Showing posts with label One Shelf at a Time Self-Challenge - Shelf #1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label One Shelf at a Time Self-Challenge - Shelf #1. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Quick aside - 2011 Self-Challenge Recap

I opted not to officially sign up for any challenges in 2011, instead setting aside a shelf and starting what I called my "One Shelf at a Time Self-Challenge." Anybody want to place bets on how well that went?

Let's just say there won't be a big party with streamers and champagne. Of the books pictured above (my self-challenge shelf), I only finished the following:


All three were wonderful books. I also dipped into and rejected a few:

The Bookshop by Penelope Fitzgerald - probably just not the right moment,
Hunting and Gathering by Anna Gavalda -whose book of short stories, I Wish Someone Were Waiting For Me Somewhere is one of my all-time favorite short-story collections, and
Bad Girls of the Bible by Liz Curtis Higgs - did not like the way she fictionalized the Biblical account of Eve and couldn't talk myself into going on to the next character, not knowing whether or not I'd know the real story well enough to get anything out of the fictionalized retelling.

One book was taken off the challenge shelf by its owner (my eldest son), who said he couldn't wait any longer for me to read it because he had a friend who wanted to borrow it:

A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick

The rest just sat there, eventually forgotten as I became overwhelmed by review books. It wasn't till November that I realized I'd forgotten about the shelf entirely, probably somewhere around July because I do recall thinking, "I should do a 6-month recap" and not getting to it. By the time I remembered I had a challenge shelf it, was obviously too late to read all those books; however, I did read Garlic & Sapphires and attempted Hunting & Gathering because they were borrowed books and I didn't think I should keep them beyond the end of the year.

This is a good example of why I don't join in on challenges. I'm a challenge failure. But, apart from the books I've rejected, I still do want to read all the remaining books on that shelf. During 2011 I managed to read The Goose Girl, which was published prior to Enna Burning (both by Shannon Hale) and therefore needed to be read first, anyway. So, there Enna will sit until her time comes.

I have some Christmas cookies to work off. Must dash, for now. I may inundate you with more reviews, later.


©2012 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery and Babble or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

True Grit by Charles Portis - book and the *old* movie

True Grit by Charles Portis
Copyright 1968
The Overlook Press - Western
215 pages

<---My copy doesn't look like that, but I love that cover, don't you?

True Grit is the story of Mattie Ross, whose father is killed by a man he took in and provided shelter and a job. Mattie, of near Dardanelle in Yell County, Arkansas and her father's trustworthy foreman (formerly a slave) travel to Fort Smith --where the two men had traveled to buy some ponies -- to identify her father, collect his possessions and send his body home for burial. But, Mattie wants revenge. Nobody has gone after the killer, Tom Chaney, so she asks around and finds the toughest federal marshal known in those parts, Rooster Cogburn. She wants someone with "true grit" to find Tom Chaney and bring him back to Arkansas to hang.

It quickly becomes apparent that Mattie is one tough and savvy young girl. She's been in charge of the bookkeeping for her father and has a good lawyer, back home, so she has papers ready to sign when she goes in to fetch her fathers "traps" (I'm guessing we'd use the word "trappings", as in possessions) and sell back the gelding ponies he's just purchased. Young Mattie then hires Marshal Cogburn and returns to purchase a pony to follow him into Indian Territory -- for half the price the dealer just paid her. Mattie will make you smile a lot.

Just after Mattie's paid Rooster a down-payment, a slick Texas Marshal named La Beouf (he pronounces his name "La BEEF") shows up. He's looking for Tom Chaney, too. Chaney, also known as Chelmsford, shot a senator and La Beouf is after the reward from his family and the bounty for bringing him in. But, La Beouf wants to take Chaney back to Texas and that doesn't suit Mattie. Instant tension. The two men decide to work together but they don't want Mattie tagging along, after all, even though Rooster has already agreed to let her go. Rooster had backed down because she badgered him so thoroughly.

Mattie immediately proves her determination by fording the Arkansas River on her new pony, Little Blackie, after the two marshals declare her a runaway and have her forcibly removed from the ferry. Will Mattie survive the grueling ride into Indian Territory? Will they find Tom Chaney? Will that crazy, good-looking Texan ever get over himself? Is Rooster too much of a drunk to get the job done?

True Grit, the original film version made in 1969, is an old favorite of mine so I bought the book a couple of years ago when I read a blog review. Till then, I had no idea it was based on a novel. The newer release of the movie nudged me into reading the book and I'm really glad it did. The novel is every bit as entertaining as the old movie and then some (I have not yet seen the new film version, although we do plan to view it) and, of course, goes into much greater detail.

What I loved about True Grit:

The characterization is superb and consistent, the story gripping and adventurous, the dialogue sharp and often amusing. You can't help but root for Mattie. It's obvious from the beginning who it is that really has "true grit".

What I disliked about True Grit:

Only one little thing: The lack of contractions in dialogue, which gets a bit annoying. Otherwise . . . nothing. I was fascinated to find that McAlester, Oklahoma was named after the owner of a store:

From Wikipedia: The town gets its name from J.J. McAlester, who later became Lt. Governor of Oklahoma and was immortalized as
a character in the novel True Grit, which was then made into feature films in 1969 and 2010.

You can read more about the history of McAlester, OK, here.

My thoughts about the 1969 film version of True Grit, compared to the novel:

It is always fascinating to read a book and then compare book to movie or novel to screenplay. Much of Mattie's internal monologue was compressed and turned into dialogue at the beginning of the movie to cram in all of the facts as quickly as possible. In the novel, Mattie is an old woman reflecting on her experience but you see events as they unfold in the film and there's no narration.

Events are revealed more slowly, of course, in the novel and Mattie the narrator sometimes jumps ahead to what's happened since. In the end, you known how her life turned out -- and Rooster's and La Beouf's, as well. I'm pretty sure it took about 100 pages before they even made it to Indian Territory, but there's never a dull moment.

Mattie is a mere 14 when the story takes place but actress Kim Darby looks a good bit older than 14 in the movie, in my humble opinion. Glen Campbell and John Wayne truly fit their parts. I don't know that I realized John Wayne won an Academy Award for his role, but I do think he deserved it.

Mattie's mode of speech stands out because of her minimal use of contractions, but La Beouf and Cogburn mix it up a little -- some use of them but not continuous -- so the mode of speech is a little less annoying and more natural in the film than the novel.

Here's what really surprised me about the movie. Having seen it many times, over the years (we own a DVD and I used to watch it whenever it came on TV, as a kid), I was completely stunned to find out that the Indian Territory in which they hunted for Tom Chaney was actually Oklahoma because . . . well, it sure didn't look like the Oklahoma I know, in the movie. Oklahoma is my home state, so I just always assumed it took place in some other part of Indian Territory -- up north. And, of course, the movie wasn't filmed in Oklahoma, as suspected. According to Wikipedia, True Grit (1969) was filmed in Colorado and California. Careful, there are some spoilers in the comparison of book to movie at that site.

There are quite a few lines that are taken directly from the book and a good portion of the movie is fairly accurate, but most of their time in Oklahoma is spent in the snow in the novel and it was sunny, springy and cloudless in the movie until the ending scene (which also isn't accurate to the novel, although I won't mention the differences in those final scenes because some of them might ruin your fun if you read the novel anytime soon).

The bottom line:

Excellent writing with well-developed characters, sharp and witty dialogue and an adventurous storyline make True Grit a winner. No wonder they've made it into a movie twice. Highly recommended. And, I still recommend the 1969 film version. We'll see what Huzzybuns and I think about the newer movie. We're both pretty anxious to see it, now, and agreed that the old movie hasn't lost its spark, now that we've been away from it a while. Lucky Ned Pepper was played by Robert Duvall and "Moon" by a young Dennis Hopper in the 1969 film version. Cool. I had no idea they were in the film.

After reading True Grit, I'm curious what else the author has written and The Overlook Press has published. I don't know if I've ever read anything by that particular publisher, before, so I'll fetch a link. Here you go . . . The Overlook Press. Ooooh, they have tons of P. G. Wodehouse titles, so I already love them!

And, in other news:

Here's your dose of kitty cute - Isabel, on the verge of knocking her rubber ducky into the tub. I bought her a rubber duck because she recently succeeded at fishing my razor out of the tub and she was chewing on it. Yikes! I figured she could use something safer for water play.

True Grit is the second book I've read for my personal One Shelf at a Time reading challenge. 2 down, 19 to go!

©2011 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery and Babble or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Far Afield by Susanna Kaysen

Far Afield by Susanna Kaysen
Copyright 1990
Vintage - General Fiction
338 pages

"Can I try the dryler?"

"No. No." Eyvinder grabbed it and held it to his breast. "Jonathan, I must make a confession." He grinned. "This is really a stone I painted to resemble a dryler. It's very good, no? I have done a beautiful job making it into a dryler. I wanted to give you a full Faroese meal in all its typicality, Anna and I both wanted this. But Anna cannot make dryler. Nobody can make them anymore. We've forgotten how, because they are so stinking bad to eat. They are just like rocks to eat. So, I decided,why not take a rock and make it into a dryler? It's conceptive art, isn't it?"

"Conceptual," said Jonathan.

--from p. 29 of Far Afield

Then he heard the hum. Vibrating in consonance with one of the tones of the ocean's churning, it slid in and out of perceptibility in the way that the landscape disappeared in the mist. But by stilling his breath and, to some degree, his jumping pulse, Jonathan was able to pick it out, the low continuo in the cantata of sea and wind.

--p. 50

He would take refuge in a homey understanding of Faroese ways only to be slapped back to an uncomfortable position as an American by some terrible smell: uncomfortable because he could no more now imagine himself standing at an oak door with a brass knocker, wearing a tie and holding a bottle of Médoc, than he could picture eating rotten meat. He was floating around in cultural hyperspace; nothing felt right.

--p. 210

Jonathan Brand has chosen the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic to do his field work in anthropology. A Harvard graduate student, he's been discouraged from going to the Faroes. The natives are hardly primitive, after all. But, undaunted, Jonathan learns the language and forges ahead with his plan to spend a year in the islands, studying the local customs and traditions, learning about the people and their lifestyle.

His journey begins badly. Lost luggage, terrible weather and cuisine that consists mostly of rotted fish and other dubious meats leave him feeling uncertain about his decision. But, with the encouragement of his native Faroese friend Eyvinder he begins his year in Skopun, on the island of Sandoy, in a rented house. Through experience, hard work and willingness to work at belonging, Jonathan quickly makes friends and finds his place. But, it's not a place he can remain, forever.

What I loved about Far Afield:

Okay, warning time: gushing is imminent. Far Afield is so skillfully crafted, beautifully written and insightful that I can already tell you it's got a pre-built slot in my top reads for 2011. Susanna Kaysen's writing has a depth I haven't encountered for a while and it really blew me away. You not only get such a well-defined sense of place that you feel the cold and the wind, smell the fishy ocean tang and hear the sheep, but also feel as if you come away from the book with a sense that you might just understand this unique island culture. But, you probably won't want to fly there to sample the food.

Far Afield is character-driven and mostly internal. You're firmly planted in Jonathan's point of view and Jonathan is emotionally complex, if not a bit of a wreck. At some point during his year in the Faroes, Jonathan realizes he has been disconnected from his own reality, that he's had some mild delusion that the smarter, better-spoken, more self-assured Jonathan of his imagination would someday step forward and take over.

I would call Kaysen's writing psychologically astute. She certainly did take my breath away; I'll say that much. It's particularly worth noting that Jonathan is at times grandly flawed and in many ways unlikable, yet it's easy to get invested in his life and care about him. I think perhaps that's because he's such a mensch. He screws up a lot but in spite of being a Harvard grad student, born of intellectual parents, he doesn't think highly of himself; in fact, he's hugely critical and aware of his own flaws. In his interactions with people, he treats most of them with such great respect that it's no stretch to believe he could develop friendships, even with people with whom communication is sketchy and whose differences in lifestyle compared to his own are enormous.

There are also some very funny moments, particularly any time Jonathan is around Eyvinder, who is quite a character. After he feeds Jonathan traditional foods on his first visit, Eyvinder tells Jonathan he should return to eat, another time:

"Jonathan. Jonathan. You must not take offense because I have very black ideas. It's my Italian side. You are our friend. You are not from the CIA. I am just spitting up foolishness. Please, you will come back, we will have stuffed puffins and arrange your marriage."

--p. 32

What I disliked about Far Afield:

If you read my blog regularly, you know my predilection for action and pacing. There's plenty of action at times, actually, but the book is so emotional and character-centered that it moves slowly. In spite of that slow pacing, there was never a point that I would have even remotely considered setting Far Afield aside. There's a definite pull to the book, an uncertainty about whether Jonathan will stay in the Faroes and settle or feel obligated to return home. Far Afield is character-driven writing at its best.

The bottom line:

Superb writing, deft psychological insight, uncommonly skillful description and a unique setting make Far Afield a tremendously satisfying read. Highly, highly recommended, particularly for those who like reading about different places and people and enjoy a depth of characterization.

On a related note:

I read that favorite quote about eating stuffed puffins and arranging a marriage for Jonathan to Kiddo and got an interesting reaction. "Stuffed puffin sounds kind of good, actually."

My opinion is a little akin to the famous Ulysses Grant quote about Port Gibson, Mississippi being "too beautiful to burn." Puffins: Too Cute to Cook.


©2011 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery and Babble or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

My Self-Challenge - One Shelf at a Time: Shelf #1

I've decided to do something a little different, challenge-wise, in 2011. Usually, I tend to shun challenges completely because I've found that I am so fond of variety that I get topic fatigue rather quickly -- or, at least I'll limit myself to one or two challenges at a time, each year. This year, I've decided to do something I've been pondering for quite a while. Instead of joining in on formal blog challenges and all that they involve, I'm challenging myself to hit my TBRs and really tackle them one shelf at a time. Each time I finish a shelf, I'll start on another.

The idea is to just keep going; it's a perpetual self-challenge, although I'll number the shelves and see how it goes. My first shelf of books began with some titles that have been on my closet shelf for quite a while and from there I switched and substituted, added and rearranged until I decided I'd better just take a photo or I'd keep altering things, forever. I do that, you know.

I tried to arrange the books to fit the variety I crave but I'm also starting out with at least 4 books that have been loaned to me, so that I can get them back to their owners. There are a few ARCs I didn't get around to reading, last year, and a few classic titles that I keep looking at longingly. Two are volumes of short stories, one is a goofy book, one a book about Bible characters. Yeah, it's a hodge-podge, all right.

I've already begun reading one of the titles: Far Afield by Susanna Kaysen. I'm not sure, but I think I might have heard of that particular book and acquired it because of a review by SuziQ, a favorite blogger who never leads me astray. So far, it is excellent.

Here's my list for Shelf #1:

1. The Thieves of Darkness by Richard Doetsch - Probably received via Shelf Awareness (Ack! I don't remember!)
2. You'll Be Sor-ree! by Sid Phillips - Started to read this last year and stopped, another SA book
3. Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife by John Nagl & Peter Schoomaker - borrowed from husband
4. Semper Cool by Barry Fixler - Meant to read this for the Vietnam challenge
5. Bad Girls of the Bible by Liz Curtis Higgs - for fun
6. Manifesting Change by Mike Dooley - An ARC I didn't get to in 2010
7. Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl - On loan from my future daughter-in-law
8. Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri - Got this ARC for free from my local library and I've heard the stories are marvelous
9. Hunting and Gathering by Anna Gavalda - Borrowed from future DIL; we have both read Gavalda's I Wish Someone Were Waiting for Me Somewhere repeatedly.
10. Never Shower in a Thunderstorm by Anahad O'Conner - My goofy read
11. The Bookshop by Penelope Fitzgerald - I'm planning to buddy read this one with New Orleans Chris (aka "Stuffster", at least in my little brain)
12. True Grit by Charles Portis - I've had this one for a while, but naturally the new movie version has motivated me to dig it out.
13. Fire Bell in the Night by Geoffrey S. Edwards - Another buddy read, sent to me by the author and then lost repeatedly. My friend Paula has wanted to buddy read this one with me for so long it's embarrassing.
14. Virtual Realities by Alfred Bester - Sci-fi short stories; I've read a few of these and really enjoyed them
15. Far Afield by Susanna Kaysen
16. Appointment in Samarra by John O'Hara - Classic from the closet shelf
17. A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick - Borrowed from eldest son's collection
18. Anagrams by Lorrie Moore - I've had this one for probably 10 years; it's one of the many books I bought at our former salvage store when they got some very-slightly-damaged book stock that was sold at unbelievable prices. I got a lot of wonderful literature from that particular sale.
19. Enna Burning by Shannon Hale - A book I've put on challenge lists twice and failed to even open. This time I shall read it, oh yes I shall.
20. Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes - Another classic I keep telling myself I need to get around to reading

Not pictured: Nancy Mitford's The Pursuit of Love & Love in a Cold Climate (two novels in one book)

That's quite a big shelf for starters, isn't it? We'll see how long it takes to read them. Should be interesting!

©2011 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery and Babble, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.