Sunday, September 21, 2008

10 Poems To Change Your Life - Roger Housden

mja..

110 Poems of Love and Revelation - Roger Housden

ok

The Dress Lodger - Sheri Holmer

Extremely miserable individuals living extremely miserable lives during nineteenth century England. I couldn't get through it. I tried several times. Maybe read 1/3 and the last chapter....

Brain Rules - John Medina

1. Exercise boosts brain power. 2. The human brain evolved, too. 3. Every brain is wired differently. 4. We don't pay attention to boring things. 5. Repeat to remember (short-term memory). 6. Remember to repeat (long-term memory). 7. Sleep well, think well. 8. Stressed brains don't learn the same way. 9. Stimulate more of the senses. 10. Vision trumps all other senses. 11. Male and female brains are different. 12. We are powerful and natural explorers.
Great book!!!

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Den Vita Massajens Dotter - Corinne Hofmann


Jaha, detta ar alltsa uppfoljaren till Den Vite Massajen och berattelsen blir inte pa langa vagar lika spannande eller exotisk nar hon och dottern flyttat till Schweiz. 5

Den Vita Massajen - Corinne Hofmann


En sann berattelse om en schweizisk kvinna som traffade en massajkrigare i Kenya och blev foralskad eller snarare besatt. Hon har sjalv skrivit boken och skriven som det vore en dagbok. Hennes liv och kulturen hon levde i ar intressanta att lasa om men efter ett tag tycker man nog att hon verkar lite naiv och tillochmed lite korkad. Kanske 6.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Half of a Yellow Sun - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie


Two sisters' (Olanna and Keinene) struggle with love and family relationships during difficult years of war in the Republic of Biafra. They suffer through the military coups, the creation of Biafra, famine and sanctions as well as the fall of Biafra and return to Nigeria in the late sixties. Very powerful. Very different. I learned some history and geography I certainly didn't know before. 8

Berlinerpopplarna - Anne B. Ragde


Norsk forfattare skriver om tre valdigt olika broder (hm....fyra visar det visst sig....) som vaxte upp pa en gard utanfor Trondheim. Mycket bra. 8

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Seducing the Boys Club - Nina DiSesa


A successful woman gives advice oh how to advance in a business world run by men. Tinki was reading this book, so I picked it up to see what she was reading. It was interesting but the author is a little full of herself. It seems like mostly stories of her own greatness interspersed with some advice like below:
• Learn to appreciate men. Men like women who like them.
• Remember that women are biologically wired to succeed.
• If you want to make a name for yourself, find a mess and fix it. A secure and comfortable job only holds you back.
• Don't assume that men never listen. They listen like a dog does.
• Don't be a quiet achiever.
• Act brave and you will look brave.
• Screw the rules. Make up your own.
5

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Away - Amy Bloom


I didn't care for this book. The style of writing was not focused but all over the place. I really didn't care for the style at all. Not at all. No good descriptions of characters and no buildup of them. I disliked finding out what happened to everyone who was not a main person. The main person Lillian is interesting enough and the story could have been compelling by a different author. She flees Russia when her whole family is murdered because they are Jewish. She ends up on the U.S. living life as a semi-prostitute until she finds out that her 3-year-old daughter might still be alive and she sets off to find her encountering more misery and prostitution along the way. Yuck. Nope. 4

Saturday, August 16, 2008

The Rest of Her Life - Laura Moriarty


Ok. Highschool girl accidentally kills another girl while driving. Book is about the mother and how she deals with the tragedy and relationship with her own mother which is affecting her relationship with her daughter. 5

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions - Dan Ariely


Fun and enlightening. Everyone should read this book.

Mogen for skrubben - Solja Krapu


En svensk bok om en lararinna pa hogstadiet som blir inlast i kopieringsskrubben en hel helg. Mycket tid att tanka... Bra. Lite redundant men anda bra. 8

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Case Histories - Kate Atkinson


Mystery set in England. Usually not my type of book but for some reason I liked it. My book club didn't... I liked the setting. The story line didn't quite tie all the people together but I still liked it. The people seemed real. They were weird but real. 7

Out Stealing Horses - Per Petterson


Great quiet book that takes place in Norway and a little bit in Sweden. Great prose translated from Norwegian which is obvious and awesome. 9.

The nasty bits : collected varietal cuts, usable trim, scraps, and bones - Anthony Bourdain


His usual style but choppier due to each chapter dealing with a separate trip to different countries. Nothing new really. 5

Financial peace revisited - Dave Ramsey


Great financial advice to take to heart. Some of the religious stuff is too much for me along with the wife's quotes.

In defense of food : an eater's manifesto - Michael Pollan


Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.
Brilliant.

The Friday Night Knitting Club - Kate Jacobs


Kinda trashy. Until the end. I did like the end. 5ish....

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Whistling in the Dark - Lesley Kagen


I had mixed feelings while reading this book. It is supposed to evoke the feelings of a bygone fifties neighborhood but it is told through the eyes of a ten-year-old. It is the voice that gets annoying at times, I think. I can't put my finger on it. The kids are naive but at the same time not. I don't know. They are kind of likeable though and I found myself liking the book in the end. Even though the ending is hollywoodish. Sally O'Malley and her younger sister Troo are left to fend for themselves when their mom is sick during a summer when a murderer is on the lose. Sally is also trying to deal with the death a year earlier of her father. 6

Sunday, July 6, 2008

By hook or by crook : a journey in search of English / David Crystal


Love books about the English language (actually languages overall). This one is ok. Learned some new things. Laughed a little. Came away with a renewed sense of the amazing intricacies of linguistics. 7

The People of the Book - Geraldine Brooks


Hannah is an Australian rare-book expert and is commissioned to restore a famous centuries old Jewish book which had been lost but is found anew in Sarajevo towards the end of the Bosnian war. Hannah deals with the details of the book as well with personal demons relating to relationships with her mother and non-existent father. The historical fiction aspects and the way the story is presented to the reader is very appealing. However, some of the dialogue of the modern day people is trite. Overall, after a slow start, a great read. 8

Sunday, June 8, 2008

The Double Bind - Chris Bohjalian


Intriguing story with a mystery-like unfolding about a young woman, Laurel, who deals with PTSD after a brutal attack. The truth is revealed in the end which brings the story to a somewhat chaotic close because I am left not knowing quite what parts of the story had been Laurel's delusions and what had really happened, which gets a little annoying. It would be hard to tease apart without going back and going over chapters again to compare minute details, which were really clues to her insanity, to facts were disclosed at the end. I wanted to keep reading to find out what would happen but I didn't feel quite satisfied when I did. Mostly well written except for some stiff and stilted dialogues. 7.

Luftslottet som sprängdes - Stieg Larsson


ooja
Swedish captivating thriller

Flickan som lekte med elden - Stieg Larsson


jajamen mycket medryckande och spannande

Män som hatar kvinnor - Stieg Larsson


ja

Between two worlds : escape from tyranny : growing up in the shadow of Saddam - Zainab Salbi and Laurie Becklund



Zainab grew up as in the shadow and force of Sadam Hussein. Her father was his private pilot and her family spent a lot of time partying (reluctantly!) in his circles. She provides an insight to Sadam Hussein as a person, a controlling scary person. Eventually, she was married off to an American stranger in order to get her out of Iraq and away from Sadam and his perpetrating son. It was a horrible marrige from which she fled and created her own life as a strong advocate for women in need. Good. It gets a little redundant to her about the extravagancies and outrageousness of Sadam and the people around him, however. But it is still good. 7

The omnivore's dilemma


great

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Blue Shoe - Anne Lamott


Mattie lives in Marin!! Mattie is the main character in the book. She is a devout christian who sleeps with her ex even though he is scum and at the same time she wants to kill him. She had a jumbled upbringing and, while dealing with her mother's declining health and mental capacity, is trying to come to grips with her dead father's philandering. The story gets a little annoying at times but it all takes place in lovely Marin. I recognize all the names and places as well as plants and smells and people. I have always been a big fan of Anne Lamott, so how can I not like this one as well? 8

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Bel Canto - Ann Patchett


This is a fiction hostage drama in an unnamed South American country. The main characters involve a famous opera singer and a successful Japanes businessman who are held hostage after a party to honor the Japanese man's birthday. The story is interesting, the setting is interesting, and the characters are interesting but somehow it still reads a little like a romance novel. Characters spend a long time as hostages having time to develop relationships independent of the real world. In the end it is necessary to have some of them die to solve the dilemma of returning to normal life and family after such an experience. It's entertaining but not believable. 5.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Eating Heaven - Jennie Shortridge


Any book that takes place in Portland, OR, immediately moves one step up the ladder! Eleanor Samuel's life is in crisis. Her uncle--he may even be her dad we find out as family secrets unravel--is dying from cancer and she is the one taking care of him. At the same time her food article writing career is veering off along with her eating habits. Described as in her late thirties and on the heavy side, she is forced to examine her grief, her life and her relationship with food all at the same time. What's not to like? I enjoyed it. 7.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

The Red Azalea - Anchee Min


Anchee Min’s story about growing up on Mao’s China is absolutely gripping. The language, her writing, is terse and unadorned and as naked and raw as the life in China she fled. Everything about her childhood is so very foreign, the food, the people, the emotions, the culture, and the brutality of oppression, which makes it so intriguing, exotic if you will. At the same time, it is not difficult to recognize the humanity in it all, the humanity that we all share despite enormous differences. Some books fade into oblivion, but this is one that never could. 9+.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Animal, vegetable, miracle - Barbara Kingsolver


Kingsolver and her family moved to their farm in the Appalachians and decided to spend a year only eating local fooods. A lot of it came from their own farm. Kingsolver writes well as usual and chronicles a year of their efforts be locavores. She shares beautiful stories from their gardening adventures and cooking and canning productions. The stories are intertwined with research and data about the food production industry as well as some lovely recipes. Her response to the question why Americans eat so much bad food is "alimentary alienation" derived from Marx' theories of humans' desire to control an entire process of manufacture. Brilliant. She also writes eloquently about vegetarianism having adhered to a vegetarian diet for periods herself. Sometimes she is even funny. "Strangely enough, it's the animals to which we have assigned some rights, while the saintly plants we maim and behead with moral impunity. Who thinks to beg forgiveness while mowing the lawn?" Splendid book. 9

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck


This is a book I have been wanting to read for a long time. It's amazing in its detail and use of language. I was transported to dusty hot California instantly. It's a short book that could have been expanded but it's still enjoyable. Two laborers are travelling from job to job as farmhands. George, who smarter, takes care of the dim-witted Lennie. They dream of a place to call their own where they work only for themselves. Their dream is predictably crushed when Lennie gets in trouble again. In the end, George is forced to "send off" Lennie towards that dream... Sad. Good. 8.

Julie & Julia - Julie Powell


365 days. 524 recipes. 1 tiny apartment kitchen. Julie Powell has always adored Julia Child. Around the time she is about to turn 30, Julie is depressed and feels her life is going nowhere. She is a lowly liberal secretary for a government agency populated by Republicans. She decides to cook all the recipes in Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking during one year while blogging about it. Her writing is hilarious. I laughed out loud several times. This is easy and fun reading and by no means any heavy duty literature. I enjoyed it for what it is. I even learned a new word, prolix. Tediously lengthy in speech and writing. Anyway, Julie cooks her way out of depression and mediocrity and into a new career as a writer. "Two years ago I was a twenty-nine-year-old secretary. Now I am a thirty-one-year-old writer. I get paid very well to sit around in my pajamas and type on my ridiculously fancy iMac, unless I'd rather take a nap. Feel free to hate me--I certainly would." A funny and easy 8.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Clara Callan - Richard B. Wright


This book won prizes in Canada and I am not sure why. This was my choice for one of my bookclubs. And I didn't even like it very much. My bookclub seemed to like it however. The premise was interesting. Two sisters from a small town in Canada part ways in 1934. One heads to New York for a career in radio and the other stays behind working as a school teacher. The book follows them over the next couple of years. It sounded interesting enough, but I didn't like how the author--a man--described Clara's feelings around sex and motherhood. Clara is the sister that stays behind. At one point she gets raped and then she fantasizes about that and goes out of her way to find the guy that did it. It is too weird. I just don't like it when men attempt to imagine what a woman might be going through. It becomes very stereotypical and contrived. The book contains a lot of references to literature, radio, and film at the time, which was interesting. 5.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Ines of my soul - Isabel Allende


My bookclub picked this historical fiction about Ines Suarez, a woman who played a big role in the conquest of Chile by the Spaniards in the 1500s. The historical aspects of the book in regards to the indigenous cultures is interesting because of the role the hierarchy of the indigenous societies played in their downfall. However, some historical facts such as the endless wars and the cruelty of both Spaniards and Indians get tedious. Ines is imagined as a superhuman who doesn't seem to need sleep nor food and can do anything from amazing cooking to astonishing healing and adventurous lovemaking. Hm. Her life and relationships with powerful men seem romantisized and Allende's style with an element of magic realism makes the story of Ines more fictionlike than realistic. I did appreciate some of the man-bashing; at one point Ines states that all men are only interested in three things: fornicating, drinking, and killing. 6?

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Skinny Bitch - Freedman & Barnouin


Foul-mouthed and straight up is how the dish is served in this book. Gotta love two women who disguise a vegan lifestyle book behind a clever title. Since I have been a vegan myself for about two years right before my first pregnancy and a vegetarian for many years up until recently, the information is not new to me. However, it is dished out differently. How about, "Soda is liquid satan?" This book is sometimes funny and sometimes crude. Nevertheless, it is helpful reading; it is good to be reminded of these things again. These things = treatment of slaughterhouse animals, antibiotics and hormones in livestock, and the mis-directed interests of incestous government agencies that are supposedly protecting the general public while all along taking money from corporate America. Nothing new, but a good reminder. I will be more mindful of what I eat. Besides, vegan food is good. I love veggies! 9.

High Latitudes : An Arctic Journey - Farley Mowat


Farley Mowat describes his journey in 1969 across Canada's frozen North. It seems like village after village is filled with disillusioned and unemployed Inuit people, or Eskimos as they were called at the time. The Inuit have been more or less forced by the Canadian government to give up their traditional way of life. They don't hunt anymore and they don't live in tents anymore. Their children are sent far away to go to school for a traditional education. Their environment is filling up with garbage--abandoned oil drums and plastic debris. Despite Mowat being an excellent writer, it is a pretty depressing picture. A few positive developments are revealed as well: the encouragement and success of traditional art for sale as well as grocery and goods cooperatives. This was a pick by one of my reading groups and I struggled to get through it. 4.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Stealing Buddha's Dinner - Bich Minh Nguyen


Nguyen's memoir of her family's escape from Saigon in 1975 to the U.S. and their/her subsequent adjustment to American culture. She came to love American food, which seemed more exotic than her grandmother's traditional Vietnamese dishes. Her father married a Mexican woman, Rosa, who introduced even more diverse food into Nguyen's life. The book deals with her longing to be just like the blue-eyed, blonde-haired Americans. In the end, as a young adult, she travels back to Vietnam and realizes that it is not her home anymore; she is American. Also, the book chronicles how she, as an adult, reunites with her mother, who didn't emigrate with them in 1975 but arrived much later. I enjoyed the book from a cultural perspective as well the nostalgic details of food items. Maybe a 6.