Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Tuesday Intro: Circle of Friends


The kitchen was full of the smells of baking. Benny put down her school bag and went on a tour of inspection.
"The cake hasn't been iced yet," Patsy explained. "The mistress will do that herself."
"What are you going to put on it?" Benny was eager.
"I suppose Happy Birthday Benny." Patsy was surprised.
"Maybe she'll put Benny Hogan, Ten."
"I never saw that on a cake."
"I think it is, when it's a big birthday like being ten."
"Maybe." Patsy was doubtful

Circle of Friends 
by Maeve Binchy

I was saddened to learn of Maeve Binchy's death yesterday at the age of 72. Circle of Friends, published in 1990, was the first of many of her novels that I read and loved years ago. I'd like to dig up an old copy and read it again now. Have you read Maeve Binchy? Which of her novels was your favorite?


Every Tuesday, Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea posts the opening paragraph (sometime two) of a book she decided to read based on the opening paragraph(s). Feel free to grab the banner and play along.


Monday, July 30, 2012

Good-bye July and Anticipating August

It's hard to believe tomorrow is the last day of July - this month has passed in a flash. From July 4th festivities, graduation parties, a weekend get-away in Lake Placid, and the Grapehound Wine Tour to multiple birthday celebrations, farmers markets, and craft shows, this has been everything a summer month should  be. As far as reading goes, however, it has been the worst month ever. I finished only one book - that's right a single book... and it was one with pictures.

Le Road Trip by Vivian Swift  was a lovely book. These are my thoughts as posted on Goodreads:
A perfect beginning to my "Paris in July" reading! Le Road Trip is full of thoughts on travel, love, and France. The artwork/illustrations perfectly complement the tone of Swift's writing. It left me energized and excited to continue my armchair travel through France.
Le Road Trip  was, indeed, a beautiful book, but the rest of Paris in July turned out to be a bust as my "armchair travel through France" came to a screeching halt.



My primary audio time (listening alone in car) has been, as expected, practically nonexistent this summer, but  North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell  has still been my 'main' book in July. I have it loaded on my ipod and nook, so have been both reading and listening. It is wonderful. Can I say once more that Juliet Stevenson is an amazing narrator? I even hear her voice in my mind as I read on the nook.

I've picked up several other books, but nothing has really captured my attention this month. Tomorrow evening I'm hosting my book club's annual pot luck dinner, so I'll have a new book to begin once we make our next selection. We will discuss Rules of Civility by Amor Towles. My review along with the group's reaction should follow soon.

Looking ahead to August, there are two events I'm eagerly anticipating. First is the return of Trish's Pin It and Do It Challenge. My family is pretty excited about this, too. They're hoping I focus on new recipes again. We'll see...


Heather and Andi are also hosting a North and South Read-Along. I'm on Chapter 37 now, but plan to join the discussion along the way. In addition to blog posts, they will be using the twitter hashtag #NSread and there's even talk of a  mini-series group watch party! Check out their home-base page for more details.



Finally, the past week has been especially difficult for reading blogs and commenting, but I'll be around to visit and catch up this week. Thanks for your patience and understanding.

On to August...

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Where in the World Are You Reading: Local Bookstore


Where in the World Are You Reading, a new monthly meme hosted by Trish, Kelly, and Lisa, kicks off this month with a local bookstore theme. For me, local is a relative term. The nearest Barnes & Noble is 30 minutes away, but I can also drive 30 minutes in the opposite direction to the Colgate Bookstore in Hamilton, NY (run by Colgate University). Barnes & Noble is much more convenient, but I love my trips to Hamilton - especially on a summer Saturday when we combine a visit to the Farmers Market with bookstore browsing and lunch!


The Colgate Bookstore is in the heart of the village.


I've always loved this pointing finger directing customers to the store.


The interior is open and airy.


Meeting rooms and college gear are upstairs, textbooks are downstairs.


I could spend hours wandering around the first floor.


Comfortable chairs are scattered throughout the store.

From author events to book clubs, there is always something happening at the Colgate Bookstore. There is a Jane Austen book club, a book-to-film discussion series, a women's book club (with mostly literary fiction selections), and more. I'm still kicking myself over missing an evening with Lauren Groff last month.

The deadline for bookstore posts was actually July 26th. I somehow thought it was the end of the month. Sorry, Trish... my August "library" post will be on time.

Links to more local bookstore posts can be found here, click over to Trish's round-up post.


Saturday Snapshot is hosted by:
Alyce from At Home With Books

Find details and more photos here.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Happy Birthday, Zelda!


Since I am currently reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel Tender is the Night,  Zelda's birthday must be noted. She most certainly influenced her husband's writing, and the character of Nicole Diver in Tender is the Night bears a striking similarity to Zelda.

From today's Writer's Almanac:


It's the birthday of writer and socialite Zelda Fitzgerald (books by this author), born Zelda Sayre in Montgomery, Alabama (1900). She was named after the fictional gypsy heroine in Zelda's Fortune (1874), one of her mother's favorite books. She was the youngest of five children, and she rebelled against the strict discipline of her father, an Alabama Supreme Court judge. She snuck out of her window at night, smoked cigarettes, bobbed her hair, and wore a flesh-colored swimsuit so that people would think she was swimming nude. She spent her evenings at dances and parties with the officers stationed at nearby Camp Sheridan, and they competed for her attention. One officer performed the full manual of arms drill outside her door, and others took turns trying to outdo each other with fancy airplane stunts in the sky above the Sayre household.

It was at Camp Sheridan that Zelda met a young officer named Scott Fitzgerald. He was beautiful, like Zelda — they were both petite, with blond hair and light eyes. Years later, in her autobiographical novel Save Me the Waltz (1932), she wrote: "He smelled like new goods. Being close to him with her face in the space between his ear and his stiff army collar was like being initiated into the subterranean reserves of a fine fabric store exuding the delicacy of cambrics and linen and luxury bound in bales." Scott and Zelda spent a lot of time together, but she didn't want to commit to him; even though he was confident that he was going to be rich and famous, Zelda was hesitant, and her parents were unconvinced. She wrote to him: "Mamma knows that we are going to be married some day — But she keeps leaving stories of young authors, turned out on a dark and stormy night, on my pillow — I wonder if you hadn't better write to my Daddy — just before I leave — I wish I were detached — sorter without relatives. I'm not exactly scared of 'em, but they could be so unpleasant about what I'm going to do."

After the publication of Fitzgerald's first novel, This Side of Paradise (1920), Zelda agreed to marry Scott. They became the most famous couple of the Jazz Age. They were the center of attention at parties, where their drunken exploits became the stuff of legend.

Zelda was a writer in her own right, and Scott borrowed from her ideas and sometimes copied writing from her verbatim. When they were dating in Montgomery, Zelda showed Scott her diary, and he used that and her letters in This Side of Paradise. He had modeled the main character, Rosalind, after a woman he had been in love with at Princeton, named Ginevra King; but after meeting Zelda, he reworked the character of Rosalind until she was a combination of both women.

When Zelda was hired to write a review of The Beautiful and the Damned for the New York Herald Tribune, she wrote: "It seems to me that on one page I recognized a portion of an old diary of mine which mysteriously disappeared shortly after my marriage, and also scraps of letters which, though considerably edited, sound to me vaguely familiar. In fact, Mr. Fitzgerald — I believe that is how he spells his name — seems to believe that plagiarism begins at home." She also encouraged readers to buy the book so that Scott could buy her a new dress and a platinum ring.

She said, "I don't want to live — I want to love first, and live incidentally."



Friday, July 20, 2012

Midyear Reflection: Expanding Horizons


July is not shaping up to be much of a reading month for me. Summer conjures up images of long, blissful hours spent reading by the lake but, in reality, my favorite chair sits empty most of the time and I'm lucky to eke out a handful of uninterrupted reading days. Summers get so busy around here!

However, I have had some time to reflect upon this year's reading. The "Six by Six" meme I posted last week served as a good starting point, but it was Vasilly's recent review of The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna, set primarily in Sierra Leone, that really got me thinking. 

First, I've enjoyed my reading immensely this year and have read some really good books. It's also been a banner year for audiobooks. BUT, it has become glaringly (and somewhat painfully) clear that my reading has focused almost exclusively on authors from the US and UK, and the overwhelming majority of books have been set in the US and Europe. 

At the moment, I'm in the middle of two long books - Clarissa by Samuel Richardson (a group read) and North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell. Both are set in England. I also have bookmarks in Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Americans in France) and Diving Belles by Lucy Wood (short stories, UK). These could very well keep me busy for the rest of the summer, but I'm feeling very narrow at the moment and need to expand my reading horizons.

Possibilities from my tbr pile:

The Space Between Us by Thrity Umrigar
The World We Found by Thrity Umrigar
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Goodbye Tsugumi by Banana Yoshimoto 
After Dark by Haruki Murakami 
Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China by Jung Chang
The Bookseller of Kabul by Asne Seierstad
Family Matters by Rohinton Mistry
Sons by Pearl S. Buck (should reread The Good Earth first)
The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai

Have you ever been stuck in a reading rut? Any thoughts on these titles?

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

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