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Group:  100 Books Challenge for 2009 ignore
Topic:  teelgee tackles 125 - Part Two 0 / 42 read

Sep 18, 2009, 1:47am (top)Message 1: teelgee

Part One is here.



70. Women of the Silk by Gail Tsukiyama. Beautifully written book about a young woman in rural China who is "sold" by her father to work in a silk factory. Takes place in the late 20s/early 30s as the Japanese are invading China. (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Sep 18, 2009, 1:51am.

Sep 18, 2009, 7:17am (top)Message 2: theaelizabet

Hi Teelgee--My daughter loved this book, too. Btw, I've just ordered her the sequel, Language of the Threads, which is available at Book Closeouts.

Sep 18, 2009, 7:34am (top)Message 3: mrstreme

Still enjoying your posts!

Sep 18, 2009, 11:55am (top)Message 4: teelgee

>2 theaelizabet -- Thanks! I have that one plus The Street of a Thousand Blossoms on my shelf, look forward to reading them! I read The Samurai's Garden last year and absolutely loved it.

Thanks mrstreme!

Sep 19, 2009, 1:02pm (top)Message 5: alphaorder

Gail and I became friends at the bookshop. She is fabulous. I have a number of her books to still read, but LOVED The Street of a Thousand Blossoms.

Sep 23, 2009, 12:32am (top)Message 6: teelgee



71. The Earth Hums in B Flat by Mari Strachan. I seem to be drawn to books narrated by adolescent girls lately. Perhaps it's because there's something so true and honest about them and that they're full of questions, trying to find their way into the complicated and confusing world of adults.

Gwenni Morgan tells the story of her family and that of some of the other residents in her small Welsh village. Her family is coming apart at the seams throughout this journey. Gwenni makes some startling discoveries about them and about other townsfolk as she plays detective while trying to find a missing man, the father of two young girls she sometimes babysits.

There is a touch of magical realism to the novel; Gwenni believes she can fly in her dreams and has some premonitions. She strives to fly while she's awake. Her older sister thinks she's loony and her mother fears that others will think her odd. Her father loves unconditionally.

This is a beautifully told story of family, love, coming of age and honesty. (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Sep 27, 2009, 8:11pm.

Sep 23, 2009, 7:59pm (top)Message 7: alphaorder

I see you just added Housekeeping. Have you read it yet? It was on of my favorite books from my first years of bookselling. I haven't had the same experience with her other books. Your thoughts?

Sep 23, 2009, 8:29pm (top)Message 8: teelgee

alpha - I read Housekeeping years ago and wanted to re-read it soon to see if I still love it. I loved it then. I recently read Gilead after a false start with it several years ago, I couldn't get into it then, but this time it clicked for me and I loved it too. Looking forward to Home soon, I see it's just come out in PB.

Sep 25, 2009, 5:48am (top)Message 9: FlossieT

Yay! Another Mari Strachan fan. I absolutely loved this book when I read it last year and have been pressing it eagerly on all my friends at every opportunity.

Sep 25, 2009, 7:10pm (top)Message 10: coppers

Hi and another yay! from me. I just started The Earth Hums this afternoon and although I haven't gotten very far in it yet, I know I'm going to love it. I'm so glad to see you did.

Sep 27, 2009, 8:24pm (top)Message 11: teelgee



72. Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier. It's been many decades since I first read this book and I remembered nothing about it (big surprise). It wasn't as spooky as I remembered, but it is full of intrigue and surprises. Just when I thought I had something figured out, the plot twisted. Wonderful characters, expertly written. (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Sep 29, 2009, 11:43pm.

Sep 30, 2009, 12:01am (top)Message 12: teelgee



73. Home Safe by Elizabeth Berg. I was leaning toward a 3 - 3.5 for this newest of Berg's books - it felt predictable and a bit ho hum. But it really picked up for me toward the end and turned out to be not so predictable after all.

The story centers on 59 year old Helen, a novelist who's been recently widowed. She hasn't been able to write since her husband's death; it becomes apparent that she was dependent on him for many things and she must find her way through the maze of finances, home repair and navigating around her city, Chicago. She comes to depend on her 27 year old daughter Tessa a bit too much and is also forced to let go of trying to control Tessa's life.

There are many nice moments and bits of prose in this novel. I especially liked the writings of the adult students she taught (an experiment in diversity). Berg was able to come up with consistent voices for each of the students, and these scenes showed glimpses of astonishing writing by people who wouldn't consider themselves writers or be considered writers by others.

Well written, very enjoyable book. (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 5, 2009, 12:38pm.

Oct 5, 2009, 12:57pm (top)Message 13: teelgee



74. Telex from Cuba by Rachel Kushner. I read this for my book group, else I probably wouldn't have finished it. The setting is Cuba - a sugar plantation and a nickel mine, both run by Americans - in the 1950s (with a fair amount of jumping around to other time periods).

I enjoy a book that is narrated from several different points of view when it's done well. This one was not. It was clunky and confusing, went from first person to third person and back. The story would have flowed much better if the author had stuck to one third person narrator.

I enjoy historical fiction when it's done well. This one was not. I'm not real familiar with the revolution in Cuba. But my sense is that Kushner took a lot of liberties with the historical characters - Fidel and Raul Castro in particular - and she threw in cameos of Hemingway and Sartre, among others, that served no purpose to the story.

I love metaphors when they're done well. Some of Kushner's metaphors made me smile or nod, but many made me groan. From the same page, here are two examples:

Paris resituated to the tropics, with its humidity, deluges, and brine, was like a transplanted organ a body had begun to reject. *smile*

...a layer of rhetorical dust piling on the cryptic words like lint from a vacuum cleaner bag *wha? groan*


One thing Kushner did well was to show how American imperialism has affected countries like Cuba and Haiti. I hated most of the characters, their pomposity and privilege, their sense of entitlement and their racism. And the ruination of such exquisite land for a profit by the big corporations that take and take and take and give back so little. And we wonder why Cubans, Mexicans, et al want to leave their countries and come to America? For the most part, we've left them with little or nothing.

(3/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 7, 2009, 4:39pm.

Oct 7, 2009, 5:06pm (top)Message 14: teelgee



75. Love and Summer by William Trevor. I sometimes get impatient with books that are quiet and understated. But maybe I'm mellowing as I age - I did finally fall in love with Gilead after all. Love and Summer is a gorgeous book set in mid-20th century Rathmoye, Ireland, a small farming community. We spend a summer with Ellie and her farmer husband Dillahan (I don't believe we ever learn his first name); with Joseph Paul Connulty and his sister, Miss Connulty (her first named hasn't been uttered since her great betrayal); Florian Kilderry, a bachelor who lives a town or two over and causes a stir when he shows up with a camera at the funeral of the town matriarch; and a few other minor characters.

Early on there are hints of a great tragedy in Dillahan's life before his marriage to Ellie. She was a servant on his farm after he was widowed, then they married out of convenience which, up until this summer, was satisfactory to both of them but not much more.

Past and present weave together gently as we learn the stories of each of the main characters. It is not a huge story overall - they are ordinary people with ordinary lives, some happy and some not so. But the telling is so compelling that each event looms large.

This is a novel of love and loyalty, of grief and forgiveness (of self, primarily). Trevor is an author I plan to read much more of in the years to come - this is only the second of his novels I've read and there is a banquet awaiting me! (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 15, 2009, 5:32pm.

Oct 7, 2009, 6:21pm (top)Message 15: theaelizabet

Teelgee,

I just took Love and Summer out of the library and hope to get to it soon. I know Trevor only through his short stories and am ready to explore him on a "bigger canvas."

Oct 8, 2009, 10:03pm (top)Message 16: alphaorder

I bought it last week, so I am glad you liked it. Finishing Loving Frank first, since I was just to Taliesin last weekend.

Oct 15, 2009, 5:38pm (top)Message 17: teelgee



76. The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa. Beautiful book, for its simplicity and poignancy. (4/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 18, 2009, 3:19am.

Oct 15, 2009, 5:45pm (top)Message 18: teelgee

At some point last month it became clear to me that I wasn't going to reach 125 books this year. I'll be lucky to hit 100, given that there's just 2 1/2 months left in the year (can you believe it???) and I have some real chunksters to read between now and December 31st too (currently reading Life and Fate to be followed by Vanity Fair and Wolf Hall).

And I'm OK with that! I realized as I started to put back Life and Fate because it was "too long" that I'd be missing out on some great literature, and what's more important? Reaching an arbitrary number or reading something fantastic?

How am I doing with the justification so far?

Seriously, I've learned the last couple of years about savoring books, how much more I can get out of them if I don't rush through them to reach a goal. I've still met most of my challenges (What's in a Name; Orange Prize books; Classics; Published in 2009 and a few others). So if I reach 100, great. If I don't, no one will take away my reading privileges.

I'm just trying to figure out how I managed 108 last year when I worked most of the year!

Oct 15, 2009, 9:31pm (top)Message 19: coppers

And here I am, proud of myself for reading over 50 books in a year for the first time ever! Remember, it's the journey that's special, not the destination!

I also loved Housekeeper. It was such a charming read.

Oct 15, 2009, 9:31pm (top)Message 20: lindsacl

I'm glad you're OK with that, Terri! Even if you don't hit 100 I'm sure you'll still be welcome around here!!

Oct 15, 2009, 9:52pm (top)Message 21: Donna828

>18: I am sort of toying with the idea of trying to read fewer books next year so that I can take my time and savor them. But, then, I am such a glutton that I keep reading as fast as I can!

Oct 15, 2009, 10:59pm (top)Message 22: wookiebender

I've always been torn between reading fast and getting lots of variety (I like variety in my reading) and the concept of reading slowly and savouring. (I say "concept of" because it's not something I've ever really done in practice. :)

Good on you for embracing the savouring of books! Stopping by the reading highway and smelling the roses!

Personally, I just want to teach myself to stop reading books I'm just not enjoying.

Oct 16, 2009, 9:41am (top)Message 23: brenzi

"Stop reading books I'm just not enjoying" that was my goal this year and it's worked out very well. The hard part was trying not to feel guily about it. That's gotten easier over time.

Oct 16, 2009, 5:22pm (top)Message 24: bonniebooks

"Stop reading books I'm just not enjoying"

I just finished my first year at LT and have loved the whole experience, but now that my challenges are over--especially my 999--it's a lot easier to do that. Plus, I've got my "Best of Your Best, 2009" list to work from for the rest of this year and on into the next, so I'm less likely to get a book that I won't enjoy. I sort of know now, too, which LT-ers (e.g., you and teelgee) are more apt to like the books I like, so that helps as well.

Oct 17, 2009, 12:43pm (top)Message 25: alphaorder

I agree with giving up books that I'm not enjoying. I read plenty that I enjoy but don't LOVE.

Bonnie - what is the "Best of Your Best, 2009".

Sorry to take over your thread Terri, but if anyone cares to look at my "to read" list in my library and make a few recs, I would appreciate it. I stuck with what to read next.

Oct 17, 2009, 1:23pm (top)Message 26: bonniebooks

I'll post you an alphabetized list on your profile page, alphaorder. Once I was finished with my challenges this year, I asked LT-er friends to tell me their "Top Ten" for the year. You can see all their recs on my thread bonniebook's Best of Your Best, 2009. I finally created an alphabetized list so I could use it more easily when going to the library or the book store. Sorry, Terri!

P.S. I'll go over to your TBR's and give you my opinion. Take it for what it's worth! ;-)

Oct 17, 2009, 1:24pm (top)Message 27: teelgee

>25, 26 No problem, the door is open, coffee is on!

Oct 18, 2009, 3:19am (top)Message 28: teelgee



77. The Snow Geese by William Fiennes. Non-fiction. I wanted to love this book. A couple of my book buddies raved about it. The writing was good. The story was interesting - Fiennes, a Brit, becomes fascinated by snow geese and follows them on their migration from Texas to the northern wilds of Canada.

This read more like a novel - which, for this book, did not work for me. Fiennes seemed almost obsessed with the clothes of the people he encountered on his journey - lengthy descriptions of shirts and sweatshirts and hats and coats, which for the most part added nothing to the story.

He either has a knack for meeting unusual people or he embellished some of the characters. Everyone was folksy and funny and memorable.

I would rather have read more about the geese and less about the travels and the traveling companions. I'd be interested to read his book of fiction. (3.5/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 22, 2009, 3:31am.

Oct 22, 2009, 2:18am (top)Message 29: teelgee



78. Waking: A Memoir of Trauma and Transcendence by Matthew W. Sanford. I heard Matt Sanford on an NPR program about a year ago and his story touched and fascinated me. In 1978, at age 13, he was in a terrible auto accident that killed his father and sister and left Matt a paraplegic. In this memoir he tells of years of pain, anguish and coming to terms with his paralysis and the grief of losing his father and sister.

Matt spends a number of years in a gray world, disconnected emotionally and spiritually from his body. At some point he becomes aware that his healing story will not involve walking or becoming like one of the super hero paraplegics paraded in front of him for inspiration. Eventually Matthew is introduced to yoga and experiences what he calls an "energetic sensation within my mind-body relationship." He pursues yoga intensely - though it is not a linear progression; he experiences many setbacks. Eventually, Matt goes on to teach yoga to both walking people and those with disabilities.

I was drawn to Matt's story partly because of my own experience with yoga and with progressive physical limitations. It is a good reminder to all of us to stay conscious of our bodies, not to take them for granted; and that we can change the healing stories that practitioners tell us and that we tell ourselves.

Beautiful writing; highly recommended. (4.5/5)

Message edited by its author, Oct 28, 2009, 1:14pm.

Oct 22, 2009, 2:24am (top)Message 30: bonniebooks

What an outstanding review, teelgee! I added it to my wish list and thumbed you at the same time.

Oct 22, 2009, 2:34am (top)Message 31: teelgee

Why, thank you BonnieBee! It is quite a book.

Oct 22, 2009, 9:32am (top)Message 32: Donna828

>78: Thank you, Terri, for reminding me about this wonderful book. A friend pressed this on me several years ago. Her family knows Matthew's family or some kind of connection like that. Well, I thought it would be poorly written sentimental stuff and read it only because my friend kept asking me about it. I was pleasantly surprised to find a compelling story about a truly heroic young man and his family.

Oct 22, 2009, 1:10pm (top)Message 33: bonniebooks

Interesting backstory, Donna! Even on LT, it's six degrees of Kevin Bacon. ;-)

Oct 24, 2009, 10:39am (top)Message 34: coppers

Lovely review, I'll be looking out for that one!

Oct 28, 2009, 1:23pm (top)Message 35: teelgee



79. Stitches by David Small. Graphic memoir. Wow, I love this genre! This is an outstanding book, the illustrations are brilliant in the moods and information they convey. The story is sad; David's childhood was full of trauma and family secrets. The ending, obviously, came out OK since he's an award winning illustrator-author. Highly recommended. (4.5/5)

Message edited by its author, Nov 27, 2009, 9:42pm.

Oct 28, 2009, 2:33pm (top)Message 36: bonniebooks

I know, Terri! As a reader, I'm always so impressed with the power of words to make me feel and think. I didn't realize how biased I was toward the superiority of the written word; Stitches reminded me again of how directly powerful visual images are--and in a way that words can't match. With words, there's translation going on, I'm creating my own images in my head that I'm then responding to. With David Small's book, you can look away, but he's controlling what you see--and the intensity of it--when you do choose to look. I wouldn't say that the story, itself, was amazing. It was poignant, but it's how Small told his story that was amazing to me.

Nov 5, 2009, 10:06am (top)Message 37: tiffin

I lost you for ages! Found and starred again. So caught up from mid September to late October. Some splendid reads here and, of course, you've swelled my wishlist.

Nov 12, 2009, 4:29pm (top)Message 38: pamelad

Terri, I agree with you on the number thing. I have also put aside some good big books this year, and read some mediocre short ones, because of the 999 challenge. Have to fill those categories!

Will try to follow your lead and relax into some slow books.

Nov 27, 2009, 9:39pm (top)Message 39: teelgee



80. Elizabeth and Her German Garden by Elizabeth von Arnim (4/5)
More later. Whew, finally finished a book in November. sheesh.


Message edited by its author, Nov 27, 2009, 9:42pm.

Nov 27, 2009, 10:12pm (top)Message 40: wookiebender

Ooh, I just picked up my copy of Elizabeth and Her German Garden from the bookshop the other night! My mum has dibs on it when I finish it, so when Wolf Hall has a suitable break, I'm hoping to squeeze this one in... Looking forward to reading your thoughts!

Nov 27, 2009, 10:35pm (top)Message 41: teelgee

It's a fast read wookiebee - or for most people. I haven't had much reading time this month though, so it took me awhile!

Nov 28, 2009, 2:01am (top)Message 42: wookiebender

I know! Originally I was going to give it to Mum first, but then I flicked through it and saw how large the font was! Then I conceived Plan #2: get to a good break in Wolf Hall and then quickly read it. I'm up to the good break, now I just need to find time to read!

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Touchstone works

Touchstone authors

Elizabeth von Arnim
Elizabeth Berg
William Fiennes
Tsukiyama Gail
Vasili Grossman
Nancy Horan
Rachel Kushner
Hilary Mantel
Daphne Du Maurier
Yoko Ogawa
Marilynne Robinson
Matthew W. Sanford
David Small
Mari Strachan
William Makepeace Thackeray
William Trevor
Gail Tsukiyama
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