Octobor Challenges

 According to the October prompts, I picked three books from my three favorite authors. It will be a severe book battle to decide a monthly favorite.

 Oct book 1 A book with an orange cover or spine

The Cat Who Turned On and Off (The Cat Who #3)


Author: Lilian Jackson Braun

Genre: cozy mystery

Number of pages: 265

First published: 1968

Setting: the US in the 1960’s

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: In December the weather declared war.

One sentence comment: It will be a great read during Christmas time since snow, Santa Clause and gift wrapping are involved.

 I love the tone of the book, relax with a slight slouch in the beginning. It told the situation of the protagonist, Qwilleran, poor and lonely approaching Christmas. In order to get out of his slum-like hotel room, he was going to join a writing competition. Nevertheless, rather than writing a heartwarming Christmas story, he was drawn in a murder investigation. Now the protagonist has two cats, each coming from the former books of the series. I had wondered whether the number of cats would grow with the ending of the book.

 

Each book of the series reveals a circle of artists. The first book is about the book critics, the second, designers, and this book, antique dealers. The traits and dialogues of the major characters, who are also suspects, are unique and funny. The author’s craft of characters are clever; with a new art circle revolving, we read a new set of characters each book so we don’t easily get bored. However, I feel I have enough to read about the protagonist’s doting on his two cats.

 

Oct book 2 an older book written before 1950

My Antonia


Author: Willa Cather

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 250

First published: 1918

Setting: Nebraska, US

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: Last summer I happened to be crossing the plains of Iowa in a season of intense heat, and it was my good fortune to have for a traveling companion James Quayle Burden – Jim Burden, as we still call him in the West.

One sentence comment: There are so many anecdotes from the American frontier in the early 20th century that were told through the book and we shall get to know and remember them.

 I love Cather’s writing, so tranquil even about belligerent events. I like to recite the sentences as if I were watching the extending prairie. The Russian immigrants’ tragedy was very affecting for they were forced to leave their country but could never find a new home in their heart. However we see many people from Bohemia, Norway or Sweden could well settle down and open a new leaf of their life. I think the reason why the book is the most acclaimed among the writer’s works is because it gave various portrayals of people’s realistic situations, the hardship, the problems, and their sentiment of the time.

 However, I don’t like the book as much as O Pioneers, because this book is less structured. The protagonist, Antonia was still a girl after I read half of the book. The emphasis was on all sorts of people at the country and a small town, so It felt like a memoir rather than a novel. We were shown many people’s lives so the book doesn’t live up to the title. I felt distracted to be introduced to one character after another.

 Oct book 3 a book with an odd number of pages

Where Shadows Dance (Sabastian St. Cyr Mystery #6)


Author: C S Harris

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 345

First published: 2011

Setting: London, 1812

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: A cool wind gusted up, rstling the branches of the trees overhead and bringing with it the unmistakable clatter of wooden wheels approaching over cobblestones.

One sentence comment:

 I love the beginning of the book, which introduced the International affairs when Britain fought with Napoleon in Spain, was prepared for defending Canada from American attack, and pondering about sending troops to defend Russia from Napoleon. While in Britain the invention of the steam engine attracted a crowd’s attention. What a summer in 1812!

 Sabastian St. Cyr Mystery is my most favorite series. There are many loveable and theatrical characters in this series. I don’t get tired of them reading one book after another because their personal stories are evolving along with each murder case investigated. Harris is a masterful writer in delivering ferocious-minded female characters and devious antagonists. Some conversations were so hilarious that kept me laughing and wondering how the serious looking Harris could come up with those witty dramas! Reading her books satisfies my curiosity and fulfills me with entertainment.

 Oct 4 an objectionable book (banned at some point)

The Bluest Eye


Author: Toni Morrison

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 206

First published: 1969

Setting: 1939-1941, US

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: Here is the house.

One sentence comment: It’s astonishing but I don’t enjoy it because of its bitterness.

 The story is about Pecola and her parents, their past and how they become who they are. The author can write the worst melancholy in a person’s heart. Indeed we are often aware of people’s monstrous behaviors but neglect what has made a monster.

 

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