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

Jan, 2025 Read


1.      A book by an author with a 2-syllable last name

(first book of my 2025 project: 6 classics before turning to 60)

The Scarlet Pimpernel


Author: Baroness Orczy

Genre: historical fiction

Number of pages: 323

First published: 1905

Setting: Paris in 1792

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: A surging, seething, murmuring crowd of beings that are human only in name, for to the eye and ear they seem naught but savage creatures, animated by vile passions and by the lust of vengeance and of hate.

One sentence comment: I love this book, romantic and beautiful.

 The Scarlet Pimpernel is about this crazy time of huge change and serious danger, and this one super-rich guy basically ran a secret rescue squad. He and his team kept sneaking back into Paris to save all these people the French government was trying to hunt down.

 

2.      Free pick

(Second book of my 2025 project: 6 classics before turning to 60)

The Custom of the Country


Author: Edith Wharton

Genre: Classic fiction

Number of pages: 413

First published: 1913

Setting: New York and France

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: ‘Undine Spragg – how can you?’ her mother wailed, raising a prematurely wrinkled hand heavy with rings to defend the note which a languid ‘bell-boy’ had just brought in.

One sentence comment: This book offers the most vivid insights into the evolving social dynamics in New York in the early 20th century.

 

Edith Wharton's The Custom of the Country doesn't enjoy the same fame as some of her other novels. I suspect it's because critics haven't taken kindly to its villainous heroine. Undine, shallow and obsessed with money, is certainly unsympathetic. Yet, despite her comic portrayal, she doesn't suffer the tragic fate often meted out to 19th-century women who dared to defy societal norms. Undine actually gets what she wants. In a way, the story seems to applaud her dishonesty and unconventional boldness, which might leave some readers feeling a bit uneasy.

 

My heart really goes out to Ralph, Undine's first victim. He was a true gentleman from a distinguished family, a thoughtful soul who valued art above all else. Yet, he was forced to take on a soul-crushing job to keep up with Undine's extravagant spending. His tragedy lies in his fundamental belief in human decency. He simply couldn't comprehend the extent of her deceit. Ralph's story reflects the social upheaval of the time. It highlights how traditional values were crumbling, leaving those who clung to them bewildered and powerless to maintain the order they cherished.

 


June Monthly Challenge


1.      A book about a parent, siblings, or other family members

The Shining


Author: Stephen King

Genre: horror

Number of pages: 659

First published: 1977

Setting: small town

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: Jack Torrence thought: Officious little prick.

One sentence comment: This is my first book by Stephen King then I know the scariest horror is from human.

 

I misunderstood Stephen King as the mainstream art world did. He is ahead of our time at least by 20 years.  In the book, he talked about addiction, hatred, trauma, and madness, which are the major topics when we deal with kids’ problems nowadays. He will be one of my favorite authors that I read every year.


2. A book with a child or a house on the cover

O Pioneers


Author: Willa Cather

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 230

First published: 1913

Setting: Nebraska in 19th century

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: One January day, thirty years ago, the little town of Hanover, anchored on a windy Nebraska tableland, was trying not to be blown away.

One sentence comment: It’s a very beautiful book that took me by surprise.

 

I love the two women protagonists that are very different but lovable in the same way. Symbolic scenery and inner thoughts of the characters are fascinating like poetry. The culture and the ensuing sin and crime are responded drastically different by the people then from our era. It provokes me to have a better understanding of human condition.

 

3. A book that was first published during your parent’s lifetime

When the Bough Breaks (# 1 of Alex Delaware series)


Author: Jonathan Kellerman

Genre: mystery

Number of pages: 426

First published: 1985

Setting: Boston

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: It was shaping up as a beautiful morning.

One sentence comment: I like the part about the psychologist world but not the action packed plot.

 

I can be drawn to any book with Freudian elements, but a psychologist with an Indian Jones trope is ridiculous. However, considering the author’s good language ability, I will give the series anther two chances to see whether he can give the protagonist a better shape. 

 

4. A book by an author who is/was a parent

Neverwhere


Author: Neil Gaiman

Genre: fantasy

Number of pages: 372

First published: 1996

Setting: London

Rating: 2 stars

First sentence: The night before he went to London, Richard Mayhew was not enjoying himself.

One sentence comment: The story has no spine, and I have the problem of finding my way through it.

 

Gaiman’s prose is OK, but what’s the point of putting on two ugly and brutal baddies from the beginning? I have absolutely no interest in them. It would be more appealing to tell about the protagonist’s relationship with his girlfriend in London Above. I was quite taken by the starting point of the book.

 

February Book Challenge

 Book competition so far



Feb *3 A book with a red cover (“lucky” color)



2001 (a Space Odyssey #1)

Author: Arthur Clarke

Genre: Science Fiction

Number of pages: 297

First published: 1968

Setting: Space in 2001

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: The drought had lasted now for ten million years, and the reign of terrible lizards long since ended.

One sentence comment: It’s enjoyable for a non SF fan like me because the plot evolves from the root of present science and doesn’t get into far-fetched fantasy.

 

          I should have read this book before a couple of unfavorable more recent SF books. Perhaps I would have developed an overjoyed preference for the SF genre. The author took an interesting and realistic view of human development by first introducing a man-ape called, Moon-Watcher. It was a great imagination and I was feeling very much touched by their primeval life and challenges.

          Then the time jumped into the imaginative 2001 and we found humans already had self-support life system on the Moon. What’s surprising was that the digital newspaper was on! The author had predicted the digital era during the 1960’s. Shortly after, I was put into a spaceship with two humans and one robot to travel outward from the solar system. We got into closer encounters with asteroids and Jupiter.

          The journey’s final goal was Saturn. My criticism is on the last few dozens of pages, which changed from science into complete fantasy, completely leaving the author’s orbit of science.


Feb *4 Free Pick: Happy Lunar New Year! (classic of this month)

Ethan Frome



Author: Edith Wharton

Genre: fiction

Number of pages: 113

First published: 1911

Setting: Massachusetts, US

Rating: 5 stars

First sentence: I had the story, bit by bit, from various people, and, as generally happens in such cases, each time it was a different story.

One sentence comment: The tragic story reflects the age-old argument about fate and free-will.

 Told from Ethan’s point of view, the story showed how pathetic he was but only one old woman showed pity on him. He might seem irresponsible but he had struggled with both pride and shame. To the brink of getting money to run away, he was called back by his conscience not to take advantage of those who had sympathy for him. I was quite moved by his inner dialogues. Through the author’s artistic reporting of details, my heart was caught by what was going to happen to the poor man when death and horror seemed to hover over him forever. This book is going to be my favorite of the month.

 

Feb *2 A book with one of the words from “Year of the Dragon” in the title

The bear and the dragon



Author: Tom Clancy

Genre: political thriller

Page number: 1137

First published: 2000

Setting: Moscow, Beijing, and Washington DC modern time

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: Going to work was the same everywhere, and the changeover from Marxism-Leninism to Chaos-Capitalism hadn’t changed matters much – well, maybe things were now a little worse.

One sentence comment: It’s amazing to see an assassination bring about a panoramic view of three major powers in our era.

        Spending two months reading this book, I glanced through a mocking review about this book saying that Clancy try to write War and Peace, by bursting with numerous Russian names leading to a war.  I don’t like a large cast but I like him delving into psychological and theological discussion.

          Concerning the plot, the first thing that stroke interest is the talks of building Russia’s gas pipeline to the west with technical supports from American companies, which would be earning billions of dollars. After 23 years of the book’s publication, Europe had to suffer from the dependency on cheaper oil from Russia after the war on Ukraine. The actual pipeline Stream 1 was built in 2010. Clancy’s book was like a prophecy.

This book tackles a lot of cross culture issues, such as American Mafia, the west tradition versus KGB. It’s also a book to understand modern China. The character Ming had grown up under the shadow of one-child policy. She worked for a minister and experienced sex exploitation, which she saw as part of her job. An infanticide eventually led to a clash between China and the US. In case a westerner does not understand this issue, the book provides ruthless explanations. After the brief mentioning of Falun Gong, Ming said that ‘ communism remains a jealous system of belief.’ This story line is excellent and dramatic but not exaggerating at all.

Another intriguing line is to find out the murder in the beginning of the book, who and why. It’s surprising to see that the Russian investigator Lieutenant Paovalov was so friendly with the FBI agent Reilly, that he relied on the US to provide help. The book is full of sarcastic and humorous comments. One of most funny is that when a medium intelligent diplomat was used as a spy, we were told that it wasted a lot of time for counterintelligence people, making them trail dumb diplomats who turned out to be nothing more than just that – dumb diplomat – of which the global supply was ample.

In sum, the events and things discussed in this chunkster is overwhelming. My criticism is that the plot tends to drag  too long. Like a long running TV series, if you jump in the middle, you don’t feel you have missed anything.

Feb *1 A book with an Asian/Chinese protagonist, or author, or setting

 


Author: Shamini Flint

Genre: Mystery

Number of pages: 295

First published: 2009

Setting: Malaysia

Rating: 3 stars

First sentence: The accused, Chelsea Liew, was in court.

One sentence comment: It’s a culture-relevant and informative novel about three major Asian countries, Singapore, Malaysia and China.

This book taught me more about Singapore and Malaysia. I was amazed by the mentioning of the tension between these two countries. Singapore is more progressive but authoritative. Malaysia is a Moslem country; therefore, if a man converts to Moslem, his under-aged children automatically become Moslems, so that the custody will be decided in the Moslem court. In the same way, the man’s inheritance will be dissolved in the Moslem court.

          Through this book, I knew another shocking atrocity from China. Because of the flooding around the Yangtze River, Chinese government cracked down hard on logging. However all the major forests from other Asian countries were exploited and disappeared. This is why I shouldn’t read Asian books because I can not avoid reading detested things about China.

          I think there is a great weakness about the plot. How could the Malaysian police threw people into prison without further evidence, such as a murder weapon or a witness? I can’t read a modern mystery as if the story happened in the Middle Ages.

Wh prompts for May

 

May # Who – person with a person’s name in the title

The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes



Author: Conan Doyle

Genre: short stories

Page number: 281

First published: 1894

Rating: two stars

First sentence: “I am afraid, Watson, that I shall have to go,” said Holmes, as we sat down together to our breakfast one morning.

One sentence comment: Sherlock Homes book series were among my favorite classics when I was a kid, but I have obviously grown out of it after reading many modern mysteries in recent years.


May # What – a book title indicating what the person is/does

Call the Midwife



Author: Jennifer Worth

Genre: nonfiction

Page number: 340

First published: 2002

5ating: 5 stars

First sentence: Nonnatus House was situated in the heart of the London Docklands.

One sentence comment: East Enders’ bitter but heartwarming history in the 1950’s survived becaue of the author who saved their babies during that time.

 

It’s a marvelous accounts about a lost world, including the convent and the workhouse. Both of them are institutes of Christianity but carrying opposite effects. Children were brought to the world safely by midwives sent from the convent. However, many children died from separanting from their parents, who entered the workhouse in order to survive from hunger. I realize that perhaps it is better to be paupers than staying in a workhouse. The work condition was so appaling that human beings were downgraded into working animals. I guess that’s why social welfare developed first in the Christian countries.

 

The author must have a good system of recording events. She brought to us many memorable characters that lived half centuries ago.

 

 May # Where – a book that is currently located in your home

A Clue for the Puzzle Lady



Author: Parnell Hall

Genre: mystery

Page number: 323

First published: 1999

Rating: 4 stars

First sentence: The first clue came with a corpse.

One sentence comment: I have been fascinated to find a mystery combined with puzzles even though I am not a puzzle fan.

 

I have always thought that a crossword puzzle maker is a genius. It was out of my imagination how a crossword puzzle could be embedded into a cozy mystery. The author did it and made the story twist and fun. The intuitive old lady in the title role is fun and nasty at the same time but that won’t deter me from reading more about her.