Entries tagged as ‘book reviews’
October was a more introspective month with a lot of yoga-related reading, though the best yoga book I’ve ever read I just finished, so you’ll have to wait until November to see it here on Perusals. Unless of course you are on Goodreads – then you can see it now. ::wink::
A few reminders:
*’s mark books that were really wonderful
All links take you to my reviews on Goodreads
Without further ado …
Falls the Shadow, Sharon Kay Penman (Welsh Trilogy, book 2)
*Worry, Edward M. Hallowell
Julie & Julia, Julie Powell
*The Book Thief, Markus Zusak
The Perilous Gard, Elizabeth Marie Pope
The Hindus: An Alternative History, Wendy Doniger
(Didn’t finish this one. It had to go back to the library before I could even get past the introduction. Dense but good.)
*A Return to Love, Marianne Williamson
(This was a re-read from yoga school. I wasn’t ready for this book back in October 2008 and I am so glad I revisited it. Both reviews, from 08 and 09, are included.)
Categories: Books
Tagged: book reviews, Books, goodreads, goodreads.com, yoga, yoga books
September was a good reading mojo month. With a few hiccups (I’m looking at you, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle) I found a lot of great reads this month. Links take you to my reviews on Goodreads.com and *’s mark the books I found truly outstanding.
*Song of the Sparrow, Lisa Ann Sandell
The Edge of Impropriety, Pam Rosenthal
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life, Barbara Kingsolver
(Note: this book made me so angry, that I was trying to come up with a symbol to denote books that I wanted to hurl against a wall, run over with a car, and then stomp to an inky pulp. Hopefully this is the only book that will ever make me THAT mad.)
Cooking Up a Storm, Emma Holly
**I Shall Not Want, Julia Spencer-Fleming
Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human, Richard Wrangham
A Little Bit Wicked, Kristen Chenoweth
Prairie Tale: A Memoir, Melissa Gilbert
What did you read last month?
Categories: Books
Tagged: book, book review, book reviews, Books, Goodread.com, goodreads
This was a great month for reading and a week’s vacation in Maine helped create some quality downtime to really get involved in some great books.
Links take you to my reviews on Goodreads.com and the * marks books that I highly recommend/enjoyed.
*In Too Deep, Portia Da Costa
Au Revoir to All That: Food, Wine, and the end of France, Michael Steinberger
*In The Bleak Midwinter, Julia Spencer-Fleming
*Lord of Scoundrels, Loretta Chase
A Fountain Filled with Blood, Julia Spencer-Fleming
*Out of the Deep I Cry, Julia Spencer-Fleming
One Thousand White Women, Jim Fergus
*We Took to the Woods, Louise Dickinson Rich
All Mortal Flesh, Julia Spencer-Fleming
*To Darkness and to Death, Julia Spencer Fleming
Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human, Richard W. Wrangham
How about you? What did you read this summer that you really liked?
Categories: Books
Tagged: book, book reviews, Books, goodreads, goodreads.com, julia spencer fleming, review, reviews
Links take you to my reviews of Goodreads.com and asterisks mark books that have made the “Favorites” list.
Into the Forest, Jean Hegland
(while it didn’t get a coveted * (har har) I highly recommend this one too,
for sheer interesting-ness.)
Here Be Dragons, Sharon Kay Penman
Out of Africa, Isak Dinsen
*The Gathering, Anne Enright
(I’d give this a 10 *’s if I could!)
Categories: Books
Tagged: book, book reviews, Books
What I read for the month of May. This was a better month for breaking outside of the romance genre.
Links take you to my reviews on Goodreads.com. Asterisks mark books that were really good reads.
Indiscretion by Jillian Hunter
*Jitterbug Perfume by Tom Robbins
Mister Pip by Lloyd James
Shift by Charlotte Agell
What did you read recently?
Categories: Books
Tagged: book, book review, book reviews, Books, reviews
Since first sharing my thoughts on the Twilight books back in December,the initial bruhaha surrounding Twilight has calmed. But every now and then, to my delight and dismay, Twilight rears its ugly head.
A friend recently sent me an awesome blog post from the ever brilliant Jessa Crispin, over at Bookslut. Unfortunately I can’t track down the original post and link, but here’s a transcription of the post. (Jessa, if you’re out there, can you tell me how to find the link — and subscribe to the RSS feed on the Bookslut blog? Thanks!)
Back to matters at hand. The Post from Jessa Crispin:
A few days before Valentine’s Day I got a little overly optimistic about my social skills and found myself at a lunch with a group of women I do not know. The conversation mostly revolved around whether or not one girl’s boyfriend was going to propose on the big day. The others were sure he would, despite the woman’s protest that he was resisting moving in together. I sat on my hands and concentrated very hard on not jumping up, saying “Maybe he’s just not that into you!”, cackling madly and fleeing out the door.
But then they asked me for book recommendations for their book group. I asked what they had read recently and liked, and she said, “Twilight.” My one ally at the table tells me I visibly sneered. I think I snapped something about Mormon celibacy and pathetic female roles, until mercifully my phone rang and I had an excuse to leave the table.
Maybe I’ll print out this smart Jenny Turner essay on Twilight, and just hand out a copy when someone asks me what I think of the books. Because it keeps happening, and I have to keep apologizing to my friends for sneering at people they know.
It can be a challenge to feel like the lone voice of dissent over popular fiction. You become a touchstone to all those around you who want to point out who is not hip, or a stick-in-the-mud. (I know this well, I was one of those constantly touting Harry Potter to those who ‘just didn’t get it.’) Well, this unhip, stick-in-the-mud sticks by her opinion that while I wouldn’t outright forbid anyone reading this book, please, for the love of all that is good on this earth, understand that Bella and Edward are the ANTITHESES of a healthy, adult relationship.
Take a moment and read the Jenny Turner article. It’s spot on with her assessment of the weaknesses of Bella’s character, the cultural issues at stake in the novel, and the obvious (and not so obvious) parallels and comparisons to pop-culture and Brit Lit.
Here’s a little teaser:
Bella’s character, in accordance with the conventions of the most finely mashed romantic fiction, has no features at all, apart from a mild emo-ish dysthymia (‘I didn’t relate well to people my age. Maybe the truth was that I didn’t relate well to people, period’) and an accident-prone streak, causing her to need a lot of rescuing (clumsiness, ‘most characteristically tripping’, is according to Toufic often a sign that a person may be ‘crossing the threshold’ to the ‘altered realm’). As Helen Fielding did with Bridget Jones, Meyer has hitched a ride on the Mr Darcy plotline, but without bothering to give her heroine any of Elizabeth Bennet’s spirit – raising a reprise of the Bridget question, why would a man of any style or substance fall for a lummox like her? To which Meyer offers two answers, one conventional and one less so: because she’s the avatar of the audience, which has paid its pocket money for the privilege of indulging itself in a bit of the something-for-nothings and a dab of the it-could-be-you’s; and because Edward’s superhuman sensorium is irresistibly attracted – with a carnality both erotic and murderous – to the special ‘smell’ of Bella’s ‘throat’.
Categories: Books
Tagged: anti-Twilight, book review, book reviews, Books, Bookslut, Jenny Turner, Jessa Crispin, Twilight