Seems your invitation was what was missing Sue. OK - have deleted my personal blog so maybe now I can cope. Not sure about ever writing a review but at least I can follow all yours!
Happy reading - am just over half way through a Fraction of the Whole and at this rate - spending hours on the computer instead of reading - I'll barely have time to try read our next book, but will be well prepared for May or whenever.....
Minerva was established in 1988 by a group of women who discovered that they shared a love of reading and talking about books. We have been going strong ever since, with several original members still in attendance!
Tuesday, 30 December 2008
Monday, 29 December 2008
Sebastian Barry's The secret scripture
Just having a go at a little personal review!!
I wanted to read this book because I heard great things about his previous one, A long long way, and both it and this one were shortlisted for the Booker prize. The book is set in Ireland in contemporary times, with flashbacks to the 1930s, and is told through the voices of two characters: Roseanne, a centenarian who has lived in a mental institution for 60 years or so, and Dr Grene, a psychiatrist at the institution for 35 years. As Roseanne writes her life-story, which she hides under boards in her room, Dr Grene investigates the reasons for her being there with a view to deciding her future. What falls out is a tortured story of religion, family and politics at a time in Ireland when sides had to be taken, rules took precedence and humanity was in short supply.
I loved the book, though had some reservations. The ending was a little contrived and I think he got Roseanne's voice better than Dr Grene's, despite the fact that he's a male writer. Particularly towards the end, Dr Grene's voice felt a bit forced, as though even Barry knew his plot resolution was a bit too neat and didn't quite know how to do it.
What I liked was the language, the characters (though most are loosely drawn) and the themes. I loved the musings on "truth" and "history". This is not a new idea, but I liked the way he mused here. I also liked its relationship of truth to health, that Roseanne's "truth" was a healthy one.
Roseanne is an interesting narrator. I would call her reliable not because she tells us the correct facts necessarily (as it appears that she may not have) but because, as Grene says at the end, she tells us "her" truth and this truth "radiated health". It may not hold up in a court of law but it gets to the heart of who Roseanne is. It is "vexing and worrying", though, as Roseanne says, when different people's truths (such as Fr Gaunt's and Roseanne's) cross each other. How true is Father Gaunt's anyhow? His conveys the facts but contains no humanity, let alone empathy. He has no idea of who Roseanne is, but he does know the "law" (of the church at least).
This is my favourite aspect of the book - the issues it raises about truth - and I love the little touch re "truth" and health/psychological cure. It makes me think that we should always keep a look out for two truths – the facts and inner meaning - and decide which one should take precedence in any given situation. In a court of law the facts perhaps need to take precedence but we should also heed the "hidden inner" truth as well. When dealing with our relationships perhaps the "hidden inner" truth is the one we should look for, as in WHY is this person saying or doing this, not WHAT did they say or do.
The language is beautiful and poetic. Poetic usually means two things to me, mostly in combination - language that is rich in imagery, as Barry's is, and language that has a strong rhythm that is often though not always based on breaking the rules of prose. Barry has great rhythm - it doesn't tend to break the rules (it doesn't, for example, have a lot of sentence fragments) but he uses punctuation and long sentences interspersed with short sentences to give a lovely flow. He also uses repetitions. Take this near the opening - it almost reads like blank verse:
"That place where I was born was a cold town. Even the mountains stood sway. They were not sure, no more than me, of that dark spot, those same mountains.
There was a black river that flowed through the town, and if it had no grace for mortal beings, it did for swans, and many swans resorted there, and even rode the river like some kind of plunging animals, in floods.
The river also took the rubbish down to the sea, and bits of things that were once owned by people and pulled form the banks, and bodies too, if rarely, oh and poor babies, that were embarrassments, the odd time. The speed and depth of the river would have been a great friend to secrecy.
That is Sligo town I mean."
He sets a powerful tone in these opening few paras - the rhythm is slow but with just an edge of awkwardness that catches you off guard. And the language conveys something untoward - "cold", "dark", "black", "rubbish", "secrecy". These are not repeated but, used in combination in such a few concentrated paras, they give us a sense of the story to come. I found this opening quite wonderful and it engaged me quickly.
I was a little unsure of Dr Grene. As I read it I kept wondering what the point of all the Bet stuff was...even though I did find a lot of it quite moving. It was mainly towards the end that he started to lose me...when he started to more actively investigate Roseanne's history. From a plot point of view it was logical and understandable, but the voice seemed to lose it a bit - it became a little prosaic, ordinary in some sense that seemed to lose Grene's particularity.
In Dr Grene's choice in the last para of the bright and open rose rather than a uniform neat one, we can see an acceptance of being open to many truths, to the imperfections of the world (as Roseanne appears to be) than to that neat, dry version of the world that we get from Fr. Gaunt. I think this softens the neat plot conclusion somewhat - as does the fact that despite this neatness, he doesn't go in for the full cliched emotions that would be drawn out in a simple genre book.
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Review
Thursday, 25 December 2008
me too
story of my life - me too - being younger sister. Anyway, here it is Christmas morning, and I'm checking emails. Tragic. But we did our major event last night which is when whole family coincided in Sydney. And so I've done my labour in the kitchen, until tomorrow when there's more hoo hah.
Just about finished Eat pray love - and am enjoying it immensely. Next in the light summer read is the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Anyone read it?
Happy Christmas everyone...stuff yourselves, don't feel guilty, we're all so lucky. xxx
Just about finished Eat pray love - and am enjoying it immensely. Next in the light summer read is the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Anyone read it?
Happy Christmas everyone...stuff yourselves, don't feel guilty, we're all so lucky. xxx
Thursday, 18 December 2008
Using this blog
I have been thinking about how we can make this blog useful (if we really get going). Using labels is one way of doing this. So, for example, if we post recommendations, we could use the label "Recommendation". If we review a book, we could use the label "Review". However, these are pretty broad and could get overloaded after a while. Should we just give it a go?
I'm also thinking that it would be good to keep using Facebook for Event org and invitations, and for group photos - and use this more for discussion about books, films and other topics we'd like to talk about?
What say you all (well, what say you Marie since you're the only who's taken up the invitation so far! - I know it's Christmas time and people are busy...)
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Experimenting with Blogging
Well - here's my first post - just to see where it ends up. A new post, a new thread? Only one way to find out.
As for me and reading, have been soooo slack the last two months - not feeling inclined at all - HOW STRANGE!. But just spent the last four days catching up with some Minervan literature - Diary of a Bad Year - intriguing form -and After Dark - OK, atmospheric, but not my favourite Murakami.
where to now? Maybe Barack Obama's Dreams from My Father which has sat on my bookshelf for months. Or The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson, set in Sweden. Bill's recommendation. And a bit sad cos' the author died not long after publishing his trilogy, this being the first.
MZ musings
As for me and reading, have been soooo slack the last two months - not feeling inclined at all - HOW STRANGE!. But just spent the last four days catching up with some Minervan literature - Diary of a Bad Year - intriguing form -and After Dark - OK, atmospheric, but not my favourite Murakami.
where to now? Maybe Barack Obama's Dreams from My Father which has sat on my bookshelf for months. Or The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson, set in Sweden. Bill's recommendation. And a bit sad cos' the author died not long after publishing his trilogy, this being the first.
MZ musings
Labels:
experimenting
Wednesday, 17 December 2008
Getting started
Here we go with our very own blog. I believe we can make this a group blog but I haven't got that far in the tutorial. I also chose a fairly plain template to start with. All this can be changed later - I believe!
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