November Book Challenges

 

Nov # a book published before 1900

Lady Susan



Author: Jane Austen

Genre: epistolary

Page number: 58

First published: 1871

Setting: England in Regency era

Rating: 2 stars

First sentence: My dear brother – I can no longer refuse myself the pleasure of profiting by your kind invitation when we last parted of spending some weeks with you at Churchill, and, therefore, if quite convenient to you and Mrs Vernon to receive me at present, I shall hope within a few days to be introduced to a sister whom I have so long desired to be acquainted with.

One sentence comment: It feels odd to read an epistolary novel full of calculation for marriages written by a young lady under 20.

          It means that Austen never believed in love. A romantic person became realistic because she experiences hardship in life as she grows older. But if Austen saw through the mask of marriages as a teen, how could she write romantic novels in later years? I start to think that Austen had known that marriages are business from the very beginning.

 

Nov # a book with a reading word in the title

Mayhem at the Orient Express ( A League of Literary Ladies Mystery #1)



Author: Kylie Logan

Genre: cozy mystery

Page number:282

First published: 2013

Setting: An island off Ohio at present time

Rating: 2 stars

First sentence: If it weren’t for Jerry Garcia peeing on my pansies, I never would have joined the League of Literary Ladies.

One sentence comment: It's most  disappointing that the author came up with the idea of a book club in a mystery, but had no merit of book discussion.

 

In terms of character building, dialogs, and plot development, this book achieves nothing. From the very beginning, since the three women protagonists appeared, which seemed to signal a possibly interesting mystery, they quarreled up to 50 pages before the murder happened. You would think things could have taken a good turn, but their conflict went on while the author were introducing more flat characters and boring conversation. I didn't give up the book simply because I wanted to find out the solution. Then I can sum up my experience, that is never trust a mystery series if its first book is published after 2010.

 

 

Nov # a book included on Goodread’s 1000 books to read before you die

The Awakening



Author: Kate Chopin

Genre: fiction

Page number: 113

First published: 1892

Setting: Louisiana, USA in the late 19th century

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: A green and yellow parrot, which hung in a cage outside the door, kept repeating over and over: ‘Allez ous-en! Allez vous-en! Sapristi! That’s all right!’

One sentence comment: Told like a slow paced romance, this book, however, activates my investigating mind, eager to find out the outcome.

 

It’s a languid story about Mrs Edna Pontellier, a 21 year-old woman with children, supplied a comfortable life by her husband. She is involved with two men, Robert and Arobin, one she loves and the other she is pursued by. The courting in this book is peculiar and almost unrealistic for a modern reader, like me; however, over a hundred years apart, I get a chance to savor the writing about the powerlessness of a young woman. When she decided that she ‘no longer one of Mr Pontellier’s possessions to dispose of or not,’ I guess it is why the book was banned.

 

Nov # a book you would consider to be light reading

A is for Alibi



Author: Sue Grafton

Genre: soft-boiled mystery

Page number: 308

First published: 1982

Setting: CA, USA, in 1980’s

Rating: 2 stars

First sentence: My name is Kinsey Millhone.

One sentence comment: It’s hard to relate to any of the characters in the book.

 

          The first sentence is bland and so are many others. I’m disappointed about this book since I thought this long running series must be enchanting. It only tried to tell a drama of a group of non feeling people.

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