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    Books of the Year: The Best Books of 2012


1. "So Big" – Edna Ferber Edna is an ardent lover of art & beauty, who is forced to be a poor cabbage farmer, yet she neither breaks nor loses her sensitivity. She wants educated due to her back-breaking labor son to see what's valuable in life, but sometimes the understanding
comes too late.


The novel may take place in turn-of-the-century Chicago, but the questions it raises are no less relevant today. What is valuable in life? What is the connection between money and success, if it is there at all? What will make us truly happy?

T2. The Homecoming of Samuel Lake" - Jenny Wingfield This family saga was called "Southern Gothic at its best", touching "on many genres—family life, Christian fiction, coming-of-age, and suspense". USA Today wrote "anyone who loves Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird will   delight in Swan, the Lakes' eleven-year-old daughter".r

From Amazon: Every first Sunday in June, members of the Moses clan gather for an annual reunion... Samuel Lake, a vibrant and committed
young preacher... In the midst of it all, Samuel and Willadee’s outspoken eleven-year-old daughter, Swan, is a bright light. Her high spirits and fearlessness ... But just as the reunion is getting under way, tragedy strikes, jolting the family to their core and setting the stage for a summer of crisis and profound change.

3. "Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman" - Stefan Zweig  Zweig is one of my favorite writers, and he didn't disappoint in this biography.

About his other works: "The Royal Game", a novella about a monarchist in the period after Austria's annexation, is one of the most famous of Zweig's works, but his stories on other topics are no worse. I especially like how he conveys the inner world of children, as in "Burning Secret" (a good review).

The Austrian Jewish writer had to leave his country in 1934 after Hitler's rise to power. Despite physically escaping Hitler, seeing the horrors of WW2 made him feel hopeless and in 1942 commit a joint suicide with his wife.  

4. "Cows, pigs, wars & witches : the riddles of culture" - Marvin Harris  Entertaining &  thought provoking book.

Read more... )
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Yes, I know it's closer to the 2012's end. Anyway, this is the 4th year of my Books of the Year lists.

Ever pitied the time wasted on not good enough books? After many books will appear a short explanation why it is or isn't recommended and its' topic. Hope you'll discover at least one good book. Feel free to ask questions about any of them and I would appreciate to hear your opinions and recommendations too!

The Best Books of Prose & Verse

TOP 10.

1. Bernard Shaw "Mrs. Warren's Profession" & "Saint Joan" (reread the latter). Undoubtedly, those 2 are the best books of the year. I loved their main heroines, the true strong women. Don't want to spoil, so will say no more, except that the plays make one see what a Classic feels like.  

2. Betty Smith "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" (reread). My favorite female bildungsroman (or coming-of-age story), but not only. The book focuses not only on Francie & her brother, but also on their entire Irish-American family. F.e., a big part is dedicated to the parents' story and to Aunt Sissy. It lets us see the life in Brooklyn in the beginning of the 20th century and addresses issues of poverty, gender roles, idealism vs. pragmatism, love and much, much more. Despite rereading it, I again experienced this very rare feeling of literally not being able to put the novel down.  I just checked and "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" is a largely autobiographical work. May be, this partly explains the magic.

 3. Irene Nemirovsky "All Our Worldly Goods" is my favorite Nemirovsky's novel about two families in France between 1910 and 1940. The review you can read in the 1st comment to this post both partly explains the attraction and made me think of the horrifying, yet not unusual in Jewish history, context. (From here)

4. View with a grain of sand: selected poems / Wisawa Szymborska ; translated from the Polish by Stanislaw Baranczak and Clare Cavanagh. Even if you usually don't like poetry, at least, give it a try and read the post I wrote on her death with poems' excerpts and 2 songs. There are several poetry translations of her work, and, after reading them on Internet, I see the above 2 translators as superior to other attempts. In poetry, a translation can make it or break it, so be warned. ;)  

5. "Let Me In" John Ajvide Lindquist. Just after complaining of never seeing truly dark, adult, looking into damaged psyches fantasy, I found Lindqvist's novel. Eli is a vampire, but don't let this frighten you. This book is completely different from "Twilight", Ann Rice's vampire novels or "Dracula". I wrote about my reading of it here and would be very interested to hear others' impressions.   

For More Good Books )
elanor_x: (Default)

This is the 3rd year of now traditional books' post with a new feature. Ever pitied the time wasted on not good enough books? For me, sometimes the mistake becomes obvious only after a lapse of time, so after almost each book will appear a short explanation why it is or isn't recommended and its' topic. Hope you'll discover at least one good book. Feel free to ask questions about any of them and I would appreciate to hear your opinions and recommendations too!

The Best Books of Prose & Verse

1) "Summer morning, summer night" by Ray Bradbury My favorite book of his. A small collection of short stories, (iirc all) without any magical elements, just regular people living in a small town.
 

2) Ian McEwan "On Chesil Beach" Found via Clarissa's Blog recommendation, which gets the title of The Best Blog Discovered in 2010. Can't say it better than she did. 

3) "The House of Bilqis" by Azhar Abidi
A novel. From
this great interview with the author: Pakistani-born author raises a series of difficult questions: What are the consequences of leaving home and marrying outside one’s culture? And how does one address familial obligations, never stated but always present, that demand sacrifices grown children don’t want to make?


4)  Larissa Miller "Golden Symphony"
Translated as "Dim and Distant Days" (Vol. 25 of the GLAS Series) [is on Amazon]. This autobiography of the Jewish poetess let me glimpse into the world of my grandparents' and parents' generations in USSR. Check
her English site for poems and prose extracts.

Read more... )
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Feel free to ask questions about any of them and I would appreciate to hear your opinions and recommendations too!

 

 

Favorite recommended books of 2009:

 

1) The Short Stories of Katherine Mansfield

2) "The Pillars of the Earth" ~ Ken Follett

3) "World Without End" ~ Ken Follett [Those 2 books are utterly different from his other work, which I didn't want to read. Political games were even more interesting than love subplots.]


4) "The Courilof Affair" ~ Irene Nemirovsky ["In 1903, Leon M - a devout terrorist - is given the responsibility of 'liquidating' … Courilof, the notoriously brutal and cold-blooded Russian Minister of Education, by the Revolutionary Committee…Posing as his newly appointed personal physician, Leon M takes up residence with Courliof in his summer house in the Iles and awaits instructions."]
 

More Good Books )
elanor_x: (Default)

This is a book meme consisting of books I read in 2008.

In bold – books I loved.

Smiley -  – near books I specially loved.   

Feel free to ask questions about any of them and I would appreciate to hear about any books you love and recommend too!

 

 1) Aleksandr Nicolaevich Ostrovsky [1823-1886]

A Russian playwright. You can read a few of his plays online at Project GutenbergMy mother loves him and we have a full collection of his works (in Russian, of course). I have tried reading them this year and immediately fell in love.   
  
 

 2) "An Autobiography" ~ Agatha Christie

I haven't even read her books before reading it, so my enjoyment was not due to being her fan. She painted how people lived then and her life in such way, that I couldn't stop reading. Probably the best book I read in 2008 together with Ostrovsky's plays.

 3) "In Cold Blood" ~ Truman Capote

More Books 2008! )

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