Sunday, January 6, 2013

Book 1 (2013) The Slap ***1/2 by Christos Tsiolkas

Written by an Australian man --- not usually a good portent.   The hook was the story line, "at a suburban barbecue, a man slaps a child who is not his own", and the aftermath of that.  

A great book, with lots of very surprizing insights.  I  gave it the extra half point because of all the original truths, but not the full 4 stars as it held my interest all the way through but not enough to make me insist all my friends read it.   There's lots of sex, typically male in that way.   But you can really see why it needs to be there sometimes for the next part of the story to work.  

He writes from the viewpoints of several characters, showing their pain and their humanity.   For example, one of the most innocent characters, an Indian veterinarian, has married her husband for his looks, and the marital sex is not very satisfying.   Tsiolkas reveals this artfully and something as mundane and shallow as this marriage becomes understandable.

There are several young families,  singles, older generations, and ethnic groups represented.  I found the inside of an older Greek couples marriage quite interesting.  I really think Tsiolkas must be listening to a lot of women to get some of the things in this book.   Good for him, he got it.

Not too lucid this morning, not enough practice writing this last year.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Book 40 (2012) The Magic **** by Rhonda Byrne

This is the third book by Byrne (The Secret, The Power) on the subject of how to attract good things into your life.   These books have made a profound difference in my life.   The principles are simple and you've heard them all before.  Long before I read these books, I had implemented many of the principles, but reading these books really hones the positive mental practices.  

It all starts with gratitude --- the greatest lesson to learn in life.  


Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Book 39 (2012) Women Work & the Art of Savoir Faire by Mireille Guiliano

Seeping myself in French culture.  

Book 38 (2012) Removing the Hutterite Kerchief by Rebecca Hofer

Can't remember much.

Book 37 (2012) The 4 Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz

Good advice.

Book 36 (2012) Automatic Wealth by Michael Masterson

Good advice.

Book 35 (2012) Persuasion by Arlene Dickinson

This is a business bio by one of the Dragons on Dragon's Den.  Interesting.

Book 34 (2012) title by author

I can't remember anything except it was short stories about Mennonite war veterans and coming back to Steinbach.   Will complete when I get the book back from dad.

Book 33 (2012) Mennonites Don't Dance by Darcie Friesen Hossack

Great short stories.

Book 32 (2012) ... The Dream * by Cynthia Faryon

The history of the Davidson farms in Marchand in photos.

Other books by this author reviewed on this blog:
A boy, a farm, a dream 

Book 31 (2012) A boy, a farm, a dream ** by Cynthia Faryon

The story of the Marchand pioneers through the eyes of Lloyd Lehman.  I met this amazing man (age 90 +) this summer.   He is now married to Shirley Hastings Toews, related by blood to my Aunt Martha Doerksen Toews Griffiths.   Dad was a friend since they were kids.   We visited one afternoon, what a great day.  

He wrote his memoirs, Faryon interviewed him, and created the book.   Shirley says it's full of errors.   Her writing is not great, but the story is outstanding.  He stayed on the farm but his dream was machinery and trains.

The back story is the story of Watson Pogue Davidson and The Manitoba Dairy Farms.  We also took many drives through the Marchand area identifying where all the dairy barns, schools, etc. used to stand.  Many great afternoons.

Book 30 (2012) Mennonite is the Name, Evil and Deception are the Game * by Heidi Loewen

This woman is pretty crazy but it's a great story (true) about how a family greed and piety can destroy great wealth and properity.   The story of the family that built the Piano HOuse in Winnipeg.

Book 29 (2012) By Whatever Name *** by Elizabeth Reimer Bartel

She's a first cousin of my mother Evelyn Reimer Doerksen.   This story is fictionalized history of her mother's family bringing in the history of the "holdoman" church (a very strict sect of Mennonites).    The family moves from Manitoba to Kansas and becomes entangled in the US conscientious objector laws, which were much more onerous than in Canada.   Treatment was prison and torture.

She's a wonderful writer but this one's tops them all.   That subtle forboding atmosphere suggested when the all the world seems bright, happy, and prosperous for the Mennonite farmers and business people.   Oh yes, she is 86 years old and apparently getting better.

Book 28 (2012) Berlin Noir Trilogy** by Philip Kerr

I read it for the background of a detective surviving in Berlin during WW II.   Great read.
The first of the Bernie Gunther series.

Book 27 (2012) Love and War in the Apennines ** by Eric Newby

This is a memoir of a soldier captured in Italy in WWII.  He escaped and was helped by Italian peasants in the mountains at very great risk to themselves.   It's also a romance.
A great story, never before told.   He makes it interesting while not sparing us the miserable details of survival.

Book 26 (2012) Mennonite Furniture, A Migrant Tradition *** by Janzen

This was on the bargain pile at the Mennonite Heritage Museum.   I had looked at it many times, but only saw photos of furniture that I had never seen in any one's house, so I dismissed it as maybe about Ontario or Pennsylvania Mennonite.   But it is really a social history about customs in Russia, Prussia, etc., a very good bargain for sure.   A Mennophile essential.

More Books (2012)

I also read a pile of non-fiction books,  including:

fashion books
books about French style
books about investing
cookbooks

Book 25 (2012) Irma Voth **** by Miriam Toews

The story of a girl dragged from Manitoba to a Mexican Mennonite colony, getting mixed up in drugs and film making, and breaking out with no money, no passport, no education.  Toews amazes yet again with freshness of her words and story.  

It's hard to chose her best book, but these are musts for any reader ---
The Flying Troutmans
Swing Low
A Complicated Kindness

All prize winners.

Book 24 (2012) Kennedy's Brain ** by Henning Mankell

A crazy meander, not nearly as good as Mankell's The Eye of the Leopard.  But for the story about AIDs in Africa, I could not recommend it at all.

Book 23 (2012) Confined Space ** by Deryn Collier

A first mystery, and quite good.   A Bern Fortin novel (he's a Canadianj Forces commander retired, now a coroner in a northern BC town).   Let's hope for more in this series.

Book 22 (2012) The Sense of an Ending*** by Julian Barnes

He won the Man Booker Prize for this one, but can't remember the story now.   I thought Arthur and George was a stunning book.

Book 21 (2012) The Importance of Being Seven** by Alexander McCall Smith

Another great read, with my favorite character, Bertie.   Very funny -- his mother is accidentally shipped to eastern Europe in a container full of used clothing.

This is 6th book in the 44 Scotland Street series. 

Book 20 (2012) T is for Trespass ** by Sue Grafton

Another good one.

Book 19 (2012) Returning Home *** by Loreen Plett

Fiction based on Plett family history.   Mennonites in what is now Poland (then Prussia), the wealthy prosperous family and one who rebelled and left the community.   Some religion thrown in.   Also some gypsies.  
Great story, written by a writer of the romance style.   A must read if you are interested in Mennonite history as it is unique or the history of Prussia/Poland.

Book 18 (2012) Alone in the Classroom** by Elizabeth Hay

I loved Hay's Late Nights on Air (one of my top 5 Canadian novels), but I can hardly remember what this is about.   It's about a school teacher in a one room prairie school, and a girl is murdered.

I heard her read at the Vancouver Institute this winter and she was marvellous.   The mind was fed and glowing for a week.   She was a broadcaster and has the power of voice as well as word. 

Prizes --
Giller Prize for Late Nights on Air

Book 17 (2012) Removing the Hutterite Kerchief ** by Rebecca Hofer

One of those true stories of just how corrupt a closed community can be.  Well written and an education.

Book 16 (2012) Swamp Angel **** by Ethel Wilson

Now in my top 5 Canadian novels.   Written in the 50's.   I looked for it for years, and finally it was republished.   Bought 2 copies, one to send to Sheila.

Takes place in Vancouver and a northern BC isolated resort.

The story of a woman who is independent, makes mistakes, and then is strong enough to fix them.   I liked Wilson's truths.   One of my favorites is how Maggie Lloyd finds herself in a situation in which she can do no right.   The couple who owns the resort are not competent, but resent her as she takes charge, especially the wife.   Maggie realizes that she must manage the situation because the woman will not, cannot see beyond the jealousy and emotion of the moment, to see how they will have to work together.  

Book 15 (2012) We Need to Talk About Kevin *** by Lionel Shriver

It's about a boy who murders fellow high school students.

A difficult read in some ways, following the mind of a mother through pregnancy and raising a child in her endless analysis and justification.   Is this a skillful explanation how an evil child can be born and deceive everyone or the revelation of the harm a mother can do. 

Lionel is an amazing writer, but there were parts where the story was forced.   I read it too long ago to remember what exactly.

Awards -- Orange Prize

Movie --- haven't seen it yet.

Book 14 (2012) For Now * Gayle Friesen

Well written, had not realized it was juvenile fiction.

Book 12 & 13 (2012) Old Filth and The Man in the Wooden Hat **** by Jane Gardam

I loved these book, about a Raj orphan who becomes a judge, a tale untold before, and certainly not as engagingly.   The second book is the story of Filth's wife, and her adventures in the war, her secrets and passions.
Many intriguing and touching story lines and mysteries.   Spans British Empire, Singapore (I think), Columbo, the war, the Inner Temple, and more.

Prizes -- short listed for Orange Prize.  The writer who started the Orange Prize spoke at the writers festival in October -- Kate Mosse.

Book 11 (2012) V is for Vengeance ** by Sue Grafton

As with A to U, all good reads.

Book 10 (2012) The Descendants **1/2 by Kaui Hart Hemmings

Good story, children's dialogue particularly well written (not as good as The Flying Troutmans).   Good movie too.

Book 9 (2012) Major Pettigrew's Last Stand *** by Helen Simonson

I enjoyed this book and was disappointed to find she has not written more.
It's about aging, racism, class (English of course the best kind), and ungrateful children.

Book 8 (2012) The Concubine's Children **** by Denise Chong

A master accomplishment by this writer.   Anyone who lives or has lived in Vancouver or Nanaimo must read it.   No, everybody must read it.

Chong tells the story of her mother and grandmother's lives.   The grandmother was the second wife, the Canada wife, or concubine.   She made her living as a tea house lady.   I had never heard about these tea houses in the early China towns.   Chong's mother told her the story of growing up in this environment, with a heartless gambling, drinking mother.   Included are several trips back to China by various member's of the family to build a mansion, visit the first wife and children, and find the ruins and descendants.  

An overwhelming story and not a hard read. 

Book 7 (2012) This Hidden Thing **** by Dora Dueck

I've spent many weeks in Manitoba this year, read many books on local history and by local authors.   Mostly the Mennonite theme, but also other early settler stories.

This book tells the story of Mennonite refugees from Russia in the 1920's.  Many of these families were supported by sending young teenage girls to be house maids in Winnipeg homes.    My own aunts had this experience.    As with many families with this background of terror, they prospered in Canada, and in one generation with great personal sacrifice, made a wonderful life.   

Very well written and compelling story of not so untypical woman's life.

Prizes -- 2010 Manitoba Book of the Year

Book 6 (2012) Willful Behavior ** by Donna Leon

Another great read starring Venice, Italy.

See other reviews on Donna Leon's Brunetti series on this blog.

Book 5 (2012) Confessions of a Sociopathic Social Climber -10 by Adele Lang

Utter rubbish, did not finish. 

Book 4 (2012) The Charming Quirks of Others ** by Alexander McCall Smith

Another Isabel Dalhousie novel.   Love her, love the setting, want to be secretly wealthy living in Edinburgh (well maybe not).

Book 3 (2012) Tell It to the Trees**** by Anita Rau Badami

This is an outstanding book on many levels.   The body of a woman is found frozen in the snow.   As in all Badami's books, the theme is the immigrant experience in Canada and this one also features an abusive husband and the Canadian winter.

I heard Badami interviewed on CBC on this book, and she says she had not heard of or read Sinclair Ross's The Painted Room, a short story, and a Canadian definitive.

If you have not read this author before, you must.  

Her previous books (all great):
Tamarind Mem
The Hero's Walk
Can You Hear the Nightbird Call

What happened to 2012

I kept reading throughout 2012 but just did not get to the blog.   I can't back-date entries (can I?), but I will catch up with at least comments and ratings.