Friday, April 3, 2015

****There Once Lived A Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbor's Baby, Scary Fairy Tales by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya

      • Ludmilla Petrushevskaya, born in Moscow 1938, where she still lives, is a Russian writer, novelist and playwright.
      • Translated from the Russian by Keith Gessen and Anna Summers and was published in 2009
      • A fascinating women, Petrushevskaya is also a singer and a visual artist. She has exhibited her work in major Russian museums. 
      • Petrushevskaya's work was once banned from publication in Russia 
      • Style: Urban Folk-Tale; allegorical 

      Petrushevskaya was formerly banned from publishing books in Russia. Many of her stories were not translated into English until recently. Her short stories depict mostly Russian women in dark, melancholic despairing situations during post-war Russia.



      Petrushevskaya writes in allegoric form. Her stories read like urban folk tales. She uses surreal, mystical and fantastical imagery to convey the transformative experiences of her characters. Like a dream, the world around them metamorphoses from one moment to the next. The characters wander in nekyia- night journeys where they separate from their physical bodies and float through mysterious tunnels, doors and apocalyptic worlds.  The woman, often on the brink of death or in some other catastrophic situation within their daily lives, are able to see and understand their circumstances differently and return to life with a renewed perspective. It is a form of redemption and, sometimes, healing.



      I was mesmerized by Petrushevskaya’s tales. Together, they portray the extreme impoverished conditions of post-war Russia; the soul of its people crushed by oppression, starvation and valueless money. Petrushevskaya’s otherworldly style reveals the indomitable spirit of a people forced to live in squalid and often inhumane situations. Similar to Chekhov, this is story telling at its finest.




        *****Agostino by Albert Moravia

        Albert Moravia,  1907-1990
        Translated from the Italian by Michael Moore
        Originally written in 1942, but was rejected for publication by Fascist censors.

        Setting:  Tuscany Italy

        Theme: adolescence - coming of age, sexual awakening

        *****A Journal of the Plague Year, by Daniel Defoe

        Daniel Defoe: 1660-1731
        • A Journal of the Plague Year was first published in England, 1722 and is a fictionalized account of the Great Plague of London, 1665-1666
        • The actual plague began around the time DeFoe was five years old and is not his first hand account, but a representation of what it was like to live during the plague.
        • To prepare for writing this novel, Defoe, who had worked as a journalist among other things, gathered notes from those who had experienced the plague first-hand, from medical and mortality records and he it is believed he may have obtained information from his Uncle's diary, who is also believed to be H.F., the narrator.
        • Defoe is one of the first authors to come from a common ancestry, being without a University and/or classic's background. He is believed -by many- to be the first English novelist. What ever the opinion, he significantly contributed to the development of the English novel.
        Setting:  London, England 1664 -1666

        Themes
        • suffering
        • authority - the ability to govern and maintain order during a plague, or any tragedy
        • experiences and emotions during a tragedy
        • compassion for the destitute or helpless
        • belief's as to how the plague started, how it spread, etc.
        • religion
        Characters
        • H.F. -  the narrator, a bachelor and saddler, who is not identified until the last page of the novel when he closes his account of the Great Plague, yet uses his initials, only. Devoutly religious.
        • H.F's Brother - H.F. takes care of his brother's house. His brother fled from London, with his family, at the plagues outbreak. 
        • Dr. Heath - H.F.'s friend and physician who gives him medical guidance throughout the plague.
        • John Hayward - A neighbor of H.F.'s brother who escapes the plague with his wife, despite the fact he is a parish undersexton, a gravedigger, and he buries the sick dead. His wife is a nurse who works with the sick. They believe their use of garlic, vinegar and other natural remedies is the reason for their continued health.
        • Robert & Rachel: Husband and wife, they are forced to live apart so healthy Robert can support his plague afflicted wife and baby.  Robert lives on his boat. He leaves goods outside of, and far from, their house, then calls Rachel to announce his delivery and walks away so she can access all.
        • The Piper - A poor man who receives food and/or (mostly) alcohol for playing his pipe at bars during the plague. After passing out on the street, he is picked up for dead and wakes up in a mass burial pit (grave) among the actual dead.
        • Solomon Eagle - A Quaker who preaches God's final judgment up and down the streets of London, naked, with a pan of burning coal on top of his head.
        • John, Thomas & Richard - A trio of healthy men who, despite all odds, are able to escape London and the plague well after it is locked down and they are blocked from entering all surrounding towns.
        • Ford- Is the leader of a group of healthy people on the run from London and the plague. They meet and join John's trio, again, surviving on the outskirts of all towns despite the odds.
        • John Cock - When the plague first breaks out, John takes his household - a wife, five children, a maid and two apprentices - to live in the country. He learns that the plague is abating, but is far from over. Over zealous to be home in London, they all return. Within five days, all but the maid are dead from the plague. John and his family are symbols.  Defoe uses their story as a cautionary tale.
        Vocabulary
        deodand:  An animal or article that caused, or was related to, a persons death. By law, it must be forfeited to the crown to be used for charitable purposes. This law was abolished in England in 1846.

        Quotes

         "...as they say in the case of a mad dog, who though the gentlest creature before of any of his kind, yet then will fly upon and bite any one that comes next him, and those as soon as any who had been most observed by him before."

        "...the corruption of human nature, who cannot bare to see itself more miserable than others of its own species, and has a kind of involuntary wish that all men were as unhappy or in as bad a condition as itself."

        "...tis evident that death will reconcile us all..."

        "...many people had the plague in their very blood, and preying upon their spirits, and were in themselves but walking putrefied carcases whose breath was infectious and their sweat poison, and yet were as well to look on as other people, and even knew it not themselves; I say that it was really true in fact, but they know not how to propose a discovery."

        "I  mean as such the begging, starving, laboring poor, and among them chiefly those who, in a case of siege, are called the useless mouths..."
        "But nobody can account for the possession of fear when it take hold of the mind."


        Monday, March 23, 2015

        ***A Week in Winter by Maeve Binchy

        Maeve Binchy,  1939-2012, an Irish novelist
        Audiobook,  2013, read by Rosalyn Landor


        Sunday, March 8, 2015

        *****Evelina, by Frances Burney

        • Frances Burney, 1752-1840, England
        • Evelina  was Frances Burney's first and most famous novel
        • First published in England by Thomas Lowndes in January 1778. Burney's brother posed as the author after Frances was rejected by another publisher. 
        • Evelina was initially published anonymously in order to avoid censure by her father and literary critics. At that time, it was not considered acceptable for women to read books, let alone write them. Once her novel received public awareness and acceptance, Burney revealed to the public that she was the true author.
        • An epistolary novel
        • Satire, humor and melancholy all pervade this lovely, morality infused, novel.  
        • Setting:  18th century, (London) England
        • Themes: Social class snobbery, female delicacy, women's reputations,  male chivalry, London Society: vice and virtue

        My Review
        What a wonderful book! It was so well conceived from beginning to end. There was never a dull moment. Every turn added another new piece to the puzzle, another mystery or entanglement, but without any hint as to its final outcome.  At no time previous have I found myself so intensely rooting for a heroine’s good fortune. Whether I did so in vain, I will not disclose here. I will share this, the ending concludes perfectly. Not because it is happy or sad, but because it was handled superbly. A novel’s finale often leaves me disappointed. So much thought is given to the first two-thirds, or more, of a novel and then…poof!...it is as if the author was too exhausted with all other efforts to attend properly to his or her ending. I was not disappointed with Evelina, such was the strength of Burney’s emotionally charged drama. Unquestionably brilliant!

        Quotes
        • Mr. Villars of Evelina: "Never can I consent to have this dear and timid girl brought forward to the notice of the world by such a method; a method which will subject her to all the impertinence of curiosity, the sneers of conjecture, and the stings of ridicule."
        • "But really, I think there ought to be a book of the laws and customs, a-la-mode, presented to all young people upon their first introduction into public company."
        • "But alas, my dear child, we are the slaves of custom, the dupes of prejudice, and dare not stem the torrent of the opposing world, even though our judgments condemn our compliance! However, since the die is cast, we must endeavor to make the best of it.
        • "Generosity without delicacy, like wit without judgment, generally gives as much pain as pleasure."
        • Lord Orville to Sir Clement, regarding Evelina: "She is not, indeed, like most modern young ladies, to be known in half an hour; her modest worth, and fearful excellence, require both time and encouragement to show themselves. She does not, beautiful as she is, seize the soul by surprise, but, with more dangerous fascination, she steals it almost imperceptibly."

        Wednesday, March 4, 2015

        ****hausfrau, by jill alexander essbaum

        • Debut novel
        • LibraryThing.com Early Reviewer's edition
        • To be published on March 34, 2015
        • Author: American born - Texas 1971 - a published poet, writer and professor
        • Her poetry is known for its erotic and religious imagery, both central themes in Hausfrau.
        • Below is an example of a poem which was featured in a New York Time's article on January 5, 2012, written by Katherine Schulten. This piece is centered around time and our ephemeral lives.
        Precipice
        by Jill Essbaum

        The border
        of a thing. 

        Its edge
        or hem.

        The selvage,
        the skirt,

        a perimeter's 
        trim.

        The blow
        of daylight's

        end and
        nightime's

        beginning.
        A fence

        or a rim
        a margin,

        a fringe.
        And this:

        the grim,
        stingy

        doorstep
        where

        the lapse
        of passage

        happens.
        That slim

        lip of land,
        the liminal

        verge
        that slips

        you past
        your brink.

        Where
        and when

        you
        blink.  
        • Setting
          • Dietlikon, Switzerland, which is close to Zurich
            • suburban home next to and over-shadowed by the Grossmunster Cathedral
          • Contemporary setting
        • Main Characters
          • Anna Benz, hausfrau, 29 yrs, born & raised in USA
          • Bruno Benz, husband, 35 yrs, born in Switzerland
          • 3 young Benz children:  Victor, Charles & Polly Jean
          • Ursula: Bruno's mother
          • Doktor Messerli, Anna's Jungian psychologist
          • various men - Anna's lovers
            • I have listed these lovers as one entity because it is not any one individual that is important. More so, it is the purpose they serve collectively to Anna psyche that is of primarily significance.
        • Vocabulary
          • hausfrau - German for 1. Housewife, homemaker. 2. A married woman
          • intumescent- state of being swollen or swelling up
          • milquetoast - a timid or spineless person, esp one capable of being intimidated
          • shibboleth  - a catchword or common saying
        LibraryThing.com Review
        If you liked Portrait of a Lady, Madame Bovary, The Lover, Anna Karenina, Lady Chatterley's Lover, or the like, you will love Hausfrau.  The emotionally charged behavior portrayed through these heroines is similarly depicted in Hausfrau, Essbaum's character driven novel. You may or may not like the heroine, but are unable to pull oneself from the grip of her pathos.

        Essbaum's background as a poet is evidenced by the lyric quality of her narrative. It is both eloquent and luminous. Despite the darkness of the subject matter it is quite beautifully written. The protagonist deconstructs at an escalating pace but with poetic grace. Depression and anxiety play back and forth between deeply insightful observations as the protagonist examines her life with help of her Jungian therapist.

        In the end there are no clear-sighted conclusions, only consequences and possibilities, not all of which are strictly positive or negative.  Which way things unfold is left to the reader's imagination - not as a conclusive final course, but as a meditative reflection. One that looks back at us and the obsessions we partake in order to hide from our personal realities.

        Hausfrau is an exceptional debut novel. I look forward to future literary works from this talented author.

        • Quotes (from uncorrected proof)
          • "Shame is psychic extortion. Shame lies. Shame a woman and she will believe she is fundamentally wrong, organically delinquent. The only confidence she will have will be in her failures. You will never convince her otherwise." 
          • "Novelty's a cloth that wears thin at an alarming rate."
          • "A lonely woman is a dangerous woman. A lonely woman is a bored woman.  Bored women act on impulse."
          • "No coincidence is chance. Synchronicity is the external manifestation of an inner reality."
          • "An obsession is a defense against feeling out of control. A compulsion is the failure of that defense."
          • "Where you were is never as relevant as where you are."
          • "Hubris is every heroine's assassin."
          •  Pain is an impatient customer. It isn't long before it demands attention.









        ***Songs for the Missing, by Stewart O'Nan

        Published 2008
        Audiobook
        Read by Emily Janice Card



        Grief and hope quietly take over the life of a family waiting to learn what happened to their daughter. Just weeks before she is to leave for college, she vanishes. O'Nan portrays the emotional roller-coaster family and friends experience between the time she disappears and the time of her return (do not worry, that was not a spoiler). Despite the subject matter, this story lacks a key element - the ability to evoke empathy. The reader does not feel the depth of the family's or friends' pain. It is a fundamental component that takes away from the quality of O'Nan's narrative. This is usually where the author excels. As a result, the novel drags on, leaving the reader bored through out most of the book. It is unfortunate, I have come to expect more from him.

        Monday, February 16, 2015

        ****The Crimson Petal and the White by Michel Faber


        •  Dutch born writer, born 1960
        •  First published in England - 2002
        •  BBC produced a four-part series adaptation of this novel - 2011
        • Title: title words were taken from a Tennyson poem. 
          • purity vs. depravity
        • Setting:  1870's  Victorian London
        • Themes:  vice vs. virtue, cleanliness vs. filth, religion/faith, writing books (or a wish to do so)

        Thoughts and Impressions
        My first thoughts upon completing this novel adequately summarize my overall impression:

        I love a good tome, one that ferries you off to a different time and place and is concluded with a moment of sweet parting sorrow. Such is the leisurely veil I bask in until… my hand falls quietly upon the pile of books waiting to be devoured, and I am off on my next adventure. 

        A Few Quotes
        I often tag interesting quotes as I read, but did not do so this time.  I skimmed through in order to pick out a few that illustrate the character, style and quality of Faber's writing.  They do not necessarily represent the top quotes since it is difficult to go back and find your favorites, especially in a book of this size.

        • "She slipped out of the room, like a pretty moth emerging from a husk of dried slime."
        •  "It's as if, having unlocked the chastity of shutters and doors, they can't see the point of maintaining any shred of modesty."
        • Meal time:
          • "...small morsels of time are consumed, with an indigestible eternity remaining."
          • "The next game is dinner..."
        • "What is education? Dressing the lamb before the kill." Madam Mother response to daughter she is preparing for prostitution.
        • Poverty of the soul:
          •  It's time you learned some grownup poetry. Not Wordsworth and such, for then you might get a taste for mountains and rivers, and we shan't ever live anywhere near those...
          •  "A single day spent doing things which fail to nourish the soul is a day stolen, mutilated, and discarded in the gutter of destiny."
        •  Agnes' (wealthy Lady aristocrat) thoughts, while preparing for the coming season of extravagant balls, dinners and games, etc:
          •  "Participating in Society is not a thing one can do naturally; one has to rehearse for it."
          • "Like a person contriving to pass a vicious dog by hailing it cheerily, she is able to walk into ballrooms and dining-halls that bristle with dangers, and simply sweep past them all."
        • "Isn't Heaven reward enough, without needing to see the damned punished?"