Archive for the ‘books’ Category

  • Under the Dome – Stephen King
  • Go Ask Alice – Anonymous
  • Alien – Alan Dean Foster
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khaled Hosseini
  • The Walking Dead – Robert Kirkman
  • Johnny Got His Gun – Dalton Trumbo

Added another to the list. Hell yes. And I’m about to finish “The Other Queen,” a Philippa Gregory novel.

It’s been a good month for books so far!

Trumbo’s book was another on the Top 10 Most Disturbing list… Number four, to be precise.  But you know what? It didn’t disturb me that much. It was about a soldier during WWI who got his arms and legs blown off, but also had his face destroyed too. He is unable to speak or hear or otherwise communicate and is trapped inside his body.

So… again this didn’t disturb me as much as I thought it would. Am I simply becoming numb?

As a side note, it also reminded me of the film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (it might be a book, too?), about a man who suffers a stroke that leaves him unable to move, talk, or make noise.

I don’t think it deserves the number four spot, but once more, I suppose when I get to the end, we’ll see.

  • Under the Dome – Stephen King
  • Go Ask Alice – Anonymous
  • Alien – Alan Dean Foster
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khaled Hosseini
  • The Walking Dead – Robert Kirkman

This is August, so far. Hot damn, I said! It’s been a good month so far, and I even have a few books lined up to finish from the library.

Stephen King’s novel was lengthy… overall  it was all right. Not my favorite. The characters annoyed me more. The plot seemed to stretch on indefinitely, and I was dissatisfied by the resolution. I still like King though.

Alien was the novelization of the movie, so it went just like the film itself does. Considering I haven’t seen that movie in ages, this was something neat. It made me want to re-watch the series. I suppose my interest was piqued because I recently watched Predators and was thinking about the whole franchise.

And The Walking Dead is awesome. Just awesome. I haven’t quite finished yet–I have about fifty pages left. A friend gave me the compilation for my birthday (THANK YOU SO MUCH), and I’m loving every second of it. It does, however, remind me of Lost a little bit… only with zombies.

Well, it should be a good month for books. Boy has left for Dallas, and I have more nights to myself to read. Not that I don’t miss him, of course… but I have to fill all the suddenly empty time with something :)

Movies Seen:
Predators – Very quick to get into the plot. Silly one-liners. Seems sort of hopeless, because how can humans possibly defeat predators on their own turf? They can’t. Adrien Brody was incredibly jacked, and although I like Topher Grace, he plays most of his roles with the same plucky demeanor and it can be sort of annoying.

500 Days of Summer – Sorry, but this movie still bothers me. JGL aside, I think Summer was an annoying bitch to him.  I thought maybe a second viewing  would change my mind, but it did not.

Restaurants visited:
Carpe Diem for brunch. Tasty, although the service was slow.  Had a bacon omelette, which was egg with bacon, tomato, onions, cheese, and one leaf of basil.  The sides were potatoes and fruit, and with the potatoes some sort of giant, tasty bean. The chai was excellent.

California Pizza Kitchen for my belated birthday dinner with friends. The food was decent as usual. I got the margherita pizza and some water, because I’d had a terrible headache the entire afternoon.

Books Read:

The Pillars of the Earth – Finished this one, finally. What a good book. The style of writing is simple but pulls you along. The characters and plot is engrossing. It reminds me of GRRM (who wrote later, but whom I read first) without the fantasy elements. If you like historical fiction novels, this one is definitely a book to pick up.

Under the Dome – I’m about 350 pages into this one.  It’s okay. The binding is actually falling apart because I took the book out to the pool and it was so hot in the sunlight that the glue started to dissolve… I’m hoping that it won’t be completely dead by the time I return it to the library…

The Walking Dead – Well, the small neighborhood they found was full of zombies. The kid was shot, and now they’re staying at a farm where the farmer has been keeping the dead locked in the barn. What will happen next?

It was a good weekend. Friday night I helped a friend out and wrote a paper for her Shakespeare class. We did this while listening to music and drinking pina coladas. Later we started to watch  Daybreakers and freaked out when a giant insect crawled up the wall, scaring the living shit out of both of us.  It took me ten minutes to get up the courage to go kill that nasty insect and then vacuum up the remains.

Other than that, it was pretty good.

  • I, Mona Lisa – Jeanne Kalogridis
  • Survivor – Chuck Palahniuk
  • The Parable of the Sower – Octavia E. Butler
  • The Pillars of the Earth – Ken Follett
  • Under the Dome – Stephen King
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns - Khaled Hosseini

­This month’s reading list is a bit ambitious, especially considering that two of the books (Follet’s and King’s) are over 800 pages a piece.  Realistically, I think I can finish Stephen King’s book if I devote some serious time to it, although I need to return it by the 30th so that I don’t have it hanging around collecting late fees once it is overdue, which it will be by the time we return from our trip to Maryland.

I, Mona Lisa was rather boring. Nothing spectacular. Forgettable, etc. That and I kept getting the time period mixed up with that of The Pillars of the Earth, for some reason. I suppose reading books concurrently doesn’t always work… Oh well.

The Parable of the Sower was actually listed in the comments below the Top 10 Most Disturbing list.  Others had recommended it on the basis that it was incredibly moving/disturbing, so I decided to get it out of the library when I saw it.

It’s about a girl named Lauren who lives in the time during the decline of the States as a powerful nation; the economy has completely collapsed, and the government has turned a blind eye to everyone’s problems. Food is expensive and water is nearly unobtainable. The country is rife with conflict, cannibals, and gangs of thieves, rapists, and arsonists.  The story itself follows Lauren and her daily life, beginning from when she is fifteen and living in a neighborhood that was thought to be safe, and then continuing to when she is on her own, struggling to survive. It essentially reads as a diary of the apocalypse, divided into entries, and chronicling the growth of her own spirituality, a doctrine she comes to name as Earthseed.

The book contains disturbing elements, of course, but overall, is not one I cringed away from or found hard to read. In fact, sometimes I found it a little difficult to force myself through, as it moved a bit slowly.  I found the spiritual aspects of the book interesting and less intrusive than in other books.

So, my final verdict is that while it’s an okay apocalypse book, it does not warrant a spot on the Top 10 Most Disturbing list.

Oh. Survivor by Palahniuk was weird. He’s such a bizarre, off-kilter writer. I can only take so much of Palahniuk before I have to read slightly more mundane fiction.

Under the Dome seems suspiciously like the Simpsons Movie, where an entire town is kept inside a forcefield/dome. I’ve only read the first 100 (out of like… 800) pages, and so I’m not quite sure what the actual story is.

As much as I like King… I feel like he’s becoming very predictable.  Maybe I’m just outgrowing his style or something though.  This is hard for me to admit because to be honest, King was a lot of the reason why I wanted to attempt writing stories… His early work is incredibly inspiring. But lately… Ugh. Especially after Duma Key, I really just stopped paying him attention. I have yet to read Cell, but then again … maybe I’ll just take it out of the library instead of spending $9 on it.

Finally, A Thousand Splendid Suns was my book club pick, and they picked it. So I get to read it again and revel that I picked possibly the best book since Eat, Pray, Love!

That’s all for now.

  • Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth’s Last Days – Tim LaHaye
  • The Man from Beijing – Henning Mankell
  • Stardust – Neil Gaiman
  • The 120 Days of Sodom – Marquis de Sade

I suppose it isn’t fair to say that I ‘read’ the de Sade book, but whatever. The rest I finally finished.

Hopefully this month will be better for books:

  • The Pillars of the Earth – Ken Follet
  • I, Mona Lisa – Jeanne Kalogridis
  • Survivor – Chuck Palahniuk
  • Parable of the Sower – Octavia E. Butler

These are the books I’m going to read this month, hopefully. I have to read the last three, at the very least, because they are due back to the library. An ambitious month for books, since I have limited time to read and because the Ken Follet book is about 900 pages long, but it’s very engaging and I have no doubt that if I set my mind to it I can finish.

I’ve also rekindled my romance with Fallout 3, and so that’s been sucking down a lot of my time as well.  I’ll definitely update you about these books though (the Ken Follet book seems especially awesome so far…)!

Today was interesting so far because it was a break in my normal routine of get up, shower, eat, and go to work by 7:30.  Today I got to sleep in a bit because I had an eye appointment scheduled for 10:00 AM.
It’s always interesting for me to see the world outside my apartment during the hours that I’m at work. There are people jogging, walking their dogs, dining on terraces.  Often I wonder what it is they do that allows them to be out at this time in the morning, enjoying the sunlight, and I envy them for being able to read at their leisure,  to get up and have coffee and pastries out on a terrace when the rest of the world is beginning to work.
Well, the eye doctor, Dr. Reagin, didn’t get to me until 10:45 or so, and then I spent an hour–an hour–in the chair as he slowly slipped different lenses into place to test out my prescription. I appreciate his thoroughness, but after forty-five minutes I began to fidget and wish I were on my way.
Before going back to work, I stopped in at the library.
I wasn’t searching for anything in particular, but ended up getting a book called The Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler. It’s one of the books recommended by someone who commented on the 10 Most Disturbing list, and so it caught my eye and I checked it out. Two other books had been listed as “Checked In” on the library’s database, but I didn’t have time to look for them.
Speaking of the 10 Most Disturbing list, I can tell you that I acquired a copy of The 120 Days of Sodom, began the first two parts of it, and will not be reading it any further.
Frighteningly, it is number three on the list.
Even more frightening is that I could not get through it.
That book is horrible. Horrible. Now you remember how I ranted over American Psycho and said that it made me physically ill to read that book;  well, 120 Days of Sodom was worse than that.
Without me having done any research and with no real authority at all except my own experience in reading books for the last (approximately) 21 years, I can say that there is no real reason to ever read this book, ever.
I’m reading it because I made a promise to myself to finish a list of something.
However, this book shakes the very foundations of my desire to continue reading. It is number three, and if people rank other books above this one, then I’m not sure I possess the willpower and fortitude to continue.
I can say that the main plot of this book–loose plot, mind you–is that of four men who try to discover who is the most libertine of them all. Together with their daughters and a bunch of other prostitutes and young men and women (very young in some cases, I believe some less than 12), they hole up together in some castle and embark on a long period of debauchery.
That said, the book is divided into parts. The first two are the most fully fleshed out, as de Sade did not finish the novel. The first part is a list of all the events that will unfold, who is attending, their physical descriptions, and descriptions of the setting.  The second part is a general overview of the beginnings of the giant orgy. At this point I was having some trouble reading it, but it wasn’t terribly bad yet. There were some things I cringed over, but skimmed, and overall it wasn’t any worse than American Psycho, except in quantity of acts.
I began to skim over parts 3 and 4, because this damn book is about 800 pages long and I wanted to see what else I would have to endure.
Well, 3 and 4 detail the acts that get more violent and horrific. Some of the things I read I don’t think I will ever forget. I said this about American Psycho, but now that I have read through de Sade, I can say that American Psycho is a child’s book compared to 120 Days of Sodom.  Parts three and four begin to chronicle the acts against the men and women who are in this orgy, and while part two left some specifics out (about why these people are not allowed to use the bathroom very often), part three expands on this. Graphically.
It became so graphic that my skin began to crawl, and I felt the familiar warning signs of my body telling me it was about to go into fight-or-flight mode.
I skipped to part four, hoping that they would wrap up, and perhaps the story of how the people fared afterwards would be told and I could at least lie and said I’d read most of the book.
Well no. Part four was the way that each participant was dismembered and tortured to death. The descriptions were merely a sentence or two long, as de Sade evidently had only sketched out what was to occur here, but the mere ideas alone were so foul and loathesome that I could not continue after a few pages. Thumbing through the last fifty pages or so (or more), I caught snippets off of each page. Each victim’s fate was worse than the last, and eventually I began to feel feverish, my heart pounding and sweat breaking out all over my body, until I thought I would be sick. I threw the book across the room and tore out of bed.
It took me the better part of three hours to calm myself enough where I could fall asleep. I watched “The Little Mermaid” and read up on Disney Princesses on Wikipedia as well in order to get those vulgar images repressed enough to have some peace. Even then, I still felt some of the same things that I had when I had read through American Psycho: chills, nausea, weakness, and a general lack of desire to ever be happy again.
That someone would write a book like this makes me question my faith in people. Authors are capable of making dreams unfold in writing, making magic seem possible, but so are they also capable of creating horrors that should not be in existence.
Truly, this book is the worst thing I have read to date.  I don’t see why it exists, except as a testament to how truly warped, disgusting, and perhaps even evil the human mind can become.
I have decided that I will not be giving out this book to anyone. People who want to read it I’m sure will find a way to get their hands on it (or look it up online), but while I normally find joy in lending out books to people so that they can share my literary experience, I will not be so much as mentioning to many others that I have it. For me it is a shameful text to say that I own, embarrassing to see it on my shelf, horrifying to me that I paid money to own this abomination.
Does it deserve its place on the 10 Most Disturbing list? Yes, without a doubt. I have not read the other books yet to judge a better place for it, but I really can’t imagine that any of them are as bad as this one.  If I can stomach another five books off the list (the first two, number four, and number six), I will be happy to tell you which book should rank where.
If I can stomach it.

Today was interesting so far because it was a break in my normal routine of get up, shower, eat, and go to work by 7:30.  Today I got to sleep in a bit because I had an eye appointment scheduled for 10:00 AM.
Read the rest of this entry »»

The bad:

  • Evidently, one of my credit cards thinks I did not send payment last month.  I have a record of sending payment, so now when I have some time I’ll need to find some records and talk to them about it. For now, I have to pay double the minimum amount plus a late fee, plus next month’s minimum to cover for the mistake. Jerks.
  • Just found out yesterday that Julie went into surgery in the morning for what might possibly be cancer that has metastasized elsewhere.  Definitely keeping her and her family in my thoughts.  It was so unexpected.

The good:

  • Continuing from above, Julie has an amazingly positive attitude about things, so I’m sure everything will be fine.
  • My renter’s insurance is going down by $10 a month. A little victory, but still a victory.
  • Had a good night watching The Taking of Pelham 123, Buffy, and eating tomato soup, doing crunches, and cleaning up.
  • Massive storm last night.  I watched from the peacefulness of my little porch while it poured and thundered. Gotta love summer storms.
  • Finally ordered another book for the Top 10 Most Disturbing Novels list. Now  I have some books to look forward to reading this month and into next!
  • Seeing Jonah Hex tonight and Cyrus in a couple weeks. Good times.

I’ve heard a couple people say now that this week is shaping up to be a bad one… but I don’t think so. At least, I’m trying not to believe it.

Book update:

May:

  • The Help – Kathryn Stockett
  • Narcissus in Chains – Laurell K. Hamilton
  • Perfume: The Story of a Murderer – Patrick Süskind
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith
  • The Time Traveler’s Wife – Audrey Niffenegger
  • Dead and Gone – Charlaine Harris

This month:

  • Left Behind: A Novel of the Earth’s Last Days – Tim LaHaye
  • The Man from Beijing – Henning Mankell
  • Stardust – Neil Gaiman

I ended up reading six books this past month! Six! A record so far this year.

Unfortunately, I don’t have too many books planned except two this month. I’m sure I’ll add more, however. For right now though, I’m stuck on this first one, which has taken an obnoxious turn after such a perplexing premise.

To summarize, Left Behind focuses on a few key people who are literally left behind after the mysterious disappearance of millions of people, simultaneously, around the globe. Think Langoliers-style disappearance: suddenly, as though they have vaporized and left their clothes, jewelry, and other non-organic implements behind.  Obviously the survivors are bereft and have to figure out why they’ve been left behind and how to carry on amidst the wild theories that crop up as to why these people are gone…

Basically, the book took a religious turn about halfway through and totally turned me off. It’s my fault. I should have read the detailed synopsis (and perhaps the next three or four books’ summaries as well, which also give away what the disappearances mean…), because I probably wouldn’t have bought this book. Don’t get me wrong; I don’t mind reading about religion at all. But this book was preachy, and I disliked one of the main character’s immediate conversion to born-again status. It was a disappointment (although it was my fault for buying it). Oh well.

Ugh.

I haven’t bought The Man From Beijing yet, and I’m about halfway through Stardust, so I suppose there’s still hope left for this month.

Friday night after a particularly stressful day at work, I drive over to Las Margaritas on Cheshire Bridge Road to have a mojito (no, not a margarita) and meet up with some old friends who have come into town. Later that night we go back to grab the boy and some liquor from the store near my house, and then back to another friend’s house to play Beatles Rock Band into the night.

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First, a book update:

  • The Help – Kathryn Stockett
  • Narcissus in Chains – Laurell K. Hamilton
  • Perfume: The Story of a Murderer – Patrick Süskind
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith
  • The Time Traveler’s Wife – Audrey Niffenegger

Read the rest of this entry »»