Sunday, February 14, 2010

A Couple of Reviews



















Happy Valentine's Day everyone!

I'm totally lacking behind with posting in general and with my reviews in particular, so I'll try to combine a couple of reviews in this post. I have not been posting for a while, because I spent all too much time in front of the computer and did not take enough care of sitting in an ergonomically good posture plus I spent too much time reading in the metro, both of which are not good for my shoulders and neck, and I ended up getting a bit of a tension neck for a week or so. This is one of those "do I ever learn" things. I know how to avoid this and still... Well, my neck is better now and I'm back on posting. :)

Then on to the reviews:

1. Tariq Ali: Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree
Tariq Ali is a British-Pakistani writer adn filmmaker. See his website for more info about him and his work.
Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree is the first book by him I have ever read, but it will not be the last. Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree is set in Andalusia in 1500. The Christians have reconquered the southern parts of the Iberian peninsula and the Muslim population, the Moors, who for centuries have lived in peaceful coexistance with the local Christians, are unsure of their future. The story concentrates on one Muslim family, the leading family of a village and the people working for them. Ali does a great job in portraying  the cultured, liberal Moors and the intolerance of the Catholic Church of the time. But his portrayal is in no way one-dimentional. Not all Christians in the novel think like the archbishop who wants to make everyone convert to Christianity and who thinks there is no place for either Muslims or Jews in Spain. Also, the religious pragmatism of some of the Moors is well described. Many thought that by converting to Christianity they at least got to keep their land and property.
Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree is a well written and interesting historical novel about an interesting time period in European history. It is part one in Ali's Islam Quintet, five novels about the history of Islam. I'm most definitely going to read the other parts, too.
I read this book for the following challenges: What's in a Name 3, World Religion, and Reading the World

2. Rumer Godden: The River
This was my second book by Godden this year. It's a little book, mere 176 pages, and a very quick read. The book is set in Bengal, India and tells about some months in the life of an English family from the point of view of Harriet, the second oldest of four children. The structure of the book is very simple. The more complex use of flashbacks so prominent in In This House of Brede is absent here. The writing is simple, but enjoyable, crisp and flowing. What starts as a pleasurable story of ordinary life in an English family in India turns suddenly dramatic towards the end. This book was totally different from the only other Godden novel I had read before this, but is solidified my admiration of her writing.
I read this book for What's in a Name 3 and Reading the World challenges.

3. Rumer Godden: Greengage Summer
My third book by Rumer Godden, and another enjoyable read. There was, in fact, quite a lot in common with this book and The River. Greengage Summer is also told by a young English girl, this time second oldest of five children, and again what starts as rather a peaceful story ends up turning quite dramatic towards the end. The mother of the children wants to take them to France to visit some WW II sites, but when the mother is hospitalised due to, I think blood poisoning (the actual reason is not told in the book, only that there was in insect bite), in her leg, the children are left more or less on their own in a hotel, where some intresting persons live and/or work. In the hotel a somewhat mysterious Englishman called Eliot takes the children under his wing. This is a story of growing up, secrets, jealousy, and murder. Another highly recommended read!

I know it is not yet time for Mailbox Monday, but I cannot help mentioning a wonderful addition to my book collection I received today. Valentine's Day just happens to be also my birthday :), so I got a book present from my Dad. Usually he always asks beforehand, which book I would like, but this time he had taken the risk and bought me a special book without asking, if I already had it. Well, I did not, and I was delighted to find that he had bought me Pelaamisen lumo, the book by Finland's number one tennis player Jarkko Nieminen. And it is an autographed copy! Thank you very, very much, Dad! :)

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

January Wrap Up and Teaser Tuesday 2.2.2010













 

Teaser Tuesday is a weekly event hosted by MizB 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 & author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participiants can add the book to their to be read lists if they like your teasers!
My teaser today is from Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree by the British-Pakistani writer and film-maker Tariq Ali. This is the first novel of his Islam Quintet tracing the history of Islam. Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree is set in Southern Spain during the first years of the 16th century. Granada has fallen to the Christians and Muslims of al-Andalus, Moorish Spain, are faced with some hard decisions:
"I am not sure that they will let us live in al-Andalus without converting to Christianity. Hind marrying Juan is a joke, but the future of the Banu Hudayl, of those who have lived with us, worked for us for centuries. That is what worries me deeply." [p. 22]

I had a very good reading month in January. Here's a little wrap up:

Books read: 11
Books read in English: 8
Books read in Finnish: 3
Books by Finnish writers read: 1
Fiction: 9
Nonfiction: 2
Books reviewed: 5

List of books read in January with links to my reviews:

-Carlson, Kristina: Maan ääreen
-Godden, Rumer: The River
-Kjaerstad, Jan: Rakkauden merkit (originally published in Norwegian)
-Manguel, Alberto: The Library at Night
-Marani, Diego: Sotilas ilman menneisyyttä (this novel, originally written in Italian, will be published in English in September with the title New Finnish Grammar)
-Woolf, Virginia: To the Lighthouse

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Four Short Stories by Elizabeth Gaskell















Ever since I read Cranford last summer I have known that little by little I will read all the novels by Elizabeth Gaskell. I had no idea she also wrote some short stories until I happend to notice a slim, little volume called Four Short Stories in the library. After reading the text on the back cover I realised this book would be perfect for the Women Unbound challenge.

Four Short Stories by Elizabeth Gaskell includes the following stories:
  • The Three Eras of Libbie March
  • Lizzie Leigh
  • The Well of Pen-Morfa
  • The Manchester Marriage
The first story in the collection The Three Eras of Libbie March was first published in Howitt's Journal in 1847, a year before her first novel Mary Barton saw the light of day. Lizzie Leigh and The Well of Pen-Morfa were both published in Household Words in 1850. The publisher of this magazine was Charles Dickens. The fourth of the stories in the collection, The Manchester Marriage, was published in 1858, also in Household Words.

All four stories are about women and the trials and tribulations women faced in mid 19th century Britain.The heroines in the first three stories are all unmarried. Libbie March is a single, working class woman, who knows she is not going to marry and who has to try and find a way to live her life without the safetynet of a husband and a house of her own. Lizzie Leigh is an unwedded mother, whereas the heroine of The Well of Pen-Morfa is a women about to get married whose whole life is changed tragically after an accident leaves her disabled for life. Only the heroine of The Manchester Marriage is married, but also this story portrays the position of women in a male dominated society.

After the wonderful lightness and humour of Cranford these were grimmer stories, but not stories without hope and, in some cases, there were even quite a lot of happiness. My favorites were The Manchester Marriage and The Three Eras of Libbie March, but all four stories were well worth reading. Elizabeth Gaskell was, not only able to write (in some cases quite long) novels, but also to use the more compact form of short stories quite effectively. All in all an interesting and enjoyable read!

Four Short Stories by Elizabeth Gaskell was my 6th read for the Women Unbound Challenge. I still have one fiction and one nonfiction book to read to complete the challenge. :)

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Teaser Tuesday 26.1.2010: The Library at Night



















Teaser Tuesday is a weekly event hosted by MizB 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 & author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participiants can add the book to their to be read lists if they like your teasers!

I have a huge pile of TBR novels from the library at the moment and can hardly wait to read each and everyone of them! :) I'm currently reading two novels, Consequences of Sin, a mystery set it Edwardian England by Clare Langley-Hawthorne and Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree, a historical novel telling the aftermath of the fall of Muslim Granada in the early 16th century, by Tariq Ali. Both books are firsts in a series. Consequences of Sin introduces Ursula Marlow, an heiress, an Oxford graduate and a passionate advocate of women's suffrage. Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree is the first book in Ali's quintet of novels tracing the history of Islam. Both seem very good this far. But, in addition to these novels I'm also reading an essay collection by Alberto Manguel called The Library at Night, "a meditation on the meaning and mysteries of libraries through history". My teaser comes from the first essay, where Manguel talks about his own library in a 15th century barn in the French countryside. These sentences are from a chapter on p. 17, where he writes about what he does to new acquisitions to his private library:
"Old and new, the only sign I always try to rid my books of (usually with little success) is the price-sticker that malignant booksellers attach to the backs. These evil white scabs rip off with difficulty, leaving leprous wounds and traces of slime to which adhere the dust and fluff of ages, making me wish for a special gummy hell to which the inventor of these stickers would be condemned."
Isn't that great? :) I rarely read essays, but I'm really looking forward to reading this book!


Sunday, January 24, 2010

In This House of Brede















I read In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden for the first time quite a few years ago. Right after that I also read another of her books about women religious Five for Sorrow, Ten for Joy. I liked both books a lot and always intended to read more by Godden, but somehow never did. Then some weeks ago, while browsing the DVD-section of Amazon.co.uk I noticed that they had the movie version of In This House of Brede available. I ordered it. Just after my DVD arrived I also read Danielle's review of Godden's The Greengage Summer. I watched the DVD and liked it a lot, and now I wanted not only to read more Godden, but to reread In This House of Brede. In retrospect it was good I watched the film first, because the story had been changed a lot, really a lot! It had been such a long time since I read the book that I had forgotten most of the details. If I had first reread the book and then watched the flm, I would probably not have liked the film nearly as much.

In This House of Brede is a wonderful book. Set in the 1950's and 60's in the Benedictine Monastery of Brede it follows the life of the community of about 90 nuns during a time when society and also the Roman Catholic Church were changing quite dramatically. The book starts with Mrs. Philippa Talbot, a very successful careerwoman, a widow and a convert to Catholicism, saying her goodbyes at work. She is to enter Brede. Through Philippa, and also through various other sisters and nuns of the Brede Abbey, Godden paints a very realistic and very loving picture of the community. These are flesh and blood women with their strenghts and weaknesses striving towards a common goal. Even though Philippa is in a way the main character of the book, it could also be said that the main characher were in fact the community as a whole.

Rumer Godden's writing is beautiful. The narrative moves back and forth in time through the thoughts of the individual women and the things they say. For example in the prologue we follow Philippa from her workplace to her arrival in the village of Brede, where she enters the local pub for a glass (or three :)) of whisky to quiet her nerves and to smoke har last cigarettes, before
"What do you ask?"
"To try my vocation as a Benedictine in this house of Brede."


Then there follows a list of the members of the community at the time of Philippa's entrance and next, in the first chapter, all of a sudden it is four years later and Sister Philippa is nearing her Solemn Profession. I did not remember that the book was constructed this way and felt quite cheated when I first thought that Godden jumped so much forward and was not going to tell us in more detail about Sister Philippa's first few years in the monastery, but I should not have been worried. As the story envolved all was revealed in expertly constructed flashbacks.

I loved the way Godden portrayed the sisters and nuns and all the customs of the community. For example in a traditional pre Vatican II Benedictine Monastery the nuns were called Sister before their Solemn Profession and after that the choir nuns were called Dame whereas the claustral sisters were called Sister even after they had made their permanent vows. Also the entrance ceremony when entering into the novitiate was different for a widow entering than for a virgin. Many customs of religious communities were changed after the second Vatican council in the 1960's, and In This House of Brede tells us also about those changes and how different members of the community felt about them.

In my opinion In This House of Brede is the best novel ever written about a religious community. Godden was able to include so much in the story. There really is everything in there, everything you could think a novel trying to realistically tell about a community of nuns could include: difficulties of older vocations and those entering very young, boyfriends and lovers left behind, personal tragedies, the difficulties to follow the hardest vow of them all i.e. the vow of obedience, healthy friendships between nuns and friendships deemed too particular, new members entering, others leaving, economical difficulties, those who have to learn not to be in charge and those who have to learn to be in charge, the world changing outside the walls of Brede Abbey and the Church itself changing. There really is everything in there and still I loved the book so much that it hardly felt enough! I would have loved to read even more about the House of Brede.

In This House of Brede, whose fictional community was based on the real-life Stanbrook Abbey and St. Cecilia's Abbey, was first published in 1969. The previous year Rumer Godden had converted to Roman Catholicism. While writing In This House of Brede she had, for three years, lived next door to an English Benedictine Abbey. The experience changed her life.

I will count In This House of Brede as my first read in the World Religion Challenge.

Friday, January 22, 2010

World Religion & Reading the World Challenges


I have decided to join two more challenges, both of which I originally found through Eva's blog:





















World Religion Challenge is hosted by Bibliofreak.The challenge site is here. The aim of the challenge is to read books (fiction or nonfiction, poetry, religious texts) about different religions. The challenge runs all through 2010 and there are 4 levels of participation. I have chosen to join The Unsheparded Path, also known as The Don't Tell Me What to Do -path. :) That allows me to choose freely how many books I'll read and about which religion(s).I am a cradle Lutheran and have also read quite a lot about Catholicism. So, I guess, I will be reading something about Christianity also for this challenge (I actually just finished my first book for the challenge. In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden, but more about that in a review later.), but I will try to use the challenge as a means to read more about other religions. As I will be walking the Unsepharded Path :) I don't want to make too many plans about which books to read. There has been, however, this one book sitting in my bookself for quite a while now that I think would be perfect for this challenge and this challenge would also be a perfecr reason to finally read it. The book is The Great Transformation: The World in the Time of Buddha, Socrates, Confucius and Jeremiah by Karen Armstrong. I might also read something else by Armstrong. Years ago I read her memoir of her years as a sister in a Catholic teaching order and have been thinking of reading more by her ever since, but somehow never did. In addition to The Great Transformation (and maybe something else by Armstrong) I will probably read fiction where religion or themes related to religion play an important role. Possible books (three of which are only available in Finnish] include:
  • Rumer Godden: In This House of Brede (just finished this one & will count it as my first read for the challenge) [Catholic Christianity]
  • Aaron Hamburger: Faith for Beginners [Judaism]
  • Hermann Hesse: Siddhartha [Hinduism, Buddhism, eastern & western spirituality]
  • Juha Itkonen: Myöhemipien aikojen pyhiä [Mormons]
  • Bahiyyih Nakhjavani: The Saddelbag [Islam]
  • Eila Pennanen: Pyhä Birgitta [Catholic Christianity]
  • Hannu Raittila: Ei minulta mitään puutu [Laestadian religious movement, Christianity]
  • Ilia Trojanow: The Collector of Worlds [Islam, Hinduism]
  • You Are Not Here and Other Works of Buddhist Fiction, ed. by Keith Kachtick [Buddhism]
These two nonfiction books I have read earlier, but will highly recommend for anyone wanting to know a bit more about Catholicism:
Let's move over to the Reading the World Challenge then. I've been wanting to join some kind of a "reading around the world -challenge" for a while now. Actually I would love to do a challenge where one should read books set in different bordering coutries and in such a way travel all around the world through one's reading, but that would be quite a big undertaking. Reading the World Challenge, hosted by papertigers.org asks the participants to read one book for every continent once a month. See the challenge website here. I have decided to start the challenge this month, but what books to choose that's difficult! Too much choice, all too much! :) Well, the following list is compiled mainly from my TBR list. Maybe this challenge will help me shorten it a bit... I'm hoping  to read maybe more than one book per continent, but we'll see. Here's my list:

Africa:
  • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The Thing Around Your Neck [Nigeria]
  • Faarah M. J. Awl: Ignorance Is the Enemy of Love [Somalia]
  • Buchi Emecheta: Joys of Motherhood [Nigeria]
  • Petina Gappah: An Elegy for Easterly [Zimbabwe]
  • Naguib Mahfouz: Before the Throne: Dialogue's with Egypt's Great from Menes to Anwar Sadat [Egypt]
Antarctica:
  • Caroline Alexander: Mrs Chippy's Last Expeditions [1914-1915]: The Remarkable Journal of Shackleton's Polar-Bound Cat
  • Beryl Bainbridge: The Birthday Boys
  • Vivien Kelly: Take One Young Man
  • H. P. Lovecraft: At the Mountains of Madness
  • Rosie Thomas: Sun at Midnight
Asia:
  • Nathalie Abi-Ezzi: A Girl Made of Dust [Lebanon]
  • Rumer Godden: The River [India]
  • Sanjida O'Connell: The Naked Name of Love [Mongolia]
  • Mahbod Seraji: Rooftops of Tehran [Iran]
  • Fan Wu: February Flowers [China]
Australia:
  • Wilkie Collins: Ioláni, or Tahiti, as It Was [Tahiti]
  • Richard Flanagan: Wanting [Tasmania, Australia]
  • Janet Frame: Towards Another Summer [New Zealand]
  • Apelu Tielu: Forever in Paradise [Samoa]
  • Kate Grenville: The Lieutenant [Australia]
Europe:
  • Gurbergur Bergsson: The Swan [Iceland]
  • Jens Kristian Grondahl: Virginia [Denmark]
  • Ismail Kadare: The Three-Arched Bridge [Albania]
  • Claudio Magris: Danube [Austria, Bulgaria, Germany, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia]
  • Herta Müller: The Passport [Romania]
North America:
  • Patrick Chamoiseau: Childhood [Martinique]
  • Edwidge Danticat: Breath, Eyes, Memory [Haiti]
  • Elizabeth Hay: Late Nights on Air [Canada]
  • Mayra Montero: The Red of His Shadow [Haiti, Dominican Republic]
  • Luis Alberto Urrea: The Hummingbird's Daughter [Mexico]
South America:
  • Roberto Bolaño: By Night in Chile [Chile]
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Of Love and Other Deamons [Colombia]
  • Tomás Eloy Martinez: The Tango Singer [Argentina]
  • Colin Thubron: To the Last City [Peru]
  • Lily Tuck: The News from Paraguay [Paraguay]
As my very own bonus book for the Reading the World Challenge I shall read The End of the Alphabet by CS Richardson.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Empress of the World




















My second read for the GLBT Challenge and my first one for the What's in a Name? 3 was Empress of the World by Sara Ryan. Empress of the World is a YA novel about a group of students attending the Siegel Institute Summer Program for Gifted Youth. The narrator is Nicola (Nic) Lancaster, who plays the viola, draws, and works in theatre productions. She wants to become an archeologist and has come to the Siegel Institute to study archeology. Right in the beginning of the summer programme Nic, who has never had "friend friends" only theatre friends or orchestra friends, befriends some fellow students, among them Battle Hall Davies, a beautiful dancer, who seems to be everything Nic is not. The friendship between Nic and Battle grows and they soon move from being friends to being girlfriends.

I wanted to read this book especially for the GLBT Challenge (but it did not hurt that it also fits into the title category of What's in a name? 3 Challenge :)), as I had read quite a few very positive reviews about it. And I see why so many people have loved this book. The story felt very real. The subject matter, teenage same sex relationship, is important. It is essential that young persons whether they are GLBT or straight or wondering about their sexuality have books like Empress of the World to read and fictional characters like Nic and Battle to identify with. But...

I loved How Beautiful the Ordinary, I did not love Empress of the World. It was ok, and as I said, I do see its merits. I guess, I'm simply too old for this book. :) It felt too teenagey for me, but I would recommend it for all my heart to anyone in or closer to their teens than I am!

Sara Ryan has also written a companion book to Empress of the World, The Rules for Hearts, which follows Battle's life four years after the summer at the Siegel Institute.