Sunday, April 6, 2008

Hi Fellow Readers!
I started "The Pillars of the Earth" by Ken Follett in mid-March. I am intimidated by the number of pages in this book--a whopping 1000 pages. I am about 200+ into the book and while the story is good, I'm finding that I have to force myself to read it at the moment. So...

I'm moving on to "Three Cups of Tea" by Greg Mortenson. This book came highly recommended to me by friend Emily. It's nonfiction about a man, Greg Mortenson, who is climbing the mountain K2 in Pakistan. He gets lost and finds himself in this village of people. He sees the need for a school and so begins his mission in life. I am told that this is a very inspiring story and am so far enjoying this book.

My book club met last night and discussed "Eat, Pray, Love" It was a fruitful discussion in which we talked about talking with God, meditation, love and first kisses, food and much more.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

I finished Eat Pray Love last week and have been meaning to write about it, but you know how it is when you get busy... This book was really good and I really enjoyed the Italy and the Bali part. I'll admit that I was losing interest in the middle (India) part, but I really did enjoy this book. If you haven't heard about it, you need to check it out. A woman in her mid 30s goes through a terrible divorce and gets a book advance in order to travel around the world. I know, nice, huh? She re-connects with herself with the backdrop of Italy (pleasure), India (meditation/soul), and Indonesia or Bali to be exact (the common ground between pleasure and the soul). It was very easy to read--style was great. I'm anxious to see what everyone in my book club has to say about this book. :)

I'm currently reading "The Pillars of the Earth" by Ken Follett (at a whopping 980 some pages it's going to take me awhile to get through this one!). It's excellent so far.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

The Boleyn Inheritance by Philippa Gregory

This is the sequel to "The Other Boleyn Girl" by Philippa Gregory. The story continues from TOBG and explores Henry VIII's relationships with his next two wives: Anne of Cleves and Katherine Howard. This was a fun story, but quite long (over 500 pages). Gregory's writing is easy to read and follow. I liked that she explored these three women (I forgot to mention Jane Boleyn who was Anne Boleyn's sister-in-law) and talked about how mad some of them were. It was a fun read, too bad I wasn't at the beach for the last half of the book.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

If you haven't already seen the ads, PBS is airing productions of all of Jane Austen's novels on Masterpiece Theatre on Sunday nights. You'll have to check your local PBS station for times. It inspired me to read the rest of her novels--something I'd like to finish in 2008. I have "Mansfield Park" and "Emma" left now.

"Northanger Abbey" was the first novel that Jane wrote although I think it was published posthumously. It is a fun tale of Catherine Morland and how she falls in love with Henry Tilney. Of course Catherine is from a "lower" middle class family and has hardly any fortune and Henry is very well off, indeed! Catherine is very obssessed with the gothic novels of the era (think "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley) and has a very over-active imagination. It almost ruins her changes with Henry, but alas it all works out in the end.

This book was definitely the most light-hearted of the Austen novels that I have read so far. Definitely worth the time though to read it.

The PBS version of this very fun--so if you missed it, I'm sure it will be out on DVD any day now. The gal who plays Isabella Thorpe was also in the Keira Knightly version of "Pride & Prejudice"--she played Kitty Bennett. (Thanks Jennie for that little fact!)

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Life of Pi by Yann Martel

This is the book that Nancy chose for our next book club meeting. I read it when it was first out in paperback so maybe in 2003 sometime. I had forgotten a lot of the plot and all I could remember was that it ended up being Pi and the tiger, Richard Parker on the lifeboat.

I won't go into great detail on the plot just in case someone from book club actually reads my blog and hasn't finished it yet. But, basically Pi and his family are going from India to Canada along with several animals from their zoo on a large ship. The ship sinks and Pi is the only human survivor. He ends up on the lifeboat with a hyena, zebra, orangutan and a Bengal tiger. You can imagine what happens.

The writing style is easy to follow, but some people might find it hard to get going in the book. It was a quick read and interesting, but be prepared for some gory scenes and honest detail about how Pi survives for over 5 months at sea.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Happy New Year fellow readers!

I recently read "Love in the Time of Cholera" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez for my book club. I didn't finish it, but was filled in by Cynthia in my book club on the ending. This is currently the Oprah Book club selection. I have no idea why! The writing is all prose--not a lot of dialogue. This book has been translated from Spanish into English so we all wondered if there wasn't anything lost in translation. Apparently there wasn't. The plot didn't move forward in the middle of the book and the only reason I kept reading was for book club. The characters didn't have a lot of depth in my opinion--the main male character, Florentino was a pervert and obsessed with sex. He was promiscuous which all of us had a hard time with and when he finally ended back up with the woman he's loved for over 54 years, he complains about them both smelling "old." I didn't think this was a romantic story at all. Overall, I could have lived without reading this book.

I would not recommend that any of you read this book. I'm hoping that the reason Marquez won the Nobel prize is based on his other works.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

"Book of the Dead" by Patricia Cornwell

The Kay Scarpettas series is one of the most interesting I've read. She is a medical examiner/forensic investigator. This latest book takes place in Charleston, SC. If you've read the previous books, you will appreciate the twist of events that takes place with Scarpetta, Marino and the other characters. I won't give anything away in my blog, but I was shocked at where Cornwell took this book. There's a big cliff-hanger at the end too so I guess we'll all just have to wait and see what comes from her next book.

Now back to the Boleyn Inheritance...

The next book for my book club is "Love in the Time of Cholera."