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Review: Solar by Ian McEwan (with book club and audiobook notes)

SolarMy rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

I’ll be upfront about this: I doubt I would have finished Solar if I hadn’t been reading it for book club. It featured an unlikeable main character, and spent way too much time on his bodily functions.

But I still gave it 3.5 stars, not a bad rating at all.

The book (like its main character) wasn’t likable, but it was interesting.

Summary via Ian McEwan’s website:

Michael Beard is in his late fifties; bald, overweight, unprepossessing – a Nobel prize-winning physicist whose best work is behind him. Trading on his reputation, he speaks for enormous fees, lends his name to the letterheads of renowned scientific institutions and half-heartedly heads a government-backed initiative tackling global warming. An inveterate philanderer, Beard finds his fifth marriage floundering. When Beard’s professional and personal worlds are entwined in a freak accident, an opportunity presents itself, a chance for Beard to extricate himself from his marital mess, reinvigorate his career and very possibly save the world from environmental disaster.

It’s easy to say why I didn’t like Beard. The first thing you learn about him is that he’s a philanderer with a double standard. From there he just adds fault upon fault– he was evidently once brilliant, and he’s still smart, but he just coasts by in jobs that want his name on their letterhead. Anything that goes wrong is someone else’s fault (and he’ll go to serious effort to ensure that everyone else thinks so too). He’s so self centered that no one else’s perspective is anywhere on his radar.

On the other hand, he can be charming, and given his egocentricity, his views make a certain kind of sense. They are entertaining to read because they are so far removed from reality.

Similarly, I could sit back and watch the events of the book unfold, no matter how preposterous at times. It’s all rooted in reality.

I could have done without the bodily humor– the scene that goes on and on about him going out into the arctic while needing to pee, finally stopping to take care of it, then thinking that part of his anatomy has frozen and broken off; A scene where he eats too much thinking he might be hungry later, then gives a speech thinking he needs to throw up (finally stepping aside to do just that), descriptions of the smells associated with sex between two older, fat participants.

I think that what makes this book work is that in his sea of faults, I could see some of my own.

I liked the setup, but when reading the book, I felt the entire Global Warming/Clean Energy thing was a convenient and interesting backdrop, not really part of what the book was trying to discuss. My book club convinced me that it was more integrated into the novel than I had thought.

Audiobook Notes

Narrator: I think Roger Allam may have saved the book for me.  I normally have a much harder time with unlikeable main characters in audiobooks than I do in printed ones, but Roger made Beard an OK person to spend all this time with.

Production: Nothing noteworthy about it (good or bad).

Audio vs. Print? Our book club meeting had 3 audiobook readers, 2 print reader, and one non-reader (didn’t have a chance to read it).  Our opinions of the book were all very similar. I think.  In general, I prefer print to audio when a book has unlikeable characters (I just don’t want to spend all that time with them), but I think the narrator overcame some of those issues for me.  On the other hand, I do wish I could have skimmed through various parts mentioned above.  I’ll give a slight nod to print here.

Book Club Notes

I read this book for my book club M. The five of us that read the book had a fairly similar opinion of it, as I described above.  At least one person thought it picked up once she got into it, although I wasn’t the only one not sure if she’d have finished it if it wasn’t for book club.

We had a good discussion, largely centered around the character of Michael Beard– how realistic was he, what motivated him at different points in the story.  We talked about whether he was believable as a brilliant (not just smart man).  We also talked about the other characters, and whether there were any of them we could actually like.

We then talked about what the book was saying about solar power, renewable energy, global warming, and scientists in general.  As I mentioned, this conversation convinced me that McEwan had something to say about the state of the world, the politics of science, and about scientists and bureaucrats, which adds to my appreciation of this book.

 
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Posted by on February 10, 2011 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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Book Club Nominees

It’s time to pick books again, at least for one of my book clubs!  Everyone in the group had a chance to submit nominations, now we vote using a somewhat unusual method.

We’ll choose 6 of these, more or less. I’m curious what you would pick.  Have you read any of these?  Discussed them with your book club?  Leave a comment and let me know!

  1. Feed by M. T. Anderson
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/169756.Feed
  2. Day After Night by Anita Diamant
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6985166-day-after-night
  3. Room: A Novel by Emma Donoghue
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7937843-room
  4. Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2187.Middlesex
  5. The Year of Living Biblically by AJ Jacobs
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/495395.The_Year_of_Living_Biblically
  6. The Finkler Question by Howard Jacobson
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9279068-the-finkler-question
  7. Broken Birds, The Story of My Momila by Jeannette Katzir
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6561078-broken-birds-the-story-of-my-momila
  8. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2057775.Animal_Vegetable_Miracle
  9. Every Last One by Anna Quindlen
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7468160-every-last-one
  10. Beneath a Marble Sky by John Shors
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/94672.Beneath_a_Marble_Sky
  11. A Regular Guy by Mona Simpson
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/892084.A_Regular_Guy_
  12. Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays by Zadie Smith
    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6425404-changing-my-mind
 
13 Comments

Posted by on January 30, 2011 in Book Club, M

 

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Audio Review & Book Club Thoughts: The Year of Fog by Michelle Richmond

The Year of FogMy rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

The Year of Fog is a compelling look at the aftermath of a child’s disappearance, but even more than that, it’s a reflection on memory, how it works, and what it means to remember something.

Summary from Michelle Richmond’s website:

Six-year-old Emma vanished into the thick San Francisco mist. Or into the heaving Pacific. Or somewhere just beyond: to a parking lot, a stranger’s van, or a road with traffic flashing by. Devastated by guilt, haunted by her fears about becoming a stepmother, Abby refuses to believe that Emma is dead. And so she searches her mind for clues about what happened that morning and cannot stop the flood of memories reaching from her own childhood to illuminate that irreversible moment on the beach.

Now, as the days drag into weeks, as the police lose interest and fliers fade on telephone poles, Emma’s father finds solace in his faith, but Abby can only wander the beaches and city streets, attempting to recover the life and the little girl that she lost. With her hope fading and her life at a crossroads, she will leave San Francisco for a country thousands of miles away. And it is there, by the side of another sea, on a journey that has taken her into a strange subculture of wanderers and surfers, that Abby will make the most astounding discovery of all, as the truth of Emma’s disappearance unravels with stunning force.

The book plunges into the immediate events leading up to Emma’s disappearance. She’s out of sight by the second page of the book’s text. I actually felt this was a little off-putting, there was this big emotional event and I didn’t even know the characters first.

Any doubts I had were quickly set aside. I got to know Abby as well as any literary character I’ve encountered, and see her version of Emma and Jake, Emma’s father.

As captivating as the plot was– and I was eager for every detail of Abby’s search for Emma, long after the police have given up, the volunteers have gone home, even after Jake has started to doubt the value of what they are doing, it isn’t the most compelling part of the book.

The characters would have been enough to carry the story on their own. I only saw the secondary characters through Abby’s eyes, and even with her (at times skewed) perception, they were a very interesting collection of people. Even as her search limits her contact with people from her life before, it puts her in contact with individuals she never would have gotten to know otherwise– from David at the support group for parents with missing children, to Goofy, a young surfer that becomes a friend. Goofy is one of several characters I saw enough of to know that I wish I could know them even better.

The plot and the characters make for a solid interesting book. What pushes it beyond that is the examination of memory– what makes memory work, what does it mean to remember something. These ideas are examined in abstract, as they apply to Abby’s life, and as they apply to tracking down Emma.

Why not 5 stars? There were a few spots in the book that didn’t feel up to the same standard as the whole– places where the events didn’t feel quite as right, where it dragged just a bit, where the writing felt a little less even. These weren’t enough to keep me from liking or appreciating the book– I still think it is excellent. I just don’t give out that last star easily!

Audio Notes:

Narrator: Carrington MacDuffie became Abby to me.  I wasn’t aware of her as the narrator, I simply heard Abby telling the story.

Production: Overall, a nice production. I downloaded it from Overdrive via my local library, and I liked that the breaks between the parts (~75 – 80 minutes each) all occurred between chapters.

Audio or Print: I know this book worked well as an audiobook, but I can’t point to any way the audio made the experience better.  I think either is fine.

Book Club Notes:

The Year of Fog is the 2011 Silicon Valley Reads book.  My Book Club M reads the SVR book every year for our January meeting.

We had 6 of us at the meeting, and we all really liked the book.  We all are moms, and agreed the book would have been too hard to read when our children were young, closer to the age Emma was in the book.

We had a great discussion.  We talked about the plausibility of various parts of the book– what was realistic, which parts people thought were unlikely but necessary to make the book work.  We discussed the relationships in The Year of Fog, particularly between Abby and Jake, but also Abby and her friends, Abby and David, Abby and Nick.

We found it interesting to wonder how the events in the book would have played out differently if Emma had disappeared on Jake’s watch, or if Abby & Jake had both been with her at the time.

We also spent some time on memory and the books examination of it.

I’d recommend The Year of Fog for book club discussion.

 
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Posted by on January 4, 2011 in Book Club, M

 

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Audio review and book club notes: Claude and Camille by Stephanie Cowell

Claude and CamilleClaude & Camille: A Novel of Monet

My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

I enjoyed reading Claude and Camille, and yet found myself wishing for something a little more, or maybe a little different.

Summary via Stephanie Cowell’s website:

In his early twenties, Claude Monet came to Paris, determined to make a success in painting. He quickly found poverty, obscurity and a beautiful upper-class girl Camille who threw away a life of privilege to be with him. He also made friends with a group of likewise unknown painters, often as poor as he was: Renoir, Pissarro, Degas, Bazille, Manet and Cezanne and somehow through every obstacle in the world kept them together until they began to be known as impressionists. But the years of struggle and life in wretched rooms with little food began to wear on his patience and Camille’s endurance until even as he was beginning to sell his work, their passionate love was descending into tragedy and he was beginning to understand that he had never completely known her.

I never really connected with the character of Monet. Through the book, I got to know him as a person, but I’m not sure he was a person I would have particularly liked. He was driven by his art, and this left him feeling entitled to support from his family well into his 20s, and led him to live beyond his means at several different points in his life. I got something of a feeling for him as a painter, but not as a genius. I never saw through his eyes as an artist who changed the artistic world.

However, Claude and Camille wasn’t the story of a painter, it was the story of a relationship. With that perspective, I was much more interested in the character of Camille. I didn’t understand or agree with her decisions either, but somehow I found her more accessible, and I think I would have loved the book if it was told from her viewpoint.

Camille was a young woman so swept away by her love for her young man that she ran off with him, living with him and bearing his child in a day when women of her class just didn’t do such things. She also suffered from very dark periods, where even getting out of bed was difficult, and living the life of an artist’s wife was nearly impossible.

I loved the look into a setting that I wasn’t particularly familiar with. I also was unfamiliar with Claude Monet’s background, so I can’t speak at all to how closely the book sticks to the commonly known story.

Book Club Notes:

I read Claude & Camille for my Book Club M.  There were five of us at the meeting, and although no one disliked the book, we varied widely in how much we liked it.  There was one member that couldn’t put it down, one that was disappointed, and the rest of us were somewhere in between.

We had a really good discussion of the book, starting with what we were looking for and didn’t find.  As I mentioned above, I would have preferred Camille’s viewpoint.  The member that was the most disappointed wanted more of the painting, wanted to feel what it was like to touch the brushes and see the world. Others wanted more insight into the artistic vision of Monet and his contemporaries.

We also enjoyed talking about the motivations of the characters, and about the cost of genius (and why there always seems to be a tradeoff– there don’t seem to be well balanced, personable geniuses in life or literature).

Stephanie Cowell will e-mail you book club discussion questions, her e-mail is available on her website.  I didn’t realize this, and didn’t ask until I was on the way to our discussion, but I received them before we finished and they brought us back on topic when we started wandering on to other subjects.

Audio Notes:

Narrator: Christopher Cazenove has a very nice voice, and I had no problems with his narration.

Production: No issues with it.

Audio or print? Honestly, when I think back on this book, I’m hard pressed to remember that I listened to it– I just remember  the story.  I then wonder if there is any point to having this section of my review, if I don’t have anything to say about the audio aspects.  I decided that fact was worth pointing out.  So no, I don’t have any recommendations on audio vs. print.  Choose the delivery mechanism that works best for you.

 
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Posted by on November 10, 2010 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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Review: Broken Glass Park by Alina Bronsky

Broken Glass ParkMy rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

Summary via Goodreads.com:

The heroine of this enigmatic, razor-sharp, and thoroughly contemporary novel is seventeen- year-old Sacha Naimann, born in Moscow. Sacha lives in Berlin now with her two younger siblings and, until recently, her mother. She is precocious, independent, skeptical and, since her stepfather murdered her mother several months ago, an orphan. Unlike most of her companions, she doesn’t dream of getting out the tough housing project where they live. Her dreams are different: she wants to write a novel about her mother; and she wants to end the life of Vadim, the man who murdered her.

What strikes the reader most in this exceptional novel is Sacha’s voice: candid, self-confident, mature and childlike at the same time: a voice so like the voices of many of her generation with its characteristic mix of worldliness and innocence, skepticism and enthusiasm. This is Sacha’s story and it is as touching as any in recent literature.

I found this a very interesting book, in spite of not being able to really connect with the protagonist.

I found Sacha fascinating, but I never quite felt I understood her, either intellectually or emotionally. It isn’t that I found her unconvincing. I always believed she was acting in character. She was just… foreign to me.

When I thought about it, I realized her life was so different than mine that I was having trouble bridging the gap.

I was fascinated by the look at a culture inside a culture, a very poor Russian immigrant community in Germany. Sacha was a misfit because of her personality, and possibly would have been one wherever she was. She didn’t fit into the wider community because she was part of the poor Russian tenements, but she has too many goals for her life to fit in with the discouraged teens in her area.

She’s taken on responsibility for her siblings, a responsibility that leads her to decide she much protect them from their father when he is finally released from jail.

At the same time, she’s feeling the need to escape her life, and makes the first steps towards doing this. Along the way, she discovers a whole different world than her own, takes some time to explore her sexuality, and after all this makes some decisions that didn’t make sense to me.

After discussing Broken Glass Park with my book club (see my notes below), I was curious as to how this book would be perceived by someone closer to Sacha, so I handed my copy over to a young woman who had several things in common with the character:  She’s not far from Sacha’s age, she’s very smart, and her family emigrated from Russia when she was younger.  Beyond that, their lives are quite different.

As I suspected, she loved the book (right up until the ending).

Book Club Notes

I read Broken Glass Park along with my Book Club M.  I’d have to say that everyone was in a similar place as me with regards to the book.    We all thought it was interesting, but couldn’t quite relate.

We spent time talking about whether our distance from the book was due to it being a translation.  Certainly, the words had an unusual feel to them, but the entire book did as well.  It’s hard to know where that feeling came in.

We did have a good discussion on the choices that Sacha made, on the society she lived in, on what pieces were universal.

I received this book for review via Regal Literary.  I suggested my book club discuss it, and once the group selected it, I waited for our discussion before reviewing it.

 
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Posted by on October 7, 2010 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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Audiobook Review: The Soloist by Steve Lopez

The Soloist: A Lost Dream, an Unlikely Friendship, and the Redemptive Power of Music(The full title is The Soloist: A Lost Dream, an Unlikely Friendship, and the Redemptive Power of Music but I didn’t want to try to put that up there!)

My rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

This is a wonderful story, very effectively written.

From the Penguin Books website:

When Steve Lopez saw Nathaniel Ayers playing his heart out on a two-string violin on Los Angeles’ skid row, he found it impossible to walk away. More than thirty years earlier, Ayers had been a promising classical bass student at Juilliard—ambitious, charming, and also one of the few African-Americans—until he gradually lost his ability to function, overcome by schizophrenia. When Lopez finds him, Ayers is homeless, paranoid, and deeply troubled, but glimmers of that brilliance are still there.

Over time, Steve Lopez and Nathaniel Ayers form a bond, and Lopez imagines that he might be able to change Ayers’s life. Lopez collects donated violins, a cello, even a stand-up bass and a piano; he takes Ayers to Walt Disney Concert Hall and helps him move indoors. For each triumph, there is a crashing disappointment, yet neither man gives up. In the process of trying to save Ayers, Lopez finds that his own life is changing, and his sense of what one man can accomplish in the lives of others begins to expand in new ways.

Poignant and ultimately hopeful, The Soloist is a beautifully told story of friendship and the redeeming power of music.

I suggested this book for my book club after seeing a recommendation on a Bermudaonion’s Blog.  I’d heard the story on NPR, and been interested in the movie,  but the book hadn’t been on my radar.

Even with this being non-fiction,  I was afraid the book would sugar coat the difficulties that people with serious mental illness face– that it would wrap up too easily and happily.

It doesn’t. Neither is it a bleak, depressing book.

The book gave me insight into what life is like for the homeless, and why it isn’t easy to change. It showed me the power that music can have. It let me see a friendship that changed the lives of two people, but also of many others around them.

Audio Notes

Narrator: William Hughes did an excellent job with the narration. Since the book was told in first person, I wondered at one point if the author was narrating– the voice just seemed so comfortable with the words. It wasn’t the author, who likely wouldn’t have been this skilled.

Production: Solid, but no extras from the paper version.

Audio vs. Paper: I hadn’t originally planned to listen to The Soloist– I’d bought a paper copy and put it somewhere safe. When I couldn’t figure out where that safe place was, I downloaded the audio version. I think this one works in print or audio.

Book Club Notes

I read The Soloist for my Book Club M.

Five of us met to discuss the book. All of us enjoyed it, including one that really didn’t expect to– she had the opposite concern I did, she thought that a non-fiction book dealing with mental illness would be too grim. We enjoyed talking about the situations in the book, and what had to come together to make the story work.

We talked about how fortunate it was that drugs were not part of Nathaniel Ayers’ issues.  As someone with clear talent and no “bad choices” (or self medication), he was a very sympathetic face to put on the issue of homelessness and mental illness, which played very well for Steve’s newspaper articles and later press and political coverage.

We talked about the sacrifices Steve Lopez made, and the rewards he reaped from his work with Nathaniel. We discussed Steve’s motivation for continuing past the initial article, and how it changed over time.

The best part of our discussion was when people in the group shared their personal connections to some of the issues raised in The Soloist.

The conversation we had was very good, but when it was done, it was done. We had lots of other logistical issues to discuss, and a short meeting time due to our meeting location, so that was OK. I’d rate this as a good but not great book club book.

Other opinions on The Soloist

 
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Posted by on July 16, 2010 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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Book Club nominations

It’s now time for my Book Club M to pick new books, probably about 6 months worth.  Everyone had a chance to nominate books, now we all vote.  To see our method, look at my Book Club page.

What do you think of these choices?  I’m excited about so many of them, it’s hard to vote!

A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick
Broke, USA by Gary Rivlin
Broken Glass Park by Alina Bronsky
Claude & Camille: A Novel of Monet by Stephanie Cowell
Critique of Criminal Reason by Michael Gregorio
Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese
No Rooms of Their Own ed. by Ida Rae Egli
Solar by Ian McEwan
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
The Postmistress by Sarah Blake
The Solitude of Prime Numbers by Paolo Giordano
Up from the Blue by Susan Henderson
 
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Posted by on July 3, 2010 in Book Club, books, M

 

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Review: The House on Fortune Street by Margot Livesey

The House on Fortune StreetMy rating: 4 of 5 stars

The House on Fortune Street is a book divided into four sections, each telling the story of a different character. These chapters overlap in the events they cover, but each covers enough different ground to not to seem repetitive.

Sean is a writer and struggling academic.  He’s living in the house on Fortune Street with his girlfriend Abigail, who convinced him to leave his wife for her.   He works part time for the theater company that takes up most of her time. Abigail’s best friend Dara lives in the flat downstairs.  She’s a therapist at a women’s clinic.  The fourth player is Dara’s father, Cameron.   He’s a very nice man who tries very hard to overcome his one flaw that some people (including Dara’s mother) find unforgivable.

The book got off to a very slow start for me. I didn’t get the point of Sean’s story at all. He seemed like a loser, largely due to his own choices, unwilling to change the direction of his life (although he goes along with others changing it for him). I didn’t like him, sympathize with him, find him interesting, are understand why we were reading about him.

It picked up quite a bit after that.

Cameron’s story was interesting. He was a generally likable guy, struggling with a problem that in and of itself could make him very unlikable.   The events in this story start much earlier than the previous chapter. Besides letting the reader get to know Cameron (only a very minor character in Sean’s story, but quite an interesting guy) it sets up Dara’s chapter.

Dara and Abigail were both interesting characters, and their chapters are when the book really came to life for me. The two women are contrasts in personality and background. but become close friends in college, then drift apart again. I really appreciated seeing into their thoughts that kept them apart.

Both women were significantly affected by the events in their past.  For Dara, we see those events from Cameron’s point of view.  For Abigail, we see them from her own.  Through their lives, they react and make decisions in a way that makes you wonder how different their lives could have been.

In the end, this was a very satisfying read. It’s worth hanging on past the first section.

Book Club Notes

I read The House on Fortune Street  for my Book Club M.   Four of us met to discuss it.  All of us liked it.  I was the only one with significant reservations about any part of it, although at least one person had some of the same issues with Sean’s section.  We had a good discussion about the characters:  Was the end of Dara’s story believable?  Was Cameron’s flaw forgivable?  Did he ever step over a line?  Was Abigail a supportive friend?  The discussion questions also suggested that each character’s life was connected to that of a well known writer.  Some of these parallels were clear, others less so,  and both ways, they were interesting to discuss.

I’d count The House on Fortune Street as a book club success.

 
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Posted by on July 2, 2010 in Book Club, books, M, reviews

 

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Book Club bytes

Again, I’ve fallen behind on reviewing the books my book clubs have discussed.  I’m catching up with mini reviews and book club notes on each of them.  I’m starting with my Book Club M.

ZeitounZeitoun by Dave Eggers

was our book for February.  It’s the true story of a man who stayed to help during/after Hurricane Katrina, and the way he (and others) were treated.

My thoughts:

My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

It’s a story that deserved to be told. It was an interesting tale. I enjoyed it, and was glad I read it.

However, the delivery of the story seemed flat. I’m not sure if the blame is more with the audiobook narrator or the word choice of the author. I’m guessing it is a little of both, with the author having more of an issue.

I’d have liked it more if the story had been a little wider, and if Zeitoun and family didn’t seem quite so perfect.

Club thoughts:

I was sick, so wasn’t there.  One other member was sick as well, which left a very small group to discuss the book.  From their comments afterward, I think they all liked it more than I did.  It sounds like they didn’t find a lot to talk about, although that might have changed if I was there, since I may have added a different viewpoint on Zeitoun.

Loving Frank

Loving Frank by Nancy Horan

was our March book.  The book was based on the relationship between Frank Lloyd Wright and Mamah Borthwick Cheney.

My thoughts:

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I thought that this book sounded interesting, but I was wary of reading it– I usually find plots involving infidelity hard to sympathize with. In this case, it didn’t get in my way.  I enjoyed it, in spite of characters making decisions that made no sense to me personally (but were consistent with their personalities).

Club thoughts:

We had a good conversation on Loving Frank.

We enjoyed discussing the how much of this book was based on fact.  Several of us had gone to do some research before the meeting, since none of us were familiar with the events mentioned, or even with Frank Lloyd Wright’s work. In particular, none of us saw the ending coming. We were interested to know that the book follows the historical record, as far as it exists. Although some aspects of Wright’s life are well documented, there isn’t a much about Mamah Cheney.

It was interesting to examine how the attitudes of the time influenced the events of the book: if there was not expected for woman to marry, would the situations of the book have arisen in the first place?  Did this in any way excuse Mamah’s behaviour? How much could we understand, even if not forgive? Why did the other characters behave in the ways they did?

This is a case where we had a good discussion even though we all enjoyed the book. I know of other people who didn’t like it, and I can understand that.  I think the book can lead to a good conversation either way.

Making It Up Making It Up by Penelope Lively

was under discussion in May.

My thoughts:

My rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

The concept of this book grabbed me right away:  Look back at your life.  Pick a point in the past.  What if something had gone differently at that point?

I still love the concept, but the execution isn’t what I’d hoped for.  It was often difficult to tell which character was supposed to be the author, and what the changes were from her life.  Often, her character was a very, very minor player in the story.

Taken as short stories, several of them were very captivating, although others were unmemorable.

I’d like to read another book by Lively, but I can see why this book was tricky to find.

Club thoughts:

I’d say the group as a whole would agree with what I wrote above.  We were all disappointed in the book. We had trouble discussing more than a few of the stories, because they had faded from memory after a few days.  (There were a couple that worked well for some of us, and we did spend time on them.)

In spite of this, we had a great meeting, because it led to discussion of turning points in our own lives.    If this appeals to you as a way to spend a book club meeting, I’d recommend this book.

Up Next

For the book club, we are discussing The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood this month, followed by The House on Fortune Street by Margot Livesey and  The Soloist by Steve Lopez. I aim to catch up on my other book club’s picks next week.

What has your book club been reading?  Tell me here, or leave a link to a post in your blog.

 
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Posted by on May 6, 2010 in Book Club, books, L, M, reviews

 

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Book club updates

I haven’t posted recently about my book clubs and the books we’ve discussed!

A few days ago, my Book Club M discussed Life After Genius by M. Ann Jacoby I reviewed it in October, and then suggested it for this group to discuss. We all enjoyed reading the book– I’d been pretty sure that most of the members would, but I was glad that the others did as well. We had a good discussion, largely stemming from the highly unreliable narrator and from the family relationships in the book.

Book Club L skipped December (my fault!) but Book Club M read and discussed Michael Pollan’s In Defense of Food, which is the Silicon Valley Reads book for 2010. I haven’t posted a review of this book yet, and I probably won’t. Our opinion on this book was mixed, with some people loving it, and others being not as certain. I didn’t think our discussion was particularly compelling either, but I was probably the persbn that liked the book the least. We talked about the science behind his claims and about his tone while discussing them. I think that those that liked this book best had previously read The Omnivore’s Dilemma, so that may be a better place to start.

In November, my Book Club L discussed Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout, which I’d previously read, reviewed and discussed with Twitter Book Club. Olive Kitteridge made my list of top reads in 2009. Everyone thought it was a good book, but not everyone enjoyed reading it– a couple of people found Olive’s character too negative, and that interfered with their connection with her. This disagreement helped the discussion, which I think everyone enjoyed.

Also in November, Twitter Book Club discussed Tethered by Amy MacKinnon. I still hope to review it someday, although I’m not sure how likely that is at this point. I really enjoyed the book and the TBC discussion (even if I hadn’t finished the book yet). I need to recommend this for one of my other clubs, since I’d love to talk about the parts I hadn’t yet read.  I have to say, Twitter Book Club has consistently selected great books, and I’m thinking I should go back and read the two I’ve missed!

I think that catches me up on book club discussions! Hopefully, I’ll stay more up to date on my reviews this year, but  I still may post short updates when we discuss I book I’ve already read.

 
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Posted by on January 6, 2010 in Book Club, L, M, Twitter

 

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