Showing posts with label Author P. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author P. Show all posts

November Challenges

 

Nov 1 a book with a person’s name in the title

Judas


Author: Amos Oz

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 274

First published: 2016

Setting: Jerusalem 1959-60

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: Here is a story from the winter days of the end of 1959 and the beginning of 1960.

One sentence comment: While the author's intent to challenge the traditional portrayal of Judas and its historical impact on Israel is commendable, the novel's characters fail to evoke empathy.

 I’ve been an admirer of Amos Oz since reading A Tale of Love and Darkness. Over the years, I’ve delved into thirteen of his works, captivated by his exploration of personal longing and Israeli history. Though I purchased his final novel, Judas, in 2017, it remained unread until now. Upon finally picking it up, I was immediately reminded of the reasons I love Oz’s writing.

 While he never penned a traditional murder mystery, his best works are filled with observation, analysis, and a sense of mystery. Judas is no exception. A young man, disillusioned with life, is drawn into a mysterious house to care for an elderly man. Like the protagonist, I was immediately captivated by the witty and insightful conversations with this crooked old man. Oz's ability to delve into psychological, theological, and historical details is a hallmark of his style.

 However, I don’t consider Judas to be one of his best works. Despite a potentially intriguing plot centered around the truth about two men accused of betrayal, the repetitive narrative and the protagonist’s pretentious obsession, particularly his infatuation with a middle-aged woman, detracted from my enjoyment. Perhaps my tastes have evolved, and I’ve grown weary of the more perverse love stories that were once a hallmark of Oz’s work.

 Nov 2 a book written by an author who uses initials instead of her first name

When Maidens Mourn


Author: C S Harris

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 352

First published: 2012

Setting: England

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: Tessa Sawyer hummed a nervous tune beneath her breath as she pushed through the tangled brush and bracken edging the black waters of the ancient moat.

One sentence comment: While the incorporation of diverse historical elements is enjoyable, the historical mystery at the core of the novel could be better organized. A more focused narrative would enhance the overall reading experience.

 I’m glad that the volume seven of this series, returns to the exquisite writing style of its earlier installments, employing more elaborate language and vivid descriptions. This volume delves into a mysterious 12th-century legend, which adds a layer of intrigue to the murder case. Simultaneously, it further explores the protagonist's dark past, though not without its signature humor. A loyal canine companion is introduced, along with a solitary war victim stranded in England. The Frenchman's character reminds me of the numerous war criminals from the Korean War who were brought to Taiwan in the 1950s and remain there to this day."

 My primary criticism of this book lies in its unstructured approach to clues. The plot, rather than being cohesive, is fragmented by the inclusion of disparate elements, such as the tension with France, contemporary subversion, and the protagonist's family secrets. These elements, unfortunately, fail to coalesce into a coherent narrative. While I typically admire the heroine, in this instance, her characterization veers towards villainy, a departure from her usual role.

 Nov 3 a book written by an author who wrote under a pen name

Death at Gallows Green (A Victorian Mystery #2)


Author: Robin Paige

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 280

First published: 1995

Setting: Essex in the Victoria Era

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: The gentle southern breeze that riffled the fresh green grass of the Essex meadows was mild and fragrant.

One sentence comment: It’s interesting to see Beatrix Potter in the story.

 I found the poaching storyline to be a drag on the narrative. The characters, who I've already met, offer little in the way of development or surprise

 

Nov 4 a book with the letters “N-A-M-E” on the front cover

The Poyson Garden


Author: Karen Harper

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 302

First published: 1999

Setting: England in 16th century

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: “The queen wishes to see you alone in her privy chamber, my lady.”

One sentence comment: I can't believe this novel portrays Elizabeth as a daring detective, risking her life in dangerous situations without considering herself to be a future queen.

 I’m interested in the history when Elizabeth I's early life was marked by a precarious existence under the reign of her half-sister, Queen Mary I. She was a target of suspicion and persecution, living in constant fear of imprisonment or even execution. While the historical mystery presented an intriguing plot, it ultimately fell short due to its implausibility and repetitive nature. However, the writer's attempt to delve into the background story of Elizabeth's Fool piqued my interest. This intriguing subplot inspired me to seek out a historical novel, "The Queen's Fool," which delves deeper into the complex relationship between Elizabeth I and her loyal companion.

 

April Book Challenge

 

April *1 author’s first or last name begins with A, I, or R.



Death at Bishop’s Keep (#1 A Victorian Mystery)

Author: Robin Paige (Bill Albert & Susan Witting Albert)

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 296

First published: 1994

Setting:1894

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: Kate Ardleigh glanced warily over her shoulder.

One sentence comment: I was amazed to find the Victorian mystery series I had been seeking.

 

As an Irish American, Kate is the perfect protagonist to plunge into a late Victorian society. An empire passing its prime is perfect for a quirky heroine and aristocrats that sought marriages with financial consideration. Of course we have a Charles Darwen like man to give us another spirit of the era, science and invention. The backstory is dense such as crime that may have nothing to do with the thematic murder in the story. I love the language that refrains me from gobbling the novel without tasting its flavor. The ending is marvelous and I am sure to follow this series.

 

April *2 fire colored spine



Murder in Chinatown (Gaslight Mysteries #9)

Author: Victoria Thompson

Genre: historical mystery

Number of pages: 305

First published: 2007

Setting: New York in the end of nineteenth century

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: “I’m not in labor, am I?”

One sentence comment: The ending is great for it brought a solution and a new beginning.

 

It’s the ninth book in this series, and it read as good as the previous books. I have a slight criticism, which is the first 100 pages can be reduced into one third of the length. The conversation in the middle of the book is very interesting, and the ending is heart-warming.

 

April *3 With an Earth words



A Puzzle in a Pear Tree (Puzzle Lady Mystery #4)

Author: Parnell Hall

Genre: mystery

Number of pages: 349

First published: 2002

Setting: an American village

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: “No, no, no,” Rupert Winston cried, silencing the piano and vaulting up onto the stage with all the spry grace of a much younger man.

One sentence comment: This book demonstrates why I love a village life – a musical pageant and real people posing the stable scene for Christmas.

 

The book introduces a new puzzle, acrostics, which is quite amazing. The weak point of the book is that I can’t find any characters to relate to so I can only watch ridiculous characters committing impossible crimes. The conversation between protagonists for discussing the crime is repetitive and boring.

 

April *4 with a water setting



Tell No One

Author: Harlan Coben

Genre: thriller

Number of pages: 369

First published: 2001

Setting: present

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: There should have been a dark whisper in the wind.

One sentence comment: The author tried to create a mysterious atmosphere that doesn’t convince me.

 

I was put off by the lovesick feelings of the protagonist from the very beginning. The secret was so overdone that it was later revealed like a pretense. The author’s writing is good but I just couldn’t appreciate the storyline.

 Local Book Club Choice

Dr Jekyll and Mr Hide



January book challenges

 

This year I am also taking the Decades Challenge, and I started books published before 1900. The two short stories are from a book collection, The American Tradition.

Jan *1 Book from TBR

The Yellow Wallpaper



Author: Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Genre: short story

Page number: 24

First published: 1892

Setting: US in late 19th century

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: It is very seldom that mere ordinary people like John and myself secure ancestral halls for the summer.

One sentence comment: It’s a creepy story that mixed with humor.

          I started with an author I had not read for 2024 challenges. Besides I haven’t read short stories for a long time, and this time I like it. It’s hard to imagine that a woman of mirth would bear so much stress to the point of depression, but strangely, the hallucination saved her from feeling prisoned.


Jan *2 same genre/theme as *1 book

The Real Thing



Author: Henry James

Genre: short story

Page number: 68

First published: 1893

Setting: UK in the late nineteenth century

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: When the porter’s wife, who used to answer the house-bell, announced “ A gentleman and a lady, sir” I had, as I often had in those days – the wish being father to the thought – an immediate vision of sitters.

One sentence comment: It is a heart wrenching story though I was not quite in the narrator’s state ‘ my drawing was blurred for a moment.’

 

          I tried to read Henry James’ A Portrait of a Lady decades ago but gave up. A few years ago, I read but didn’t like Turn of the Screw – too scary and ambivalent. Then I was deeply touched by Washington Square. Now I decided to start this year with his short story. James is famous for his subtle writing with sublime beauty, and I truly felt the effect how he delivered the story of a genteel couple now losing their livelihood. I could sympathize with the narrator’s decision from the very beginning and sadness to the end.

 

Jan *3 similar style cover to *2 book

Tweak: Growing up on Methamphetamines



Author: Nic Sheff

Genre: memoir

Page number: 351

First published: 2008

Setting: San Francisco present time

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: Day 1

I'd heard rumors about what happened to Lauren

One sentence comment: The vivid journey on the street is surprisingly comic, and the picture of how the rich people live is appalling.

 

          It is a book full of adventure and humor. The narrator started his wayward life as early as when he was sent to Paris to learn French as a teenager, then he squandered money from his father's credit card, thinking he could live like that forever until the card were canceled. He had to go back to face his life, a rich life without meaning. The book is a journey of a young man's struggling with self value and finding salvation.

 

Jan *4 An author from the same country as that of *3 book

The Novice’s Tale ( A Sister Frevisse medieval mystery #1)



Author: Margaret Frazer

Genre: historical mystery

Page number: 229

First published: 1992

Setting: oxfordshire, UK in 1431

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: Mid-September in the year of our Lord’s grace 1431 and perfect weather, warm and dry.

 One sentence comment: It is a most enjoyable first book of a new series for me; Unfortunately, I found most of the books are out of print.

 

First of all, I enjoy the major trait of the book - treating scenes as characters. In the first chapter, it described the priory in more than one page – bustling but serene. In chapter four, the first paragraph gave a vivid view of the kitchen, an important place for secular servants to work. I’m personally quite taken by atmosphere of a priory, a place for regular schedules and rigorous research.

          Secondly, the book elaborated a character’s personality through events and other people’s view like a penetrating picture or drama. When the pious and timid novice, Thomasine first encountered an important man to the priory, she didn’t dare to look but her curiosity propelled her to peek and to compare him with her father.  Later her obnoxious aunt, the pompous and abusive Lady Ermentrude pronounced, “You become any meeker, you’ll cease to breathe!”

          Despite of Margaret Frazer’s aesthetic prose, the plot is a page turner for the first 50 pages. The mentioning of the court scandal, the young king in France, the witch Jon of Arc, all seemed evocative clues. After a quarter of the book, we came to see the inner world of the major protagonist, Sister Frevisse. Then we started to understand what sort of person she was besides her glamouring opening scene as a confident and chatty niece of an important man who visited the priory. It is a wonderful surprise to see how the book structured.

          This book is my favorite in January. If I need to criticize the book, that is the murder victim’s vice and torture was too much exaggerated. Unfortunately, the series seem to be out of print except the first two volumes.

 After putting away my 2023 read books, my largest bookshelf looks fine to cater another years' books. I sticked three more author labels, intending to read their books in the coming years. They are Clarke, Crichton, and King.



Two books about Ireland and two Canadian debuts

 


Echoes

Author: Maeve Binchy

Genre: historical fiction

Page number: 737

First published: 1985

Rating: stars: five stars

First sentence: It was sometimes called Brigid’s Cave, the echo cave, and if you shouted your question loud enough in the right direction you got an answer instead of an echo.

One sentence comment: This is a book that makes me care about all the characters.

 

Echoes is another terrific book by Maeve Binchy. The title echoed in a few parts of the books to imply the deep aspiration from two protagonists, Angela and Clare, to have someone close to share their burden of life. These two women with about ten years between them, were caught by dilemmas and had to make decisions of their owns.

 

I love the characters that are strong and warm-hearted. Binchy had a great talent to tell Irish stories in which people’s lives were rocky and bitter but with humor and mutual understanding.

 

The book is also tinged with mystery. How will Angela and Clare be settled in their small town life when both of them seem to be misfits. How can Clare fall in love with David and give up her high hope of career? How will the pains of both family, the brothers of the two women, face their town people in the end? And how will Gerry, the lady's man through the book, die in the coast, according to the beginning of the book?

 


Absolution by Murder

Author: Peter Tremayne

Genre: historical mystery

Page number: 272

First published: 1994

Rating: stars: four stars

First sentence: The man had not been dead long.

One sentence comment: I was surprised that Ireland had such a glorious history as a religious leader in the 7th century.

 

While reading the book, I suddenly realized that Ireland had a historical glory over England where it was a religious leader at that part of world.

 

Set in the 7th century, a Northern Kingdom in England was torn by religious forces between Ireland and Rome. Therefore a debate was held among religious leaders in order to decide which religious rituals to follow for the country. A series of murders happened during the time.

 

The heavy research involved in the book is marvelous. My criticism is that the author is not a great plotter, because the culprit was so obvious in the beginning of the investigation.



Still Life

Author: Louise Penny

Genre: mystery

Page number: 318

First published: 2005

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: Miss Jane Neal met her maker in the early morning mist of Thanksgiving Sunday.

One sentence comment: I had never read a modern mystery like this book, so elegant worded with touching thoughts.

 

Beyond a beautiful cover of the misty October, this book has brought to me an experience of a remote Canadian village. Published in the beginning of the 21st century, this book deals with the issues of our present time - rogue teens, lone elderlies, feeling animals and people of faltering faith of God. Reading the author's elegant language combined with elements of art and poetry, I feel the reading week  has been a real treat.

 


The Push

Author: Ashley Audrain

Genre: fiction

Page number: 303

First published: 2021

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: Your house glows at night like everything inside is on fire.

One sentence comment: This book reminds me of the kids I met who played pranks on their friends but were unaffected by their suffering.

 

The narrative of this book is sometimes vivid and thrilling, but superfluous in many parts.

 

Books, Hobby and Lone Woman in January

 

This year I’ve picked books from my shelf to read mostly according to the prompts provided by The 52 Book Club – 2023 Reading Challenge. I know I can’t read 52 books a year so I skip some unfavorable prompts. 

 


# 1 A book with a subtitle

The Real Jane Austen: A Life in Small Things

Author: Paula Byrne

Genre: Biography

Rating: five stars

* First sentence: This is a watercolour of Lyme Regis on the southern coast of England.

* One sentence comment: This is the most detailed and intimate account of my favorite classic writer, Jane Austen.

It was this prompt that gave me the urge to read this non-fiction I meant to read for some time. I bought this book for a while, but among fantastic looking fictions, this book with a quiet looking cover had been put off for perhaps a year. However, this year I made it my first book to read, and it is a real treat for a new year. Through the objects of Jane Austen’s time, I got close to the daily life, joy and plight of my favorite classic writer. I have read a few biographies about Jane Auten, but never had a book given me such vivid accounts about her romance, friendship and travels, especially her linkage to the West Indies.  

 Against my previous knowledge, Jane Austen actually had quite a few suitors, and one of the proposals was accepted but turned down overnight. The real Austen chose love over heritage just like her heroines in her novels. Austen had a few close friends with whom she corresponded with letters. They became important sources for us to understand her life and thoughts. We know she was playful but stern in her principles. Her experiences with Prince Regent was extraordianry. Reading it put a smile on my face because I was reminded what was written in a previous book I read, about a sycophant to the Prince. I am looking forwards to reading on the book series, A Sebastian St. Cyr Mystery.

 The book made me fantasize to visit all the places Austen had stayed, such as Bath, Chawton, and Brighton.

 #2   Featuring an inheritance



The Dutch House

Author: Ann Patchett

Genre: Novel

Rating: two stars

The characters are all too dramatic and unrealistic. The father was too stupid, the mother was too saint like and the stepmother, too ruthless. The plot is boring and the reason why I continued to the end was I wanted to find the ending. After I read it I thought perhaps there was a point in the story.

 #3 Title starting with the letter “G”

Giving Up the Ghost



Author: Hilary Mantel

Genre: Memoir

Rating: four stars

First sentence: It is a Saturday, late July 2000; we are in Reepham, Norfork, at Owl Cottage.

One sentence comment: Mantel’s prose is full of wonders.

 Hilary Mantel was a modern legend that had won the Booker Prize twice in a row. I have read a couple of book reviews written by her and was affected by her prose. More surprisingly, I got to know she’d suffered from chronic illness since her teenage years from her memoir. Endometriosis came back at her mid age, and she described how she had felt as well as how she had seen herself, “My skin turned gray and my weight began to fall so that one day when I saw myself sideways through a mirror, I shocked myself: I looked like one of those beaten dogs that the RSPCA used to photograph, with bones sticking through the hide.”

Near the end of the book, she wrote, “everything about me - my physiology, my psychology, feels constantly under assault: I am a shabby old building in an area of heavy shelling, which the inhabitants have vacated years ago.” I think her words about writing have revealed the innermost longing of many writers, “I feel that every morning it is necessary to write myself into being…. When you have committed enough words to paper you feel you have a spine stiff enough to stand up in the wind.”

 

I couldn’t help wondering what if the ill fate happened to me, and I was touched by her words: “We were taught to be thankful that, whatever is in store for us, it wasn’t crucifixion: unless you were a missionary or really unlucky.”

 

 Fun with the Bookish Pictionary for Once upon a Bookish Club

The author's first memory was her mother walking backwards to take a picture.😛

“I don’t understand why she goes backward, back and aslant, tracking to one side. The tree overhead make a noise of urgent conversation, to quick to catch; the leaves part, the sky moves, the sun peers down at me.”

 


My hobby: making cake

On the 22th of January, it happened to be the Lunar New Year, so we played a game after the church service. I also made a chocolate cake the day before. I seldom made a chocolate cake, and this time I couldn’t get confectioners' sugar in the supermarket to make Creamy Chocolate Frosting. I decided to bake the chocolate frosting; otherwise we would have tasted the sugar’s granular texture. The base was baked for too long; therefore, it tasted a bit hard.

 


A Lone Woman at the Convenience Store

It was a late afternoon on the second day of the Lunar New Year. I went into a convenience store to withdraw some money. Then I strolled to the shelf for food to look for a dinner box. I saw a woman squatting by the shelf, holding a cup of hot soup, supposedly having just bought it from the store. At first I thought she was an old tramp, but when she started to talk to me, I found that she was too well dressed to be a tramp. She recommended me to buy a curry, which she considered very tasty and she often bought it since she just lived in the building next to the store. I told her that I often had curry and today I hoped to buy something I rarely had. I know the building she mentioned is an expensive complex, so I realized that the reason she was squatting there was to look for a chance to talk to someone like me, who looked for one-person food during New Year so that she could converse with another lone woman.

 

Favorite Books in 2022



If you have found favorite books every year, you have found new friends. My reading this years has focused on novels and memoirs written in English. Here are my favorite books for the year.

What Angels Fear (#1 of Sebastian St. Cyr Mystery)



Carrying wounds from the war and returning to England as a lovelorn, Sebastian was created by the author, C. S. Harris, as a wastrel to his aristocratic father, but a hero to the depraved woman who had broken his heart six years ago. England was at war with Napoleon for 20 years; hence, is ripe for conspiracy, in favor of the French, to destabilize the Regency. Under this backstory, Sebastian was dragged into a murder case, thus he had to do a wide trawl to find the real killer.

 I am impressed by the writing of the characters from the police force. Lovejoy, a chief magistrate for Westminster, had a heart for justice. On the other hand, Lord Jarvis was his dubious superior, concerning more of averting the Revolution flame than of finding the truth. Lovejoy, coming from a tradesman family, diligent at work, had a conviction that “a childless man ought to leave something worthwhile behind him, some contribution to society.” In contrast, Lord Jarvis often accompanied the buffoon Prince on comic scenes with a determination to keep Tory in power. It was heartrending to see Lovejoy, in the middle of reasoning about a case, consulted his wife as if she had still lived. On the contrary, Lord Jarvis was surrounded by women of three generations, with whom he was so satisfied as to the point of annoyance. Among them, his daughter, Hero, caused him most grief for her interest in books, especially from the authors promoting women's rights. Oh! It’s so much fun to read about Jarvis’ mindset. The author must develop the character, Hero, in the next book of the series, otherwise I would be disappointed.

  I benefit from the splendid language of the book at the same time writing my own murder mystery. Following the instruction of an online course, I have produced one chapter each weak, reaching three so far by the end of July. We really have to keep in mind about what makes a joyful life. One of the things is creation. There are so many areas of our mind not yet explored, and God always give us chances to resume what we have started and not given up.

  A Feather on the Breath of God



Reading at the beginning of the book, I thought this novel was dull- too much depiction of a half Chinese half Panamanian father, who was mostly dumb, and did not get along with both his wife and daughter. His wife of German origin turned my spirit up though. She was a woman that loved literature, the woman without love but said “one husband is enough”, the woman, utmost conservative but made her daughter’s clothes so glamorous that embarrassed her daughter at school.

 To the middle of the story, my eyes brightened with the narrator‘s story of learning ballet. I had never imagined a ballerina should endure so much pain. But she reflected “In dance, pain is often inseparable from desirable feelings… I would have forgone many pleasures to feel the pain of being a dancer again.” Later in her life, she discovered that  "it was men who invented ballet – and the ballerina. It is men who put her feet in those shoes and take food out of her mouth,” and the shocking discovery of ballet is its metaphor of crotch and penis.

 The last part is most astonishing, about an affair with a Russian immigrant, nicknamed “Count Dracula” by the narrator’s friends. He was compulsive and dashing with an air of knightly bravery. He had belonged to the class of street gang in Odessa, but talked about his stories with no shame. The man seemed to me that he had only known harsh life but no love before he met the narrator. Could he have been in love with the narrator the first time in life? But surely he wasn’t aware. He pitied the narrator for he knew that she would grow old staying as a spinster. On the contrary, she wasn’t in love with him, for she knew, as clever as she was, that she was infatuated with a fatherly figure that she had never had. As the narrator put it, “I think he was a good father to his daughter.”

 The whole book carries a consistent pain with the shadow of having, in reality, and not having a father, in spirit. she wanted to be as light as a feather, because she felt as light as a feather as if God has destined her life so little to desire that she had no where to stand on. She held tight of ballet and a patriarchal lover, for the reason to find a ground. She found “a moment of completely magic; a sudden sense of weightlessness, of the world pulling back; the conviction of some great and wonderful thing was coming toward me.” Unlike her mother, she was brave, that she didn’t ask her love object to be someone else. She accepted him completely. Though she knew she was not in love. She only lived under God’s breath.

 I love this quote from the book, “human beings are capable of passions that human experiences can never live up to.” – T. S. Eliot

 

Light a Penny Candle



This is a book defining friendship, love, and loss. Out of so many good points in the 592-page novel, I would say that transcendence outshines all.

 The first slump in Elizabeth’s life was her mother’s walking away with another man. She could not understand and was in a rage. After a few years, she fell in love with a charming man, Johnny, and made the decisions that seemed foolish to other people, but she was faithful to her feelings. Then she could understand her mother. In desperation, she was offered another chance to fulfill her life, and she made a decision to leave Johnny. Many sad events would still to happen and turn her life in turmoil, but she would be able to cope with.

 Reading about her life was like reviewing my own life again. At every period of time, happiness was short and sorrow seems forever. However, we have to remember to move on, with a belief that we will get over the obstacles as long as we take a step back from the situation and never lose heart.

 Maeve Binchy (1939-2012) published 16 novels (1982-2012). All of them are over 500 pages. Like some people from the internet, I intend to read them in order. It will take 8 years perhaps.

 

 After the Eclipse


I was immediately attracted by some website‘s introduction of the memoir when I read it . What a terrible thing for the author, Sarah Perry, to be the witness of her mother’s murder when she was only 12 years old! And how courageous to write about her mother's love life with enquiry and honesty. That means she totally accepts who her mother was, without judgement and not afraid to be judged. Through her mother's life story, she questions the common expectation of women, that is, a woman needs a man. After the murder, all the men, her ex husband, boyfriends, and fiance became suspects. Almost all of them were violence-prone. What a satire that a vibrant woman with a never-give-up heart to seek happiness for her and her daughter, should have found her destination an early death. As a hard working shoe sewer, she had been capable of buying a small house, therefore, she was financially sustainable without a man. All her shouting and depressing years with the men she had been with were heart-wrenching to read.

 The genre of this book is memoir combined with mystery. Generally, a memoir is the author's intimate voice;   It should be valued. However, the drawback of a memoir is that the audience does not necessarily relate to the author. For example, how many people feel like to know about a small town murderIn order to draw a larger audience, it is better to have a mystery to solve in a memoir. The single mother, Crystal, could be so capable of providing financial and emotional security for her child, but why should she lost control when it came to men? People are generally curious. Curiosity is considered a virtue, because by finding the truth, we may have to change our mindset rather than succumb to rigidity. The author had intended to explore deeper into this issue; therefore the readers who take this in can benefit from changing their world view about marriage and single parenting.

 

Murder on St. Mark’s Street (#2 of Gaslight Mystery)



I’m completely mesmerized by the Gaslight Mystery. I have just finished the second book, Murder on St. Mark’s Place. It’s amazing to see how the author reshaped the period of New York one hundred years ago. The issues at that time, domestic violence, the education for the disabled, immigration, poverty, are actually the issues now. The author seriously did research for the era, but wrote the stories full of humor and fun.

 The characters are carved in a way as if you know them, or you actually identify with one. Besides wonderfully delineating the protagonists Sarah and Frank, for smaller roles, numerous occasions were specially intelligently written. For example, Sarah’s mother were always obedient but decided to disagree with her stubborn husband. “Her father looked as surprised as if the chair has spoken.” However, the crisis between Sarah and her father was dissolved. Then comes with Sarah’s inner thought, feeling sorry for her former judgement on her mother, “She has judged her by the wrong standards, … Had she been a man, she might have pursued a successful career in diplomacy, if her work here today was any indication of her abilities.” Another example, poor Agnes frantically denied that she was bitten by her husband, proclaiming she would be a better wife. Sarah felt a heartache, “Not only did their husband injured their bodies, they also injured their minds, twisting them until they actually believed they deserved the beatings they received.” I personally met women like this. One of my friends has suffered from her disloyal husband’s violence, not actually to her body, but by means of smashing household items to scare her in case of arguments. It’s long running for 20 years. During the time I acquainted with her, she has come up with the statement again and again, “my husband is an intelligent man.” Every time it appalled me, wondering if she implied that because he was intelligent, in her own opinion anyway, he had the right to treat her like that. Believe or not, she has received higher education and been successful in career.

 Victoria Thompson’s English style is ingeniously friendly; therefore the series’ language level is suitable for Taiwanese college students. Right now we are boosting dual-language education so reading interesting and meaningful books like hers is like finding treasures . The series will help students to understand timeless social issues concerning not only New Yorkers but surely also Taiwanese.

 

 Lab Girl



In the beginning, enchanted by the book reviews, I was still unsure whether to order the book Lab Girl, for I had not had lab experiences, which may render me difficult to understand the book. However, this book turned out to be a page turner, giving me a penetrating feel of joy and awe.

  I usually mention an author by her last name; but this time is different. Activating a remote part of my soul, Hope seemed to share a very core of my self, unsure about self as a boyish teenager, relating to having no intimate relationship with Mom. At about her age meeting Bill, I came across a man I assumed as a soulmate, but I was not as lucky as Hope. Into the middle of the book, I anticipated a romantic ending of them two. However, real life is more complicated than I had imagined. Just as she said in the book, “When something just won’t work, moving heaven and earth often won’t make it work – and similarly, there are some things that you just can’t screw up.” Suddenly my disappointment turns to relief. Yes, along the life span, we met people we imagined would fit into our ideal relationship; perhaps he was funny, intelligent, or anything else we valued. However, things didn’t work, and there is no reason we should take it too hard.

 I love Hope’s many deep reflections. Such as “the realization that I could do good science was accompanied by the knowledge that I had formally and terminally missed my chance to become like any of the women that I had ever known.” Accepting myself is something I had leaned along my life journey; I had thought about the similar passage though it was not about science. On another occasion, after a conversation with Bill, Hope said “I accepted him for what he was, instead of for what he wished he could be. The potency of my acceptance made me wonder, just a little, if I could turn it inward and accept myself.” How much acceptance is how much love there is. Hope is such an amazingly loving person! I feel I should reread this book every year to remind me of following her path of accepting and loving people.

 

Without Reservation

I felt strongly related to the author  when I first read the book Without Reservations. I was at the hospital waiting for my test result to come out. Knowing I would have a boring time, I had had put the new book in my bag. When I turned the first few pages, I felt a jumping delight. Her nostalgic tone, thinking about her late mother, considering breaking away her present life, which label her as a journalist for the past 20 years, all kindle light on the dull environment I was at. Somehow it reminds me of releasing from my work tense.

 The book is much more than a travel memoir. When I was almost through the book, I suddenly realized the the book title had not meant that she traveled without booking in advance; it actually tried to tell readers she did not reserve any inner thought, either her weakness or her hope, either her feeling of loneliness or her reluctance to compromise. She tried to be honest not only to her self, but also to her unknown readers. I found out she had passed away in 2012, and felt a loss. It's a timeless memoir.

 

 


Reality hidden in Fantasy: The Book of Dust

 


Review chap 1-10

Philip Pullman said “The meaning of a story emerges in the meeting between the words on the page and the thoughts in the reader's mind.” The first part of The book of Dust reminded me of an encounter with a Taiwanese lecturer who had escaped from China. According to her, She had never been interested in politics but she had to give up her contract bonus and run for her life, because she realized if her students reported on her for calling herself ‘Taiwanese’ instead of ‘Chinese,’ she could be put in jail under the charge of espionage.

 The first 10 chapters of the book mainly followed the view of a ten-year-old boy, Malcolm. He worked in the Trout, his family pub, and ran errands for the nuns in a priory, a charity under the Church. La Belle Sauvage was his canoe, where he and his deamon, Asta often spent time. One day he found out a message in an acorn for which a man was murdered.  Later, men from the CCD, an agency from the Church, came to the Trout to search for certain people. Malcolm was traced by Dr. Relf, who worked for Oakley Street, a secret organization against CCD and members passed information through acorns. Malcolm helped Dr. Relf to pass on news he had heard from the pub. In the meantime, a woman from CCD went to Malcolm’s elementary school, recruiting students to report on their teachers. Malcolm got attached to a six-month old baby, Lyra, in the priory. She was an illegitimate daughter from Mrs. Coulter and Lord Asriel. It turned out that Mrs. Coulter was the head of CCD, and she wanted Lyra for a self-serving reason. Lord Asriel was chased by enemies but he managed to see her daughter in the priory.

 The most clever invention of the book is to put traditional theology into clear visibility. A person has three elements, which are body, deamon and ghost. Deamon is the spiritual part of a person. If a deamon dies, the body can not live. What’s left in a person is a ghost. Pullman has claimed to be agnostic because he believes in democracy instead of authority, but he passes on the church tradition through his literature so that children can get close to theological ideas though kids are bound to be raised in a system without God. That’s why he was knighted in 2019. It is a world going downward with capitalism in terms of morality, but theological spirit may save people in some ways.

 Pullman used CCD to allude to the atrocity of past church authority. Amazingly, it is not very different from modern day brutality of authoritarian countries. With modern technology, totalitarian countries can even clamp people tighter than ever. Reading what CCD did brought back horrible feelings as if I were watching the news about China. Recently they are sending people to abandoned buildings for Covid 19 quarantine, and many people climbed walls to escape because there would be food shortage and they could possibly die for lack of care. A man who had draped two large banners calling for an end to China's harsh zero-Covid policy was arrested and secretly executed. As in the book, people in China were taken away for disrespect of the system and could not be found anymore. This book is as realistic as George Orwell’s 1984.

 

Review Chapter 11-18

I used to have a wayward student, who created all sorts of troubles, such as bullying classmates and lashing out at teachers. I made a schedule to talk to him every week.  After a few times, he told me he had tried to commit suicide at home, and I was petrified with anxiety of his safety. Therefore, I immediately applied for a meeting with the school psychiatrist. Surprisingly, She was calm as if nothing was abnormal, and she asked me to pose some more questions to the students to clarify his feelings, such as 'what emotions made you do this?' 'is it anger, frustration, sadness,...?' 'What emotion made you take an action inward to yourself, and what made you take it outward to others?' I was in awe and realized that language has many layers of depth. Pullman designed the object of Alethiometer to bring up the concept.

 Following the story, Malcolm met a man with a  three-leg hyena deamon. Dr. Relf told him that the man’s name was Gerard Bonneville. He was a criminal and intended to take revenge on Mrs. Coulter. She had testified against him and put him into jail because he had secretly researched Dust, a matter relating to consciousness. Dr. Relf also told Malcolm about the language of alethiometer. Malcolm tried to warn people about the flood, but nobody took his words seriously. During the flood, Malcolm and Alice, a co-worker at the pub, were taking Lyra in his boat to Jordan College. In the tower of the college, Dr. Relf and other members of Oakley Street talked about Lyra. According to the prophecy from the witches, ‘Lyra was destined to put an end to detiny’. Bonneville had tried to get the child in order to bargain with the Magisterium, the authority of the church, so he could get back his laboratory.

 In the book, alethiometer can be used as a metephor of psychoanalysis. It had thirty-six symbols arranged around the dial. When a question was asked by the gifted reader, the hand and needles moved to respective symbols. There were more than twelve layers of meanings below each symbol. The more precisely a question was asked, the better fitted the answers were. The manner of asking questions was just like how a psychiatrist works. And the process of interpretation was like ‘free association’ of a patient under guidance during psychoanalysis sessions. Then the psychiatrist will fetch the meanings deep into a patient’s subconsciousness. I have read works of and about Freud, in which cases were discussed and there was success about how subconscious feelings were known to the patients then the symptoms that had troubled them were gone. Therefore I believe that everyone should trace down one’s subconscious emotions and understand more about oneself.

 Freud had a very unusual habit, that is to put down his dreams immediately after it happened in order to get a fuller understanding about himself.  In the book, there is a small part talking about dreams. When a person dreams, the deamon may change into a butterfly. I sometimes had very creative dreams, and when I woke up I was amazed and wondered what a master artist had been living in my brain. It’s a pity that I am not as diligent as Freud so I forgot most of my breathtaking dreams.

 Pullman depicted Bonneville as a complicated character. He could be both intimidating and charming. He had been zealous about his research on Dust, but was deprived of all his equipment. His spirit reflected by his three-leg daemon was described as disabled, unpleasant, scornful, defensive and also can be vulnerable. He later acted just like his savenger deamon, trying to steal and kill in order to get back what he had lost. Likewise, as a laughing hyena, he had to be hypocritical to pursue his objective. Pullman was actually doing the reading through the daemon of a person that could not easily be described according to his appearance.

 

Review Chapter 19-end

There were numerous occasions when I encountered problems, occurring to me too tricky to find a solution. However, when I cleared my head and thought about the leads, the blurred picture of the problem became focused and the means to solve the problem stood out. It was like how Malcolm and Alice tried to save Lyra from the priory. They first worried about how they would recognize the baby girl among so many infants. Then they couldn't figure out how to get her through a water tunnel.

 Malcom and Alice were determined to save Lyra, then they conquered the obstacles and succeeded. After a subsequent long journey, they almost lost Lyra to a woman on an island. Meeting one problem after another, they had an almost fatal encounter with Bonneville.

 There are some paragraphs written like an allegory of marriage. Before Bonneville showed up, Malcolm and Alice felt his shadow and their relationship became rough.  When Bonneville appeared, he first threw away Alice's deamon, so Alice had to seek her own deamon into the wood. Keeping Alice away from Malcolm gave Bonneville a chance to do damage to her. Before Malcolm could find her, he had to suffer from the pain of keeping away from his own deamon. It was like a man has to distance his own emotion and to make sacrifices in order to save his marriage.

 This book is basically Malcolm's story. In a biblical manner, he is like John that paved the road for the One, in this case, Lyra. Pullman has used metaphors from the biblical elements, such as the flood, the journey before Jesus was delivered, and the Baptist John that paved the road for Jesus. The Bible is the legendary history of Israel.  Then it prevails over the Christrian world, mostly in Europe and North America. In the past decades, the relationship between people and church has loosened or even become non-existant, but the essence of Jesus's compassion and leniency is still the power behind our civilization. The book is profound to me, so it evokes my memories and inspires me to write.