Thursday, January 25, 2007

5. The Magician's Assistant


by Ann Patchett, rated A

For more than twenty years Sabine has loved the magician Parsifal and served as his assistant even though Parcifal is gay When Parsifal's lover dies of aids and he realizes he is also infected with the disease he marries Sabine and puts most of his property in her name so she will be his widow and save on inheritance taxes. Sabine believes her husband has no living relatives and when he dies she is shocked to learn of a trust fund established for a mother and two sisters in Nebraska. When his family contacts her, she invites them to visit and then visits them in Nebraska in order to discover the truth about the man she loved and thought she knew.

I was very surprised at how this book ended. I guess I am just a lot more naive than any woman my age has a right to be. Oh well.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

4. Mrs. Palfrey at the Clairmont


by Elizabeth Taylor (DVD) Rated b

Amazon Blurb:
Mrs. Palfrey is recently widowed and decides to move to a small hotel in London to spend her last years as a lady of independence. The Claremont is a crumbling old edifice that serves as a retirement home for a small but fascinating group of tenants. Mrs. Palfrey meets her fellow 'inmates' at dinner, and announces that she has a grandson who will be calling on her at times. Yet despite multiple attempts her grandson Desmond doesn't respond and Mrs. Palfrey realizes she has entered a world of loneliness.

Out on an errand she falls and is befriended by a handsome young busker/writer Ludovic Meyer who nurses her leg wound, makes her tea, and escorts her home. Ludo is a loner and also lonely and when Mrs. Palfrey offers him dinner at the hotel he gladly accepts. But at the hotel the guests presume that Mrs. Palfrey's guest will be her grandson Desmond. Mrs. Palfrey hastily informs Ludo that she has erred and Ludo agrees to pose as her grandson. The guests at the hotel are charmed by Ludo, and Mrs. Palfrey and Ludo grow increasingly bonded - they share many likes and tastes and meld into a beautiful relationship that would be the envy of any grandmother and grandson. Mrs. Palfrey's loneliness is dissipated by Ludo and the effect is vice versa. How the two progress to the end of the film, finding new lives from old ones, forms the immensely touching finale to the film.

My Comments: I watched this over the weekend. I thought it was a very beautiful but bittersweet movie. I loved how the relationship of Mrs. Palfrey and Ludo progressed but the atmosphere of the Clairmont and the
situation of the residents made me very sad.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

3. Awakened heart

by Betty Neels, Rated B

I don't know why I like this author's cheesy romances. I just do. I always read them and they are always basically the same. The hero is always a doctor and is Dutch, the heroine is always English and a nurse. He is rich, large and handsome, she is poor, dumpy and plain. It's always a marriage on convenience and they later fall in love sometime between the first and second helpings of dessert. I am exaggerating here but not by much.

The chaste courtship is mainly conducted traveling from one restaurant to another where they order sumptuous meals that the author describes in great detail. All the passion in these books is restricted to food. One can only imagine if she ever wrote a sequel to any of these books how heavy the couple would be.

But I liked it, I will read the next one when it comes out. So there!

Monday, January 22, 2007

2. Home, The Blueprint of our Lives


edited by John Edwards, Rated B+

A coffee-table type book with short essays on Home and what it meant to each of the 60 people who wrote about the homes they grew up in. It includes novelist Isabel Allende, chef Mario Batali, musician John Mellencamp, quarterback Joe Montana and architect Maya Lin to numerous to mention here of lesser-known people from all walks of life. The first-person testimony is very effective

Sunday, January 21, 2007

1. My Life in France


Julia Childs - Audio CD, Rated C

I checked this book out on a whim and while it was OK, it was really not my cup of tea. A memoir of that begins when Julia and new husband Paul Child moved to france where he was working at the American Embassy. She became interested in French cooking and enrolled the Cordon Bleu Cooking school and later went on to co-write a French Cookbook aimed at the American market. It drug in parts and had my eyes rolling when she describes in detail how she spent three months obsessively trying to perfect the perfect mayonnaise. But then I, a complete cretin, think the perfect mayonnaise comes in a jar marked Hellmans.