Read-a-Thon Reads: 17!

April 19th, 2009

Product Details96. Good-bye, Mr. Chips by James Hilton

It’s the gentle story of a man who taught in a British private boys’ school for many decades. I love the way Chips starts out as a very average sort of person and teacher. It’s the experiences of life—the death of his wonderful wife, the tragedies of the war, the days, years spent teaching children—that transform Chips into a thoughtful, clever, and exemplary human being.

 

Product Details97. A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams

Whew! What a ride. What a terrible ride into the lives of three sad, miserable lives. Blanche comes to stay with her sister, Stella, after Blanche’s life deteriorates. Stella has married and is expecting a baby, but her life is anything but cozy and warm. Stella’s husband, Stanley, beats his wife and drinks heavily. Everything in this story echoes, No Way Out, and You are Doomed to Misery.

 

Product Details98. A Member of the Wedding by Carson McCullers

Frankie provides our eyes and ears for A Member of the Wedding and what a view she gives us readers! Frankie is poised on the edge of childhood and adulthood, that awful spot we now call adolescence, but she is not sitting quietly on the edge; she is teetering back and forth between the worlds and it is not a happy place to be. She has lost her connections to her world. There are only two who try to call her back into the world: Berenice, the housekeeper, and her cousin, John Henry. As Frankie questions the world, Berenice is the voice of the grownup world, trying to ease Frankie into the new world. At the same time, John Henry is the voice of Frankie’s childhood, urging her to play, to experience the world, to forget the world of thinking. Frankie’s one hope becomes her desire to escape and join her brother and his new wife after their wedding. Of course, this does not happen and Frankie goes back to her world, but she is not the same person she once was.

What a rich, marvelous book! I could read it all over again and I think I would love it just as much. Frankie’s encounter with the soldier…the monkey and the monkey owner…the Freaks….the noises and the pictures the author draws of this world…a rich, rich story.

 

Product Details99. Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote

Fourth hour, fourth book completed. (Mind you, all my books for the read-a-thon were jump started; I’m not really reading books…I’m finishing them.)

And not just another book completed…another GREAT book completed. I would recommend highly all the books I’ve read today.

Breakfast at Tiffany’s. I’d seen the movie. I’ve read two other Capote books and was wowed by them. Breakfast at Tiffany’s is equally wonderful. The juxtaposition of our narrator and Holly Golightly makes the book. Holly would probably be called manic-depressive today when she was hospitalized but to the narrator and her other admirers she has that rare zest for life that is to wonderous to behold. Others, more thoughtful observers, would also see in Holly the devastation she left in her wake.

A powerful story.

 

Product Details100. Tales of Outer Suburbia by Shaun Tan

It’s not on anyone’s classics book…yet. But what a fantastic read! Fantastic is a key word, because every story feels like a fantasy, yet terribly real.

Yes, I, who grew up in suburbia when nobody knew it would take over America like a disease, I always thought of suburbia as a strange world but never ventured into the corners of suburbia that Tan takes us to in this book.

The pictures are perfect and the stories so thoughtful I would love to read them again and again.

Another excellent read. Did I ever pick some great reads for the read-a-thon?!

 

Product Details101. Boyology by Sarah Burningham

 

Boyology was my toughest read of the Read-a-Thon. I’m 52 and I’ve been married almost 31 years, so it was hard to read through page after page of how to flirt and how to kiss. :-) I can see it would be very, very useful for a teen girl. And fun.

Another book ready to pass on to a read-a-thon-er….

 

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102. Joey Fly: Private Eye in Creepy Crawly by Aaron Reynolds

Crime Written in a comic book format, this thin book is charactered with insects, arachnids, and worms. The dialogue is clever, filled with bug-populated similes. Will kids get the humor? A bit, I think. Kids will just like the silly detectives trying to solve the mystery of the missing pencil box.

 

 

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103. Death in Venice by Thomas Mann

 I liked and disliked this book. Mann has his character, Aschenbach, preach a little more than I like, preaching his thoughts about beauty and writing and control. That’s what I disliked. For the first third of the book, I could barely force myself to keep reading.

Then Aschenbach falls in love and begins to tail the object of his affection all over Venice. The story takes a different turn and the writing moves from a rant about virtue to a real story. Venice is beautifully depicted and Aschenbach becomes a real, brilliant, tortured human being. That’s what I liked.

 

Product Details103. That Night by Alice McDermott

A masterpiece. I wish I’d read this book this morning when I was still able to write coherently instead of midnight when I’m in the last seven hours of a twenty-four hour read-a-thon.

I loved the way the author switches from first person singular narrator to first person plural narrator in the story. I also loved the way the author provides little glimpses of the future for the characters who pop into the narrative. These give the story a big vision both broad and yet full of disappointment.

 

 

 

Product Details104. Amelia’s Notebook by Marissa Moss

A little children’s book, written in the form of a notebook. The notebook format is perfect for such a close look inside the life of a child.

 

Product Details105. Poetry in Motion from Coast to Coast

Poetry in Motion from Coast to Coast is a book of short poems that were originally written on subways all across America. Some of my favorite poems were in this book including This is Just to Say.

 

Product Details106. The Upstairs Room by Johanna Reiss

The Upstairs Room is the fictionalized memoir of a Jewish girl who was kept hidden with her sister in an attic room for over two years during WWII in the Netherlands. Reiss originally wrote the story to explain what had happened to her two daughters. Very sad.

 

Product Details107. The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway

The Old Man and the Sea was possibly the worse choice I’ve ever made for a read-a-thon. The old man spends most of the book fighting the fish, weary, exhausted, tired. I’m not at all interested in fish but Hemingway is a writer I like, spare and lean.

Product Details108. The Great Fire by Jim Murphy

The Great Fire is a look at the Chicago Fire. It moved fast and, because of a series of errors, spread over much of the city. Jim Murphy knows how to write nonfiction.

 

 

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109. Years of Dust by Albert Marrin
Years of Dust examines the Dust Bowl years, the causes, the problems, the way things resolved themselves. It could happen again.

Product Details110. The Black Pearl by Scott O’Dell

The Black Pearl is the story of a boy who seeks a big pearl and finds it. The boy’s father is lost at sea and the boy feels certain he must set things to rights with the pearl.

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111. Afternoon of the Elves by Janet Taylor Lisle

Afternoon of the Elves is the story of a friendship between Sara-Kate and Hillary. Sara-Kate unexpectedly shows Hillary an elf village in her backyard and Hillary becomes intrigued. The story is quite mysterious. Love the ending.

 

 



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