Monday 9 April 2007

The world is your library

I've been listlessly browsing the internet trying to prolong this wonderful long weekend (seriously how utterly depressing are Sunday nights, or in this case, Monday night *sob*) and came across this great meme. All about books!! Hurrah! :)

Next reading: Hmmm to be honest, no idea. I think I might start this book that Patrick recommended to me ages ago as one of his dearly loved favourite books - The Liveship Traders series by Robin Hobb. The first of the trilogy is Ship Of Magic.

Emotionally Weird: Back Roads by Tawni O'Dell. It's such an emotionally hard and heart-breaking book to read, you get drawn and torn into the confusion of a dysfunctional family. The most heart-breaking book ever though is A Fine Balance by Rohinto Mistry. I have tear stains on all the pages. It took me a while to recover.

Last read: A Man of Peace in a World of War by Stanley Meiser. I was really looking forward to this biography of Kofi Annan. I should write a longer review for this because it was a great read, not only on the rivetting rise of Kofi Annan but the changing face and influence of the UN (particularly since Rwanda and more recently, the Iraq War). It is a much deserved defence of the UN but somewhat of a uncritical analysis of Kofi Annan. It's hard to explain but in some ways, I think the biographer was too much in awe of Kofi and therefore, found it difficult to be critical to any faults and remain unbiased.

Last book bought: Worse than Watergate by John W Dean. I suspect I might read this before Liveship Traders (haha)

Shortest book owned: I think it was actually a book I had as a child and I lent it to someone who never returned it. Something by John Marsden, I think.

Longest book owned: Ramona Quimby, Age 8 by Beverly Cleary. I adored Ramona as a child. I identified with her immensely as a nine year old because I, too, felt misunderstood by the rest of the adult world. I eventually gave this book to Patrick as a present (which we currently have on our bookshelf).

Favourite book: This is such a toughie. I would have to say my favourite book of all times gave me a lot of hope and inspiration as a teenager. To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee.

Book read the most times: To Kill A Mockingbird, Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen. (They are my comfort books when I want to both relate and escape from reality)

Least favourite book: I don't hate any books, per se. But my least favourite in recent memory is the Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold. I found it manipulative and didn't live up to its hype. Same with anything from Dan Brown. It's just sloppy terribly writing and plot. Even John Grisham writes better thrillers.

Favourite 'serious' fiction: Crime & Punishment by Dostoevsky and another from Russian literature, Anna Karenina by Tolstoy (one of my all-time favourite books as well).

Favourite comedy: I don't read a lot of comedy but this book made me laugh so hard, Dress your Family in Corduroy and Denim by David Sedaris.

Favourite classic: Pride & Prejudice and as an an adventure revenge story, The Count of Monte Cristo by Dumas.

Favourite Shakespeare: Macbeth. I love that famous line "Out Damn Spot! Out I say!" about guilt & our conscience plaguing us and also the Witches' "Fair is foul and foul is fair. Hover through the fog and filthy air". Oh Macbeth, how I love thee! ;)

Favourite poetry collection/poet: Be still my beating heart! I really do appreciate poetry because unlike being cast as the detached dramatist, poets become engaged in their own observations, their singular experience, rather than the experience of all men. For example, Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, their relationship and situation was very romantic and their poetry take up the question of closeness and distance, both emotional & physical, the close rhetorical space of the poems echoes the metaphors of the Brownings' relationship that recur throughout: the closed penknife, the enclosure of the dove's wings, the bee shut in glass, the vine twined round the tree. I love the imagery! I love how their correspondence, their rhetoric presents them as part of a private conversation that we’re somehow privy to by mere chance. My favourite poets are Robert Frost, John Donne and the Brownings. I just think with poetry, you get the deepest emotions in many evocative voices, passion, contentment, longing, illusion, hope and loss. It's grounded in humanity for me in any case (hmmm... moving on...)


Favourite fantasy: Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings

Favourite sci-fi: I don't particularly like sci fi. If 1984 by George Orwell is considered sci-fi then that is my favourite.

Favourite non-fiction: A Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela. He is hands-down the person I would most like to meet; I am in complete awe of him.

Favourite chick lit/lad lit: Bridget Jones and Starter for Ten.

Favourite horror: YUCK! I just detest this genre now but as a teenager, I really dug the Christopher Pike books (what a messed up kid :p)

Favourite Young Adult: What is young adult? When I was in high school (early years), I read Sweet Valley High if that counts.

Favourite manga/graphich novel/comic: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! The original comics are so much more deliciously darker than the tv or movie adaptations.

Favourite series: Sweet Valley High!! ;)

Favourite short story: Roald Dahl's Kiss Kiss. Most macabre disturbing tales!

Best book read this year: It's still early in the game and I hope to read a lot more this year! Possibly the Kofi Annan one.

Speaking of which, we were talking to a friend on the weekend about book-crossing and it has inspired me to release a few favourites to the world. Great books are meant to be shared! :)

2 comments:

Patrick said...

Ooo! Cool meme! I can't believe you're never gonna read liveship traders. You sicken me. SICKEN!

Lynn said...

You should do the meme, babe. And never say never! :p I will....... one day.