Tuesday, August 5, 2008

The Memory Keeper's Daughter

Oh-so early this morning, I even finished another book! This one I was glad to be done with. Very slow moving plot, and too descriptive for my taste. It was a tad bit boring, and the title didn't really quite make any sense...until the middle of the book. And then when the concept was sort of introduced, it ended there. Eh! Nothing I would recommend. This is going back to Elizza stat, hahahaha.
A short summary: Kim Edwards's stunning family drama evokes the spirit of Sue Miller and Alice Sebold, articulating every mother?s silent fear: what would happen if you lost your child and she grew up without you? In 1964, when a blizzard forces Dr. David Henry to deliver his own twins, he immediately recognizes that one of them has Down Syndrome and makes a split-second decision that will haunt all their lives forever. He asks his nurse to take the baby away to an institution and to keep her birth a secret. Instead, she disappears into another city to raise the child as her own.
On to the next book! If you look to the right of my blog, my bookshelf shows books on my nightstand....to be read with relish! :) I'm going through the entire Jodie Picoult series, I think, since I like the way she writes. I'm also on the lookout for the Twilight series; it's a teen's book, but I've heard some great reviews about it....and it's always out of stock now! Gotta go to those out-of-the way bookstores to see if they carry it.

Monday, August 4, 2008

PS I Love You

Whoohoohoo!!! I have been reading again, starting the past few days. And it is just wonderful to be holding and turning the pages of a novel! I forgot how relaxing, how a story can just take me to a different place, a different time. Ahhhhh......I love books, I love reading!

I finished reading PS, I Love You by Cecilia Ahern a few days ago and I've been reading voraciously ever since.
A short summary: PS, I Love You follows the engaging, witty, and occasionally sappy reawakening of Holly, a young Irish widow who must put her life back together after she loses her husband Gerry to a brain tumor. Ahern, the twentysomething daughter of Ireland's prime minister, has discovered a clever and original twist to the Moving On After Death concept made famous by novelists and screenwriters alike--Gerry has left Holly a series of letters designed to help her face the year ahead and carry on with her life. As the novel takes readers through the seasons (and through Gerry's monthly directives), we watch as Holly finds a new job, takes a holiday to Spain with her girlfriends, and sorts through her beloved husband's belongings. Accompanying Holly throughout the healing process is a cast of friends and family members who add as much to the novel's success as Holly's own tale of survival. In fact, it is these supporting character's mini-dramas that make PS, I Love You more than just another superficial tearjerker with the obligatory episode at a karaoke bar. Ahern shows real talent for capturing the essence of an interaction between friends and foes alike; even if Holly's circle of friends does resemble the gang from Bridget Jones a bit too neatly to ignore (her best friend is even called Sharon).
Not a bad book; it was enjoyable for the most part, until the end. Hehehe. I know, I know. But for me, if the end isn't a great one, then it makes the book a so-so book. So yes, this one's a so-so book. Would I read it again, maybe, if there was nothing else to read. For a light, no-thinking read, this should be ok. But if I had a choice, I'd probably pick something else.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Trying Out a New Author

What with the soltera, Hong Kong trip, wedding and planning our anniversary trip, it was a WONDER that I started --- and finished --- Jodi Picoult's Songs of the Humpback Whale!

A basic summary: Jane runs away from her husband after a major fight. Her daughter goes with her. She writes to her brother who tells her where to go in his next letter, delivered to the Post Office of the next town. This continues until Jane's husband, a well-known oceanographer, finally tracks her down.

This is a pretty deep, complex book. I was very confused with the book having 5 different narrators, not just Jane. It was a chore to have to completely change my reading perspective every chapter, but as I got the hang of it, it wasn't too bad. :) Jodi Picoult explores these 5 characters and how they relate to each other very thoroughly. Then the reader gets to tie everything together. Though not by all means predictable, Songs of the Humpback Whales is most definitely NOT an easy read. Be prepared to spend a few hours delving into this book.

Sunday, June 3, 2007

New Books for Raegan

I know, this blog is really for MY reading habits and the books that I read. But if I can influence other people, i.e., my kids (!) into the habit of reading, then they most definitely deserve mention in this blog, yes? :)

{Bookstore Run}

After lunch at Serendra with the Gavinos, Raegan and I went to the bookstore to pick a book series for her to read. Junie B Jones was getting to be too easy for her, and I could barely pick a word from the books to supplement her vocabulary! She would breeze through the books and I felt that she needed a litte bit more of a challenge, especially since I wanted her to learn more words.

So she looked and looked and looked. I pointed her towards the older kids section and she spent a few minutes looking at books. With some suggestions, she narrowed down her choice to a couple of books from the Little House on the Prairie series: Little House on Rocky Ridge and Little House in Brookfield.

This series is appropriately for Grades 3-5, which is fine for vocabulary purposes. And at least she's chosen chapter books again, so that's definitely a plus! Hopefully, she'll get into reading again, right before school starts.

Now to work on the other two kids.....

All that time spent in the bookstore brought back memories of reading books just for the pleasure of it. I survived on Trixie Belden, Nancy Drew, the Bobbsey Twins and all books written by Enid Blyton. I've always had a thirst for knowledge and that has definitely helped me during all my school years. I am hoping that Raegan will follow in my footsteps.


Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Keeping a Secret....NOT!

Sophie Kinsella, author of the (in)famous Shopaholic series, writes Can You Keep A Secret in a witty, light, HILARIOUS way! I kid you not when I say that I could NOT put the book down. I settled in bed around midnight, meaning to read a couple of chapters before going to sleep.

Uhmmm....NOT! I read through the ENTIRE book and ended at 4 am! Hehehehe! I could NOT put it down! I was laughing out loud then would automatically look at Ranger and Japa, hoping I didn't wake them with my guffaws! :)

Emma Corrigan, a nervous flyer, thinks that she will meet inevitable death when her plane hits turbulence. She grabs the arm of a complete stranger and babbles ALL her secrets away. They land, and Emma thinks she will never see the stranger again. Wrong!

This stranger turns out to be the CEO of the company she works for! And with every conversation they have, the stranger, Jack Harper, constantly refers to some of Emma's secrets. And so begins a story that is emotionally exhausting and hilarious at the same time. Again, I could not put it down; I really wanted to find out how everything would turn out!

Light reading, definitely a Chick Lit book. No guy would probably be caught dead reading this, but it is just SO fun!!! Take it to the beach, and enjoy it!

Happy reading! Back to Shakespeare now.......

Friday, May 18, 2007

THE Classic Author

William Shakespeare of course! Ever since I held my first Shakespeare book when I was a freshman in high school (Assumption San Lorenzo), I fell in love with this bard. That first book was Julius Caesar. We were made to memorize the speech of either Marc Antony or Brutus and then declaim in front of the entire class. I'm pretty sure I chose Marc Antony, and his (in)famous speech started with "Friends, Romans, Countrymen.....I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him...." Or maybe it was Brutus? I can't remember...but I DO remember that speech, and I got a grade of Outstanding for it, too!

And so my love affair with William Shakespeare started. In my senior year at Immaculate Heart, in my Advanced Placement Language Class, we were asked to write a paper on the application of Shakespeare of LIGHT in his most famous romance novel, Romeo and Juliet. "Oh Romeo, oh Romeo, wherefore art thou, Romeo?" :)

And who would have thought I'd end up marrying a Romeo? Hehehe.

Back to Romeo and Juliet. I feverishly read and re-read the novel from cover to cover, writing down and citing several instances where Shakespeare applied light in the novel. It was enough to fill up at least 8 pages worth of citations and explanations. The day our teacher returned our papers, she gave out everything except mine. I was sick to my stomach, thinking that maybe I had forgotten to put quotation marks somewhere and she'd have me for plagiarizing!!! Ack!

To my surprise, our teacher told our entire class that she just HAD to read this particular paper (I still didn't know it was mine, dunce that I was, hehehe) because it was just so very inspiring and well written......she had barely finished the first paragraph when a thrill shot through me: She was reading MY paper! MY PAPER!!!! :)

And so my love affair with William Shakespeare continued.

I wanted to impart to the kids this love of Shakespeare for the longest time....but I had difficulty finding a book that was in plain English, not the thee, thou, thy of the Olden English language. I wanted a simple, straightforward book that would tell the story without need for a dictionary or a thesaurus at hand.

So when I spied this particular book at our nearby National Bookstore, I just HAD to purchase it!
The Illustrated Tales from Shakespeare, A Modern Adaptation from the Charles and Mary Lamb Classic.

I am now reading through it and re-living my love affair with THE William Shakespeare. Then I'm going to have the kids read it. This particular version is written for the 9-12 year range after all. But obviously, I have GOT to know the stories very well so as to be able to discuss it (here on my blog and) with the kids.

Happy Reading!

Monday, May 14, 2007

A Snippet from World History

Xerxes Invades Greece, supposedly narrated by Herodotus. I bought this book a few days after the "high" we all felt from watching 300, the movie. I wanted ---needed---to know more about the story of King Leonidas and his 300 Spartan warriors. The movie pretty much immortalized Leonidas and the kind of men (and women, hehehe) from the Greek state of Sparta.

To my utter disappointment, this book failed to deliver. I guess I should have known that the scenes that I was looking for were going to be skimmed over. After all, this book is one in a series of several books (20 extracts from The Histories!!!) that is published by Penguin Epics.

Anyhoo, I waded through mindless descriptions of King Xerxes and his army and navy --- commanders of which were thoroughly NAMED by Herodotus. I mean really, if the reader wanted a story and not a history text, you'd drop this book like a hot potato! But silly, stubborn me, wanted to find the part where Leonidas fought to the death.

I found it on page 72. For about 4 whole pages. That was it. And to think that I read this book for what seemed the loooooongest time ever for an itsy-bitsy 113-page book! Sigh! Onward to the next book, I say. And no, I will NOT be picking up any more extracts from The Histories, that's for sure! I don't need to know endless names of Greek and Persian generals or captains.

Word of the day today is EXTIRPATE. to destroy totally; to exterminate. In the context of this book: King Xerxes set out to extirpate Greece with his Persian army.

Oh well. At the very least, the book allowed me to use the WOD today, hehehe.

On to my journey......I will be staying with the classics and I picked out a compilation of Shakespeare :)

Happy reading!