Saturday, March 10, 2007

26. Hawaii

by James Mitchner
Rated ★★★★★

One of the best favors I have done for myself in a long while was to decide to go back and revisit some of the golden oldies (books, of course) from my past. I think it must have been Shogun that really was the decider for me. I discovered that my memory has apparently been completely erased as to the content of books I read thirty years ago and the only thing left is the vague sense that I somehow liked them.

This brings up a whole other thought about how one's brain archives stuff and have these books been permanently erased or is the information lurking in some remote and dusty corner of my mind? OK, I am digressing badly here.

I am currently reading Hawaii and am just loving it. There are odd bits about politics that are dry and somewhat boring but for the most part the story moves right along. Actually it is a series of stories that tells how each group of people came to Hawaii and how they managed to find their feet so to speak and eventually assimilate into who the Hawaiian people are today. Very, very good book.

I am looking at a copy of Tolstoy's War and Peace that I ordered from the library and trying to decide whether or not I want to attempt it. I already know I won't be reading this copy as it's a hard cover addition that's 1386 pages long. I think I am going to start it and if I decide it's a book I really want to read I will order a cheap paperback from half.com and tear it into thirds. My wrists will appreciate that.

But for what my next book is going to be, well I think it will be Judith Merkle Riles third book in the Margaret of Asbury series, The Water Devil and then perhaps I'll revisit Uris's book Trinity.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

25. The Kommandant's Girl

By Pan Jenoff
Rated ★★★

After having said that I don't do Holocaust books here I am reading another one. But I did enjoy this one, probably because it came off as a more positive book than those that have distressed me so much in the past. The characters in this book were fighters, not just helpless victims so the focus of the book was their struggle. You know while reading that a story like this would not end well but still it is heart warming to read about people who are taking their fate in their own hands and even if their cause is nearly hopeless at least they are going down fighting.

Emma, a beautiful young orthadox jew in Krakow, Poland meets Jacob while working at the university library and met Jacob. He sweeps her off her feet, and they marry on the eve of the Nazi invasion. Jacob immediately leaves to join the Jewish underground, and Emma returns to her family, now locked in the Jewish ghetto. Jacob provides false papers, enabling Emma to become Anna Lipowski and move in with his Catholic aunt Krysia, posing as her niece. Krysia works for the underground while maintaining her status as a leader in the arts community. During a dinner party, Emma/Anna is introduced to Nazi Kommadant Richwalder. Smitten, he asks her to come work for him. She agrees, knowing such access will aid the underground, and even becomes intimate with the enemy to gather information.

Written in the first person, the author gives an insightful portrait of people forced into an untenable situation and succeeds in humanizing the unfathomable as well as the heroic

Movie - The Illusionist

Rated ★★★★★

Martin and I watched The Illusionist last night. I had been on a long waiting list for it at my library and it was well worth the wait. It was beautifully acted and beautifully filmed. Naturally there was a lot of it that I didn't get. But that's ok, I still liked it anyway.

Briefly - Sophy (a Dutchess) and Eisenheim a (poor peasent boy) become childhood friends. When thier friendship becomes known her family puts a stop to it. Eisenheim goes off to see the world and encounters an old man who teaches him magic. He returns years later to find that Sophy has become engaged to a Crown Prince. Eisenheim uses his powers so that he and Sophy can elope. The whole thing was kind of Gothic but in a fun kind of way.

Jeanette

Monday, March 5, 2007

24. Dolly and The Bird of Paradise

By Dorothy Dunnett
Rated ★★★½

The story starts in London with Rita Geddes a cheeky, punky makeup artist with multicolored hair and an attitude. She is called to a photo shoot by associate to make up a celebrity journalist. There she meets Johnson Johnson in whose apartment the shoot is being held.

Rita is offered a temporary position with the journalist to fill in for her close friend Kim Jim who is planning to retire. Because the money is so good Rita is soon off to the journalist's lush island hideaway where she is beaten up and knocked out. To make matters worse the friend who got her into this mess is found murdered. Rita is out to avenge her friend.

As I am no great fan of mysteries but I did enjoy this book. The tight writing, clever dialogue, delicious mahem, malaprops and misnomers make this a gem to read. She could have left out the french phrases and dialogue. I have never appreciated it when Dunnett does this but since I love her other books so much I forgive her. But I do retain the right to grumble.






Sunday, March 4, 2007

23. War and Rememberance

By Herman Wouk
Rated ★★★★★


War and Remembrance covers the period from after Pearl through the surrender of Japan in August 1945. As he did in Winds of War the author sends his fictional cahracters all over the world in order to cover every aspect of the Second World War including the "Final Solution" thru the pov a Natalie Jastrow who married the youngest son on Victor Henry. When it got down to the nitty gritty for Natalie I skipped because as I said in the previous entry I just don't go there.

While I realise that Wouk needed to tell the complete story of what happened to the Jewish people in Europe I found parts of it too painful to read. I get caught up in the story and kept wishing I could reach into the book, grab Natalie by the shirt and scream in her face "get out of there you stupid twit. Leave while you still can."

The author has also included a fictional book within his book written by a German General in order to give the German pov. I thought this was very clever of him. The only criticism of this marvelous work I have is that the author's focus is primarily on the war in Europe, just skipping lightly over the war in the Pacific and giving no corresponding Japanese character to give their pov. Oh Well, it was still a wonderful read. I am very glad I decided to revisit these books.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

22. Winds of War

By Herman Wouk
Rated ★★★★★

This is another book from my list of wonderful books I read years ago. It's books like this that make Historical Fiction my favorite genre as it's the easiest way for me to learn about history without having to read a bunch of dry history books.

The blurb on my library web site states that this book and it's sequel War and Remembrance capture all the drama, romance, heroism and tragedy of the Second World War. I agree with that statement. Also it's the last war that the United States flat out won so for that reason alone it's a unique achievement.

Wouk uses the fictional family of Naval Officer "Pug" Henry to spread out over the globe in order to give the story a unifying, human-level plot. But in order to make this work one has to totally suspend their disbelief at having the characters show up in every key situation and just sit back and enjoy the ride.

The only real problem I had with this book was with the parts that dealt with the Jewish daughter in law being trapped in Europe at the outbreak of the war. I recognized that Woulk was using this plot device in order to give the reader a clear picture of what happened to the Jews when the Nazi's came to power but I just can't do Holocaust stories. I am too much of a wuss and they give me bad dreams. So I just skipped that part of the story when it started to get bad.

Other than that it was an engrossing story and once again I had forgotten so much from my previous read that it was pretty much all new again. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in this period of history.

Friday, February 23, 2007

21. Family Tree


By Barbara Delinsky
Rated ★★★★

From the blurb: "The old and illustrious New England Clarke family has a new member, and she is not what the family envisioned. Elizabeth Clarke, a beautiful daughter born to Hugh and Dana, possesses definite African American traits."

"As Dana's family history and fidelity are questioned, Hugh, who thought he was above racism, now wants his wife to find out the truth about her heritage. While Dana searches for her father and Hugh's family pressures him to find out for certain if the child is indeed his, Hugh must confront the truth about himself, his family, and their racist attitude while also trying to reconcile his own attitude toward his daughter."

This book makes you think about how you would react if this had happened in your family.

20. In Pursuit of the Green Lion

by Judith Merkle Riley
Rated A++

This book is a sequel to A Vision of Light. Married now to Brother Gregory (Gilbert de Vilers) Margaret, is living with the insufferable, penny pinching in laws She is carving out a life for herself and her daughters despite the hostility and greed of her in-laws. But when Gregory is captured in France and held for ransom, Margaret knows she must take action—her in-laws are too tight with money to be of any use—so she teams up with her old friends Mother Hilde, the herbalist, and Brother Malachi, an alchemist on a quest for the secret of changing base metals into gold. Together, the trio plan to rescue Gregory and bring him back to London, where he and Margaret can start a new life away from his meddling family.

And thus begins a wild adventure across fourteenth-century Europe. Murderous noblemen, scheming ladies, truculent ghosts, and a steady stream of challenges plague the journey. Margaret will need not only her special gift of healing, her quick mind, and her independent spirit but the loyalty of her friends and the love of her new husband to carry them all safely home.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

19. The Persian Boy


by Mary Renault
Rated B

I thought the end of this book would never come. My problem with it is that I read the first half, read two other books and then came back to it. Bad idea.

The story is told from the viewpoint of Bagoas, a young eunuch and a real historical character who became Alexander's servant and lover following the conquest of Persia. Essentially this is a love story: not just between Alexander and Bagoas, but also Hephastion one of his generals and boyhood friend, lover, and battle companion. In the author's note at the end of the story Renault points out that history bears out the fact that Alexander was bi-sexual but leaned heavily to the homosexual side of his nature.

I recently watched a televised version of Alexander's life on the History Chanel. In that program they mentioned that Alexander and his army covered approximately forty thousand miles (mostly on foot) in twelve years. Taking into account that this army was fighting battles, and conquering nations all the way, I can't see how Alexander had time to date girls or the energy left to conduct a romance. This may have been a simple case of making do with what was readily available.

Renault portrays Alexander the Great as being handsome, charismatic, brave, usually fair and just, and a brilliant military strategist whose Macedonian warriors are willing to follow him to the ends of the earth. Putting together Renault's book and the History Chanel biography of him, I am totally impressed. He was truly a remarkable man.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

18. All Passion Spent

Vita Sackville-West
Rated C

Blurb from back of book "Having surrendered of her life to the exemplary, if often hollow fulfillment of her marriage, to the expectations of her statesman husband and the demands of her children, Lady Slane finally, in her widowhood, defies her family. She dismisses the wishes and plans of her six pompous sons and daughters for her future, and instead retires to a tiny house in Hampstead, where she chooses to live independently and free from her past. There she alters, and not without some success, the course of her personal history. There, too, she recollects the dreams of her youth and at last, with one last "strange and lovely thing, " acts upon the passion she forfeited seventy years earlier to the narrow conventions of a proper Victorian marriage."

After reading the first few pages of this book I was entirely in sympathy with Lady Slane as she declares her independence from her pompas and patronizing children. However by the time I finished this book the only characters I liked were the landlord, the handyman and the french maid. As I read it slowly dawned on me that Lady Slane had a mean streak that had remained hidden under her personna of gentle, scatterbrained and submissive wife and dedicated Mother.


Tuesday, February 13, 2007

17. Natural Born Charmer

By Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Rated A+++

Chicago Stars quarterback Dean Robillard is driving to Tennessee when he spots a headless beaver walking down the side of the street.

Once again this author has come through for me in a big way. She is a genius of creating a comic situation and giving it depth and a touch of pathos. She has a talent for drawing the reader into the story so the reader feels emotionally invested in the outcome. There is far more than the relationship between the main characters. There is a broken family that tries to find its' way back. There is a child who finds her way back to her father and a man who has to find forgiveness in his heart for a mother that would never ask for it.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

16. A Vision of Light


by Margaret Merkle Riley
Rated A+

From the blurb on back of book "An appealing novel about Margaret of Ashbury, a 14th-century Englishwoman, who is inspired in a ``vision of light'' to write her memoirs and tell a woman's story. Unable to write, she hires Brother Gregory to record her memories. He is contemptuous of her ambition, but hungry enough to accept her offer."

Gregory is a clerical scholar, who desparately wants a profound spiritual experience, intellectualizes constantly about it, whereas for Margaret, she simply lives it. He tries to control and force it, while for Margaret it is a gift of the ability to heal.

Margaret stays in hot water with her neighbors, her client's and eventually she attracts the notice of the church. She is saved by an rich and elderly merchant whom she marries. What started out as a marriage of convenience turns into a real love match and it is he who encourages Margaret to tell her story and also to learn to read and write. But when he dies Margaret has to face once again that a women without the protection of a husband during this period is extremely hazardous.

The book alternates between Margaret's and Gregory's clashes in their present and her telling of her past. I loved the medieval setting and where Margaret is describing life as a midwife in London. I really liked Brother Gregory because even from the beginning you knew that Margaret was going to poke holes in all his pet theories on the superiority of men and how inferior the minds of women were.