Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Teaser Tuesday 28.9.2010

















Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by LizB of Should Be Reading.
The rules are:
  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two teaser sentences from somewhere on that page
  • Be careful not to include spoilers
Share the title and author too so that other Teaser Tuesday participients can add the book on their TBR lists, if they like your teasers!

My teaser is from page 45 of Tell It to the Bees by Fiona Shaw.
     "There was no more sleep to be had, but the morning was hard and unyielding, and Jean got up into it slowly, her limbs frighted with reluctance.
      As her body surfaced, Mrs. Sandringham's words came back to her and a wash of sadness ran across her, that it was only ever her own hands that caressed or cradled her."


What are you reading now?

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Library Loot 25.9.2010 & R.I.P Short Story: The Cask Of Amontillado

Library loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire and Marg that encouragers bloggers to share the books they have checked out from the library. If you would like to participate, Mr. Linky is this week over at Marg's blog The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader.

My loot this week is quite small. I have so many books from previous loots waiting for their turn that my card is almost full. The upper limit of loans on a card in our library is 40. I guess, I have something like 36 items on my card at the moment: novels in English and in Finnish, plus some nonfiction, including a few books I've borrowed for professional reasons. I'm very interested in multicultural/intercultural/diversity issues and am trying to broaden my knowledge on diversity management at the moment. But, lets go back to my loot. :)
  • Dinesen, Isak (Karen Blixen): Anecdotes of Destiny
    The back cover promises five superb tales of gothic wit and mysticism. Sounds perfect for R.I.P. Short Story Challenge. I just love the movie Out of Africa starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford that was based on Blixen's memoir of the same name. "I had a farm in Africa..." for me that is one of the most memorable first lines in books and ever since I saw the movie and also a wonderful old interview programme with Blixen I have wanted to read her works. Somehow, however, I never have before this! Now I am determined to correct that by reading at least one story from this book for R.I.P.
  • Engle, Margarita: The Firefly Letters
    When I first saw this book at work I immedietely knew it would be a must read for me! Engle tells the story of Swedish women's rights pioneer Fredrika Bremer's mid 19th-century journey to Cuba. And she tells it as one long poem!
  • Goodall, Jane & Thane Maynard & Gail Hudson: Hope for Animals and Their World
    I admire Dr. Jane Goodall for her pioneering work among the chimpanzees in Gombe and for her work for peace. This book is a collection of survival stories about animal species that have been endangered but are now recovering. And isn't the cover photograph just lovely! Dr. Jane and the little chimp both looking at the sea. :)
  • Miller, Kei: The Last Warner Woman
    This is a novel about the life of Jamaican born Adamine, who is born in one of the last leper colonies on the island, later learns she has the gift of "warning", moves to England, and as an old woman tries to tell her own story and compete with a novelist writing a book about her and twisting her words. I don't think I have ever read anything by a Jamaican author. This book seems like a good first in that aspect.

















On the R.I.P. front I'm not been able to keep my selfimposed schedule of posting on R.I.P. short stories every Monday and Friday. I had every intention to post yesterday, but fell asleep on the couch before I even got started! Well, this is going to be a combined Library Loot & R.I.P. post now.

I found the Read Print site just resently. There are, for example, many short stories by Edgar Allen Poe on the site, and for this post I chose to read the one called The Cask of Amontillado. Actually after starting with the story I pretty soon realised I had read it once before. It was well worth a reread.

In this short story Montresor feels he has been gravely insulted by Fortunato and wants to punish Fortunato accordingly, "not only punish, but punish with impunity". Fortunato, however, has no idea there is anything but amiable feelings between them. When Monresor approaches Fortunato, compiments his knowledge in vines, and tells he has aquired some Amontillado, but has his doubts about the vine, Fortunato is more than happy to assist in determinig the quality of the purchase. What follows is a journey down to the vaults below the Montresor palazzo -and to a complete and horrible punishment of Fortunato by Montresor.

Edgar Allen Poe, of course, was a master of his art. This story in all its gothic creepiness is a perfect example of that.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Teaser Tuesday 21.9.2010

















Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by LizB of Should Be Reading.

The rules are:
  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two teaser sentences from somewhere on that page
  • Be careful not to include spoilers
  • Share the title and author too so that other Teaser Tuesday participients can add the book on their TBR lists, if tyhey like your teasers!
My teaser this week is from the latest novel by an author who has quickly become one of my favorite writers, namely Emma Donoghue. The book, of course, is Room.

     "Before I didn't even know to be mad that we can't open the Door, my head was too small to have Outside in it. When I was a little kid I thought like a little kid, but now I'm five I know everything." [p. 101]


I have little over 100 pages left to read and I'm actually taking a break from the book, because it's so good! I want it to last longer and I want to ponder about the story a little before continuing. It is an amazing book! :)

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Library Loot 19.9.2010

















Library loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire and Marg that encouragers bloggers to share the books they have checked out from the library. If you would like to participate, Mr. Linky is over at Claire's blog The Captive Reader this week. 

I'm sorry to have skipped my planned schedule for R.I.P posts. On Thursday I started reading Room by Emma Donoghue and it kept me in its grip so totally that I forgot all about ghost stories. Then on Friday I bought a new ADSL modem. The deal included also a new digibox, so that I will not only to get my TV channels through the modem, but will be able to manage anything I want to record for later from any computer anywhere. I'm using the new modem already, but have some problems with getting my DVD-recorder to work with the new digibox, so am waiting for some help with that. However, all that was actually only a prequal for this: yesterday I finally, after pondering about it for months, went and bought myself a mini laptop! My old computer, which I'm actually using now writing this, is not a laptop and I've been dreaming of a small laptop that would be easy to take with me when I travel. And I'm super happy with the one I chose. It's small, it has everything I need in a travelling laptop, -and it's berry pink! :) It's a Sony Vaio and I think it was love at first sight! :) :)

Well, excuse me my enthusiasm! :) I'll turn back to books now. I have, in fact, found all too many interesting books lately and reserved many of them from the library. Hovever, as so often happens, somehow the books seem to arrive in groups. On Monday I came home from work with a few holds that had arrived. Then two more arrived on Thursday and three more on Friday! These are the books in English (I also got two new Finnish novels I had put on hold, but will not talk more about those this time.) I got from the library this week:
  • Emma Donoghue: Room
    Fiction. The Booker Prize Short List. A-M-A-Z-I-N-G book. I'm reading Room just now.
  • Brian Dumaine: The Plot to Save the Planet. How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming
    Nonfiction. Found this on Helsinki City Library's online list of new nonfiction books in English & it sounded interesting.
  • Andrew Fagan: The Atlas of Human Rights. Mapping Violations of Freedom Around the Globe.
    Nonfiction. I'm very much interested in human rights, especially issues like freedom of speech, women's rights, GLBT rights, and anything done to end discrimination and sensorship in general. This slim book seems to give quite a good general view of the state of the human rights around the globe.
  • Howard Jacobson: The Finkler Question.
    Fiction. One of the Man Booker Prize Short listed novels this year & first of the Booker candidates I got my hands on. I have, however, waited for weeks and weeks to read Room, so this must wait a bit for it's turn.
  • Panos Karnezis: The Convent. <- This link takes you to a review of The Convent by Ursula Le Guin.
    Fiction. For a liberal minded Lutheran I have always been unusually interested in anything to do with Catholic religious orders. I've more or less read everything I've ever got my hands on on the subject be it then fiction or non. This novel is set in a small Spanish convent where one day the Mother Superior finds a suitcase punctured with airholes at the entrance to the retreat. I'm very intrigued by this book.
  • Aiko Kitahara: The Budding Tree. Six Stories of Love in Edo.
    Fiction. These are stories about single, working women in the Japanese Edo period. The Edo period in Japanese history runs from 1603 to 1868, but according to the back cover of the book, these stories are set in the early-to-mid-19th-century Japan. 
  • C. J. Moore: The Untranslatables. The Most Intriguing Words from Around the World.
    Nonfiction. And the title says it all! :) It includes some gems from my own mother tongue, too , but more about those later.
  • The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories from Elizabeth Gaskell to Ambrose Bierce.
    Fiction. This is for the R.I.P. Challenge.
  • Fiona Shaw: Tell It to The Bees.
    Fiction. This is for the GLBT Challenge, a love story between a mother of a small boy and the local doctor, who happens to be a woman. The setting is 1950s. Looks very promising!
Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll go back to playing with my new berry pink toy! ;)

Monday, September 13, 2010

Teaser Tuesday 14.9.2010

















Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by LizB of Should Be Reading.

The rules are:
  • Grab your current read.
  • Open to a random page.
  • Share 2 teaser sentences from somewhere on that page.
  • Be careful not to include spoilers.
  • Share the title and author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participants can add the book to their TBR lists if they like your teasers!
My teaser today comes from The Twin by Gerbrand Bakker. The book won the IMPAC Prize this year. IMPAC is in fact one of my favorite literary prizes because of its global nature and the role of public libraries in the nomination process. This teaser is from page 18:
"Mother was an outrageously ugly woman. Someone who hadn't known her would probably consider the photo on the mantelpiece laughable: bony, pop-eyed farmer's wife with thrice-yearly hairdo does her best to assume a dignified pose."
In addition to The Twin I'm also reading Rocannon's World by Ursula Le Guin in Finnish translation. Rocannon's World is Le Guin's first novel and is set in the Hainish universe. And I'm also still reading The Hammer and the Cross. I will pace parts of it between my fiction reads.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

R.I.P Short Story: Miss Mary Pask by Edith Wharton

















The Pulitzer Prize winning author Edith Wharton may be better known for her novels depicting upper class Americans, especially New Yorkers, but she also wrote some ghost stories. Those stories have been published in The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton. What then, for her, qualified as a ghost story? In her own words a ghost story
"...must depend for its effect solely on what one wight call its thermometrical quality, if it sends a cold shiver down one's spine, it has done its job and done it well, and many a tale that makes others turn cold leaves me at my normal temperature. The doctor who said there were no diseases but only patients would porbably agree that there are no ghosts, but only tellers of ghost stories, since what provides a shudder for one leaves another peacefully tepid. Therefore one ought...simply tell one's ghostly adventures in the most unadorned language, and "leave the rest to Nature..." [ Preface, p. 4]
In the story I read today, Miss Mary Pask, Edith Wharton manages just that. The narrator of the story has been painting in Brittany, when suddenly he remembers that a friend of his, Mrs. Bridgeworth, has a sister living nearby. As Mrs. Bridgeworth has told him that her sister, Miss Mary Pask, is often lonely, the narrator feels he ought to go and visit her. The journey to the remont location where Miss Pask lives is full of fog and darkness and builds a proper ghost story atmosphere. Finally he is at the door of Mary Pask's little house. Her help answers the door and says that Miss Pask would, of course, see the narrator. Only when he stands alone in the dark waiting for Miss Pask does he remember that already almost a year ago he learned from Mrs Bridgeworth that Miss Pask had died. And just then, there is Mary Pask standing on a landing above him! She comes down and starts a conversation with the somewhat terrified narrator.
"'It's so wonderfully good of you - I suppose Grace asked you to come?' She laughed again - her conversation had always been punctuated by rambling laughter. 'It's an event - quite an event! I've had so few visitors since my death, you see.'
     Another bucketful of cold water run over me; but I looked at her resolutely, and again the innocence of her face disarmed me.
     I cleared my throat and spoke - with a huge panting effort, as if I had been heaving up a gravestone. 'You live here alone?' I brought out.
     'Ah, I'm glad to hear your voice - I still remember voices, though I hear so few,' she murmured dreamily. 'Yes - I live here alone. The old woman you saw goes away at night. She won't stay after dark...she says she can't. Isn't it funny? But it doesn't matter; I like the darkness.' She leaned to me with one of her irrelevant smiles. 'The dead,' she said, 'naturally get used to it.'"
[p. 138]
I'll leave the plot description there. Miss Mary Pask is such a great story you have to read it yourself! :) Wharton manages to build a nicely creepy, but not too scary, atmosphere, and just when you think this is your average ghost story there is the perfect twist in the end!

I have read some of the stories in this collection before, but I liked this one so much that stay tuned for more! I will review more of Wharton's ghost stories in my upcoming R.I.P. posts. Next one will be up on Friday.

Friday, September 10, 2010

R.I.P Short Story: Island of the Setting Sun

















Ok, I've decided to post on Fridays and Mondays about the short stories I'm reading for the R.I.P. challenge. I already mentioned in my initial R.I.P. post that I will most probably read some short stories or extracts published in The Dedalus Book of Finnish Fantasy. I've now read three stories from the anthology and it's quite interesting to read Finnish authors in translation! 

The story I chose to write about tonight is by one of my favorite authors: Mika Waltari. Many of Mika Waltari's (1908-1979) books are nowadays consireded to be Finnish literary classics, but in his time he was sometimes said to write too popular or entertaining books for them to have been considered serious or great literature. He wrote both contemporary and historical novels. His most well-known novel is The Egyptian, a junkster book set in Ancient Egypt and telling the story of Sinuhe the doctor. He also wrote a manual for aspiring writers that is a classic in its field over here. As a teenager, he was only 17 at the time, he published a collection of horror stories using the pen name Kristian Korppi. Korppi is raven in Finnish and the little introduction in The Dedalus Book of Finnish Fantasy mentiones that he might have chosen that particular pseudonym because of Edgar Allan Poe's short story of the same name.

Island of the Setting Sun is a mysterious story about a Viking raid to an unknown island on the other side of a great ocean. As The Egyptian (first published in Finnish in 1945) is told by Sinuhe so is this story (first published in 1926) told by an unnamed Viking king. First-person narrative is very typical of Waltari as is well-worded descriptive passages. I find it quite amazing that he was so young when he wrote Island of the Setting Sun, but then, of course, he was a very talented writer. :) The story starts with:
 "I, the final king of the vanquished Viking tribe of the Valley of Three Suns, have commanded Father Anselmus, newly arrived from the land of the Gauls, to commit to posterity that which I am about to impart: the tale of our journey to the Island of the Setting Sun; else it shall be lost, it shall dissapear along with me into the land of eternal shadows, where my ancestors have stepped before me, and in whose footsteps I, the last of my kin, a few years hence must follow"
As a young man the king wanted adventure and he talked some of his fellow Vikings to join him on a raid across the ocean. Already after a fortnight at the sea their slaves start to die, then a great storm breaks. Just when the king thinks all is lost the skies and sea calm down and the men see land. It is the Island of the Setting Sun. It's inhabitants are totally silent, short and pale with captivating green eyes. A battle follows and the vikings win. Something strange is happening, however. When the Viking king visits the temple of the greeneyed people, he falls passionately in love with the statue of their goddess. The passion is all comsuming, but so is the curse of the goddess.

I liked this story very much. I liked the athmosphere Waltari created, it was a little bit creepy, but not too much. :) That the story was set in Viking Period was a nice plus. And see, in the passage I quoted above, how subtly, by simply naming a priest as the scribe for the king's story, the 17-year-old Waltari manages to convey the fact that the time of the Vikings is nearing its end.


That's it for tonight. I find it hard to write a post and follow the US Open women's semifinal tennis match on TV simultaneously. Should have eyes in the back of my head! :) Next short story peril post will appear on Monday.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

R.I.P V Challenge


















During the little over a year I've been book blogging (and I just realised I totally forgot my first book blogoversary back in June!! Oh well, let's celebrate all the more next summer. :)) I remember seeing numerous posts praising Carl of Stainless Steel Droppings' Readers Imbibing Peril challenges. As I don't celebrate Halloween and ghost stories are a bit outside of my comfort zone (yes, I know, it's not just about ghost stories:)) I had thought that maybe I should just concentrate on those challenges I committed myself in the beginning of the year, but... Everybody seems to love Carl's challenge and all those lovely lists of books exactly outside of my comfort zone made me rethink. So, this will be my first time taking part in the R.I.P Challenge. And may I say at once that I love, love, love the challenge banners by Jennifer Gordon. Her art is just amazing!

I'll join both short story peril and peril the third. I'll try and post regularly about the short stories I will read for the challenge. I'm thinking of deciding on a day or days of the week and keep posting on those days especially about this challenge. I will also try to read one novel that qualifies for this challenge.

Here's a short list of possible R.I.P reads:

For short story peril:
  • The Dedalus Book of Finnish Fantasy
    A collection of short stories and extracts from longer texts. 
  • The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton
    I've read some of these & liked them. Could read some more.
  • The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories: from Elizabeth Gaskell to Ambrose Pears
    Elizabeth Gaskell! A must read!
For peril the third:
  • Alan Bradley: The Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag
    Have read sooo much about Bradley's books in various book blogs! Unfortunately our library doesn't have the first book in the series.
  • Wilkie Collins: The Woman in White
    This would be a reread, but the first time in original language. This book made a huge impact on me when I read it as a teenager.
  • Helen Grant: The Vanishing of Katharina Linden
    I've read about this one, too. Sounds interesting.
  • Elizabeth Peters: Tomb of the Golden Bird
    Amelia Peabody, Egypt, humorous gothic, and I hope The Master Criminal will make an appearence! What more could one want!
  • Philip Sington: The Einstein Girl
    Mystery set in the 1930s.
I'll start with a short story post either tomorrow or on Saturday.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Teaser Tuesday 7.9.2010

















Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by LizB of Should Be Reading.

The rules are:
  • Grab your current read.
  • Open to a random page.
  • Share 2 teaser sentences from somewhere on that page.
  • Be careful not to include spoilers.
  • Share the title and author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participants can add the book to their TBR lists if they like your teasers!
I'm reading nonfiction for a change. I started with a biography of Roger Federer and continue now with The Hammer and the Cross -A New History of the Vikings by Robert Ferguson. Some of you may remember that I have an MA in history and that the Viking Age is one of the historical periods I'm especially interested in. Ferguson's book is well written and I'm thoroughly enjoying it. It is, however, a bit difficult to choose two sentences for a teaser from a history book! My teaser, which is from page 64, tells how Christian chroniclers and historians writing in the Middle Ages saw the Viking raiders:
" The thirteenth-century historian Roger of Wendover referred to a raid on Northumbria a few years later in 800, by 'the most impious armies of pagans [who] cruelly despoiled the churches of Hartness and Tynemouth, and returned with its plunder to the ships', after which the focus of the raiding turned to religious sites in Ireland and in the Western Isles of Scotland, a region which the Irish Christian scribes of the Annals of Ulster regarded as falling within their sphere of interest and of whose sufferings at the hands of the Vikings they duly opened an account. The annals of 794 note the 'devastation of all the islands of Britain by the Heathens', the following year that the Isle of Skye was 'overwhelmed and laid waste'."
Have you noticed already that the shortlist for the Man Booker Prize is out? Which book is your favorite? I don't think I have ever seen another list of this kind where I immediately wanted to read all the books mentioned! And my favorite, that is Room by Emma Donoghue.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Cloud 9 & a Wrap-Up

















Yesterday the first grand prix dance competition after summer took place in Turku. Since May we have been concentrating in standard dances only (i.e. slow waltz, tango, Wiennese waltz, slow fox, and quickstep). We have been working very hard and were eager to see how we'd do in the competition. Well, we won!! It was the first time we won the standard section in a grand prix competition and I'm still more or less on cloud 9 here! :)
So, dancewise these past weeks have been very good, but it has also meant that I had not been reading much, or rather, I'm reading a few books, but don't seem to be able to finish them!

I'm reading
  • Dubliners by James Joyce for my book club meeting
  • The Hammer and the Cross: A New History of the Vikings by Robert Ferguson for fun (I've always been very interested in the Viking period. I even went to study in Norway because of that.)
I'm also slowly reading through two books of short stories:
  • Angels beneath the Surface: A Selection of Contemporary Slovene Fiction ed. by Mitja Cander & Tom Priestly
  • Love and Obstacles by Aleksander Hemon
In August I did spend almost two weeks with Middlemarch, as I wanted to read it for Nymeth's readalong. Unfortunately could not get further than 200+ pages. In the end I just had to put the book aside and read something else. I'll get to Middlemarch some other time. I guess this just was not the right moment for it.

Here is my August wrap up:

Books read: 3 (only 3 :( )
Books read in English: 2
Books read in Finnish: 1
Finnish books read: 1
Fiction: 3
Nonfiction: 0
Books reviewed: 3 one of which was read already in July

These are the books I managed to finish reading in August:
How was your reading in August?

Oh, I almost forgot! I'm on Twitter now. :)