the language and comes to know the people, Hessler begins to see that it is indeed a unique moment for Fuling. In its past is Communist China's troubled history � the struggles of land reform, the decades of misguided economic policies, and the unthinkable damage of the Cultural Revolution � and in the future is the Three Gorges Dam, which upon completion will partly flood thecity and force the resettlement of more than a million people. Making his way in the city and traveling by boat and train throughout Sichuan province and beyond, Hessler offers vivid descriptions of the people he meets, from priests to prostitutes and peasants to professors, and gives voice to their views. This is both an intimate personal story of his life in Fuling and a colorful, beautifully written account of the surrounding landscape and its history. Imaginative, poignant, funny, and utterly compelling, River Town is an unforgettable portrait of a city that, much like China itself, is seeking to understand both what it was and what it someday will be.

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432 Peter Hessler 0060855029 Eveline 5 favorites 4.27 2001 River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze
author: Peter Hessler
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2001
rating: 5
read at: 2007/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:
It's always embarrassing to talk about this book in front of other expats in China b/c everyone has really strong opinions about it & you feel cheesey for just straight up loving it, but I really did.
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As I Lay Dying 77013 As I Lay Dying is Faulkner’s harrowing account of the Bundren family’s odyssey across the Mississippi countryside to bury Addie, their wife and mother. Narrated in turn by each of the family members -- including Addie herself -- as well as others; the novel ranges in mood, from dark comedy to the deepest pathos. Considered one of the most influential novels in American fiction in structure, style, and drama, As I Lay Dying is a true 20th-century classic.

This edition reproduces the corrected text of As I Lay Dying as established in 1985 by Noel Polk.]]>
288 William Faulkner Eveline 5 favorites 3.71 1930 As I Lay Dying
author: William Faulkner
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.71
book published: 1930
rating: 5
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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<![CDATA[Fire: From "A Journal of Love": The Unexpurgated Diary of AnaĂŻs Nin, 1934-1937]]> 18349 ]]> 434 AnaĂŻs Nin 0156003902 Eveline 5 favorites 4.12 1987 Fire: From "A Journal of Love": The Unexpurgated Diary of AnaĂŻs Nin, 1934-1937
author: AnaĂŻs Nin
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.12
book published: 1987
rating: 5
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:
Pervy and fascinating and titillating. It's like porno for artsy females.
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Great Expectations 2623
Pip must discover his true self, and his own set of values and priorities. Whether such values allow one to prosper in the complex world of early Victorian England is the major question posed by Great Expectations, one of Dickens's most fascinating, and disturbing, novels.

This edition includes the original, discarded ending, Dickens's brief working notes, and the serial instalments and chapter divisions in different editions. It also uses the definitive Clarendon text.]]>
544 Charles Dickens 0192833596 Eveline 5 favorites 3.78 1861 Great Expectations
author: Charles Dickens
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.78
book published: 1861
rating: 5
read at: 1997/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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Close Range: Wyoming Stories 27999 The Shipping News and Accordion Crimes.

Annie Proulx's masterful language and fierce love of Wyoming are evident in these tales of loneliness, quick violence, and the wrong kinds of love. Each of the portraits in Close Range reveals characters fiercely wrought with precision and grace.

These are stories of desperation and unlikely elation, set in a landscape both stark and magnificent.

The half-skinned steer --
The mud below --
55 miles to the gas pump --
The bunchgrass edge of the world --
A lonely coast --
Job history --
Pair a spurs --
People in Hell just want a drink of water --
The governors of Wyoming --
The blood bay --
Brokeback Mountain]]>
289 Annie Proulx 0684852225 Eveline 4 favorites 4.01 1999 Close Range: Wyoming Stories
author: Annie Proulx
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.01
book published: 1999
rating: 4
read at: 2000/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: favorites
review:

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Collected Poems 149506
From the astonishing debut Hawk in the Rain (1957) to Birthday Letters (1998), Ted Hughes was one of postwar literature's truly prodigious poets. This remarkable volume gathers all of his work, from his earliest poems (published only in journals) through the ground-breaking volumes Crow (1970), Gaudete (1977), and Tales from Ovid (1997). It includes poems Hughes composed for fine-press printers, poems he wrote as England's Poet Laureate, and those children's poems that he meant for adults as well. This omnium-gatherum of Hughes's work is animated throughout by a voice that, as Seamus Heaney remarked, was simply "longer and deeper and rougher" than those of his contemporaries.]]>
1376 Ted Hughes 0374529655 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites Manly poems, good poems. 4.17 2003 Collected Poems
author: Ted Hughes
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.17
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2005/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
Manly poems, good poems.
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The Singing 318280
. . . Reality has put itself so solidly before me
there's little need for mystery . . . Except for us, for how we take the world
to us, and make it more, more than we are, more even than itself.
--from "The World"

The awards given to C.K. Williams' two most recent books--a National Book Award for The Singing and a Pulitzer Prize for Repair --complete the process by which Williams, long admired for the intensity and formal daring of his work, has come to be recognized as one of the few truly great living American poets. Williams treats the characteristic subjects of a poet's maturity--the loss of friends, the love of grandchildren, the receding memories of childhood, the baffling illogic of current events--with an intensity and drive that recall not only his recent work but also his early books, published forty years ago. The Singing is a direct and resonant searing, hearfelt, permanent.

The Singing is the winner of the 2003 National Book Award for Poetry.]]>
80 C.K. Williams 0374529507 Eveline 3 poetry, favorites 3.85 2003 The Singing
author: C.K. Williams
name: Eveline
average rating: 3.85
book published: 2003
rating: 3
read at: 2004/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
I'm having trouble remembering this collection. But I remember really liking the title poem in particular. I saw him read it at the National Book Awards Nominees reading and he basically blew everyone away. Or maybe he just blew me away & I projected my reaction onto everyone else. Anyway, he's great.
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<![CDATA[The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke]]> 46201
The influence and popularity of Rilke’s poetry in America have never been greater than they are today, more than fifty years after his death. Rilke is unquestionably the most significant and compelling poet of romantic transformation, of spiritual quest, that the twentieth century has known. His poems of ecstatic identification with the world exert a seemingly endless fascination for contemporary readers.

In Stephen Mitchell’s versions, many readers feel that they have discovered an English rendering that captures the lyric intensity, fluency, and reach of Rilke’s poetry more accurately and convincingly than has ever been done before.

Mr. Mitchell is impeccable in his adherence to Rilke’s text, to his formal music, and to the complexity of his thoughts; at the same time, his work has authority and power as poetry in its own right. Few translators of any poet have arrived at the delicate balance of fidelity and originality that Mr. Mitchell has brought off with seeming effortlessness.

Originally published: New York : Random House, 1982.]]>
356 Rainer Maria Rilke 0679722017 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites
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4.40 1926 The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke
author: Rainer Maria Rilke
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.40
book published: 1926
rating: 5
read at: 2001/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
I haven't made it through all the poems in here. There are parts in this one elegy to a dead friend that I will remember forever. Something about the eyes of animal taking you in & holding you a moment then releasing you without judgment. And a passage that's like, Look at this rose on the corner of my desk ... what meaning does it find in my awareness? And my favorite poem of all time, "Orpheus. Eurydice. Hermes." is in here. Here is the text of that poem on this random woman's webpage:


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<![CDATA[Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow]]> 97553 Crow was Ted Hughes's fourth book of poems for adults and a pivotal moment in his writing career. In it, he found both a structure and a persona that gave his vision a new power and coherence. A. Alvarez wrote in the Observer, 'Each fresh encounter with despair becomes the occasion for a separate, almost funny, story in which natural forces and creatures, mythic figures, even parts of the body, act out their special roles, each endowed with its own irrepressible life. With Crow, Hughes joins the select band of survivor-poets whose work is adequate to the destructive reality we inhabit.']]> 96 Ted Hughes 0571176550 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites 4.10 1970 Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow
author: Ted Hughes
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.10
book published: 1970
rating: 5
read at: 2002/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
amazing, lean, intense, muscular, dark, & perhaps my favorite book of poetry ever.
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<![CDATA[Auto-necrophilia; the----poems, book 2]]> 955285 Softcover book 64 Bill Knott 0695801899 Eveline 5 poetry, favorites
Here are a couple of the poems:

POEM

The wind blew a piece of paper to my feet.
I picked it up.
It was not a petition for my death.

NO-ACT PLAY

I'm sitting alone in my rented room.

A door knocks at the door.

I don't answer.

It goes away.

Later I leave the room, and go to my crummy job.

The door returns, and knocks again.

It is admitted.

TO MY ENEMIES

I will ruin you
By leaving my fingerprints
On all of your crimes

POEM

Once I had to leave you, so
I arranged for earth-tremors at night
So in your sleep you'd think I was stroking you
American Tobacco Company

POEM

One of the old guys said
a good test of poetry was
that if you thought of a true
poem while shaving you'd cut yourself
well
lots of times I'll be reading a poem
and stop right in the middle
cause I just remembered
the great shaves I get
from my Wilkinson Sword-Edge blades

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4.65 1971 Auto-necrophilia; the----poems, book 2
author: Bill Knott
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.65
book published: 1971
rating: 5
read at: 2001/01/01
date added: 2007/11/02
shelves: poetry, favorites
review:
These poems are SO weird and SO great. One of the best lines is, "I'm a poet. I write filler for suicide-notes."

Here are a couple of the poems:

POEM

The wind blew a piece of paper to my feet.
I picked it up.
It was not a petition for my death.

NO-ACT PLAY

I'm sitting alone in my rented room.

A door knocks at the door.

I don't answer.

It goes away.

Later I leave the room, and go to my crummy job.

The door returns, and knocks again.

It is admitted.

TO MY ENEMIES

I will ruin you
By leaving my fingerprints
On all of your crimes

POEM

Once I had to leave you, so
I arranged for earth-tremors at night
So in your sleep you'd think I was stroking you
American Tobacco Company

POEM

One of the old guys said
a good test of poetry was
that if you thought of a true
poem while shaving you'd cut yourself
well
lots of times I'll be reading a poem
and stop right in the middle
cause I just remembered
the great shaves I get
from my Wilkinson Sword-Edge blades


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<![CDATA[The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake]]> 52762 The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake has remained continuously in print and is a perennial favorite among aspiring writers, participants in creative writing programs, and students of contemporary American fiction. "Trilobites", the first of Pancake's stories to be published in The Atlantic, elicited an extraordinary immediate response from readers and continues to be widely anthologized.]]> 192 Breece D'J Pancake 0316715972 Eveline 4 favorites 4.21 1983 The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake
author: Breece D'J Pancake
name: Eveline
average rating: 4.21
book published: 1983
rating: 4
read at: 2006/01/01
date added: 2007/06/24
shelves: favorites
review:
Every once in a while you feel like the author has watched too many Clint Eastwood movies and is trying too hard to be hardscrabble and austere, but overall I really liked this collection and thought the writing was unique and good.
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