Friday, August 26, 2011

Nominees for February through May 2012



Please pick your 4 favorites and send them to Peggy via email before September 1, 2011.

The Pursuit of Love
by Nancy Mitford (fiction)

Amazon.com synopsis: Nancy Mitford’s most enduringly popular novel, The Pursuit of Love is a classic comedy about growing up and falling in love among the privileged and eccentric. Mitford modeled her characters on her own famously unconventional family. We are introduced to the Radletts through the eyes of their cousin Fanny, who stays with them at Alconleigh, their Gloucestershire estate. Uncle Matthew is the blustering patriarch, known to hunt his children when foxes are scarce; Aunt Sadie is the vague but doting mother; and the seven Radlett children, despite the delights of their unusual childhood, are recklessly eager to grow up. The first of three novels featuring these characters, The Pursuit of Love follows the travails of Linda, the most beautiful and wayward Radlett daughter, who falls first for a stuffy Tory politician, then an ardent Communist, and finally a French duke named Fabrice.

One Day by David Nicholls (fiction)
From Publishers Weekly: ...The episodic story takes place during a single day each year for two decades in the lives of Dex and Em. Dexter, the louche public school boy, and Emma, the brainy Yorkshire lass, meet the day they graduate from university in 1988 and run circles around one another for the next 20 years. Dex becomes a TV presenter whose life of sex, booze, and drugs spins out of control, while Em dully slogs her way through awful jobs before becoming the author of young adult books. They each take other lovers and spouses, but they cannot really live without each other... Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand (nonfiction)

Amazon Best Books of the Month, November 2010: From Laura Hillenbrand, the bestselling author of Seabiscuit, comes Unbroken, the inspiring true story of a man who lived through a series of catastrophes almost too incredible to be believed. In evocative, immediate descriptions, Hillenbrand unfurls the story of Louie Zamperini--a juvenile delinquent-turned-Olympic runner-turned-Army hero. During a routine search mission over the Pacific, Louie’s plane crashed into the ocean, and what happened to him over the next three years of his life is a story that will keep you glued to the pages, eagerly awaiting the next turn in the story and fearing it at the same time. You’ll cheer for the man who somehow maintained his selfhood and humanity despite the monumental degradations he suffered, and you’ll want to share this book with everyone you know. —Juliet Disparte

Room by Emma Donoghue (fiction)

Amazon.com Review. Amazon Best of the Month, September 2010: In many ways, Jack is a typical 5-year-old. He likes to read books, watch TV, and play games with his Ma. But Jack is different in a big way--he has lived his entire life in a single room, sharing the tiny space with only his mother and an unnerving nighttime visitor known as Old Nick. For Jack, Room is the only world he knows, but for Ma, it is a prison in which she has tried to craft a normal life for her son. When their insular world suddenly expands beyond the confines of their four walls, the consequences are piercing and extraordinary. Despite its profoundly disturbing premise, Emma Donoghue's Room is rife with moments of hope and beauty, and the dogged determination to live, even in the most desolate circumstances. A stunning and original novel of survival in captivity, readers who enter Room will leave staggered, as though, like Jack, they are seeing the world for the very first time. —Lynette Mong

Let the Great World Spin
by Colum McCann (fiction)

Amazon Best of the Month, June 2009: Colum McCann has worked some exquisite magic with Let the Great World Spin, conjuring a novel of electromagnetic force that defies gravity. It's August of 1974, a summer "hot and serious and full of death and betrayal," and Watergate and the Vietnam War make the world feel precarious. A stunned hush pauses the cacophonous universe of New York City as a man on a cable walks (repeatedly) between World Trade Center towers. This extraordinary, real-life feat by French funambulist Philippe Petit becomes the touchstone for stories that briefly submerge you in ten varied and intense lives--a street priest, heroin-addicted hookers, mothers mourning sons lost in war, young artists, a Park Avenue judge. All their lives are ordinary and unforgettable, overlapping at the edges, occasionally converging. And when they coalesce in the final pages, the moment hums with such grace that its memory might tighten your throat weeks later. You might find yourself paused, considering the universe of lives one city contains in any slice of time, each of us a singular world, sometimes passing close enough to touch or collide, to birth a new generation or kill it, sending out ripples, leaving residue, an imprint, marking each other, our city, the very air—compassionately or callously, unable to see all the damage we do or heal. And most of us stumbling, just trying not to trip, or step in something awful. But then someone does something extraordinary, like dancing on a cable strung 110 stories in the air, or imagining a magnificent novel that lifts us up for a sky-scraping, dizzy glimpse of something greater: the sordid grandeur of this whirling world, "bigger than its buildings, bigger than its inhabitants."—Mari Malcolm

A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan (fiction)

From Bookmarks Magazine: Critics loved Egan's newest novel, describing it as "audacious" and "extraordinary" (Philadelphia Inquirer). In the hands of a less-gifted writer, Egans's time-hopping narrative, unorthodox format, and motley cast of characters might have failed spectacularly. But it works here, primarily because each person shines within his or her individual chapter that offers a distinct voice and a fascinating backstory. A few reviewers mentioned the uneven nature of the chapters and the different stylistic experiments within them. Yet, hailed as "a frequently dazzling piece of layer-cake metafiction" (Entertainment Weekly), A Visit from the Goon Squad is a gutsy novel that succeeds on all levels.

Lord of Misrule
by Jaimy Gordon (fiction)

Amazon Best Books of the Month, December 2010: It is nearly impossible not to be drawn into horseracing cliches when describing Jaimy Gordon's novel Lord of Misrule, especially since it came out of the pack as a dark horse (there you go) to win the 2010 National Book Award for fiction the same week it was published. It's a novel of the track, and Gordon embraces racing's lingo and lore and even some of its romance of longshot redemption, though she knows those bets never really come in, at least the way you think they will. Her story is set at a backwater half-mile track in West Virginia in the early '70s, the sort of place where people wash up or get stuck or, if they're particularly cruel, carve out a provincial fiefdom. The horses there are washed up too but still somehow glorious, and they're as vividly and individually defined as the people who build their lives around them. Between horse and handler there's a sort of cross-species alchemy that, along with Gordon's gorgeous language and wise storytelling, provides the central beauty of her mud-caked but mythic tale, which Maggie, one of her most compelling characters, comes the closest to describing: "On the last little spit of being human, staring through rags of fog into the not human, where you weren't supposed to be able to see let alone cross, she could make a kind of home." —Tom Nissley

Mr. Pip by Lloyd Jones (fiction)
From Bookmarks Magazine: Winner of the Commonwealth Writers' Overall Prize for Best Book and short-listed for the Booker Prize, Mister Pip delighted critics with its beautiful prose, compelling characters, and humane exploration of literature's power. They especially lauded Matilda, who learns to identify with Pip and, in the process, heals the rift with her mother. Not every scene is heartrending; however, this story is framed by rape, murder, and civil war. Some reviewers noted a few whiffs of paternalism from the author, some awkward dialogue, too much foreshadowing, and an odd ending. But in its exploration of how literature can bring joy amid great suffering, Mister Pip is a heartwarming and worthwhile coming-of-age novel. Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.

Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey (fiction)
Amazon Best Books of the Month, April 2010: In this vivid and visceral work of historical fiction, two-time Booker Prize winner Peter Carey imagines the experiences of Alexis de Tocqueville, the great French political philosopher and author of Democracy in America. Carey brings de Tocqueville to life through the fictionalized character of Olivier de Garmont, a coddled and conceited French aristocrat. Olivier can only begin to grasp how the other half lives when forced to travel to the New World with John "Parrot" Larrit, a jaded survivor of lifelong hardship who can’t stand his young master who he is expected to spy on for the overprotective Maman Garmont back in Paris. Parrot and Olivier are a mid-nineteenth-century Oscar and Felix who represent the highest and lowest social registers of the Old World, yet find themselves unexpectedly pushed together in the New World. This odd couple’s stark differences in class and background, outlook and attitude—which are explored in alternating chapters narrated by each—are an ingenious conceit for presenting to contemporary readers the unique social experiment that was democracy in the early years of America. —Lauren Nemroff

Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls (fictionalized nonfiction)

From Publishers Weekly: For the first 10 years of her life, Lily Casey Smith, the narrator of this true-life novel by her granddaughter, Walls, lived in a dirt dugout in west Texas. Walls, whose megaselling memoir, The Glass Castle, recalled her own upbringing, writes in what she recalls as Lily's plainspoken voice, whose recital provides plenty of drama and suspense as she ricochets from one challenge to another. Having been educated in fits and starts because of her parents' penury, Lily becomes a teacher at age 15 in a remote frontier town she reaches after a solo 28-day ride. Marriage to a bigamist almost saps her spirit, but later she weds a rancher with whom she shares two children and a strain of plucky resilience. (They sell bootleg liquor during Prohibition, hiding the bottles under a baby's crib.) Lily is a spirited heroine, fiercely outspoken against hypocrisy and prejudice, a rodeo rider and fearless breaker of horses, and a ruthless poker player. Assailed by flash floods, tornados and droughts, Lily never gets far from hardscrabble drudgery in several states—New Mexico, Arizona, Illinois—but hers is one of those heartwarming stories about indomitable women that will always find an audience. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Just Kids by Patti Smith (nonfiction)
Amazon Best Books of the Month, January 2010: Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe weren't always famous, but they always thought they would be. They found each other, adrift but determined, on the streets of New York City in the late '60s and made a pact to keep each other afloat until they found their voices—or the world was ready to hear them. Lovers first and then friends as Mapplethorpe discovered he was gay, they divided their dimes between art supplies and Coney Island hot dogs. Mapplethorpe was quicker to find his metier, with a Polaroid and then a Hasselblad, but Smith was the first to fame, transformed, to her friend's delight, from a poet into a rock star. (Mapplethorpe soon became famous too—and notorious—before his death from AIDS in 1989.) Smith's memoir of their friendship, Just Kids, is tender and artful, open-eyed but surprisingly decorous, with the oracular style familiar from her anthems like "Because the Night," "Gloria," and "Dancing Barefoot" balanced by her powers of observation and memory for everyday details like the price of automat sandwiches and the shabby, welcoming fellow bohemians of the Chelsea Hotel, among whose ranks these baby Rimbauds found their way. — Tom Nissley

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Just to Get Everyone in the Spirit

The Radetzky March

He was only called Pfiffikus because you give that name to someone who likes to whistle, which Pfiffikus most definitely did. He was constantly whistling a tune called the "Radetzky March," and all the kids in the town would call out to him and duplicate that tune. (Page 52)

The "Radetzky March" was written by Johan Strauss Sr. in 1848 (Op. 228) and dedicated to the Austrian Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky von Radetz. It is traditionally played as the final number at New Year's concerts in Vienna. The audience claps in time to the music. The video below shows the "Radetzky March" being played at the 1987 New Year's concert in Vienna with Herbert von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philharmonic and the audience.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

August Meeting Wrap-Up

For those of you who came here looking for the post with the nominees that weren't chosen during the last selection, since I have a feeling that post is about to be knocked off the bottom of the page by this post, here is a permalink to that post. You will find synopses both for the books that weren't chosen and the books which were chosen, so out of those, the ones we are being asked to consider now for voting by e-mail are:
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
Just Kids by Patti Smith
Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey
Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann
Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Wells
Mr. Pip by Lloyd James

I just realized that Let the Great World Spin is not in the original post because it was nominated at the meeting and not before, so here is a link to a synopsis of that. Also, we have a nomination by Nancy for consideration of Room by Emma Donoghue, so here is a link for that. Peggy would like to have us pick our 4 favorites and reply no later than Sunday, August, 21, 2011, by email or by phone. I don't want to post her email and phone here on the internet (for anti-spam reasons), but if you don't have them, add a comment to this post stating so, and I will send them to you.

Followup to City of Thieves: A Russian Movie Recommendation, "Ballad of a Soldier"














For those of you who don't mind subtitled movies, a Russian movie from 1959 that you might enjoy is "Ballad of a Soldier." It is available on Netflix and is not as "heavy" as a lot of Russian movies, also the hero of that story physically looks what I imagine the character "Kolya" to look like. In the movie, the hero's name is "Alyosha," (diminutive of Alexei). He is out on recon one day at the front, and he and his partner stumble across German tanks. Impulsively and in a panic, Alyosha picks up an anti-tank gun and scores a direct hit on two tanks, incapacitating them. For his "bravery," his commanding officer proposes him for a medal. Alyosha asks instead for leave for a couple of days to visit his mother on the collective farm because her roof has been leaking and he wants to repair the roof. The officer agrees, but since he knows travel in wartime will be difficult, he grants Alyosha 6 days: 2 days to get there, 2 days to fix the roof, and 2 days to get back. The film then follows Alyosha on his journey where: 1) transportation is even more messed up than his commanding officer imagined, and 2) Alyosha is such a friendly and helpful guy he can't help getting involved in the lives of the people he meets along the way. That is all I can say about the plot in case any of you want to watch it.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Saturday, August 6, 2011, at 2 p.m.

City of Thieves by David Benioff

The siege of Leningrad

















The encirclement of Leningrad by the German army was completed on September 8, 1941, and was not completely lifted until January 27, 1944. By the time it was over, of the original 3 million residents of the city, anywhere from 600,000 to 800,000 had died of cold, starvation, or bombardment by the Germans (not to mention being shot by the authorities for looting, desertion, etc). The picture and the facts are lifted from the St. Petersburg tourism web page Another good site I found was part of an "Eyewitness to History" site and contains several survivor accounts in their own words.

Cultural References from City of Thieves (I look them up so you don't have to.)

War and Peace. On page 90, Kolya expresses his opinion about Natasha Rostov, the main female character from Tolstoy's War and Peace, causing Lev to marvel that anyone would care that much about a fictitious character. What I found out by watching the David Benioff video that I have embedded below is that, during the siege, copies of War and Peace were printed up and handed out to the people of Leningrad to read as a morale booster.

Osip Mandelstam (1891–1938). (I can't find the exact page for reference). A Russian poet of Polish Jewish extraction, Mandelstam grew up in imperial St. Petersburg, and like most poets of the time, was initially a supporter of the revolution. Like the father of the main character, Lev, he was seized by the police and died in custody. Benioff references Mandelstam's "Stalin Epigram."
The Stalin Epigram
by Osip Mandelstam
translated by W. S. Merwin

Our lives no longer feel ground under them.
At ten paces you can’t hear our words.

But whenever there’s a snatch of talk
it turns to the Kremlin mountaineer,

the ten thick worms his fingers,
his words like measures of weight,

the huge laughing cockroaches on his top lip,
the glitter of his boot-rims.

Ringed with a scum of chicken-necked bosses
he toys with the tributes of half-men.

One whistles, another meows, a third snivels.
He pokes out his finger and he alone goes boom.

He forges decrees in a line like horseshoes,
One for the groin, one the forehead, temple, eye.

He rolls the executions on his tongue like berries.
He wishes he could hug them like big friends from home.

Anna Akhmatova (1889–1966). A Russian poet of upper-class Russian extraction and a great friend of Osip Mandelstam. (Some, including Mandelstam's wife, claimed that the two were more than friends, but Akmatova always denied it.) Akhmatova also initially supported the revolution but eventually became disillusioned. She was often criticized by the Soviet establishment for writing bourgeois, sentimental love poetry. Because of her personal associations, her poetry was officially banned between 1925 and 1940. On page 68, Kolya lashes out at Akhmatova, not only for her "narcissistic" verse, but also for having left Leningrad and for urging the women of Leningrad to fight via radio broadcast from the safety of Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975). The composer remained initially remained in Leningrad where he volunteered for the fire brigade and posed for the posters mentioned by Lev on page 67. He wrote the first three movements of his 7th Symphony while in Leningrad, but was evacuated to Kuybishev where he finished the work (it turns out Kolya was right about that). The 7th Symphony is often called the "Leningrad Symphony," and was premiered in Moscow, but the most famous performance was in wartime Leningrad itself as detailed in the video clip below.



Interview with David Benioff about City of Thieves


Part 1


Part 2


Part 3